Learning Ancient Greek to Further My Studies

December 21, 2007

Ashtyn and I have been tossing around the idea of learning Ancient Greek. One of the most common types of Ancient Greek that actually has Ancient documents is Koine. This is also the language the original New Testament was written in. While the Greeks do not have any religious book that is to them what the Bible is to the Christians, the Torah is to the Jews, and the Koran is to the Muslims, it is said that during the Byzantine conversion, many religious texts were believed to have been destroyed.

We must rely on history to follow Hellenismos (the polytheistic, ancient, Hellenic religion). We can only do that by what texts are available. One way to access these texts in their original form is by learning Greek. This is why learning Greek is important to us. Since the original New Testament is one of the few books we have, whether we believe in it or not, the source material is a teaching tool we can use. Not only that, but this is the original Biblical text. This does not contain all the dogmatic connotations that the past 2,000 years of leadership (both church and state) have applied to the text. I would rather learn through this kind of text (and take the New Testament for what it is - a bunch of fables/stories) so I can be able to read other Greek documents that have managed to have been preserved.

To learn Greek, I’ve joined a Yahoo Group that accesses a University of Houston online class website to self-teach Greek. The class is an Introduction to Ancient and Biblical Greek. I look forward to learning this way, but I’m also looking into purchasing a course in Ancient (Koine) Greek that Ashtyn & I can teach our son.

There are three years worth of lessons. You can find the courses at the Open Texture website. I’ve emailed the staff at OT and they are very nice. Their materials are highly recommended for beginners. While they use the Bible as the course material, it is from an original version of the New Testament. It isn’t English text that has been turned into Greek so you can re-translate it into English.

No matter what religion you are, would you be willing to learn an Ancient Language? Feel free to respond in the comment section and tell me your thoughts.

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Written by Dominick Evans - Visit Website
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Filed under: Greece, PolytheismDominick @ 11:00 pm


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