Ancient Greece needs "a leader" and a stronger community
I've been wandering myself how Ancient Greek didn't become a language as studied as Latin or Sanskrit and suddenly I realized that it all resumes in Cultural relevance. Both Latin and Sanskrit were culturally more relevant because of stronger institutions (Churches and Academy enthusiasts) that pushed both languages in positions of Lingua Franca and Liturgy around great part of the world during great time periods. Even though Ancient Greek has its prestige, it didn't reached Latin's and Sanskrit's because of these things: The Fall of Constantinople (The Fall of Eastern Rome) and The Orthodox Church authority passing from the Greeks to the Slavs (From Koiné/Attic to Old Church Slavonic).
After Greece gained its independence from The Ottoman Empire, it wasn't as powerful as Russia and Bulgaria and the cultural relevance of modern Hellas wasn't as strong as the Slavic countries that also share the Orthodox Christianism, so Ancient Greek as a soft power tool was irrelevant.
Now that we are in the hyperconnectivity era, these languages have found a greater niche and many people willing to study them. Because of this, institutions such as The Vatican have implemented neologisms for Latin that people use. Also, the Latin community has grown significantly because these languages, individually, are rabbit holes and people are curious about them; hence, many more people become more interested and the language community grows, but... What about Ancient Greek? Why hasn't Ancient Greek the same impact as Latin and Sanskrit? This is the point that I wanted to arrive.
Ancient Greek doesn't have a bigger community because of great disorganization among the community members and a lack of a central figure. Like I pointed out before: both Latin and Sanskrit have had strong institutions that preserve both languages and promote their use; meanwhile, Ancient Greek hasn't. Even in the modern era, these 2 languages have big promoters, say influencers (Like ScorpioMartianus), but Ancient Greek hasn't.
I know many people will say that ScorpioMartianus promotes both, but everyone that has stumbled with his channel knows him more as "The Latin" youtuber, rather than "The Ancient Greek" youtuber.
In conclusion: Ancient Greek is and hasn't been cultural relevant because of lack of stronger institutions or relevant figures that promote the usage of the language. If people want Ancient Greek to become more used in many other contexts besides just religion, poems, philosophy and history (like me), the Ancient Greek community needs to be more organized, look for a central figure with great charisma that promotes Ancient Greek's usage. I know people will create their own neologisms and teach them to their public or friends, but when these neologisms enter in contact and result into different word combos and interpretations, then it would become "a mess".
What do you think? Do you agree with me? What critics would you give me?