3 February 2022

Non-literal matches in the Romans: Part 2

In a former entry we started to analyze Paul's non-literal quotations in the Romans. In this entry we finalize the list of them. Before continuing:


We begin our study with Romans 9:33. It contains a combination of two quoted texts, both from Isaiah. The first passage is from Isaiah 8:14, and the second one is from Isaiah 28:16:


The bibref commands getrefs SBLGNT LXX Isaiah 8:14 and getrefs SBLGNT LXX Isaiah 28:16 help us to find the matches. You will note that in both cases the outputs need to be carefully selected: here a manual study seems much more helpful than the mechanical check. Also, between the two passages in Isaiah there is a long amount of text on 35929 characters. In fact, Paul begins quoting the passage from Isaiah 28:16 and then the one from Isaiah 8:14, but there is some overlapping text that belongs to both.

The next matches are somewhat simpler to visualize:




Note that the last match cannot be found with the getrefs command.

Further matches follow:





The last two matches seem to be rather fuzzy. The differences are highlighted with lighter colors as well. (Finding the literal matches from I_Kings may take several seconds.)

The next quotation combines two passages from LXX, but the text taken from Isaiah cannot be found with the getrefs algorithm:


There is an overlapping part in which 0+9 and 9+0 letters are present. In fact, the word “οφθαλμους” (“eyes”) are used in both passages in the LXX.

The next one shows a long quotation (it consists of 5 different getrefs chunks):


Next, another mixed quotation of two different parts from Isaiah (use getrefs SBLGNT LXX Isaiah 59:20 and getrefs SBLGNT LXX Isaiah 27:9 to find the literal submatches):


Further matches:



The last entry cannot be found via a literal submatch.

Additional matches:




Now we finished the listing of the non-literal matches in the Romans. In the next blog entry we will try to find conclusions by summarizing our results.


Entries on topic internal references in the Bible

  1. Web version of bibref (12 January 2022)
  2. Order in chaos (17 January 2022)
  3. Reproducibility and imperfection (20 January 2022)
  4. A student of Gamaliel's (23 January 2022)
  5. Non-literal matches in the Romans (26 January 2022)
  6. Literal matches: minimal uniquity and maximal extension (31 January 2022)
  7. Literal matches: the minunique and getrefs algorithms (1 February 2022)
  8. Non-literal matches: Jaccard distance (2 February 2022)
  9. Non-literal matches in the Romans: Part 2 (3 February 2022)
  10. A summary on the Romans (5 February 2022)
  11. The Psalms (6 February 2022)
  12. The Psalms: Part 2 (7 February 2022)
  13. A classification of structure diagrams (15 February 2022)
  14. Isaiah: Part 1 (19 February 2022)
  15. Isaiah: Part 2 (26 February 2022)
  16. Isaiah: Part 3 (2 March 2022)
  17. Isaiah: Part 4 (7 March 2022)
  18. Isaiah: Part 5 (15 March 2022)
  19. Isaiah: Part 6 (23 March 2022)
  20. Isaiah: Part 7 (30 March 2022)
  21. A summary (7 April 2022)
  22. On the Wuppertal Project, concerning Matthew (17 July 2022)
  23. Matthew, a summary (25 July 2022)
  24. Isaiah, a second summary (31 July 2022)
  25. Long false positives (23 August 2022)
  26. A general visualization (25 August 2022)
  27. Stephen's defense speech (19 September 2022)
  28. Statistical Restoration Greek New Testament (31 July 2023)
  29. Qt version of bibref (11 March 2024)

Zoltán Kovács
Linz School of Education
Johannes Kepler University
Altenberger Strasse 69
A-4040 Linz