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Greek Theology Starter Kit

Ten short Greek lessons, a seven-word fast-start guide, guardrails against bad word studies, and a verse-study template you'll reuse for years. This is where you become the one who actually checked.

10 guardrail-checked lessons 10 audio devotionals Downloadable PDFs Beginner-safe
Best experience

Use the full portal.

1

Open the member portal for all web modules and PDFs.

2

Listen to one audio lesson from the lesson library.

3

Use the verse-study template to move from word to context to worship.

Fast-start guide

Seven Bible words that carry theological weight.

Don't treat these as secret meanings. Treat them as doors into context, doctrine, and worship.

λόγος · logos

John uses Word language to announce the eternal Son, God's self-expression, who became flesh.

χάρις · charis

Grace is God's generous action, not a softer word for religious effort.

δικαιόω · dikaioo

Justification is God's verdict in Christ, not a motivational slogan about self-improvement.

ἐπιούσιος · epiousios

The daily bread word teaches dependence, and its rarity should make us humble.

ἱλασμός · hilasmos

John defines love by atonement: God acts first, and sin is truly dealt with.

τετέλεσται · tetelestai

Christ's finished work is completed action with continuing significance for believers.

ἐκκλησία · ekklesia

The church is not built from a clever etymology. Jesus says, "my church," and he builds it.

Lesson library

Ten short lessons with audio.

Each lesson follows the same rhythm: Greek word, verse context, theological payoff, and one guardrail against a bad word study. Ten reps of that and you'll start hearing the difference between a careful claim and a flashy one. That's when your small group starts looking your way.

Reusable template

Verse-study worksheet.

1. Word

Write the Greek word, transliteration, and one plain-English gloss. Keep it short.

2. Context

Read the sentence and paragraph. Ask what the author is actually doing with the word here.

3. Theology

Name the doctrine or devotional payoff only if the passage itself supports it.

4. Guardrail

Write one way this word gets overused, flattened, or preached from etymology instead of context. Knowing the trap is half of avoiding it.

Copy/paste study note

Verse:
Greek word:
Transliteration:
Plain gloss:
Immediate context:
Theological payoff:
Devotional application:
Bad word-study guardrail:
What I should not claim from this word:
Prayer or worship response: