Icon - Septuagint

Septuagint

The Greek word eikon means an image or likeness that represents something else. An eikon does not necessarily imply sanctity or veneration.

The Septuagint is the Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures used by the early Christians, and Eastern Orthodox consider it the only authoritative text of those Scriptures. In it the word eikon is used for everything from man being made in the divine image to the "molten idol" placed by Manasses in the Temple.

  1. Genesis 1:26-27;
  2. Genesis 5:1-3;
  3. Genesis 9:6;
  4. Exodus 25:18–20
  5. Numbers 21:8–9
  6. Deuteronomy 4:16
  7. 1 Samuel (1 Kings) 6:11 (Alexandrian manuscript);
  8. 2 Kings 11:18;
  9. 1 Chronicles 28:18–19;
  10. 2 Chronicles 33:7;
  11. Psalm 38:7
  12. Psalm 72:20;
  13. Isaiah 40, 19-20;
  14. Ezekiel 7:20;
  15. Ezekiel 8:5 (Alexandrian manuscript);
  16. Ezekiel 16:17;
  17. Ezekiel 23:14;
  18. Ezekiel 41:17–18;
  19. Daniel 2:31,32,34,35;
  20. Daniel 3:1,2,3,5,7,11,12,14,15,18;
  21. Hosea 13:2

Be aware that Septuagint numberings and names and the English Bible numberings and names are not uniformly identical.

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