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Gre 4220 BEGINNING GREEK i Prof. Esa Autero Th.D
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Why Study Greek? “The languages are the sheath in which the sword of the Spirit is contained." Martin Luther
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Why Study Greek? “What was originally expressed in Hebrew does not have exactly the same sense when translated into another language.” “…even the Law…differ not a little when read in the original.” Prologue to the Book of Sirach c. 180 BC
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Why Study NT Greek? More accurate understanding of God’s word
You (sg.) – you (pl.) Word studies Nuances and colors Misuse of Greek Historical distance Cross-Cultural experience *Photo:
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Why Study Greek? Greek does not solve all the problems in interpretation Limits the amount of interpretative possibilities “A bucket of iron” Genitive of material OR genitive of content
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Why Study Greek? Example from the New Testament
ἡ γὰρ ἀγάπη τοῦ Χριστοῦ συνεχέι ἡμᾶς (2 Cor 5:14) NKJV “For the love of Christ compels us” (2 Cor 5:14) NIV “For Christ’s love compels us” (2 Cor 5:14) CEV “We are ruled by Christ’s love for us” Options in Greek: Christ’s love for us? (subjective genitive) Our love for Christ? (objective genitive) Both? (plenary) Greek does not give an obvious answer but helps understand interpretative options
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Brief History of Greek Language
Pre-Homeric (-1000 BC) Indo-Europeans to Greece Classical Era (1000 BC-330 BC) 4 predom. dialects (Aeolic, Doric, Ionic, Attic) Attic = Plato, Thucydides, Xenophon Koine (330 BC- 330 AD) Alexander the Great; lingua franca Byzantine (330 BC AD) Constantine’s conversion Modern Greek (1453 AD to present) – literary & demotic Photo:
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Koine and NT Greek Types of Koine Greek: Vernacular/vulgar Literary
E.g. papyri Literary E.g. Plutarch, Polybius, Josephus, Philo Conversational E.g. New Testament, some papyri Atticistic (cf. KJV English) E.g. Dio Crysostom, Aristides Photo: Portion of the Cretan Laws from 5th/6th century BC ---
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Aspects of NT Greek Language milieu of the NT:
Aramaic, Hebrew, Greek Conversational Greek (not literary or vulgar) Spectrum: Hebrews to Revelation Hebraisms: And Mary said to the angel, “How can this be, since I am a virgin? [lit. “I do not know a man” – ἄνδρα οὐ γινώσκω]?” (Luke 1:34). Latinisms: Lat. centurio – Gk. κεντυρίων (Mark 15:39) Lat. legio – Gk. λεγιών (Mark 5:9)
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Literary Levels of NT Authors
Semitic/Vulgar Conversational Literary Koine Revelation Mark John, 1-3 John 2 Peter Most of Paul Matthew Hebrews Luke-Acts James Pastorals 1 Peter Jude Tendencies in NT books/authors
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Greek alphabets Α α Β β Γ γ Δ δ Ε ε Ζ ζ Η η Θ θ Alpha Father (a) Beta
Capital Small Letters Name Pronunciation Α α Alpha Father (a) Β β Beta Ball (b) Γ γ Gamma Gift (g) Δ δ Delta Debt (d) Ε ε Epsilon Met (e) Ζ ζ Zeta Zion (z, dz) Η η Eta Obey (eh) Θ θ Theta Theme (th)
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Greek Alphabets Ι ι Κ κ Λ λ Μ μ Ν ν Ξ ξ Ο ο Π π Iota Pit (i) Kappa
Capital Small Letters Name Pronunciation Ι ι Iota Pit (i) Κ κ Kappa Kit (k) Λ λ Lambda Long (l) Μ μ Mu Man (m) Ν ν Nu No (n) Ξ ξ Xi Relax (x) Ο ο Omicron Omelet (o) Π π Pi Pay (p)
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Greek Alphabets Ρ ρ Σ σ, ς Τ τ Υ υ Φ φ Χ χ Ψ ψ Ω ω Rho Ring (r) Sigma
Capital Small Letters Name Pronunciation Ρ ρ Rho Ring (r) Σ σ, ς Sigma Sing (s) Τ τ Tau Tale (t) Υ υ Upsilon Tube (u) Φ φ Phi Phone (ph) Χ χ Chi Chemical (ch) Ψ ψ Psi Taps (ps) Ω ω Omega Tone (o)
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Vowels Vowels = (7): α ε η ι ο υ ω ε ο (short); η ω (long)
α ι υ (short or long)
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Pronunciation & Accents
How was Greek pronounced in the NT era? Erasmian vs. hypothetical vs. modern Erasmian: widely used distinguishes different sounds
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Diphthongs αι αυ ει ευ οι ου υι Ai (aisle) Ai Au (kraut) Au Ey (hey)
Pronunciation transliteration αι Ai (aisle) Ai αυ Au (kraut) Au ει Ey (hey) Ei ευ Eu (feud) Eu οι Oi (oil) Oi ου ou (group) Ou υι Ui (suite) ui
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------Accents:------
Symbol Type Example , Smooth (not pronounced) ἀμήν ‘ Rough; smooth “h” sound ὥρα ------Accents:------ ά Acute; On any of the last 3 syllables ὰ Grave; ultimate only καὶ ᾶ Circumflex; Long syllables only πνεῦμα
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The Consonant Classes λ μ ν ρ β γ δ θ κ τ φ χ σ ζ ξ ψ
17 consonants in 3 classes: Liquids: smooth & easy flow λ μ ν ρ Mutes: close & release β γ δ θ κ τ φ χ Sibilants: “s” sounds σ ζ ξ ψ
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PUNCTUATION Punctuation in Greek is different from English
Character Looks like Greek Meaning θεός, comma comma θεός. period period θεός; semicolon question mark θεός period above line semicolon
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Textbook and Websites Visit the website for additional helps
Supplementary info Videos Flash cards etc. ($$) Other useful websites: testament-texts/ (Multilinear) (NA 28) (GNT SBL Edition)
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