Page:04.BCOT.KD.PoeticalBooks.vol.4.Writings.djvu/20

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I. POSITION OF THE PSALTER AMONG THE
HAGIOGRAPHIA, AND MORE ESPECIALLY AMONG THE
POETICAL BOOKS.

The Psalter is everywhere regarded as an essential part of the Kethubim or Hagiographa; but its position among these varies. It seems to follow from Luk 24:44 that it opened the Kethubim in the earliest period of the Christian era.[1] The order of the books in the Hebrew MSS of the German class, upon which our printed editions in general use are based, is actually this: Psalms, Proverbs, Job, and the five Megilloth. But the Masora and the MSS of the Spanish class begin the Kethubim with the Chronicles which they awkwardly separate from Ezra and Nehemiah, and then range the Psalms, Job, Proverbs and the five Megilloth next.[2] And according to the Talmud (Baba Bathra 14b)

  1. Also from 2 Macc. 2:13, where τὰ τοῦ Δαυίδ appears to be the designation of the כתובים according to their beginning; and from Philo, De vita contempl. (opp. II 475 ed. Mangey), where he makes the following distinction νόμους καὶ λόγια θεσπισθέντα διὰ προφητῶν καὶ ὕμνους καὶ τὰ ἄλλα οἷς ἐπιστήμη καὶ εὐσέβεια συναύξονται καὶ τελειοῦνται.
  2. In all the Masoretic lists the twenty four books are arranged in the following order: 1) בראשׁית;   2) ואלה שׁמות;   3) ויקרא;   4) וידבר (also במדבר);   5) אלה הדברים;   6) יהושׁע;   7) שׁופטים;   8) שׁמואל;   9) מלכים;   10) ישׁעיה;   11) ירמיה;   12) יחזקאל;   13) תרי עשׂר;   14) דברי הימים; 15) תהלות;   16) איוב;   17) משׁלי;   18) רות;   19) שׁיר השׁירים;   20) קהלת; 21) קינות (איכה);   22) אחשׁורושׁ (מגלה);   23) דניאל;   24) עזרא. The Masoretic abbreviation for the three pre-eminently poetical books is accordingly, not מתא but (in agreement with their Talmudic order) אםת (as also in Chajug'), vid., Elia Levita, Masoreth ha-Masoreth p. 19. 73 (ed. Ven. 1538) ed. Ginsburg, 1867, p. 120, 248.