Backslide

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To draw back or apostatize in matters of religion (Act_21:21; 2Th_2:3; 1Ti_4:1). This may be either partial (Pro_14:14) or complete (Heb_6:4-6; Heb_10:38, Heb_10:39). The apostasy may be both doctrinal and moral.


bak´slīd´ (משׁוּבה, meshūbhāh; Hos_11:7; Hos_14:4 and often in Hos and Jer, שׁובב, shōbhābh; שׁובב, shōbhēbh, in Jer, 4 times: all meaning “turning back or away,” “apostate,” “rebellious.” סרר, ṣārar, in Hos_4:16 = “stubborn,” “rebellious”; the Revised Version (British and American) “stubborn”):

In all places the word is used of Israel forsaking Yahweh, and with a reference to the covenant relation between Yahweh and the nation, conceived as a marriage tie which Israel had violated. Yahweh was Israel's husband, and by her idolatries with other gods she had proved unfaithful (Jer_3:8, Jer_3:14; Jer_14:7; Hos_14:4). It may be questioned whether Israel was guilty so much of apostasy and defection, as of failure to grow with the growing revelation of God. The prophets saw that their contemporaries fell far short of their own ideal, but they did not realize how far their predecessors also had fallen short of the rising prophetic standard in ideal and action.

See Apostasy; Apostate.

Backslider bak´slīd-ẽr סוּג לב, ṣūgh lēbȟ:

“The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways” (Pro_14:14). But the Revised Version (British and American) “backslider” conveys the wrong impression of an apostate. The Hebrew expression here implies simply non-adherence to the right, “The bad man reaps the fruits of his act” (Toy, Prov, in loc.).

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