A 'sacred language', or 'liturgical language', is a
language, frequently a
dead language, that is cultivated for
religious reasons by people who speak another language in their daily life.
The traditions involved in religious
ritual and
liturgy quite frequently provide a place where
archaic forms of language occur. One of the last places the obsolescent
English pronoun ''
thou'' remains in frequent use is in religious liturgy; wherever the
Authorised Version of the
Bible is read, or older versions of the
Anglican ''
Book of Common Prayer'' are in use.
Usage
The use of a sacred language represents a further development of this practice. Here, language has changed so far from the language of the
sacred texts that the language of the old liturgy is no longer comprehensible without special training.
Missionary and
pilgrim faiths may then spread the old language to populations which never spoke it, and to whom it is yet another foreign language. Once a language becomes associated with religious worship, its believers often ascribe virtues to the language of worship that they would not give to their native tongues. The sacred language is typically vested with a solemnity and dignity that speech in the vernacular lacks. The enterprise of training
clergy to use and understand the sacred language becomes an important cultural investment. Their use of the tongue gives them access to a body of knowledge that untrained lay people cannot access.
A number of languages have been used as sacred languages. They include:
★
Ecclesiastical Latin is the official language of the
Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Church seems to have continued to use
Greek in its liturgy until the mid fourth century AD. By the reign of pope Saint
Damasus I Latin had been introduced into the liturgy at Rome. [A few words of
Hebrew and Greek remained.] The adoption of Latin was further fostered when the
Vetus Latina version of the
Bible was edited and parts retranslated from the original Hebrew and Greek by
Saint Jerome in his
Vulgate. Latin continued as the Western Church's language of liturgy and communication, especially as there were no standardized vernaculars throughout the Middle Ages. At the
Council of Trent, a proposal to introduce national languages into the liturgy was put off due to their tendency to divide Catholics and disturb Catholic unity. [Interestingly, the liturgy was, for a short time in the seventeenth century, carried out in
Classical Chinese during the
Jesuit China missions.] By the 1960s, the Church had begun allowing the vernacular, especially for sacramental rites in mission territories. The
second Vatican Council, however, allowed for a greater use of the vernacular, while respecting Latin as the language of the Roman Church. To a large degree, the Council's prescription was initially disregarded and the vernacular became not only standard, but exclusively utilized in the liturgy. Latin remains the language of the
Roman Rite and its use is still encouraged. Large scale papal ceremonies often make use of it. Meanwhile, the numerous
Eastern Catholic Churches in union with Rome each have their own respective parent language, although many make wide use of the vernacular. However, the Eastern Code of Canon Law, for the sake of convenience, has been promulgated in Latin.
★
Syriac, used as a liturgical language by
Syriac Christians who belong to the
Chaldean Catholic Church,
Assyrian Church of the East,
Syriac Orthodox Church,
Syriac Catholic Church, and
Maronite Church.
★ Classical
Arabic, for
Muslims the only true language of the
Qur'an; it differs markedly from the
various forms of contemporary spoken Arabic.
★
Avestan, the language of the oldest portions of the
Avesta, the sacred texts of
Zoroastrianism.
★
Classical Chinese, the language of older Chinese literature and the
Confucian,
Taoist, and in East Asia also of the
Mahayana Buddhist sacred texts, which also differs markedly from contemporary spoken
Mandarin.
★
Coptic, a form of ancient
Egyptian, is used by the
Coptic Orthodox Church and the
Coptic Catholic Church.
★
Etruscan, cultivated for religious and
magical purposes in the
Roman Empire.
★
Ge'ez, the predecessor of many
Ethiopian Semitic languages (e.g.
Amharic,
Tigrinya,
Tigre) used as a liturgical language by
Ethiopian
Christians (in both the
Orthodox Tewahedo and the
Catholic churches).
★
Early New High German is used in
Amish communities for Bible readings and sermons.
★
Hebrew, the language of the
Torah used in the liturgy of
Judaism.
★
Koine Greek, which plays a similar role in
Greek Christianity. It differs markedly from
Modern Greek, but remains half-comprehensible for Modern Greek speakers.
★
Ladino, as a form of Judeo-Spanish closer to the original
Hebrew syntax, was reserved for
Bible translations by
Sephardis.
★
Mandaic, an Aramaic language, in
Mandaeanism
★ Various
Native American languages are cultivated for religious and ceremonial purposes by
Native Americans who no longer use them in daily life.
★
Palaic and
Luwian, cultivated as a religious language by the
Hittites.
★
Pali, the original language of
Theravada Buddhism.
★ Some
Portuguese and
Latin prayers are retained by the
Kakure Kirishitan (Hidden Christians) of Japan, who recite it without understanding the language.
★ Classical
Punjabi is the language of the holy scripture of
Sikhism. It is different from the various dialects of Punjabi that exists today.
★
Sanskrit, the tongue of the
Vedas and other sacred texts of
Hinduism as well as the original language of
Mahayana Buddhism and
Jainism.
★
Old Church Slavonic, which was the liturgical language of the Slavic
Eastern Orthodoxy, and the
Romanian Orthodox Church
★
Church Slavonic is the current liturgical language of the
Russian Orthodox Church.
★ Old
Tibetan, known as ''Chhokey'' in
Bhutan, the sacred language of
Tibetan Buddhism
★
Sumerian, cultivated and preserved in
Assyria and
Babylon long after its extinction as an everyday language.
★
Yoruba, the language of the
Yoruba people, brought to the
New World by
African
slaves, and preserved in
Santería,
Candomblé, and other transplanted African religions.
★
Gothic, only East Germanic language with substantial texts.
Judaism
The Holy Tongue (
Hebrew: 'לשון הקודש',''Leshon Ha-Kodesh''), is a phrase used to refer to the
Biblical Hebrew language. The expression is first attested in a fragmentary work preserved in the
Dead Sea Scrolls and later occurs in Rabbinic literature. Hebrew is the traditional language of
Jewish religious services, though its usage today varies by denomination (
Orthodox services are, generally entirely in Hebrew,
Reform services make a much lesser use of the language, and
Conservative services usually fall somewhere between).
Christianity
Christianity does not contain one single sacred language. By supporting the mission of Sts. Cyril and Methodius to the Slavs, the pope rejected one heresy in the Middle Ages which proposed that Hebrew, Greek, and Latin alone were suitable for the sacred liturgy since these were the languages inscribed upon the titulus on Jesus' cross at His crucifixion. However, those churches which can trace their origin to the early centuries of Christianity have often continued to utilize the standard languages of the day such as
Latin in the
Roman Catholic Church,
Greek in the
Greek Orthodox Church and
Greek Catholic Church,
Church Slavonic in several
Eastern Orthodox Churches,
Ge'ez in the
Ethiopian Orthodox Church and
Ethiopian Catholic Church, the
Coptic language in
Coptic Christianity, and
Syriac in
Syriac Christianity.
Hinduism
Hinduism has one single language "samskrita"(sanskrit).It is the language used by Lord Krishna in giving advice to Arjuna at the Mahabharatha battle field which is called as Gita or Bhagavadgita.
Sanskrit is the language used in all the four vedas & upanishads.It is used in sahasranama,chama,rudra etc.It is used in all the text required to perform any hindu ritual.
This is not accepted by many Tamil speaking Hindus.
[1] Tamils consider that their language is equally sacred and divine and offer the presence of many religious text in Tamil which were written during different milleniea. There is a growing tradition among Tamil Hindus to conduct marriages and other holy rituals in Tamil.
[2] Most political parties in the state of Tamil Nadu support this trend.
[3] The State Government of Tamil Nadu has enacted a law that allows Hindu Temples in the state to provide religious services in Tamil. There is a claim to make tamil as mandatory language for religious services.
[4]
Islam
Classical Arabic is the sacred language of Islam. It is the language of the
Qur'an, and the language of Islam's prophet
Muhammad. Like Latin, classical Arabic shares both the role of an intellectual language as well as a liturgical language in much of the
Islamic world.
References
★ Stone, M.E. and Eshel, S, An exposition on the Patriarchs (4Q464) and two other documents (4Q464a and 4Q464b) Le Muséon 105,3-4 (1992) 243-264 (contains a discussion of the Dead Sea scroll text.
See also
★
Tower of Babel or read the story as it appears in Genesis 11:1-9
here. (ספר בראשית פרשת נח יא:א-ט)
★
Confusion of tongues
★
Literary language
★
Official language
★
Standard language
★
Divine language