in-her'-i-tans (nahalah, "something inherited," "occupancy," "heirloom," "estate," "portion"): The word is used in its widest application in the Old Testament Scriptures, referring not only to an estate received by a child from its parents, but also to the land received by the children of Israel as a gift from Yahweh. And in the figurative and poetical sense, the expression is applied to the kingdom of God as represented in the consecrated lives of His followers. In a similar sense, the Psalmist is represented as speaking of the Lord as the portion of his inheritance. In addition to the above word, the King James Version translations as inheritance, morashah, "a possession," "heritage" (
De 33:4;
Eze 33:24); yerushshah, "something occupied," "a patrimony," "possession" (Jud 21:17); cheleq,
"smoothness," "allotment" (
Ps 16:5); kleronomeo, "to inherit" (
Mt 5:5, etc.); kleronomos, "heir" (
Mt 21:38, etc.); kleronomia, "heirship," "patrimony, "possession"; or kleros, "an acquisition" "portion," "heritage," from kleroo, "to assign," "to allot," "to obtain an inheritance" (
Mt 21:38;
Lu 12:13;
Ac 7:5;
20:32;
26:18;
Ga 3:18;
Eph 1:11,
14,
18;
5:5;
Col 1:12;
3:24;
Heb 1:4;
9:15;
11:8;
1Pe 1:4).