Senses
Senses
sensiz: The translation of , aistheterion (Heb 5:14, those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern good and evil). The word means, primarily, the seat of the senses, the region of feeling; in the Septuagint of Jer 4:19, it represents the Hebrew kr, the walls of the heart (see the Revised Version (British and American)), and is used to denote the internal sense or faculty of perceiving and judging, which in Heb 5:14 is regarded as becoming perfected by use or exercise (compare Eph 4:12 f; 1Ti 4:7; 2Pe 3:18).
In 2 Esdras 10:36 we have Or is my sense deceived, or my soul in a dream? Latin sensus, here mind rather than sense.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Senses
“sense, the faculty of perception, the organ of sense” (akin to aisthanomai, “to perceive”), is used in Heb 5:14, “senses,” the capacities for spiritual apprehension. In the Sept., Jer 4:19, “(I am pained … in the) sensitive powers (of my heart).”