Posted on 06/19/2013 2:34:22 PM PDT by NYer
Its hard to imagine Christianity without Greek. Its the language of the New Testament and our earliest creeds and doctrines. The very terms we use to describe Godthree persons, one in beinghave their roots in ancient Greek words and concepts. Needless to say, the language of Homer and Plato has profoundly shaped our faith.
Not all of us have the time to learn ancient Greek. But there are at least ten Greek words every Christian should know:
logos: In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. So begins the Gospel of John. In the Greek, word is logos. What does it mean to call Jesus the Word in the first place? The context of the verse offers some clues. In an obvious allusion to the creation account in Genesis, John is suggesting that Christ is the creative word of God. But we must turn to the original language to really understand the full meaning. In ancient Greek, logos is a loaded term. The Liddell-Scott Greek Lexicon includes all of the following in the definition: explanation, statement of theory, argument, rule, law, reason, inward debate of the soul, scientific knowledge. Whenever you say any word today that ends in ology, this is where it came from. The Holman Bible Dictionary explains further:
Among the Greek philosophers, especially the Stoics, logos came to mean the rational principle that gave order to the cosmos. It could therefore be equated with God. Human reason, in turn, derived from this universal logos.
Now we can appreciate what an extraordinary statement John was making: Jesus is the rational principle behind the universe, the cause of all created thingsthe word of God Himself indeed.
agape: We have one word for love. The Greeks had at least four. One such word is eros, which corresponds with our word lust. (Its also where we get the word erotic.) But when we read in 1 John 4:8, for example, that God is love it is a different Greek word that is being used: agape. In the context of Scripture, agape refers to a selfless, sacrificial love. For St. Paul, love is a relationship of self-giving which results from Gods activity in Christ, according to the Holman Bible Dictionary. But agape and eros may not be as opposed to each other as it might seem. In his encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, Pope Benedict XVI offers an innovative take on the relationship between the two words, suggesting that when properly oriented towards God, eros has its place in the faith along with agape. Indeed, isnt this the fundamental message of the Theology of the Body associated with his predecessor Pope John Paul II? The unity of eros and agape is biblical as well. Anyone who doesnt think so should read Song of Songs.
ecclesia: Anyone who desires to study the Church becomes a student of ecclesiology, a word that looks like it has nothing to do with its subject matter. But its lifted right out of the Greek word the New Testament uses for Church: ecclesia. In ancient Greece, this was the term for the democratic assemblies that governed city-states. In the New Testament, ecclesia took on a different, far broader meaning, referring to the following: the whole body of Christians, a group of believers, and the faithful gathered together in a particular city, according to Eastons Bible Dictionary. The etymology of the word is also rich with implications. It is a combination of the prefix ek, meaning out, from, and toand kaleo, to call. Hence, one way of defining the word is: the people called out from the world and to God, according to Strongs Concordance. By the way, our word church also comes from another Greek word, kyriakos, meaning, belonging to the Lord.
evangelion: The gospel writers are sometimes called evangelists. We too are called to be evangelists, something Pope Benedict reminded us. But what exactly is an evangelist? In the Greek, evangelion, means good message, according to Eastons Bible Dictionary. You could also translate it as gospel or good tidings. The word is the product of the combination of eu-, a prefix meaning good, and angelion, message. That last word should look familiar: its also the source of our word angel. As evangelists, we are called to bring the good news of the Incarnation, of the Cross, and the Resurrection to others. As evangelists we are not so different than the angels: we too are ambassadors from heaven, sent on a mission from God Himself.
martyria: This is a word that should sound familiar. In Christianity, martyrs are those who were killed for their faith. But, in ancient Greek, martyria had a broader meaning, referring simply to testimony. Over time, the Church came to call those who died for their faith martyrs because they were such extraordinary witnesses to Christ. This is consistent with how the word is used in Scripture. For example, in Revelation 6:9, John has the following vision: I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God and for the testimony which they held. Knowing the original meaning of this word helps us to see that we all are called to give testimony to those around us. And, even though it may not entail a physical death, it often does mean that we have to die to ourselves in some waywhether that means cutting ourselves off from the sins of the flesh, or radically serving others. In this way, martyria complements the word addressed above, evangelion. As evangelists, we witness with our words. As martyrs, we witness with our actions. We are, of course, called to be both.
christos: Jesus is ultimately a Hebrew name, but Christ is from the Greek word, christos, meaning anointed. In the Old Testament priests were set apart by being anointed, as was David and his successors. Scripture refers to the king as the anointed of Yahweh, writes Kenneth Baker, S.J., in his book, Fundamentals of Catholicism. He was, therefore, a sacred person who, in a way, represented the kingship of Yahweh over his people. The people also believed that God worked through the king to protect them and to achieve his special plan.
leitourgia: The liturgywhere we both hear the Word and receive the Word Made Fleshis the heart of the faith. We know liturgy refers to the two parts of the Mass, but what does the word actually mean? Liturgy hails from the Greek, leitourgia, which the Catholic Encyclopedia explains is a combination of leitos, meaning public, and ergo, to do. In ancient Greece, it referred to a public duty, a service to the state undertaken by a citizen. This reminds us that the liturgy is never a private affairit is a public act, even when we pray the Liturgy of the Hours alone.
eucharistia: We are taught that the Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life, so we would do well to understand where the word came from. Its origin is the New Testament Greek word, eucharistia, meaning thanksgiving. In this word, we recognize again the prefix, eu-, meaning good or well, combined with the verb, charizesthai, meaning to show favoritself derived from charis, the Greek word for grace. This lends the Eucharist a double meaning, encompassing what it is as well as how we should respond to it. It goes without saying that in receiving the Eucharistic Lord, we receive grace as well. How else can we respond except in pure, heartfelt thanksgiving?
latreia and douleia: The words we use for worship can be confusing sometimes. Among contemporary Catholicism, it has been drilled into our minds that adoration is reserved for God alone, while veneration is due to Mary, the saints, and angels. Usually such clarification is followed by a disclaimer: Catholics do not worship Mary. The problem is technically we do. Worship is the umbrella term that encompasses both adoration and veneration. Heres the best way to avoid the confusion, especially if youre reading anything that was writing before the 1960s, or even the 1990s: latria is the Latin term for adoration, or worship, of God. Dulia is the Latin term for veneration, or worship, of the saints. These terms, in turn, come directly from the Greek: latreia and douleia. Both Greek words have the basic meaning of service. To paraphrase Aquinas, latreia is the service paid to God, while douleia is the service we render to saints.
Notably, in the New Testament, the two words are used in dramatically different contexts. Latreia is always used to refer to worship of God. (For example, John 16:12 and Romans 12:1.) Douleia, on the other hand, also has secular contexts of servitude (for example, Romans 8:21). Such a disparity of contexts certainly reinforces the distance between the activities signified by each word: veneration of saints in no way competes with, or diminishes, the adoration of God.
hyperdulia: By the way, the Latin term hyperdulia, in no way implies Catholics are hyper about Mary. Instead, hyper- is the Greek prefix meaning above. Hyperdulia refers to the honor given to Mary which is above the honor given to the other saints.
2 most significant Biblical Greek words are PISTIS and GRACIS, followed closely by CHARIS.
“2 most significant Biblical Greek words are...”
May I ask you, most significant based on what?
For Greek I liked this as a beginner’s book (get the workbook too), comes with helpful CD: http://www.amazon.com/Basics-Biblical-Grammar-William-Mounce/dp/0310250870
Mounce’s workbook answers are here: http://doxa.teknia.com/bbg3_answers.pdf
Hebrew, same series, this time by Pratico and Van Pelt: http://www.amazon.com/Basics-Biblical-Hebrew-Grammar-Second/dp/0310270200/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1371697001&sr=1-2
Workbook and some free online things available if you look hard enough. None of this is too expensive either.
See post 24. Some good, well thought out starter stuff for learning Hebrew and NT Greek.
St. Paul calls himself a doulos.
Thanks vladimir998 for those suggestions!
Lectio Divina (Latin)
Salvation.
It’s a phrase found in many a Biblical Greek seminary textbook.
I think I saw it first in Mounce.
But you're gonna have to serve somebody, yes
You're gonna have to serve somebody,
Well, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord
But you're gonna have to serve somebody.
[^_^]
I realize it’s an opinion... but I would see it from God’s side. Without His grace, there is no payment for sins, no need for faith. It originates with Him, we are held to Him and are positioned in Him because of His grace.
Thanks.
A servant, of God...Not Mary...Not another man...
The ana- part means "again," and mimnesko by itself means "to remind" or "to call to memory." (The root is mna-.)
Alpha by itself at the beginning of a word is sometimes a negative (as in "atheist") but before a vowel an -n- is added so it sometimes looks similar to the ana- prefix.
Excellent. Nice platonic word.
Certainly...But nowhere in scripture are we told to become a slave to any heavenly saints nor a hyper-slave to Mary...
So this Catholic dulia and hyper-dulia is completely out of the question...
They lead us to believe that these two types of worship are veneration; like highly favored, or highly praised, or something similar...
But now we actually see that those words mean to become 'enslaved' to these deities... NO thanks...
bumpus ad summum
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