Early Personal Hymns of Thanksgiving

2nd Century BCE–2nd Century CE
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Hymns are heightened poetic expressions of praise and thanksgiving. They frequently use the rhetorical technique of parallelism, in which the same idea is expressed with different details in each half of a poetic line. God is praised for specific acts, such as creation, revelation, and redemption, or attributes, such as wisdom, compassion, and just rulership. Fictive hymns that are placed in the mouths of characters emphasize the specific divine attributes and actions that have motivated the hymn within the narrative context. Such fictive hymns are common in the Apocrypha, including the books of Ben Sira, Tobit, and Judith, and are placed in the mouths of biblical characters in retellings and expansions of biblical narratives (see Hymns and Prayers of and about Women). They also occur in the New Testament, including in the Gospel of Luke, where both Jesus’ mother, Mary, and John the Baptist’s father, Zechariah, give thanks to God in hymnic form.

Related Primary Sources

Primary Source

Ben Sira’s Hymn of Thanksgiving

Public Access
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Ben Sira is a wisdom book written in the land of Israel around the 180s BCE (before the Maccabean wars but after the high priesthood of Simon II; see HELLENISTIC PERIOD). The book was written in…

Primary Source

Tobit’s Hymn of Thanksgiving

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They kept blessing God and singing his praises, and they acknowledged God for these marvelous deeds of his, when an angel of God had…

Primary Source

Judith’s Hymn of Thanksgiving

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All the women of Israel gathered to see her, and blessed her, and some of them performed a dance in her honor. She took ivy-wreathed wands…

Primary Source

Magnificat and Benedictus

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And Mary said, “My soul magnifies the Lord,    and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for he…