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If any of the Hebrew Roots wanna prove to you that in the Greek, of Acts 8:16 or 7:59 the name of Jesus in Greek Iesous appears without "s"

Show them this:

"In Acts 7:59 (as well as Acts 8:16), the name "Iesous" appears as Ἰησοῦ because it is in the genitive case, indicating possession or relation. This form is used in the phrase "Lord Jesus," where it functions as part of a construction that specifies "Lord" rather than acting as the subject of the sentence.

In contrast, "Iesous" (Ἰησοῦς) his ORIGINAL form is typically used in the nominative case when referring directly to Jesus as the subject of a verb or as a proper noun. The change in the ending reflects the grammatical role of the name in the sentence, adhering to the conventions of Koine Greek.
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𝔄𝔫𝔱𝔦 β„Œπ”’π”Ÿπ”―π”’π”΄ β„œπ”¬π”¬π”±π”°
Forwarded from Strength Made Perfect
β€œFor I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that __________; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.” β€” Romans 1:16
Anonymous Quiz
5%
Obeyeth
3%
Is chosen
89%
Believeth
1%
Gets baptized
2%
Does 3 or 4 good deeds a week
2025/02/15 07:04:37
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