![]() ![]() Since the advice of men skilled in the law was needed in the examination of causes and the solution of difficult questions, they were enrolled in the Sanhedrin and accordingly in the N. 44:4) Mark 9:11 Mark 12:35 examined into the more difficult and subtile questions of the law, Matthew 9:3 Mark 2:6 Mark 12:28 added to the Mosaic law decisions of various kinds thought to elucidate its meaning and scope, and did this to the detriment of religion, Matthew 5:20 Matthew 15:1ff 23:2ff Mark 7:1ff cf. Luke 11:52, 53 - yet see critical texts), regards the latter name as the more specific ( a jurisconsult) and Classic, γραμματεύς as the more general ( a learned man) and Hebraistic it is also the more common in the Apocrypha, where νομικός occurs only 4 Macc. ![]() in the Bible, a man learned in the Mosaic law and in the sacred writings, an interpreter, teacher: Matthew 23:34 1 Corinthians 1:20 (called also νομικός in Luke 10:25, and νομοδιδάσκαλος in Luke 5:17 (Meyer (on Matthew 22:35), while denying any essential different between γραμματεύς and νομικός (cf. 294 Wood, Discoveries at Ephesus, Appendix, Inscriptions from the Great Theatre, p. Lightfoot in The Contemporary Review for 1878, p. 2 Samuel 8:17 2 Samuel 20:25 2 Kings 19:2 2 Kings 25:19 Psalm 44:2 ( ), a clerk, scribe, especially a public scribe, secretary, recorder, whose office and influence differed in different states: Acts 19:35 (Sir. in secular authors and here and there in the O. Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 1122: γραμματεύς ![]()
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