Greek word · Strong's G3625

οἰκουμένη

oikouménē · noun · “world (inhabited)”

In a sentence

Oikoumenē is the inhabited world — the populated earth as a whole. It frames the New Testament’s reach: the gospel goes to every nation under heaven.

Oikoumenē comes from the same root as “house” — the inhabited, ordered world where people live. In the New Testament it often pictures the whole human family as the scope of God’s saving plan.

Jesus says the gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed “throughout the whole oikoumenē as a testimony to all nations” (Matthew 24:14). Christian mission is not parochial; it is house-wide.

Strong's reference

Definition: land, i.e. the (terrene part of the) globe; specially, the Roman empire

KJV usage: earth, world

Reference gloss from Strong's Concordance (1890, public domain).

Key verses BSB · Public Domain (CC0)
Related

Original BibleDawn word study. Original-language data and the public-domain Strong's (1890) gloss are referenced; see sources.