In high school, J. L. Rice and I were the two first boys to ever take shorthand. We took it for two full years, thinking we would need it in college. We didn’t, but for me, it was a wise choice since it paid my way through school and supported my family the first two years of marriage. (I worked as a secretary for a railroad company during college and for a cast iron pipe company for two years afterward.)
In Old Testament days, in the courts of kings like David and Solomon, among the officials serving the rulers was one called a “recorder.” The Hebrew word is MAZKIR. It’s a fascinating word.
Bear in mind that the consonants in Hebrew carry the freight. The ZKR–pronounced zah-kar–is the word for “remember.” You will recall what a popular theme that was for prophets who brought sermons to God’s people. “Remember, O Israel,” they would begin. A friend of mine did his doctoral thesis on the use of “zakar” in the Old Testament. He had plenty of material to work with.
The word MZKR or MAZKIR adds a new dimension to “remember,” and makes it “to cause to remember.” That is, to remind.
A MAZKIR or court recorder was a person with an interesting assignment: he took notes (shorthand?) on what the king did in negotiations with other rulers or while issuing verdicts in court and he kept that information on file. The next time the king met with the other rulers or held court again, he called in his “mazkir” and asked him to bring him up to date, to remind him of what they did the last time. Kings need people to help them remember.
Okay, still with me here? This is where it gets good.