What is the significance of hallelujah?

What is the significance of hallelujah?
Redemption Theology

TL;DR:

“Hallelujah” is a powerful command that means “Praise the LORD,” calling us to actively worship God. It’s more than a phrase—it’s a declaration of who God is and a response to all He has done.

from the old testament

  • The Old Testament was written largely in Hebrew, and Hallelujah is the English equivalent of the two Hebrew words hallelu and Yah. The word hallelu is the imperative plural form of halal, which means “praise.” For example, regarding Abram's beautiful wife Sarai, the Bible says of the Egyptians, “Pharaoh’s officials saw her and praised her to Pharaoh” (Genesis 12:15). The root word for “praised” is halal.
  • Hallelu is a command meaning “you all praise," and Yah is a shortened form of God's personal name. Combined, these words are often rendered as “praise the LORD!” (Psalm 104:35; 105:45; 106:48). Note that some translations, such as the LSB, translate it more literally as “Praise Yah!” In each case, the phrase refers to praising God.

from the new testament

  • The New Testament was written in Greek, but some biblical Hebrew words were transliterated rather than translated into Greek. “Hallelu Yah” is an example of that. In Greek, it became alleluia and appears in four verses in Revelation: 19:1, 3–4, and 6. In those verses, God was being praised “For the Lord our God, the Almighty, reigns” (Revelation 19:6b). The word alleluia continued to be transliterated first into Latin, then German, and finally into English as “hallelujah.”

implications for today

"Hallelujah!"—you might hear that when someone at the office fixes the copy machine or from the person in front of you at the doughnut shop when she finds out her favorite flavor hasn't sold out. But that offhand use misses so much because it is offhand. God is responsible for all good things in our life (James 1:17), so when we say "hallelujah," we should really mean it as a praise to God.

Whether the one saying it realizes it, "hallelujah" expresses praise to the one and only God, Yahweh. That's why  Christians throughout the centuries have been using it to recognize the great things He has done in their lives and the lives of those around them.

Believers, above all people, should be continually praising Him. Paul tells us to "Rejoice in the Lord always!" (Philippians 4:4). We were saved because of His mercy in sending Jesus to bear our sin (1 Peter 2:24). We continue to live and breathe because He is upholding us (Colossians 1:17). Everything that happens in life, whether good or difficult, is God training us to persevere in this life (James 1:2–4).

The next time you are singing a song or hear someone exclaim, “Hallelujah!” let that remind you to praise Him as well!

understand

  • “Hallelujah” is a Hebrew expression that means “Praise Yahweh” or “Praise the LORD.”
  • “Hallelujah” is a command calling people to actively praise God.
  • “Hallelujah” carries the same meaning from the Old Testament into the New Testament and into modern languages.

reflect

  • How does understanding praise to be a command rather than just a response change your view of worship?
  • What does it look like in your life to actively and intentionally praise God?
  • For what are you praising God today, and who can you share that with?

engage

  • How does understanding the meaning of “hallelujah” deepen our understanding of praise and worship?
  • Why might “hallelujah” have been preserved across languages instead of being translated?
  • What does the repeated use of “hallelujah” in worship passages teach about the centrality of praise in the life of God’s people?