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Greek Lessons
- Vindicated at the Table: How Speech Condemns and Grammar Acquits
- Carried, Not Carrying: The Grammar That Topples Boasting
- Spliced into Abundance: The Grammar of Displacement and Participation in ἐνεκεντρίσθης
- When the Heart Expands Toward Ruin: The Grammar of Self-Watchfulness
- Living, Begetting, Dying: The Grammar of Time and Continuity
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Category
Tag Archives: Matthew 5:5
The Future Passive and the Inheritance of the Earth
Few verses in the New Testament glow with the serene promise and grammatical richness of μακάριοι οἱ πραεῖς, ὅτι αὐτοὶ κληρονομήσουσιν τὴν γῆν (Matthew 5:5). Nestled in the Beatitudes, this verse delivers its reward through a future indicative passive verb — κληρονομήσουσιν — that demands more attention than its soft rhythm might suggest. Beyond the comfort of divine blessing lies a grammatical nuance: the future indicative in Koine Greek can subtly encode both volition and divine appointment, often through passive forms that retain an active meaning. This phenomenon opens a door into the linguistic theology of the Gospel, where agency and passivity converge in sacred inheritance.… Learn Koine Greek