A Jot or a Tittle יוד

David Koberstein

Active member
יוד
I tell you the truth, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen,
will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.
Matthew 5:18


If you grew up reading the King James Version of the Bible, you would have read the passage above with
the words "one jot or one tittle." Perhaps you learned that this was some type of punctuation mark
equivalent to our English apostrophe. The "jot" that Jesus was referring to was the Hebrew letter yod.
It is the smallest letter in the Hebrew alphabet. Just half a line long.
The Yod is often written with a small line at the top - like a little capital "L" rotated 180 deg. What we translate
as "tittle" or "stroke of a pen" is just the small curve at the top of the letter the slight embellishment on the yod.
It was called the thorn of the yod.
So what Jesus was saying was, "Not the smallest letter or even a decoration on the smallest letter will disappear."
This is actually a well-known Hebrew expression, "lo yod v'lo kotso shel yod." "It means not a yod or a thorn of a yod,"
or "not the most insignificant or unimportant thing."

A story was told by another rabbi after Jesus' time that appears to illustrate what this means:
When God gave the Torah, he said. "the king moreover must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself...
He must not take many wives, or his heart will be lead astray. He must not accumulate large amounts of silver
and gold" (Deuteronomy 17:16-17). But instead, King Solomon had many wives and horses, and much gold.
When that happened, the letter yod ascended to God's throne and humbly said to the Lord, "Didn't you say
that no letter should ever be abolished from the Torah? Today Solomon has abolished the word "not" from
this law, and perhaps tomorrow he will abolish the whole thing! God responded, "Solomon and a thousand
like him will pass away, but the smallest tittle will not be canceled from you."


This parable gives us some insight into Jesus' words. Solomon was living as if Deuteronomy 17 didn't have
the word "not" in it., and as if God had commanded the opposite --- that the king should acquire many wives
and as much wealth as possible! But no matter as much Solomon ignored the law. God's commands could
not be canceled.
Many people in our world today believe that we can live our lives as if God doesn't exist and that the rules are
ours to make. But this lesson tells us that the final standard by which we must live is God's Word, not our own.

Shalom Rav שלום רב
 
It's quite dishonest to claim a work you did not write.
I'm not claiming anything. I'm sharing an excerpt devotional from one of my books in my home library. I would think you would be more concerned about the contents than where it came from or who wrote it. I hope you don't take that same approach to your Bible.
Shalom Aleichem
 
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