5 occurrences in 5 dictionaries

Reference: ALPHA

American

See the letter A.

Fausets

(ALPHA (? - ?), Greek): (ALEPH (?), "chief," "guide," Hebrew.) The first letter, as OMEGA (? - ?) is the last, of the Greek alphabet. So Christ is the First and the Last, including all that comes between, the Author and Finisher of the visible and invisible, and of the spiritual creations (Re 1:8; 21:6; 22:13; Heb 12:2; Isa 41:4; 44:6). As He made originally, so will He complete the whole. ALPHABET comes from the first two Greek letters, Alpha (? - ?), Beta (? - ?) equating in Hebrew to 'Aleph (?), Bet[h] (?).

The Moabite stone of Dibon, probably of the reign of Ahaziah, Ahab's son, who died 896 B.C., exhibits an alphabet so complete that at that early date it can have been no recent invention. It has been discovered as mason's marks on the foundation stones of Solomon's temple. Yet even it was not the earliest form of the Palestinian alphabet. The fine discrimination of sounds, implied in inventing an alphabet, could hardly be brought to perfection at once Rawlinson fixes the invention 15 centuries B.C.

The language of the Dibon stone, and the Hebrew of the Bible, most closely agree. Mesha's victories are recorded there in the same character, and even the same idiom, as in 2 Kings 3. In symbols of the early Christian church A and were often combined with the cross, or with Christ's monogram, e.g., on a tablet in the catacombs at Melos, of the early part of the second century. The rabbis (Jalkut Rubeni, fol. 17, 4, Sohoettgen, Hor. Heb., 1:1086) say, "Adam transgressed the whole law from Aleph (?) to Tau (?)" (the last Hebrew letter); so Christ fulfilled it from Alpha (? - ?) to Omega (? - ?) (Mt 3:15).

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Morish

The first letter of the Greek Alphabet, and which also signifies the numeral 1. A title or character of God and of Christ, which points to His eternity as 'the beginning,' 'the first,' the I AM. Re 1:8; 21:6; 22:13. "I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end," or "the first and the last;" which is similar to a passage in Isa 41:4: "I Jehovah, the first, and with the last; I am he."

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Smith

(A), the first letter of the Greek alphabet. With Omega, the last letter, it is used in the Old Testament and in the New to express the eternity of God, as including both the beginning and the end.

Re 1:8,11; 21:6; 22:13; Isa 41:4; 44:6

hence these letters became a favorite symbol of the eternal divinity of our Lord, and were used for this purpose in connection with the cross, or the monogram of Christ (i.e. the first two letters, ch and r, of Christ's name in Greek). Both Greeks and Hebrews employed the letters of the alphabet as numerals.

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Watsons

ALPHA, the first letter of the Greek alphabet; Omega being the last letter. Hence Alpha and Omega is a title which Christ appropriates to himself, Re 1:8; 21:6; 22:13; as signifying the beginning and the end, the first and the last, and thus properly denoting his perfection and eternity.

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Basic English, produced by Mr C. K. Ogden of the Orthological Institute - public domain