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"...I shall be anointed with fresh oil"   The word used for "anoint" in the Septuagint and the Greek New Testament comes from the Greek word chrio.  This word originally denoted the smearing or rubbing of oil or perfume upon an individual.  For example, if a patient came to see a physician because of sore muscles, the physician would pour oil upon his own hands; then he would begin to deeply rub that oil into the sore muscles of that patient.  That penetrating application of oil would be denoted by the Greek work chrio.  So technically speaking, the word "anoint" has to do with the rubbing or smearing of oil upon someone else.

When you read the word "anoint" in the Bible, think not only of the oil, but of the hands of the Anointer.  Oil was very expensive in Bible times; therefore, rather than tip the bottle of oil downward and freely pour it upon the recipient, a person would first pour the oil onto his hands and then apply it to the other person.  

Let's consider this concept in the context of God anointing our lives.  God Himself -- the Great Anointer -- filled His hands with the essence of His Spirit and then laid His mighty hands upon our lives, pressing the Spirit's power and anointing ever deeper into us.  So when we speak of a person who is anointed, we are actually acknowledging the the hand of God is on that person. 

If you would like a fresh anointing of the Holy Spirit upon your life, you come before the Great Anointer!  He alone can give you what you need.  Open your heart to God, and allow Him to lay His hands upon your life in a new way.

This post is taken from SPARKLING GEMS FROM THE GREEK (p. 363).

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.