3390. métropolis
Lexical Summary
métropolis: Metropolis, mother city

Original Word: μητρόπολις
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: métropolis
Pronunciation: may-TRO-po-lis
Phonetic Spelling: (may-trop'-ol-is)
KJV: chiefest city
Word Origin: [from G3384 (μήτηρ - mother) and G4172 (πόλις - city)]

1. a mother city, i.e. "metropolis"

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
chief city, mother city

From meter and polis; a mother city, i.e. "metropolis" -- chiefest city.

see GREEK meter

see GREEK polis

NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
from métér and polis
Definition
a metropolis.

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 3390: μητρόπολις

μητρόπολις, μητροπολεως, (μήτηρ and πόλις), a metropolis, chief city; in the spurious subscription 1 Timothy 6:(22) at the end; (in this sense from Xenophon down).

Topical Lexicon
Concept of the Mother City

The Greek noun μητρόπολις (mētropolis) combines μήτηρ, “mother,” and πόλις, “city,” describing the “mother city” from which colonies or dependent towns received life, leadership, and identity. While the term itself is not used in the canonical Greek New Testament, the idea of a central, life-giving city permeates both Testaments, providing a rich background for biblical imagery that links geography, covenant community, and salvation history.

Usage in the Septuagint and Second Temple Literature

In Hellenistic writings and in portions of the Septuagint, μητρόπολις designates a primary, authoritative city that governs surrounding settlements. For example, Seleucid documents refer to Antioch as the μητρόπολις over Coele-Syria, and 2 Maccabees 4:38 calls Jerusalem “the metropolis of the Jews.” These references illuminate how first-century readers would have understood the social and political weight attached to a “mother city” that embodies the people’s law, worship, and heritage.

Cultural and Historical Setting

In Greco-Roman practice a metropolis:

• Sent out colonies but retained their allegiance.
• Supplied legal charters, religious festivals, and civic traditions to daughter towns.
• Received honor and tribute from her colonies, reinforcing mutual identity.

Because early Christians lived in an empire structured around such civic networks, the metaphor supplied ready language for distinguishing the Church’s true allegiance from surrounding pagan loyalties.

Jerusalem as the Scriptural Prototype

Old Testament revelation prepares the way for the concept of a covenant “mother city.” Zion stands at the center of Israel’s worship and government:

• “Glorious things are said of you, O city of God” (Psalm 87:3).
• “Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines forth” (Psalm 50:2).

By the Second Temple period Jerusalem was commonly spoken of as the μητρόπολις of Judaism. This perspective explains Paul’s assertion: “But the Jerusalem that is above is free, and she is our mother” (Galatians 4:26). Even without the explicit noun μητρόπολις, Paul’s wording evokes the same notion—Jerusalem (earthly or heavenly) functions as covenant mother to God’s people.

Theological Themes Connected to the Idea of a Metropolis

1. Covenant Identity

The metropolis embodies the people’s covenant with God, housing the temple and priesthood that mediate God’s presence.

2. Pilgrimage and Worship

Annual feasts required Israelites to “go up to Jerusalem” (Luke 2:41-42), reinforcing the centrality of the mother city for worship.

3. Authority and Discipline

The governing council (Sanhedrin) and later the apostolic council in Jerusalem (Acts 15) modeled how doctrinal and ethical decisions flowed outward to the wider community.

4. Missionary Expansion

As colonies spread from a metropolis, so the gospel advanced from Jerusalem to “Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8). Each new church retained spiritual lineage to its sending “mother.”

Eschatological Fulfillment in the New Jerusalem

Hebrews and Revelation lift the concept from earthly geography to eschatological glory:

• “You have come to Mount Zion, to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem” (Hebrews 12:22).
• “Then I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God” (Revelation 21:2).

Here the final μητρόπολις is not merely Israel’s capital but the eternal dwelling of God with His redeemed people, fulfilling every prophetic hope.

Implications for Church Life and Mission

• Unity: Local assemblies derive their identity from the heavenly metropolis, urging cooperation rather than competition.
• Holiness: As citizens of the mother city, believers pursue purity befitting “the city whose architect and builder is God” (Hebrews 11:10).
• Evangelism: Just as colonies bore witness to the glory of their metropolis, churches scatter to plant new congregations that reflect the character of the New Jerusalem.
• Pilgrimage Mind-set: “For here we do not have a permanent city, but we are looking for the city that is to come” (Hebrews 13:14). Earthly citizenship is secondary to heavenly allegiance.

Related Terms and Themes

πόλις (polis) – city

παροικία (paroikia) – sojourning/alien residence

πολίτευμα (politeuma) – commonwealth/citizenship (Philippians 3:20)

Summary

Though μητρόπολις never appears in the Greek New Testament, its conceptual world saturates Scripture. From historical Jerusalem, through the Church’s missionary expansion, to the radiant New Jerusalem, the Bible presents a single, unfolding narrative of a “mother city” that gathers, governs, nourishes, and finally perfects the people of God in Jesus Christ.

Forms and Transliterations
μεμηχανευμένας μητροπόλεων μητρόπολιν μητρόπολις μηχανάς
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