صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني

Vowel you made Ufe of in the Pronunciation, is a plain Teftimony that no Vowel Points were used in his Time, that is, until the Beginning of the fifth Century after Chrift. Those therefore who place the Invention of the Points to about the Year 500, place it early enough.

The Inventors of thefe Points are called Maforites, and their Work Mafora, or the Mafore, which is derived from the Hebrew Word D Mafar, tradidit, becaufe, after the Hebrew became a dead Language) thefe Maforites, from Age to Age, delivered down the Manner how the Hebrew Words were to be written, read and pronounced. And that there might be preferved to all future Ages, they invented a great Number of Points for Vowels, Paufes, and Accents, which the Reader fhould obferve. I fhall not trouble myfelf nor you concerning the nice Curiofity and needlefs Labour of thefe Maforites, not only to number the Verfes contained in every Book of the Law and the Prophets, and in all of them together, but likewife the Words, and even the Letters. The Points are all I fhall take Notice of; because the Learned, until of late, have thought them to be of great Ufe, and that the Hebrew Language cannot be learned without the Knowledge, at least of the Vowel Points. Even those who have thought the Vowel Points, as well as thofe of Paufe or Accent, deferve no Regard to afcertain or fix the Sense of a Word, yet think a Beginner muft learn them, the Language not being otherwife to be learned. But Mafclef, a Prieft and Canon of Amiens in France, has, not many Years fince, published a Hebrew Grammar, whereby he tells us, that Language may be learned without any Knowledge of the Vowel Points; and that he himself, being puzzled with the many Rules given with Relation to the Points, threw them all afide, and found it much easier and better to learn the Language without them.

It is pretended by thofe who lay a great Strefs on the Points, that the fame Word, as moft of the Hebrew Words are, being written with Confonants only, has various Significations, according to the Vowels with which you read or pronounce it. For Confonants alone cannot be read or pronounced without the Affiftance of Vowels: And the Signification of Words in all Languages depends upon the Pronunciation of the Vowels, as well as of the Confonants; and that in the Hebrew, though most of the Words are written without any Vowels, as must be confeffed by thofe who will not allow all the Letters to be Confonants; therefore, where Words are written with Confonants only, and yet have different Significations according to their different Prenunciation, they must have different Vowels affixed to them, and for this Reason the Maforites have done well to affix different Vowels to the fame Word, to afcertain the Senfe of it. Thus, for Inftance, the three Letters 7 dbr have at least five different Significations. 1. He fpake. 2. Speaking. 3. A Word. 4. A Peftilence. 5. A Fold for Sheep or Cattle. No Doubt, but while the Hebrew was a living Language, the Word compofed of these three Letters was underflood in its dif. ferent Significations by the different Vowels they ufed when they spake And fuch Vowel Points the Maforites have now affixed to it, by which we may know when and where thofe three Letters fignify one Thing and when another. When it fignifies he fpake, they affix the

it.

Points which denote a fhort and a long, and say dabar. When it is a Participle, and fignifies Speaking, by their Points they read dober. When it is a Noun, and fignifies a Word, they put it under two a's fhort, and read dabar. When it fignifies a Peftilence, they put two e's under, and read deber. When it fignifies a Fold, they put the Points which denote a and e, and read it daber. And the like have they done with Regard to all other Words.

What has been done, in this Cafe, by the Maforites, would certainly be of great Ufe and Service to the Church for understanding the Hebrew Text, if they had lived while the Hebrew was a living Language, and thefe Vowel Points had been then used, and we could have been affured of their Knowledge of the true Pronunciation of all Words, according to their different Significations: But as the Hebrew was become a dead Language many hundred Years before their Time, the true ancient Pronunciation was as much unknown then as now. We have St. Jerom's Teftimony before cited, that different Vowels were used in the Pronunciation of the fame Word in different Countries. And this was at least a hundred Years before the Maforites began the Invention of their Points, either for Vowel, Paufe or Accent. I fay, began, because they were not all invented at once, but Improvements continued to be making for fome Centuries. It is alfo manifeft, from the LXX, that the ancient Jews read with different Vowels from those which the Maforites have affixed.

This is very well proved by Masclef in his Arguments for his New Grammar, p. xxxviii, &c. which I will give you in his own Words. He fays therefore

[ocr errors]

"Rem ipfam accuratius & per partes evolvamus. In duobus fita "eft pronunciatio Mafforethica. 1o. In valore feu fono quem fingulis Alphabethi literis tribuit. 2°. In Vocalibus, quas punctis exprimit. Atqui quoad utramque partem à veteri norma non parum recedit "punctatio feu pronunciatio Mafforethica.

66

"Quod ad literas, hæc pauca è multis annotamus. Docent Veteres "literam non ut p fed ut ph pronunciari. Nulla apud eos Mentio "duplicis, nullibi aiunt literas 7 duplici modo efferri. Tria "Argumenta quibus evincitur Maforethicam pronunciationem à veteri " & genuina non parum deflexiffe.

"Quoad alteram Pronunciationis partem, fcilicet vocales quas fup"plent, æque aberrant Mafforethæ. Difcrepant enim a Veteribus tam "circa vocales fupplendas, quam circa loca in quibus fupplendæ funt. "Primò in eorum fyftemate nulla, ut aiunt, vocalis frequentior oc"currit quam Scheva. Atqui in Pronunciatione iftius Motionis longe "a Veteribus difcedunt Mafforethæ. Punctorum Mafforethicorum "Myfteriis haud initiatus cum hic Mystagogum adhibebo, quem "nemo mihi favere voluiffe caufabitur. D. Guarinum dico novæ "Methodi acerrimum hoftem, qui Grammaticæ fuæ Tom. I. p. 37. "fic loquitur.

'

"Antiqui Interpretes Græci lectione r Scheva regulas longè diverfas ab "iis quas tradunt hodierni Grammatici fequebantur. 1°. Enim illud jæpè "non legebant initio Diétionis, ut Gen. i. I. N Bereichit in principio: Græci Benote. Levit. xiii. 19. N Seeth, tumor; Græci,

66

[ocr errors]

"and, &c. e contra quando duo Scheva initio Dictionis concurrunt, prius fe"cundum Grammatices hodiernæ canones vulgò mutatur in hhiriq qaton, id << eft in i: pofterius vero quiefcit, id eft, mutum eft, illi vero interdum "utrumque legebant. Ex his aliifque plurimis exemplis quæ paffim oc"currunt in Origenis Hexaplis a noftro D. Bernardo de Montfaucon editis, "videtur conflare variam admodum et incertam fuiffe apud Veteres Scheva legendi rationem. Huc ufque Guarinus.

[ocr errors]

"Secundò idem colligitur è nominum propriorum diversâ prolatione. "Legunt Recentiores Nebuchadnetfar, Rechabgam, Pinchas, Chifkia, Firmeia, Fechezebel, Achafchveros, Dariavefch, Kiflef, &c. LXX. Jo"fephus & alii Nabuchodonofor, Roboam, Phinees, Ezechias, Jeremias, "Ezechiel, Auerus, Darius, Cafleu, &c. Eo argumento utitur Bochar"tus Epiftola ad Jacobum Capellum de linguæ tum Chaldaicæ tum "Syriacæ pronunciatione: Extat Tom. 3. Col. 853. Recentiores He"brai, inquit, a Veteribus in Hebraici fermonis pronunciatione multum dif"ferunt ut ex nominibus huic linguæ propriis, fi cum antiquis verfionibus con-"ferantur, difcimus.

[ocr errors]

"Atqui fi a veteri pronunciatione ita difcordant in nominibus pro"priis, quorum pronunciatio facilius potuit confervari (omnium enim ore femper trita fuerunt ifta nomina) quid exiftimandum contigiffe "in vocibus, quæ (utpote rarius in quotidiano fermone occurrentes) 66 promptius potuerunt ad aliam pronunciationem detorqueri? Dicent "Adverfarii emollita effe a LXX Interpretibus nomina propria, quo "Græcis auribus minus barbara apparerent.

"Efto. At quantumvis emollita dicantur, fieri non poteft ut a pro"nunciatione Mafforethica tam difcrepent, fi eodem modo & LXX & "Mafforethæ ea in Fontibus Hebraicis legerunt. Potuerunt quidem "inflecti pofteriores Syllabæ, ut iftis nominibus daretur Græca termi"natio; at quid caufæ fuit, cur non ubique fervaretur idem Syllaba"rum numerus, priorefque & intermedia Syllabæ tam turpiter defor"marentur ?

66

"Non in folis nominibus propriis, fed & in aliis diverfitas illa confpicitur. Habemus aliquot fragmenta Hexaplorum, in quibus Tex"tum Hebraicum literis Græcis defcripferat Origines ad eam normam, qua tunc a Judæis pronunciabatur. Scimus fimiliter quomodo plu"rima loca ejufdem Textus legerit & pronunciarit Hieronymus. Si "conferantur ea loca cum Mafforethica pronunciatione, nec rarò nec parum a veteri videbitur Mafforethica difcrepare. Nullus eft Scrip"turæ Interpres Mafforethis vetuftior, quem non deprehendas haud "rarò fecutum effe diverfam a Mafforethica pronunciationem; ita "tamen ut quo quifque proprior fuit Malforetharum tempori, eo propius illius lectio ad eorum punctationem accedat. LXX omnium "antiquiffimi longiffimè recedunt."

[ocr errors]

But if nothing more than the bare Pronunciation of Hebrew Words was concerned in the Cafe, the Matter would not be worth the leaft Dispute. We know not how the ancient Greeks and Romans pronounced the Latin and Greek Tongues. Every Nation now gives the fame Sound to the Latin and Greek Letters, which they give to those of their own Language, which occafions thofe Languages to be differently pronounced by different People. However, all write and inter

pret

pret them in the fame Manner; which Difference in Pronouncing or Speaking is of little or no Confequence. But the Cafe is different with regard to the Hebrew, most of the Words in that Language (as has been obferved) are written without Vowels, and the Question is, what Vowels the Words require to make the Senfe understood; not how the Words are to be pronounced in Speaking, when Vowels are affixed to them. Therefore we fay, that as it appears from the LXX, that the Jews, before our Saviour's Time, and from Origen and St. Jerom, that for 400 Years at least after our Saviour's Time, ufed other Vowels, by which they fpake their Words, than thofe which the Maforites have ufed; the Confequence is, that the Points which the Maforites have now affixed to every Hebrew Letter, whether for Vowel, Paufe, or Accent, are of little or no Authority, and deferve not to be regarded by us: And that the true Senfe of an Hebrew Word, written only with Confonants, is not to be fetched from the Points of the Mafore, and the Rules given concerning them, but from the Context and Conftruction, and the Affiftance of the LXX, and other ancient Tranflations.

Now though (as before obferved) we cannot charge the Jews with wilful Falfification of the Hebrew Text, that is, they have not of fet Purpose changed the Letter of their Bibles, yet we cannot fay that they have not in fome Places wilfully falfified the Senfe by their Points, of which Mafclef gives us a notable Inftance in his Arguments for his New Grammar, p. lxvi.

[ocr errors]

"Anno 1712 circa Augufti initium aliquot dies Ambiani commo"rati funt Judæi duo Metenfes. Seniori & doctiori nomen erat Daniel "Zei, alteri Elias Prag. Collocuti fimul pluries de Religione; veni"mus tandem ad celebre Jacobi Vaticinium, Gen. xlix. non auferetur fceptrum de Juda. Afferebam inde manifeftò fequi, jam præteriiffe "tempus adventui Meffiæ præfignatum: Nihil tenes, inquit Daniel "Zei; male enim paufas & diftinguis hunc verfum. Et unde hoc, "inquam? Non auferetur fceptrum de Judd, Virgula, & Dux de femore "ejus, Virgula, donec veniet qui mittendus eft, punctum. Nunquid non "finitur fenfus in voce, & incifi novi initium eft? Id certe " & loci contextus & Veterum confenfus expofcit. Quin & id probat "accentus Athnach fub voce etiam in veftris Bibliis collocatus "hoc modo. Erant præ manibus Biblia Rabini Manaffeh Ben "Ifrael. Tum fubridens Daniel, nondum Myfteriis noftris plenè ini“tiatus es, inquit. Vide accentum fequentem fub voce Ty. Munus "illius eft efficere ut vox cui fubjacet præcedenti connectatur. Et quanquam id per fe non indubie præftaret, præftaret tonus Muficus "hujus vocis. Cum enim a nobis decantatur verficulus ille, vocem "attollimus ad vocabulum Ty, & aliquantulum paufamus: Deinde "cum particula hemiftichium aliud inchoamus. Unde fit ut hujus "loci fenfus ifte fit. Non auferetur Sceptrum de Judd & Dux de femore "ejus in æternum, Virgula, quando venerit Meffias, &c. Argumentare nunc quantum volueris, quid inde aut pro te, aut contra nos in"feres? Inftabam ut facile erat; fed fruftra novitatem lectionis, vete

[ocr errors]

tr

A

"rumque

"rumque Rabbinorum in ifto verfu noftro more legendo confenfum "regerebam homini vim argumenti ne quidem fentienti. - Cum hæc "primum fcribebam nondum noveram interpretationem modo allatam "fcripto fuiffe traditam a Rabbino Abraham Ifrael Pilzaro Judæo "Batavo."

The late learned Mr. Johnson of Cranbrook, in his pofthumous Difcourfe on Daniel's feventy Weeks, has alfo obferved how the Maforites have endeavoured to marr that Prophecy alfo, by their Points, by putting a Stop, which they call an Athnach, which anfwers to our Semicolon, in the Place where there ought to have been no more than a Comma. And in this Place our English Tranflators have followed them, though in the former, concerning Shiloh, they have not. "For

66

(as Mr. Johnjon alfo obferves) thofe great Men, who tranflated our "Bible, took the prefent Hebrew Text, as it is pointed by the Mafo"rites, to be the only Senfe and Meaning of the Old Teftament." Now by this Maforitic Pointing they have endeavoured to make the Text unintelligible. For thus it ftands, Dan. ix. 25. Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the Commandment to restore and build Jerufalem, unto the Meffiab the Prince, fhall be seven Weeks; and threefcore and two Weeks the Street fhall be built again, and the Wall, even in troublesome Times. Now by placing their Athnach or Semicolon after the feven Weeks, and thereby cutting off the feven Weeks from the threefcore and two Weeks, the make the Prophecy wholly unferviceable to the Chriftians. For it is moft certain that Jefus, whom the Chriftians have received for the Meffias, did not come at the End of feven Weeks, or 49 Years, after the Commandment went forth to reftore and build Jerufalem, whether we understand it of the Edict of Cyrus or Artaxerxes for that Purpofe. And the Maforites have left themselves at Liberty to apply the Prophecy to any Meffiah or anointed Prince or High-Priest of their own. But had they joined the fixty-two Weeks to the feven Weeks, as the Context plainly fhews they ought to have done, and read the Text, as no doubt it ought to be read, From the going forth of the Commandment to refore and build Jerufalem, unto the Meffiah the Prince, fhall be feven Weeks, and threefcore and two Weeks, that is, 69 Weeks, or 483 Years, and there placed their Athnach or Semicolon, the Number of Years would exactly point out the Time when the Chriftian Meffiah came. Therefore they fixed their Point of Pause so, as to make what they pleafed of the Words.

These two Prophecies of Jacob concerning Shiloh, and of Daniel's Weeks, do fo clearly prove that the true Meffiah, fo long and often foretold by the holy Jewish Prophets, must have been long fince come, and done and fuffered what was prophefied concerning him, and fo exactly point to the Time when our bleffed Lord Jefus did actually come, that it is not to be wondered at that the Jews, who are fo obftinately bent not to believe in Jefus as the Chrift, thould use all their Endeavours to render thefe two Prophecies wholly unferviceable to our proving Jefus to be the Christ, the Son of the living God, and Saviour of the World. But no Chriflian, I believe, has been fo weak as to understand thofe Texts in the Manner the Jews fhew by thefe Points they would have them understood. For although our, and it may be

other

« السابقةمتابعة »