Title: Hebrew Poetry
1Hebrew Poetry
2B. Hebrew Poetry1. General Characteristics
3Hebrew Poetry1. General Characteristics
- a. The Difference between Poetry and Prose
- (1) Basic Differences
4Hebrew Poetry General Characteristics
- The Difference between Poetry and Prose
- (1) Basic Differences
- (a) Use of Language
-
5Hebrew Poetry General Characteristics
- a. The Difference between Poetry and Prose
- (1) Basic Differences
- (a) Use of Language
- (b) Purposes
-
6Hebrew Poetry General Characteristics
- a. The Difference between Poetry and Prose
- (1) Basic Differences
- (a) Use of Language
- (b) Purposes
- (2) Example Lam 2 2 Kings 251-21
7- 2 Kings 259
-
- And Nebuzaradan burned the house of the Lord,
the kings house, and all the houses of
Jerusalem even every great house he burned with
fire.
8- Lamentations 25-6
- The Lord has become like an enemy,
- He has swallowed up all its palaces,
- He has destroyed its strongholds
- And multiplied in the daughter of Judah mourning
and moaning. - And he has violently treated his tabernacle like
a garden booth - He has destroyed his appointed meeting place.
9b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
10b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
11b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (1) Rhythm and Sound
- Alliteration (beginning sounds)
12b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (1) Rhythm and Sound
- Alliteration (beginning sounds)
- Assonance (vowel sounds)
-
13b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (1) Rhythm and Sound
- Alliteration (beginning sounds)
- Assonance (vowel sounds)
- Play on Words
Example Gamla (camel) Galma (gnat) Mt 2324
14b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (1) Rhythm and Sound
- Alliteration (beginning sounds)
- Assonance (vowel sounds)
- Play on Words
- Rhythm (meter)
15b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (1) Rhythm and Sound
- Alliteration (beginning sounds)
- Assonance (vowel sounds)
- Play on Words
- Rhythm (meter)
- Hermeneutical Significance
- Relationship of word choice to form
16b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (2) A Key Structural Feature Parallelism
17b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (2) A Key Feature Parallelism
- The balancing of adjacent lines
18b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (2) A Key Feature Parallelism
- The balancing of adjacent lines
-
- But he was pierced for our trangressions,
- he was crushed for our iniquities
- The punishment that brought us peace was upon
him, - And by his wounds we are healed. Is 535
19b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (3) Other Structural Features
- (a) Chiasm An ABBA pattern in the structure of
a verse or section of Hebrew poetry -
20b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (3) Other Structural Features
- (a) Chiasm
- If I forget you, O Jerusalem, A
- May my right hand forget its skill, B
- May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth, B1
- If I do not remember you A1
- Ps 1374-5
21b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (3) Other Structural Features
- (a) Chiasm
- Do not give dogs what is sacred
- Do not throw your pearls to pigs.
- If you do, they may trample them under your feet,
- And then turn and tear you to pieces.
- Matt 76
22b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (3) Other Structural Features
- (a) Chiasm
- (b) Acrostic
- The use of the Hebrew alphabet to structure
sections of poetry
23b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (3) Other Structural Features
- (a) Chiasm
- (b) Acrostic
- e.g., Psalm 34Its lines are organized
according to the Hebrew alphabet
24b. Hebrew Poetry Nature and Structure
- (4) Metaphorical Language and Imagery
- Figures of Speech
- E.g., simile metaphor
Simile Comparison often using like/as
As the deer longs for flowing streams, so my
soul longs for you, O God. Ps 421
Metaphor Indirect comparison
You are my rock and my fortress. Ps 713