כְּתָב
Definition
כְּתָב (kᵉthâb) is an Aramaic noun meaning 'writing' or 'document.' It refers to a formal, inscribed text, often of an official or authoritative nature. In the biblical context, it specifically denotes the written decrees of Persian kings, such as the administrative orders in Ezra 6:18 and 7:22, as well as the mysterious divine inscription in Daniel 5, where it appears as 'the writing on the wall' (Daniel 5:7-8, 5:24). This word emphasizes the permanence and legal weight of the written word in ancient governance and divine communication.
Biblical Usage
This word is used exclusively in the Aramaic portions of the Old Testament, primarily in Ezra and Daniel. It consistently appears in contexts of royal or divine authority. In Ezra, it refers to official Persian documents that regulate worship and administration (Ezra 6:18, 7:22). In Daniel 5, it is central to the narrative, describing the supernatural handwriting that pronounces judgment on King Belshazzar (Daniel 5:7-8, 5:15-17, 5:24). The usage pattern highlights written decrees as instruments of human law and divine prophecy.
Etymology
כְּתָב is the Aramaic cognate of the Hebrew word כָּתָב (kāthāb, H3791), both deriving from the root כ־ת־ב (k-t-b), meaning 'to write.' This root is common across Semitic languages. In Aramaic, כְּתָב specifically developed to denote the product of writing—a document or inscription—often with a formal or legal connotation, distinguishing it from more general terms for writing.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it bridges human and divine communication. In Daniel 5, the 'writing' (כְּתָב) is a direct, supernatural message from God, underscoring the authority of Scripture and God's sovereignty over kingdoms. It reminds readers that God's decrees are as binding as royal edicts. Understanding this Aramaic term enriches the study of divine judgment and revelation, highlighting how God uses written forms to convey irreversible truths.
In the ancient Near East, written documents, especially from kings, held immense authority and were considered unchangeable (as seen in Esther 8:8). כְּתָב reflects this cultural view, where a written decree was a permanent legal instrument. The 'writing on the wall' in Daniel 5 would have been understood as a divine edict, parallel to a royal proclamation, but with ultimate, supernatural enforcement, contrasting with modern casual perceptions of writing.
כָּתָב (kāthāb, H3791) — The Hebrew equivalent, used more broadly for any writing or scripture. סֵפֶר (sēpher, H5612) — Often means 'scroll' or 'book,' a collection of writings rather than a single inscription. דָּת (dāth, H1881) — Refers to 'law' or 'decree,' emphasizing the legal content rather than the written form itself.
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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