woch ( אשׁמרה , 'ashmurāh , אשׁמרת , 'ashmōreth ; φυλακή , phulakḗ ): A division of the night. The night was originally divided into three watches ( Judges 7:19 ), but later into four, as we find in the New Testament (Matthew 14:25; Mark 6:48 ). We do not know the limits of the watches in the first division, but the middle watch probably began two hours before midnight and ended two hours after. The fourfold division was according to the Roman system, each of which was a fourth part of the night. See TIME .
"Watch" is also the guard placed on watch ( משׁמר , mishmār , Nehemiah 4:9; κουστωδία , koustōdı́a , from Latin custodia , Matthew 27:65 , Matthew 27:66; Matthew 28:11 ). It sometimes refers to the act of watching, as in 2 Kings 11:6 , 2 Kings 11:7 ( משׁמרת , mishmereth ); Luke 2:8 ( phulakē ).
"Watch" is also used figuratively , as in Psalm 141:3 for restraint : "Set a watch, O Y ahweh, before my mouth" (שׁמרה , shomrāh ). See WARD .
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (ISBE) was edited by James Orr, John Nuelsen, Edgar Mullins, Morris Evans, and Melvin Grove Kyle and was published complete in 1939. This web site includes the complete text.
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