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Greek Lessons
- Following the Teacher: Aorist Participles, Future Intentions, and Conditional Clauses
- Two Witnesses: Pronouns, Participles, and Present Tense in John 8:18
- Blind Minds and Hardened Hearts: Koine Simplicity versus Classical Subtlety
- The Witness Within: Spirit and Identity in Paul’s Koine Expression
- The Grammar of Good Ground: Parsing Luke 8:15
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Category
Tag Archives: Hebrews 4:8
Rest Yet to Come: Conditional Logic and Eschatological Rest in Hebrews 4:8
If Jesus Gave Them Rest: Literary and Theological Context of Hebrews 4:8
Hebrews 4:8 — εἰ γὰρ αὐτοὺς Ἰησοῦς κατέπαυσεν, οὐκ ἂν περὶ ἄλλης ἐλάλει μετὰ ταῦτα ἡμέρας· (“For if Joshua had given them rest, then he would not have spoken afterward about another day.”)
This verse sits at a critical juncture in the argument of Hebrews 4, where the author is interpreting Psalm 95 and weaving it into an exhortation about entering God’s eschatological “rest” (κατάπαυσις). The mention of “Jesus” in the Greek text (Ἰησοῦς) refers to Joshua, the son of Nun, due to the shared Greek name. The verse constructs a second-class conditional statement to make a theological point: that the rest offered by Joshua in the conquest of Canaan was not the ultimate rest promised by God.… Learn Koine Greek