Word Summary
skolops: anything pointed, a stake, thorn
Original Word: σκόλοψTransliteration: skolops
Phonetic Spelling: (skol'-ops)
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: anything pointed, a stake, thorn
Meaning: anything pointed, a stake, thorn
Strong's Concordance
thorn.
Perhaps from the base of skelos and optanomai; withered at the front, i.e. A point or prickle (figuratively, a bodily annoyance or disability) -- thorn.
see GREEK skelos
see GREEK optanomai
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 4647: σκόλοψσκόλοψ,
σκολοπος,
ὁ, from
Homer down,
a pointed piece of wood, a pale, a stake:
ἐδόθη μοι σκόλοψ τῇ σαρκί,
a sharp stake (others say
splinter, A. V. thorn; cf.
Numbers 33:55;
Ezekiel 28:24;
Hosea 2:6 (8);
Babrius fab. 122, 1. 10; others (Sir. 43:19)),
to pierce my flesh, appears to indicate some constant bodily ailment or infirmity, which, even when Paul had been caught up in a trance to the third heaven, sternly admonished him that he still dwelt in a frail and mortal body,
2 Corinthians 12:7 (cf.
2 Corinthians 12:1-4); (cf.
Winers Grammar, § 31, 10 N. 3;
Buttmann, § 133, 27. On Paul's
thorn in the flesh see Farrar, St. Paul, i. 652ff (Excursus x.);
Lightfoot's Commentary on Galatians, p. 186ff; Schaff in his 'Popular Commentary' on Galatians, p. 331f.)