Biblia

Alpha

Alpha

ALPHA

See the letter A.

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Alpha

(ALPHA ( – ), Greek): (ALEPH ( ), “chief,” “guide,” Hebrew.) The first letter, as OMEGA ( – ) is the last, of the Greek alphabet. So Christ is the First and the Last, including all that comes between, the Author and Finisher of the visible and invisible, and of the spiritual creations (Rev 1:8; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13; Heb 12:2; Isa 41:4; Isa 44:6). As He made originally, so will He complete the whole. ALPHABET comes from the first two Greek letters, Alpha ( – ), Beta ( – ) equating in Hebrew to ‘Aleph ( ), Bet[h] ( ).

The Moabite stone of Dibon, probably of the reign of Ahaziah, Ahab’s son, who died 896 B.C., exhibits an alphabet so complete that at that early date it can have been no recent invention. It has been discovered as mason’s marks on the foundation stones of Solomon’s temple. Yet even it was not the earliest form of the Palestinian alphabet. The fine discrimination of sounds, implied in inventing an alphabet, could hardly be brought to perfection at once Rawlinson fixes the invention 15 centuries B.C.

The language of the Dibon stone, and the Hebrew of the Bible, most closely agree. Mesha’s victories are recorded there in the same character, and even the same idiom, as in 2 Kings 3. In symbols of the early Christian church A and were often combined with the cross, or with Christ’s monogram, e.g., on a tablet in the catacombs at Melos, of the early part of the second century. The rabbis (Jalkut Rubeni, fol. 17, 4, Sohoettgen, Hor. Heb., 1:1086) say, “Adam transgressed the whole law from Aleph ( ) to Tau ( )” (the last Hebrew letter); so Christ fulfilled it from Alpha ( – ) to Omega ( – ) (Mat 3:15).

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

Alpha

We meet with this word, Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11. and in two other chapters of the Revelations. It is the first letter in the Greek alphabet. And the Lord Jesus, in having graciously condescended to call himself by this name, hath made it very precious to the believer. Jesus is, indeed, the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last, the Author and Finisher of salvation, It should seem that the Lord intended by this name, and adding to it Omega also, to imply the comprehensiveness of his nature, and being, both the first and the last, to intimate his eternity. (See Isa 43:10)

See A

See Aleph

Fuente: The Poor Mans Concordance and Dictionary to the Sacred Scriptures

Alpha

Alpha (), the first letter of the Greek alphabet, corresponding to the Hebrew Aleph. Both the Hebrews and the Greeks employed the letters of their alphabets as numerals, and A (Alpha or Aleph)therefore denoted one or the first. Hence our Lord says of himself, that he is Alpha and Omega, i.e.the first and the last, the beginning and the ending, as he himself explains it (Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13).

Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature

Alpha

The first letter of the Greek Alphabet, and which also signifies the numeral 1. A title or character of God and of Christ, which points to His eternity as ‘the beginning,’ ‘the first,’ the I AM. Rev 1:8; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13. “I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end,” or “the first and the last;” which is similar to a passage in Isa 41:4: “I Jehovah, the first, and with the last; I am he.”

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Alpha

A title of Christ

Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13

Compare with

Isa 41:4; Isa 44:6; Isa 48:12

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Alpha

Alpha (l’phah). The first letter of the Greek alphabet, corresponding to Aleph, the first Hebrew letter. These letters were used as numerals. Alpha therefore denotes one, the first. And, as Omega is the last Greek letter, our Lord calls himself Alpha and Omega, the first and the last, implying his divine eternity. Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13; comp. Isa 44:6.

Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible

Alpha

Alpha. Alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet. With Omega, the last letter, it is used in the Old Testament and in the New to express the eternity of God, as including both the beginning and the end. Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13; Isa 41:4; Isa 44:6.

Hence, these letters became a favorite symbol of the eternal divinity of our Lord, and were used for this purpose in connection with the cross, or the monogram of Christ (that is, the first two letters, Ch, and r, of Christ’s name in Greek). Both Greeks and Hebrews employed the letters of the alphabet as numerals.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary

ALPHA

fist letter of the Greek alphabet, a name applied to Christ

Rev 1:8; Rev 1:11,Rev 1:6,Rev 1:13

Fuente: Thompson Chain-Reference Bible

Alpha

the first letter of the Greek alphabet; Omega being the last letter. Hence Alpha and Omega is a title which Christ appropriates to himself, Rev 1:8; Rev 21:6; Rev 22:13; as signifying the beginning and the end, the first and the last, and thus properly denoting his perfection and eternity.

Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary

Alpha

Rev 1:8 (a) In this passage our Lord JESUS Himself applies this name to Himself as He does also in verse Rev 1:11. In Rev 21:6, He again applies that name to Himself and also in chapter Rev 22:13. He wants us to remember and never forget that He is the beginning of all literature. There would be no such thing as education, or understanding, or learning, were it not that He gave man the ability to learn, and then unveiled to man’s mind the multitude of matters which we call education. All information about creation has come from Him. Those who shut Him out of their lives and thinking are in darkness, or return to darkness. He is the author of the solar system and of all chemicals. He is the designer of the earth and the heavens. He originated the plan of salvation.

He is the author of every kind of life in the vegetable kingdom, the animal kingdom and the human kingdom. CHRIST JESUS is first, He is before all in every department of the universe. As Alpha is the first letter of the Greek alphabet, so CHRIST is the first cause of everything that exists.

Fuente: Wilson’s Dictionary of Bible Types