Bible Word Study
Μῆδος
mēdos · a Mede
Μῆδος
a Mede
Definition
Μῆδος refers to an inhabitant of Media, an ancient kingdom located east of Assyria and south of the Caspian Sea (modern-day Iran). In the New Testament, it specifically denotes an ethnic Mede, a people historically associated with the Persian Empire. The term appears only in Acts 2:9, where Medes are listed among the diverse groups present in Jerusalem at Pentecost, highlighting the geographical reach of the Jewish diaspora and the universal scope of the gospel proclamation.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the New Testament, in Acts 2:9. It appears in a list of nations and regions represented by devout Jews gathered in Jerusalem for Pentecost. The usage is purely ethnic and geographical, serving to illustrate the wide dispersion of Jewish people and the miraculous, cross-cultural nature of the Holy Spirit's outpouring, which enabled people from many lands to hear the apostles 'in their own tongues.'
Etymology
Derived directly from the Greek Μῆδος (Mēdos), which itself originates from the Old Persian 'Māda,' referring to the land and people of Media. The Greek term was a standard ethnonym used in classical and Hellenistic literature to identify this eastern people.
Semantic Range
While the word itself is a simple ethnic identifier, its single biblical occurrence in Acts 2:9 carries theological weight. It signifies the fulfillment of God's promise that His Spirit would be poured out on 'all flesh' (Acts 2:17) and that the gospel witness would begin in Jerusalem and extend to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8). The inclusion of Medes in the Pentecost audience underscores the gospel's intent to transcend ethnic and national boundaries from its very inception. In the 1st-century Greco-Roman world, 'Mede' would have evoked the image of an eastern people from the old Persian Empire, often associated with wisdom and astrology (cf. Daniel's references to 'the law of the Medes and Persians'). Their mention alongside Parthians, Elamites, and Mesopotamians in Acts 2:9 paints a vivid picture of the Jewish diaspora scattered across the former Persian and Hellenistic empires, maintaining their faith far from Judea. Πέρσης (Persēs, G3374) — A Persian, often closely associated with Medes historically and in biblical texts (e.g., Daniel 5:28, Acts 2:9), but denoting a distinct though neighboring and later dominant ethnic group within the same empire.
Word Details
How this works
Definitions are from the Dodson Greek-English Lexicon, supplemented by STEPBible TBESG data (CC BY 4.0). Concordance and morphology data are derived from the interlinear Bible.
Full methodology & sources →References
- Abbott-Smith, G. (1921) A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. [Public Domain]
- Brown, F., Driver, S.R. and Briggs, C.A. (1906) A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament. Oxford: Clarendon Press. [Public Domain]
- Tyndale House, Cambridge (n.d.) Tyndale Brief lexicon of Extended Strongs for Greek (TBESG). STEPBible. Available at: https://www.stepbible.org. [CC BY 4.0]
- Tyndale House, Cambridge (n.d.) Translators Formatted full LSJ (TFLSJ). STEPBible. Available at: https://www.stepbible.org. [CC BY 4.0]
- Thayer, J.H. (1889) A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament. [Public Domain]
- Gesenius, W. (1846) Gesenius' Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon to the Old Testament. [Public Domain]
- Dodson, J. (2010) Greek Lexicon. Biblical Humanities. [CC0]