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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 G4845: A compound verb combining συν- (with), πληρόω (to fill), meaning “to fill completely, to fulfill entirely.” Used in both literal contexts (boat filling with water) and temporal contexts (time being fulfilled), emphasizing complete fulfillment or filling.
συμπληρόω represents the concept of complete fulfillment or filling to capacity. As a compound word, it combines togetherness (συν-) with filling (πληρόω) to express thorough completion or fulfillment. In the New Testament, it appears in both physical contexts (a boat filling with water) and temporal contexts (the day of Pentecost being fulfilled), demonstrating the word’s versatility in expressing completeness. The early church understood this term as significant in describing both divine timing and the fullness of God’s work. Today, it reminds us that God’s purposes reach their complete fulfillment in His perfect timing.
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Etymology:
For compound words:
The prefix συν- indicates completeness
The root πληρόω contributes the concept of filling
Together they express thorough fulfillment
Translation Options:
Morphological Features:
Example English morphing:
Present: fill completely
Past: filled completely
Passive: being filled completely
Participle: filling completely
BDAG emphasizes both literal and temporal uses. Thayer’s highlights the completeness aspect. LSJ notes its use in various contexts of fulfillment. Vine’s connects it to divine timing. Strong’s emphasizes the thoroughness implied. Moulton and Milligan document its use in both physical and temporal contexts.
First appearance:
But as they sailed, He fell asleep. And a windstorm came down on the lake, and they [συμπληρόω] were filling with water, and were in jeopardy. Luke 8:23
Additional References:
Luke 9:51, Acts 2:1
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Thucydides: History | “The harbor [συμπληρόω] was completely filled with ships.” |
Plato: Republic | “The training period [συμπληρόω] was fulfilled entirely.” |
Xenophon: Cyropaedia | “The army’s ranks [συμπληρόω] were filled to completion.” |
συμπληρόω beautifully captures the completeness of God’s work and timing. It proclaims the good news that King Jesus fulfills all things perfectly, whether in dramatic moments of need or in the fulfillment of divine purposes. This word reminds us that God brings all things to their proper completion in His perfect timing.
Strong’s G4845: A compound verb combining συν- (with), πληρόω (to fill), meaning “to fill completely, to fulfill entirely.” Used in both literal contexts (boat filling with water) and temporal contexts (time being fulfilled), emphasizing complete fulfillment or filling.
Part of speech: Verb
Tags: fulfillment, completion, divine-timing, fullness, prophecy-fulfillment, pentecost, storms, completion, perfection, time, providence, divine-purpose
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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