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Difference between revisions of "Bath-Kol"

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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23301" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23301" /> ==
<p> (בִּאּתאּקוֹל, [[Daughter]] f the ''Voice'' )'','' a rabbinical name for a supposed oracular voice, which Jewish writers regard as inferior in authority to the direct revelation that the O.T. prophets enjoyed (Vitringa, ''Observ. Sacr.'' 2:338), although the [[Targum]] and [[Midrash]] affirm that it was the actual medium of divine communication to Abraham, Moses, David, Nebuchadnezzar, etc. (Reland, Ant. Sacr. pt. 2, ch. 9). Neither are the Jewish authorities agreed as to what the [[Bath-Kol]] itself was, many maintaining that it was merely the echo of the divine utterance (Buxtorf, Lex. Talm. s.v. בת ). Some scholars have incorrectly rendered the term "daughter-voice," daughter's voice (Horne, ''Introd.'' 4:149; Jennings, ''Jewish Antiq.'' bk. 1, ch. 6). It has been supposed that [[Josephus]] alludes to the Bath-Kol in the annunciation to [[Hyrcanus]] that his sons had conquered [[Antiochus]] (Ans. 13:10, 3), and the awful warning voice in the [[Temple]] prior to its destruction ( War, 5:5, 3); but these and other instances seem to fall short of the dignity required. Prideaux, however, classes them all with the heathen species of divination called Sortes Vigilanae (Connection, 2:354), and Lightfoot even considers them to be either Jewish fables or devices of the devil (Hor. Heb. ad &nbsp;Matthew 3:17). Yet instances of voices from heaven very analogous occur in the history of the early [[Christian]] Church, as that which was instrumental in making [[Alexander]] bishop of Jerusalem, and that which exhorted [[Polycarp]] to be of good courage (Eusebius, Hist. Ecclesiastes 6, l; 4:15). See Danz, De filia vocis (Jen. 1716; also in Meuschen's Nov. Test. ex Ta'mude illustr. p. 351-378); Haner, De הת קול (Jen. 1673); Metzler, De vocis filia (Jen. 1673). (See Word Of The Lord). </p>
<p> ( '''''בִּאּתאּקוֹל''''' , [[Daughter]] f the ''Voice'' ) '','' a rabbinical name for a supposed oracular voice, which Jewish writers regard as inferior in authority to the direct revelation that the O.T. prophets enjoyed (Vitringa, ''Observ. Sacr.'' 2:338), although the [[Targum]] and [[Midrash]] affirm that it was the actual medium of divine communication to Abraham, Moses, David, Nebuchadnezzar, etc. (Reland, Ant. Sacr. pt. 2, ch. 9). Neither are the Jewish authorities agreed as to what the [[Bath-Kol]] itself was, many maintaining that it was merely the echo of the divine utterance (Buxtorf, Lex. Talm. s.v. '''''בת''''' ). Some scholars have incorrectly rendered the term "daughter-voice," daughter's voice (Horne, ''Introd.'' 4:149; Jennings, ''Jewish Antiq.'' bk. 1, ch. 6). It has been supposed that [[Josephus]] alludes to the Bath-Kol in the annunciation to [[Hyrcanus]] that his sons had conquered [[Antiochus]] (Ans. 13:10, 3), and the awful warning voice in the [[Temple]] prior to its destruction ( War, 5:5, 3); but these and other instances seem to fall short of the dignity required. Prideaux, however, classes them all with the heathen species of divination called Sortes Vigilanae (Connection, 2:354), and Lightfoot even considers them to be either Jewish fables or devices of the devil (Hor. Heb. ad &nbsp;Matthew 3:17). Yet instances of voices from heaven very analogous occur in the history of the early [[Christian]] Church, as that which was instrumental in making [[Alexander]] bishop of Jerusalem, and that which exhorted [[Polycarp]] to be of good courage (Eusebius, Hist. Ecclesiastes 6, l; 4:15). See Danz, De filia vocis (Jen. 1716; also in Meuschen's Nov. Test. ex Ta'mude illustr. p. 351-378); Haner, De '''''הת''''' '''''קול''''' (Jen. 1673); Metzler, De vocis filia (Jen. 1673). (See Word Of The Lord). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==