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 | | It is a notation signifying that either that the music was composed by a disciple or supplicant of Deity, or that it was time for the selah, or disciple, to sing or chant. |
 | | So the word in the middle of and after many of the psalms, Selah, is not an instrumental musical signature denoting suspension, but a notice for the selah or disciple to respond to, or recite, a passage of the psalm. |
 | | Selah is from a similar root of the following words indicating exaltation, which a true disciple sometimes feels when relating to divinity, and the term suspension may also be seen as relevant, but not as a suspension in the musical time, but as the state of a disciple before being fully initiated. |
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