καταγγελεύς
a reporter, herald
Definition
A καταγγελεύς is a herald, announcer, or proclaimer who makes a public declaration, often with an official or authoritative tone. In the New Testament, it specifically refers to someone who announces or proclaims a message, particularly in the context of religious or philosophical teaching. The word carries the sense of one who declares something openly and publicly, not merely reporting news but actively advocating or making known a specific message. Its sole biblical occurrence in Acts 17:18 illustrates this role perfectly.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the New Testament, in Acts 17:18. There, it describes the philosophers of Athens (Epicurean and Stoic) who encountered the Apostle Paul. They called him a 'babbler' (using the derogatory term σπερμολόγος, *spermologos*) and a 'proclaimer of foreign divinities' (καταγγελεύς ξένων δαιμονίων), because he was preaching the gospel of Jesus and the resurrection. The context shows the word being used by educated pagans to label Paul as an official-sounding, yet to them strange, announcer of new spiritual ideas.
Etymology
Derived from the preposition κατά (*kata*, meaning 'down,' 'according to,' or intensifying 'thoroughly') and the root related to ἀγγέλλω (*angellō*, 'to announce, report'). The compound verb καταγγέλλω (*katangellō*, G2605) means 'to proclaim, declare, preach.' The noun καταγγελεύς is the agent noun form, meaning 'a proclaimer' or 'one who does the proclaiming.' It shares its core meaning with the more common word κῆρυξ (*kēryx*, G2783), 'herald.'
Semantic Range
While used only once and by unbelievers, this title inadvertently highlights a core function of Christian ministry: proclamation. The philosophers recognized Paul not as a casual discussant but as an authoritative messenger, a 'herald' of a divine message. Understanding this term enriches our view of apostolic mission; the gospel is not a private opinion but a public, authoritative announcement to be declared (καταγγέλλω). It connects to the theology of preaching (κήρυγμα, kērygma) and the apostolic calling to be Christ's official ambassadors (2 Corinthians 5:20).
In the Greco-Roman world, a herald (κῆρυξ) was an official messenger who made public proclamations, often from a governing authority. They commanded attention and their words carried weight. By using καταγγελεύς, the Athenian philosophers were placing Paul in this category—someone acting as an official announcer. Their sarcastic tone ('proclaimer of foreign divinities') reflects a cultural wariness toward new religious cults, which were often viewed with suspicion and could be seen as disruptive to the established social and religious order.
κῆρυξ (kēryx, G2783) — The standard word for 'herald,' often with a more formal, public, and authoritative connotation. ἀπόστολος (apostolos, G652) — 'Apostle, sent one'; emphasizes being commissioned and sent with a message, whereas καταγγελεύς focuses on the act of proclamation itself. εὐαγγελιστής (euangelistēs, G2099) — 'Evangelist'; specifically a proclaimer of the good news (εὐαγγέλιον), a more theologically charged subset of a herald.
Word Details
How this works
Definitions are from the Dodson Greek-English Lexicon, a concise public-domain resource suitable for introductory word study. Brief glosses are supplemented by STEPBible TBESG data (CC BY 4.0). For advanced research, standard scholarly references include BDAG (Danker, 3rd ed.) and LSJ.
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