|
| |
alien
A quick review of Strong's Concordance will prove to your satisfaction that the English
phrase "alien" [including "aliens" and alienated] appears in Scripture
16 times. It was translated from "ger" [#1616, a word that's usually
translated "stranger"] ONCE, "nikro" [#5237, also translated
mostly "stranger" but also "strange", "foreigners" and even
"outlandish"--a real bona fide perversion of the Word of God] three times,
"nekar" [#5236] ONCE, "yaqa" [#3363] three times, "naqa"
[#5361] three times, "abar" [#5674] ONCE, "appolotrio" [#526] three
times, "allotrios" [#245, usually translated "strangers" though] ONCE.
Before knowing the Strong's numbers or the original "hebrew" words from which
they are supposedly derived, it's the following verse which alerted many of us to be wary
of this word "strange":
Exodus 18:3 And her two sons; of which the name of the one [was] Gershom; for he
said, I have been an alien in a strange land:
Exodus 18:3 And her two8147 sons;1121 of which834 the name8034 of the one259 was
Gershom;1648 for3588 he said,559 I have been1961 an alien1616 in a strange5237 land:776
Exodus 18:3 And her two sons; of which the name of the one [was] Gershom; for he
said, I have been [a ger] in a [nikro] land:
Obviously there's a contradistinction here that's worthy of further study, right? So
we did. And that's where we found proof that Moses' wife MUST have been an
Israelite.
You see, had she been a non-Israelite, then their son "Gershom" could NOT have
been named "ger shom", because "ger" is ALWAYS a reference to an
Israelite traveling in a foreign land [whether it be another Israelite city or nation, or
a foreign city or nation], right?
To know what a "nikro" land is, you must know what a "nikro" is,
right? This distinction between "ger" and "nikro", the ESSENCE
OF SCRIPTURE in the original "hebrew" [most likely Gaelic] and Greek, is
completely MISSING from the English "translations", meaning that those who rely
only on the KJV can NEVER completely grasp this CONTRADISTINCTION.
Not ALL foreigners are referred to as "nikro". The wives of Solomon for
whom it was a sin for him to marry are "nikro":
Did not Solomon king of Israel sin by these things? yet among many nations was there no king like him,
and he was beloved of his God, and God made him king over all Israel: nevertheless even
him did foreign [nikro,
Strong's #5237] women cause to
sin.
Nehemiah 13:26-27And King Solomon loved many foreign [nikro, Strong's #5237] women, even the daughter of Pharaoh, Moabites, Ammonites,
Edomites, Sidonians, Hittites; 1 Kings 11:1
While "nikros" have a close racial affinity to the Israelites [e.g., Moabites
and Ammonites are descendants of Abraham's nephew Lot, the Egyptians were the Tribe of
Dan, the Edomites were descendants of Abraham's grandson Esau's marriage with Canaanites]
it was still ALWAYS a sin for Israelites to marry them--and their offspring can NEVER
enter the Congregation of the LORD.
But there are numerous other races in the world which PRE-DATE Abraham, right? The
Asians, referred to as "Enosh" in Scripture, who make NO claim to be of Abraham,
are even more remotely removed from us racially, right? And of course it's an even
WORSE sin to marry them than it is to marry "nikro". And niggers, referred
to as "behemah" in Scripture, also make no claim to be of Abraham, and it's the
DEATH PENALTY to marry them:
And if a woman approach unto any behemah, and lie down thereto, thou shalt kill the woman, and the behemah: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them,
Leviticus 20:16
http://fathersmanifesto.net/behemah.htm
Why do jews freak out when you point this verse out to them?
BECAUSE JEWS KNOW THEY HAVE NIGGER ANCESTRY, A MORTAL SIN ACCORDING TO THE WORD OF GOD.
The following jew definition was obviously contrived by jews in a FUTILE attempt to
conceal this FACT:
| Strongs
# 241 |
foreign, i.e. not a Jew |
To an Israelite, a jew is not even a "nikro", nor even a "behemah".
To an Israelite, a jew is even lower on the social scale than a behemah--it is a
mamzer:
A mamzer shall not enter into the
congregation of the LORD; even to his tenth generation shall he not enter into the
congregation of the LORD, Deuteronomy 23:2
REMINDER: The subject line of this thread is: Re: HEY IDIOT RCC Mal 4:1- An ongoing
Translation in the Greek
Using the standard the Blue Letter Bible feature for Strong's (King James Version) to
get a total word count for the Bible (Hebrew (OT) and Greek (NT) [this is not
broken down by original word, only KJV occurrences] compared with the Resurgence
Greek Project occurrences by word [WHICH INCLUDES THE APOCRYPHA] provides
the following comparisons. However, the Resurgence Greek overlaps variants, whereas
the Blue Letter Bible does not ( e.g., singular versus plural).
Blue Letter Bible homepage:
Resurgence Greek Project homepage:
KJV English Concordance for "alien"
alien occurs 5 times in 5 verses
KJV English Concordance for "aliens"
aliens occurs 3 times in 3 verses
KJV English Concordance for "alienate"
There is one verse containing the word alienate
KJV English Concordance for "stranger"
stranger occurs 129 times in 124 verses
| Uses |
Word |
Definition |
| 35 |
?????e??? |
of another race, a stranger |
| 34 |
????? |
subst: a guest-freind or foreigner, stranger, wandererAdj: strange, foreign, unusual |
| 34 |
p??????? |
stranger |
| 14 |
?e???? |
to receive or entertain strangers, to receive as a guest |
| 3 |
f????e??? |
loving strangers, hospitable |
| 1 |
?e??d???? |
to entertain guests or strangers |
KJV English Concordance for "strangers"
strangers occurs 80 times in 79 verses
| Uses |
Word |
Definition |
| 14 |
?e???? |
to receive or entertain strangers, to receive as a guest |
| 3 |
f????e??? |
loving strangers, hospitable |
| 1 |
?e??d???? |
to entertain guests or strangers |
KJV English Concordance for "strange"
strange occurs 76 times in 73 verses
| Uses |
Word |
Definition |
| 35 |
?????e??? |
of another race, a stranger |
| 34 |
p??????? |
stranger |
| 34 |
????? |
subst: a guest-freind or foreigner, stranger, wandererAdj: strange, foreign, unusual |
| 16 |
????t???? |
to estrange from |
| 14 |
?e???? |
to receive or entertain strangers, to receive as a guest |
| 12 |
?t?p?? |
out of place, unexpected, strange; wicked, wrong, |
| 3 |
f????e??? |
loving strangers, hospitable |
| 3 |
?pa???t????�a? |
to estrange, alienate |
| 2 |
???????ss?? |
using a strange tongue |
| 2 |
????t???s?? |
estrangement |
| 1 |
?e??d???? |
to entertain guests or strangers |
Found by Definition
| Uses |
Word |
Definition |
| 35 |
?????e??? |
of another race, a stranger |
| 34 |
????? |
subst: a guest-freind or foreigner, stranger, wandererAdj: strange, foreign, unusual |
| 34 |
p??????? |
stranger |
| 14 |
?e???? |
to receive or entertain strangers, to receive as a guest |
| 3 |
f????e??? |
loving strangers, hospitable |
| 1 |
?e??d???? |
to entertain guests or strangers |

| Lemma |
Lexical Entry |
| p??????? (34) |
stranger  |
| Related Words |
pa?????s?? p??a?
|
| Strongs
# 3941 |
having a home near, i.e. (as noun) a by-dweller (alien resident) |
| Thayers at Crosswalk |
Thayer's |
LSJ (from Perseus) |
|
Middle Liddell (from Perseus) |
|
| Forms for this lemma |
Parsing |
Occurrences |
| p??????? |
Nominative Singular Masculine |
11 |
| p??????? |
Nominative Plural Masculine |
7 |
| pa????? |
Dative Singular Masculine |
4 |
| pa?????? |
Genitive Singular Masculine |
3 |
| pa??????? |
Accusative Plural Masculine |
3 |
| p??????? |
Nominative Singular Neuter |
2 |
| pa?????? |
Present Active Participle Nominative Singular Masculine |
1 |
| p??????? |
Nominative Plural Masculine |
1 |
| p??????? |
Nominative Singular Masculine |
1 |
| pa?????? |
Genitive Plural Masculine |
1 |
Middle Liddell and LSJ Lexicons used by Permission of the Perseus Projects (perseus.tufts.edu)
| Lemma |
Lexical Entry |
| f????e??? (3) |
loving strangers, hospitable
|
| Related Words |
None found. |
| Strongs
# 5382 |
fond of guests, i.e. hospitable |
| Thayers at Crosswalk |
Thayer's |
LSJ (from Perseus) |
|
Middle Liddell (from Perseus) |
|
| Forms for this lemma |
Parsing |
Occurrences |
| f????e??? |
Accusative Singular Masculine |
2 |
| f????e??? |
Nominative Plural Masculine |
1 |
Middle Liddell and LSJ Lexicons used by Permission of the Perseus Projects (perseus.tufts.edu)
| |
|