This occurs in the title of Psalm 22 and signifies “the hind of the morning” (margin). May not its reference be to the resurrection of the Lord after the cross? The Targum explains it as signifying “the morning oblation of the lamb.” If this is correct, the offering of the lamb stands in strong contrast to “the bulls of Bashan” roaring like a lion, and “the dogs” that compassed the patient victim in the Psalm. Modern critics see nothing more in the words than the name of some tune to which the Psalm was set.