The Massorah.
This Is Appendix
30 From The Companion Bible.
All
the oldest and best manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible contain on every
page, beside the Text (which is arranged in two or more columns), a
varying number of lines of smaller writing, distributed between the
upper and lower margins. This smaller writing is called the Massorah
Magna or Great Massorah, while that in the side
margins and between the columns is called the Massorah Parva or Small Massorah.
The illustration given below is a reduced facsimile
of a Hebrew Manuscript (16.25 x 12.375), written in a German hand, about
the year A.D. 1120.
The small writing in the margins in this particular
Manuscript is seen to occupy seven lines in the lower margin, and four
lines in the upper; while in the outer margins and between the three
columns is the Massorah Para.
The word Massorah is from the root masar,
to devliver something into the hand of another, so as to commit
it to his trust. Hence the name is given to the small writing referred
to, because it contains information necessary to those into whose trust
the Sacred Text was committed, so that they might transcribe it, and
hand it down correctly.
The Text itself had been fixed before the Massorites were put in charge of it. This had been the work of the Sopherim (from saphar, to count, or number). Their
work, under Ezra and Nehemiah, was to set the Text in order after the
return from Babylon; and we read of it in Nehemiah 8:8 1 (compare Ezra 7:6,11). The men of "the Great Synagogue" completed the work. This work lasted about 110 years, from Nehemiah
to Simon the first, 410-300 B.C .
The Sopherim were the authorised revisers
of the Sacred Text; and, their work being completed, the Massorites were the authorised custodians of it. Their work was to preserve it.
The Massorah is called "A Fence to the Scriptures," because it locked all words and letters in their places. It does not
contain notes or comments as such, but facts and phenomena. It records
the number of times the several letters occur in the various books of
the Bible; the number of words, and the middle word; the number of verses,
and the middle verse; the number of expressions and combinations of
words, etc. All this, not from a perverted ingenuity, but for the set
purpose of safeguarding the Sacred Text, and preventing the loss or
misplacement of a single letter or word.
This Massorah is not contained in the
margins of any one Manuscript. No Manuscript contains the whole, or
even the same part. It is spread over many Manuscripts, and Dr. C.D.
Ginsburg has been the first and only scholar who has set himself to
collect and collate the whole, copying it from every available Manuscript
in the libraries of many countries. He has published it in three large
folio volumes, and only a small number of copies has been printed. These
are obtainable only by the original subscribers
When the Hebrew Text was printed, only the large type
in the columns was regarded, and small type of the Massorah was left, unheeded, in the Manuscripts from which the Text was taken.
When translators came to the printed Hebrew Text,
they were necessarily destitute of the information contained in the Massorah; so that the Revisers as well as the Translators
of the Authorised Version carried out their work without any idea of
the treasures contained in the Massorah; and therefore,
without giving a hint of it to their readers
This is the first time an edition of the Authorised
Version has been given containing any of these treasures of the Massorah,
that affect so seriouly the understanding of the Text. A vast number
of the Massoretic notes concern only the orthography, and matters that
pertain to the Concordance. But many of those which affect the sense,
or throw any additional light on the Sacred Text, are noted in the margin
of The Companion Bible.
Some of the important lists of words which are contained
in the Massorah are also given, videlicet, those that
have the "extraordinary points" (Appendix 31); the "eighteen emendations" of the Sopherim (see Appendix 33); the 134 passages where they
substituted Adonai for Jehovah (see
Appendix 32); and the Various Readings called Severin (see Appendix 34). These are given in separate
Appendixes; but other words of any importance are preserved in our marginal
notes.
Readers of The Companion Bible are put
in possession of information denied to former generations of translators,
commentators, critics, and general Bible students.
For futher information on the Massorah see Dr. Ginsburg's Introduction to the Hebrew Bible, of
which only a limited edition was printed; also a small pamphlet on The
Massorah published by King's Printers.
NOTE
1 The Talmud explains that "the book" meant the original
text; "distinctly" means explaining it by giving the Chaldee
paraphrase; "gave the sense" means the division of words,
etc. according to the sense; and "caused them to understand the
reading" means to give the traditional pronuciation of the words
(which were then without vowel points).

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