Greek · G5043

τέκνον

A child (as produced)

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τέκνον G5043
Pronunciation téknon

What does τέκνον (téknon) mean in the Bible?

τέκνον names a child or offspring, and the Pastoral Epistles use it in both spiritual and household senses. Timothy and Titus are Paul's true or beloved children in the faith, showing the warmth and responsibility of discipling relationships.

Reader summary

Full entry for τέκνον (G5043) · Open the biblical lexicon

Questions this entry answers

What does τέκνον (téknon) mean in the Bible?

τέκνον names a child or offspring, and the Pastoral Epistles use it in both spiritual and household senses. Timothy and Titus are Paul's true or beloved children in the faith, showing the warmth and responsibility of discipling relationships.

How does the BSB render G5043?

The BSB source-word alignment has 99 aligned rows for this entry. Common renderings include children (68), Child (10), son (4), [his] child (2), [his] children (2).

Where does τέκνον (téknon) appear in Scripture?

The source-word alignment first shows this entry at Matthew 2:18. Its strongest book concentrations include Luke (14), Matthew (14), Mark (9), Romans (7).

Are there verse guides for τέκνον (téknon)?

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

What This Word Actually Means

τέκνον names a child or offspring, and the Pastoral Epistles use it in both spiritual and household senses. Timothy and Titus are Paul's true or beloved children in the faith, showing the warmth and responsibility of discipling relationships. The same word appears in overseer and deacon qualifications, where children and household management become part of public credibility.

First Timothy 5 uses children and grandchildren to teach family responsibility toward widows before the church carries the burden alone. The word therefore helps readers connect affection, discipleship, family duty, and church order without collapsing spiritual children into natural children or treating household texts as mere private life.

Sources