Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/86

ἀποκαθίστημι away from God, Col. iii. 3; since they owe this habit of mind to the death of Christ, they are said also 🇬🇷, Ro. vi. 8; Col. ii. 20. [.: 🇬🇷.]

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷 (Mk. ix. 12 🇬🇷 R G), and 🇬🇷 (Mk. ix. 12 L T Τr [but WH 🇬🇷, see their App. p. 168]; Acts i. 6; cf. W. 78 (75); [B. 44 sq. (39)]); fut. 🇬🇷; 2 aor. 🇬🇷 (with double augm., [cf. Ex. iv. 7; Jer. xxiii. 8], Mk. viii. 25 T Tr WH); 1 aor. pass. 🇬🇷 or, acc. to the better reading, with double augm. 🇬🇷, Mt. xii. 13; Mk. iii. 5; Lk. vi. 10 (Ignat. ad Smyrn. 11; cf. [WH. App. p. 162]; W. 72 (69 sq.); [B. 35 (31)]; Mullach p. 22); as in Grk. writ. to restore to its former state; 2 aor. act. to be in its former state: used of parts of the body restored to health, Mt. xii. 13; Mk. iii. 5; Lk. vi. 10; of a man cured of blindness, Mk. viii. 25; of the restoration of dominion, Acts i. 6 (1 Macc. xv. 3); of the restoration of a disturbed order of affairs, Mt. xvii. 11; Mk. ix. 12; of a man at a distance from his friends and to be restored to them, Heb. xiii. 19.*

🇬🇷: fut. 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; [Pass., pres. 🇬🇷]; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; 1 fut. 🇬🇷; in Grk. writ. fr. [Hdt. and] Plat. down; in Sept. equiv. to ; &emsp; 1. prop. to uncover, lay open what has been veiled or covered up; to disclose, make bare: Ex. xx. 26; Lev. xviii. 11 sqq.; Num. v. 18; Sus. 32; 🇬🇷, Plat. Prot. p. 352 a.; 🇬🇷, Plut. Crass. 6. &emsp; 2. metaph. to make known, make manifest, disclose, what before was unknown; &ensp; a. pass. of any method whatever by which something before unknown becomes evident: Mt.x. 26; Lk. xii. 2. &ensp; b. pass. of matters which come to light from things done: Lk. ii. 35 [some make the verb mid. here]; Jn. xii. 38 (Is. liii. 1); Ro. i. 18; from the gospel: Ro. i. 17. &ensp; c. 🇬🇷 is used of God revealing to men things unknown [Dan. ii. 19 Theod., 22, 28; Ps. xcvii. (xcviii.) 2; 1 S. ii. 27, cf. iii. 21], especially those relating to salvation:—whether by deeds, Mt. xi. 25; xvi. 17; Lk. x. 21 (by intimacy with Christ, by his words and acts);—or by the Holy Spirit, 1 Co. ii. 10; xiv. 30; Eph. ii. 5; Phil. iii. 15; 1 Pet. i. 12; 🇬🇷 who, what, how great his Son is, in my soul, Gal. i. 16. Of Christ teaching men: Mt. xi. 27; Lk. x. 22. &ensp; d. pass. of things, previously non-existent, coming into being and to view: as, 🇬🇷, Ro. viii. 18 (🇬🇷 to be conferred on us); 1 Pet. v. 1; 🇬🇷, 1 Pet. i. 5; 🇬🇷, Gal. iii. 23; the day of judgment, 1 Co. iii. 13. &ensp; e. pass. of persons, previously concealed, making their appearance in public: of Christ, who will return from heaven where he is now hidden (Col. iii. 3) to the earth, Lk. xvii. 30; of Antichrist, 2 Th. ii. 3, 6, 8.*

[On this word (and the foll.) cf. Westcott, Introd. to the Study of the Gospels, p. 9 sq. (Am. ed. 34 sq.); Lücke, Einl. in d. Offenb. d. Johan. 2d ed. p. 18 sqq.; esp. F. G. B. van Bell, Disput. theolog. de vocabulis 🇬🇷 et 🇬🇷 in N. T., Lugd. Bat., 1849. 🇬🇷 is thought to describe an external manifestation, to the senses and hence open to all, but single or isolated; 🇬🇷 an internal disclosure, to the believer, and abiding. The 🇬🇷 or unveiling precedes and produces the 🇬🇷 or manifestation; the former looks toward the object revealed, the latter toward the persons to whom the revelation is made. Others, however, seem to question the possibility of discrimination; see e. g. Fritzsche on Rom. vol. ii. 149. Cf. 1 Co. iii. 13.]

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷, q. v.), an uncovering; &emsp; 1. prop. a laying bare, making naked (1 S. xx. 30). &emsp; 2. tropically, in N.T. and eccl. language [see end], &ensp; a. a disclosure of truth, instruction, concerning divine things before unknown—esp. those relating to the Christian salvation—given to the soul by God himself, or by the ascended Christ, esp. through the operation of the Holy Spirit (1 Co. ii. 10), and so to be distinguished from other methods of instruction; hence, 🇬🇷, Eph. iii. 3. 🇬🇷, a spirit received from God disclosing what and how great are the benefits of salvation, Eph. i. 17, cf. 18. with gen. of the obj., 🇬🇷, Ro. xvi. 25. with gen. of the subj., 🇬🇷, 2 Co. xii. 1 (revelations by ecstasies and visions, [so 7]); Gal. i. 12; Rev. i. 1 (revelation of future things relating to the consummation of the divine kingdom); 🇬🇷, Gal. ii. 2; 🇬🇷 to speak on the ground of [al. in the form of) a revelation, agreeably to a revelation received, 1 Co. xiv. 6; equiv. to 🇬🇷, in the phrase 🇬🇷, 1 Co. xiv. 26. &ensp; b. equiv. to 🇬🇷 as used of events by which things or states or persons hitherto withdrawn from view are made visible to all, manifestation, appearance, cf. 🇬🇷, 2, d. and e.: 🇬🇷 a light to appear to the Gentiles [al. render ‘a light for a revelation (of divine truth) to the Gentiles,’ and so refer the use to a. above], Lk. ii. 32; 🇬🇷, Ro. ii. 5; 🇬🇷, the event in which it will appear who and what the sons of God are, by the glory received from God at the last day, Ro. viii. 19; 🇬🇷, of the glory clothed with which he will return from heaven, 1 Pet. iv. 13; of this return itself the phrase is used 🇬🇷: 2 Th. i. 7; 1 Co. i. 7; 1 Pet. i. 7, 13. (Among Grk. writ. Plut. uses the word once, Cat. maj. c. 20, of the denudation of the body, [also in Paul. Aemil. 14 🇬🇷; in Quomodo adul. ab amic. 32 🇬🇷; cf. Sir. xi. 27; xxii. 22 etc. See Trench § xciv. and reff. s. v. 🇬🇷, fin.])*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (fr. 🇬🇷, and this fr. 🇬🇷, 🇬🇷 the head, and 🇬🇷 in the Ion. dial. to watch; hence 🇬🇷 [Hdt. 7. 163, 168; Xen. mem. 3, 5, 6; Eur., al.] to watch with head erect or outstretched, to direct attention to anything, to wait for in suspense; 🇬🇷 (Polyb. 16, 2, 8; 18, 31, 4; 22, 19, 3; [Plut. parall. p. 310, 43, vol. vii. p. 235 ed. Reiske]; Joseph. b. j. 3, 7, 26, and in Ps. xxxvi. (xxxvii.) 7 Aq. for ), anxiously [?] to look forth from one’s post. But the prefix 🇬🇷 refers also to time (like the Germ. ab in abwarten, [cf. Eng. wait it ]), so that it signifies constancy in expecting; hence the noun, found in Paul alone and but twice, denotes), anxious [?] and persistent expectation: Ro. viii. 19; Phil. i. 20. This word is very