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Has anyone ever told you: יהוה (Yahweh) God loves you and has a great plan for your life?
Has anyone ever told you: יהוה (Yahweh) God loves you and has a great plan for your life?
Strong’s G4179: An adjective meaning “manifold, many times more,” used to describe multiplication or increase. In the New Testament, it appears in Jesus’ promise of reward for those who sacrifice for the kingdom, emphasizing abundant divine compensation for earthly losses.
Πολλαπλασίων conveys the concept of multiplication or manifold increase. In its sole New Testament appearance, Jesus uses it to promise abundant rewards to those who sacrifice for the kingdom of God. The early church understood this term as expressing God’s generous multiplication of blessings, both temporal and eternal. Today, it reminds believers that God’s rewards far exceed any sacrifices made for His kingdom.
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Etymology:
Translation Options:
Examples:
Masculine/Neuter: πολλαπλασίων, πολλαπλασίονος
Feminine: πολλαπλασίων, πολλαπλασίονος
BDAG emphasizes its multiplicative meaning. Thayer’s notes its use in reward contexts. LSJ traces its mathematical usage. Vine’s highlights its promise aspect. Strong’s connects it to abundance. Moulton and Milligan document its use in commercial contexts.
First Appearance:
Luke 18:30: “who will not receive many times more [πολλαπλασίονα] in this time, and in the age to come eternal life.”
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Xenophon: Economics | “The harvest yielded many times more [πολλαπλασίων] than was sown” |
Plato: Laws | “The penalty shall be many times [πολλαπλασίων] the amount stolen” |
Aristotle: Ethics | “The return should be many times [πολλαπλασίων] the original investment” |
Πολλαπλασίων beautifully expresses God’s abundant generosity toward those who sacrifice for His kingdom. It proclaims the good news that no sacrifice for Christ goes unrewarded, and His compensation far exceeds our losses.
Strong’s G4179: An adjective meaning “manifold, many times more,” used to describe multiplication or increase. In the New Testament, it appears in Jesus’ promise of reward for those who sacrifice for the kingdom, emphasizing abundant divine compensation for earthly losses.
Part of speech: Adjective
Tags: manifold, multiplication, increase, reward, divine compensation, sacrifice, kingdom benefits, abundance, Biblical Greek, New Testament terminology, Luke, divine promises
Note: While this entry strives for accuracy, readers engaged in critical research should verify citations and keyword occurrences in their Bible translation of choice. For Biblical citations, the F.O.G Bible project recommends Logos Bible software.
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