Letter to the Editor

 •  2 min. read  •  grade level: 12
 
Dear Sir.-At the request of a friend I have been led to examine the Greek version of Psa. 110 ver. 3. I have since pursued a similar investigation in several other languages, the result you may like to notice.
I would, however, remark in the first place, that whereas our authorized English version presents the most accurate rendering of the Hebrew in this passage (as in many other cases), it is capable of very great improvement by a mere change of punctuation, i.e. by placing a colon or full stop at "holiness," and no stop afterward till the end of the verse. And this will be seen to approach very near to the sense of the prayer-book version, which is as follows:-" In the day of thy power shall the people offer Thee freewill offerings with an holy worship, the dew of Thy birth is of the womb of the morning." The next is Luther's, " Upon Thy victory shall Thy people willingly offer to Thee in holy and glorious apparel. Thy children shall be born to Thee as the dew from the morning." The French in Ostervald's edition, " Thy people shall be a willing people in the day when Thou shalt collect Thine army with sacred pomp, Thy posterity shall be as the dew which is produced from the womb of the morning." In the three following versions, viz., the Septuagint, Syriac, and old Latin (probably the Vulgate), it will be seen the variations are chiefly caused by the ambiguity of the two words Inv, which, without points, may be read "with Thee" instead of " Thy people," and ילרדּ which also without points and with the insertion of י before the last syllable means "I begat thee" instead of "thy youth." Thus Sept. "With Thee is dominion in the day of Thy power, in the splendor of Thy saints, I begat Thee from the womb before the morning star." Syriac, "With Thee there shall be glory in the day of power, in the beauties of holiness." From the womb, from the East (or of old), I begat thee a male child. The word rendered "male child" answers to the Hebrew טל (tal), dew. The English reader will recognize the sound in Talitha kumi, Damsel, arise. The Latin is a close version of the Septuagint. It may be added, that if the punctuation of the Syriac is to be regarded, which, however, is very doubtful, that version favors the stop placed as in our English Bibles, i.e., a colon at "morning."