In Jur Mödö folk-stories and some other narratives, at the very peak of the discourse the narrator sometimes switches from 3rd person narrative to 2nd person, addressing a major participant, as if telling that character what he did, or what was done to him.
In Revelation 20:12-15, this device was used (and nowhere else in the whole New Testament):
“(12b) All the dead people were punished, for you whoever exactly according to your deeds that you had lived at that time (in the past) doing them and that had been written in that book. (13b) Then they continued to be punished, for you whoever exactly according to your deeds that you had lived at that time (in the past) here (in the world) doing them. (15) For you whoever, if your name was not seen written in that book of life, you were thrown right then into that lake of fire.”
It almost felt as if the translator was saying to the reader, “If you haven’t got the point of this Bible by the time you reach this chapter, I’m going to give it to you straight between the eyes!”
Click or tap here for the text in Jur Mödö
12 … Töku pili odɔ karama dɔmo ꞌbëyï ꞌba bɔ mɔtɔ ko gɔ akoꞌdɔ ꞌbï ame koloma tönë toꞌdɔ mo kugu ꞌdeni mï buku nima ne. 13 … Kina koloma ŋgï todɔ karama dönnï ꞌbëyï ꞌba bɔ mɔtɔ gɔ akoꞌdɔ ꞌbï ame koloma tönë toꞌdɔ mo bine ne. 14 … . 15 Ɔdɔ nï mɔtɔ koꞌja möyï yï dë kugu ꞌdeni mï buku ꞌba dïdï nima, uꞌdu yï ŋgï mï pöpö ꞌba paꞌdo nima.
(Source: Andrew Persson)