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Language Studies

Aramaic Thoughts Archives

February 22, 2013
In the Targums, these various Aramaic sources consistently translate the Hebrew ben adam (son of man) with bar enosh or some variant thereof. That is, while the Hebrew phrase is singular, the Aramaic sometimes uses a plural form. Sometimes, too, the Aramaic will use bar enosh even where the Hebrew has…
February 15, 2013
The use of "son of man" in the Jewish Aramaic sources (Targums, Midrash, Talmud) require some explanation of sources to begin with. The Targums are Aramaic translations/paraphrases of Biblical material. These perhaps originated as oral performances after the manner described in Neh 8:8. There, Ezra reads the Law and the…
February 8, 2013
The use of the phrase bar enosh (Aram. "son of man") in Daniel 7:13 is problematic partly because it is clearly a theologically significant passage, and partly because the Aramaic portion of the Old Testament is very small, and this is the only place the phrase is used. In other words, we have nothing with which…
February 1, 2013
Last week, we introduced the phrase "Son of Man," so well-known from the gospels. In the New Testament, the term occurs in two Greek forms ho huios tou anthropou (the arthrous form, that is, having the definite article), and huios anthropou (the anarthrous form, not having the definite article). The former…
January 25, 2013
The title "Son of Man" is of great importance for the identification of Jesus in the New Testament. As such, it has been investigated to death, and it is not my purpose here to add anything new to the investigation. I intend first to lay out the basic facts of its use in the New Testament, look at possible Aramaic background…
January 18, 2013
Earlier this week I received two books that I had won in a publisher's drawing at the recent national meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society. These two books were two of the volumes in the Yale University Press series of the Works of Jonathan Edward, which was nice enough in itself. But these two volumes are the…
January 11, 2013
The place to start for Syriac texts is with the New Testament. This is for two reasons. First, the New Testament is familiar to most readers who would want to study Syriac. This makes it easier to make sense out of a passage when the grammar and syntax of the language being learned is strange. Second, Syriac New Testaments…
January 4, 2013
There is not much available as far as grammars for Targumic and Talmudic Aramaic literature, as the basic structure of the grammar doesn't change from that of Biblical Aramaic. What the student will need is a more extensive dictionary for those resources, since the Biblical Aramaic vocabulary is so limited. The most useful…
December 28, 2012
For the jump to Biblical Aramaic from Biblical Hebrew, my first recommendation would be A Short Grammar of Biblical Aramaic, by Alger Johns. The advantage of this work is that it is relatively cheap (approximately $15.00), and there is an annotated answer key by James Jumper, also about $15.00. This kind of resource…
December 21, 2012
It struck me that some of you readers might have an interest in learning Aramaic. If that is the case, you could probably use some guidance in the best way to accomplish that. My primary observation in this area is that the prospective student of Aramaic will need to recognize the necessity of spending a fair amount of…
December 14, 2012
It is common knowledge that the Greek New Testament uses four different words for love. The most prominent, and most theologically significant is agape or in its verbal form agapao. This is usually defined as divine love, or human love that has its origin in God. The Abbott-Smith Manual Greek Lexicon of…
December 7, 2012
In modern New Testament studies, it is commonly assumed that the Gospel of Mark was written first. Matthew and Luke, according to this view, depended largely on Mark for the general order of events, and used much of Mark's material in their own writing. There are events recorded in Matthew and Luke however that are not…
November 30, 2012
The Gospel of Mark has a curious saying of Jesus that is not found in the other gospels. In 9:38-50, John tells Jesus of his attempt to silence an exorcist who was using Jesus' name. John's rationale was that this man was not traveling with them. John's comment provoked a short address from Jesus about discipleship. It…
November 23, 2012
Other approaches to the interpretation of this text have been taken. Some have suggested that there is an Aramaic wordplay between camel (gamal) and acts of charity (gemiluth), though if so, it is hard to imagine what can be gained by such a word play. Rather, it would seem to confuse the issue. Some of…
November 16, 2012
Conventional wisdom can be defined as that understanding of things that is broadly received among people. Thus in the 1970's the conventional wisdom was that the earth was about to enter into a new Ice Age. Articles in respected newspapers such as the New York Times and the Washington Post touted this as fact,…

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