Lexicon sabaóth: Sabaoth, i.e. armies Original Word: σαβαώθPart of Speech: Hebrew Form (Indclinable) Transliteration: sabaóth Phonetic Spelling: (sab-ah-owth') Short Definition: hosts, armies Definition: hosts, armies. HELPS word-Studies 4519 sabaṓth (the Greek transliteration of the Hebrew term, bā̓āh, OT 6635) – host(s), an innumerable throng (limitless company). 4519 /sabaṓth ("the Lord of hosts") only occurs in Ro 9:29 and Js 4:5, and correlates to the familiar phrase, "the Lord of hosts" in the OT and LXX. NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originof Hebrew origin tsaba in fem. pl. DefinitionSabaoth, i.e. armies NASB TranslationSabaoth (2).
Thayer's STRONGS NT 4519: σαβαώθσαβαώθ (Hebrew צְבָאות, plural of צָבָא, an army): κύριος σαβαώθ ( צְבָאות יְהוָה) ( A. V. Lord of Sabaoth), i. e. lord of the armies namely, of Israel, as those who under the leadership and protection of Jehovah maintain his cause in war (cf. Schrader, Ueber d. ursprüngl. Sinn des Gottesnamens Jahve Zebaoth, in the Jahrbb. f. protest. Theol. for 1875, p. 316ff, and in Schenkel see 702f; cf. Herm. Schultz, Alttest. Theol. ii., p. 96ff; ( B. D. under the word , the Lord of. But for the other view, according to which the heavenly hosts arc referred to, see Hackett in B. D., American edition, under the phrase, , Lord of, and Delitzsch in the Luth. Zeitschr. for 1874, pp. 217ff; so Riehm (HWB, under the word Zebaoth) as respects the use of the sphrase by the prophets). On the diverse interpretations of the word cf. Oehler in Herzog xviii., p. 400ff (and in his O. T. Theol. (edited by Day) § 195f; cf. T. K. Cheyne, Isaiah, edition 3 vol. i. 11f)): Romans 9:29; James 5:4.
Strong's Sabaoth, Lord of Armies Of Hebrew origin (tsaba' in feminine plural); armies; sabaoth (i.e. Tsebaoth), a military epithet of God -- sabaoth. see HEBREW tsaba' |
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