Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/88

ἀπόκρυφος Lk. x. 21; Mt. xi. 25 (L T Tr WH 🇬🇷), in imitation of the Hebr. , Ps. xxxvii. (xxxviii.) 10; cxviii. (cxix.) 19; Jer. xxxix. (xxxii.) 17; cf. 🇬🇷, [B. 149 (130); 189 (163); W. 227 (213)]. (In Grk. writ. fr. Hom. down.)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), hidden, secreted: Mk. iv. 22; Lk. viii. 17. stored up: Col. ii. 3. (Dan. xi. 43 [Theod.]; Is. xlv. 3; 1 Macc. i. 23; Xen., Eur.; [cf. Bp. Lghtft. on the word, Col. l. c., and Ign. i. 351 sq.].)*

🇬🇷, and Aeol. 🇬🇷 (Mt. x. 28 L T Tr; Mk. xii. 5 G L T Tr; Lk. xii. 4. L T Tr; 2 Co. iii. 6 T Tr; cf. Fritzsche on Mk. p. 507 sq.; [Tdf. Proleg. p. 79]; W. 83 (79); [B. 61 (54)]), 🇬🇷 (Grsb. in Mt. x. 28; Lk. xii. 4), 🇬🇷 (Lchm. in 2 Co. iii. 6; Rev. xiii. 10), 🇬🇷 (Mk. xii. 5 WH); fut. 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; Pass., pres. inf. 🇬🇷 (Rev. vi. 11 G L T Tr WH); 1 aor. 🇬🇷 (Bttm. Ausf. Spr. ii. 227; W. l. c.; [B. 41 (35 sq.)]); [fr. Hom. down]; &emsp; 1. prop. to kill in any way whatever, (🇬🇷 i. e. so as to put out of the way; cf. [Eng. to kill off], Germ.  schlachten): Mt. xvi. 21; xxii. 6; Mk. vi. 19; ix. 31; Jn. ν. 18; viii. 22; Acts iii. 15; Rev. ii. 13, and very often; [🇬🇷, Rev. ii. 23; vi. 8, cf. Β. 184 (159); W. 339 (319)]. to destroy (allow to perish): Mk. iii. 4 [yet al. take it here absol., to kill]. &emsp; 2. metaph. to extinguish, abolish: 🇬🇷, Eph. ii. 16; to inflict moral death, Ro. vii. 11 (see 🇬🇷, II. 2); tο deprive of spiritual life and procure eternal misery, 2 Co. iii. 6 [Lchm. 🇬🇷; see above].

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, or 🇬🇷, (hence 3 pers sing. pres. either 🇬🇷 [so WH] or 🇬🇷, Jas. i. 15; cf. W. 88 (84); B. 62 (54)); 1 aor. 🇬🇷; (🇬🇷, or 🇬🇷, to be pregnant; cf. 🇬🇷); to bring forth from the womb, give birth to: 🇬🇷, Jas. i. 15; to produce, ibid. 18. (4 Macc. xv. 17; Dion. Hal. 1, 70; Plut., Lcian., Ael. v. h. 5, 4; Hdian. 1, 5, 13 [5 ed. Bekk.]; 1, 4, 2 [1 ed. Bekk.].)*

🇬🇷: fut. 🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; pf. pass. [3 pers. sing. 🇬🇷 Mk. xvi. 4 R G L but T Tr WH 🇬🇷], ptcp. 🇬🇷; to roll off or away: Mt. xxviii. 2; Mk. xvi. 3; Lk. xxiv. 2. (Gen. xxix. 3, 8, 10; Judith xiii. 9; Joseph. antt. 4, 8, 37; 5, 11, 3; Lcian. rhet. praec. 3.) But see 🇬🇷.*

🇬🇷; fut. 🇬🇷 (Col. iii. 24; L T Tr WH 🇬🇷; see 🇬🇷); 2 aor. 🇬🇷; 2 aοr. mid. 🇬🇷; fr. Hdt. down; &emsp; 1. to receive (from another, 🇬🇷 [cf. Mey. on Gal. iv. 5; Ellic. ibid. and Win. De verb. comp. etc. as below]) what is due or promised (cf. 🇬🇷, 2): 🇬🇷 the adoption promised to believers, Gal. iv. 5; 🇬🇷 thy good things, “which thou couldst expect and as it were demand, which seemed due to thee” (Win. De verb. comp. etc. Pt. iv. p. 13), Lk. xvi. 25. Hence &emsp; 2. to take again or back, to recover: Lk. vi. 34 [Τ Tr txt. WH 🇬🇷]; xv. 27; and to receive by way of retribution: Lk. xviii. 30 (L txt. Tr mrg. WH txt. 🇬🇷); xxiii. 41; Ro. i. 27; 2 Jn. 8; Col. iii. 24. &emsp; 3. to take from others, take apart or aside; Mid. 🇬🇷, to take a person with one aside out of the view of others with the addition of 🇬🇷 in Mk. vii. 33, (Joseph. b. j. 2, 7, 2; and in the Act., 2 Macc. vi. 21; 🇬🇷, Hdt. 1, 209; Arstph. ran. 78; 🇬🇷, App. b. civ. 5, 40). &emsp; 4. to receive any one hospitably: 3 Jn. 8, where L T Tr WH have restored 🇬🇷.*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (fr. 🇬🇷 to enjoy), enjoyment (Lat. fructus): 1 Tim. vi. 17 (🇬🇷 to enjoy); Heb. xi. 25 (🇬🇷 pleasure born of sin). (In Grk. writ. fr. [Eur. and] Thuc. down.)*

🇬🇷: [impf. 🇬🇷, WH txt. in 2 Tim. iv. 13, 20; Tit. i. 5]; 2 aor. 🇬🇷; [fr. Hom. down]; &emsp; 1. to leave, leave behind: one in some place, Tit. i. 5 L T Tr WH; 2 Tim. iv. 13, 20. Pass. 🇬🇷 it remains, is reserved: Heb. iv. 9; x. 26; foll. by acc. and inf., Heb. iv. 6. &emsp; 2. to desert, forsake: a place, Jude 6.*

🇬🇷: [impf. 🇬🇷]; to lick off, lick up: Lk. xvi. 21 R G; cf. 🇬🇷. ([Apollon. Rhod. 4, 478]; Athen. vi. c. 13 p. 250 a.)*

🇬🇷 and 🇬🇷 ([🇬🇷 Jn. xii. 25 T Tr WH], impv. 🇬🇷 Ro. xiv. 15, [cf. Β. 45 (39); WH. App. p. 168 sq.]); fut. 🇬🇷 and (1 Co. i. 19 🇬🇷 fr. a pass. in the O.T., where often) 🇬🇷 (cf. W. 83 (80); [B. 64 (56)]); 1 aor. 🇬🇷; to destroy; Mid., pres. 🇬🇷; [impf. 3 pers. plur. 🇬🇷 1 Co. x. 9 T Tr WH]; fut. 🇬🇷; 2 aor. 🇬🇷; (2 pf. act. ptcp. 🇬🇷); [fr. Hom. down]; to perish. &emsp; 1. to destroy i. e. to put out of the way entirely, abolish, put an end to, ruin: Mk. i. 24; Lk. iv. 34; xvii. 27, 29; Jude 5; 🇬🇷 render useless, cause its emptiness to be perceived, 1 Co. i. 19 (fr. Sept. of Is. xxix. 14); to kill: Mt. ii. 13; xii. 14; Mk. ix. 22; xi. 18; Jn. x. 10, etc.; contextually, to declare that one must be put to death: Mt. xxvii. 20; metaph. to devote or give over to eternal misery: Mt. x. 28; Jas. iv. 12; contextually, by one’s conduct to cause another to lose eternal salvation: Ro. xiv. 15. Mid. to perish, to be lost, ruined, destroyed; &ensp; a. of persons; &ensp; α. properly: Mt. viii. 25; Lk. xiii. 3, 5, 33; Jn. xi. 50; 2 Pet. iii. 6; Jude 11, etc.; 🇬🇷, Lk. xv. 17; 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvi. 52; 🇬🇷, 2 Co. iv. 9. &ensp; β. tropically, to incur the loss of true or eternal life; to be delivered up to eternal misery: Jn. iii. 15 [R L br.], 16; x. 28; xvii. 12, (it must be borne in mind, that acc. to John’s conception eternal life begins on earth, just as soon as one becomes united to Christ by faith); Ro. ii. 12; 1 Co. viii. 11; xv. 18; 2 Pet. iii. 9. Hence 🇬🇷 they to whom it belongs to partake of salvation, and 🇬🇷 those to whom it belongs to perish or to be consigned to eternal misery, are contrasted by Paul: 1 Co. i. 18; 2 Co. ii. 15; iv. 3; 2 Th. ii. 10, (on these pres. ptcps. cf. W. 342 (321); B. 206 (178)). &ensp; b. of things; to be blotted out, to vanish away: 🇬🇷, Jas. i. 11; the heavens, Heb. i. 11 (fr. Ps. ci. (cii.) 27); to perish,—of things which on being thrown away are decomposed, as 🇬🇷, Mt. v. 29 sq.; remnants of bread, Jn. vi. 12;—or which perish in some other way, as 🇬🇷, Jn. vi. 27; 🇬🇷, 1 Pet. i. 7;—or which are ruined so that they can no longer subserve the use for which they were designed, as 🇬🇷: Mt.