Absence, Absent
lit., “a being away from,” is used in Phi 2:12, of the Apostle’s absence from Philippi in contrast to his parousia, his presence with the saints there (parousia does not signify merely “a coming,” it includes or suggests “the presence” which follows the arrival).
“to be absent” (apo, “from,” eimi, “to be”), is found in 1Co 5:3; 2Co 10:1, 2Co 10:11; 2Co 13:2, 2Co 13:10; Phi 1:27; Col 2:5. See GO.
lit., “to be away from people” (ek, “from,” or “out of,” demos, “people”), came to mean either (a) “to go abroad, depart;” the Apostle Paul uses it to speak of departing from the body as the earthly abode of the spirit, 2Co 5:8; or (b) “to be away;” in the same passage, of being here in the body and absent from the Lord (2Co 5:6), or being absent from the body and present with the Lord (2Co 5:8). Its other occurrence is in 2Co 5:9.
means “without,” Luk 22:35, “without purse;” in Luk 22:6, “in the absence (of the multitude),” marg., “without tumult.” See WITHOUT.