ὄξος
vinegar, sour wine
Definition
ὄξος refers to 'vinegar' or 'sour wine,' a common, inexpensive beverage in the ancient world. In the New Testament, it specifically denotes the posca—a diluted vinegar-wine mixture that was a standard ration for Roman soldiers (Matthew 27:48, Mark 15:36, John 19:29). In Matthew 27:34, it is mixed with gall and offered to Jesus as a bitter, anesthetic drink, which He refuses. In the other accounts, it is offered on a sponge as a gesture of mockery or, in John's Gospel, to fulfill Scripture (John 19:28-30).
Biblical Usage
This word appears exclusively in the crucifixion narratives of all four Gospels, always in the context of Jesus's suffering. In Matthew 27:34 and Mark 15:23 (implied), it is offered at the crucifixion's outset as a pain-dulling drink. In Matthew 27:48, Mark 15:36, Luke 23:36, and John 19:29-30, it is offered near the moment of death, sometimes in mockery (Luke 23:36) and sometimes as a gesture of minimal mercy. John uniquely presents it as the fulfillment of Psalm 69:21.
Etymology
Derived directly from the Greek noun ὄξος, meaning 'vinegar' or 'anything sour.' It is related to the adjective ὀξύς (oxys, G3691), meaning 'sharp' or 'keen,' highlighting the acidic, pungent quality of the substance. The word was borrowed into Latin as 'acetum,' showing its common use across Mediterranean cultures.
Semantic Range
ὄξος is theologically significant as it directly connects to Jesus's fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy, specifically Psalm 69:21: 'They gave me vinegar for my thirst.' Its offering encapsulates both the cruelty of His mockery and the depth of His physical suffering, underscoring His full humanity and voluntary submission. Understanding this term enriches the reader's perception of the crucifixion's historical reality and its scriptural intentionality.
In the 1st-century Roman world, ὄξος (posca) was a cheap, thirst-quenching drink for soldiers, laborers, and the lower classes, made by mixing vinegar with water and sometimes herbs. It was not typically a drink of pleasure but of necessity. This contrasts with modern associations of vinegar purely as a condiment, highlighting the offer to Jesus as one of basic, even contemptuous, sustenance rather than a noble beverage.
οἶνος (oinos, G3631) — The general Greek word for 'wine,' whereas ὄξος is specifically soured or vinegary wine.
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.
Full methodology & sources →