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ἀναστατόω Eum. 648]; &ensp; a. that of Christ: Acts i. 22; ii. 31; iv. 33; Ro. vi. 5; Phil. iii. 10; 1 Pet. iii. 21; with the addition of 🇬🇷, Ro. i. 4 (a generic phrase: the resurrection-of-the-dead, although it has come to pass as yet only in the case of Christ alone; cf. Acts xvii. 32; W. § 30, 2 a. fin.); 🇬🇷, 1 Pet. i. 3. &ensp; b. that of all men at the end of the present age. ‘This is called simply 🇬🇷 or 🇬🇷, Mt. xxii. 23, [28], 30; Mk. xii. 18, 23; Lk. xx. 27, 33, 36; Jn. xi. 24; Acts xvii. 18; xxiii. 8; 2 Tim. ii. 18; by meton. i. q. the author of resurrection, Jn. xi. 25; with the addition of 🇬🇷, Lk. xx. 35; Acts iv. 2; or simply of 🇬🇷 [on the distinction which some (e. g. Van Hengel on Ro. i. 4; Van Hengel and Bp. Lghtft. on Phil. iii. 11; Cremer s. v.) would make between these phrases, see W. 128 (117); B. 89 (78)], Mt. xxii. 31; Acts xvii. 32; xxiii. 6; xxiv. 15 [Rec.], 21; xxvi. 23; 1 Co. xv. 12 sq. 21, 42; Heb. vi. 2. 🇬🇷 resurrection to life (🇬🇷, 2 Macc. vii. 14 [cf. Dan. xii. 2]), and 🇬🇷 resurrection to judgment, Jn. v. 29, (on the genitives cf. W. 188 (177)); the former is 🇬🇷, Lk. xiv. 14; 🇬🇷, Heb. xi. 35 (so called in comparison with a continuance of life on earth, which is spoken of as an 🇬🇷 by a kind of license; [cf. W. 460 (429)]). 🇬🇷 in Rev. xx. 5 sq. will be that of true Christians, and at the end of a thousand years will be followed by a second resurrection, that of all the rest of mankind, Rev. xx. 12 sqq. On the question whether and in what sense Paul also believed in two resurrections, separated from each other by a definite space of time, cf. Grimm in the Zeitschr. für wissenschaftl. Theol., 1873, p. 388 sq. &ensp; c. the resurrection of certain in ancient Jewish story who were restored to life before burial: Heb. xi. 35.*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; a verb found nowhere in prof. auth., but [in Dan. vii. 23 Sept.; Deut. xxix. 27 Graec. Venet.] several times in the O. T. fragments of Aquila [e. g. Ps. x. 1] and Symmachus [e. g. Ps. Iviii. 11; Is. xxii. 3], and in Eustathius, (fr. 🇬🇷, driven from one’s abode, outcast, or roused up from one’s situation; accordingly equiv. to 🇬🇷), to stir up, excite, unsettle; foll. by an acc. &ensp; a. to excite tumults and seditions in the State: Acts xvii. 6; xxi. 38. &ensp; b. to upset, unsettle, minds by disseminating religious error: Gal. v. 12.*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷; to raise up upon a cross, crucify, (🇬🇷 as in 🇬🇷): Heb. vi. 6, (very often in Grk. writ. fr. Hdt. down). Cf. Win. De verb. comp. etc. Pt. iii. p. 9 sq.; [Winer admits that in Heb. l. c. the meaning to crucify again, or afresh, may also be assigned to this verb legitimately, and that the absence of a precedent in prof. writ. for such a sense is, from the nature of the case, not surprising].*

🇬🇷: 1 aor. 🇬🇷; to draw sighs up from the bottom of the breast, to sigh deeply: Mk. viii. 12. (Lam. i. 4; Sir. xxv. 18 (17); 2 Macc. vi. 30, and in Grk. writ. fr. [Aeschyl. choëph. 335,] Hdt. 1, 86 down.)*

🇬🇷: fut. 🇬🇷; [1 aor. 🇬🇷: Pass., pres. 🇬🇷]; 2 aor. 🇬🇷; &emsp; 1. to turn upside down, overturn: 🇬🇷, Jn. ii. 15, (🇬🇷, Hom. Il. 23, 436). &emsp; 2. to turn back; intrans. [W. 251 (236)] to return, like the Lat. reverto i. q. revertor, (as in Grk. writ.; in Sept. i. q. ): Acts v. 22; xv. 16 (here 🇬🇷 has not like the Hebr. the force of an adverb, again, but God in the Messiah’s advent returns to his people, whom he is conceived of as having previously abandoned; cf. W. 469 (437)). &emsp; 3. to turn hither and thither; pass. reflexively, to turn one’s self about, sojourn, dwell, 🇬🇷 in a place; &ensp; a. literally: Mt. xvii. 22, where L T WH Tr txt. 🇬🇷, cf. Keim ii. p. 581 [Eng. trans. iv. p. 303]. (Josh. ν. 5; Ezek. xix. 6, and in Grk. writ.) &ensp; b. like the Hebr. to walk, of the manner of life and moral character, to conduct one’s self, behave one’s self, live: 2 Co. i. 12 (🇬🇷); 1 Tim. iii. 15 (🇬🇷); Eph. ii. 3 (🇬🇷 among whom); 2 Pet. ii. 18 (🇬🇷). simply to conduct or behave one’s self, ‘walk’, (Germ. wandeln): 1 Pet. i. 17; Heb. x. 33; (🇬🇷) xiii. 18. [Cf. its use e. g. in Xen. an. 2, 5, 14; Polyb.1, 9, 7; 74, 13; 86, 5 etc., (see 🇬🇷, fin.); Prov. xx. 7 Sept.; Clem. Rom. 1 Cor. 1, 21, 8; etc.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (fr. the pass. 🇬🇷, see the preceding word), prop. ‘walk,’ i. e. manner of life, behavior, conduct, (Germ. Lebenswandel): Gal. i. 13; Eph. iv. 22; 1 Tim. iv. 12; Jas. iii. 13; 1 Pet. i. 15, 18; ii. 12; iii. 1 sq. 16; 2 Pet. ii. 7; plur. 🇬🇷 the ways in which holy living shows itself, 2 Pet. iii. 11. Hence life in so far as it is comprised in conduct, Heb. xiii. 7. (This word, in the senses given, is found in Grk. writ. fr. Polyb. 4, 82, 1 down; in the Scriptures first in Tob. iv. 14; 2 Macc. v. 8; add Epict. diss. 1, 9, 5; 4, 7, 5, [and (fr. Soph. Lex. s. v.) Agatharchides 134, 12; 153, 8; Aristeas 16].)*

🇬🇷; [1 aor. mid. inf. 🇬🇷]; (mid. of 🇬🇷), to put together in order, arrange, compose: 🇬🇷, Lk. i. 1 (so to construct [R. V. draw up] a narrative that the sequence of events may be evident. Found besides only in Plut. de sollert. anim. c. 12, where it denotes to go regularly through a thing again, rehearse it; [in Eccl. ii. 20 Ald., and in eccl. writ. e. g. Iren. 3, 21, 2 sub fin.]).*

🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; pf. 🇬🇷; &ensp; a. trans. to cause to rise: 🇬🇷, Mt. v. 45, (of the earth bringing forth plants, Gen. iii. 18; of a river producing something, Hom. Il. 5, 777). &ensp; b. intrans. to rise, arise: light, Mt. iv. 16, (Is. lviii. 10); the sun, Mt. xiii. 6; Mk. iv. 6; xvi. 2; Jas. i. 11; the clouds, Lk. xii. 54; 🇬🇷, 2 Pet. i. 19. trop. to rise from, be descended from, Heb. vii. 14. The earlier Greeks commonly used 🇬🇷 of the sun and moon, and 🇬🇷 of the stars; but Aelian., Paus., Stob. and other later writ. neglect this distinction; see Lob. ad Phryn. p. 124 sq. [.: 🇬🇷.]*

🇬🇷: 2 aor. mid. 🇬🇷; [in various senses fr. Hom. down]; in the mid. voice to set forth a thing drawn forth, as it were, from some corner (🇬🇷), to set forth [in words], declare, [R. V. lay before]: 🇬🇷, Acts