A remarkable aspect of the literary structure of the Hebrew Bible is the possibility that the **Tetragrammaton** (*יהוה*) or name of YHWH is numerically and thematically woven into the very fabric of the text in the numbers **26 and 17**. The concept of divine name-number structuring is known in Jewish tradition as _ariga_—literally “weaving” (Joseph Gikatilla). Though first explicitly recorded in 13th-century France (Claus Schedl), its origins stretch back the middle ages (_Abudirham_ (1340)) and likely to biblical antiquity. The number **26** reflects the sum of the traditional values of the Hebrew letters in the divine name: _yod_ (**10**) + _he_ (**5**) + _waw_ (**6**) + _he_ (**5**). The number **17** may represent a gematric variation of a conjectured form such as _’ahweh_, analogous to “*I am*” in [Exodus 3:14](https://www.bible.com/bible/100/EXO.3.14) (See [[Jesus And The Claim To Be I AM (ἐγώ εἰµι)|Also]]), or it may simply derive from the sum of the individual digits in **26** (**1+0+5+6+5**). Strikingly, both 17 and 26 are also the numerical value of the Hebrew word **kabod** (_כָּבוֹד_), meaning “glory.” This theological and numerical association is grounded in [Exodus 33:17–23](https://www.bible.com/bible/100/EXO.33.17-23), where God reveals His _glory_ to Moses by proclaiming His _name_—these two concepts are linked throughout the Hebrew Scriptures and signify His manifest presence ( Bazak; Labuschagne). Claus Schedl proposed that this “weaving” was a compositional technique originating in biblical times, with scribes intentionally embedding numerical representations of YHWH's name into the structure of the text. In a private letter shortly before his death, Schedl questioned whether medieval kabbalists had preserved this ancient scribal knowledge, suggesting that the biblical text may have been composed “nach der Zahlen des Gottesnamens” (according to the numbers of the divine name). --- Would you like this to be footnoted with full citations, or keep it more integrated like this? These patterns suggest a conscious literary strategy, whereby the text of Scripture was constructed with numeric precision to reflect the presence and character of God. In the case of Daniel 9, as this paper will explore, such numerical design appears to frame and emphasize key theological motifs—including the role of the “Prince,” the significance of the “Sevens,” and the overarching covenantal timeline—thus embedding divine identity within the text’s very structure. The name YHWH woven into the fabric of the text There is a Jewish tradition— recorded for the first time, as far as we know, in the thirteenth century in France— that the name of God was woven into the very texture of Scripture. This does not mean that the tradition about this ‘weaving’ was invented at that time. For its origin we must look beyond the medieval kabbalistic tradition and go back to biblical antiquity. It was who brought the "ariga tradition to my attention. According to him, we should consider it a reminiscence of a scribal compositional technique that goes right back to biblical times until the finalization of the text of Holy Scripture in the first century of the Common Era. In a private letter to me (17-5-1986), a few weeks before his tragic death in a car accident he wrote: “Wäre es nicht möglich, dass in der späteren mittelalterlichen Kabbala noch das Wissen davon erhalten war, dass der biblische Text tatsächlich nach der Zahlen des Gottesnamens durchkomponiert wurde???!!!”. In other words, he suggested that this ‘weaving’ of God’s name into the text was carried out by means of the two numbers which represent the gematric values of the divine name, 26 and 17. The first divine name number, 26, represents the name yahweh, , an archaising form of the 3rd person form yihyeh, , “he is”. • 26 = y h w h, , = 10+5+6+5. In a private letter to Pieter van der Lugt (4-4-2011), Jacob Bazak drew our attention to the fact that Rab David, son of Joseph, son of David, in his book Abudirham (a commentary on the Jewish Prayer Book), written in Spain in 1340, noted concerning Psalm 136: “This psalm contains 26 verses like the number of the divine name y-h-w-h which is 26.” This is a very important piece of evidence showing incontestably that the use of the divine name number 26 for structuring purposes in the Hebrew Bible was still known in the Middle Ages. The divine name number 17 can of course be explained as the sum of the digits of the numbers 10, 5, 6 and 5 (1+0+5+6+5=17), but it is also possible that 17 is the numerical value of a conjectured ’ahweh, , which is to ’ehyeh, , “I am” (Ex. 3:14), as yahweh, , is to yihyeh, , “he is”: • 17 = ’ h w h, , = 1+5+6+5. The numbers 17 and 26 also both happen to be the numerical value of kabod, , or kabôd, , ‘glory’. Among the Jewish methods of computing gematric values, two are common: • in one, by which we get the positional or ordinal value (also known as Gematria 22): the letters have the value of their position in the alphabet, the alef – yod represent 1 – 10, but kaf = 11, lamed = 12, mem = 13, and so forth; and • in another, by which we get the decimal value (also known as Gematria 400) the letters alef through yod again represent the numerals 1 – 10, but kaf = 20, lamed = 30, mem = 40, etc….qof = 100, resh = 200, shin = 300, taf = 400. As far as I know it has always been taken for granted that the decimal values of yod through taf (10 through 400) were simply attributed to these letters. In my opinion, however, these values were calculated: they were achieved by multiplying the sum of the digits of their ordinal values by 10 (yod through tsadeh) and 100 (qof through taf). The fact that 17 and 26 can stand for both the Name and the Glory is not surprising, since in the Bible the ‘name’ and the ‘glory’ of God were inextricably linked. This is most effectively demonstrated in Ex. 33:17-23, where Moses asks God to show him his glory and God responds by pronouncing his name in Moses’ hearing.