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Greek Lessons
- When News Travels: The Grammar of Report and Mission
- When Memory Speaks: Learning to Compose Greek from Mark 11:21
- When a Finger Moves the World: The Grammar of Arrival Hidden in an Exorcism
- Vindicated at the Table: How Speech Condemns and Grammar Acquits
- Carried, Not Carrying: The Grammar That Topples Boasting
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Category
Tag Archives: 1 Corinthians 11:5
Where Honor Touches Flesh: The Syntax of Exposure in ἀκατακαλύπτῳ τῇ κεφαλῇ
Πᾶσα δὲ γυνὴ προσευχομένη ἢ προφητεύουσα ἀκατακαλύπτῳ τῇ κεφαλῇ καταισχύνει τὴν κεφαλὴν ἑαυτῆς· ἓν γάρ ἐστι καὶ τὸ αὐτὸ τῇ ἐξυρημένῃ. (1 Corinthians 11:5)
Every woman, however, praying or prophesying with uncovered head shames the head of herself; for it is one and the same as the shaven one.
The Participial Drift of Presence: How Grammar Constructs a Scene of Public RevelationThe verse unfolds through a syntactic architecture that frames a woman not as an abstract entity but as an agent positioned within a ritual moment defined by the simultaneous actions of προσευχομένη and προφητεύουσα, creating a scene where communicative posture and embodied condition intersect.… Learn Koine Greek