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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 G4354: A compound verb combining pros (toward) with laleō (to speak), meaning “to speak to, to converse with.” Used in Acts to describe pastoral and evangelistic conversations, particularly in contexts of personal ministry and persuasive gospel communication.
Προσλαλέω represents direct, personal communication with specific individuals or groups. In the New Testament, it appears in contexts of apostolic ministry where personal conversation leads to spiritual instruction and encouragement. The compound structure emphasizes both the directional nature and personal quality of the communication. Early church fathers often used this term to describe pastoral dialogue and evangelistic engagement. Today, it continues to illustrate the importance of personal, direct communication in ministry.
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Etymology:
For compound words:
The prefix πρός adds directional focus to λαλέω, creating the concept of speaking directly to someone with purpose.
Translation Options:
As a verb, προσλαλέω shows these morphological features:
The active voice emphasizes direct engagement in conversation.
BDAG emphasizes its use in personal ministry. Thayer’s notes its directional nature. LSJ provides evidence of its use in formal address. Vine’s connects it to pastoral communication. Strong’s highlights the compound nature affecting speech direction. LEH notes its use in dialogue contexts. Moulton and Milligan cite papyri evidence of personal communication.
First appearance:
Now when the meeting of the synagogue had broken up, many of the Jews and of the God-fearing proselytes [προσλαλοῦντες] followed Paul and Barnabas, who, speaking to them, were urging them to continue in the grace of God. Acts 13:43
Additional References:
Acts 28:20
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Xenophon: Memorabilia | Socrates [προσλαλέω] conversed with his students |
Plutarch: Lives | The general [προσλαλέω] addressed his troops personally |
Lucian: Dialogues | The philosopher [προσλαλέω] spoke directly to his audience |
Προσλαλέω beautifully captures the personal nature of gospel ministry. Just as Paul and others engaged in direct, personal communication to share Christ, we too are called to personal engagement in sharing the good news. The gospel spreads through intentional, personal conversation that points people to Jesus.
Strong’s G4354: A compound verb combining pros (toward) with laleō (to speak), meaning “to speak to, to converse with.” Used in Acts to describe pastoral and evangelistic conversations, particularly in contexts of personal ministry and persuasive gospel communication.
Part of speech: Verb
Tags: conversation, speaking, communication, evangelism, pastoral-care, personal-ministry, compound-verb, Acts, Paul, apostolic-ministry, dialogue, personal-evangelism, ministry-conversation, gospel-communication, pastoral-dialogue
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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