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HYMENAEUS - H>@ - (belonging to marriage), the name of a person occurring twice in the correspondence between St. Paul and Timothy; the first time classed with Alexander, ( kjv@1Timothy:1:20) and the second time classed with Philetus. ( kjv@2Timothy:2:17-18) (A.D. 66-7.) He denied the true doctrine of the resurrection.

HYMN - H>@ - a religious song or psalm. kjv@Ephesians:5:19; kjv@Colossians:3:16) Our Lord and his apostles sung a hymn after the last supper. In the jail at Philippi, Paul and Silas "sang hymns" (Authorized Version "praises") unto God, and so loud was their song that their fellow prisoners heard them.

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Hymn @ occurs only kjv@Ephesians:5:19 and kjv@Colossians:3:16. The verb to "sing an hymn" occurs kjv@Matthew:26:30 and kjv@Mark:14:26. The same Greek word is rendered to "sing praises" kjv@Acts:16:25 (R.V., "sing hymns") and kjv@Hebrews:2:12. The "hymn" which our Lord sang with his disciples at the last Supper is generally supposed to have been the latter part of the Hallel, comprehending kjv@Psalms:113-118. It was thus a name given to a number of psalms taken together and forming a devotional exercise. The noun hymn is used only with reference to the services of the Greeks, and was distinguished from the psalm. The Greek tunes required Greek hymns. Our information regarding the hymnology of the early Christians is very limited.

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HYMENAEUS @
- A false teacher kjv@1Timothy:1:20; kjv@2Timothy:2:17

HYMN @
-
See PSALMS
-
See SONG

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H8416 <STRHEB>@ תּהלּה tehillâh teh-hil-law' From H1984; laudation; specifically (concretely) a hymn: - praise.


H8605 <STRHEB>@ תּפלּה tephillâh tef-il-law' From H6419; {intercession} supplication; by implication a hymn: - prayer.


G5211 <STRGRK>@ Ὑμεναῖος Humenaios hoo-men-ah'-yos From Ὑμήν Humēn (the god of weddings); hymenaeal; Hymenaeus an opponent of Christianity: - Hymenus.


G5214 <STRGRK>@ ὑμνέω humneō hoom-neh'-o From G5215; to hymn that is sing a religious ode; by implication to celebrate (God) in song: - sing an hymn (praise unto).


G5215 <STRGRK>@ ὕμνος humnos hoom'-nos Apparently from a simpler (obsolete) form of ὕδέω hudeō (to celebrate; probably akin to G103; compare G5567); a hymn or religious ode (one of the Psalms): - hymn.