Music of the Bible, Christian Music Philosophy, Church Music, Music Education, Christian Music Education
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Monday, July 21, 2014
Reading (Singing) Distinctly Gave the "Sense" part 2
Reading
(Singing) Distinctly Gave the "Sense" part 2
The
word translated “read” in this verse is taken from the Hebrew word qara (7121) sometimes connotes reading
the scrolls, and at other times it means to call out or to proclaim the
torah.This proclaiming is commonly
understood by Hebrew scholars to mean the intoning or singing of
Scripture.
Note
that the Bible does not say that the Levite musicians gave commentary (like the
*Halakhah and *Haggadah from the *Midrash) on the content of the scrolls, but
merely about their type of “reading”, which I believe refers to the singing of
the Law through the use of the te’amim.We know with certainty that this rendering was performed so distinctly (parash 6567, i.e. to separate or to
specify) that it gave so much specificity to the meaning of the text that the
congregation “understood the reading" of the Torah.
So, you may legitimately ask, ”What should we learn
from this text in the book of Nehemiah?” Christian musicians in the twenty
first century need to be aware that proper musical rendering of the good news
of the Bible can make it more understandable to the hearers.The musician must perform sacred music in
such a way that the modern-day worshiper will be aware of the “sense” of the
message in order to understand distinctly.
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