προσευχή,
προσευχῆς,
ἡ (
προσεύχομαι), the
Sept. for
תְּפִלָּה, equivalent to
εὐχή πρός τόν Θεόν (cf.
πρός, IV.
1. prayer addressed to God:
Matthew 17:21 (
T WH omit;
Tr brackets the verse);
Matthew 21:22;
Mark 9:29;
Luke 22:45;
Acts 3:1;
Acts 6:4;
Acts 10:31;
Romans 12:12;
1 Corinthians 7:5;
Colossians 4:2; plural,
Acts 2:42;
Acts 10:4;
Romans 1:10 (9);
Ephesians 1:16;
Colossians 4:12;
1 Thessalonians 1:2;
Philemon 1:4,
22;
1 Peter 3:7;
1 Peter 4:7;
Revelation 5:8;
Revelation 8:3,
4 (where
ταῖς προσευχαῖς is a dative commodi,
for, in aid of,
the prayers (
Winers Grammar, § 31, 6 c.; cf.
Green, p. 101f));
οἶκος προσευχῆς, a house devoted to the offering of prayer to God,
Matthew 21:13;
Mark 11:17;
Luke 19:46 (
Isaiah 56:7;
1 Macc. 7:37);
προσευχή καί δέησις,
Acts 1:14 Rec.;
Ephesians 6:18;
Philippians 4:6 (
1 Kings 8:38;
2 Chronicles 6:29;
1 Macc. 7:37; on the distinction between the two words see
δέησις); plural,
1 Timothy 2:1;
1 Timothy 5:5;
ἡ προσευχή τοῦ Θεοῦ, prayer to God,
Luke 6:12 (
εὐχαριστία Θεοῦ, Wis. 16:28; cf. references in
πίστις, 1 a.);
πρός τόν Θεόν ὑπέρ (
L T Tr WH περί)
τίνος,
Acts 12:5; plural
Romans 15:30;
προσευχή προσεύχεσθαι, a Hebraistic expression (cf.
Winers Grammar, § 54, 3; (
Buttmann, § 133, 22 a.)), to pray fervently,
James 5:17.
2. a place set apart or suited for the offering of prayer; i. e.
a. a synagogue (see
συναγωγή, 2 b.): 3Macc. 7:20 (according to the reading
προσευχήν; see Grimm's Commentary at the passage);
Philo in Flaccum § 6 (also § 14); leg. ad Gaium §§ 20, 43, 46;
Juvenal, sat. 1, 3, 296;
συνάγονται πάντες εἰς τήν προσευχήν,
μέγιστον οἴκημα πολύν ὄχλον ἐπιδέξασθαι δυνάμενον,
Josephus, Vita §54.
b. a place in the open air where the Jews were accustomed to pray, outside of those cities where they had no synagogue; such places were situated upon the bank of a stream or the shore of the sea, where there was a supply of water for washing the hands before prayer:
Acts 16:13,
16;
Josephus, Antiquities 14, 10, 23, cf.
Epiphanius haer. 80, 1.
Tertullian in his ad nationes 1, 13: makes mention of the
orationes litorales of the Jews, and in his de jejuniis c. 16 says "Judaicum certe jejunium ubique celebratur, cure omissis templis per omne litus quocunque in aperto aliquando jam preces ad carlurn mittunt." (
Josephus (c. Apion. 2, 2, 2) quotes Apion as representing Moses as offering
αἴθριοι προσευχαί.) Cf. DeWette, Archäologie, § 242; (
Schürer, Zeitgesch. § 27 vol. ii., p. 369ff). Not used by secular authors except in the passages cited above from
Philo,
Josephus, and
Juvenal (to which add
Cleomedes 71, 16; cf. Boeckh, Corpus inscriptions 2:1004 no. 2114 b. and 1005 no. 2114 bb. (
A.D. 81), see Index under the word).
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