Corner, Cornerstone
Corner, Cornerstone
“an angle” (Eng., “coign”), signifies (a) “an external angle,” as of the “corner” of a street, Mat 6:5; or of a building, Mat 21:42; Mar 12:10; Luk 20:17; Act 4:11; 1Pe 2:7, “the corner stone or head-stone of the corner” (see below); or the four extreme limits of the earth, Rev 7:1; Rev 20:8; (b) “an internal corner,” a secret place, Act 26:26. See QUARTER.
“a beginning” (its usual meaning), “first in time, order, or place,” is used to denote the extremities or “corners” of a sheet, Act 10:11; Act 11:5. See BEGINNING.
Note: For the adjective akrogoniaios (from akros, “extreme, highest,” and No. 1), “a chief corner stone,” see CHIEF. They were laid so as to give strength to the two walls with which they were connected. So Christ unites Jew and Gentile, Eph 2:20; again, as one may carelessly stumble over the “corner stone,” when turning the “corner,” so Christ proved a stumbling stone to Jews, 1Pe 2:6.