Inward Part

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [1]

A symbolic expression in the Old Testament represented by three Hebrew words: חדר , ḥedher , "chamber," hence, inmost bowels or breast; טחות , tuḥōth , "the reins"; קרב , ḳerebh , "midst," "middle," hence, heart . Once in the New Testament ( ἒσωθεν , ésōthen , "from within,"   Luke 11:39 ). The viscera (heart, liver, kidneys) were supposed by the ancients to be the seat of the mind, feelings, affections: the highest organs of the psyche , "the soul." The term includes the intellect ("wisdom in the inward parts,"   Job 38:36 ); the moral nature ("inward part is very wickedness,"   Psalm 5:9 ); the spiritual ("my law in their inward parts,"   Jeremiah 31:33 ). Its adverbial equivalent in Biblical use is "inwardly." Inward , Man (which see) is identical in meaning.

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