-
Verse 30. _THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT_] He who has an
indisputable right to demand the worship of all his creatures has
mercifully overlooked those acts of idolatry which have disgrace...
-
AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE - The long period when people were
ignorant of the true God, and when they worshipped stocks and stones.
Paul here refers to the times preceding the gospel.
GOD WINKED...
-
CHAPTER 17
_ 1. The Gospel in Thessalonica (Acts 17:1)._
2. The Gospel in Beroea (Acts 17:10).
3. Paul in Athens (Acts 17:15).
Three cities in which the Gospel is next preached are before us in
thi...
-
PAUL'S SPEECH TO THE AREOPAGUS. He opens with a compliment to the
religiosity of the Athenians. He has walked up and down the city and
marked the many objects of worship; he has also found an altar wi...
-
Paul stood up in the midst of the Areopagus and said, "Men of Athens,
I see that in all things you are as superstitious as possible. As I
came through your city and as I saw the objects of your worshi...
-
IN THESSALONICA (Acts 17:1-9)...
-
AND, &C. Literally The times indeed therefore of ignorance.
WINKED AT; BUT. having overlooked. Greek. _hupereidon._ Only here.
NOW. Emphatic. See note on Acts 4:29.
COMMANDETH. Greek. _parangello._...
-
Speech of St Paul at Athens
Taking notice of the extreme religious scrupulousness, which had led
the Athenians to raise an altar to an unknown God, the Apostle
declares to them the God whom alone the...
-
_And the times of this ignorance_ There is no pronoun in the original,
and the conjunctions are feebly represented by "and." The sense is
more nearly conveyed by "Having however overlooked the times o...
-
ΠΆΝΤΑΣ for πᾶσι with אABD. _Vulg_. ‘hominibus ut
omnes.’
30. ΤΟῪΣ ΜῈΝ ΟΥ̓͂Ν ΧΡΌΝΟΥΣ ΤΗ͂Σ�, _the
times of ignorance therefore God overlooked but_, &c., i.e. God has
not imputed unto men the errors whi...
-
SPEECH OF ST PAUL AT ATHENS
Taking notice of the extreme religious scrupulousness which had led
the Athenians to raiso an altar to an unknown God, the Apostle
declares to them the God whom alone they...
-
_A SERMON ABOUT THE ONE TRUE GOD ACTS 17:24-34:_ In his sermon Paul
showed that the true God_ _ made the world and all things therein.
This God is Lord of heaven and earth. He gives to all life, and
b...
-
ΑΓΝΟΊΑΣ _gen. sing. от_ ΆΓΝΟΙΑ (G52)
невежество. _Gen._ описания,
ΎΠΕΡΙΔΏΝ _aor. act. part. от_ ΎΠΕΡΟΡΆΩ (G5237)
недосматривать. Частый гл. в Септ.,
обозначающий вещь, на которую не
обратили внимания...
-
DISCOURSE: 1790
REPENTANCE ENJOINED
Acts 17:30. _The times of this ignorance God winked at; but now
commandeth all men every where to repent_.
THIS is one of the most celebrated discourses in all the...
-
THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT;— The original
'Υπεριδαν, signifies _overlooked;_ that is, he did not appear
to take notice of them, by sending express messages to them, as he did
to the Jew...
-
IN ATHENS. Acts 17:14 b - Acts 17:34.
a.
The brethren from Berea go with Paul as far as Athens and take back a
command for the coming of Silas and Timothy. Acts 17:14 b -...
-
See notes on verse 22...
-
And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all
men every where to repent:
AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT, [ huperidoon (G5237)]
- literally, and better, 'overl...
-
19 The hill called the Areopagus (Latin, Mars' Hill), just a few steps
above the Market Place, was a most fitting forum for the folly of God
to defeat the wisdom of the world. At Rome Paul's weakness...
-
SECOND MISSIONARY JOURNEY (CONTINUED)
1-15. Thessalonica and Berœa.
1. Amphipolis] 32 m. W. of Philippi.
APOLLONIA] 30 m. W. of Amphipolis.
THESSALONICA] now Salonika, was the capital of the provin...
-
ATHENS.
After leaving Berœa, St. Paul entered the Roman province of Achaia,
which was at this time a senatorian province, governed by a proconsul,
and of which the capital was Corinth. He first visite...
-
PAUL'S SPEECH. It is discreet and to the point. It deals not with the
OT., with which his hearers were unacquainted, but with the truths of
natural religion, many of which were understood (though only...
-
TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE] cp. Acts 14:16. REPENT] i.e. turn from
idolatry. Idolatry was pardonable in the times of ignorance, but now
that the True Light has appeared, it is a heinous sin....
-
GOOD NEWS FOR EVERYONE
ACTS
_MARION ADAMS_
CHAPTER 17
PAUL AND SILAS GO TO THESSALONICA, 17:1-4
V1 Paul and Silas travelled through Amphipolis and Apollonia. They
came to Thessalonica. There was...
-
AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT. — Better, perhaps,
_overlooked,_ the English phrase, though vivid, being somewhat too
familiar, and suggesting; strictly taken, not merely tolerance, but...
-
CHAPTER 12
ST. PAUL IN MACEDONIA.
Acts 16:29; Acts 17:1; Acts 17:10
TROAS was at this time the termination of St. Paul's Asiatic travels.
He had passed diagonally right through Asia Minor, followin...
-
CHAPTER 12
ST. PAUL IN MACEDONIA.
Acts 16:29; Acts 17:1; Acts 17:10
TROAS was at this time the termination of St. Paul's Asiatic travels.
He had passed diagonally right through Asia Minor, followin...
-
τοὺς μὲν οὖν χρ.: a contrast drawn between the past
times of ignorance, and the present times with God's summons to
repentance, but instead of a finite verb we have the participle
ὑπεριδών, and so δέ...
-
THE ONE LIVING AND TRUE GOD
Acts 17:22
The gospel preacher must avail himself of any circumstance in his
surroundings that will enable him to arrest the attention of his
audience. He must meet them...
-
At Thessalonica and Berea the apostle visited the synagogues, and
again in each case persecution arose from the Jews. A sentence which
fell from the lips of the leader of the mob shows with what rapid...
-
Paul's Sermon on Mars Hill
The apostle began his sermon by noting that they were very religious,
worshipping idols devoted to all types of gods, even an unknown God.
Paul seized upon their recognition...
-
(15) And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth
all men every where to repent:
(15) The oldness of the error does not excuse those that err, but it
commends and sets forth the...
-
_Overlooked. Despiciens, Greek: uperidon. It may either signify
looking down on the ignorant world, and so taking pity of it; or
rather that God having overlooked, and permitted mankind to go on so
lo...
-
PAUL AT ATHENS
16-33. While Timothy and Silas prosecute the work in the upper
country, Paul and Luke spend the time at Athens, the world's grand
emporium of science, literature, philosophy, and idolat...
-
Then Paul stood in the midst of Mars' hill, and said, Ye men of
Athens, I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious. (23)
For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar wit...
-
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...
-
_AN UNIVERSAL COMMAND_
‘And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth
all men everywhere to repent.’
Acts 17:30
The time of ignorance, during which there had been merciful Divin...
-
−
30._And the times of this ignorance _Because that is commonly thought
to be good which hath been used of long time, and is approved by the
common consent of all men; it might have been objected to P...
-
In the last case it was the power exercised by the enemy over the
passions of the Gentiles that caused the persecution of the apostles:
at Thessalonica we again find the old and universal enmity of th...
-
AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT,.... Not that he
approved of, or encouraged such blindness and folly, as appeared among
the Gentiles, when they worshipped idols of gold, silver, and ston...
-
And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all
men every where to repent:
Ver. 30. _God winked at_] Regarded not. God accounted the times of
paganism before Christ (for all the...
-
_And the times of this ignorance_ What! Does he object ignorance to
the learned and knowing Athenians? Yes, and they acknowledged it by
this very altar; _God winked at_ Greek, υπεριδων, _having_
overl...
-
WINKED AT; suffered, bore with, and did not give them a written
expression of his condemnation of these sins, or come out in judgment
against them.
TO REPENT; of their idolatry and wickedness, and tu...
-
AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT, BUT NOW COMMANDETH ALL
MEN EVERYWHERE TO REPENT,...
-
The conclusion of Paul and the effect of his sermon:...
-
From Philippi Paul and his company travelled westward in Greece to
Thessalonica (also in Macedonia). A Jewish synagogue being there, they
attended this for three sabbath days, reasoning with the Jews...
-
TRULY, THESE TIMES OF IGNORANCE GOD OVERLOOKED, BUT NOW COMMANDS ALL
MEN EVERYWHERE TO REPENT,
1. For too long - too many - in too many places - have been living
unaware of God. That ignorance about...
-
"The times of ignorance therefore God overlooked; but now he
commandeth men that they should all everywhere repent"The times of
ignorance" The times previous to the preaching of the gospel. "God
overl...
-
22-31 Here we have a sermon to heathens, who worshipped false gods,
and were without the true God in the world; and to them the scope of
the discourse was different from what the apostle preached to...
-
THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT; to prevent an objection,
lest any should think that they might continue in their unbelief, and
fare as well as their progenitors, God is said to have overloo...
-
Epistle of Mathetes to Diognetus
As long then as the former time[46]
Shepherd of Hermas Similitude Fifth "And if any one, sir," I said,
"has been hitherto ignorant, before he heard these words, how...
-
Acts 17:30 Truly G3303 G3767 times G5550 ignorance G52 God G2316
overlooked G5237 (G5660) now G3569 commands...
-
EFFECTIVE MINISTRY IN ATHENS (17:15-34).
His Berean guides saw Paul safely to Athens. This had not been where
he was originally aiming for. After Thessalonica his intention had
probably been to procee...
-
“The times of ignorance therefore God overlooked, but now he
commands men that they should all everywhere repent, inasmuch as he
has appointed a day in which he will judge the world in righteousness
b...
-
Acts 17:30. AND THE TIMES OF THIS IGNORANCE GOD WINKED AT. The English
translation of the Greek word υ ̔ περιδω ̀ ν, _winked at,_
utterly fails to give the sense of the original, which should be
rende...
-
THE TIMES OF IGNORANCE
(τους χρονους της αγνοιας). The times before full
knowledge of God came in Jesus Christ. Paul uses the very word for
their ignorance (αγνοουντες) employed in verse Acts
17:23...
-
REPENT
Repentance is the translation of a (Greek, "metanoeō")
"metanoia-metanoeo", which means "to have another mind," "to change
the mind," and is used in the New Testament to indicate a change of...
-
Acts 17:26
St. Paul at Athens.
I. The Jewish nation had existed to be a witness for this universal
fellowship among the nations. It had existed as a witness against that
which tended to divide them a...
-
CONTENTS: Founding of church at Thessalonica and the Jewish
opposition. Paul and Silas at Berea. Paul at Athens and the sermon
from Mars' hill.
CHARACTERS: Christ, Paul, Silas, Jason, Caesar, philoso...
-
Acts 17:1. _When they had passed through Amphipolis._ Boiste adds the
Roman name _Emboli._ It was built by Simon, the Athenian commander. It
stood on an island formed in the river Strymon, and was cal...
-
PAUL STOOD UP. Many seem to think Paul made a great mistake in what he
said to this group, and see a resolve never to repeat this error in
what he says in 1 Corinthians 2:1-5. But this cannot be! Paul...
-
_And they that conducted Paul brought him unto Athena _
PAUL AT ATHENS
I. The place which the apostle visited. Athens.
II. The feelings of which he was the subject. Not of admiration at the
masterp...
-
_Then Paul stood in the midst of Mars’ hill._
NOVELTY ATTRACTIVE
Yes, the people gathered in crowds round the statue, and looked at it
again and again. It was not the finest work of art in the city,...
-
_The times of this ignorance God winked at._
GOD AND THE TIMES OF IGNORANCE
1. Surrounded by the representatives of the great philosophic schools,
and with the beautiful objects of Pagan devotion on...
-
ACTS—NOTE ON ACTS 17:30 Paul now moves to his distinctly Christian
appeal. He distances himself from the philosophers. GOD OVERLOOKED.
God did not immediately judge the world in previous times....
-
ACTS—NOTE ON ACTS 17:22 Paul’s Areopagus address is the prime
example in Acts 1:1 of preaching to Gentiles who have no knowledge of
the OT....
-
_CRITICAL REMARKS_
Acts 17:22. TOO SUPERSTITIONS.—Somewhat superstitious (R.V.);
better, _more god-fearing_, more religious (_sc._, than
others)—_i.e._, unusually religious; though the word has both...
-
EXPOSITION
ACTS 17:1
AMPHIPOLIS. This was the ancient capital of that division of
Macedonia (Macedonia Prima); see Acts 16:12, note. It was situated on
the Via Egnatia, thirty-four miles southwest f...
-
Now when they had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came
to Thessalonica, where there was a synagogue of the Jews (Acts 17:1):
Now Luke passes that off in one verse. From Philippi to Amph...
-
1 Peter 1:14; 1 Peter 1:15; 1 Peter 4:3; 2 Corinthians 7:10; Acts 11:1
-
Winked at [υ π ε ρ ι δ ω ν]. Only here in New Testament.
Originally, to overlook; to suffer to pass unnoticed. So Rev.,
overtooked....
-
The times of ignorance — What! does he object ignorance to the
knowing Athenians? Yes, and they acknowledge it by this very altar.
God overlooked — As one paraphrases, "The beams of his eye did in a
m...
-
That is, "Though God of his infinite patience hath long borne with the
world lying in darkness and ignorance; yet how, by causing his gospel
to be preached to all nation, he calls and invites them to...