Greek Exegesis: Romans

GREK 603

Summary
Explore the Greek Exegesis: Romans course and what you can expect to learn through the semester.

Accredited

Accredited by HLC & ABHE

Affordable

$440 per credit hour

Course Overview

Greek Exegesis: Romans consists of translation of and exegetical analysis in Greek of the epistle to the Romans, with special attention to how syntactical structures contribute to semantic analysis.

Textbooks

Professor: Dr. Stephen Oliver

Assignment Overview

Students will translate and analyze the Greek text of Romans.

Using the skills learned in class, the students will demonstrate through two exegetical papers their ability to

  1. translate passages from Greek,
  2. evaluate textual evidence and argue for the most likely meaning in the presence of textual variants, and
  3. make the interpretive journey from Koine Greek text to modern-day application.

Students will choose one of three tracks for focus assignments. Examples of focus assignments include:

Scholarship

Write a one-page informal (bullet points or outline is acceptable) response to Dan Wallace’s perspective on Rom. 3:23, specifically his claim that the present tense of ὑστεροῦνται indicates that the believer continues to sin.

Ministry

Prepare a one-page essay or 8-10 slides (PowerPoint or similar) presenting what Rom. 3:21-31 teaches about justification.

Personal Development

Post a 400-word blog about justification based on Rom. 3:21-31. Include your perspective on the “faith in Christ”/“Christ’s faith” debate.

Intended Outcomes

Appreciation for

  • Structural diagramming as a means to sharpen one’s understanding of an author’s argument in epistolary literature.
  • The role of the various elements of NT exegesis.

Ability to

  • Write an exegetical paper that demonstrates familiarity with the whole range of exegetical skills.
  • Show evidence of advanced skill in analyzing the case, tense, participle, infinitive, and article uses of Koine Greek.

Knowledge of

  • The contents and syntactical characteristics of Paul’s letter to the Romans.
  • The components and uses of a standard critical Greek NT apparatus.
  • The range of scholarly opinion on a selected text, including its textual critical, exegetical, and pragmatic dimensions.