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John 1:38 - Directives in the New Testament: A Case Study

John 1:38 - Directives in the New Testament: A Case Study

  • Semi-Technical
  • David A. Montgomery

How should indirect speech be interpreted? In the New Testament, several passages of this nature are found, where the intended meaning of a statement differs from its direct meaning. Biblical interpreters from cultures where the style of communication is mostly direct easily miss the indirect meaning and instead interpret the statement in a direct manner. Montgomery looks at John 1:35-41 as a case in point. He develops and applies a new hermeneutical principle from a linguistic analysis of directive discourse.

Source: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, 2007. 14 pages.

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If the guilt of sin is so great that nothing can satisfy it but the blood of Jesus, and the filth of sin is so great that nothing can fetch out the stain thereof but the blood of Jesus, how great, how heinous, how sinful must the evil of sin be. Stephen Charnock
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