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Printed from the Blue Letter Bible
Lexicon Results
Strong's G5440 - phylaktērion
Outline of Biblical Usage
1) a fortified place provided with a garrison, a station for a guard or garrison 2) a preservative or safeguard , an amulet. The Jews used this word to describe small strips of parchment on which were written the following passages of the law of Moses, Ex. 13:1-10, 11-16; Dt. 6:4-9, 11:13-21, and which, enclosed in small cases, they were accustomed when engaged in prayer to wear fastened by a leather strap to the forehead and to the left arm over against the heart, in order that they might thus be solemnly reminded of the duty of keeping the commands of God in the head and in the heart, according to the directions given in Ex. 13:16, Dt. 6:8, 11:18; These scrolls were thought to have the power, like amulets, to avert various evils and to drive away demons. The Pharisees were accustomed to widen, make broad, their phylacteries, that they might render them more conspicuous and show themselves to be more eager than the majority to be reminded of the law of God.
Authorized Version (KJV) Translation Count — Total: 1
Concordance Results Using KJV
Strong's G5440 - phylaktērion
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Line-By-Line Order:
 Verse-Reference
 Reference-Verse
 Separate Line
 Verse Only
 Reference Only
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Reference Delimiters:
 none—Jhn 1:1 KJV
 square—[Jhn 1:1 KJV]
 curly—{Jhn 1:1 KJV}
 parens—(Jhn 1:1 KJV)
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Paragraph Order:
 Verse-Reference
 Reference-Verse
 Reference-Only
Other Options:
 Abbreviate Books
 Quotes around Verses
 Remove Square Brackets
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Number Delimiters:*
 No Number
 No Delimiter — 15
 Square — [15]
 Curly — {15}
 Parens — (15)
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* 'Number Delimiters' only apply to 'Paragraph Order'
The English language concordance used by the Blue Letter Bible team started with the King James Version of the Bible, 1769 edition. We wrote a program to build the concordance files, indexing 790,881 words. We hope you enjoy the results!

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