Anonymous

Difference between revisions of "Bid"

From BiblePortal Wikipedia
1,026 bytes added ,  17:51, 8 October 2021
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<p> Variously signifying, according to six [[Hebrew]] and as many [[Greek]] originals: (1) "to command" ( Numbers 14:10; Matthew 1:24 the King James Version, προστάσσω , <i> '''''prostássō''''' </i> ); (2) "to prescribe" or "order" ( John 2:2 ); (3) "to consecrate," and so rendered in the Revised Version (British and American) ( Zephaniah 1:7; compare 1 Samuel 16:5 ); (4) εἶπον , <i> '''''eı́pon''''' </i> , "to say" or "tell" ( Matthew 16:12 ); (5) "to call" i.e. "invite" ( καλέω , <i> '''''kaléō''''' </i> ), conspicuously used in this sense in Christ's parables of the Marriage [[Feast]] ( Matthew 22:3-9 ) and of the Great [[Supper]] (Lk 14:7-24); (6) "to take leave of," ἀποτάσσω , <i> '''''appotássō''''' </i> ( Luke 9:61 ). </p>
 
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_58480" /> ==
        <p> BID, pret. bid, or bade pp. bid, bidden. L. peto, to drive at, to attack, to ask, to desire, to beseech, anciently beto impetus. Applied to the voice, it denotes utterance, a driving of sounds, which is applied to asking, prayer, and command. Class Bd. </p> <blockquote> 1. To ask to request to invite. </blockquote> <p> Go ye into the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage. Math 22 </p> <p> This sense is antiquated, but we have the same word from the Latin, in invite, in and bid. </p>
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_1793" /> ==
        <p> Variously signifying, according to six [[Hebrew]] and as many [[Greek]] originals: (1) "to command" ( Numbers 14:10; Matthew 1:24 the King James Version, προστάσσω , <i> '''''prostássō''''' </i> ); (2) "to prescribe" or "order" ( John 2:2 ); (3) "to consecrate," and so rendered in the Revised Version (British and American) ( Zephaniah 1:7; compare 1 Samuel 16:5 ); (4) εἶπον , <i> '''''eı́pon''''' </i> , "to say" or "tell" ( Matthew 16:12 ); (5) "to call" i.e. "invite" ( καλέω , <i> '''''kaléō''''' </i> ), conspicuously used in this sense in Christ's parables of the Marriage [[Feast]] ( Matthew 22:3-9 ) and of the Great [[Supper]] (Lk 14:7-24); (6) "to take leave of," ἀποτάσσω , <i> '''''appotássō''''' </i> ( Luke 9:61 ). </p>
==References ==
<references>
 
        <ref name="term_58480"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/bid Bid from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
        <ref name="term_1793"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/bid Bid from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
</references>