David J. Armitage, «An Exploration of Conditional Clause Exegesis with Reference to Galatians 1,8-9», Vol. 88 (2007) 365-392
This paper explores various issues pertaining to the exegesis of Greek conditional clauses, using as a case study the pair of conditional statements found in Galatians 1,8-9. These conditional curse formulations are broadly similar with reference to content, whilst also showing significant differences, notably in terms of mood. These conditional statements are firstly examined from syntactic and semantic perspectives. Their function in the discourse is then analysed with reference to Speech Act Theory. An integrative approach to exegesis of conditional clauses is advocated.
		
			372                                      David J. Armitage
greater contingency, can one conclude that the choice of subjunctive
(including in third class conditions) necessarily implies less
contingency, and higher probability? Can the third class condition
legitimately be described as “probable future†(34)? Such a connection
may have been present in Classical Greek, when the optative was more
widely used and thus presented a commonplace alternative to the
subjunctive, thereby narrowing the latter’s semantic field. However in
Hellenistic Greek, the use of the optative had diminished enormously(35).
Table 4 shows the proportion of finite verbs in the indicative, imperative,
subjunctive and optative in two major works in Homeric Greek (36), and
in the Greek of the Septuagint and New Testament.
                                        MOOD / ATTITUDE
   TEXT            Indicative        Imperative   Subjunctive        Optative     DATA SOURCE
               Instances     %    Instances % Instances %       Instances     %
Odyssey        10366       81.8   689       5.4 837       6.6   767         6.1
                                                                                  WordHoard(37)
Iliad          12996       83.1   847       5.4 1078      6.9   712         4.6
LXX OT         51665       83.5   5473      8.8 4301      6.9   460         0.7
LXX
Apocryphal     10057      81.5    1178      9.5   968     7.8   131(40)    1.1
writings(39)                                                                      BibleWorks 6(38)
NT             15628      81.4    1648      8.6   1863    9.7   68         0.4
Luke-Acts      4419       85.3    409       7.9   320     6.2   28         0.5
Pauline
               2839       75.9    425       11.2 496      13.1 31          0.8
epistles
     (34) BROOKS – WINBERY, Syntax, 121. See also DANA – MANTEY, Manual
Grammar, 290, who describe the third class condition as “more probable futureâ€.
     (35) Cf.C.F.D. MOULE, An Idiom Book of New Testament Greek (Cambridge
1960) 150.
     (36) ROBERTSON, Grammar, 926, notes that in Attic Greek, the frequency of the
subjunctive was lower than in Homeric Greek, and he draws attention to the very
high frequency of optative use in some Attic texts (p. 936).
     (37) WordHoard is an application for the analysis of morphologically tagged
texts (including various examples of Early Greek Epic) available at:
wordhoard.northwestern.edu/userman/index.html (accessed 16/9/06).
     (38) BibleWorksTM Version 6.1.012r; © BibleWorks, LLC.
     (39) The following apocryphal materials were included in this search: 1
Esdras, 4 Esdras, Judith, Tobit, 1, 2, 3, 4 Maccabees, Wisdom of Solomon, Sirach,
Baruch, Epistle of Jeremiah, Susanna, Bel and the Dragon, Prayer of Azariah,
Prayer of Manasseh, Odes, Psalm 151, Psalms of Solomon. The additions to
Esther were not included given constraints imposed by the organisation of the
material in Bibleworks.
     (40) 4 Maccabees includes 46 optatives, accounting for 6.3% of the finite verbs
in that book. 4 Maccabees thus markedly inflates the figure for optatives in LXX
Apocryphal material.