Difference between revisions of "Filth"
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== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_77778" /> == | == Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_77778" /> == | ||
<div> '''1: | <div> '''1: '''''Περικάθαρμα''''' ''' (Strong'S #4027 — Noun Neuter — perikatharma — per-ee-kath'-ar-mah ) </div> <p> denotes "offscouring, refuse" (lit., "cleanings," i.e., that which is thrown away in cleansing; from perikathairo, "to purify all around," i.e., completely, as in the Sept. of Deuteronomy 18:10; Joshua 5:4 .) It is once used in the Sept. ( Proverbs 21:18 ) as the price of expiation; among the [[Greeks]] the term was applied to victims sacrificed to make expiation; they also used it of criminals kept at the public expense, to be thrown into the sea, or otherwise killed, at the outbreak of a pestilence, etc. It is used in 1—Corinthians 4:13 much in this sense (not of sacrificial victims), "the filth of the world," representing "the most abject and despicable men" (Grimm-Thayer), the scum or rubbish of humanity. </p> <div> '''2: '''''Ῥύπος''''' ''' (Strong'S #4509 — Noun Masculine — rhupos — hroo'-pos ) </div> <p> denotes "dirt, filth," 1—Peter 3:21 . Cp. rhuparia, "filthiness" (see A, No. 2, below); rhuparos, "vile," James 2:2; Revelation 22:11 , in the best mss. (see B, No. 3, below); rhupoo, "to make filthy," Revelation 22:11; rhupaino (see D below). </p> | ||
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_60285" /> == | == King James Dictionary <ref name="term_60285" /> == | ||
<p> [[Filth | <p> [[Filth]] n. See [[Foul]] and Defile. </p> 1. [[Dirt]] any foul matter any thing that soils or defiles waste matter nastiness. 2. [[Corruption]] pollution any thing that sullies or defiles the moral character. <p> To purify the soul from the dross and filth of sensual delights. </p> | ||
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_121762" /> == | == Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_121762" /> == | ||
Latest revision as of 12:50, 14 October 2021
Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words [1]
denotes "offscouring, refuse" (lit., "cleanings," i.e., that which is thrown away in cleansing; from perikathairo, "to purify all around," i.e., completely, as in the Sept. of Deuteronomy 18:10; Joshua 5:4 .) It is once used in the Sept. ( Proverbs 21:18 ) as the price of expiation; among the Greeks the term was applied to victims sacrificed to make expiation; they also used it of criminals kept at the public expense, to be thrown into the sea, or otherwise killed, at the outbreak of a pestilence, etc. It is used in 1—Corinthians 4:13 much in this sense (not of sacrificial victims), "the filth of the world," representing "the most abject and despicable men" (Grimm-Thayer), the scum or rubbish of humanity.
denotes "dirt, filth," 1—Peter 3:21 . Cp. rhuparia, "filthiness" (see A, No. 2, below); rhuparos, "vile," James 2:2; Revelation 22:11 , in the best mss. (see B, No. 3, below); rhupoo, "to make filthy," Revelation 22:11; rhupaino (see D below).
King James Dictionary [2]
1. Dirt any foul matter any thing that soils or defiles waste matter nastiness. 2. Corruption pollution any thing that sullies or defiles the moral character.
To purify the soul from the dross and filth of sensual delights.
Webster's Dictionary [3]
(1): ( n.) Foul matter; anything that soils or defiles; dirt; nastiness.
(2): ( n.) Anything that sullies or defiles the moral character; corruption; pollution.