αἷμα, ατος, τό,
I
1. blood, Il. 1.303, etc.; φόνος αἵματος 16.162; ψυχῆς ἄκρατον αἷμα S. El. 786: in pl., streams of blood, A. Ag. 1293, S. Ant. 121, E. El. 1172, Alc. 496.
2. of anything like blood, Βακχίου Tim. Fr. 7; αἷ. σταφυλῆς LXX Si. 39.26, cf. App.Anth. 3.166 (Procl.). dye obtained from ἄγχουσα, alkanet, PHolm. 15.25, PLeid.X. 99.3.
3. with collat. meaning of spirit, courage, οὐκ ἔχων αἷμα pale, spiritless Aeschin. 3.160; τοὺς αἷμα φάσκοντας τὴν ψυχήν Arist. de An. 405b4.
II bloodshcd, murder, A. Ch. 520, S. OT 101; ὅμαιμον αἷ. a kinsman’s murder, A. Supp. 449; εἴργασται μητρῷον αἷ. E. Or. 285, cf. 406; αἶ. πράττειν ib. 1139; αἷμα συγγενὲς κτείνας S. Fr. 799.3; αἷμα τραγοκτόνον shedding of goat’s blood, E. Ba. 139; ἐφ’ αἵματι φεύγειν to avoid trial for murder by going into exile, SIG 58 (Milet., V B.C.), D. 21.105; αἷμα συγγενὲς φεύγων E. Supp. 148: pl. in this sense, A. Ch. 66, 650, freq. in E., never in S.; αἵματασύγγονα brothers’ corpses, E. Ph. 1502: - concrete, νεακόνητον αἷ. keen-edged death, i. e. a sword, S. El. 1394 (expl. by μάχαιρα, Hsch.).
III
1. blood relationship, kin, αἷ. τε καὶ γένος Od. 8.583; αἵματός εἰς ἀγαθοῖο 4.611; οΐ σῆς ἐξ αἵματός εἰσι γενέθλης Il. 19.111; τὸ αἷ. τινος his blood or origin, Pi. N. 11.34; αἷ. ἐμφύλιον incestuous kinship, S. OT 1406; τοὺς πρὸς αἵματος Id. Aj. 1305, cf. Arist. Pol. 1262a11; μητρὸς τῆς ἐμῆς ἐν αἵματι akin to her by blood, A. Eu. 606, cf. Th. 141; ἀφ’ αἵματος ὑμετέρου S. OC 245.
2. concrete, of a person, ὦ Διὸς.. αἷμα IG 14.1003.1, cf. 1389 ii4, etc.
G129 — αἷμα
(τος, τό, blood, whether of men or of animals:
1.
a. simply and generally: [Joh 19:34]; [Rev 8:7]; [Rev 11:6]; [Rev 16:3]f, 6{b} (on which passages cf. [Exo 7:20]ff); ; ῤύσις αἵματος, [Mar 5:25] ((πηγή αἵματος [Mar 5:29])); [Luk 8:43]f; θρόμβοι αἵματος, [Luk 22:44] (L brackets WH reject the passage). So also in passages where the eating of blood (and of bloody flesh) is forbidden, [Act 15:20], [Act 15:29]; [Act 21:25]; cf. [Lev 3:17]; [Lev 7:16] (26); ; see Knobel on [Lev 7:26]f; (Kalisch on Leviticus, Preliminary Essay § 1); Ruckert, Abendmahl, p. 94.
b. As it was anciently believed that the blood is the seat of the life ([Lev 17:11]; (cf. Delitzsch, Biblical Psychol, pp. 238-247 (English translation, p. 281ff))), the phrase σάρξ καί αἷμα (וְדָם בָּשָׂר, a common phrase in rabbinical writers), or in inverse order αἷμα καί σάρξ, denotes man's living body compounded of flesh and blood, [1Co 15:50]; [Heb 2:14], and so hints at the contrast between man and God (or even the more exalted creatures, [Eph 6:12]) as to suggest his feebleness, [Eph 6:12] (Sir. 14:18), which is conspicuous as respects the knowledge of divine things, [Gal 1:16]; [Mat 16:17].
c. Since the first germs of animal life are thought to be in the blood (Wis. 7:2; Eustathius ad Iliad 6, 211 (ii. 104, 2) τό δέ αἵματος ἀντί τοῦ σπέρματος φασίν οἱ σαφοὶ, ὡς τοῦ σπέρματος ὕλην τό αἷμα ἔχοντος), the word serves to denote generation and origin (in the classics also): [Joh 1:13] (on the plural cf. Winer's Grammar, 177 (166)); [Act 17:26] (R G).
d. It is used of those things which by their redness resemble blood: αἷμα σταφυλῆς the juice of the grape ('the blood of grapes,' [Gen 49:11]; [Deu 32:14]), Sir. 39:26 Sir. 50:15; 1 Macc. 6:34, etc.; Achilles Tatius 2:2; reference to this is made in [Rev 14:18-20]. εἰς αἷμα, of the moon, [Act 2:20] ([Joe 2:31] ()), equivalent to ὡς αἷμα [Rev 6:12].
2. bloodshed or to be shed by violence (very often also in the classics);
a.: [Luk 13:1] (the meaning is, whom Pilate had ordered to be massacred while they were sacrificing, so that their blood mingled with the blood (yet cf. Winer's Grammar, 623 (579)) of the victims); αἷμα ἀθοῷν (or δίκαιον Tr marginal reading WH text) the blood of an innocent (or righteous) man viz. to be shed, [Mat 27:4]; έ᾿κχειν and ἐκχύνειν αἷμα (דָּם שָׁפַך, [Gen 9:6]; [Isa 59:7], etc.) to shed blood, slay, [Mat 23:35]; [Luk 11:50]; [Act 22:20]; [Rom 3:15]; [Rev 16:6] (here Tdf. αἵματα); hence, αἷμα is used for the bloody death itself: [Mat 23:30], [Mat 23:35]; [Mat 27:24]; [Luk 11:51]; Acts (, yet, cf. i d. above;) [Act 20:26]; [Rev 17:6]; μέχρις αἵματος unto blood, i. e., so as to undergo a bloody death, [Heb 12:4] (τόν αἴτιον τῆς... μέχρις αἵματος στάσεως, Heliodorus 7, 8); τιμή αἵματος 'price of blood' i. e. price received for murder, [Mat 27:6]; ἀγρός αἵματος field bought with the price of blood, [Mat 27:8], equivalent to χωρίον αἵματος, [Act 1:19] — unless in this latter passage we prefer the explanation, which agrees better with the context, 'the field dyed with the blood of Judas'; the guilt and punishment of bloodshed, in the following Hebraistic expressions: ἐν αὐτῇ αἵματα (Rec. αἷμα (so L Tr WH)) ὑρέθη, i. e., it was discovered that she was guilty of murders, [Rev 18:24] (cf. πόλις αἱμάτων, [Eze 24:6]); τό αἷμα αὐτοῦ ἐφ' ἡμᾶς (namely, ἐλθέτω) let the penalty of the bloodshed fall on us, [Mat 27:25]; τό αἷμα ὑμῶν ἐπί τήν κεφαλήν ὑμῶν (namely, ἐλθέτω) let the guilt of your destruction be reckoned to your own account, [Act 18:6] (cf. [2Sa 1:16]; [Jos 2:19], etc.); ἐπάγειν τό αἷμα τίνος ἐπί τινα, to cause the punishment of a murder to be visited upon anyone, [Act 5:28]; ἐκζήτειν τό αἷμα τίνος ἀπό τίνος (פ מִיַד פ דַּם בִּקֵשׁ, [2Sa 4:11]; [Eze 3:18], [Eze 3:20]; [Eze 33:8]), to exact of anyone the penalty for another's death, [Luk 11:50]; the same idea is expressed by ἐκδίκειν τό αἷμα τίνος, [Rev 6:10]; [Rev 19:2].
b. It is used specially of the blood of sacrificial victims having a purifying or expiating power ([Lev 17:11]): [Heb 9:7], [Heb 9:12]f, 18-22, 25; [Heb 10:4]; [Heb 11:28]; [Heb 13:11].
c. Frequent mention is made in the N. T. of the blood of Christ (αἷμα τοῦ Χριστοῦ, [1Co 10:16]; τοῦ κυρίου, ; τοῦ ἀρνίου, [Rev 7:14]; [Rev 12:11], cf. ) shed on the cross (αἷμα τοῦ σταυροῦ, [Col 1:20]) for the salvation of many, [Mat 26:28]; [Mar 14:24], cf. [Luk 22:20]; the pledge of redemption, [Eph 1:7] (ἀπολύτρωσις διά τοῦ αἵματος αὐτοῦ; so too in [Col 1:14] Rec.); [1Pe 1:19] (see ἀγοράζω, 2 b.); having expiatory efficacy, [Rom 3:25]; [Heb 9:12]; by which believers are purified and are cleansed from the guilt of sin, [Heb 9:14]; [Heb 12:24]; (); [1Jo 1:7] (cf. [1Jo 5:6], [1Jo 5:8]); [Rev 1:5]; [Rev 7:14]; [1Pe 1:2]; are rendered acceptable to God, [Rom 5:9], and find access into the heavenly sanctuary, [Heb 10:19]; by which the Gentiles are brought to God and the blessings of his kingdom, [Eph 2:13], and in general all rational beings on earth and in heaven are reconciled to God, [Col 1:20]; with which Christ purchased for himself the church, [Act 20:28], and gathered it for God, [Rev 5:9]. Moreover, since Christ's dying blood served to establish new religious institutions and a new relationship between men and God, it is likened also to a federative or covenant sacrifice: τό αἷμα τῆς διαθήκης, the blood by the shedding of which the covenant should be ratified, [Mat 26:28]; [Mar 14:24], or has been ratified, [Heb 10:29]; [Heb 13:20] (cf. [Heb 9:20]); add, [1Co 11:25]; [Luk 22:20] (WH reject this passage) (in both which the meaning is, 'this cup containing wine, an emblem of blood, is rendered by the shedding of my blood an emblem of the new covenant'), [1Co 11:27]; (cf. Cicero, pro Sestio 10, 24foedus sanguine meo ictum sanciri, Livy 23, 8sanguine Hannibalis sanciam Romanum foedus. πίνειν τό αἷμα αὐτοῦ (i. e. of Christ), to appropriate the saving results of Christ's death, [Joh 6:53]f, 56. (Westcott, Epistles of John, p. 34f.)
αἷμα , - τος , τό ,
[in LXX for H1818;]
blood.
1. In the ordinary sense: [Mar 5:25], [Luk 8:43-44]; [Luk 22:44], [Joh 19:34], [Act 15:20]; [Act 15:29]; [Act 21:25], [Rev 8:7-8]; [Rev 11:6]; [Rev 16:3-4]; [Rev 16:6]; [Rev 19:13].
2. In special senses:
(a) of generation, origin, kinship ( cl .): [Joh 1:13] ( v. MM , VGT , s.v. );
(b) as in OT ( AR on Eph., l.c .), in the phrase σάρξ καὶ αἷ ( αἷ . κ . σ .), to indicate human nature as opp . to God and created spirits: Mat 16:17 , [1Co 15:50], [Gal 1:16], [Eph 6:12], [Heb 2:14];
( c ) of things in colour resembling blood: [Act 2:19-20], [Rev 6:12]; [Rev 14:18-20]
(d) of bloodshed, a bloody death ( cl. ): [Mat 23:30]; [Mat 23:35]; [Mat 27:4]; [Mat 27:6]; [Mat 27:8]; [Mat 27:24-25], [Luk 11:50-51]; [Luk 13:1], [Act 1:19]; [Act 5:28]; [Act 18:6]; [Act 20:26]; [Act 22:20], [Heb 12:4], [Rev 6:10]; [Rev 17:6]; [Rev 18:24]; [Rev 19:2]; αἷ . ἐκχέειν ( Deiss., LAE , 428; MM , VGT , s.v. , αἷ ), [Rom 3:15], [Rev 16:6];
(e) of sacrificial blood, as an expiation: [Heb 9:7]; [Heb 9:12-13]; [Heb 9:18-22]; [Heb 9:25]; [Heb 10:4]; [Heb 11:28]; [Heb 13:11]; of the blood of Christ, [Mat 26:28], [Mar 14:24], [Luk 22:20], [Joh 6:53-54]; [Joh 6:56] [Act 20:28], [Rom 3:25]; [Rom 5:9], [1Co 10:16]; 1Co 11:25 ; [1Co 11:27] [Eph 1:7]; [Eph 2:13], [Col 1:20], [Heb 9:12]; [Heb 9:14]; [Heb 10:19]; [Heb 10:29]; [Heb 12:24]; [Heb 13:20], [1Pe 1:2]; 1Pe 1:19 , [1Jn 1:7] ( cf. [1Jn 5:6]; [1Jn 5:8]), [Rev 1:5]; [Rev 5:9]; [Rev 7:14]; [Rev 12:11]. ( Cremer , 69 f ., 612 f .) †