Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

descend

verb intransitive
To move or pass from a higher to a lower place; to move, come or go downwards; to fall; to sink; to run or flow down; applicable to any kind of motion or of body. We descend on the feet, on wheels, or by falling. A torrent descends from a mountain. The rains descended, and the floods came. Vatthew 7:25,

descend

To go down, or to enter. He shall descend into battle and perish. 7 Samuel 26:10.

descend

To come suddenly; to fall violently. And on the suitors let thy wrath descend.

descend

To go in; to enter. He, with honest meditations fed, into himself descended.

descend

To rush; to invade, as an enemy. The Grecian fleet descending on the town.

descend

To proceed from a source or original; to be derived. The beggar may descend from a prince, and the prince, from a beggar.

descend

To proceed, as from father to son; to pass from a preceding possessor, in the order of lineage, or according to the laws of succession or inheritance. Thus, an inheritance descends to the son or next of kin; a crown descends to the heir.

descend

To pass from general to particular considerations; as, having explained the general subject, we will descend to particulars.

descend

To come down from an elevated or honorable station; in a figurative sense. Flavius is an honorable man; he cannot descend to acts of meanness.

descend

In music, to fall in sound; to pass from any note to another less acute or shrill, or from sharp to flat.

descend

verb transitive
To walk, move or pass downwards on a declivity; as, to descend a hill; to descend an inclined plain.