Year: 2021

Blue Jays and Pregnant Women

Since I came to a basic understanding of the classical languages, I’ve also become interested in the Linnaean (some say Scientific) names of birds. A Blue Jay crashed our feeder today, scattering the Passer Domesticii (Sparrows of the House). I’d never learned his Linnaean anme so I looked up and found it is Cyanocitta cristata. Kύανος (ku-an-os) is ancient Greek for […]

Wishing to Want

θέλω (the-lo) was one of the first Greek words I learned. This came to pass because a well-meaning Greek friend (upon learning that I was studying Attic Greek) told me that the ancient language was too hard to learn so I should start with Modern Greek. He  presented me with this book: Greek Made Easy by […]

Fulfillment

My Greek mentor once told me he was initially inspired to study the language because some pretentious British author ended a novel with the words: Τὸ Tἐλος (to tel-os). As you might imagine this means, “The End” in ancient Greek.  My mentor guessed that was the meaning but he took the time to look it up. […]

Context

There’s a church not far from here that is displaying this message on an electronic marquee: Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them. 1 John 4:16. The message they are trying to convey is: All you need is love. If you have love then you are in good with God. In […]

Time

A conceit has developed among modern ‘philosophers’ about the importance of the Greek’s understanding of time. It involves two words: χρόνος (chro-nos) and καιρός (kai-pos), both of which appear in quick succession in Luke’s account of the encounter between Zechariah and Gabriel. καιρός is used in Gabriel’s pronouncement inflicting silence on Zechariah until John was born. Zechairah would remain speechless “because […]

Justice and Wisdom

The introduction to the Gospel of Luke uses four Greek words that appear only in the two books attributed to him. Some of the other vocabulary in that passage occurs elsewhere only in the Pastoral Letters to Titus and Timothy for which some speculate that Luke served as amanuensis to Paul. Simularities in the erudite […]

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