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NT GREEK STUDIES
Learn to Read the Greek New Testament


COMMENT POLICY


The purpose of this blog is to encourage, edify, and have profitable discussion about the Scriptures, and specifically the New Testament in its original language.

Comments are welcome, however I reserve the right to remove any comments that are not in love, but rather contentious and unprofitable for the body of Christ.

When commenting, please use your real name. Any false names or anonymous commentors will be removed.

When commenting, it is preferable to use Greek characters when posting words or verses in Greek, If you have any questions about how to write/type in Greek, just ask me here.
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Greek Quotes:

Another result when pastors do not study the Bible in Greek and Hebrew is that they, and their churches with them, tend to become second-handers. The harder it is for us to get at the original meaning of the Bible, the more we will revert to the secondary literature. For one thing, it is easier to read. It also gives us a superficial glow that we are “keeping up” on things. And it provides us with ideas and insights which we can’t dig out of the original for ourselves. - John Piper

Not only is this the only well from which we can draw the original force and meaning of the words and phrases of divine utterance, but also those languages (Hebrew & Greek) possess a weight of their own – a vividness which brings home to the understanding fine shades of meaning with power which cannot survive the passage into another tongue. - John Owen
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