Greek · G4434

πτωχός

Poor

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πτωχός G4434
Pronunciation ptōchós

What does πτωχός (ptōchós) mean in the Bible?

Ptochos means poor, destitute, dependent, or reduced to begging, and can be extended metaphorically as in poverty of spirit. Jesus blesses the poor in spirit, identifies good news to the poor as a sign of messianic fulfillment, commands a rich man to give to the poor, and assumes the continuing presence of poor people when defending Mary's anointing.

Reader summary

Full entry for πτωχός (G4434) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does πτωχός (ptōchós) mean in the Bible?

Ptochos means poor, destitute, dependent, or reduced to begging, and can be extended metaphorically as in poverty of spirit. Jesus blesses the poor in spirit, identifies good news to the poor as a sign of messianic fulfillment, commands a rich man to give to the poor, and assumes the continuing presence of poor people when defending Mary's anointing.

How does the BSB render G4434?

The BSB source-word alignment has 34 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include poor (22), to [the] poor (4), [to the] poor (2), beggar (2), a poor [man] (1).

Where does πτωχός (ptōchós) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 5:3. Its strongest book concentrations include Luke (10), Mark (5), Matthew (5), James (4).

Are there verse guides for πτωχός (ptōchós)?

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

What This Word Actually Means

Ptochos means poor, destitute, dependent, or reduced to begging, and can be extended metaphorically as in poverty of spirit. Jesus blesses the poor in spirit, identifies good news to the poor as a sign of messianic fulfillment, commands a rich man to give to the poor, and assumes the continuing presence of poor people when defending Mary's anointing. The noun does not make poverty saving, romantic, or morally superior, nor does Matthew 26 cancel ongoing care.

Poverty names real vulnerability to hunger, exclusion, debt, exploitation, and loss of agency. Gospel ministry proclaims the kingdom, shares resources, opposes partiality, listens to poor neighbors, and refuses to use their need for donor publicity, coercion, or simplistic lessons.

Sources