Almah
In Biblical Hebrew, the words almah and alamot, drawn from a Semitic root implying the vigour of puberty, refer to a young woman who is sexually ripe for marriage. Although the concept is central to the account of the virgin birth of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, the scholarly consensus is that the words denote a woman's fertility without concern for her virginity. They occur nine times in the Hebrew Bible. In the ancient Near East, many spiritual and cultural traditions centred on women were tied to their ability to bear children, and this particular focus on motherhood remains present in the Abrahamic religions today.
Etymology and social context
Almah derives from a root meaning "to be full of vigour, to have reached puberty". In the ancient Near East, girls received value as potential wives and bearers of children: "A wife, who came into her husband's household as an outsider, contributed her labor and her fertility... er task was to build up the bet 'ab bearing children, particularly sons". Scholars thus agree that almah refers to a woman of childbearing age without implying virginity, while an unrelated word, betulah, best refers to a virgin, as well as the idea of virginity, betulim.From the same root the corresponding masculine word elem עֶלֶם 'young man' also appears in the Bible, as does alum used in the sense ' adolescence', in addition to the post-Biblical words almut and alimut both used for youthfulness and its strength.
In Hebrew texts
The word ‘almah occurs nine times in its various forms in the Hebrew Bible, while the masculine form ‘elem only twice. It is therefore quite rare, if compared to na‘ar, which occurs over 225 times, or betulah, which occurs 51 times.There are three occurrences of the form ha‘almah. It is used twice for young women who are known to be virgin, while the third occurrence is in Isaiah 7:14.
- In Genesis 24 a servant of Abraham, seeking a wife for his son, Isaac, retells how he met Rebecca. He says that he prayed to the Lord that if an almah came to the well and he requested a drink of water from her, that should she then provide him with that drink and also water his camels; he would take that as a sign that she was to be the wife of Isaac. The word almah is only used during the retelling; another word, hanaara, is used during the events themselves.
- In Exodus 2, Miriam, an almah, the sister of the infant Moses, is entrusted to watch the baby; she takes thoughtful action to reunite the baby with his mother by offering to bring the baby to a Hebrew nurse maid.
- The verses surrounding Isaiah 7:14 tell how Ahaz, the king of Judah, is told of a sign to be given in demonstration that the prophet's promise of God's protection from his enemies is a true one. The sign is that an almah is pregnant and will give birth to a son who will still be very young when these enemies will be destroyed.
- In 1 Chronicles 15:20 and the heading to Psalm 46, the psalm is to be played "on alamot". The musical meaning of this phrase has become lost with time: it may mean a feminine manner of singing or playing, such as a girls' choir, or an instrument made in the city of "Alameth". Old translators were puzzled about the exact meaning of these expressions and interpreted them variously, e.g. Symmachus read ‘olamoth in Ps. 46, the Vulgate read ‘alumoth in 1 Chron. 15:20 etc.
- In a victory parade in Psalm 68:25, the participants are listed in order of appearance: 1) the singers; 2) the musicians; and 3) the "alamot" playing cymbals or tambourines.
- The Song of Songs 1:3 contains a poetic chant of praise to a man, declaring that all the alamot adore him.
- In the Song of Songs chapter 6, verse 8, the glory of the female object of his love is favorably compared to 60 queens, 80 concubines, as well as innumerable alamot, and in the next verse she is stated to be undefiled.
- In Proverbs 30:19, concerning an adulterous wife, the Hebrew text differs significantly from the Greek Septuagint, the Latin Vulgate and the Syriac Peshitta. All versions begin by comparing the woman's acts to things that leave no traces: a bird flying in air, the movement of a snake over a rock, the path of a ship through the sea; but while the Hebrew version concludes with the "ways of a man with an almah", the other versions read "and the ways of a man in his youth".
In Greek texts