Sceptre; Scepter

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Sceptre; Scepter [1]

sep´tẽr ( שׁבט , shēbheṭ , שׁרביט , sharbhı̄ṭ , expanded form in   Esther 4:11;  Esther 5:2;  Esther 8:4; ῥάβδος , rhábdos (Additions to Esther 15:11;  Hebrews 1:8 ), σκῆπτρος , skḗptros ): A rod or mace used by a sovereign as a symbol of royal authority. The Hebrew shēbheṭ is the ordinary word for rod or club, and is used of an ordinary rod (compare  2 Samuel 7:14 ), of the shepherd's crook ( Psalm 23:4 ), scribe's baton or marshal's staff ( Judges 5:14 ), as well as of the symbol of royalty. Its symbolism may be connected with the use of the shēbheṭ for protection ( 2 Samuel 23:21;  Psalm 23:4 ) or for punishment ( Isaiah 10:24;  Isaiah 30:31 ). It is used with reference to the royal line descended from Judah ( Genesis 49:10 ), and figuratively of sovereignty in general and possibly of conquest (  Numbers 24:17 , in Israel;  Isaiah 14:5 , in Babylonia;  Amos 1:5 ,  Amos 1:8 , in Syria, among Philistines;  Zechariah 10:11 , in Egypt), the disappearance or cutting off of him that holdeth the scepter being tantamount to loss of national independence. The kingship of Yahweh is spoken of as a scepter ( Psalm 45:6 (Hebrew verse 7) quoted in   Hebrews 1:8 ). The manner of using the scepter by an oriental monarch is suggested in the act of Ahasuerus, who holds it out to Esther as a mark of favor. The subject touches the top of it, perhaps simply as an act of homage or possibly to indicate a desire to be heard. The scepter of Ahasuerus is spoken of as "golden" ( Esther 5:2 ), but it is probable that scepters were ordinarily made of straight branches ( maṭeh ) of certain kinds of vines ( Ezekiel 19:11 ,  Ezekiel 19:14 ).

It is sometimes difficult to determine whether the word shēbheṭ is used in figurative passages in the sense of scepter or merely in the ordinary sense of staff (e.g.   Psalm 125:3 , the King James Version "rod," the Revised Version (British and American) and the American Standard Revised Version "sceptre" (of the wicked);  Psalm 2:9 , "rod of iron";  Proverbs 22:8 , "rod of his wrath"). Another word, meḥōḳēḳ , literally, "prescribing" (person or thing), formerly translated uniformly "lawgiver," is now generally taken, on the basis of parallelism, to mean "sceptre" in four poetic passages ( Genesis 49:10 , "ruler's staff" to avoid repetition;  Numbers 21:18;  Psalm 60:7;  Psalm 108:8 ).

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