Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Daniel 3:5
[That] at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of music, ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king hath set up:
5. cornet ] lit. horn: so Dan 3:7 ; Dan 3:10 ; Dan 3:15; elsewhere in this sense only in the ‘ram’s horn,’ Jos 6:5. The usual Hebrew name for this (or some similar) instrument is shphr. The word used here ( karn) is, however, common in the same sense in Syriac.
flute ] pipe, Aram. mashrotha (from the root sh e ra, to hiss, Heb. , Isa 5:26), not the word usually rendered ‘flute,’ and found besides (in the O. T.) only in Dan 3:7 ; Dan 3:10 ; Dan 3:15. It occurs, though very rarely (P.S [219] Col. 4339), in Syriac in the same sense.
[219] .S. R. Payne Smith, Thesaurus Syriacus.
harp ] or lyre, Aram. kitharos, i.e. the Greek : so Dan 3:7 ; Dan 3:10 ; Dan 3:15.
sackbut ] trigon ( Dan 3:7 ; Dan 3:10 ; Dan 3:15), Aram. sabbeka, whence no doubt the Gk. was derived, which was a small triangular instrument, of the nature of a harp, but possessing only four strings (see Athen. iv. P. 175, d, e, where it is said to be a Syrian invention; xiv. p. 633 f.; and the other passages cited by Gesenius in his Thesaurus, p. 935). Sambucistriae and psaltriae (see the next word) are mentioned by Livy (xxxix. 6) as a luxurious accompaniment at banquets, introduced into Rome from the East in 187 b.c. (The mediaeval ‘sackbut,’ Span. sacabuche, a sackbut, and also a tube used as a pump: from sacar, to draw out, and bucha, a box, meaning properly a tube that can be drawn out at will, was something quite different, viz. “a bass trumpet with a slide like the modern trombone,” Chappell, Music of the most Ancient Nations, i. 35, as quoted in Wright’s Bible Word-Book, s.v.)
psaltery ] Aram. psanrn, i.e. : so Dan 3:7 ; Dan 3:10 ; Dan 3:15. The Greek . and the Latin psalterium, was a stringed instrument, of triangular shape, like an inverted : it differed from the cithara (as Augustine repeatedly states) in having the sounding-board above the strings, which were played with a plectrum and struck downwards [220] . The number of strings in the ancient psaltery appears to have varied. The ‘psaltery’ is often mentioned in old English writers: in Chaucer it appears in the form ‘sawtrie,’ or ‘sauterie,’ as Manciple’s Tale, 17,200, “Bothe harp and lute, gitern and sauterie ”; and Shakespeare, for instance, speaks of “the trumpets, sackbuts, psalteries, and fifes” ( Coriol. v. 4. 53). The name, in the form sanr, passed also into Arabic; and the instrument, under this name, is mentioned in the Arabian Nights, and is in use also in modern Egypt [221] .
[220] Isid. Etym. iii. 22. 7; Cassiod. Praef. in Psalm, c. iv; Augustine on Psalms 56 (iv. 539a b, ed. Bened.), and elsewhere (see the Index); also Vergil, Ciris 177 ‘Non arguta sonant tenui psalteria chorda.’
[221] Dozy, Supplment aux Dict. Arabes, i. 694; Lane, Modern Egyptians, ii. 70. The LXX used (sometimes) for the Heb. nbel and kinnr. Elsewhere in A.V. or R.V. where ‘psaltery’ occurs (as Psa 33:2), it always represents nbel.
dulcimer ] bagpipe: Aram. smpnyh, i.e. the Greek . , which in Plato and Aristotle has the sense of harmony or concord, came in later Greek to denote a bagpipe, an instrument consisting essentially of a combination of pipes, supplied with wind from a bladder blown by the mouth, and called ‘symphonia,’ on account of the combination of sounds produced by it, one pipe (called the ‘chaunter’) producing the melody, and three others the fixed accompaniments, or ‘drones.’ It is remarkable that Polybius employs the same word of the music used, on festive occasions, by Antiochus Epiphanes [222] . Smpnyh is found, in the same sense, in the Mishna [223] ; and it passed likewise into Latin [224] , and hence into several of the Romance languages, as Ital. zampogna; Old Fr. Chyfonie, Chiffonie (v. Ducange). In Syriac, it appears in the form , which also denotes a kind of flute (Payne Smit [225] col. 3430). (The dulcimer was an entirely different kind of instrument, consisting of a trapze-shaped frame, with a number of strings stretched across it, which was laid horizontally on a table, and played by a small hammer, held in the hand, a rudimentary form of the modern pianoforte.)
[222] Polyb. xxvi. 10, as cited by Athen. Dan 3:21, p. 193d e (and similarly x. 52, P. 439 a) Antiochus Epiphanes associated with very common boon companions , (or ) , ; and xxxi. 4 (Athen. x. 53, p. 439 d) . ( is a jar [of wine?]; Diod. Sic. xxix. 32 has , lit. a little horn [ denoted the Phrygian flute ]. means very probably not a band, but as in Dan., and in the passages cited in the next note but one a musical instrument.)
[223] Levy, NHWB. iii. 492 a ( Kelim xi. 6, xvi. 8); cf. 513 a .
[224] As Pliny, H. N. viii. 64 (= the of Athen. xii. 19, p. 520 c), ix. 24; Prudentius, Symm. ii. 527 ‘signum symphonia belli Aegyptis dederat, clangebat buccina contra’; Fortunatus, Vit. Martin. iv. 48, ‘Donec plena suo cecinit symphonia flatu.’
[225] yne Smith R. Payne Smith, Thesaurus Syriacus.
worship ] lit. bow down to (Dan 2:46). So regularly.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
That at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet – It would not be practicable to determine with precision what kind of instruments of music are denoted by the words used in this verse. They were, doubtless, in many respects different from those which are in use now, though they may have belonged to the same general class, and may have been constructed on substantially the same principles. A full inquiry into the kinds of musical instruments in use among the Hebrews may be found in the various treatises on the subject in Ugolins Thesau Ant. Sacra. tom. xxxii. Compare also the notes at Isa 5:12. The Chaldee word rendered cornet – qarena’ – the same as the Hebrew word qeren – means a horn, as e. g., of an ox, stag, ram. Then it means a wind instrument of music resembling a horn, or perhaps horns were at first literally used. Similar instruments are now used, as the French horn, etc.
Flute – masheroqytha’. Greek, suringos. Vulgate, fistula, pipe. The Chaldee words occurs nowhere else but in this chapter, Dan 3:5, Dan 3:7, Dan 3:10, Dan 3:15, and is in each instance rendered flute. It probably denoted all the instruments of the pipe or flute class in use among the Babylonians. The corresponding Hebrew word is chalyl. See this explained in the notes at Isa 5:12. The following remarks of the Editor of the Pictorial Bible will explain the usual construction of the ancient pipes or flutes: The ancient flutes were cylindrical tubes, sometimes of equal diameter throughout, but often wider at the off than the near end, and sometimes widened at that end into a funnel shape, resembling a clarionet. They were always blown, like pipes, at one end, never transversely; they had mouthpieces, and sometimes plugs or stopples, but no keys to open or close the holes beyond the reach of the hands. The holes varied in number in the different varieties of the flute. In their origin they were doubtless made of simple reeds or canes, but in the progress of improvement they came to be made of wood, ivory, bone, and even metal. They were sometimes made in joints, but connected by an interior nozzle which was generally of wood. The flutes were sometimes double, that is, a person played on two instruments at once, either connected or detached; and among the Classical ancients the player on the double-flute often had a leather bandage over his mouth to prevent the escape of his breath at the corners. The ancient Egyptians used the double-flute. Illustrations of the flute or pipe may be seen in the notes at Isa 5:12. Very full and interesting descriptions of the musical instruments which were used among the Egyptians may be found in Wilkinsons Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians, vol. ii. pp. 222-327.
Harp – On the form of the harp, see the notes at Isa 5:12. Compare Wilkinson, as above quoted. The harp was one of the earliest instruments of music that was invented, Gen 4:21. The Chaldee word here used is not the common Hebrew word to denote the harp ( kinnor), but is a word which does not occur in Hebrew – qaytheros. This occurs nowhere else in the Chaldee, and it is manifestly the same as the Greek kithara, and the Latin cithara, denoting a harp. Whether the Chaldees derived it from the Greeks, or the Greeks from the Chaldees, however, cannot be determined with certainty. It has been made an objection to the genuineness of the book of Daniel, that the instruments here referred to were instruments bearing Greek names. See Intro. to ch. Section II. IV. (c) (5).
Sackbut – Vulgate, Sambuca. Greek, like the Vulgate, sambuke. These words are merely different forms of writing the Chaldee word sabbeka’. The word occurs nowhere else except in this chapter. It seems to have denoted a stringed instrument similar to the lyre or harp. Strabo affirms that the Greek word sambuke, sambyke, is of barbarian, that is, of Oriental origin. The Hebrew word from which this word is not improperly derived – sabak – means, to interweave, to entwine, to plait, as e. g., branches; and it is possible that this instrument may have derived its name from the intertwining of the strings. Compare Gesenius on the word. Passow defines the Greek word sambuke, sambuca (Latin), to mean a triangular-stringed instrument that made the highest notes; or had the highest key; but as an instrument which, on account of the shortness of the strings, was not esteemed as very valuable, and had little power. Porphyry and Suidas describe it as a triangular instrument, furnished with cords of unequal length and thickness. The Classical writers mention it as very ancient, and ascribe its invention to the Syrians. Musonius describes it as having a sharp sound; and we are also told that it was often used to accompany the voice in singing Iambic verses – Pictorial Bible. It seems to have been a species of triangular lyre or harp.
Psaltery – The Chaldee is pesanteryn. Greek, psalterion; Vulgate, psalterium. All these words manifestly have the same origin, and it hat been on the ground that this word, among others, is of Greek origin, that the genuineness of this book has been called in question. The word occurs nowhere else but in this chapter, Dan 3:5, Dan 3:7, Dan 3:10, Dan 3:15. The Greek translators often use the word psalterion, psaltery, for nebel, and kinnor; and the instrument here referred to was doubtless of the harp kind. For the kind of instrument denoted by the nebel, see the notes at Isa 5:12. Compare the illustrations in the Pict. Bible on Psa 92:3. It has been alleged that this word is of Greek origin, and hence, an objection has been urged against the genuineness of the book of Daniel on the presumption that, at the early period when this book is supposed to have been written, Greek musical instruments had not been introduced into Chaldea. For a general reply to this, see the introduction, section I, II, (d). It may be remarked further, in regard to this objection,
(1) that it is not absolutely certain that the word is derived from the Greek. See Pareau, 1. c. p. 424, as quoted in Hengstenberg, Authentic des Daniel, p. 16.
(2) It cannot be demonstrated that there were no Greeks in the regions of Chaldea as early as this. Indeed, it is more than probable that there were. See Hengstenberg, p. 16, following.
Nebuchadnezzar summoned to this celebration the principal personages throughout the realm, and it is probable that there would be collected on such an occasion all the forms of music that were known, whether of domestic or foreign origin.
Dulcimer – sumponeyah. This word occurs only here, and in Dan 3:10, Dan 3:15. In the margin it is rendered symphony or singing. It is the same as the Greek word sumphonia, symphony, and in Italy the same instrument of music is now called by a name of the same origin, zampogna, and in Asia Minor zambonja. It answered probably to the Hebrew ugab, rendered organ, in Gen 4:21; Job 21:12; Job 30:31; Psa 150:4. See the notes at Job 21:12. Compare the tracts on Hebrew musical instruments inscribed schilte haggibborim in Ugolin, thesau. vol. xxxii. The word seems to have had a Greek origin, and is one of those on which an objection has been founded against the genuineness of the book. Compare the Intro. Section I. II. (c). The word dulcimer means sweet, and would denote some instrument of music that was characterized by the sweetness of its tones.
Johnson (Dict.) describes the instrument as one that is played by striking brass wires with little sticks. The Greek word would denote properly a concert or harmony of many instruments; but the word here is evidently used to denote a single instrument. Gesenius describes it as a double pipe with a sack; a bagpipe. Servius (on Virg. AEn. xi. 27) describes the symphonia as a bagpipe: and the Hebrew writers speak of it as a bagpipe consisting of two pipes thrust through a leather bag, and affording a mournful sound. It may be added, that this is the same name which the bagpipe bore among the Moors in Spain; and all these circumstances concur to show that this was probably the instrument intended here. The modern Oriental bagpipe is composed of a goatskin, usually with the hair on, and in the natural form, but deprived of the head, the tail, and the feet; being thus of the same shape as that used by the water-carriers. The pipes are usually of reeds, terminating in the tips of cows horns slightly curved; the whole instrument being most primitively simple in its materials and construction. – Pict. Bible.
And all kinds of music – All other kinds. It is not probable that all the instruments employed on that occasionwere actually enumerated. Only the principal instruments are mention ed, and among them those which showed that such as were of foreign origin were employed on the occasion. From the following extract from Chardin, it will be seen that the account here is not an improbable one, and that such things were not uncommon in the East: At the coronation of Soliman, king of Persia, the general of the musqueteers having whispered some moments in the kings ear, among several other things of lesser importance gave out, that both the loud and soft music should play in the two balconies upon the top of the great building which stands at one end of the palace royal, called kaisarie, or palace imperial. No nation was dispensed with, whether Persians, Indians, Turks, Muscovites, Europeans, or others; which was immediately done. And this same tintamarre, or confusion of instruments, which sounded more like the noise of war than music, lasted twenty days together, without intermission, or the interruption of night; which number of twenty days was observed to answer to the number of the young monarchs years, who was then twenty years of age, p. 51; quoted in Taylors fragments to Calmets Dict. No. 485. It may be observed, also, that in such an assemblage of instruments, nothing would be more probable than that there would be some having names of foreign origin, perhaps names whose origin was to be found in nations not represented there. But if this should occur, it would not be proper to set the fact down as an argument against the authenticity of the history of Sir John Chardin, and as little should the similar fact revealed here be regarded as an argument against the genuineness of the book of Daniel.
Ye shall fall down and worship – That is, you shall render religious homage. See these words explained in the notes at Dan 2:46. This shows, that whether this image was erected in honor of Belus, or of Nabopolassar, it was designed that he in whose honor it was erected should be worshipped as a god.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Dan 3:5
The sound of the cornet, flute, harp.
Eastern Musical Instruments
The instruments enumerated here are mostly still in use in the present time, but some of them have become obsolete. The cornet is a brass trumpet manufactured in the country, and used in martial music. There are several kinds of flute, both single and double. The harp is no longer in use, nor the psaltery, which is a similar instrument of the same kind; they have been replaced by the ood, which gives a richer sound, and is more portable. The sackbut is a tamboora, a sort of guitar, of various shapes and sizes; in its most complete and perfect form it is three feet nine inches long, has ten strings of fine wire, and forty-seven steps. It is played with a plectrum, and is often inlaid with mother-of-pearl and valuable woods. It is often, however, of smaller size and less costly materials. The dulcimer is a kanoon, or sander. The kanoon is the original of our piano, both being probably derived from the lyre and the harp, whence the piano was first called a harpsichord. This instrument consists of a box two inches in depth, and of an irregular form, its greatest length being thirty-nine inches, and its width sixteen. There are only twenty-four notes, and, like the piano, each note has three strings, which are tuned with a key. The sounding-board lies under the strings, and is perforated, and covered with fish-skin where the bridge rests. The performer lays the instrument on his knees, and strikes the chords with the forefinger of each hand, to which is fastened a plectrum of horn. Another form of this instrument, called santur, is a double kanoon, and comes still nearer to our piano; the strings are of wire, and only double; they are struck with wooden hammers held in the hand. When used in a procession, this instrument is suspended from the neck by means of a cord. (H. J. Van Lennep, D.D.)
The Religion of Ceremonial
Are all the coloured garments so many visions of beauty? Is there some strain religious in the blare of brazen trumpets and the throb of military drums? Most of the people that we see gathered together around great sights would gladly be at home, listening to the voice of child, or friend, or bird. Do external images fill the soul? is it enough to have a painted God? What wonder if we begin by worshipping things that are seen? That course would seem to be natural, and would seem to be able to justify itself by sound reasoning of a preliminary kind. Who could not in ignorance of other deity worship the sun? Sometimes he seems to be almost God! How multitudinous are his phases, how manifold the apocalypse within which he shows his uncounted riches; now so pale, as if he were weary, an eye half closed in sleep long needed, long delayed; and then in full pomp, every beam, so to say, alive, and the whole heaven amazed and delighted at this vision of glory, as if hidden within that fount of flame and heat there lay ten thousand times ten thousand summers, and ten thousand times ten thousand purple autumns, with all their largesses of fruit and flowers and benison, for the sustenance and the nutrition of men; then lost among the clouds, where, indeed, he seems to be disporting himself in painting a thousand academies by one look of his eyes; see how he fills the clouds and seems to shape them, or fall into their shape, making them burn and sparkle and glitter, and invests them with unimagined and untransferable colours; a marvellous, glorious sight! Who could not uncover his head in presence of such glory, and say, Surely this is the gate at least that opens upon the palaces of God. To worship nature would seem in certain stages of development to be right. God made it; God made the green grass and the blushing flower; the great hills, stairways to heights which man never scaled; God made the valleys and the mountains; and what are these fountains saying to the hearing ear? Only the true listener can tell; the vulgar man hears nothing in that splash of water, but the refined soul hears in it melody and song, music religious, and hint of other music that might please the ear of God. As we grow in wisdom, in capacity, in understanding, in sympathy, we close our eyes upon the universe, and say it is no more to us an image that should be sought unto for purposes of worship; but we see within, by a Divinely directed introspection, the true altar, the true sanctuary, the true centre of acceptable worship. Thus we grow from the natural to the spiritual, and when we have obtained the measure of our growth we say, God is a Spirit; if we still preserve the image, it is as we should preserve a symbol, that was helpful to us before we saw the thing signified. If our religion is in colour, form, aesthetic attitude and motion, our religion will surely come to nought; but if our piety live in eternity, if it feed itself upon the almightiness and the grace of God, as shown in the Cross of Christ, then it will abide for ever. (Joseph Parker, D.D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 5. The sound of the CORNET] There is not less difficulty in ascertaining the precise meaning of these musical instruments than there is in the offices in Da 3:2. karna, here translated cornet, is the common blowing horn, which makes a deep and hollow sound, as well as one shrill and piercing.
FLUTE] mashrokitha, from sharak, to whistle, shriek. A wind instrument which made a strong and shrill noise, such as the hautbois or clarionet.
HARP] kithros, cytharus; . Some kind of stringed instrument. It seems to be formed from the Greek word.
SACKBUT] sabbecha. The Greek has it , from which our word sackbut, from sabach, to interweave; probably on account of the number of chords, for it seems to have been a species of harp.
PSALTERY] pesanterin; Greek, . A stringed instrument, struck with a plectrum; that called santeer in Egypt is probably the same. Dr. Russel says: “It is a large triangle, and has two bottoms two inches from each other, with about twenty catguts of different sizes.” It was the ancient psalterium, and most probably the same as David’s harp.
DULCIMER] sumponeyah; Greek, . Probably a kind of tamboor, tambourine, or tomtom drum. It does not mean the same as the Greek symphonia, which signifies a concert or harmony of many instruments, for here one kind of instrument only is intended.
All kinds of music] col zeney zemara, the whole stock, or band, of music; the preceding being the chief, the most common, and the most sonorous. My old MS. Bible has, Trumpe, and Pipe, and Harpe: Sambuke, Santrie, and Synfonye, and al kynde of musykes.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
All kinds of music, i.e. wind and stringed instruments of various sorts and fashions, for we have here Syrian and Greek ones, as appears by the words, though in Chaldee letters, for this mighty monarch was lord over them all.
Ye fall down and worship: mark, all that is required of them is only a gesture of worship, without oral profession. The pomp and equipage, the solemn sound of the music, and the strict command, was enough to induce them to stoop and fall down to it. This is one of Satans great engines to draw the world from Gods pure worship, and the simplicity that is in Christ, dazzling mens eyes, and bewitching them with a gaudy, whorish dress of idolatrous service, as ye see in this example, and Rev 17:4,5; all which ariseth merely from hence, because men do not or will not see that Gods worship is wholly spiritual, and most beautiful and glorious as such, 2Co 3:7 to the end; by this it excels all pagan, Jewish, and antichristian worship, all which is human, bodily, uncommanded of God, therefore displeasing and provoking, unprofitable, insnaring, and destructive. Now idolatrous gestures are sinful, because forbidden of God, Exo 20:5, because this satisfies and hardens idolaters in their way, also because by this snare and critical mark their proselytes are known and distinguished, as here, they that stood up, when others fell down; thus antichrist and new Babylon hath her mark in the forehead and hands of her followers, Rev 13:15-17. Primitive Christians would not offer a grain of frankincense to a pagan idol for fear or favour, nor true protestants kneel to the host, which the popish priest holds up to insnare them.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
5. cornetA wind instrument,like the French horn, is meant.
flutea pipe or pipes,not blown transversely as our “flute,” but by mouthpiecesat the end.
sackbuta triangularstringed instrument, having short strings, the sound being on a highsharp key.
psalterya kind ofharp.
dulcimera bagpipeconsisting of two pipes, thrust through a leathern bag, emitting asweet plaintive sound. Chaldee sumponya, the modern Italianzampogna, Asiatic zambonja.
fall downthat therecusants might be the more readily detected.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
That at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet,…. So called of the horn of which it was made; a sort of trumpet; so the Jews had trumpets of rams’ horns:
flute; or pipe, or whistle, so called for its hissing noise; it is used of the shepherd’s pipe or whistle; see Zec 10:8,
harp; an instrument of music used by David, and much in use among the Jews, and other nations;
sackbut; or “sambuca”; which, according to Athenaeus g, was a four stringed instrument, an invention of the Syrians; and Strabo h, a Greek writer, speaks of it as a barbarous name, as the eastern ones were reckoned by the Grecians:
psaltery; this seems to be a Greek word, as does the next that follows, rendered “dulcimer”; but in the original text is “symphonia”; which does not signify symphony, or a concert or consort of music, but a particular instrument of music. Maimonides i makes mention of it as a musical instrument, among others; Servius k calls it an oblique pipe; and Isidore l describes it a hollow piece of wood, with leather stretched upon it, and beat upon with rods or sticks, something like our drum: the king of Babylon might have Grecian musicians, or, however, Grecian instruments of music, in his court, as the Grecians had from the eastern nations:
and all kinds of music; that could be had or thought of; and this was done in honour to this idol, and to allure carnal sensual persons to the worship of it, according to the order given:
ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king hath set up; when they heard the music sound, immediately they were to repair to the plain where the image stood, and pay their adoration to it; or to fall down prostrate in their own houses in honour of it; and perhaps persons were appointed in all cities and towns throughout the empire to play this music; at hearing which, all people, nations, and tongues, were to bow down, in token of their religious regard unto it.
g Deipnosoph. I. 4. h Geograph. l. 10. p. 324. i Hilchot Celim, c. 10. sect. 14. k In Virgil. Aeneid. I. 11. l Originum, l. 3. c. 21.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
(5) The cornet.On the musical instruments, see Exc. B.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
5. Prince gives the names of these musical instruments as “the horn, syrinx, lyre, triangular harp, upright harp, bagpipe (?).” (See also Hebraica, Dan 4:7.) There can be little doubt that he is correct as to the first three instruments, but as to the “triangular harp” there may be a difference of opinion. The only thing certainly known is that it was not a sackbut (trombone). The “upright harp” (A.V., psaltery) must also remain only a probability, as the term used was a general name for several kinds of instruments, especially for such stringed instruments as were played upon by the fingers of both hands. (See Hastings’s Dictionary of the Bible, under “Music,” vol. 3:1900.) The last instrument is mentioned nowhere else in the Bible and has provoked much discussion. It, like the “psaltery” ( psanterim), is certainly a Greek loan word. “The Greek , from which the word is derived, did not originally denote an instrument but a concordant interval. Tradition applies it to the bagpipe. Originally the form of this instrument may have been developed from the double flute, one of the pipes being shorter and being used for the melody while the longer furnished a droning bass accompaniment. We are told by Athenaeus (Lib. X, p. 439) that Antiochus Epiphanes used to dance to the sound of the symphonia. To this day the Italians have a bagpipe called zampugna or sampogna, and a chifonie or symphonie was an instrument of the same class used in the Middle Ages. In Rome this instrument was introduced in the time of the empire under the name of tibia utricularis or chorus, and soon became highly popular” ( ibid.). Too much stress has been laid by most modern scholars upon the modern form of these Greek names, together with the fact that they never appear on the Babylonian monuments and never in Greek literature until a very late period. It is natural for an editor or translator to modernize obsolete terms. As Francis Brown has said in another connection, “It is one thing to argue that a document is late because it contains words not found in old documents, and quite another thing to argue that words are new because they occur only in a late document.” That the Babylonians and the Greeks were in close touch toward the end of the sixth century B.C. cannot be rationally denied. (See Introduction, III, 2, and compare Margoliouth, Expository Times, February, 1901.) While Driver makes the Greek words the chief proof of late date, Meinhold considers this proof rather weak and thinks the presence of Persian words is most significant; while the word which Kautzsch declares to be of all others the one which dates Daniel linguistically as a late production Behrmann shows is not a Greek word at all, but pure Aramaic. It has even been argued with some force that these particular terms are interpolations and were not a part of the original Daniel text (Thomson). But all such discussion is now obsolete. The argument as to the date of this book no longer centers upon the decision of such questions (Introduction, II, 4-7).
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Dan 3:5. Harp The original word is caithros, which seems to be denominated from the citron-tree, the product of Armenia, Media, and Persia; the tree itself might take its name from the ground in which it flourished, or from the round figure of its fruit: for ceter, signifies a rock in the Chaldee (Pro 30:26.), and mountainous or rocky places are called cythera, and citharon. Citra is likewise Chaldee for a crown, turban, or diadem of the head, and is the proper name for the Persian diadem, which the Greeks write [cittaros], [cidaris], and [cittaris.] An instrument shaped in the like orbicular form, might for the same reason be called citerus; and this we are told was the original form of the harp; or else, the matter of which it was made gave its name, as it did to many other instruments in all nations. The modern Persian affords us another derivation: Ciar-tar is their name for a lyre; ciar signifying four, and tar a string, from the four chords with which it is strung; and as the ancients made use of such a lyre, so by giving little or no sound to the R it might of old be pronounced like cithara. See Bishop Chandler, Vind. of Def. Colossians 1 p. 50.
Sackbut The Hebrew word is sabca, whence the Greek word . Euphorion mentions this instrument as very ancient. The statue of one of the muses, erected at Mitylene in Lesbos, has a sambuca in her hand. It is mentioned as a foreign invention in Aristoxenus and Strabo; is expressly said to be the discovery of the Syrians, and was in use among the Parthians and Troglodytes. The name is Syriac or Chaldee, and comes from sabbach, which signifies to twist or plait: and it is applied to trees which bear thick branches, and to a military battering engine, worked by a variety of ropes; and for the same reason, to a musical instrument made of the wood of such trees, or thickly strung with chords. The sabek-tree is mentioned in the Septuagint version of Gen 22:13 which Vossius takes to be the Syrian or Egyptian jessamin, called zabach and sambach by the Syrians and Arabs to this day. In other parts sambucus is the name of the alder. Of such light and brittle wood musical instruments were composed, and therefore we need search no farther for the original of this name. However, it may be noted, that samma and buc are Indian or Persian words for certain instruments of music; and anciently those tongues were the same with those which were spoken by the Medes and Armenians. See Bishop Chandler, as above, p. 51.
Psaltery The Hebrew word is psanterin, and the Greek psalterion. They who invented the instrument undoubtedly imposed the name which it bears; for wherever we can trace the one, we may ascribe the other. Now it is acknowledged by the Greeks, that it was more ancient than Terpander; that it was barbarous or foreign; that it abounded with many strings, and was the same with the old magadis, pectys, and trigonum, which were many-stringed, and of a triangular form, of which the Greeks did not assume the invention; and that there was in Persia (in which Media and Armenia are generally included) a pectys and magadis, whose strings hung on both sides of the wood, and which was touched with both hands, as our harps are. Hence we may safely infer, that the invention and name are to be derived from the East. We have such accounts of the splendour and politeness of the Median court, that we may reasonably suppose that both the instrument and its name had their original in that country, and were borrowed of them by the Babylonians and Greeks. This will appear more evident from the termination of the original, psanter, for old Persic substantives commonly end in ter. And as in is added in the modern Persian to heighten the sense of adjectives in the superlative degree; so in is a Syriac or Babylonian plural, which the Chaldees might subjoin to the foreign name of this instrument, the better to express the sounding of the strings of both sides of this instrument at once, with both the hands of the performer. Psanter may be derived from the Chaldee or Syriac pesh, or peshesh, which signifies beating, impelling, pushing, or touching with the fingers. In the Chaldee, a word which primarily signifies pulsations or beating, is applied to musical instruments in general; and the Jews called neginoth, in the plural, one kind of stringed instruments which was more than ordinarily struck and moved in various parts; and which is therefore rendered by the LXX a psaltery. Psanterin then, if it be not a neutral superlative used substantively in the Persian or Median tongue, to signify an instrument of all others the most touched, may be a Median word, to which in Babylon they added a Syriac plural, to express, as in the form of neginoth, the frequent and double pulsations thereof. Such a root is to be found at present among the Persians. Bishana, or, as it maybe spoken, psana, is the percussion of a harp in Persic, and the verb has the sense of making an impression on the nerves. Bishop Chandler, p. 53, &c.
Dulcimer The original word is sumponiah, and the Greek symphonia; but the signification in the Chaldee and in the Greek is different. The Greek is a compound word, which signifies a concert, or harmony of many instruments; whereas the word here, is a simple name of one single instrument, upon which different parts of music were played: and as the stringed instruments came originally from the East, probably some Grecian might add a greater number of strings or chords, to give a greater compass or variety of music, which being called symphonia in Greek, and introduced into the Chaldean and Persian courts, might possibly have retained its Grecian name; though this is by no means certain. As to the particular instrument intended by the name, we cannot be positive. A pipe perforated with many holes was called a symphony in the Jerusalem tongue; and a bladder with pipes in it (now called a bag-pipe) had the like name in the language of the Moors, which they left behind them in Spain. The Moors in Africa called a little drum, hollow in the middle, and covered on one side with a skin, a symphony; which name might as justly be given to one kind of harp or fiddle, which was made, according to St. Augustin, of a concave piece of wood, like a drum. For all agree that the reason of calling so many things by the same name, seems to be their cavity. The learned Henry Michaelis derives the word from the Hebrew saphan, which signifies to conceal, or to cover in a hollow form. Hence sephina is put for a ship, Jon 1:5 or the hold, or capacious part of it, agreeable to the translation of the LXX. Symphony might possibly come from sipap, which carries the idea of cavity to all its derivatives. Thus saph or suph, (the original of the Greek word scyphus,) signifies a cup or bowl, in the Hebrew or Chaldee. Suph is the name of a reed or cane, from the tube in the middle of it; (see Exo 2:3.) and saph is used for the shank of a candlestick, and for the middle part of pillars, placed before the portal or threshold of great houses, as well as for the entrance or gate itself; for these ornamental pillars were probably hollow, like the two great ones in the porch of Solomon’s temple. Now, as simpulum, a cup used in sacrifices, is confessedly derived from the Hebrew suph or saph; so, by the like analogy, symphony, or symphonia, may, when applied to any hollow instrument composed of boards, or of wood otherwise excavated. It is the genius of the eastern tongues to increase syllables at the end of words, as new ideas are added to their primitive significations; and as syllables are increased in words which have two radicals following each other of the same letter, the first letter is commonly dropped, and the last is supplied by a certain mark on the next, which the Chaldees almost constantly change into the letter N, and almost as often liquidate into M, when the compensative N goes before the letters BMP. Thus, instead of siphonia, as the word is written in some copies, Dan 3:10 the Chaldees would sound it sinphonia; but for facility and gracefulness of speaking, they soften it into simphonia; because of the P which immediately follows. See Bishop Chandler, Vind. p. 45 and Dr. Chandler’s Defence, p. 15.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Dan 3:5 [That] at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of musick, ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king hath set up:
Ver. 5. That at what time ye hear. ] See on Dan 3:1 . The allurements of pleasure are shrewd enticements to idolatry. 2Pe 2:18 Sir Walter Raleigh said, Were I to choose a religion to gratify the flesh, I would choose Popery. The Catholics, in their supplication to King James for a toleration, plead that their religion is, inter caetera, among others, so conformable to natural sense and reason, that it ought to be embraced! A proper argument. I have read of a lady in Paris who, when she saw the bravery of a procession to a saint, she cried out, Oh how fine is our religion beyond that of the Huguenots!
That at what time ye hear the sound.
Ye fall down and worship.
a Spec. Europ.
cornet, &c. These names are supposed to be Greek, or from the Greek; but Athenaeus, a Greek grammarian (about A.D. 200-300), says the sambuke (“sack-but”) was a Syriac invention. Strabo, in his geography (54 B.C. A.D. 24), ascribes Greek music to Asia, and says: “the Athenians always showed their admiration of foreign customs”.
harp. Chaldee. kithros; Greek. kithara. Terpander, a Greek musician (seventh century B. C), the father of Greek music, invented the kithara with seven strings (Strabo says) instead of four, and one is sculptured on a monument of Assurbanipal (Lenormant, La Divination chez les Chaldiens, pp 190, 191).
sackbut. See note on “cornet”, above.
hour = moment. Chaldee sha’ah, as in verses: Dan 3:3, Dan 3:6, Dan 3:15; Dan 4:33; Dan 5:5.
Dan 3:5-6
Dan 3:5 That at whatH1768 timeH5732 ye hearH8086 the soundH7032 of the cornet,H7162 flute,H4953 harp,H7030 sackbut,H5443 psaltery,H6460 dulcimer,H5481 and allH3606 kindsH2178 of musick,H2170 ye fall downH5308 and worshipH5457 the goldenH1722 imageH6755 thatH1768 NebuchadnezzarH5020 the kingH4430 hath set up:H6966
Dan 3:6 And whosoH4479 H1768 falleth not downH5308 H3809 and worshippethH5457 shall the same hourH8160 be castH7412 into the midstH1459 of a burningH3345 fieryH5135 furnace.H861
Dan 3:5-6
That at what time ye hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of musick, ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king hath set up: And whoso falleth not down and worshippeth shall the same hour be cast into the midst of a burning fiery furnace.
Nebuchadnezzar wanted the golden statue he had made worshipped by everyone in Babylon. In the book of Revelation, there were two beasts, one from the sea and one from the earth (Revelation 13). The sea beast was given his seat, authority and power from the dragon (Satan) and he required all under him to worship him. The earth beast rose up and operated under the authority of the sea beast and caused images like Nebuchadnezzar’s to be built and worshipped. Those who refused to worship were persecuted horribly even to the point of being put to death in all kinds of torturous ways. Pagan worship and the refusal of God’s children to bow down to a false god and worship idols is what the book of Revelation was written about.
Nebuchadnezzar did the exact same thing the beast of Revelation would do almost 700 years later. Those who lived during the great persecution of the Christians in the first century could look back to this account and relate to these events in a very real and personal way. They could look back at the examples of Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah and see what the proper response to this forced pagan worship must be.
From this forced idol worship we see a connection between Daniel and the Revelation. In Nebuchadnezzar’s dream the statue looked forward to the fourth empire under which God set up his eternal kingdom with the stone not cut by human hands crushing all the parts of the image. This fourth kingdom, being the Roman Empire, also forced her citizenry to worship her emperors who had statues erected in their honor just like Nebuchadnezzar did. The consequences for both the Babylonians and the citizens of Rome which refused to bow down and worship the statues of the kings was death (Dan 3:6, Rev 13:15). In Revelation 17, we see the great whore who’s name was given as “Babylon the great, the mother of harlots” in verse 5. The great whore in Revelation who was responsible for the blood of God’s people (Rev 17:6 and who held in her hand a cup full of the abominations of fornication, which was idol worship, (Rev 17:4), was associated with the Babylonian Empire who carried away God’s people into captivity and likewise tried to force them to bow down to idol worship. Babylon really was the Mother of Harlots to the children of God who were forced by the king to bow down and worship his statue. The identity of the scarlet dressed woman in Revelation chapter 17, looking back to Babylon can be none other than the city of Rome herself and is identified in Rev 17:18 as “that great city which reigneth over the kings of the earth”.
the cornet: Karna the horn. Dan 3:10, Dan 3:15
flute: Mashrokeetha, in Syriac mashrookeetha the , pipe or flute, as Theodotion renders.
dulcimer: or, singing, Chal, symphony
Reciprocal: 2Sa 6:5 – David 1Ki 1:40 – pipes 1Ch 13:8 – with harps 2Ch 21:11 – compelled Psa 150:3 – with the sound Ecc 2:8 – musical instruments Isa 46:6 – they fall Dan 3:9 – king
Dan 3:5. Hear . . . cornet … all kinds of music. The Babylonian Empire was a vaBt domain composed of many kinds of people. They could not he expected to leave their homes and all go to Babylon to appear before the image, but were to do this worshiping wherever they might be. They would not all be acquainted with each instrument named, but all would be expected to know some of them and to recognize instrumental music by some one or more of these instruments. Worship Is from CAOAD and Strong defines it, “A primitive root.; to prostrate oneself (in homage). Hence the kind of worship demanded did not call for any removal of the people from their places, neither did it stipulate any formal schedule in the service; it required only that the people prostrate themselves when they heard the music.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary