A
awfulthings9
Guest
Okay,
I posted something along these lines once upon a time, but looking back at that post, I was more confused by the responses than anything, so I thought I’d try again before I dropped my money.
I’ve been teaching myself Kione Greek. I don’t currently have a Greek Bible. I would prefer an interlinear, but I want to make sure it is a Catholic edition.
Secondly, I’ve heard a lot of good things about A Grammatical Analysis of the Greek New Testament by Max Zerwick.
I can’t afford to buy a whole library here. Would Zerwick’s choice be the ideal starting point for me (along with the interlinear)?
Just to clarify, I’m not looking to become a Greek scholar, nor do I have some silly fantasy of “discovering” something that the Catholic Church missed. I’m perfectly content with the idea that 2000 of scholarship would otherwise give me the reading of the New Testament I need to understand my faith. However, I write a lot of apologetics material for a local group I’ve started and I want to be able to give a good analysis of certain key passages when ncessary for this. So, I figure that with my limping knowledge of Greek, the interlinear would help me to identify specific words and phrases and a book like Zerwick’s would help me to study there usage in that context.
Or am I way off?
I posted something along these lines once upon a time, but looking back at that post, I was more confused by the responses than anything, so I thought I’d try again before I dropped my money.
I’ve been teaching myself Kione Greek. I don’t currently have a Greek Bible. I would prefer an interlinear, but I want to make sure it is a Catholic edition.
Secondly, I’ve heard a lot of good things about A Grammatical Analysis of the Greek New Testament by Max Zerwick.
I can’t afford to buy a whole library here. Would Zerwick’s choice be the ideal starting point for me (along with the interlinear)?
Just to clarify, I’m not looking to become a Greek scholar, nor do I have some silly fantasy of “discovering” something that the Catholic Church missed. I’m perfectly content with the idea that 2000 of scholarship would otherwise give me the reading of the New Testament I need to understand my faith. However, I write a lot of apologetics material for a local group I’ve started and I want to be able to give a good analysis of certain key passages when ncessary for this. So, I figure that with my limping knowledge of Greek, the interlinear would help me to identify specific words and phrases and a book like Zerwick’s would help me to study there usage in that context.
Or am I way off?