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Difference between revisions of "Deep"

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== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_59378" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_59378" /> ==
<p> [[Deep,]] a. </p> 1. Extending or being far below the surface descending far downward profound opposed to shallow as deep water a deep pit or well. 2. Low in situation being or descending far below the adjacent land as a deep valley. 3. [[Entering]] far piercing a great way. [[A]] tree in a good soil takes deep root. [[A]] spear struck deep into the flesh. 4. Far from the outer part secreted. <p> [[A]] spider deep ambushed in her den. </p> 5. Not superficial or obvious hidden secret. <p> He discovereth deep things out of darkness. &nbsp;Job 12 </p> 6. Remote from comprehension. <p> [[O]] Lord, thy thoughts are very deep. Ps. Xcii. </p> 7. Sagacious penetrating having the power to enter far into a subject as a man of deep thought a deep divine. 8. Artful contriving concealing artifice insidious designing as a friend, deep, hollow treacherous. 9. Grave in sound low as the deep tones of an organ. 10. Very still solemn profound as deep silence. 11. [[Thick]] black not to be penetrated by the sight. <p> Now deeper darkness brooded on the ground. </p> 12. Still sound not easily broken or disturbed. <p> The Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam. &nbsp;Genesis 2 </p> 13. Depressed sunk low, metaphorically as deep poverty. 14. [[Dark]] intense strongly colored as a deep brown a deep crimson a deep blue. 15. [[Unknown]] unintelligible. <p> [[A]] people of deeper speech than thou canst perceive. &nbsp;Isaiah 33 </p> 16. Heart-felt penetrating affecting as a deep sense of guilt. 17. Intricate not easily understood or unraveled as a deep plot or intrigue. <p> This word often qualifies a verb, like an adverb. </p> <p> [[Drink]] deep, or taste not the Pierian spring. </p> <p> [[Deep,]] n. </p> 1. The sea the abyss of waters the ocean. <p> He maketh the deep to boil like a pot. Job x1i. </p> 2. [[A]] lake a great collection of water. <p> [[Lanch]] out into the deep, and let down your nets. &nbsp;Luke 5 </p> 3. That which is profound, not easily fathomed, or incomprehensible. <p> [[Thy]] judgments are a great deep. &nbsp;Psalms 36 </p> 4. The most still or solemn part the midst as, in deep of night.
<p> DEEP, a. </p> 1. Extending or being far below the surface descending far downward profound opposed to shallow as deep water a deep pit or well. 2. Low in situation being or descending far below the adjacent land as a deep valley. 3. [[Entering]] far piercing a great way. A tree in a good soil takes deep root. A spear struck deep into the flesh. 4. Far from the outer part secreted. <p> A spider deep ambushed in her den. </p> 5. Not superficial or obvious hidden secret. <p> He discovereth deep things out of darkness. &nbsp;Job 12 </p> 6. Remote from comprehension. <p> [[O]] Lord, thy thoughts are very deep. Ps. Xcii. </p> 7. Sagacious penetrating having the power to enter far into a subject as a man of deep thought a deep divine. 8. Artful contriving concealing artifice insidious designing as a friend, deep, hollow treacherous. 9. Grave in sound low as the deep tones of an organ. 10. Very still solemn profound as deep silence. 11. [[Thick]] black not to be penetrated by the sight. <p> Now deeper darkness brooded on the ground. </p> 12. Still sound not easily broken or disturbed. <p> The Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam. &nbsp;Genesis 2 </p> 13. Depressed sunk low, metaphorically as deep poverty. 14. [[Dark]] intense strongly colored as a deep brown a deep crimson a deep blue. 15. [[Unknown]] unintelligible. <p> A people of deeper speech than thou canst perceive. &nbsp;Isaiah 33 </p> 16. Heart-felt penetrating affecting as a deep sense of guilt. 17. Intricate not easily understood or unraveled as a deep plot or intrigue. <p> This word often qualifies a verb, like an adverb. </p> <p> [[Drink]] deep, or taste not the Pierian spring. </p> <p> DEEP, n. </p> 1. The sea the abyss of waters the ocean. <p> He maketh the deep to boil like a pot. Job x1i. </p> 2. A lake a great collection of water. <p> [[Lanch]] out into the deep, and let down your nets. &nbsp;Luke 5 </p> 3. That which is profound, not easily fathomed, or incomprehensible. <p> [[Thy]] judgments are a great deep. &nbsp;Psalms 36 </p> 4. The most still or solemn part the midst as, in deep of night.
          
          
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_108115" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_108115" /> ==
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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35118" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35118" /> ==
<p> &nbsp;Romans 10:7, "who shall descend into the deep?" [[A]] proverb for impossibility: "say not in thine heart, [[I]] wish one could bring Christ up from the dead, but it is impossible." Nay, salvation "is nigh thee," only "believe" in the Lord Jesus raised from the dead, "and thou shalt be saved." Greek abyss (&nbsp;Luke 8:31), literally, the bottomless place. [[Translated]] in &nbsp;Revelation 9:1-2; &nbsp;Revelation 9:11; &nbsp;Revelation 11:7; &nbsp;Revelation 11:17, "bottomless pit." The demons in the [[Gadarene]] besought not to be cast into the abyss, i.e. before their time, the day of final judgment. &nbsp;2 Peter 2:4; they are "delivered into chains of darkness, and reserved unto judgment." </p> <p> They are free to hurt meanwhile, like a chained beast, only to the length of their chain (&nbsp;Judges 1:6). The "darkness of this present world," the "air" (&nbsp;Ephesians 2:2), is their peculiar element; they look forward with agonizing fear to their final torment in the bottomless pit (&nbsp;Revelation 20:10). [[Language]] is used as though the abyss were in the lowest depth of our earth. We do not know whether this is literal, or an accommodation to human conceptions, to express the farthest removal from the heavenly light. </p>
<p> &nbsp;Romans 10:7, "who shall descend into the deep?" A proverb for impossibility: "say not in thine heart, I wish one could bring Christ up from the dead, but it is impossible." Nay, salvation "is nigh thee," only "believe" in the Lord Jesus raised from the dead, "and thou shalt be saved." Greek abyss (&nbsp;Luke 8:31), literally, the bottomless place. [[Translated]] in &nbsp;Revelation 9:1-2; &nbsp;Revelation 9:11; &nbsp;Revelation 11:7; &nbsp;Revelation 11:17, "bottomless pit." The demons in the [[Gadarene]] besought not to be cast into the abyss, i.e. before their time, the day of final judgment. &nbsp;2 Peter 2:4; they are "delivered into chains of darkness, and reserved unto judgment." </p> <p> They are free to hurt meanwhile, like a chained beast, only to the length of their chain (&nbsp;Judges 1:6). The "darkness of this present world," the "air" (&nbsp;Ephesians 2:2), is their peculiar element; they look forward with agonizing fear to their final torment in the bottomless pit (&nbsp;Revelation 20:10). [[Language]] is used as though the abyss were in the lowest depth of our earth. We do not know whether this is literal, or an accommodation to human conceptions, to express the farthest removal from the heavenly light. </p>
          
          
== Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types <ref name="term_197714" /> ==
== Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types <ref name="term_197714" /> ==
<p> &nbsp;Psalm 36:6 (b) This word describes the mysteries of [[God]] which cannot be fathomed. </p> <p> &nbsp;Psalm 69:2 (b) Here is a description of the terrible sufferings of [[Christ.]] </p> <p> &nbsp;Daniel 2:22 (b) This is a figure to describe the marvelous mysteries of [[God]] which cannot be discovered or understood except by divine revelation. </p> <p> &nbsp;Romans 10:7 (a) Undoubtedly this word refers to "Sheol" of the Old Testament. </p>
<p> &nbsp;Psalm 36:6 (b) This word describes the mysteries of GOD which cannot be fathomed. </p> <p> &nbsp;Psalm 69:2 (b) Here is a description of the terrible sufferings of CHRIST. </p> <p> &nbsp;Daniel 2:22 (b) This is a figure to describe the marvelous mysteries of GOD which cannot be discovered or understood except by divine revelation. </p> <p> &nbsp;Romans 10:7 (a) Undoubtedly this word refers to "Sheol" of the Old Testament. </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31212" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31212" /> ==
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== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50671" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50671" /> ==
<p> <strong> [[Deep]] </strong> . See Abyss. </p>
<p> <strong> DEEP </strong> . See Abyss. </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_3045" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_3045" /> ==
<p> (תּהום , <i> '''''tehōm''''' </i> ; ἄβυσσος , <i> '''''ábussos''''' </i> , &nbsp;Luke 8:31 the King James Version; &nbsp; Romans 10:7 the King James Version; βάθος , <i> '''''báthos''''' </i> , &nbsp;Luke 5:4; βυθός , <i> '''''buthós''''' </i> , &nbsp;2 Corinthians 11:25 ): The [[Hebrew]] word ("water in commotion") is used (1) of the primeval watery waste (&nbsp;Genesis 1:2 ), where some suggest a connection with [[Babylonian]] [[Tiamat]] in the creation-epic; (2) of the sea (&nbsp;Isaiah 51:10 and commonly); (3) of the subterranean reservoir of water (&nbsp; [[Genesis]] 7:11; &nbsp;Genesis 8:2; &nbsp;Genesis 49:25; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 31:4 , etc.). In the Revised Version (British and American) the Greek word first noted is rendered, literally, "abyss." See [[Abyss]]; also [[Astronomy]] , [[Iii,]] 7. </p>
<p> (תּהום , <i> '''''tehōm''''' </i> ; ἄβυσσος , <i> '''''ábussos''''' </i> , &nbsp;Luke 8:31 the King James Version; &nbsp; Romans 10:7 the King James Version; βάθος , <i> '''''báthos''''' </i> , &nbsp;Luke 5:4; βυθός , <i> '''''buthós''''' </i> , &nbsp;2 Corinthians 11:25 ): The [[Hebrew]] word ("water in commotion") is used (1) of the primeval watery waste (&nbsp;Genesis 1:2 ), where some suggest a connection with [[Babylonian]] [[Tiamat]] in the creation-epic; (2) of the sea (&nbsp;Isaiah 51:10 and commonly); (3) of the subterranean reservoir of water (&nbsp; [[Genesis]] 7:11; &nbsp;Genesis 8:2; &nbsp;Genesis 49:25; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 31:4 , etc.). In the Revised Version (British and American) the Greek word first noted is rendered, literally, "abyss." See [[Abyss]]; also [[Astronomy]] , III, 7. </p>
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_37280" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_37280" /> ==
<p> (the representative in the [[A.]] [[V.]] of several Heb. words, especially תְּהוֹם, ''tehom''' , &nbsp;Genesis 1:2, etc. an abyss, often rendered "depth;" ἄβυσσος, &nbsp;Luke 8:31; &nbsp;Romans 10:7, elsewhere "bottomless pit'). The deep, or the great deep, in its literal sense, signifies, chiefly in [[Scripture]] — </p> <p> '''1.''' Hell, the place of punishment, the bottomless pit (&nbsp;Luke 8:31; &nbsp;Revelation 9:1; &nbsp;Revelation 11:7). </p> <p> '''2.''' The common receptacle of the dead; the grave, the deep or depths of the earth, under which the body is deposited: the state of the soul corresponding thereto, still more unseen, still deeper, still further distant from human inspection, is that remote country, that "bourne from whence no traveler returns" (&nbsp;Romans 10:7). </p> <p> '''3''' . The deepest parts of the sea.(&nbsp;Psalms 49:15; &nbsp;Psalms 107:26). </p> <p> '''4.''' The chaos, which, in the beginning of the world, was unformed and vacant (&nbsp;Genesis 1:2). (See [[Abyss]]). </p>
<p> (the representative in the A. V. of several Heb. words, especially תְּהוֹם, ''Tehom''' , &nbsp;Genesis 1:2, etc. an abyss, often rendered "depth;" ἄβυσσος, &nbsp;Luke 8:31; &nbsp;Romans 10:7, elsewhere "bottomless pit'). The deep, or the great deep, in its literal sense, signifies, chiefly in [[Scripture]] — </p> <p> '''1.''' Hell, the place of punishment, the bottomless pit (&nbsp;Luke 8:31; &nbsp;Revelation 9:1; &nbsp;Revelation 11:7). </p> <p> '''2.''' The common receptacle of the dead; the grave, the deep or depths of the earth, under which the body is deposited: the state of the soul corresponding thereto, still more unseen, still deeper, still further distant from human inspection, is that remote country, that "bourne from whence no traveler returns" (&nbsp;Romans 10:7). </p> <p> '''3''' . The deepest parts of the sea.(&nbsp;Psalms 49:15; &nbsp;Psalms 107:26). </p> <p> '''4.''' The chaos, which, in the beginning of the world, was unformed and vacant (&nbsp;Genesis 1:2). (See Abyss). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==