Compare
GreekG2923

κριτής

kritēs

Modern Summary of Abbott-Smith’s Lexicon (1922)

The word "κριτής" (kritēs) primarily means "judge," referring to someone who evaluates or decides matters. It can describe various types of judges, including legal authorities, such as Roman officials, or figures with moral or divine authority, such as God or Christ. In some contexts, it also refers to rulers in ancient Israel who acted as leaders and decision-makers.

a judge (genitive case or specially)

The Greek word kritēs means "a judge (genitive case or specially)," used in Scripture in contexts that reveal its full semantic depth.

Lexical data derived from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance. See full disclaimer

Connection Map

Nearest neighbors in the lexical network.

κριτήςshâphaṭ — to judge, i.e. pronounce sentence (for or against); by implication, to vindicate or punish; by extenssion, to govern; passively, to litigate (literally or figuratively)

Compare This Word

Explore how kritēs relates to similar or contrasting biblical words.

Judgment & Justice Cluster

Words that share the same theological orbit.

Continue Exploring

Follow the thread — discover connected words and concepts.

Did this word study enrich your reading or teaching? Lemmalink is entirely funded by users like you. Help us keep this tool free and open for the global church.