Bow, Bowed (Verb)
Bow, Bowed (Verb)
“to bend,” is used especially of bending the knees in religious veneration, Rom 11:4; Rom 14:11; Eph 3:14; Phi 2:10.
signifies “to bend completely together, to bend down by compulsory force,” Rom 11:10.
“to bow together” (sun, “together with,” kupto, “to bow”), is said, in Luk 13:11, of the woman crippled with a physical infirmity.
“to incline, to bow down,” is used of the women who in their fright “bowed” their faces to the earth at the Lord’s empty tomb, Luk 24:5; of the act of the Lord on the Cross immediately before giving up His Spirit. What is indicated in the statement “He bowed His head,” is not the helpless dropping of the head after death, but the deliberate putting of His head into a position of rest, Joh 19:30. The verb is deeply significant here. The Lord reversed the natural order. The same verb is used in His statement in Mat 8:20; Luk 9:58, “the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head.” It is used, too, of the decline of day, Luk 9:12; Luk 24:29; of turning enemies to flight, Heb 11:34. See LAY, SPENT. No. 7, TURN, WEAR.
“to put, or place,” is said of the soldiers who mockingly bowed their knees to Christ, Mar 15:19. See APPOINT.
Note: For gonupeteo, “to bow the knee,” Mat 27:29, see KNEEL.