BENEFACTOR(
åὐåñãÝôçò
).—A title conferred by a grateful sovereign or country for useful service rendered, often in time of difficulty or danger (Est_2:23; Est_6:2). The names of royal benefactors were enrolled in a register (Herod. viii. 85, where see Rawlinson’s note; Thnc. 1:129). In the Persian tongue the king’s benefactors enjoyed a special title, possibly implying that their names were recorded. Besides the special appellation given to all who had done public service, the title ‘benefactor’ is occasionally mentioned as a perpetual epithet of kings, merely enhancing their dignity. So Antiochus vii. of Syria, Ptolemy iii. of Egypt, and at a later period Ptolemy vii. (b.c. 145–117), were called benefactors. It is evidently this latter, complimentary or official, title to which our Lord chiefly allndes in Luk_22:55, and so Revised Version NT 1881, OT 1885 rightly spells with a capital, ‘Benefactors.’ In worldly societies men reign in virtue of superior power, and
ÅὐåñãÝôçò
, ‘Benefactor,’ is a title of flattery which may be applied to the most cruel despot—as in the case of Ptolemy vii., otherwise known as Physcon (‘Big-Belly’), and also called
ÊáêåñãÝôçò
by a play upon his official designation. But in this new society which Jesus is instituting, the greatest is to be as the least, and he that is chief as he that doth serve. And this after the example of the Lord Himself, who, being the true
ÅὐåñãÝôçò
, ‘came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many’ (see the parallel passage Mat_20:25-28, and cf. the
ὑðὲñ ὑìῶí äéäüìåíïí
,
ὑðὲñ ὑìῶí ἐê÷õíüìåíïí
which Jesus had just spoken at the Last Supper [Luk_22:19-20]).
Literature.—Hasting's Dictionary of the Bible, art. ‘Benefactor’; Comm. of Alford and Godet, in loc.; Smith, Classical Dict., art. ‘Ptolemaeus.’