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Textus Receptus Bibles

Bible Analysis

 
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Titus 1:3

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Textus Receptus (Stephanus 1550)

G5319 manifested εφανερωσεν
G1161 But δε
G2540 times καιροις
G2398 hath in due ιδιοις
G3588   τον
G3056 word λογον
G846   αυτου
G1722 through εν
G2782 preaching κηρυγματι
G3739 which ο
G4100 is committed επιστευθην
G1473 unto me εγω
G2596 according κατ
G2003 to the commandment επιταγην
G3588   του
G4990 Saviour σωτηρος
G2257 our ημων
G2316 of God θεου

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  hath
  in
G2540 times
G5319 manifested
G848 his
G3056 word
G1722 through
G2782 preaching
G3739 which
  is
G4100 committed
  unto
G2596 according
  to
  the
G2003 commandment
  of
G4990 Saviour

Textus Receptus Support:

Stephanus:
Beza:
Scrivener:

Greek-English Dictionary

Strongs: G3056
Greek: λόγος
Transliteration: logos
Pronunciation: log'-os
Part of Speech: Noun Masculine
Bible Usage: account cause communication X-(idiom) concerning doctrine fame X-(idiom) have to do intent matter mouth preaching question reason + reckon remove say (-ing) shew X-(idiom) speaker speech talk thing + none of these things move me tidings treatise utterance word work.
Definition:  

something said (including the thought); by implication a topic (subject of discourse) also reasoning (the mental faculty) or motive; by extension a computation; specifically (with the article in John) the Divine Expression (that is Christ)

1. of speech

a. a word, uttered by a living voice, embodies a conception or idea

b. what someone has said

1. a word

2. the sayings of God

3. decree, mandate or order

4. of the moral precepts given by God

5. Old Testament prophecy given by the prophets

6. what is declared, a thought, declaration, aphorism, a weighty saying, a dictum, a maxim

c. discourse

1. the act of speaking, speech

2. the faculty of speech, skill and practice in speaking

3. a kind or style of speaking

4. a continuous speaking discourse - instruction

d. doctrine, teaching

e. anything reported in speech; a narration, narrative

f. matter under discussion, thing spoken of, affair, a matter in dispute, case, suit at law

g. the thing spoken of or talked about; event, deed

2. its use as respect to the MIND alone

a. reason, the mental faculty of thinking, meditating, reasoning, calculating

b. account, i.e. regard, consideration

c. account, i.e. reckoning, score

d. account, i.e. answer or explanation in reference to judgment

e. relation, i.e. with whom as judge we stand in relation

1. reason would

f. reason, cause, ground

3. In John, denotes the essential Word of God, Jesus Christ, the personal wisdom and power in union with God, his minister in creation and government of the universe, the cause of all the world's life both physical and ethical, which for the procurement of man's salvation put on human nature in the person of Jesus the Messiah, the second person in the Godhead, and shone forth conspicuously from His words and deeds. A Greek philosopher named Heraclitus first used the term Logos around600 B.C. to designate the divine reason or plan which coordinates achanging universe. This word was well suited to John's purpose inJohn 1.

Thayer's Greek–English Lexicon
of the New Testament 1889
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.