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November 22, 2006

Syntax Searching and Epistolary Form Criticism: Disclosure Form

Read the first post in this series...

An example of the disclosure form is found in 1Th 4.13:


1Th 4.13, Disclosure Form

Description of Form

Smith provides a concise summary of the structure of the disclosure form as identified by Mullins:

Mullins has isolated the disclosure form, as a distinct literary form which is used in the NT. He examined the form in terms of structure first. By doing so he observes that this form has four constituent elements: verb of wishing, infinitive of a noetic verb, person addressed and information disclosed. Next he examined the form in terms of content and observed that the verb of wishing is typically ????, the infinitive of a noetic verb used is typically ????????? (the tense varies) or ???????, the person addressed is either second person singular or plural and the content of the information disclosed is diverse and usually found within a ??? clause.[1]

White discusses the form briefly in his article:

This form may be delineated in terms of its three principal elements: (i) the verb of disclosure, often a two-membered unit consisting of a verb of desiring (???? or ????????) in the first person indicative, and the verb of knowing (???????) in the infinitive form; (ii) the vocative of address (???????, “brothers,” in the five examples from Paul); and (iii) the subject to be disclosed introduced by ???.[2]

The common points of these descriptions include:

Smith reports Mullins determines the following references as containing instances of the disclosure formula: Ro 1.13; 11.25; 1Co 10.1; 11.3; 12.1; 2Co 1.8; Col 2.1; 1Th 4.13.[3]

Because the third item (??? or ??? clause) is variable as Mullins’ reported instances demonstrate, candidate instances of the disclosure formula can be located simply taking the first two items into account.

The Form in OpenText.org SAGNT

Locating the disclosure form in the OpenText.org SAGNT involves searching for clauses that contain a Predicator with ???? and that also contain an embedded clause (infinives are typically encoded as embedded clauses) with lexical forms of either ?????? or ????.[4] Below is the query that will find Smith and Mullins’ reported instances.[5]


Structure of the Disclosure Form
Search results in Logos Bible Software are presented in both Greek and English, with respective structures highlighted in each language. In this particular search, the silver background represents the content of the clause; the orange represents each clause component.

Syntax Search Results — Disclosure Form Instances
Bibliography
Mullins, T. Y., “Disclosure: a Literary Form in the New Testament”, NovT 7 (1964), pp. 44-50.
White, J.L., “Introductory Formulae in the Body of the Pauline Letter”, JBL 90 (1971), pp. 91-97.
Smith, C.A., Timothy’s Task, Paul’s Prospect: A New Reading of 2 Timothy (Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2006). pp. 10,

Endnotes

[1] Smith, 10.

[2] White, 93.

[3] Smith, 11.

[4] Andrew Pitts, in a forthcoming review of Logos Bible Software 3.0 to be published in the Journal of Greco-Roman Judaism and Christianity, uses a similar search with similar results as an example of the capability of the OpenText.org SAGNT.

[5] As of November, 2006, this is not strictly true. 1Co 12.1 is erroneously tagged in the current version of the OpenText.org SAGNT. This error has been flagged for correction and should be updated in a future release of the database.

Posted by Rick Brannan at November 22, 2006 6:00 AM

Comments

Rick,

Great post -- I really enjoy your syntax series. Maybe you can clear something up for me, though. Why do we need to include the "word group" and "head term" in these searches if we're not specifying any specific criteria in those nodes? In other words, why couldn't we just say "clause component 3=predictor" that "has a word2 with lexeme={}"?

I guess the use of "head term" and "word group" seem like extraneous wrappers, yet I know from experimentation that they are necessary. Why?

Are there any rules of thumb? (e.g. whatever the highest level node you select, you need to specify EVERY intermediate node down to the word group, or down to the last node where you have specific criteria?) Thanks for helping me understand this feature better. Again, I really enjoy working through your posts. . .

Posted by: Mike Hogue at November 23, 2006 8:27 AM

How can this be made to show only the negative, i.e. "not ignorant"? This current search does not pick up 1 Co 12:1 and 2 Co 2:11.

Posted by: Larry Logue at November 23, 2007 10:37 AM

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