disciple

The Greek that is often translated as “disciple” in English typically follows three types of translation: (1) those which employ a verb ‘to learn’ or ‘to be taught’, (2) those which involve an additional factor of following, or accompaniment, often in the sense of apprenticeship, and (3) those which imply imitation of the teacher.

Following are some examples (click or tap for details):

  • Ngäbere: “word searcher”
  • Yaka: “one who learned from Jesus”
  • Navajo (Dinė), Western Highland Purepecha, Tepeuxila Cuicatec, Lacandon: “one who learned”
  • San Miguel El Grande Mixtec: “one who studied with Jesus”
  • Northern Grebo: “one Jesus taught”
  • Toraja-Sa’dan: “child (i.e., follower) of the master”
  • Indonesian: “pupil” (also used in many Slavic languages, including Russian [ученик], Bulgarian [учени́к], Ukrainian [учень], or Polish [uczeń] — source: Paul Amara)
  • Central Mazahua: “companion whom Jesus taught”
  • Kipsigis, Loma, Copainalá Zoque: “apprentice” (implying continued association and learning)
  • Cashibo-Cacataibo: “one who followed Jesus”
  • Huautla Mazatec: “his people” (essentially his followers and is the political adherents of a leader)
  • Highland Puebla Nahuatl: based on the root of “to imitate” (source for this and all above: Bratcher / Nida)
  • Chol: “learner” (source: Larson 1998, p. 107)
  • Waorani: “one who lives following Jesus” (source: Wallis 1973, p. 39)
  • Ojitlán Chinantec: “learner” (Source: M. Larson / B. Moore in Notes on Translation February 1970, p. 1-125.)
  • Javanese: “pupil” or “companion” (“a borrowing from Arabic that is a technical term for Mohammed’s close associates”)
  • German: Jünger or “younger one” (source for this and one above: Reiling / Swellengrebel)
  • German New Testament translation by Berger / Nord (publ. 1999): Jüngerinnen und Jünger or “female and male disciples.” Note that Berger/Nord only use that translation in many cases in the gospel of Luke, “because especially according to Luke (see 8:13), women were part of the extended circle of disciples” (see p. 452 and looked up at his disciples).
  • Noongar: ngooldjara-kambarna or “friend-follow” (source: Warda-Kwabba Luke-Ang)
  • French 1985 translation by Chouraqui: adept or “adept” (as in a person who is skilled or proficient at something). Watson (2023, p. 48ff.) explains (click or tap here to see more):

    [Chouraqui] uses the noun “adept,” which is as uncommon in French as it is in English. It’s an evocative choice on several levels. First, linguistically, it derives — via the term adeptus — from the Latin verb adipiscor, “to arrive at; to reach; to attain something by effort or striving.” It suggests those who have successfully reached the goal of their searching, and implies a certain struggle or process of learning that has been gradually overcome. But it’s also a term with a very particular history: in the Middle Ages, “adept” was used in the world of alchemy, to describe those who, after years of labor and intensive study, claimed to have discovered the Great Secret (how to turn base metals like lead into gold); it thus had the somewhat softened meaning of “someone who is completely skilled in all the secrets of their field.”

    Historians of religion often use the term adept with reference to the ancient mystery religions that were so prevalent in the Mediterranean in the centuries around the time of Jesus. An adept was someone who, through a series of initiatory stages, had penetrated into the inner, hidden mysteries of the religion, who understood its rituals, symbols, and their meaning. To be an adept implied a lengthy and intensive master-disciple relationship, gradually being led further and further into the secrets of the god or goddess (Isis-Osiris, Mithras, Serapis, Hermes, etc.) — secrets that were never to be revealed to an outsider.

    Is “adept” a suitable category in which to consider discipleship as we see it described in the Gospels? On some levels, the link is an attractive one, drawing both upon the social-religious framework of the ancient Mediterranean, and upon certain aspects of intimacy and obscurity/secrecy that we see in the relationship of Jesus and those who followed him. The idea that disciples are “learners” — people who are “on the way” — and that Jesus is portrayed as (and addressed as) their Master/Teacher is accurate. But the comparison is unsatisfactory on several other levels.

    First, the Gospels portray Jesus’s ministry as a largely public matter — there is relatively little of the secrecy and exclusiveness that is normally associated with both the mystery cults and medieval alchemy. Jesus’s primary message is not destined for a small, elite circle of “initiates” — although the Twelve are privy to explanations, experiences and teachings that are not provided to “the crowds.” For example, in Matthew 13:10-13:

    Then the disciples came and asked him, “Why do you speak to [the crowds] in parables?” He answered, “To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given. For to those who have, more will be given, and they will have an abundance; but from those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away. The reason I speak to them in parables is that ‘seeing they do not perceive, and hearing they do not listen, nor do they understand.’”

    Etymologically, adeptus suggests someone who “has arrived,” who has attained a superior level of understanding reserved for very few. However, what we see in the Gospels, repeatedly, is a general lack of comprehension of many of Jesus’s key teachings by many of those who hear him. Many of his more cryptic sayings would have been virtually incomprehensible in their original context, and would only make sense in retrospect, in the wake of the events of Jesus’s passion, death, and resurrection. The intense master-student relationship is also lacking: the Gospels largely portray “the disciples” as a loose (and probably fluctuating) body of individuals, with minimal structure or cohesion. Finally, there seems to be little scholarly consensus about the degree to which the mystery cults had made inroads in Roman-ruled Palestine during the decades of Jesus’s life. According to Everett Ferguson in his Backgrounds of Early Christianity.

    Although Christianity had points of contact with Stoicism, the mysteries, the Qumran community, and so on, the total worldview was often quite different….So far as we can tell, Christianity represented a new combination for its time…. At the beginning of the Christian era a number of local mysteries, some of great antiquity, flourished in Greece and Asia Minor. In the first century A.D. the vonly mysteries whose extension may be called universal were the mysteries of Dionysus and those of the eastern gods, especially Isis.

    And Norman Perrin and Dennis C. Duling note, in their book The New Testament:

    Examples of such mystery religions could be found in Greece… Asia Minor… Syria-Palestine… Persia… and Egypt. Though the mysteries had sacred shrines in these regions, many of them spread to other parts of the empire, including Rome. There is no clearly direct influence of the mysteries on early Christianity, but they shared a common environment and many non-Christians would have perceived Christians as members of an oriental Jewish mystery cult.56

    Given the sparse archaeological and literary evidence from this period regarding mystery cults in Roman Palestine, and the apparent resistance of many Palestinian Jews to religious syncretism, Chouraqui’s use of the noun adept implies a comparison between the historical Jesus and mystery cults that is doubtful, on both the levels of chronology and religious culture. Personally, I believe this choice suggests a vision of Jesus that distances him from the religious world of ancient Judaism, thus creating a distorted view of what spiritually inspired him. But the idea of the disciples as “learners” on a journey (as the Greek term suggests) is a striking one to consider; certainly, the Gospels show us the Twelve as people who are growing, learning, and developing…but who have not yet “arrived” at the fullness of their vocation.

Scot McKnight (in The Second Testament, publ. 2023) translates it into English as apprentice.

In Luang several terms with different shades of meaning are being used.

  • For Mark 2:23 and 3:7: maka nwatutu-nwaye’a re — “those that are taught” (“This is the term used for ‘disciples’ before the resurrection, while Jesus was still on earth teaching them.”)
  • For Acts 9:1 and 9:10: makpesiay — “those who believe.” (“This is the term used for believers and occasionally for the church, but also for referring to the disciples when tracking participants with a view to keeping them clear for the Luang readers. Although Greek has different terms for ‘believers’, ‘brothers’, and ‘church’, only one Luang word can be used in a given episode to avoid confusion. Using three different terms would imply three different sets of participants.”)
  • For Acts 6:1: mak lernohora Yesus wniatutunu-wniaye’eni — “those who follow Jesus’ teaching.” (“This is the term used for ‘disciples’ after Jesus returned to heaven.”)

Source: Kathy Taber in Notes on Translation 1/1999, p. 9-16.

In American Sign Language it is translated with a combination of the signs for “following” plus the sign for “group.” (Source: Ruth Anna Spooner, Ron Lawer)


“disciples” in American Sign Language, source: Deaf Harbor

In British Sign Language a sign is used that depicts a group of people following one person (the finger in the middle, signifying Jesus). Note that this sign is only used while Jesus is still physically present with his disciples. (Source: Anna Smith)


“Disciple in British Sign Language (source: Christian BSL, used with permission)

See also disciples (Japanese honorifics).

complete verse (Acts 18:23)

Following are a number of back-translations of Acts 18:23:

  • Uma: “He was several days in Antiokhia, and he also left going to the lands of Galatia and Frigia, in order to strengthen the faith of the followers of the Lord Yesus there.” (Source: Uma Back Translation)
  • Yakan: “When he had been in Antiyok for a few days, he left and he went-to (lit. covered) all the places in Galatiya and Pirigiya, and he encouraged the livers of the disciples of Isa in those places.” (Source: Yakan Back Translation)
  • Western Bukidnon Manobo: “And when he was there for some time, he continued on again. He went through the province of Phrygia and Galatia and he drew tight the believing of the disciples of Jesus there.” (Source: Western Bukidnon Manobo Back Translation)
  • Kankanaey: “When he had been-a-fairly-long-time there, he set-out again to go visit the various-towns in the region of Galacia and Frigia to strengthen the minds/thoughts of the believers.” (Source: Kankanaey Back Translation)
  • Tagbanwa: “Although there is where he was going home to, he indeed didn’t stay long, for he set out again. He went again to the places where he had taught in the districts of Galacia and Frigia. What he did was, he was making sturdy the believing/obeying of all the believers there in those lands.” (Source: Tagbanwa Back Translation)

Translation commentary on Acts 18:23

In 16.6 it is said that Paul traveled through the region of Phrygia and Galatia. Here Luke states that Paul went through the region of Galatia and Phrygia. Scholars are sharply divided on the interpretation of these two phrases and the relationship between them. However, it is quite likely that the variation is a matter of style and not a change in meaning. Luke probably means that Paul went to the same regions as he visited before; and it is likely that the expression the interior of the province (19.1) is intended as a summary statement of the same geographical regions as are mentioned in these two earlier passages.

Believers is literally “disciples,” but these terms are to be equated in this type of context.

Quoted with permission from Newman, Barclay M. and Nida, Eugene A. A Handbook on The Acts of the Apostles. (UBS Handbook Series). New York: UBS, 1972. For this and other handbooks for translators see here .

SIL Translator’s Notes on Acts 18:23

Division 18:23–21:16

The third missionary journey

In this division Paul went on his third missionary journey. During that time Priscilla and Aquila instructed Apollos in the complete teachings of Jesus.

Section 18:23–28

Paul began his third journey and Apollos learned about Jesus’ way of saving people

In this section, Paul began his third missionary journey. About that time Apollos began preaching Jesus as the Christ. But he did not know all of the gospel. In particular, he did not know about the baptism that believers practiced. Priscilla and Aquila instructed Apollos in those teachings that he did not know. Then Apollos went to Achaia and helped the believers there.

Some English versions begin the new section at 18:24 instead of 18:23 because the story of Apollos begins there. But Paul began his journey in 18:23. Consider where would be the best place to start a new section.

Other examples of headings for this section are:

Third Missionary Journey (New American Standard Bible)
-or-
Paul went on his third missionary journey
-or-
Paul went to visit some of the churches and Apollos learned the rest of the gospel

Paragraph 18:23

18:23a

After Paul had spent some time in Antioch, he traveled from place to place: The Berean Standard Bible adds the phrase in Antioch to make it clear in this verse where Paul was. The word traveled refers to beginning a journey. For example:

After spending some time there he departed (Revised Standard Version)

18:23b

traveled from place to place throughout the region of Galatia and Phrygia: The Greek words here are literally “passing through in order the district/region of Galatia and Phrygia.” It indicates that Paul visited the towns in Galatia and Phrygia. He visited them one after the other. The phrase “in order” probably indicates that he visited every town that he had preached in before. He probably visited them in the same order that he visited them last time. Other ways to translate this clause are:

traveled through the region of Galatia and Phrygia visiting each church ⌊that he established
-or-
traveled through the region of Galatia and Phrygia visiting each church ⌊in the same order that he went the last time

the region of Galatia and Phrygia: Here this phrase probably refers to the region that included both Galatia and Phrygia. For example:

the Galatian and Phrygian lands
-or-
the areas of Galatia and Phrygia

18:23c

strengthening all the disciples: The word strengthening refers to helping the disciples to become stronger in their faith in Jesus. Other ways to translate this word are:

helped the followers there to become stronger in their faith (Contemporary English Version)
-or-
strengthened [ the faith of ] all the disciples (God’s Word)
-or-
strengthened the disciples’ ways of faith
-or-
helped the disciples to believe, ⌊love, and obey⌋ ⌊Jesus⌋ better

disciples: The Greek word that the Berean Standard Bible translates as disciples means “learners” who are in a relationship with a teacher. The learners commit themselves to their teacher in order to learn from him and live according to his teaching and example.

In some languages using the word disciples would imply the twelve disciples. If that is true in your language, you may want to use the more general word “believer.” See how you translated this word in 6:1 or 16:1.

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