Greek · G4052

περισσεύω

To exceed

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περισσεύω G4052
Pronunciation perisseúō

What does περισσεύω (perisseúō) mean in the Bible?

Perisseuō means to abound, overflow, exceed, or have more than enough. Jesus says disciples' righteousness must exceed that of scribes and Pharisees, referring to kingdom obedience flowing from the heart rather than a larger quantity of public performance.

Reader summary

Full entry for περισσεύω (G4052) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does περισσεύω (perisseúō) mean in the Bible?

Perisseuō means to abound, overflow, exceed, or have more than enough. Jesus says disciples' righteousness must exceed that of scribes and Pharisees, referring to kingdom obedience flowing from the heart rather than a larger quantity of public performance.

How does the BSB render G4052?

The BSB source-word alignment has 39 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include abound (2), excel (2), overflow (2), surplus (2), were left over (2).

Where does περισσεύω (perisseúō) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 5:20. Its strongest book concentrations include 2 Corinthians (10), Matthew (5), Philippians (5), Luke (4).

Are there verse guides for περισσεύω (perisseúō)?

This entry includes 1 verse guide that explain exact original-language forms in context.

What This Word Actually Means

Perisseuō means to abound, overflow, exceed, or have more than enough. Jesus says disciples' righteousness must exceed that of scribes and Pharisees, referring to kingdom obedience flowing from the heart rather than a larger quantity of public performance. The prodigal remembers hired servants abounding in bread. Paul urges believers eager for spiritual gifts to abound in building up the church.

Ephesians says God lavished grace on believers in wisdom and understanding, and Thessalonians calls an already loving church to abound still more. The verb can describe surplus provision, lavish divine giving, surpassing quality, or growth in faithful practice. Abundance is not automatically material prosperity or approval; the passage names what overflows and toward whom.

Sources