Susanna Krizo
2010-06-02
Gengwall my man, you got it! I found also that hypo is translated “with” and I made the exact same conclusion. The reason is also that for hypo to mean “under” you really need “hyper” which means “over.” “Hypertasso” does not exist in Greek, wherefore “hypotasso” cannot mean “set under.” Incidentally we get the definition “set under” from Latin, I think it is “subicio” but it could another of the sub-words, and it is from here we get the word “submit” with the added meaning “under authority” for “sub” means “under.”
Mark, I wrote a whole chapter on hypotasso and there’s plenty more, especially on 1 Pet 3 etc. Give me a moment and I’ll explain the subject further. Jonathan turns six in two days and I am trying to get his party all set while trying to clean the house for pictures for the realtor, while caring for a baby… you get the point!
Charis, I have still not forgotten about you! I just have too many thoughts going on here. Can you hang on a few more days?
Your Tags
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more