מִנְיָן
enumeration
Definition
The Hebrew word מִנְיָן (minyân) means 'enumeration' or 'numbering.' It refers specifically to a counted or numbered amount, often in the context of a formal tally or inventory. In its single biblical occurrence in Ezra 6:17, it denotes the specific count of sacrificial offerings (bulls, rams, lambs) dedicated at the dedication of the rebuilt temple. The term implies an official, recorded number used in a ritual context.
Biblical Usage
מִנְיָן is used only once in the Old Testament, in Ezra 6:17. It appears in a post-exilic, Aramaic-influenced context within an official Persian document recorded in the book of Ezra. The word specifies the exact 'number' of animals offered as sacrifices during the temple dedication ceremony, highlighting the precise fulfillment of the command. Its usage is administrative and liturgical, tied to a formal act of worship and obedience.
Etymology
מִנְיָן is an Aramaic loanword adopted into Biblical Hebrew, derived from the root מְנָא (mᵉnā', H4483), meaning 'to count, number, or appoint.' This root is common in Aramaic and shares semantic ground with the Hebrew root מָנָה (mānâ, H4487). The word reflects the linguistic and cultural interchange during the post-exilic period when Aramaic was the administrative language of the Persian Empire.
Semantic Range
While מִנְיָן itself is a technical term for a count, its use in Ezra 6:17 connects to the theology of restoration and proper worship. The precise numbering of sacrifices signifies careful obedience to God's law and the re-establishment of covenantal worship after the exile. It underscores that the rebuilt community was meticulous in following prescribed rituals, viewing their obedience in tangible, quantifiable terms as an act of devotion.
In its original setting, מִנְיָן reflects the administrative precision of the Persian Empire, where official documents often included detailed inventories. The use of an Aramaic word in a Hebrew biblical text highlights the cultural and linguistic fusion of the post-exilic Jewish community under Persian rule. The numbered sacrifices were not merely a religious act but also a formal, recorded event, aligning with imperial practices of documentation and order.
מִסְפָּר (mispar, H4557) — The more common Hebrew word for 'number,' used extensively throughout the Old Testament in various contexts, from census counts to symbolic numbers. סְפָר (sᵉphār, H5608) — Can mean 'number' or 'counting,' but more often refers to a 'book' or 'scroll,' related to writing and recording.
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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