OBST 659 Quiz Hebrew Poetry and Wisdom
OBST 659 Quiz Hebrew Poetry and Wisdom
- One proposed setting for learning wisdom in ancient Israel is the ‘royal court’.
- In synonymous parallelism, the second line repeats ideas of the first line.
- Which statement defines a ‘non-alphabetic acrostic.’
- Quantitative meter as embraced by Josephus and some of the Church Fathers is accepted as the metrical key to Old Testament poetry by a number of Old Testament scholars today.
- The most likely time for wisdom to have been imported into Israel was during the time of King David.
- ‘My soul is among lions; I lie among the sons of men’ (Psalm 57:4a)
- The surrounding nations had no ‘wisdom teachers’ like Israel for the existence of ‘wise men’ was unique to Israel.
- The Bible states that there were other ‘wise men’ in the surrounding nations.
- The wisdom books are filled with the mention of the great moment in Israel’s history.
- ‘Folk wisdom’ may be defined as the observations on life by ordinary people.
- A single poetic line in Hebrew poetry is called a luxnos from the Greek.
- “And-cast-down from-heaven to-earth, The-beauty-of Israel” (Lam. 2:1b) is an example of 3:2 meter.
- In emblematic parallelism, one line is literal and the other line of poetry is metaphor.
- The Bible never links King Solomon with ‘wisdom’.
- Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs were placed in a special group within the Writings called the Five Megilloth.
- A single bicola consists of two, two verse units of Hebrew poetry.
- The idea of wisdom in the Old Testament had nothing to do with practical matters and was purely an intellectual exercise concerning important philosophical questions.
- Some synonyms of the word ‘wisdom’ connect the concept to ‘right behavior’.
- ‘He who walks with integrity walks securely, but he who perverts his ways will become known’ (Prov. 10:1).
- Fokkelman says Hebrew poetry is structured above the basic unit of bicolon or tricolon into verses and that groups of two or three or more verses form a unit called a ‘strophe’.
- Bishop Robert Lowth believed that the basic feature of Hebrew poetry was ‘parallelism’.
- In the Hebrew Bible, the five poetic books are found in the third division called the Writings or Kethubim.
- Identifying meter has proven extremely useful from an exegetical standpoint for the interpretation of the biblical text.
- Old Testament poetry would include all of the following: narrative, psalms of lament, proverbial wisdom, and non- proverbial wisdom.
- According to the Old Testament wisdom books, wisdom belongs to God.
- Many scholars agree with Watson that meter is a feature of Hebrew poetry, but that it is used flexibly.
- Which category does not reflect a source for wisdom reflection
- The Hebrew word most often used in the wisdom books for ‘wisdom’ is hokmah from the root hkm.
- ‘My son, if thine heart be wise, my heart shall rejoice, even mine. Yea, my heart shall rejoice, when thy lips speak right things’ (Prov. 23:15-16)
- There are other ‘wisdom passages’ in the Hebrew Bible outside of the wisdom books and the Psalms.
- A colon is a single verse unit (member) of Hebrew poetry.
- The book of Job is an example of ‘optimistic wisdom’.
- The order of the poetic books in our English Bibles came about from the order in the Greek Septuagint.
- An eight verse unit of Hebrew poetry (as in Psalm 119) is called a tristich or tricolon.
- One later (intertestamental) Jewish apocryphal work that can be classified as ‘wisdom literature’ is the Wisdom of Solomon.
- The Egyptian wisdom work the Instruction of Amenemope bears a surprising resemblance to Proverbs 22:17-24:22.
- The basic two literary genres of the Old Testament are prose and prophecy.
- ‘Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of the scornful;’ (Psalm 1:1).
- A literary feature that employs the same or similar sounding vowel sounds in accented positions
- The primary Old Testament wisdom books are: Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes.
- What type of parallelism is the verse ‘To know wisdom and instruction, to perceive the words of understanding’ (Prov. 1:2).
- “A wise son maketh a glad father, but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother.” (Prov. 10:1), is an example
of synonymous parallelism. - The comparative wisdom texts in the ancient Near East (e.g Egypt & Mesopotamian) contain examples of both ‘speculative’ and ‘pessimistic’ wisdom.
- In much of the 20th century, many critical scholars have believed that ‘wisdom literature’ in the Old Testament represented a tradition that was a foreign secular import into Israelite culture.
- Which of the following characteristic(s) may serve as a better help for biblical exegesis of poetic texts than meter.
- The Hebrew language depends largely upon rhyme for its rhythmic quality.
- Which book is not classified as a poetical book in the OT
- The phrase in Judges 15:16 “With the jawbone of an ass/ have I mightily raged…”, would be a bicolon or distich.
- Hebrew poetic ‘meter’ is primarily based on ‘rhyme’.
- A stich is a term for a Hebrew poetic unit that is comparable to a colon.
- The two marks of Hebrew poetry for Adele Berlin are ‘parallelism’ and ‘terseness’.
- Qinah or dirge meter was seen traditionally as the meter of Old Testament laments.
- Moving beyond Lowth’s views, modern interpreters now believe that parallelism operates on many levels including: grammatical, lexical, and phonological.
- Poetry is highly stylized language that is usually easy to distinguish from prose stories.
- Imagery in texts as another term for figurative language, includes numerous devices like metaphor, simile and allegory among others.
- The ‘fear of the Lord’ in the book of Deuteronomy has little similarity to the ‘fear of the Lord’ described in the wisdom books.
- The language of theology is deeply enriched by OT poetic imagery for its power of allusion reminds us of the more hidden and mysterious truths which theology seeks to express.
- “The mountains skipped like rams, the hills like lambs.” (Ps. 114:4) is an example of O’Connor’s ‘antithetic parallelism’.
- Lowth defined parallelism as the occurrence of pairs of lines in which the words or phrases in one line correspond in some way to those in the other.
- Some synonyms of ‘wisdom’ do give the word a more intellectual slant.
- According to Whybray, in the book of Proverbs ‘wisdom’ is always ‘life-skill’.
- Bishop Lowth identified five main types of Hebrew parallelism.
- The Song of Solomon is never associated with the wisdom books in the Old Testament.
- Ecclesiastes is an example of ‘speculative wisdom’.
- Some scholars believe that a professional class of ‘wise men’ or ‘sages’ existed in Israel along with the prophets and priests based on texts such as Jeremiah 18:18.
- The use of the name Yahweh in the phrase the ‘fear of the Lord’ connects biblical wisdom literature with Israel’s covenant God.
- There is no disagreement among scholars about what constitutes Hebrew poetry.
- An acrostic is where the Old Testament poet begins each successive poetic unit or a group of units with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet in a deliberate sequence.
- In a nonalphabetic acrostic, the number of lines matches the number of consonants in the alphabet.
- The book of Proverbs is an example of ‘pessimistic’ wisdom.
- Match the terms to their definitions assonance acrostic alliteration onomatopoeia paronomasia lyric poetry gnomic poetry elegaic poetry binah imagery