Mar 4:40 Why are you so fearful? how is it that you have no faith?
In the Greek, being fearful is associated with low-born and poor. In contrast, being confident (translated here as "faith") is associated with being trustworthy and gaining other people's trust. The idea is that your mental state and world view are connected to your place in society. Being low-born creates a state of fear, which is one reason the Christ's followers were to be "born again."
The world chosen for fearful here, deilos, is especially interesting. There are many Greek words that mean "fearful" that do not have the sense of low-born, for example deidêmôn. Like the Hebrew word for fearful, yare', this adjective just mean having fear. Why choose deilos? Especially since this is the only place in the New Testament (with the parallel verse in Matthew, Mat 8:26) that this term is applied to Christ's words?
There is more evidence that this is because of its connection to social standing. A very similar Greek word, deimos, means "fearful" in a directly opposite sense: being fearful, that is, generating fear in others by being strong, powerful, and clever. In a very clear sense, deilos and deimos are opposite ends of the social spectrum.
Again, as so many ideas in Christ, this is connected to the cycle that Christ describes connecting the spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional (relationship). Here, the physical storm plus a mental state, lack of faith, causes an emotional state. That emotional state is, as always, connecting to relationships with people. While Christ doesn't care about social relationships as much as personal, here the results of faithlessness and fearfulness are the same: having others not trust you and seeing no value in you.
"Fearful" is from deilos (deilos), which means "cowardly," "miserable," "wretched," "low-born," and "poor."
"How is it" is from pôs (pos) which means "in any way," "at all," "by any means," and "I suppose."
"Faith" is from pistis, which means "confidence," "assurance," "trustworthiness," "credit," "a trust," and "that which give confidence."
In the Greek, being fearful is associated with low-born and poor. In contrast, being confident (translated here as "faith") is associated with being trustworthy and gaining other people's trust. The idea is that your mental state and world view are connected to your place in society. Being low-born creates a state of fear, which is one reason the Christ's followers were to be "born again."
The world chosen for fearful here, deilos, is especially interesting. There are many Greek words that mean "fearful" that do not have the sense of low-born, for example deidêmôn. Like the Hebrew word for fearful, yare', this adjective just mean having fear. Why choose deilos? Especially since this is the only place in the New Testament (with the parallel verse in Matthew, Mat 8:26) that this term is applied to Christ's words?
There is more evidence that this is because of its connection to social standing. A very similar Greek word, deimos, means "fearful" in a directly opposite sense: being fearful, that is, generating fear in others by being strong, powerful, and clever. In a very clear sense, deilos and deimos are opposite ends of the social spectrum.
Again, as so many ideas in Christ, this is connected to the cycle that Christ describes connecting the spiritual, physical, mental, and emotional (relationship). Here, the physical storm plus a mental state, lack of faith, causes an emotional state. That emotional state is, as always, connecting to relationships with people. While Christ doesn't care about social relationships as much as personal, here the results of faithlessness and fearfulness are the same: having others not trust you and seeing no value in you.
"Fearful" is from deilos (deilos), which means "cowardly," "miserable," "wretched," "low-born," and "poor."
"How is it" is from pôs (pos) which means "in any way," "at all," "by any means," and "I suppose."
"Faith" is from pistis, which means "confidence," "assurance," "trustworthiness," "credit," "a trust," and "that which give confidence."
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