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Acts 25

VincentWS

Acts 25:1

Was come into the province [επιβαςτηεπαρχια] . Lit., having entered upon the province..

Acts 25:2

Besought. The imperfect denotes their persistence : kept beseeching.

Acts 25:3

Laying wait [ενεδρανποιουντες] . Lit., making or arranging an ambush.

Acts 25:4

Should be kept [τηρεισθαι] . This puts it as a peremptory denial of the Jews ’ request by Festus; whereas it is only his statement of a fact. Render, as Rev., that Paul was kept in charge. Festus ’ reply is conciliatory, and is put on the ground of convenience.

Acts 25:6

Judgment - seat. See on ch. Acts 7:5.

Acts 25:8

Have I offended [ημαρτον] . See on the kindred noun aJmartia, sin, Matthew 1:21.

Acts 25:9

Do a pleasure. See on ch. Acts 24:27. Rev., better, to gain favor.

Before me [επεμου] . Not with him as judge, but by the Sanhedrim in his presence.

Acts 25:10

Very well [καλλιον] . The force of the comparative should be preserved : “thou knowest better than thy question implies.”

Acts 25:11

Deliver [χαρισασθαι] . With an underlying sense of giving him up as a favor to the Jews.

I appeal [επικαλουμαι] . The technical phrase for lodging an appeal. The Greek rendering of the Latin formula appello.

Acts 25:12

The council. A body of men chosen by the governor himself from the principal Romans of the province. These were called assessors, sometime friends, sometimes captains. Though a Roman citizen had the right of appeal to the emperor, a certain discretion was allowed the governors of provinces as to admitting the appeal. It might be disallowed if the affair did not admit of delay, or if the appellant were a known robber or pirate. In doubtful cases the governor was bound to consult with his council, and his failure to do so exposed him to censure.

Cicero, in his impeachment of Verres, the brutal governor of Sicily, says; “Will you deny that you dismissed your council, the men of rank with whom your predecessor and yourself had been wont to consult, and decided the case yourself?” (ii., 33). That Festus exercised this discretion in Paul ’s case is shown by his conferring with the council.

Acts 25:13

Agrippa the king. Herod Agrippa ii, son of the Herod whose death is recorded in Acts 12:20 - 23.

Bernice. Sister of Drusilla, the wife of Felix. She is said to have lived in incestuous relations with her brother. Juvenal, in his sixth satire, alludes to this : “A most notable diamond, made more precious by having been worn on the finger of Bernice. This a barbarian king once gave to his incestuous love. This Agrippa gave to his sister.”

Acts 25:16

Opportunity [τοπον] . Lit., place. An unclassical use of the word.

Acts 25:18

Stood up [σταθεντες] . See on Luke 18:11; Luke 19:8.

Acts 25:19

Superstition [δεισιδαιμονιας] . See on ch. Acts 17:22. Better, religion, as Rev. As Agrippa was a Jew by religion, Festus would not have insulted him by applying the word superstition to his faith. Note, however, that he speaks of it as their own religion, not identifying Agrippa with them. It was a non - committal expression, since the word meant either religion or superstition according to circumstances. He left Agrippa “to take the word in a good sense, but reserved his own view, which was certainly the Roman one” (Meyer). There is, indeed, a similar tact in Paul ’s use of the word to the Athenians. He selected “a word which almost imperceptibly shaded off from praise to blame” (Trench). 27 Affirmed [εφασκεν] . The imperfect implies something habitual. “Paul kept asserting.”

Acts 25:21

Of the Emperor [τουσεβαστου] . Lit., the august one; hence a translation of Augustus, which was not a proper name, but a title of the Roman emperors.

Acts 25:26

Lord [κυριω] . An instance of Luke’s accuracy. The title “Lord” was refused by the first two emperors, Augustus and Tiberius. The emperors who followed accepted it. In the time of Domitian it was a recognized title. Antoninus Pius was the first who put it on his coins.

Acts 25:27

Crimes [αιτιας] . Rev., more correctly, charges.

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