Greek · G1921

ἐπιγινώσκω

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ἐπιγινώσκω G1921
Pronunciation epiginṓskō

What does ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginṓskō) mean in the Bible?

ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginōskō) means to recognize, identify, perceive, acknowledge, come to know, or know more fully according to context. The prefixed form can emphasize recognition or developed knowledge, but the prefix does not automatically produce exhaustive or spiritually superior knowing.

Reader summary

Full entry for ἐπιγινώσκω (G1921) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginṓskō) mean in the Bible?

ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginōskō) means to recognize, identify, perceive, acknowledge, come to know, or know more fully according to context. The prefixed form can emphasize recognition or developed knowledge, but the prefix does not automatically produce exhaustive or spiritually superior knowing.

How does the BSB render G1921?

The BSB source-word alignment has 44 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include know (3), knows (2), they did not recognize (2), they recognized (2), you will recognize (2).

Where does ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginṓskō) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 7:16. Its strongest book concentrations include Acts (13), Luke (7), Matthew (6), 2 Corinthians (5).

What This Word Actually Means

ἐπιγινώσκω (epiginōskō) means to recognize, identify, perceive, acknowledge, come to know, or know more fully according to context. The prefixed form can emphasize recognition or developed knowledge, but the prefix does not automatically produce exhaustive or spiritually superior knowing. Jesus says false prophets will be recognized by their fruit. The Emmaus disciples recognize the risen Jesus when their eyes are opened, after He has interpreted the Scriptures and broken bread.

Jerusalem’s rulers recognize that Peter and John have been with Jesus by observing their boldness. The Colossians truly understand God’s grace as the gospel bears fruit among them. Paul says present knowledge is partial and future knowledge will be fuller, corresponding to being known by God, without claiming that redeemed creatures become omniscient. Recognition therefore may arise through marks, fruit, remembered relationship, evidence, revelation, or deepening acquaintance.

It can still be resisted, mistaken, or incomplete. Teachers should avoid the root or prefix fallacy and let each object, tense, and comparison define how much knowledge the verb claims.

Passage contextlexical_synthesis
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