Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/518

πάσχω the paschal sacrifice (which was accustomed to be offered for the people’s deliverance of old from Egypt), or2. the paschal lamb, i.e. the lamb which the Israelites were accustomed to slay and eat on the fourteenth day of the month Nisan (the first month of their year) in memory of that day on which their fathers, preparing to depart from Egypt, were bidden by God to slay and eat a lamb, and to sprinkle their door-posts with its blood, that the destroying angel, seeing the blood, might pass over their dwellings (Ex. xii. sq.; Num. ix.; Deut. xvi): 🇬🇷, Mk. xiv. 12; Lk. xxii. 7, (Ex. xii. 21); Christ crucified is likened to the slain paschal lamb, 1 Co. v.7; 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvi. 17; Mk. xiv. 12, 14; Lk. xxii. 11, 15; Jn. xviii. 28; (, 2 Chr. xxx. 17 sq.3. the paschal supper: 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvi. 19; Mk. xiv. 16; Lk. xxii. 8, 13; 🇬🇷 to celebrate the paschal meal, Mt. xxvi. 18.4. the paschal festival, the feast of Passover, extending from the fourteenth to the twentieth day of the month Nisan: Mt. xxvi. 2; Mk. xiv. 1; Lk. ii. 41; xxii. 1; Jn. ii. 13, 23; vi. 4; xi. 55; xii. 1; xiii. 1; xviii. 39; xix. 14; Acts xii. 4; 🇬🇷 he instituted the Passover (of Moses), Heb. xi. 28 [cf. W. 272 (256); B. 197 (170)]; 🇬🇷 the Passover is celebrated [R. V. cometh], Mt. xxvi. 2. [See BB.DD. s. v. Passover; Dillmann in Schenkel iv. p. 392 sqq.; and on the question of the relation of the “Last Supper” to the Jewish Passover, see (in addition to reff. in BB.DD. u. s.) Kirchner, die Jüdische Passahfeier u. Jesu letztes Mahl. Gotha, 1870; Keil, Com. über Matth. pp. 513-528; J. B. McClellan, The N. T. etc. i. pp. 473-494; but esp. Schürer, Ueber 🇬🇷, akademische Festschrift (Giessen, 1883).]*

🇬🇷; 2 aor. 🇬🇷; pf. 🇬🇷 (Lk. xiii. 2; Heb. ii. 18); fr. Hom. down; to be affected or have been affected, to feel, have a sensible experience, to undergo; it is a  — used in either a good or a bad sense; as, 🇬🇷, of perils and deliverance from them, Esth. ix. 26 (for ); hence 🇬🇷, to suffer sadly, be in bad plight, of a sick person, Mt. xvii. 15 where L Tr txt. WH txt. 🇬🇷 (on the other hand, 🇬🇷, to be well off, in good case, often in Grk. writ. fr. Pind. down).1. in a bad sense, of misfortunes, to suffer, to undergo evils, to be afflicted, (so everywhere in Hom. and Hes.; also in the other Grk. writ. where it is used absol.): absol., Lk. xxii. 15; xxiv. 46; Acts i. 3; iii. 18; xvii. 3; 1 Co. xii. 26; Heb. ii. 18; ix. 26; 1 Pet. ii. 19 sq. 23; iii. 17; iv. 15, 19; Heb. xiii. 12; 🇬🇷, a little while, 1 Pet. v. 10; 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvii. 19; Mk. ix. 12; Lk. xiii. 2; [xxiv. 26]; Acts xxviii. 5; 2 Tim. i. 12; [Heb. v. 8 cf. W. 166 (156) a.; B. § 148, 10]; Rev. ii. 10; 🇬🇷, 2 Co. i. 6; 🇬🇷 w. gen. of pers., Mt. xvi. 21; Lk. ix. 22; xvii. 25; 🇬🇷 w. gen. of pers. Mt. xvii. 12; 🇬🇷, Mk. v. 26; 1 Th. ii. 14; 🇬🇷, in behalf of a pers. or thing, Acts ix. 16; Phil. i. 29; 2 Th. i. 5; with the addition of a dat. of reference or respect [cf. W. § 31, 6], 🇬🇷, 1 Pet. iv. 1 ; 🇬🇷, ibid. [yet G L T Tr WH om. 🇬🇷; cf. W. 412 (384)]; 🇬🇷 w. gen. of the thing and 🇬🇷 w. gen. of pers. 1 Pet. iii. 18, (R G WH mrg.; cf. W. 373 (349); 383 (358) note]; 🇬🇷, 1 Pet. iii. 14.2. in a good sense, of pleasant experiences; but nowhere so unless either the adv. 🇬🇷 or an acc. of the thing be added (🇬🇷 (i.e. 🇬🇷) 🇬🇷, Joseph. antt. 3, 15, 1; exx. fr. Grk. auth. are given in Passow s. v. II 5; [L. and S. s. v. II. 2]): Gal. iii. 4, on which see 🇬🇷, 3 c. [.: 🇬🇷.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, [cf. W. 176 (166)], Patara, a maritime city of Lycia, celebrated for an oracle of Apollo: Acts xxi. 1. [B. D. s. v. Patara; Lewin, St. Paul, ii. 99 sq.]*

🇬🇷: fut. 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; Sept. times without number for (Hiphil of, unused in Kal), also for , etc.; (in Hom. intrans. to beat, of the heart; fr. Arstph., Soph., Plat., al. on used transitively);1. to strike gently: 🇬🇷 (as a part or a member of the body), Acts xii. 7.2. to strike, smite: absol., 🇬🇷, with the sword, Lk. xxii. 49; 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvi. 51; Lk. xxii. 50. by a use solely biblical, to afflict; to visit with evils, etc.: as with a deadly disease, 🇬🇷, Acts xii. 23; 🇬🇷 w. dat. of the thing, Rev. xi. 6 G L T Tr WH; xix. 15, Gen. viii. 21; Num. xiv. 12; Ex. xii. 23, etc.).3. by a use solely biblical, to smite down, cut down, to kill, slay: 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvi. 31 and Mk. xiv. 27, (after Zech. xiii. 7); Acts vii. 24.*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷; fut. 🇬🇷; Pass., pres. ptcp. 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; fr. Pind., Aeschyl., Soph., Plat. down; Sept. for, etc.; to tread, i.e. a. to trample, crush with the feet: 🇬🇷, Rev. xiv. 20; xix. 15, (Judg. ix. 27; Neh. xiii. 15; Jer. xxxi. (xlviii.) 33; Lam. i. 15). b. to advance by setting foot upon, tread upon: 🇬🇷, to encounter successfully the greatest perils from the machinations and persecutions with which Satan would fain thwart the preaching of the gospel, Lk. x. 19 (cf. Ps. xc. (xci.) 13). c. to tread under foot, trample on, i.e. treat with insult and contempt: to desecrate the holy city by devastation and outrage, Lk. xxi. 24; Rev. xi. 2, (fr. Dan. viii. 13); see 🇬🇷. [.: 🇬🇷.]*

🇬🇷 (fr. r. pâ; lit. nourisher, protector, upholder; (Curtius § 348)], 🇬🇷, voc. 🇬🇷 [for which the nom. 🇬🇷 is five times used, and (anarthrous) 🇬🇷 in Jn. xvii. 21 T Tr WH, 24 and 25 L T Tr WH; cf. B. § 129, 5; W. § 29, 2; WH. App. p. 158], plur. 🇬🇷 (Heb. i. 1), 🇬🇷, [fr. Hom. down], Sept. for, a father; 1. prop., i. q. generator or male ancestor, and either  a. the nearest ancestor: Mt. ii. 22; iv. 21 sq.; viii. 21; Lk. i. 17; Jn. iv. 53; Acts vii. 14; 1 Co. v. 1, etc.; 🇬🇷, fathers of the corporeal nature, natural fathers, (opp. to 🇬🇷), Heb. xii. 9; plur. of both parents, Heb. xi. 23 (not infreq. in prof. auth., cf. Delitzsch ad loc.); or b. a more remote ancestor, the founder of a race or tribe, progenitor of a people, forefather: so Abraham is called, Mt. iii. 9; Lk. i. 73; xvi. 24; Jn. viii.