| Lexical Summary skēnē: a tentOriginal Word: σκηνήTransliteration: skēnēPhonetic Spelling: (skay-nay')Part of Speech: Noun, FeminineShort Definition: a tentMeaning: a tent Strong's Concordance habitation, tabernacle.  Apparently akin to skeuos and skia; a tent or cloth hut (literally or figuratively) -- habitation, tabernacle.  see GREEK skia  see GREEK skeuos  Thayer's Greek LexiconSTRONGS NT 4633: σκηνήσκηνή , σκηνῆς , ἡ  (from the root, ska 'to cover' etc.; cf.  σκιά ,  σκότος , etc.; Latincasa, cassis, castrum ; English shade,  etc.; Curtius , § 112; Vanicek , p. 1054f), from (Aeschylus ), Sophocles  and Thucydides  down; the Sept.  chiefly for אֹהֶל , often also for מִשְׁכָּן , also for סֻכָּה ; a tent, tabernacle  (made of green boughs, or skins, or other materials): Matthew 17:4 ; Mark 9:5 ; Luke 9:33 ; Hebrews 11:9 ; αἱ αἰώνιοι σκηναί  (see  αἰώνιος , 3), Luke 16:9  (et dabo iis tabernacula aeterna quae praeparaveram illis , 4 (5) Esdr. ); of that well known movable temple of God after the pattern of which the temple at Jerusalem was subsequently built (cf. B. D., under the word ): Hebrews 8:5; Hebrews 9:1 Rec.st, 21; with τοῦ μαρτυρίου added (see  μαρτύριον, c. at the end), Acts 7:44; the temple is called σκηνή in Hebrews 13:10; σκηνή πρώτη, the front part of the tabernacle (and afterward of the temple), the Holy place, Hebrews 9:2, 6, 8; of the Holy of holies, Hebrews 9:3; the name is transferred to heaven, as the true dwelling-place of God and the prototype of the earthly 'tabernacle' or sanctuary, Hebrews 9:11; Revelation 13:6; hence, ἡ σκηνή ἡ ἀληθινή, heaven, Hebrews 8:2; with a reference to this use of the word, it is declared that when the kingdom of God is perfectly established ἡ σκηνή τοῦ Θεοῦ will be μετά τῶν (after the analogy of σκηνουν μετά τίνος), Revelation 21:3; ὁ ναός τῆς σκηνῆς τοῦ μαρτυρίου (see  μαρτύριον, c. at the end), the heavenly temple, in which was the tabernacle of the covenant, i. e. the inmost sanctuary oradytum, Revelation 15:5. ἡ σκηνή τοῦ Μολόχ, the tabernacle i. e. portable shrine of Moloch, Acts 7:43 (for the Orientals on their journeys and military expeditions used to carry with them their deities, together with shrines for them; hence, ἡ ἱερά σκηνή of the Carthaginians in Diodorus 20, 65, where see Wesseling (but cf. סִכּוּת in Mühlau and Volck's Gesenius, or the recent commentaries on Amos 5:26)). ἡ σκηνή Δαυίδ (from Amos 9:11 for סֻכָּה), the hut (tabernacle) of David, seems to be employed, in contempt, of his house, i. e. family reduced to decay and obscurity, Acts 15:16 (otherwise דָּוִד אֹהֶל in Isaiah 16:5). 
 
 
 
 |