τεταρταῖος
four days since
Definition
The adjective τεταρταῖος means 'of the fourth day' or 'four days since.' It specifically denotes something that has been in a state or condition for a period of four days. In its sole biblical occurrence, it describes the duration of Lazarus's death before Jesus arrives in John 11:39. The term emphasizes a significant, established period of time, moving beyond the immediate aftermath of an event into a state considered settled or irreversible by contemporary cultural understanding.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the New Testament, in John 11:39. It is employed in the narrative of the raising of Lazarus, where Martha objects to the opening of the tomb because her brother has been dead for four days (τεταρταῖος ἐστιν). Its usage here serves a precise narrative and theological purpose, quantifying the duration of death to highlight the magnitude of Jesus's ensuing miracle.
Etymology
Derived from the Greek ordinal number τέταρτος (tetartos), meaning 'fourth.' The suffix -αῖος forms an adjective indicating relation or pertaining to, thus creating the meaning 'pertaining to the fourth (day).' It is a straightforward temporal adjective built directly from the numeral.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it sets the stage for one of Jesus's most powerful signs. A four-day period was culturally understood to confirm irreversible death, as the soul was believed to have finally departed. By specifying that Lazarus was τεταρταῖος, the Gospel emphasizes that Jesus's power over death is absolute, overcoming not just biological death but the full cultural and spiritual finality attributed to it. This enriches the reading of John 11 by highlighting the intentional, dramatic nature of the miracle as a demonstration of Jesus as 'the resurrection and the life.'
In first-century Jewish thought, there was a belief that the soul hovered near the body for three days after death, with decomposition beginning on the fourth day. Therefore, someone who was 'τεταρταῖος' was considered unequivocally and irreversibly dead, with no hope of natural recovery. This context makes Jesus's miracle not merely a revival but a true resurrection from a state considered final, amplifying its astonishing nature.
τέταρτος (tetartos, G5067) — The ordinal number 'fourth,' from which τεταρταῖος is derived; it denotes sequence rather than duration.
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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