Amoebaeon; or, Refrain
Amoebaeon; or, Refrain
The Repetition of the same Phrase at the End of successive Paragraphs
Am–bAE-on. It is from the Greek (amoibee), change, alteration (from (ameibein), to change. It is used of the repetition of the same phrase or sentence, where it occurs in poetry at the end of successive periods.
Cycloides may occur at the beginning, or middle, or any part of the circle, but AmbAEon only at the end.
This burden, therefore, thus emphasized is the main point for us to notice in what is being said.
Psa 118:1-4.-Where, we have the refrain For His mercy endureth for ever. (See under Symploce).
Psa 136:1-26 -Where at the end of every verse, we have the refrain, For His mercy endureth for ever.
Isa 9:12; Isa 9:17; Isa 9:21; Isa 10:4.-Where we have the four-fold burden, to emphasize the solemn warning, For all this his anger is not turned away, but his hand is stretched out still.
Amo 4:6; Amo 4:8-11.-Here we have the solemn refrain five times repeated Yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord.
Mat 6:2; Mat 6:5; Mat 6:16.-Where we have the thrice repeated lesson, Verily they have their reward. See under Idiom.
Luk 13:3; Luk 5:1-39.-Where, twice, we have the solemn words, I tell you, Nay; but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish.
Joh 6:39-40; Joh 6:44; Joh 6:54.-Four times we have the glorious fact repeated for our assurance, I will raise him up at the last day.
This, of course, is the Resurrection which was the subject of Old Test ment prophecy, and the one referred to in Rev 20:1-15 (the first or former of the two there named). But not the one which was the subject of a special revelation to the Church of God in 1Th 4:16.
Rev 2:7; Rev 2:11; Rev 2:17; Rev 2:29; Rev 3:6; Rev 3:13; Rev 3:22.-Seven times, at the end of each of these Epistles is the solemn burden repeated He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches.
These words are in the figure called Polyptoton (q.v. [Note: Which see.] ,) but this seven-fold repetition, is the figure of AmbAEon. See under Polyptoton for the significance of this phrase, as here used.* [Note: Also the series of articles in Things to Come, commencing September, 1898.]
Rev 18:21-23.-Here, the figure Epistrophe in the repetition of the words no more at all becomes the figure AmbAEon in that the words are a solemn burden or refrain in announcing the judgment on Babylon.
——–