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Aramaic

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Many terms used in the Gospels, such as "hypocrite" and "Iscariot", have no counterpart in Aramaic.
'''Aramaic''' (ܐܪܡܝܐ) was the colloquial [[language]] of [[Jesus]], which He continued to use at least informally through the [[Crucifixion]]. Its modern form is most commonly known as "Syriac".<ref name="a">The New American Desk Encyclopedia, Penguin Group, 1989</ref> It is a Semitic language and was spoken by the [[Aramaeans]] and spread across the [[Mesopotamia]] and became the language of the [[Persian Empire]]. <ref name="a"/> It was most closely related to [[Hebrew]] and [[Arabic]]. The post-biblical Rabbinic commentary on the Bible and application of the Biblical laws (as well as perpetuating of the Biblical lore) to contemporary Jewish life, is known as the [[Talmud]]. The first part of the Talmud is primarily in Mishnaic (2nd cent. B.C. to 2nd cent. A.D.) Hebrew and secondarily in Aramaic. The second part of the "Babylonian" Talmud, known as the Gemara, is primarily in Aramaic and secondarily in Hebrew. The Babylonian [[Babylon]]ian recension of the Talmud - representing Babylonian exilic [[Judaism ]] - is authritative authoritative for Jews [[Jew]]s today rather than the Palestinian [[Jerusalem]] Talmud - representing "Land of [[Israel]]" Hebrew-speaking Judaism from Palestinethere.
Parts The [[Gospel of Mark]] contains multiple phrases in Aramaic, while other parts of the [[New Testament]] were written in Aramaicoccasionally use the colloquial language.<ref name="a"/>
It survives is spoken today only in isolated parts of [[Lebanon|Lebanese]] villages as well as some , northern [[NestorianIraq]], [[Syria]]s in northern addition to smaller communities in [[IraqTurkey]] and eastern [[TurkeyIran]].<ref>http://www.omniglot.com/writing/syriac.htm</ref>
While many claim that Jesus taught in Aramaic and that the [[Gospels]] were originally written in that language, much evidence indicates that [[Greek]] was the language used both for Jesus's teachings and the initial drafts of the Gospels. Many terms used in the Gospels, such as "hypocrite" and "Iscariot", have no counterpart in Aramaic.<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/1507970</ref>
==The "Aramaic" Church==
 The [[File:Syriac_characters.gif|thumb|Syriac alphabet, the modern form of Aramaic]]The Church of the East]], sometimes known as the [[Nestorian]] Church or sometimes as the Assyrian [[Assyria]]n Church uses the Aramaic Language in their liturgy .<ref>[http://www.cired.org/]. </ref> This is true also of the Church of the East in [[India]], also known as the Syro-Chaldean Church, though its people speak an Indian dialect and not Aramaic. The Aramaic translation of the Bible for this Church is the Peshitta, the earliest of the translations for both the Old and New Testament after the [[Greece|Greek Septuaginta ]] [[Septuagint]] of the Hebrew original for the Old and after the Greek original for the New. Jesus spoke Aramaic as well as Mishnaic (1st century common) Hebrew and some of his utterances in the Greek New Testament are transliterations of the Aramaic. Examples of these are Talitha Kum(i)-"Get up ,Young girl!", Eloi, Eloi, lama Shvaktani- MyGodMy God, My God, why have you left Me." In the book of Revelation of the New Testament, the word "Maranatha" appears, as it does in the liturgies of the early church. Maranatha means either (according to its accent), "The Lord has come" or "O Lord, come!"
Church of the East members from the "Assyrian" group still speaking Aramaic, are dispersed to several countries since their World War l persecution and flight from Turkey - along with the Armenians. They are settled today in various countries and in the United States are found in numbers in Flint Michigan, Modesto California, and Yonkers New York.
A few modern Churches Such such as the [[Syro-Chaldean Church of North America]], now known as the [[Evangelical Apostolic Church of North America (Syro-Chaldean)]] derive their Apostolicity and general theological outlook from the Aramaic Church of the East though their membership is not ethnically Assyrian .<ref>[http://www.eacna.org/]. </ref>
The Chaldean Catholic Church represents a part of the Church of the East which has recognized the Pope and the jurisdiction of the Western Catholio Church. This Church also uses the Aramaic language in their liturgy. These are the churches, some under the Pope and some independent ([[autocephalous]] -"self heading") that use Aramaic as part of their liturgy nowadays - the Syrian Catholic Church, the Assyrian Church of the East (Holy Apostolic and Catholic Church of the East), the Indian Orthodox Church, the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Maronite Church, the Malankara Syrian Orthodox Church, the Syro-Malabar Church and the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church.
==SourcesSee also==*[[Semitic languages]]*[[The Aramaic Church]]*[[The Sign of the Cross: of Jewish Origin]]*[[First Century Aramaic Jewish Christian Gospel and poetry]]*[[Targum]]*[[Aramaic Judaism, Jewish Aramaic Christianity, and John 1:1]]*[[Hebrew]] for the structure of Aramaic language as a member of the Semitic language family.*[[Had Gadya]]*[[Kaddish]]*[[The Lord's Prayer]] for the Aramaic Version*[[Adiabene]]
The New American Desk Encyclopedia, Penguin Group, 1989==References=={{Reflist}}
[[Category:Semitic Languages]][[Category:Middle East]]
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