Emphatic First and Second Person Pronouns
Last week I talked about the emphatic use of αυτος in the Beatitudes, and a related question came in this week about the use of the emphatic form of εμου in Matt 10:18. The question specifically had to do with the word order and whether “on account of me” is emphatic because of its unusual word order.
Unfortunately, I do not have access right now to the commentators listed in the question so perhaps some of you out there could check this out.
The verse reads, “and you will be dragged before governors and kings for my sake (ενεκεν εμου), to bear witness before them and the Gentiles” (ESV).
There are really two issues here. The first is word order, which is, roughly, “before governors and kings you will be dragged for my sake.” This does not especially strike me as unusual word order, the prepositional phrase following the verb it modifies.
But there is a second issue here. The basic rule with the emphatic forms of εγω and συ is that they are used for emphasis (either contrast or focus), but sometimes merely redundantly. However, when the pronoun is in an oblique case, it is usually anaphoric (i.e., referring back to its antecedent; see Wallace, 321-325). This is the case in our verse.
But the real issue is how personal pronouns behave with prepositions. As a general rule, the emphatic forms of εγω and συ are used after prepositions. Why, I don’t know. But if you look up all the uses of ενεκα (ενεκεν) in the New Testament, you will find that of its 24 occurrences, 8 times it is followed by a personal pronoun, and in every case the form is emphatic. 7 are examples with εμου and once with σου (with an accent, Rom 8:36), although granted this is an editorial decision.
I did a search in Accordance for εις followed by a first or second person singular person pronoun. There are 25 occurrences, and in 21 times the pronoun is emphatic, and every example of the explicit first person pronoun (εμε) was emphatic. What this tells us is that there truly is a preference for the emphatic form of the pronoun when it is the object of the preposition as it is in our verse. A quick survey of constructions like συν εμοι and εν εμοι confirms the pattern.
So back to the question. Is there any significance in the order of the words in Matt 10:18? I don’t think so (but I could be persuaded). Is there any significance of meaning that the form is εμου and not μου? None.
So the lesson is that grammar is complicated, and different principles are often overlapping. Yes, there are cases in which the emphatic forms of εγω and συ are significant, but when they are objects of prepositions, evidently not.
I'd be inclined to say simply that Greek doesn't like clitics joining with prepositions, though I haven't check that. I'm just going on your data.
If there is any emphasis in Matt 10:18 its on ἐπὶ ἡγεμόνας δὲ καὶ βασιλεῖς (before rulers and kings). And you're right, it's not an unusual word order. But it is "emphatic" - that is to say, the fronting of the PP before the word marks it as the Focal constituent of the clause.
No, the order of those words is unusual and hence emphatic. You are right on that.
I suppose that depends on how you define "unusual."
In the sense of frequency, there's nothing unusual about it at all (which is how I took "unusual"). In the sense of "not default," then yes, it could be called "unusual" since the default order is Verb-initial. To me that simply sounds like an odd usage of "unusual" since it happens all the time -- but that's just my own particular idiolect.