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Have you ever heard anyone say that God chose to write the NT in Greek because it’s such an incredibly precise language? I’ve heard plenty of people make this claim, including pastors and professors of Greek exalting it as having an almost supernatural precision. Can this be true, or is Greek just a language like every other language, with its own idiosyncrasies, ambiguities, strengths, and weaknesses? This is an issue we need to explore, because it gets at the heart of Bible translation, raising the question, “If Greek is magically precise, more than all other languages, aren’t we losing that precision in translation?” I invited Nat Erickson to walk us through the answer to this question, and I was so pleased with how well he prepared, and how detailed and articulate his presentation was. So who is Nat? Well, he’s on the tail end of completing a Ph.D. in New Testament at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. And he’s researching how information structure affects constituent order in 'periphrastic' constructions in Koine Greek, focusing on non-New Testament Jewish and Christian writings. He blogs regularly about Greek and aspects of New Testament study at https://ntgreeketal.com/.
my books | twitter | music | Hebrew | academic articles | facebook
4.8
5656 ratings
Have you ever heard anyone say that God chose to write the NT in Greek because it’s such an incredibly precise language? I’ve heard plenty of people make this claim, including pastors and professors of Greek exalting it as having an almost supernatural precision. Can this be true, or is Greek just a language like every other language, with its own idiosyncrasies, ambiguities, strengths, and weaknesses? This is an issue we need to explore, because it gets at the heart of Bible translation, raising the question, “If Greek is magically precise, more than all other languages, aren’t we losing that precision in translation?” I invited Nat Erickson to walk us through the answer to this question, and I was so pleased with how well he prepared, and how detailed and articulate his presentation was. So who is Nat? Well, he’s on the tail end of completing a Ph.D. in New Testament at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. And he’s researching how information structure affects constituent order in 'periphrastic' constructions in Koine Greek, focusing on non-New Testament Jewish and Christian writings. He blogs regularly about Greek and aspects of New Testament study at https://ntgreeketal.com/.
my books | twitter | music | Hebrew | academic articles | facebook
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