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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 G4854: A compound adjective combining συν- (with) and φύω (to grow), meaning “grown together with, united by growth.” Used theologically to describe believers’ profound union with the Messiah in His death and resurrection, emphasizing organic, living connection.
σύμφυτος represents the deep concept of organic unity through shared growth. As a compound word, it combines togetherness (συν-) with growing (φύω) to express intimate union through shared life. In the New Testament, Paul uses it to describe believers’ union with the Messiah in His death and resurrection, portraying salvation as an organic joining with His life. The early church saw this term as crucial for understanding the believer’s mystical union with the Messiah. Today, it continues to express the profound reality of our spiritual incorporation into the Messiah’s death and resurrection life.
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Etymology:
For compound words:
The prefix συν- indicates shared condition
The root φύω contributes the concept of growth
The suffix -τος indicates completed state
Together they express organic unity through growth
Translation Options:
Morphological Features:
Example forms:
Masculine: σύμφυτος (united)
Feminine: σύμφυτη (united)
Neuter: σύμφυτον (united)
Plural adds appropriate endings
BDAG emphasizes its use in describing mystical union with the Messiah. Thayer’s highlights the organic nature of the unity. LSJ notes its use in botanical contexts. Vine’s connects it to spiritual incorporation. Strong’s emphasizes the completeness of the union. Moulton and Milligan document its use in agricultural settings.
First appearance:
For if we have been [σύμφυτος] united together in the likeness of His death, certainly we also shall be in the likeness of His resurrection Romans 6:5
Additional References:
This word appears only once in the New Testament.
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Theophrast: Plants | “The branches became [σύμφυτος] naturally grafted together.” |
Aristotle: Biology | “The parts were [σύμφυτος] grown together as one organism.” |
Plato: Timaeus | “The elements [σύμφυτος] united in natural harmony.” |
σύμφυτος beautifully captures the organic nature of our union with the Messiah. It proclaims the good news that in King Jesus, we are not merely associated with Him but vitally joined to His death and resurrection life. This word reminds us that salvation is not just legal but a living union with the Messiah.
Strong’s G4854: A compound adjective combining συν- (with) and φύω (to grow), meaning “grown together with, united by growth.” Used theologically to describe believers’ profound union with the Messiah in His death and resurrection, emphasizing organic, living connection.
Part of speech: Adjective
Tags: union-with-christ, resurrection, baptism, spiritual-growth, mystical-union, organic-unity, salvation, incorporation, spiritual-life, death-with-christ, transformation, vital-union
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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