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Bible Lexicons
Old & New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary Greek Lexicon
Strong's #2552 - κακοπάθεια
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- the suffering of evil, i.e. trouble, distress, afflicted
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did not use
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did not use
this Strong's Number
κᾰκοπάθ-εια [πᾰ], ἡ,
distress, misery, Hp. VM 10, Antipho 3.2.11, lsoc. 6.55, Arist. Pol. 1278b28; σώματος Antipho 5.18; of plants or trees, Thphr. CP 3.7.8; strain, stress, on the parts of a machine, Hero Bel. 93.1: pl., Hp. l.c.; ταῖς παρὰ τὴν ἀξίαν νῦν κακοπαθείαις your present unmerited sufferings, Th. 7.77: — later, usu. written κᾰκοπαθ-παθία, IG 22.900.16 (ii B.C.), SIG 685.30 (Magnesia, ii B.C.), BGU 1209.7 (i B.C.), Ephesians 5:10 : pl., IG 12(7).386.24 (Amorgos, iii B.C.), Phld. Piet. 86, etc.; laborious toil, perseverance, BGU l.c. (i B.C.).
κακοπάθεια (κακοπαθία WH; see Iota), κακοπαθείας, ἡ (κακοπαθής suffering evil, afflicted), properly, the suffering of evil, i. e. trouble, distress, affliction: James 5:10 (Malachi 1:13; 2 Macc. 2:26f; (Antiphon); Thucydides 7, 77; Isocrates, Polybius, Diodorus, others).
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κακοπάθεια
(WH, -θία ), -ας , ἡ
(< κακοπαθής , suffering),
[in LXX: Malachi 1:13 (H8513), 2 Maccabees 2:26-27, 4 Maccabees 9:8*;]
distress, affliction: James 5:10.†
Copyright © 1922 by G. Abbott-Smith, D.D., D.C.L.. T & T Clarke, London.
For this form which is adopted by WH instead of the itacistic κακοπάθεια in James 5:10, and supported by the evidence given below, see Deissmann BS p. 263 f. Whether the word is to be understood actively or passively is not so clear, but the probability is that the two meanings pass into each other, as Deissmann (ut s.) practically admits : cf. Thieme (p. 29) who quotes Magn 105.3 (B.C. 138) (= Syll 929.30) πᾶσα ]ν ἀναδεχόμενοι κακοπαθίαν χάριν τοῦ μ [η ]θενὸς ὑσ [τ ]ερῆσαι [δικ ]αίου μηθένα τῶν κρ [ινομένων, and points out that both ";Bemühung"; and ";Beschwerde"; give good sense. Dittenberger in his note on OGIS 244.12 (iii/B.C.) τὴν περὶ τὸ σῶμα [γε ]γενημένην ἀσθένειαν διὰ τὰς συνεχεῖς κακο [π ]αθίας warns against treating τ. γεγ. ἀσθένειαν διὰ τ. κακοπαθίας as tautological in view of the tendency in late Greek to use κακοπαθία ";non tam de malis, quibus quis afflictatur, quam de negotiis laboriosis et molestis, quae in se suscipit,"; and compares ib, 339.23 (c. B.C. 120) πάντα κατωικονομήσατο διὰ τῆς τῶν πρεσβευόντων κακοπαθίας = ";omne bene et ex voluntate composuit populus usus labore legatorum."; See also Syll 255.23 (iii/B.C.) ἐν ἀνάγκαις καὶ κακοπαθίαις γένηται, 246.9 (B.C. 220–16) οὔτε κακοπα [θί ]αν οὐδεμίαν οὔτε κί [ν ]δυνον ὑποστελλόμενος. For the word passing over almost into the sense of ";endurance,"; see BGU IV. 1209.7 (B.C. 23) οὐδὲν σπουδῆς οὐδὲ κακοπαθίας παρέλιπον.
Copyright © 1914, 1929, 1930 by James Hope Moulton and George Milligan. Hodder and Stoughton, London.
Derivative Copyright © 2015 by Allan Loder.