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rwp@1Corinthians:13:12 @{In a mirror} (\di' esoptrou\). By means of a mirror (\esoptron\, from \opt“\, old word, in papyri). Ancient mirrors were of polished metal, not glass, those in Corinth being famous. {Darkly} (\en ainigmati\). Literally, in an enigma. Old word from \ainissomai\, to express obscurely. This is true of all ancient mirrors. Here only in N.T., but often in LXX. "To see a friend's face in a cheap mirror would be very different from looking at the friend" (Robertson and Plummer). {Face to face} (\pros“pon pros pros“pon\). Note triple use of \pros\ which means facing one as in strkjv@John:1:1|. \Pros“pon\ is old word from \pros\ and \ops\, eye, face. {Shall I know} (\epign“somai\). I shall fully (\epi-\) know. Future middle indicative as \gin“sk“\ (I know) is present active and \epegn“sthˆn\ (I was fully known) is first aorist passive (all three voices).

rwp@1John:2:4 @{I know him} (\Egn“ka auton\). Perfect active indicative with recitative \hoti\ like quotation marks just before it. This is one of the pious platitudes, cheap claptrap of the Gnostics, who would bob up in meetings with such explosions. John punctures such bubbles with the sharp addition "and keepeth not" (\ho mˆ tˆr“n\, present active linear participle). "The one who keeps on saying: 'I have come to know him,' and keeps on not keeping his commandments is a liar" (\pseustˆs\, just like Satan, strkjv@John:8:44| and like strkjv@1John:1:8,10|), followed by the negative statement as in strkjv@1:8,10|. There is a whip-cracker effect in John's words.

rwp@James:3:16 @{Confusion} (\akatastasia\). Late word (from \akatastatos\), strkjv@1:8; strkjv@3:8|), a state of disorder (1Corinthians:14:33|). {Vile} (\phaulon\). Kin to German _faul_, first slight, ordinary, then bad. The steps are cheap, paltry, evil. Opposed to \agatha\ (good) in strkjv@John:5:39|.


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