כְּבוֹדֽוֹ׃ (kə·ḇō·w·ḏōw) in Isaiah 6:3: Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular
כְּבוֹדֽוֹ׃ (kə·ḇō·w·ḏōw) in Isaiah 6:3
Source Word
The BSB+ row for Isaiah 6:3 links the English rendering "of His glory" with כְּבוֹדֽוֹ׃, Strong's H3519, and the morphology tag N-msc | 3ms.
How The Form Affects Interpretation
The form helps readers hear the proclamation personally and theologically: the earth is full of His glory, tied to the Lord of Hosts just named.
How To Communicate It
When teaching Isaiah 6:3, use this form to show that the fullness of the earth is not vague spiritual radiance. The phrase points to the Lord's glory in the seraphic proclamation.
What Not To Say
- Grammar should serve context, not override it.
- Grammar should serve Isaiah 6:3, not replace the seraphic proclamation.
- Do not treat the construct form as a complete doctrine of glory by itself.
- Do not use masculine grammatical gender or a third-person suffix to make a biological claim.
- Do not detach "His" from the Lord of Hosts named in the verse.
- Do not treat this occurrence as a complete word study for every use of H3519.
- Do not use the grammar profile as a shortcut around the wording and logic of the verse.
What Does The Label Mean?
Hebrew-nominal
Noun
Noun - masculine singular construct | third person masculine singular
Third person masculine singular
Masculine
Singular
Construct
This form carries the BSB rendering "of His glory" within Isaiah 6:3. Isaiah 6 shows the prophet before the holy Lord, receiving cleansing and a commission in the presence of divine glory.
What The Form Does In This Verse
The seraphic proclamation that all the earth is full in Isaiah 6:3
The declaration of the Lord of Hosts' holiness
The construct noun and suffix identify the fullness as the Lord's glory, not an undefined glory.
The form does not by itself settle the whole doctrine of divine glory, holiness, or creation; Isaiah 6:3 supplies the proclamation context.
How Much The Form Matters Here
High: The form identifies whose glory fills the earth in Isaiah 6:3, a central claim in the holiness proclamation.
Construct noun with third-person suffix. marks glory as belonging to the Lord of Hosts just named. Attached to the fullness statement about all the earth. Governed by the seraphic proclamation in Isaiah 6:3. The suffix should be read from the immediate proclamation, not as a detached pronoun.
Whose glory fills the earth? The glory belongs to the Lord of Hosts named in the proclamation.
Direct: The construct noun and suffix directly support the English phrase "of His glory."
The suffix points back to the Lord of Hosts in the proclamation; the verse controls the reference. The construct relation identifies whose glory is in view without supplying the whole doctrine of glory by itself.
Construct phrase proves a whole doctrine of divine glory by itself: The phrase identifies the relation; Isaiah 6:3 supplies the holiness and glory proclamation. masculine suffix proves a biological claim: The suffix is a grammatical feature pointing to the Lord of Hosts in context, not a biological argument.
How The Interpretation Is Derived
The BSB+ row for Isaiah 6:3 links the English rendering "of His glory" with כְּבוֹדֽוֹ׃, Strong's H3519, and the morphology tag N-msc | 3ms.
H3519 is represented here by the lemma כָּבוֹד. In this occurrence, the public guide is limited to the BSB rendering "of His glory" rather than every possible gloss of the entry.
The construct form and suffix bind glory to the Lord of Hosts named in the proclamation. The grammar helps identify whose glory fills the earth while the repeated holy proclamation supplies the theological frame.
Isaiah 6 shows the prophet before the holy Lord, receiving cleansing and a commission in the presence of divine glory.
The form fits Scripture's witness to holiness, cleansing, and commissioned speech before the Lord.
When teaching Isaiah 6:3, use this form to show that the fullness of the earth is not vague spiritual radiance. The phrase points to the Lord's glory in the seraphic proclamation.
Do not build the full doctrine of divine glory from the construct form or suffix alone. The form clarifies the phrase relation within Isaiah 6:3.