Structural analysis of Isaiah 61 with a special focus on verses 1-3
An analysis of the structure of Isa 61 underlines the priestly character of its content. There are weighty reasons to depart from the Masoretic division of the text in Isa 61:1. The Masoretes placed a rebia above ʿanaṿiys suggesting that we have here a major division. I suggest that a new metrical v...
| Main Author: | |
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| Format: | Electronic Article |
| Language: | English |
| Check availability: | HBZ Gateway |
| Interlibrary Loan: | Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany) |
| Published: |
2013
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| In: |
Old Testament essays
Year: 2013, Volume: 26, Issue: 2, Pages: 298-314 |
| Online Access: |
Volltext (kostenfrei) |
| Summary: | An analysis of the structure of Isa 61 underlines the priestly character of its content. There are weighty reasons to depart from the Masoretic division of the text in Isa 61:1. The Masoretes placed a rebia above ʿanaṿiys suggesting that we have here a major division. I suggest that a new metrical verse starts in Isa 61:1 with the expression levashoׂr. In verses 1-3 the prophet, or the person to whom the prophets refers, is anointed seven times by YHWH: every time the colon opens with le followed by an infinitive construct. My division of the cola however results in more bicola than tricola as suggested by the Masoretic accents. In Hebrew poetry the bicolon is far more usual than the tricolon. So, when possible, a division in bicola must be preferred above tricola. I give my reasons to divide v. 3c not as a bicolon, but as a tricolon. Consequently I notice several stylistic features at the end of the first part of the hymn. My division suggests that the whole hymn consists of fifty cola, a number that corresponds with the number of the Jubilee. My aim is to show that the structure of the poem undergirds its priestly message and character. An analysis of the structure of Isa 61 underlines the priestly character of its content. There are weighty reasons to depart from the Masoretic division of the text in Isa 61:1. The Masoretes placed a rebia above ﬠֲנָוִיס suggesting that we have here a major division. I suggest that a new metrical verse starts in Isa 61:1 with the expression לְבַשֳּׂר. In verses 1-3 the prophet, or the person to whom the prophets refers, is anointed seven times by YHWH: every time the colon opens with לְ followed by an infinitive construct. My division of the cola however results in more bicola than tricola as suggested by the Masoretic accents. In Hebrew poetry the bicolon is far more usual than the tricolon. So, when possible, a division in bicola must be preferred above tricola. I give my reasons to divide v. 3c not as a bicolon, but as a tricolon. Consequently I notice several stylistic features at the end of the first part of the hymn. My division suggests that the whole hymn consists of fifty cola, a number that corresponds with the number of the Jubilee. My aim is to show that the structure of the poem undergirds its priestly message and character. |
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| ISSN: | 2312-3621 |
| Contains: | Enthalten in: Old Testament essays
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| Persistent identifiers: | HDL: 10520/EJC145328 |