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Study Resources :: Dictionaries :: Mark (Noun)

Dictionaries :: Mark (Noun)

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Below are articles from the following dictionary:
Vine's Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words
1 Strong's Number: g5480 Greek: charagma

Mark (Noun):

denotes "a stamp, impress," translated "mark" in Rev 13:16, 17, etc.
See GRAVEN.

2 Strong's Number: g4742 Greek: stigma

Mark (Noun):

denotes "a tattooed mark" or "a mark burnt in, a brand" (akin to stizo, "to prick"), translated "marks" in Gal 6:17. "It is probable that the Apostle refers to the physical sufferings he had endured since he began to proclaim Jesus as Messiah and Lord [e.g., at Lystra and Philippi]. It is probable, too, that this reference to his scars was intended to set off the insistence of the Judaizers upon a body-mark which cost them nothing. Over against the circumcision they demanded as a proof of obedience to the law he set the indelible tokens, sustained in his own body, of his loyalty to the Lord Jesus. As to the origin of the figure, it was indeed customary for a master to brand his slaves, but this language does not suggest that the Apostle had been branded by His Master. Soldiers and criminals also were branded on occasion; but to neither of these is the case of Paul as here described analogous. The religious devotee branded himself with the peculiar mark of the god whose cult he affected; so was Paul branded with the marks of his devotion to the Lord Jesus. It is true such markings were forbidden by the law, Lev 19:28, but then Paul had not inflicted these on himself.

"The marks of Jesus cannot be taken to be the marks which the Lord bears in His body in consequence of the Crucifixion; they were different in character." *
[* From Notes on Galatians, by Hogg and Vine, p. 344.]

3 Strong's Number: g4649 Greek: skopos

Mark (Noun):

primarily "a watcher, watchman" (as in the Sept., e.g., Eze 3:17), then, "a mark on which to fix the eye" (akin to skopeo, "to look at"), is used metaphorically in Phl 3:14, of "an aim or object," RV, "goal."
See GOAL.

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