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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 G4764: Excessive luxury, wanton pleasure, or sensual living. A noun denoting the state of self-indulgent excess and its resulting arrogance. Used in Revelation to describe Babylon’s corrupting influence through material abundance and sensual pleasure.
Στρῆνος describes more than mere luxury; it represents a state of excess that corrupts spiritually and morally. In Revelation, it characterizes Babylon’s seductive power through material abundance and pleasure. The early church recognized this term as warning against the spiritual dangers of excessive wealth and self-indulgence. Today, στρῆνος continues to warn believers about how material excess can lead to spiritual pride and moral corruption, calling us to find our satisfaction in the Messiah rather than worldly abundance.
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Etymology:
For compound words: Not applicable as στρῆνος is a simple noun.
Translation Options:
As a noun, στρῆνος exhibits these features:
Examples of morphological changes:
BDAG emphasizes its connection to moral corruption. Thayer’s notes its relationship to arrogance. LSJ documents its use in moral criticism. Vine’s highlights its spiritual dangers. Strong’s connects it to excessive strength. Moulton and Milligan show its use in criticizing luxury.
First Appearance:
“For all the nations have drunk of the wine of the passion of her immorality, and the kings of the earth have committed acts of immorality with her, and the merchants of the earth have become rich by the wealth of her [στρῆνος] sensuality.” Revelation 18:3
Additional References:
This is the only occurrence in the New Testament.
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Lycophron: Alexandra | “The city was corrupted by its own [στρῆνος] excess.” |
Athenaeus: Deipnosophistae | “Their [στρῆνος] luxury led to their downfall.” |
Aeschylus: Fragments | “The [στρῆνος] of their wealth made them forget the gods.” |
Στρῆνος powerfully warns against the spiritual dangers of material excess and self-indulgence. The fall of Babylon in Revelation shows how worldly luxury can corrupt and lead to judgment. This reminds us that true satisfaction comes not from material abundance but from the riches of God’s kingdom in the Messiah.
Strong’s G4764: Excessive luxury, wanton pleasure, or sensual living. A noun denoting the state of self-indulgent excess and its resulting arrogance. Used in Revelation to describe Babylon’s corrupting influence through material abundance and sensual pleasure.
Part of speech: Noun
Tags: luxury, excess, materialism, babylon, judgment, wealth, self-indulgence, worldliness, moral-corruption, greek-noun
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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