Greek NT Syntax
|
Comments (0)
This is a wonderful search for illustrating how something as powerful as morphological searching in the Greek New Testament is dramatically inferior to searching the Greek NT with a syntactically-tagged database.
Those who have Greek will know that the subject of an infinitive is in the accusative case, not the nominative, as is the normal case […]
MSH @ June 10, 2008
Greek NT Syntax
|
Comments (0)
Rick Brannan posted this interesting piece on how reading the apostolic fathers in Greek stimulated a syntax query in the Greek New Testament. Rick writers:
I’m not writing this post to discuss linkages between the writings of the Apostolic Fathers and the NT (as cool as that would be). Instead, I’m going to shift to syntax. […]
MSH @ May 19, 2008
Greek NT Syntax
|
Comments (2)
Most students of New Testament Greek are familiar with the Granville-Sharp rule, as it always comes up in a discussion of how the Greek New Testament casts Jesus as God in certain passages–most specifically John 1:1-3. Granville-Sharp can be taken to a whole new level with today’s “above the word level” searching in a syntactically-tagged […]
MSH @ May 11, 2008
Greek NT Syntax
|
Comments (0)
Here’s a short description (with video at the link) of how every word of the Greek New Testament is being annotated for syntactic force. This is truly a benchmark project in the history of the study of New Testament Greek.
a2a_linkname=”New Testament Greek Syntactic Force Annotations for Every […]
MSH @ May 11, 2008
Greek NT Syntax
|
Comments (9)
John 10:30-33 has an interesting slice of dialogue between Jesus and certain adversarial Jews:
30 I and my Father are one.” 31 Then the Jews took up stones again to stone him. 32 Jesus answered them, “Many good works have I shown you from my Father; for which of those works do you stone me?” 33 […]
MSH @ May 8, 2008