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English Dictionary: Peter/ by the DICT Development Group
4 results for Peter/
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Peter \Pe"ter\, n.
      A common baptismal name for a man. The name of one of the
      apostles,
  
      {Peter boat}, a fishing boat, sharp at both ends, originally
            of the Baltic Sea, but now common in certain English
            rivers.
  
      {Peter Funk}, the auctioneer in a mock auction. [Cant, U.S.]
           
  
      {Peter pence}, [or] {Peter's pence}.
      (a) An annual tax or tribute, formerly paid by the English
            people to the pope, being a penny for every house,
            payable on Lammas or St.Peter's day; -- called also {Rome
            scot}, and {hearth money}.
      (b) In modern times, a voluntary contribution made by Roman
            Catholics to the private purse of the pope.
  
      {Peter's fish} (Zo[94]l.), a haddock; -- so called because
            the black spots, one on each side, behind the gills, are
            traditionally said to have been caused by the fingers of
            St. Peter, when he caught the fish to pay the tribute. The
            name is applied, also, to other fishes having similar
            spots.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Peter \Pet"er\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Petered}; p. pr. & vb. n.
      {Petering}.] [Etymol. uncertain.]
      To become exhausted; to run out; to fail; -- used generally
      with out; as, that mine has petered out. [Slang, U.S.]

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Peter
      originally called Simon (=Simeon ,i.e., "hearing"), a very
      common Jewish name in the New Testament. He was the son of Jona
      (Matt. 16:17). His mother is nowhere named in Scripture. He had
      a younger brother called Andrew, who first brought him to Jesus
      (John 1:40-42). His native town was Bethsaida, on the western
      coast of the Sea of Galilee, to which also Philip belonged. Here
      he was brought up by the shores of the Sea of Galilee, and was
      trained to the occupation of a fisher. His father had probably
      died while he was still young, and he and his brother were
      brought up under the care of Zebedee and his wife Salome (Matt.
      27:56; Mark 15:40; 16:1). There the four youths, Simon, Andrew,
      James, and John, spent their boyhood and early manhood in
      constant fellowship. Simon and his brother doubtless enjoyed all
      the advantages of a religious training, and were early
      instructed in an acquaintance with the Scriptures and with the
      great prophecies regarding the coming of the Messiah. They did
      not probably enjoy, however, any special training in the study
      of the law under any of the rabbis. When Peter appeared before
      the Sanhedrin, he looked like an "unlearned man" (Acts 4:13).
     
         "Simon was a Galilean, and he was that out and out...The
      Galileans had a marked character of their own. They had a
      reputation for an independence and energy which often ran out
      into turbulence. They were at the same time of a franker and
      more transparent disposition than their brethren in the south.
      In all these respects, in bluntness, impetuosity, headiness, and
      simplicity, Simon was a genuine Galilean. They spoke a peculiar
      dialect. They had a difficulty with the guttural sounds and some
      others, and their pronunciation was reckoned harsh in Judea. The
      Galilean accent stuck to Simon all through his career. It
      betrayed him as a follower of Christ when he stood within the
      judgment-hall (Mark 14:70). It betrayed his own nationality and
      that of those conjoined with him on the day of Pentecost (Acts
      2:7)." It would seem that Simon was married before he became an
      apostle. His wife's mother is referred to (Matt. 8:14; Mark
      1:30; Luke 4:38). He was in all probability accompanied by his
      wife on his missionary journeys (1 Cor. 9:5; comp. 1 Pet. 5:13).
     
         He appears to have been settled at Capernaum when Christ
      entered on his public ministry, and may have reached beyond the
      age of thirty. His house was large enough to give a home to his
      brother Andrew, his wife's mother, and also to Christ, who seems
      to have lived with him (Mark 1:29, 36; 2:1), as well as to his
      own family. It was apparently two stories high (2:4).
     
         At Bethabara (R.V., John 1:28, "Bethany"), beyond Jordan, John
      the Baptist had borne testimony concerning Jesus as the "Lamb of
      God" (John 1:29-36). Andrew and John hearing it, followed Jesus,
      and abode with him where he was. They were convinced, by his
      gracious words and by the authority with which he spoke, that he
      was the Messiah (Luke 4:22; Matt. 7:29); and Andrew went forth
      and found Simon and brought him to Jesus (John 1:41).
     
         Jesus at once recognized Simon, and declared that hereafter he
      would be called Cephas, an Aramaic name corresponding to the
      Greek Petros, which means "a mass of rock detached from the
      living rock." The Aramaic name does not occur again, but the
      name Peter gradually displaces the old name Simon, though our
      Lord himself always uses the name Simon when addressing him
      (Matt. 17:25; Mark 14:37; Luke 22:31, comp. 21:15-17). We are
      not told what impression the first interview with Jesus produced
      on the mind of Simon. When we next meet him it is by the Sea of
      Galilee (Matt. 4:18-22). There the four (Simon and Andrew, James
      and John) had had an unsuccessful night's fishing. Jesus
      appeared suddenly, and entering into Simon's boat, bade him
      launch forth and let down the nets. He did so, and enclosed a
      great multitude of fishes. This was plainly a miracle wrought
      before Simon's eyes. The awe-stricken disciple cast himself at
      the feet of Jesus, crying, "Depart from me; for I am a sinful
      man, O Lord" (Luke 5:8). Jesus addressed him with the assuring
      words, "Fear not," and announced to him his life's work. Simon
      responded at once to the call to become a disciple, and after
      this we find him in constant attendance on our Lord.
     
         He is next called into the rank of the apostleship, and
      becomes a "fisher of men" (Matt. 4:19) in the stormy seas of the
      world of human life (Matt. 10:2-4; Mark 3:13-19; Luke 6:13-16),
      and takes a more and more prominent part in all the leading
      events of our Lord's life. It is he who utters that notable
      profession of faith at Capernaum (John 6:66-69), and again at
      Caesarea Philippi (Matt. 16:13-20; Mark 8:27-30; Luke 9:18-20).
      This profession at Caesarea was one of supreme importance, and
      our Lord in response used these memorable words: "Thou art
      Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church."
     
         "From that time forth" Jesus began to speak of his sufferings.
      For this Peter rebuked him. But our Lord in return rebuked
      Peter, speaking to him in sterner words than he ever used to any
      other of his disciples (Matt. 16:21-23; Mark 8:31-33). At the
      close of his brief sojourn at Caesarea our Lord took Peter and
      James and John with him into "an high mountain apart," and was
      transfigured before them. Peter on that occasion, under the
      impression the scene produced on his mind, exclaimed, "Lord, it
      is good for us to be here: let us make three tabernacles" (Matt.
      17:1-9).
     
         On his return to Capernaum the collectors of the temple tax (a
      didrachma, half a sacred shekel), which every Israelite of
      twenty years old and upwards had to pay (Ex. 30:15), came to
      Peter and reminded him that Jesus had not paid it (Matt.
      17:24-27). Our Lord instructed Peter to go and catch a fish in
      the lake and take from its mouth the exact amount needed for the
      tax, viz., a stater, or two half-shekels. "That take," said our
      Lord, "and give unto them for me and thee."
     
         As the end was drawing nigh, our Lord sent Peter and John
      (Luke 22:7-13) into the city to prepare a place where he should
      keep the feast with his disciples. There he was forewarned of
      the fearful sin into which he afterwards fell (22:31-34). He
      accompanied our Lord from the guest-chamber to the garden of
      Gethsemane (Luke 22:39-46), which he and the other two who had
      been witnesses of the transfiguration were permitted to enter
      with our Lord, while the rest were left without. Here he passed
      through a strange experience. Under a sudden impulse he cut off
      the ear of Malchus (47-51), one of the band that had come forth
      to take Jesus. Then follow the scenes of the judgment-hall
      (54-61) and his bitter grief (62).
     
         He is found in John's company early on the morning of the
      resurrection. He boldly entered into the empty grave (John
      20:1-10), and saw the "linen clothes laid by themselves" (Luke
      24:9-12). To him, the first of the apostles, our risen Lord
      revealed himself, thus conferring on him a signal honour, and
      showing how fully he was restored to his favour (Luke 24:34; 1
      Cor. 15:5). We next read of our Lord's singular interview with
      Peter on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, where he thrice asked
      him, "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?" (John 21:1-19). (See {LOVE}.)
     
         After this scene at the lake we hear nothing of Peter till he
      again appears with the others at the ascension (Acts 1:15-26).
      It was he who proposed that the vacancy caused by the apostasy
      of Judas should be filled up. He is prominent on the day of
      Pentecost (2:14-40). The events of that day "completed the
      change in Peter himself which the painful discipline of his fall
      and all the lengthened process of previous training had been
      slowly making. He is now no more the unreliable, changeful,
      self-confident man, ever swaying between rash courage and weak
      timidity, but the stead-fast, trusted guide and director of the
      fellowship of believers, the intrepid preacher of Christ in
      Jerusalem and abroad. And now that he is become Cephas indeed,
      we hear almost nothing of the name Simon (only in Acts 10:5, 32;
      15:14), and he is known to us finally as Peter."
     
         After the miracle at the temple gate (Acts 3) persecution
      arose against the Christians, and Peter was cast into prison. He
      boldly defended himself and his companions at the bar of the
      council (4:19, 20). A fresh outburst of violence against the
      Christians (5:17-21) led to the whole body of the apostles being
      cast into prison; but during the night they were wonderfully
      delivered, and were found in the morning teaching in the temple.
      A second time Peter defended them before the council (Acts
      5:29-32), who, "when they had called the apostles and beaten
      them, let them go."
     
         The time had come for Peter to leave Jerusalem. After
      labouring for some time in Samaria, he returned to Jerusalem,
      and reported to the church there the results of his work (Acts
      8:14-25). Here he remained for a period, during which he met
      Paul for the first time since his conversion (9:26-30; Gal.
      1:18). Leaving Jerusalem again, he went forth on a missionary
      journey to Lydda and Joppa (Acts 9:32-43). He is next called on
      to open the door of the Christian church to the Gentiles by the
      admission of Cornelius of Caesarea (ch. 10).
     
         After remaining for some time at Caesarea, he returned to
      Jerusalem (Acts 11:1-18), where he defended his conduct with
      reference to the Gentiles. Next we hear of his being cast into
      prison by Herod Agrippa (12:1-19); but in the night an angel of
      the Lord opened the prison gates, and he went forth and found
      refuge in the house of Mary.
     
         He took part in the deliberations of the council in Jerusalem
      (Acts 15:1-31; Gal. 2:1-10) regarding the relation of the
      Gentiles to the church. This subject had awakened new interest
      at Antioch, and for its settlement was referred to the council
      of the apostles and elders at Jerusalem. Here Paul and Peter met
      again.
     
         We have no further mention of Peter in the Acts of the
      Apostles. He seems to have gone down to Antioch after the
      council at Jerusalem, and there to have been guilty of
      dissembling, for which he was severely reprimanded by Paul (Gal.
      2:11-16), who "rebuked him to his face."
     
         After this he appears to have carried the gospel to the east,
      and to have laboured for a while at Babylon, on the Euphrates (1
      Pet. 5:13). There is no satisfactory evidence that he was ever
      at Rome. Where or when he died is not certainly known. Probably
      he died between A.D. 64 and 67.
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:
   Peter, a rock or stone
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
©TU Chemnitz, 2006-2024
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