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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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194 BEFORE JERUSALEM FELL<br />

bets can be found in the Roman numeral system. In Roman numerals<br />

the letter I possessed the numerical value of 1; V was 5; X was 10;<br />

C was 100; D was 500; and so forth. The Greek and Hebrew languages<br />

operated similarly, although their numerical equivalents followed<br />

the alphabetic order and employed the entire alphabet.2<br />

Because of the two-fold use of letters as both alphabets and<br />

numbering systems, cryptogrammic riddles were common in ancient<br />

cultures. Cryptograms involved the adding up of the numerical values<br />

of the letters of a word, particularly a proper name.3 In Greek<br />

these riddles were called ioo y&pza (“numerical equality”); in Rabbinic<br />

Hebrew such cryptograms were known as “gematria” (from the<br />

Hebrew word for “mathematical”).4 By the very nature of the case<br />

cryptograms almost invariably involved a riddle. This can be seen<br />

in that the word very simply could have been spelled out, and also<br />

in that any particular arithmetical value could fit a number of words<br />

or names.<br />

Zahn provides us an example of a cryptogram discovered in<br />

excavations from Pompeii, which was buried by volcanic eruption in<br />

A.D. 79. In Greek the inscription written was: @zi3 ij< @9p6G @<br />

p E (“I love her whose number is 545”).<br />

The name of the lover is concealed; the beloved will know it when she<br />

recognises her name in the sum of the numerical value of the 3 letters<br />

@p e, i.e., 545(@ = 500 + p = 40 + e = 5). But the passing stranger<br />

does not know in the very least who the beloved is, nor does the 19th<br />

century investigator know which of the many Greek feminine names<br />

she bore. For he does not know how many letters there are in the<br />

name which gives us the total of 545 when added numerically.5<br />

2. For Greek, see W. G. Rutherford, 2% First Greek Grammar (London: 1935), pp.<br />

143ff. For Hebrew see E. Kautzsch, cd., Gszeniss’ Hebrew Grammar, 28th cd., trans. E.<br />

Cowley (Oxford: Clarendon, 1946), p. 30. See individual alphabetic entries in G.<br />

Abbott-Smith, A Mawal Greek Lasimz of th Nero Tukvrwrzt (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark,<br />

1937), ad. 10C.; and Joseph H. Thayer, A Greek-English Lexizon of tlu Nsw T~tument (New<br />

York: American Book, 1889), ad. 10C.<br />

3. Irenaeus mentions this phenomenon in his Agaimt Heresia 5:30:1 (although this<br />

statement is probably by a later copyist): “numbers also are expressed by letters.”<br />

4. J. Massyngberde Ford, Rewlation. Anchor Bible (Garden City: Doubleday, 1975),<br />

p. 225.<br />

5. Cited in Oskar Ruble, ‘(dp@z&f’ in Gerhard Kittel, cd., I%obgkal Dictionary oj<br />

th New Testarrwnt [TDNT-], trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,<br />

1964), p. 462. See also Miller Burrows, What Mean These Stonss? (New Haven:<br />

American Schools of Oriental Research, 1941), p. 270.

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