Buffeting
Buffeting
BUFFETING.In Mat 26:67 and Mar 14:65 this word (Gr. ) is used to describe the ill-treatment received by Christ in the house of the high priest after His condemnation was pronounced. The crowd present seems to have participated in inflicting this personal indignity. St. Mark, with his usual attention to details, notices that the officers received Him with blows of their hands. carries the significance of a blow with the clenched fist (, a fist). It vividly represents the brutal manual violence to which our Lord was subjected. The word also came to imply a meaning of general ill-usage or persecution, and, as such, occurs in 1Co 4:11, 2Co 12:7 (a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet me), 1Pe 2:20; cf.
A man that fortunes buffets and rewards
Hath taen with equal thanks.
Hamlet, Act iii. Sc. ii.
W. S. Kerr.