Letters and Communication from the Biblical World

Ancient Israelite messengers carried oral and written communications between people for both personal and official purposes.

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In the ancient world, communications were sent by messenger. In many cases, the messenger was given an oral message to repeat to the recipient and would then carry back the oral reply; in other cases, for greater accuracy and reliability, he carried a written message that he might read aloud to the recipient or hand over for a literate recipient to read himself. Letters permitted the transmission of messages over distance (and also over time, although that was not their main purpose). Proper communication was essential, and miscommunication was to be avoided. Thus Proverbs 13:17 cautions: “Harm befalls a wicked messenger; a faithful courier brings healing.”

Written messages were commonly used throughout the ancient Near East for diplomatic correspondence—between independent states or empires and between the central government or royal court and its provincial officers; for communications to and from battlefields and outposts; for legal purposes such as petitions, summonses, and evidence; and for personal matters. The Persian Empire was known for its well-developed communication system; a network of couriers on fast horses delivered messages, including royal decrees, throughout the empire.

Letters were even used for religious purposes; prayers and prophecies could be written in the form of a letter. In the Hebrew Bible, letters could be created for literary purposes (e.g., David’s Letter to Joab in 2 Samuel 11:14–15), just as other real-life genres could. Although letters commonly open with the name of the recipient and the sender as well as a blessing or greeting, many letters within the biblical narrative lack these elements and give only the body of the letter or part of it or a summary of its contents. In biblical books from the Persian period, like Ezra-Nehemiah, letters play a prominent role. By Greco-Roman times, letters, or epistles (e.g., those in the New Testament), had become a recognized literary genre, which continues into modern times (see, e.g., the epistolary novel, which is composed of letters).

Hebrew and Aramaic letters were written on papyrus and on ostraca. Because papyrus does not survive in moist climates, the only letters from the land of Israel that remain from ancient times are those that were written on ostraca. Numerous letters in Aramaic have survived in Egypt because of its dry climate. The letters are difficult to decipher because they are often in fragmentary condition or their ink has faded. They have syntactic difficulties and, in addition, sometimes allude to matters known to the recipient but not to us.

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Arad Letter (Military Orders)

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Arad letter (Military Orders). The letter, from the latter days of the Judean monarchy, refers to sending reinforcements to a town in the Negev, “Lest Edom should enter there.” It illustrates the…

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Letter to King Artaxerxes and the King’s Reply

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And in the time of Artaxerxes, Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel, and their colleagues wrote to King Artaxerxes of Persia, a letter written in Aramaic and translated. Aramaic: Rehum the commissioner and…

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Letter of the Persian Governor to King Darius and the King’s Reply

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This is the text of the letter that Tattenai, governor of the province of Beyond the River, and Shethar-boze-nai and his colleagues, the officials of Beyond the River, sent to King Darius…

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David’s Letter to Joab

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In the morning, David wrote a letter to Joab, which he sent with Uriah. He wrote in the letter as follows: “Place Uriah in the front line where the fighting is fiercest; then fall back so that he…

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Jezebel’s Letter about Naboth

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So she wrote letters in Ahab’s name and sealed them with his seal, and sent the letters to the elders and the nobles who lived in the same town with Naboth. In the letters she wrote as follows:…

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Arad Letter (Order Concerning Rations)

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Arad letter (Order Concerning Rations), from the remains of the Judahite fortress at Arad, in the Negev, 7th or 6th century BCE. The Arad ostraca provide an impression of the provincial administration…