Acknowledge

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Baker's Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology [1]

See Confession Confess

King James Dictionary [2]

ACKNOWL'EDGE, Aknol'edge, ad and knowledge. See Know.

1. To own, avow or admit to be true, by a declaration of assent as to acknowledge the being of a God.

2. To own or notice with particular regard.

In all thy ways acknowledge God. Proverbs 3 . Isaiah 33 .

3. To own or confess, as implying a consciousness of guilt.

I acknowledge my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me. Psalms 51,32 .

4. To own with assent to admit or receive with approbation.

He that acknowledgeth the son, hath the father also.

1 John 2 . 2 Timothy 2 .

5. To own with gratitude to own as a benefit as, to acknowledge a favor, or the receipt of a gift.

Thy his gifts acknowledged not.

6. To own or admit to belong to as, to acknowledge a son.

7. To receive with respect.

All that see them shall acknowledge that they are the seed which the Lord hath blessed. Isaiah 6 . 1 Corinthians 16 .

8. To own, avow or assent to an act in a legal form, to give it validity as, to acknowledge a deed before competent authority.

Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words [3]

A — 1: Ἐπιγινώσκω
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(Strong'S #1921 — Verb — epiginosko — ep-ig-in-oce'-ko )

signifies (a) "to know thoroughly" (epi, "intensive," ginosko, "to know"); (b) "to recognize a thing to be what it really is, to acknowledge," 1 Corinthians 14:37 (RV, "take knowledge of"); 1 Corinthians 16:18  ; 2 Corinthians 1:13,14 . See Know , Knowledge , Perceive.

1 John 2:23

B — 1: Ἐπίγνωσις
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(Strong'S #1922 — Noun Feminine — epignosis — ip-ig'-no-sis )

akin to A, "full, or thorough knowledge, discernment, recognition," is translated "acknowledging" in the AV of 2 Timothy 2:25  ; Titus 1:1  ; Philemon 1:6 (in all three, RV, "knowledge," properly, "thorough knowledge"). In Colossians 2:2 , AV, "acknowledgement," RV, "that they may know" (i.e., "unto the full knowledge"). See Knowledge.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [4]

ak -nol´ej ( γιγνώσκω , gignō̇skō ): To declare that one recognizes the claims of a person or thing fully established. Both in Old Testament and New Testament expressed by various forms of the word "know" ( Proverbs 3:6  ; Isaiah 61:9  ; Colossians 2:2 the King James Version). The Psalmist ( Psalm 32:5 ) "acknowledged" his sin, when he told God that he knew the guilt of what he had done. The Corinthians ( 2 Corinthians 1:14 ) "acknowledged" Paul and his companions when they formally recognized their claims and authority.

References