-
ACTS 7:3-51
In addition to several direct quotations from the Septuagint,
Stephen’s speech consists of a series of allusions to and summaries
of Israelitish history. In these phrases drawn from the O...
-
WILT THOU KILL ME ... - How it was known that he had killed the
Egyptian does not appear. It was probably communicated by the man who
was rescued from the hands of the Egyptian, Exodus 2:11....
-
CHAPTER 7
_ 1. The Address of Stephen (Acts 7:1)._
2. The Martyrdom of Stephen (Acts 7:54).
This is the largest chapter in this book and concludes the first
section. Stephen is the chosen instrumen...
-
MOSES. Stephen describes the growth of the people, the change of ruler
and his oppression, as in Exodus 1.
ACTS 7:20. FAIR UNTO GOD (_mg._): from Exodus 2:2; Philo and Josephus
speak of the beauty o...
-
"When the time for the fulfillment of the promise which God had told
to Abraham drew near, the people increased and multiplied in Egypt,
until there arose another king in Egypt who had no knowledge of...
-
STEPHEN'S DEFENCE (Acts 7:1-7)
When Oliver Cromwell was outlining the education he thought necessary
for his son Richard, he said, "I would have him know a little
history." It was to the lesson of hi...
-
WILT THOU. Thou dost not (App-105) wish (App-102); _me_ is used with
questions, where. negative answer is expected.
KILL. Greek. _anaireo,_ as in Acts 7:21.
DIDDEST. killedst....
-
_Wilt thou kill me, as thou didst the Egyptian yesterday?_ For
_didst_read KILLEDST. The verb is repeated in the original....
-
Acts 7:1-53. STEPHEN’S DEFENCE...
-
ὋΝ ΤΡΌΠΟΝ�, _as thou killedst_. The Israelite knew of the
slain Egyptian, whose body Moses had hidden in the sand, but as things
stood between Egyptians and Israelites he would hardly think of laying...
-
_THE JEWISH NATION AND THE LAND OF EGYPT ACTS 7:9-43:_ The patriarchs
sold Joseph into Egypt. Envy caused Joseph's brothers to sell him into
Egypt as a slave. God was with Joseph and gave him favor wi...
-
ΜΉ (G3361) используется в вопросе, на
который ожидается отрицательный
ответ,
ΆΝΕΛΕΪΝ _aor. act. inf. от_ ΆΝΑΙΡΈΩ (G337)
убивать.
ΘΈΛΕΙΣ _praes. ind. act. от_ ΘΈΛΩ (G2309) желать,
хотеть, планировать...
-
c.
Stephen's defence. Acts 7:1-53.
Acts 7:1
And the high priest said, Are these things so?
Acts 7:2
And he said,
Brethren and fathers, hearken: The God of glory appeared unto our
father Abraham,...
-
See notes on verse 17...
-
18 It is probable that the lot of Israel in Egypt was pleasant under
the dynasty which was acquainted with Joseph, who made these rulers
absolute masters in Egypt, for he got for them all the silver a...
-
DEFENCE AND MARTYRDOM OF STEPHEN
1-53. Speech of Stephen. There is every reason to believe that this
speech was really delivered by St. Stephen, and not composed by St.
Luke; for, (1) the speech does...
-
GOOD NEWS FOR EVERYONE
ACTS
_MARION ADAMS_
CHAPTER 7
STEPHEN’S SPEECH, PART 1: ABRAHAM’S *FAITH IN GOD, 7:1-8
V1 The *high priest asked Stephen, ‘Is this true?’ V2 Stephen
replied, ‘Listen, brot...
-
_Cf._ Exodus 2:14....
-
STEPHEN'S DEFENSE: THE DELIVERER FROM BONDAGE
Acts 7:14-29
Moses, we are here told, was “mighty in words;” that is, in
eloquence as well as in deeds. This confirms the statement of the
Jewish histori...
-
The charge against Stephen was that he had spoken against the Temple
and the Law. His reply consisted of a masterly review of the history
of the nation from the calling of Abraham to the rejection of...
-
Moses' Rejection By God's People
Into such a climate, Moses was born, a child particularly pleasing to
God. He was hidden by his parents for three months. Afterward, God
caused him to be found by Phar...
-
MOSES TYPICAL OF CHRIST
17-40. While Joseph so beautifully and vividly emblematizes King
Jesus, both in His humiliation and in His glory, Moses equally grandly
emblematizes the mediatorial Christ, him...
-
Cultured all his life in the Egyptian idolatry, flooded with all the
learning of the world, the greatest military general on the globe,
born with redoubtable physical courage, and a total stranger to...
-
But when the time of the promise drew nigh, which God had sworn to
Abraham, the people grew and multiplied in Egypt, (18) Till another
king arose, which knew not Joseph. (19) The same dealt subtlety w...
-
First of all we see man in an entirely new place man risen from among
the dead and ascending to heaven. The risen ascended man, Christ
Jesus, is the new starting-point of the dealings of God. The firs...
-
Stephen, [11] as far as we are told, had not known the Lord during His
life on earth. Certainly he was not appointed, like the apostles, to
be a witness of that life. He was simply the instrument of t...
-
WILT THOU KILL ME AS THOU DIDST THE EGYPTIAN YESTERDAY?] That is, is
it thy will? dost thou design to kill me? or, as in Exodus 2:14
"intendest" thou to kill me? In the Hebrew text it is, "wilt thou k...
-
Wilt thou kill me, as thou diddest the Egyptian yesterday?
Ver. 28. _Wilt thou kill me, &c._] If this Hebrew had been well
pleased, Moses had not heard of his slaughter; now in choler all will
out. I...
-
_The next day he showed himself unto them_ Of his own accord,
unexpectedly; _as they strove_ As they were quarrelling with each
other; _and would have set them at one_ That is, by interposing
between...
-
WILT THOU KILL ME AS THOU DIDEST THE EGYPTIAN YESTERDAY?...
-
Moses attempts to deliver his people:...
-
The high priest only asks the question, "Are these things so?" Then
God provides room for Stephen to speak without interruption for some
time. This stands in striking contrast to the way in which the...
-
28_ DO YOU WANT TO KILL ME AS YOU DID THE EGYPTIAN YESTERDAY?_ '
1. Now the news was out. Yesterday you killed an Egyptian. Are you
going to kill me today?
2. Moses knew that his stay in Egypt was o...
-
Wouldest thou kill me, as thou killedst the Egyptian yesterday?
Point to Note:
Here we see that same recurring theme that the Israelites had rejected
the deliverers sent from God. 'he had presented...
-
17-29 Let us not be discouraged at the slowness of the fulfilling of
God's promises. Suffering times often are growing times with the
church. God is preparing for his people's deliverance, when their...
-
He charges this great crime upon Moses, to hinder him from further
reproving of him: though recrimination do not make him, or any other,
more innocent; yet men ordinarily use it, as if it were some
sa...
-
Acts 7:28 you G4771 want G3361 G2309 (G5719) kill G337 (G5629) me
G3165 as G3739 G5158
-
FROM ABRAHAM TO THE PROPHET LIKE MOSES - REPLY TO THE CHARGE OF
BLASPHEMY AGAINST GOD AND MOSES (7:2-43).
The only way Stephen had of replying to charges of blasphemy when he
had no supporting witness...
-
‘And the day following he appeared to them as they strove, and would
have set them at one again, saying, “Sirs, you are brethren; why do
you do wrong one to another?” But he who did his neighbour wron...
-
Acts 7:28-29. WILT THOU KILL ME, AS THOU DIDDEST THE EGYPTIAN
YESTERDAY? THEN FLED MOSES AT THIS SAYING. De Wette calls attention
here to the history of Exodus, which relates how Moses, after his
publ...
-
_Second Division of the Speech,_ 17-36. _The Age of Moses._
The second part of the defence commences with the long-looked-for
approach of the time when ‘the promise,' now centuries old, should
be fulf...
-
WOULDEST THOU KILL ME?
(μη ανελειν με συ θελεις). Expecting the answer no,
but a thrust direct at Moses, Do you wish to kill me (note με συ
right together,ME THOU
). See Exodus 2:14 quoted by Ste...
-
Acts 6; Acts 7
Stephen.
From the history of Stephen we learn:
I. That fidelity to truth provokes antagonism; holiness and sin are
mutually repellent; love and selfishness are the opposites of each
o...
-
Acts 7:14. Then sent Joseph, and called his father Jacob to him, and
all his kindred, threescore and fifteen souls. So Jacob went down into
Egypt, and died, he, and our fathers, and were carried over...
-
CONTENTS: Address of Stephen before the council. Stephen martyred.
CHARACTERS: God, Jesus, Holy Spirit, Stephen, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
Joseph, Pharaoh, Moses, Pharaoh's daughter, Aaron, Solomon, Sau...
-
The scope and design of St. Stephen's defence before the council will
be better understood, if it be properly analyzed. The rulers construed
his defence to import, that the glory of their temple shoul...
-
WHEN MOSES WAS FORTY YEARS OLD. Exodus 2:11-15. The point Stephen
brings out, is that Israel rejected Moses, just as they did Joseph and
Jesus. Yet they knew how God had chosen both Joseph and Moses t...
-
_And when he was full forty years old, it came into his heart to visit
his brethren._
THE PATRIOTISM OF MOSES
I. Long nursed--“forty years.”
1. Inspired by his mother. The precious time during which...
-
_In which time Moses was born._
MOSES, A MAN OF GOD AND A MAN OF THE PEOPLE
I. From the people, according to flesh and blood.
II. Above the people, according to spirit and character.
III. For the...
-
_Then said the high priest, Are these things so?_
THE HIGH PRIEST AND HIS QUESTION
This functionary was probably Theophilus, son-in-law of Caiaphas. The
ex-officio president of the council called for...
-
ACTS—NOTE ON ACTS 7:1 Stephen’s defense is the longest speech in
Acts 1:1. It is a selective summary of OT history that turned the
charges on his accusers: _they_ were the ones disobeying God because...
-
_CRITICAL REMARKS_
Acts 7:18. ANOTHER KING WHICH KNEW NOT JOSEPH.—This was Aahmes, the
first monarch of the eighteenth dynasty, “a prince of great force of
character, brave, active, energetic, libera...
-
_CRITICAL REMARKS_
Acts 7:1. The high priest’s question, ARE THESE THINGS SO? analogous
to that put to Christ (Matthew 26:62), was equivalent to a modern
“Guilty or not guilty?”
Acts 7:2. Concerning...
-
EXPOSITION
ACTS 7:1
_And the high priest said _for then _said the high priest, _A.V. The
high priest spoke as president of the Sanhedrim (see Acts 9:1. Acts
9:1 and...
-
Let's turn tonight to Acts chapter 7.
In the early church when a dispute arose among the Grecians--that is,
those Jews of the Grecian culture. They were actually Jews, but they
had followed the Grecia...
-
Acts 7:28...
-
STEPHEN'S APOLOGY
Acts 7:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
After charges against Stephen had been placed, the High Priest with a
show of honor, said, "Are these things so?" Stephen then stood forth
and made his...