SET 7 // FIRE 4 // LANDING

GREEK FOUNDATIONS

WHY GREEK MATTERS

You have worked through the Hebrew foundations of the Old Testament. Now you step into the language of the New Testament. Greek.

Just like Hebrew shaped how the Old Testament communicates, Greek shapes how the New Testament reveals truth. If you do not understand how Greek works, you will read accurately at a surface level, but you will miss precision, emphasis, and depth that the original language carries.

The New Testament was written in Koine Greek. This was the common language of the time, but it was not simple. It is highly structured, extremely precise, and capable of expressing detailed meaning in ways that English often cannot fully carry.

HEBREW

Concrete and image-driven. It shows meaning through pictures and action. The Foundation

GREEK

Analytical and precise. It defines meaning through structure and grammar. The Explanation

BOTH ARE NECESSARY.

The Old Testament builds foundation through Hebrew. The New Testament explains and clarifies through Greek.

THE LEXICON OF PRECISION

One of the clearest ways Greek adds precision is through vocabulary. In English, one word may be used for multiple ideas. In Greek, different words are often used to express specific types of meaning that English compresses into one.

ἀγάπη

AGAPĒ

Translated as love, but carries a specific meaning. It describes sacrificial, committed love that is not based on emotion or condition. It is a deliberate act.

English: Love

πίστις

PISTIS

Translated as faith. In English, faith can be mere belief. In Greek, it includes trust, reliance, and faithfulness. It is active confidence, not passive agreement.

English: Faith / Belief

χάρις

CHARIS

Translated as grace. Grace is often understood as an attitude of kindness. In Greek, it includes favor, gift, and active giving. It is something actively bestowed.

English: Grace

δικαιοσύνη

DIKAIOSYNĒ

Translated as righteousness. This is not just moral behavior. It carries the idea of being in right standing according to a standard. It is God’s standard applied.

English: Righteousness

μετάνοια

METANOIA

Translated as repentance. Often reduced to feeling sorry in English. In Greek, it means a change of mind that leads to a change of direction. It is transformation, not regret.

English: Repentance

κύριος

KYRIOS

Translated as Lord. This word carries absolute authority, ownership, and rule. When used for Jesus, it is not casual respect. It is a declaration of sovereign authority.

English: Lord

Without Greek awareness, multiple words collapse into one. With Greek understanding, meaning becomes clear.

CRITICAL DISTINCTIONS

At this level, small differences in words are not minor. They shape interpretation. Greek prevents doctrines from being blurred by separating words that appear identical in English.

THE DISTINCTION OF KNOWLEDGE

In English, we have one word for knowing. Greek has two critical distinctions: οἶδα (oida) refers to knowing as a fact or awareness. But γινώσκω (ginōskō) means to know through experience, relationship, or direct interaction.

JOHN 17:3 (LSB)

“And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.”

The word “know” here is ginōskō. This is not factual knowledge. Eternal life is not defined as knowing about God. It is defined as knowing Him directly and relationally. This distinction is critical.

THE CONTEXT OF SALVATION

The word σῴζω (sōzō) is often translated as “save.” However, it can refer to rescue, physical deliverance, or eternal salvation depending entirely on context. In Matthew 9:22, Jesus tells a woman her faith has “made you well” (sōzō). Here, it means physical healing. If you assume every use of “save” means eternal salvation, you will misinterpret Scripture.

STRUCTURE & TIME

Greek adds immense precision through verb structure. Unlike English, Greek verbs carry information about time, type of action, and continuity all at once. This means the way a verb is written affects how you understand the action whether it is ongoing, completed, or repeated.

MATTHEW 7:7 (LSB)

“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.”

In Greek, these verbs are in a present imperative form that indicates continuous action. This is better understood as “keep asking,” “keep seeking,” and “keep knocking.” It is not a single action. It is ongoing persistence.

JOHN 19:30 (LSB)

“It is finished!”

This phrase comes from τετέλεσται (tetelestai). This is a perfect tense verb. It is not just a statement that something ended. It means it has been completed fully with lasting, ongoing effect. The work is finished and remains finished forever. This level of theological weight is embedded directly in the grammar.

FROM GENERAL TO EXACT

Without Greek awareness, words feel broad, meanings overlap, and interpretation becomes assumed. With Greek awareness, words are defined, meanings are separated, and interpretation becomes precise.

You are not reading casually.

You are handling meaning that affects interpretation, teaching, and doctrine. Greek matters because it forces you to be exact. It removes vague interpretation and requires you to deal with what is actually written.

This completes the foundation of why Greek matters. Now you move into the key Greek concepts that govern how the language works so you can begin applying it consistently.