What can a verb do?
Love is patient, love is kind, and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered. (13:4–5)
The previous passage (vv. 1–3) focuses on the emptiness produced when love is absent. In verses 4–5 we find the most comprehensive biblical description of the fullness of love. Paul shines love through a prism and we see 15 of its colors and hues, the spectrum of love. Each ray gives a facet, a property, of agapē love. Unlike most English translations, which include several adjectives, the Greek forms of all those properties are verbs. They do not focus on what love is so much as on what love does and does not do.
MacArthur, J. (1996, c1984). 1 Corinthians. Includes indexes. Chicago: Moody Press.
Check out this post about the use of verbs. It was really interesting and instructional. Bill Gnade has a blog I have discovered and like reading. I think you might too.
Rick
The previous passage (vv. 1–3) focuses on the emptiness produced when love is absent. In verses 4–5 we find the most comprehensive biblical description of the fullness of love. Paul shines love through a prism and we see 15 of its colors and hues, the spectrum of love. Each ray gives a facet, a property, of agapē love. Unlike most English translations, which include several adjectives, the Greek forms of all those properties are verbs. They do not focus on what love is so much as on what love does and does not do.
MacArthur, J. (1996, c1984). 1 Corinthians. Includes indexes. Chicago: Moody Press.
Check out this post about the use of verbs. It was really interesting and instructional. Bill Gnade has a blog I have discovered and like reading. I think you might too.
Rick
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home