The Ladder Behind Every Bad Greek Argument
John 3:16 opens with a single word, ἠγάπησεν ( ēgapēsen , he loved), and that word only exists because several layers of language had to cooperate to produce it. Linguists sketch them as a rough progression: phoneme, morpheme, lexeme, word, phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, discourse. It's a heuristic, not a blueprint the language was built from. But it's a useful heuristic, because most people who tell you "the Greek really says" are operating at one rung and claiming authority that only belongs to another. A phoneme is the sound your ear sorts into a category before it means anything: /ɛː/ against /a/, the bare contrast that keeps ἠγάπησεν ( ēgapēsen , he loved) distinct from ἠγάπησαν ( ēgapēsan , they loved). Morphemes are where meaning enters. ἠγάπησεν ( ēgapēsen , he loved) carries an augment marking past time, the root ἀγαπ- ( agap- , love), a formally marked tense-aspect stem, and a personal ending. Four pieces, one verb, and this is exactly where the δύναμι...