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Mark 13:9

(Click on the Strongs Numbers)

Textus Receptus (Stephanus 1550)

(See Variants Below)

G991 take heed βλεπετε
G1161 But δε
G5210   υμεις
G1438 yourselves εαυτους
G3860 they shall deliver you up παραδωσουσιν
G1063 for γαρ
G5209   υμας
G1519 to εις
G4892 councils συνεδρια
G2532 and και
G1519 to εις
G4864 the synagogues συναγωγας
G1194 ye shall be beaten δαρησεσθε
G2532 and και
G1909 before επι
G2232 rulers ηγεμονων
G2532 and και
G935 kings βασιλεων
G2476 ye shall be brought σταθησεσθε
G1752 my sake ενεκεν
G1700   εμου
G1519 in εις
G3142 a testimony μαρτυριον
G846 against them αυτοις

King James Bible (Oxford 1769)

  take
G991 heed
G1438 yourselves
  they
  shall
  deliver
  you
G4892 councils
  the
G4864 synagogues
  ye
  shall
  be
G1194 beaten
  ye
  shall
  be
G2476 brought
G1909 before
G2232 rulers
G935 kings
  my
G1752 sake
  a
G3142 testimony
  against
G846 them

Textus Receptus Support:

Stephanus:
Beza:
Scrivener:

Variants

Both the Stephanus 1550 and the Beza 1598 Textus Receptus do not fully support this verse. In many cases the verse is supported from either the Bishop's Bible, Tyndale Bible or the Erasmus reading.

Variant: Read "stand" instead of "be brought."


Greek-English Dictionary

Strongs: G4892
Greek: συνέδριον
Transliteration: sunedrion
Pronunciation: soon-ed'-ree-on
Part of Speech: Noun Neuter
Bible Usage: council.
Definition:  

a joint session that is (specifically) the Jewish Sanhedrim; by analogy a subordinate tribunal

1. any assembly (esp. of magistrates, judges, ambassadors), whether convened to deliberate or pass judgment

2. any session or assembly or people deliberating or adjudicating

a. the Sanhedrin, the great council at Jerusalem, consisting of the seventy one members, viz. scribes, elders, prominent members of the high priestly families and the high priest, the president of the assembly. The most important causes were brought before this tribunal, inasmuch as the Roman rulers of Judaea had left to it the power of trying such cases, and also of pronouncing sentence of death, with the limitation that a capital sentence pronounced by the Sanhedrin was not valid unless it was confirmed by the Roman procurator.

b. a smaller tribunal or council which every Jewish town had for the decision of less important cases.

Thayer's Greek–English Lexicon
of the New Testament 1889
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.