-
Greek Lessons
- The Question of Eternal Life: Syntax of Testing and Inquiry in Luke 10:25
- The Grammar of Astonishment and Difficulty
- The Urgency of Flight: Syntax, Eschatology, and the Grammar of Mission in Matthew 10:23
- Provoking the Lord: The Peril of Presumption
- The Great Priest Over God’s House: The Foundation of Confident Access
-
Category
Category Archives: Exegesis
New Testament Greek: Importance for Biblical Studies, Exegesis, and Theology
New Testament Greek isn’t just a linguistic puzzle—it’s the scaffolding of theological clarity. Every case ending, aspectual nuance, and syntactic shift carries interpretive weight, shaping how doctrines are understood and applied. The grammar doesn’t merely support exegesis; it actively guides it, revealing emphasis, causation, and theological intent embedded in the structure itself. Lexical richness and semantic precision protect against oversimplification, while historical debates—from Christology to soteriology—often hinge on the force of a single article or participle. In this way, grammar becomes a theological safeguard, anchoring interpretation in the inspired text and ensuring that theology flows from exegesis, not the other way around.… Learn Koine Greek
Posted in Exegesis, Textual Criticism, Theology
Leave a comment