🐾 Hebrew term: “Alphabetic acrostic” · Hebrew alphabet: 22 letters (from ת ... א, aleph to tav).
📜 What Is an Acrostic?
In Hebrew poetry, an acrostic poem uses the letters of the Hebrew alphabet in order to begin each line or stanza. It’s a literary form that shows order, completeness, and devotion — the poet takes all the letters from A to Z (or rather, Aleph to Tav) and weaves them into a full expression of grief, praise, or prayer.
🧩 How It Works
- Structure: Each verse or stanza begins with the next Hebrew letter — א (Aleph), ב (Bet), ג (Gimel), and so on through ת (Tav).
- Alphabet count: 22 total letters, so an acrostic poem usually has 22 lines or 22 groups of lines.
- Purpose: The alphabet becomes a framework — as if the poet says, “I’ll use every letter I have to speak my heart to God.”
📖 Famous Examples
- Psalm 119: the longest psalm — 22 sections, each with 8 lines beginning with the same letter (22×8 = 176 verses).
- Psalm 25, 34, 37, 111, 112, 145: shorter acrostic psalms of praise or wisdom.
- Lamentations 1–4: 22-line acrostic chapters; chapter 3 triples the pattern with 66 verses (Aleph–Tav repeated 3 ×).
- Proverbs 31:10-31: the “excellent wife” poem — another alphabetic acrostic.
🌿 Why Use It?
- Memory aid: easy to memorize or chant — perfect for public lament or worship.
- Symbol of wholeness: uses the full alphabet, expressing the totality of experience — from A to Z of praise or pain.
- Discipline in chaos: in *Lamentations*, the strict order contrasts the city’s ruin — poetic structure holding emotional collapse.
- Devotional completeness: nothing left unsaid; the poet gives every letter to God.
💬 Bible S O S (Self Discovery)
SAY — What stands out?
Why do you think the writers chose such rigid structure to describe sorrow or praise?
OBEY — How could this shape your prayer?
Try writing a short prayer or thank-you list using the letters A–Z — your own mini-acrostic of faith.
SHARE — Who might this encourage?
Show someone how ancient poetry used order to carry emotion — a reminder that creativity and grief can belong together.
📖 Summary Thought
Hebrew acrostics turn the alphabet itself into worship — every letter, every word, every tear arranged before God from Aleph to Tav.
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