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Front Matter Source: Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 15, No. 1/2 (1896), p. xix Published by: The Society of Biblical Literature Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3268823 . Accessed: 15/05/2014 17:02 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . The Society of Biblical Literature is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of Biblical Literature. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 194.29.185.243 on Thu, 15 May 2014 17:02:17 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Front MatterSource: Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 15, No. 1/2 (1896), p. xixPublished by: The Society of Biblical LiteratureStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3268823 .

Accessed: 15/05/2014 17:02

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

The Society of Biblical Literature is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access toJournal of Biblical Literature.

http://www.jstor.org

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JOURNAL

OF

BIBLICAL LITERATURE

VOL. XV. 1896 PARTS I. AND II.

CONTENTS. PAGE

I. THE SOURCES E AND J IN THE BOOKS OF SAMUEL. Henry Preserved Smith . I 2. NOTES ON HOSEA'S MARRIAGE: Lewis B. Paton ...... 9 3. THE ODE IN ISAIAH XIV. William Henry Cobb .. ..... 8

4. WAS Kt• '1 A MESSIANIC TITLE? Nathaniel Schmidt . . .... 36

5. TEXT-CRITICAL NOTES ON EZEKIEL. C. H. Toy . ..... 54 6. ON RUTH II. 8. Morris astrow, r. . ........ 59 7. OLD TESTAMENT PROBLEMS. Francis Brown . .

...... 63 8. ACTS XV. 21. 7ames Hardy Ropes ......... 75 9. 1~~S , I SAM. IX. 24. Macy M. Skinner .. ...... 82

IO, CHRIST'S TREATMENT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. 7ohn P. Peters . . . 87 II. NOTES ON THE OLD TESTAMENT. 7ohn P. Peters . . . . . . iO6 12. THE ALLEGED TRIPLE CANON OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. Willis _. Beecher . 118

13. NEHEMIAH'S NIGHT RIDE (NEH. II. 12-15). Theodore F. Wright . . .

129 14. THE SCRIPTURAL TEACHING RESPECTING THE HOLY SPIRIT. F. B. Denio 135 15. NOTES ON

AMOS II. 7, VI. 10, VIII. 3, IX. 8-10. C. C. Torrey . . . . 151

16. THE ARTICULAR INFINITIVE WITH elC. I. 7: Beckwith . . . . . 155 17. THE KINSHIP OF GODS AND MEN AMONG THE EARLY SEMITES. George A.

Barton . . . . .. .. . . . 168

18. THE MEANING OF THE PHRASE T& oT70LEotXe 7"0o K6OTOV IN GAL. IV. 3 AND COL. II. 8. E. Y. Hincks ........... 183

19. DANIEL VIII. 9-14. George F. Moore . . . . . . . 193 20. NOTES ON PSALM XXII. 25 AND NAHUM II. 8. T. K. Cheyne .

. . 198

PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY, DECEMBER 1895, JUNE 1896 .i OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY . . ....... xii CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS . ...... xx CONTENTS OF VOLS. X.-XV., 1891-96 ...... . xxiii INDEX TO VOLS. I.-XV., 1881-96 ........ . xxvii

PUBLISHED BY THE

Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis. 1896.

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, $3.00. SINGLE NUMBERS, $1.50o.

To be had of the Secretary, W. H. COBB, Congregational Library, Boston, Mass.

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OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETY.

1896-97.

PROF. E. T. BARTLETT, President. PROF. M. S. TERRY, Vice-President.

REV. WILLIAM H. COBB, Recording Secretary. PROF. D. G. LYON, CorreSionding Secretary. PROF. WILLIS J. BEECHER, Treasurer.

PROF. CHARLES A. BRIGGS, ex-oficzo, PROF. J. HENRY THAYER,

PROF. FRANCIS BROWN, " Associates

PROF. EDWARD L. CURTIS, in

PROF. EDWARD Y. HINCKS, Council.

DR. JOHN P. PETERS,

PROF. LEWIS B. PATON,

PUBLISHING COMMITTEE.

PROF. H. S. NASH. PROF. D. G. LYON. DR. W. H. COBB.

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JOURNAL

OF

BIBLICAL LITERATURE

VOLUME XV

(The Authors alone are responsible for the Contents of their

Papers.)

PUBLISHED BY THE

SOCIETY OF BIBLICAL LITERATURE AND EXEGESIS

1896

PRINTED BY J. S. CUSHING & CO., NORWOOD, MASS.

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CONTENTS.

PAGE

The Sources E and J in the Books of Samuel. Henry Preserved

Smith ... . I

Notes on Hosea's Marriage. Lewis B. Paton . . . . . 9

The Ode in Isaiah xiv. William Henry Cobb . . . . . 18

Was k': a a Messianic Title? Nathaniel Schmidt . . 36

Text-Critical Notes on Ezekiel. C. H. Toy 54

On Ruth ii. 8. Morris _astrow, 7r. . . . . . . 59

Old Testament Problems. Francis Brown . . . . . 63

Acts xv. 21. James Hardy Rofes . . . . . 75

p' 7 , I Sam. ix. 24. Macy M. Skinner . 82

Christ's Treatment of the Old Testament. 7ohn P. Peters . . 87

Notes on the Old Testament. 7ohn P. Peters . . . . o6

The Alleged Triple Canon of the Old Testament. Willis J. Beecher 118

Nehemiah's Night Ride (Neh. ii. 12-15). Theodore F. Wright . 29

The Scriptural Teaching respecting the Holy Spirit. F. B. Denio . 135

Notes on Amos ii. 7, vi. Io, viii. 3, ix. 8-io. C. C. Torrey . 151

The Articular Infinitive with ELk. 1. T. Beckwith . . . 155

The Kinship of Gods and Men among the Early Semites. George A. Barton . . . 168

The Meaning of the Phrase 7a o-roLXEta r70o KdOyOV in Gal. iv. 3 and

Col. ii. 8. E. Y. Hincks . . . . . 183

Daniel viii. 9-14. George F. Moore . . . . . 193

Notes on Psalm xxii. 25 and Nahum ii. 8. T. K. Cheyne . 198

Proceedings of the Society, December 1895, June 1896 . . . i

Officers and Members of the Society . . . . . . xii

Constitution and By-Laws . . . . . xx

Contents of Vols. X.-XV., 1891-1896 . . . . . . xxiii

Index to Vols. I.-XV., 1881-1896 . . . . . . . xxvii

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JOURNAL

OF

BIBLICAL LITERATURE.

NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS.

C ONTRIBUTORS to the JOURNAL OF BIBLICAL LITERATURE will greatly lighten the task of the editors, as well as

lessen the cost of composition and correction, by observing the following suggestions:

1. In preparing copy, please use ruled paper not over eight inches by ten in size, and open-ruled; and leave a margin of at least three inches on one side. The revision of a crowded manuscript is excessively troublesome and laborious. When the last sheet of the article has been finished, the last foot- note or other interpolation added, and the last subtraction made, please number the folios consecutively with the natural numbers from 1 to the end.

2. Write plainly, especially proper names and foreign words. If foreign characters are to be employed, let the ductus resemble as closely as possible the type in our fonts; if Roman or Italic characters with diacritical points are used, see that the points are distinct and rightly placed. Words to be printed in Italics should be once underscored. Words to be printed in Clarendon type may be once underscored with a wavy line. Type-writer copy always needs to be carefully revised, with especial attention to mechanical faults and to the punctuation.

3. Indicate paragraphs clearly by a wide indention at the

beginning; or, if the break is an afterthought, by the usual

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sign (?). Begin all larger divisions of an article on a fresh sheet of paper. It is hardly necessary to say that the proper construction of paragraphs is far more than a matter of external appearance.

4. Punctuate the copy precisely as you wish it to appear in print. The general system of punctuation adopted in the Journal is that set forth in Bigelow's " Punctuation and other

Typographlical Matters " (Boston, Lee and Shepard), a con- venient manual of subjects connected with the preparation of manuscript for the printer and the correction of proof, which will be found helpful in many ways. Double marks of quotation (" ") should be used for actual quotations; sin- gle marks (' '), for included quotations, definitions, and the like.

5. In citing the titles of books, give the title in full where it first occurs. In subsequent citations, the work may be referred to by the significant words of the title; but abbre- viations which may not be at once understood are to be avoided; and, above all, entire uniformity should be observed

throug,,hout the article. Where some conventional system

of citation is in general use, as in the case of the Vedas and the Brahmanic literature, or of the Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, the established custom of scholars should be followed. Titles of books will be priinted in Italics; titles of articles in periodicals, in quotation marks, with the name of the periodical in Italics. But the well-established method of abbreviating the titles of the following Journals, JA., JAOS., JBL., JRAS., PSBA., ZATW., ZDMG., ZWTh., should be adhered to.

6. It is desirable, for reasons of economy as well as good typographly, that footnotes be kept within moderate limits. References to footnotes should be made by brief series of natural numbers (say from 1 to 10), not by stars, daggers, etc. As to the method of inserting footnotes in the copy, good usage differs. A way convenient for author and editor and printer is to insert the note, with a wider left-hand mar-

gin than that used for the text, beginning the note on the line next after the line of text to which it refers, the text itself beintg resumed on the line next after the ending of the

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note. But if the note is an afterthought, or if it is long, it is well to interpolate it on a fresh sheet, perhaps of differently colored paper.

7. In matters for which general rules cannot easily be

given, contributors are requested to conform as far as pos- sible to the usage of the Journal, which may be learned from

previous volumes. 8. Proofs will be sent to the authors on duplicate slips,

with typographical corrections, suggestions, and queries by the editors. Contributors are requested to pay particular attention to the latter, and in every case to indicate either their rejection of a proposed change by drawing a pen through it, or else their acceptance of the same by drawing the pen through the query-mark (Qy), and in no case to make any erasures whatever. The first proofs should be read as closely as possible in order that the gleaning of cor- rections on the revise may be small. Those who may not have had experience in correcting proofs will find clear directions in Bigelow.

9. Contributors are respectfully reminded that additions and alterations in type, especially in such matter as we print in the Journal, are in many cases technically difficult and

proportionately costly, the bill for corrections sometimes amounting to as much as the first cost of composition; and that such alterations entail a most trying kind of labor, not only on editors and compositors, but on the authors them- selves as well; and they are accordingly requested to help the editors to make the most economical use of the Society's money by such careful preparation of their manuscript as shall render expensive alterations unnecessary.

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LIBRARIES AND INSTITUTIONS. xix

LIBRARIES AND INSTITUTIONS

WHICH SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PUBLICATIONS OF THE SOCIETY.

Amherst College, Amherst, Mass. Andover Theological Seminary, Andover, Mass. Astor Library, New York, N.Y.

Berkeley Divinity School, Middletown, Conn. British Museum, London, Eng. Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Penn. Bucknell Library, Chester, Penn.

City Library, Springfield, Mass.

Colgate University, Hamilton, N.Y.

Congregational Library, Boston, Mass.

Divinity School of Prot. Epis. Philadelphia, Penn. Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore, Md. Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass.

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, Ill. Lane Theological Seminary, Cincinnati, O. M'Cormick Theological Seminary, Chicago, Ill. Newberry Library, Chicago, Ill. Newton Theological Institution, Newton Centre, Mass. Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, N.J. Public Library, Boston, Mass. Public Library, Buffalo, N.Y. Public Library, Chicago, Ill. Public Library, Detroit, Mich. Public Library, Jersey City, N.J. Public Library, Newark, N.J. Public Library, Worcester, Mass.

Royal Library, Berlin, Germany. Southern Baptist Theol. Seminary, Louisville, Ky. State Library, Albany, N.Y. Union Theological Seminary, New York, N.Y.

University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass.

Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Williams College, Williamstown, Mass. Y. M. C. A. Library, New York, N.Y.

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