T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1336.1 | | ASGMKA::MARTIN | Concerto in 66 Movements | Thu Mar 20 1997 11:46 | 10 |
| ZZ Are you a peculiar person? Are you part of a peculiar people?
It would seem the theme of all the verses you mentioned centers around
holiness...being different from all the rest.
A good example is Job. The Lord looked to and fro from both ends of
the earth and found nobody save Job. He was peculiar because he was
holy.
-Jack
|
1336.2 | Set apart | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Mar 20 1997 13:11 | 7 |
| "Peculiar" doesn't have it's modern meaning of "odd" in the examples you
have chosen.
The word, according to my dictionary, meant "belonging to a particular
person or group, separate, or independent" at that point in history.
/john
|
1336.3 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Spigot of pithiness | Thu Mar 20 1997 22:08 | 8 |
| I'm sure 'holy' could have been used, but it was not. 'Peculiar' is
the word used.
Being set apart, of course, does tend to make one peculiar. Identifiably
so, it would seem.
Richard
|
1336.4 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Fri Mar 21 1997 10:01 | 12 |
|
As a noun peculiar means
"1. A privilege or property that is exclusively one's own."
This is from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,
Third Edition copyright � 1992 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
I think the verses cited in .0 are meant in this light, despite our
colloquial understandings.
Eric
|
1336.5 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Spigot of pithiness | Fri Mar 21 1997 14:28 | 9 |
| In addition to all the other definitions, I believe being 'peculiar'
will manifest itself in some measure of 'oddness,' or 'unusualness,'
or even 'eccentricity' as, at least, a by-product.
Loving one's enemy is an odd thing to do, for example. How unusual
it is to witness it.
Richard
|