Strong's Lexicon sakkos: Sackcloth Original Word: σάκκος Word Origin: Of Hebrew origin, from the word שַׂק (saq). Corresponding Greek / Hebrew Entries: • שַׂק (saq) • Strong's Hebrew 8242: A sack, sackcloth, a garment of mourning. Usage: The term σάκκος is used in the New Testament to denote a garment of mourning or penitence. It is often associated with expressions of grief, repentance, or humility before God. Context: The term σάκκος appears in the New Testament as a symbol of mourning and repentance. Sackcloth was a rough, coarse material, typically made from goat's hair, and was worn as a garment to express sorrow or penitence. In the cultural context of the Bible, wearing sackcloth was a public demonstration of one's inner state of grief or repentance. It was often accompanied by other acts of humility, such as sitting in ashes or fasting. NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originperhaps of Phoenician origin Definition sackcloth NASB Translation sackcloth (4). Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 4526: σάκκοςσάκκος (Attic σάκος), σάκκου, ὁ, Hebrew שַׂק (cf. Fremdwörter, under the word), a sack (Latinsaccus) i. e. a. a receptacle made for holding or carrying various things, as money, food, etc. ( b. a coarse cloth (Latincilicium), a dark coarse stuff made especially of the hair of animals (A. V. sackcloth): Revelation 6:12; a garment of the like material, and clinging to the person like a sack, which was usually worn (or drawn on over the tunic instead of the cloak or mantle) by mourners, penitents, suppliants, Matthew 11:21; Luke 10:13, and also by those who, like the Hebrew prophets, led an austere life, Revelation 11:3 (cf. what is said of the dress of John the Baptist, Matthew 3:4; of Elijah, 2 Kings 1:8). More fully in Winers RWB under the word Sack; Roskoff in Schenkel 5:134; (under the word Of Hebrew origin (saq); "sack"-cloth, i.e. Mohair (the material or garments made of it, worn as a sign of grief) -- sackcloth. see HEBREW saq Englishman's Concordance Matthew 11:21 N-DMSGRK: ἂν ἐν σάκκῳ καὶ σποδῷ NAS: long ago in sackcloth and ashes. KJV: long ago in sackcloth and ashes. INT: anyhow in sackcloth and ashes Luke 10:13 N-DMS Revelation 6:12 N-NMS Revelation 11:3 N-AMP Strong's Greek 4526 |



