Hin

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This is a tricky unit. The word is not Hebrew, most scholars believe it is an Egyptian unit where it is equal to about a pint. The Israelite unit is believed to be 1/6th of a bath without, as far as I can tell, any evidence beyond relatively recent Jewish tradition. The Bible says nothing that clearly defines the unit.

I find this troubling because the ephah, which is clearly to be “of the same measure” was divided into 1/10ths called omers. And the bath was plainly divided into tenths as well (Ezekiel 45:14). There is no name given for that unit, but the obvious assumption is that 1/10th of a bath is a hin, the same volume as an omer. But can we prove that?

In keeping with everything else God does, the hin must have a real-world definition that everyone used. Some “bucket” that would be logical for holding liquids. There were two ways liquids were stored in the Old Testament; pottery jars, which could be of literally any size... and animal skins.

Sheepskin

1 Samuel 10:3 (BBE) ...you will see three men going up to God to Beth-el, one having with him … a skin full of wine:.

Wineskins – not used just for wine, but also for oil, milk, etc – were typically the hides of sheep or goats that had been slaughtered, skinned, the hair removed, then stitched together and turned inside out. A typical sheepskin is about 24” (61cm) across on average. If stitched together, that means a tube 7.64” (19.5cm) across. Useful length when the ends are closed off is probably about 30” (76cm). That container, like the one at right, would hold a little under 6 gallons (22l) – almost exactly a 5.75 gallon bath!

I’d like to have some independent confirmation of this volume, but I can’t find anything out there on how much a sheepskin holds. The math is pretty good though, and it’s definitely in the range it should be. Feel free to send me any facts you may have on the subject.

Another sheepskin

A smaller, easier-to-make bag was made from a stomach of a sheep or other small animal. I can’t find any reliable information on the typical volume of stomach or bladder bags either, but the traditional versions still used in Spain, called bota, average about 1-3 liters, exactly the same range as an omer!

Once again, the unit of measurement is an obvious and logical consequence of environment; the divine handiwork isn’t noticeable until you realize that the most logical containers for liquids are the exact same size as the most logical quantities of dry goods! And exactly 1/10th and 1/100th the volume of a donkey load of grain!

Without God’s planning, what are the odds that a sheep’s stomach would be the same volume as the amount of wheat a man can bundle in a sheaf? Or that a sheep’s skin sewn into a bag is exactly ten times larger? But there’s more!

See Also

The Meanings of the Measures