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Greek Lessons
- When Greek States a Truth Without Movement
- When a Sentence Stands Up Before It Speaks
- Knowing, Being Known, and Being Revealed: The Grammar of Exclusive Access
- When Sequence Becomes Descent: Participles, Multiplication, and the Grammar of Deterioration
- When Grammar Refuses Delay: Command, Posture, and Purpose in Mark 11:25
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Tag Archives: Luke 24:45
When Minds Are Opened: The Divine Key to the Scriptures
Τότε διήνοιξεν αὐτῶν τὸν νοῦν τοῦ συνιέναι τὰς γραφάς, (Luke 24:45)
Then he opened their mind to understand the Scriptures,
Exegetical AnalysisThe sentence begins with the adverb τότε (“then”), marking a critical turning point in the narrative after the risen Jesus has appeared to the disciples. The aorist verb διήνοιξεν (from διανοίγω) means “He opened thoroughly” or “He unlocked.” It governs the direct object τὸν νοῦν (“the mind”) — specifically their mind (αὐτῶν), pointing to a shared internal transformation. The phrase τοῦ συνιέναι is an articular infinitive of purpose in the genitive, showing the aim of the opening: in order to understand.… Learn Koine Greek