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Greek Lessons
- From Jerusalem with Scrutiny: Fronting and Focus in Mark 7:1
- Speaking in Tongues in the Bible
- Grace Beyond Demand: Participles and Imperatives in a Kingdom Ethic
- Reverent Burial and Narrative Simplicity: A Koine and Classical Greek Comparison of Mark 6:29
- The Morning They Found It Razed: Perfect Participles and Sacred Surprises
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Category
Tag Archives: καθάπερ
Greek Grammar Lesson from Romans 12:4
Romans 12:4
καθάπερ γὰρ ἐν ἑνὶ σώματι πολλὰ μέλη ἔχομεν, τὰ δὲ μέλη πάντα οὐ τὴν αὐτὴν ἔχει πρᾶξιν,
Focus Topic: Simile with καθάπερ and Subject-Complement AgreementThis verse introduces a comparison between the physical body and the community of believers. Paul uses καθάπερ to build a parallel, followed by coordinated clauses emphasizing diversity within unity. The grammar expresses both sameness of identity and variety of function.
Simile Introduction: καθάπερ γάρκαθάπερ (“just as”) introduces a simile or analogy. It sets up a comparison that will be completed in the next verse (Romans 12:5). The particle γάρ provides a logical connection with the previous exhortation (v.3), explaining why humility and sober thinking are necessary — because we are members of one body.… Learn Koine Greek