ἔρχεται (erchetai) in John 14:6: Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative
ἔρχεται (erchetai) in John 14:6
Textual Witness
The Textus Receptus witness for John 14:6 reads ἔρχεται with the morphology label Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative.
How The Form Affects Interpretation
The form clarifies the action or state being asserted in the local phrase.
How To Communicate It
When teaching John 14:6, use this Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative to explain the exact form's local function first, then move carefully to interpretation from the whole clause.
What Not To Say
- Grammar should serve context, not override it.
- Do not treat this occurrence as a complete word study for G2064.
- Do not make a morphology label carry a doctrine or application apart from the verse.
- Do not say the present form automatically proves continuous action.
- Do not make voice settle agency beyond what the clause says.
What Does The Label Mean?
Verb: the form names an action, state, or verbal idea. The verse determines how strongly the verbal form should be pressed.
Present: often views the action as in progress, customary, or presently in view. Context decides the exact force.
Middle or Passive Deponent: uses a middle or passive form traditionally read with active sense. The lexeme and sentence still govern the meaning.
Indicative: presents the verbal idea as an assertion or statement in the clause.
Third person: the form speaks about someone or something rather than directly as I/we or you.
Singular: the verbal ending is marked for grammatical number and should be matched to its subject in the clause.
Not applicable: this verb form is not using noun case to mark its sentence role.
Not applicable: this verb form does not use grammatical gender to make its point.
What The Form Does In This Verse
καὶ ἡ ζωή· οὐδεὶς ἔρχεται πρὸς τὸν πατέρα, εἰ
The clause of John 14:6, not the morphology label by itself
ἔρχεται is a Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative within "καὶ ἡ ζωή· οὐδεὶς ἔρχεται πρὸς τὸν πατέρα, εἰ". It supplies the verbal action or state that the clause asserts.
The form does not by itself settle the whole interpretation of the verse, the full lexical range of the word, or a doctrine apart from the immediate wording and context.
How Much The Form Matters Here
Moderate: The form matters because it functions as predicate in John 14:6.
Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative. states the action or condition in the clause. Attached to καὶ ἡ ζωή· οὐδεὶς ἔρχεται πρὸς τὸν πατέρα, εἰ. Governed by the immediate wording of John 14:6. The syntax should be explained from the clause, not isolated from the passage.
What action or state is being asserted? ἔρχεται should be read as predicate in John 14:6, with the surrounding words deciding the exact interpretive force.
Supporting: The form supports how John 14:6 is read, especially its predicate function, without replacing the whole clause.
The same morphology label can function differently in another verse. The immediate wording should decide the contextual force. Voice labels can be overread if they are separated from the verb and clause.
Grammar alone proves doctrine: The form supports interpretation only as it serves the verse and its context. present means continuous: Present forms often present action as in view, but the verse decides whether ongoing action is being stressed. voice settles agency: Voice contributes to the clause, but agency must be read from the whole sentence.
How The Interpretation Is Derived
The Textus Receptus witness for John 14:6 reads ἔρχεται with the morphology label Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative.
The lemma is ἔρχομαι. The guide uses the gloss or rendering "I come, go" only to orient this occurrence.
ἔρχεται is a Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative within "καὶ ἡ ζωή· οὐδεὶς ἔρχεται πρὸς τὸν πατέρα, εἰ". It supplies the verbal action or state that the clause asserts.
In John 14:6, the form belongs to the statement where the surrounding words determine what the reader should learn from it.
The form should be read within the passage's local argument and the wider canonical witness, not as an isolated proof.
When teaching John 14:6, use this Verb Third Person Singular Present Middle or Passive Deponent Indicative to explain the exact form's local function first, then move carefully to interpretation from the whole clause.
Do not derive a full word study, doctrine, or interpretive conclusion from this morphology label alone. The form serves the immediate wording and context.