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NONE.filter - rwp katapin:



rwp@1Corinthians:15:54 @{Shall have put on} (\endusˆtai\). First aorist middle subjunctive with \hotan\ whenever, merely indefinite future, no _futurum exactum_, merely meaning, "whenever shall put on," not "shall have put on." {Is swallowed up} (\katepothˆ\). First aorist passive indicative of \katapin“\, old verb to drink down, swallow down. Perfective use of \kata-\ where we say "up," "swallow up." Timeless use of the aorist tense. Paul changes the active voice \katepien\ in strkjv@Isaiah:25:8| to the passive. Death is no longer victory. Theodotion reads the Hebrew verb (_bulla_, for _billa_,) as passive like Paul. It is the "final overthrow of the king of Terrors" (Findlay) as shown in strkjv@Hebrews:2:15|.

rwp@1Peter:5:8 @{Be watchful} (\grˆgorˆsate\). First aorist active imperative of \grˆgore“\, late present imperative from perfect \egrˆgora\ (to be awake) from \egeir“\ (to arouse), as in strkjv@Matthew:24:42|. For \nˆpsate\ see strkjv@1:13; strkjv@4:7|. {Your adversary} (\ho antidikos hum“n\). Old word for opponent in a lawsuit (Matthew:5:25|). {The devil} (\diabolos\). Slanderer. See on ¯Matthew:4:1|. {As a roaring lion} (\h“s “ruomenos le“n\). But Jesus is also pictured as the Lion of the tribe of Judah (Revelation:5:5|). But Satan {roars} at the saints. Present middle participle \“ruomai\, old verb, here only in N.T., to howl like a wolf, dog, or lion, of men to sing loud (Pindar). See strkjv@Psalms:22:13|. {Whom he may devour} (\katapiein\). Second aorist active infinitive of \katapin“\, to drink down. B does not have \tina\, Aleph has \tina\ (somebody), "to devour some one," while A has interrogative \tina\, "whom he may devour" (very rare idiom). But the devil's purpose is the ruin of men. He is a "peripatetic" (\peripatei\) like the peripatetic philosophers who walked as they talked. Satan wants all of us and sifts us all (Luke:22:31|).

rwp@2Corinthians:2:7 @{Songs:that on the contrary} (\h“ste tounantion\). The natural result expressed by \h“ste\ and the infinitive. \Tounantion\ is by crasis for \to enantion\ and accusative of general reference. {Rather} (\mallon\). Absent in some MSS. {Lest by any means} (\mˆ p“s\). Negative purpose. {Swallowed up} (\katapothˆi\). First aorist passive subjunctive of \katapin“\, to drink down (1Corinthians:15:54|). {With his overmuch sorrow} (\tˆi perissoterƒi lupˆi\). Instrumental case, "by the more abundant sorrow" (comparative of adjective \perissos\).

rwp@Hebrews:11:29 @{Which assaying to do} (\hˆs pieran labontes\). Literally, "of which taking trial" (second aorist active participle of \lamban“\, to take). The idiom \peiran lambanein\ occurs in strkjv@Deuteronomy:28:56|, in N.T. only here and verse 36|, though a classical idiom (Demosthenes, etc.). {Were swallowed up} (\katepothˆsan\). First aorist passive indicative of \katapin“\, to drink down, to swallow down (Matthew:23:24|).

rwp@Matthew:23:24 @{Strain out the gnat} (\diulizontes ton k“n“pa\). By filtering through (\dia\), not the "straining at" in swallowing so crudely suggested by the misprint in the A.V. {Swallow the camel} (\tˆn de kamˆlon katapinontes\). Gulping or drinking down the camel. An oriental hyperbole like that in strkjv@19:24|. See also strkjv@5:29,30; strkjv@17:20; strkjv@21:21|. Both insects and camels were ceremonially unclean (Leviticus:11:4,20,23,42|). "He that kills a flea on the Sabbath is as guilty as if he killed a camel" (Jer. _Shabb._ 107).

rwp@Revelation:12:16 @{Helped the woman} (\eboˆthˆsen tˆi gunaiki\). First aorist active indicative of \boˆthe“\, old verb with the dative as in strkjv@Hebrews:2:18|, which see. Herodotus tells of the Lycus disappearing underground near Colossae. But this vivid symbol is not dependent on historical examples. {Swallowed up} (\katepien\). Second aorist active indicative of \katapin“\, literally "drank down."


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