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Greek Lessons
- When Nature Becomes a Teacher: The Logic of διδάσκει and the Shame of ἀτιμία
- When the Prophets Reach Their Horizon: A Declension Journey Through Matthew 11:13
- When Eggs Become Scorpions: Conditional Speech and the Living Texture of Koine
- When Greatness Turns Inside Out: The Grammar of Reversal in μείζων and μικρότερος
- When Repetition Becomes Revelation: The Gravity of ἐπὶ τρίς and the Ascent of ἅπαντα
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Category
Tag Archives: subjunctive mood
The Subjunctive Mood in New Testament Greek
The subjunctive mood in New Testament Greek expresses potential, intention, or contingency rather than factual reality, distinguishing it from the indicative mood. Formed from present or aorist stems with primary endings, it appears only in the present and aorist tenses and includes both active and middle/passive forms. The subjunctive is most often used in subordinate clauses, such as purpose clauses introduced by ἵνα (“that”), conditional clauses with ἐάν (“if”), and temporal clauses with ὅταν (“when”), as well as in hortatory expressions (“let us…”) and prohibitions (μὴ + aorist subjunctive). For example, in 1 John 2:1, the phrases ἵνα μὴ ἁμάρτητε (“that you may not sin”) and ἐάν τις ἁμάρτῃ (“if anyone sins”) illustrate its use in expressing divine intention and conditional possibility.… Learn Koine Greek