英:[ˈsænidrin]
美:[sænˈhɛdrɪn, -ˈhidrɪn, sɑn-]
英:[ˈsænidrin]
美:[sænˈhɛdrɪn, -ˈhidrɪn, sɑn-]
San·hed·rin
saen hi drihn [or] saen he drihn [or] sae n drIn
noun
the supreme council and tribunal of the Jews during postexilic times headed by a High Priest and having religious, civil, and criminal jurisdiction
请参见 sanhedrim。
Late Hebrew sanhedhrīn (gĕdhōlāh) (great) Sanhedrin, from Greek synedrion council, from synedros sitting in council, from syn- + hedra seat — more at sit
The first known use of Sanhedrin was in 1588
1 Nicodemus also was a man of distinction,—a member of the Sanhedrin and a Pharisee, belonging thus to the class highest in rank among his people.
2 There is nothing to show whence the Sanhedrin derived its authority.
3 Even now a messenger may be running towards the Temple, to tell the Sanhedrin that it has appeared.
4 Hillel Weiss, spokesman for Sanhedrin, said Wednesday that Haley’s criticism of the U.N., which he says “seeks to destroy the state of Israel,” earned her the recognition.
5 My father and I were studying Sanhedrin—slowly, patiently, intensively, not leaving a passage until my father was satisfied that, at least for the present, we understood it fully.
6 He had scotched the faction of Hasmonaean sympathizers by killing forty-five members of the Sanhedrin and confiscating their possessions.
7 In 1807 Napoleon convoked a great Jewish Sanhedrin, when some of the delegate rabbis were exuberant in their flattery of him as if he had been the Messiah.
8 According to Jewish scripture, the Sanhedrin was reconstituted there with Roman consent during a rebellion that led to the second century fighting in Jerusalem.
9 That night there was another secret council of some of the Sanhedrin, and Judas Iscariot was in their midst.
10 Would you have chosen from the fishing village or from the school of Gamaliel or the Sanhedrin?
11 After healing the crippled man , Peter front of the ruling Jewish leaders ( Sanhedrin ) who questioned Peter.
在治愈了那瘸子之后, 彼得落得被众犹太领导人 ( 公会 ) 审问的下场.
12 The Sanhedrin, the native court, exercised still very considerable power.
13 The Evidence: To prevent leaders from favoring their own ideas and discouraging dissent leadership in the Sanhedrin was shared, ensuring that different viewpoints were heard.
14 And the Sanhedrin where they sat, and the schools in which they taught became as the arsenal where they ground and prepared their weapons.
15 And if you’re a teenage girl who is wondering, “Can I hang out with the Sanhedrin?” — the answer is no!
16 The first Synoptist, referring to the false report which the Sanhedrin instruct the soldiers to make, says: "And this saying was spread among the Jews unto this day."
17 More than seventeen centuries had elapsed since the Sanhedrin, the High Court of Jerusalem, had passed out of existence.
18 A year later, religious leaders gathered for what was called the Great Sanhedrin, named after the Jewish high court in ancient Israel, to ratify the declarations of the assembly.
19 The opening of the Sanhedrin attracted universal attention, but its proceedings were void of interest.
20 The Sanhedrin is hastily called in executive session to sit in judgment—to pass sentence of death.