An Explanatory Commentary On Esther With Four Appendices Consisting of the Sec

Cover An Explanatory Commentary On Esther With Four Appendices Consisting of the Sec
An Explanatory Commentary On Esther With Four Appendices Consisting of the Sec
Cassel, D. Paulus
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18:" They shall not lament for him, Ah my brother ! or, Ah sister ! they shall not lament for him, Ah Lord ! or, Ah His glory ! " In later times the Jews called those who held such funeral orations or sermons by the name of Saphdanim (DTISD), who it has been thought are the persons to whom Job alludes in chap. Iii. 8, when he says : " Let them curse it that curse the day. " Excessive lamentation for the dead was inseparably connected with excessive praise of them. Therefore in Bere- choth Q2a, ...it is strictly inculcated that the funeral orators will have to give an account for making a great ostentation. Among the public rites in connection with mourning, the misped, or " dirge, " or " oration, " was after all the most insignificant part. Hence the index of the fast days which we have under the name of Megillath Taanith, from the time of the destruction of the temple, constantly reminds us that lamentations must not be made. That is, that the fast days should be observed with sackcloth, ashes, and weeping, but without that additional and non-essential misped.

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