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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 G4849: A compound noun combining συν- (with) and πόσις (drinking), meaning “a drinking party, feast, or arranged group for dining.” Used uniquely in Mark’s account of feeding the 5000 to describe the ordered arrangement of groups for the miraculous meal.
συμπόσιον represents the concept of an organized gathering for eating and drinking. As a compound word, it combines togetherness (συν-) with drinking (πόσις) to describe formal dining arrangements. In the New Testament, it appears specifically in Mark’s account of the feeding of the 5000, where the Messiah organizes the crowd into orderly dining groups. The early church saw this term as significant in understanding both the order and fellowship aspects of communal meals. Today, it continues to inform our understanding of fellowship meals and church gatherings, emphasizing both organization and community.
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Etymology:
For compound words:
The prefix συν- indicates shared activity
The root πόσις contributes the dining aspect
Together they express organized communal dining
Translation Options:
Morphological Features:
Example forms:
Nominative: symposion (dining group)
Genitive: symposiou (of the dining group)
Dative: symposio (to/for the dining group)
Accusative: symposion (dining group as object)
BDAG emphasizes its use in describing organized meal groups. Thayer’s highlights the orderly arrangement aspect. LSJ notes its common use in Greek social gatherings. Vine’s connects it to fellowship meals. Strong’s emphasizes the communal nature. Moulton and Milligan document its use in social contexts.
First appearance:
Then He commanded them to make them all sit down in groups [συμπόσιον] on the green grass. Mark 6:39
Additional References:
This word appears only once in the New Testament.
Author: Work | Text |
---|---|
Plato: Symposium | “The guests arranged themselves in [συμπόσιον] dining groups for philosophical discussion.” |
Xenophon: Memorabilia | “They organized a [συμπόσιον] banquet gathering for the celebration.” |
Plutarch: Lives | “The nobles formed [συμπόσιον] dining companies for their feast.” |
συμπόσιον beautifully captures both the order and fellowship in Kingdom gatherings. It proclaims the good news that King Jesus not only provides abundantly but also brings order and structure to His provision. This word reminds us that fellowship meals are both organized and relational, reflecting divine order and community.
Strong’s G4849: A compound noun combining συν- (with) and πόσις (drinking), meaning “a drinking party, feast, or arranged group for dining.” Used uniquely in Mark’s account of feeding the 5000 to describe the ordered arrangement of groups for the miraculous meal.
Part of speech: Noun
Tags: fellowship, dining, organization, meals, community, gathering, order, provision, banquet, table-fellowship, miraculous-feeding, church-gathering
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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