-
SEEING THEN ... - Since no one can call in question the zeal of the
Ephesians on this subject, or doubt the sincerity of their belief, and
since there can be no danger that this well-established worsh...
-
CHAPTER 19
_ 1. The second visit of Paul to Ephesus. The twelve disciples of John
(Acts 19:1)._
2. The Apostle's continued labors. The separation of the disciples.
The Province Asia evangelized (Act...
-
TUMULT AT EPHESUS. A change of religion (for the Way, _cf. Acts 9:2_)
bears hardly on certain trades. In ch. 16 the Gospel interfered with
the trade of soothsaying; here the art of the silversmith suf...
-
IN EPHESUS (Acts 19:1-7)
Acts 19:1-41 is mainly concerned with Paul's work in Ephesus. He
stayed longer there than anywhere else, almost three years.
(i) Ephesus (G2181) was the market of Asia Minor....
-
It happened that at this time there was a great disturbance about The
Way. A certain man called Demetrius, who was a silversmith and who
made silver shrines of Artemis, brought very considerable profi...
-
CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST. are indisputable. Greek. _anantirrhetos._
Only here. The adverb in Acts 10:29.
YE OUGHT TO. it is needful that ye should.
BE. Greek. _huparcho._ See note on Luke 9:48.
QUIE...
-
_Seeing … cannot be spoken against_ Better, GAINSAID with _Rev.
Ver._Paul had spoken, and others would speak, against the worship,
nobody could gainsay the facts, they were incontrovertible.
_ye ough...
-
ἈΝΑΝΤΙΡΡΉΤΩΝ ΟΥ̓͂Ν ὌΝΤΩΝ ΤΟΎΤΩΝ, _seeing
then that these things cannot be gainsaid_. Even those who spoke
against the worship as St Paul had done, could not dispute the facts
just stated by the γραμμα...
-
HEATHEN OUTBREAK AGAINST ST PAUL AND HIS TEACHING...
-
_A TOWN CLERK USED COMMON SENSE ACTS 19:35-41:_ Finally, a town
official that had some common sense begged the mob to "be quiet, and
to do nothing rashly." He suggested that if Demetrius and his worke...
-
ΑΝΑΝΤΊΡΡΗΤΟΣ (G368) бесспорный,
несомненный, не вызывающий возражений
(BAGD). Префикс имеет значение отридания
(Moorhouse, 47-68).
ΌΝΤΩΝ _praes. act. part._ (причины) от ΕΊΜΊ, _см._
Acts 19:31. Gen _...
-
BUTLER'S COMMENTS
Special Study
PAUL'S POWER TO GIVE CHARISMATIC POWER
(Acts 19:1-41)
A.
There is much ambiguous, scripturally-imprecise and confusing exegesis
of Acts 19:1-7 being done today.
1....
-
See notes on verse 35...
-
Seeing then that these things cannot be spoken against, ye ought to
be quiet, and to do nothing rashly. SEEING THEN THAT THESE THINGS
CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST, YE OUGHT TO BE QUIET, AND TO DO NOTHING...
-
18 Many believers still clung to their old practices, but when they
found that the Lord was greater than the demons whom they feared, they
abandoned their false arts. They gave up the scrolls which ta...
-
EPHESUS
1-41. Paul at Ephesus. Opposition of the manufacturers of idols. St.
Paul, leaving Antioch in S. Galatia (see Acts 18:23), approached
Ephesus not by the usual level route leading through Colos...
-
GOOD NEWS FOR EVERYONE
ACTS
_MARION ADAMS_
CHAPTER 19
PAUL IN EPHESUS, 19:1-10
V1 While Apollos was in Corinth, Paul was travelling. He travelled
through the *province on the higher road. He arr...
-
SEEING THEN THAT THESE THINGS CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST... — The
language of the town-clerk has the ring of an official acceptance of
the established _cultus_ rather than of any strong personal devotio...
-
ἀναντιῤῥήτων : only here in N.T., but the adverb in
Acts 10:29, not in LXX but Symm., Job 11:2; Job 33:13; Polyb., xxiii.,
8, 11; on spelling see critical note. δέον ἐστὶν, 1 Peter
-
THE LAWLESSNESS OF SELFISH GREED
Acts 19:30
The theater of Ephesus still stands, and the writer of these words has
spoken in its mighty enclosure, from the very spot where this town
clerk-the model o...
-
The result of the work of Apollos was manifest when Paul reached
Ephesus. There he found a company of sincere disciples to Jesus as He
had been revealed by John. To them Paul declared the truth in its...
-
The Riot in Ephesus
While Timothy and Erastus were away, a man named Demetrius, a
silversmith who made shrines of Diana, or Artemis, began to stir
people up against Christianity. He called together th...
-
After these things were ended, Paul purposed in the spirit, when he
had passed through Macedonia and Achaia, to go to Jerusalem, saying,
After I have been there, I must also see Rome. (22) So he sent...
-
We now enter on the missionary journeys, as they are called, of the
apostle Paul. The work, under the Spirit, opens to the glory of the
Lord. Not merely are Gentiles met in grace and brought into the...
-
From Verse 24 of Chapter 18 to Verse 7 of Chapter 19 we have a kind of
summary of the progress made by the doctrine of Christ, and of the
power that accompanied it. Apollos knew only of the teaching o...
-
SEEING THEN THAT THESE THINGS CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST,.... This
officer intimates, in order to quiet the mob, and make them easy, that
these things were so certain, and well known, that nobody would...
-
Seeing then that these things cannot be spoken against, ye ought to be
quiet, and to do nothing rashly.
Ver. 36. _Ye ought to be quiet_] Or, sedate, composed, kept within
compass, "to do nothing rash...
-
_And when the town-clerk_ Greek, ο γραμματευς, _the
scribe;_ probably the proconsul's secretary, to whom the direction of
the affairs of the city was committed; _had appeased the people_ So
far as to...
-
CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST; cannot be denied; must be admitted as true....
-
The end of the riot:...
-
SEEING, THEN, THAT THESE THINGS CANNOT BE SPOKEN AGAINST, YE OUGHT TO
BE QUIET, AND TO DO NOTHING RASHLY....
-
Paul returned to Ephesus, as he had promised. Of course there was an
assembly there already, as chapter 18:27 intimates; but he found
certain disciples who, at his questioning, tell him they had not e...
-
THEREFORE, SINCE THESE THINGS CANNOT BE DENIED, YOU OUGHT TO BE QUIET
AND DO NOTHING RASHLY.
1. All of these things are widely known and can not be denied by any
thinking person. They are common know...
-
32-41 The Jews came forward in this tumult. Those who are thus
careful to distinguish themselves from the servants of Christ now, and
are afraid of being taken for them, shall have their doom accordi...
-
He did there cunningly than honestly endeavour to evade their clamour,
and still their rage, by telling them (how fallaciously soever), that
neither Paul, nor any other Christian or Jew, had any quarr...
-
Acts 19:36 Therefore G3767 since G5607 (G5752) things G5130 denied
G368 you G5209 ought G1163 (G5752)...
-
“Seeing then that these things cannot be gainsaid, you ought to be
quiet, and to do nothing rash.”
So the city clerk pointed out that as no one could deny these things
they should take matters quietl...
-
A STIRRING IN EPHESUS ON ACCOUNT OF THE NAME OF ARTEMIS (19:23-41).
In considering what follows we should note two things about its
context:
· Firstly that it introduces the final section of Acts (Ac...
-
Acts 19:36. YE OUGHT TO BE QUIET. The ‘town-clerk' seems to be
throughout his harangue intensely anxious that his city should not
through any riotous behaviour incur the displeasure of Rome....
-
CANNOT BE GAINSAID
(αναντιρητων ουν οντων). Genitive absolute with
ουν (therefore). Undeniable (αν, αντι, ρητος), verbal
adjective. Occasionally in late Greek (Polybius, etc.), only here in
N.T., b...
-
CONTENTS: Paul at Ephesus. Disciples of John the Baptist become
Christians. Paul in the synagogue and in the school of Tyrannus.
Paul's miracles. Uproar of the silversmiths.
CHARACTERS: Jesus, Holy S...
-
Acts 19:1. _Paul came to Ephesus,_ a city of Ionia, built by the
Amezones. Its temple of Diana was one of the seven wonders of the
world; but Pompey plundered it of all its riches. This city is now in...
-
AT LAST THE CITY CLERK. He ranked next to the mayor, and was sometimes
"acting mayor." He is able to calm them and reason with them. OF THE
SACRED ATONE. Meteorites were believed to be supernatural, a...
-
_A certain man named Demetrius._
PAUL AND DEMETRIUS
The application of these words to present day life is a task that
might be assigned to a child. Demetrius never dies; his word is to be
heard in ev...
-
_Some therefore cried one thing, and some another._
THE EXCITEMENT AT EPHESUS
I. What produced it.
1. Self-interest endangered.
2. Superstitious feelings aroused.
3. The unpopularity of the gospe...
-
_CRITICAL REMARKS_
Acts 19:23. THE WAY.—See on Acts 9:2.
Acts 19:24. DEMETRIUS.—The name has been found in an inscription,
exhumed in Ephesus and supposed (Hicks) to belong to A.D. 50–60,
recording a...
-
EXPOSITION
ACTS 19:1
_Country _for _coasts, _A.V.; _found _for _finding, _A.V. and T.R. THE
UPPER COUNTRY (τὰ ἀνωτερικὰ μέρη); the inland
districts of Galatia and Phrygia, through which St. Paul...
-
And it came to pass, that, while Apollos was at Corinth [watering what
Paul had planted], Paul having passed through the upper coasts came to
Ephesus; and there he found certain disciples [that no dou...
-
Quiet [κ α τ ε σ τ α λ μ ε ν ο υ ς]. Compare quieted
(ver. 35). The verb means to let down or lower; and so is applied,
metaphorically, to keeping one's self in check; repressing.
Rash [π ρ ο π ε τ ε...