Languages of the Bible
What did Jesus and other Biblical figures really speak?
By Emily Monroy
A few years ago a broadcaster from Alberta, Canada was asking members
of the public their opinion on the nation's bilingual policy. According
to one woman, Canada did not need any such policy. If English was
good enough for Jesus, she said, surely it was good enough for Canadians.
Of course I had a huge laugh over this. In Jesus' time the languages
spoken in what we now call England were Celtic; the ancestor of modern-day
English was introduced several centuries later when the Germanic Angle
and Saxon tribes invaded the island, giving rise to the term "Anglo-Saxon."
But the Alberta woman's statement raises the question: what language
did Christ actually speak?
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If English was good enough for Jesus, surely it was
good enough for Canadians.
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One can be forgiven for thinking that Jesus' mother tongue was Hebrew.
After all, Hebrew, in which the Old Testament was written, is considered
the language of the Jews, and Christ himself was a Jew. In his daily
life, though, he conversed in Aramaic, a closely related language
that the Jews adopted during their exile in Babylonia and that more
recently was used in Mel Gibson's film The Passion of the Christ.
Some words of Aramaic origin in English include the name Thomas (meaning
"twin") and "abbot" from "abba," a term
for father. Jesus might have known Greek as well. At the time of the
New Testament, Greek had become a "lingua franca" in the
Mediterranean area, and as Jesus had dealings with non-Jews, he may
very well have used Greek on these occasions. It is unlikely, however,
that he spoke Latin, which was known by few in Palestine other than
the Roman administrators.
As stated earlier, Aramaic and Hebrew are very similar. They both
belong to a group of tongues known as the Semitic languages, some
familiar examples of which are Arabic, Phoenician, and Ethiopia's
Amharic. The Semitic languages are in turn part of a larger group
known as the Afroasiatic family, which includes a number of tongues
spoken in the Middle East and North and East Africa.
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Jesus might have known Greek as well.
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Many Semitic languages in the Bible, however, are today either extinct
or used only by small groups of individuals. To a large extent, these
languages were pushed to, or over, the brink by their sister tongue
Arabic, which expanded following the rise of Islam. Among the now-dead
languages are Moabite, Edomite, and Ammonite, whose speakers are mentioned
in various parts of the Old Testament. Ruth, to whom a book of the
Bible is dedicated, was a Moabite woman. Aramaic is now spoken by
about half a million people in Lebanon and Syria. Although it is under
constant threat from the more dominant Arabic around it, efforts are
being undertaken to preserve the language.
Not all the tongues in the Bible fall into the Semitic and Afroasiatic
categories. Others belong to the Indo-European family, a group that
encompasses most modern-day languages of Europe and several in Western
Asia and Northern India. Greek and Latin are well-known examples of
Indo-European languages that make their appearance in the New Testament,
which in fact was originally written in Greek. The Persians, of whose
empire the Biblical heroine Esther became queen, also spoke an Indo-European
language.
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Aramaic
is now spoken by about half a million
people in Lebanon and Syria.
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A lesser-known Indo-European people described in the Bible were the
Hittites. At one time rulers of a large empire in the Middle East,
their most famous member was Uriah, an officer in the Israelite army
whom David had killed after his (David's) affair with the former's
wife Bathsheba. Unlike Persian, Greek, and Latin, though, which live
on today in various forms - as Iranian, modern Greek, and the present-day
Romance tongues respectively - the language of the Hittites died without
leaving any descendants, so to speak.
The most extraordinary Biblical language concerns the Elamites, a
people mentioned in Genesis and Acts of the Apostles. They originated
from what is now Iran and later conquered Babylonia. Interestingly,
their language belonged to a family known as Dravidian, the most familiar
member of which (to Westerners at least) is Tamil. Though Dravidian
languages are at present largely confined to Southern India and Sri
Lanka, they were believed to have once been spoken over a much broader
area, hence the presence of the Elamites in Biblical lands.
So if my friend from Alberta were to meet Jesus, she would be well
advised to bring along a Greek or Aramaic interpreter!
Thank
you to Pastor Gerhard Wilch of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
in Toronto for assistance with this article.
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