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Chapter 7

7:1 Are these things so? [ei tauta houtōs echei]. On this use of [ei] in a direct question see on 1:6. Literally “Do these things hold thus?” A formal question by the high priest like our “Do you plead guilty, or not guilty?” (Furneaux). The abrupt question of the high priest would serve to break the evident spell of the angelic look on Stephen’s face. Two charges had been made against Stephen (1) speaking against the holy temple, (2) changing the customs which Moses had delivered. Stephen could not give a yes or no answer to these two charges. There was an element of truth in each of them and a large amount of error all mixed together. So he undertakes to explain his real position by the historical method, that is to say, by a rapid survey of God’s dealing with the people of Israel and the Gentiles. It is the same method adopted by Paul in Pisidian Antioch (Ac 13:16ff.) after he had become the successor of Stephen in his interpretation of the universal mission of Christianity. If one is disposed to say that Luke made up this speech to suit Stephen’s predicament, he has to explain how the style is less Lukan than the narrative portions of Acts with knowledge of Jewish traditions that a Greek would not be likely to know. Precisely how Luke obtained the data for the speech we do not know, but Saul heard it and Philip, one of the seven, almost certainly. Both could have given Luke help about it. It is even possible that some one took notes of this important address. We are to remember also that the speech was interrupted at the end and may not include all that Stephen meant to say. But enough is given to give us a good idea of how Stephen met the first charge “by showing that the worship of God is not confined to Jerusalem or the Jewish temple” (Page). Then he answers the second charge by proving that God had many dealings with their fathers before Moses came and that Moses foretold the coming of the Messiah who is now known to be Jesus. It is at this point (verse 51) that Stephen becomes passionate and so powerful that the wolves in the Sanhedrin lose all self-control. It is a great and masterful exposition of the worldwide mission of the gospel of Christ in full harmony with the Great Commission of Christ. The apostles had been so busy answering the Sadducees concerning the Resurrection of Christ and maintaining their freedom to teach and preach that they had not pushed the world-wide propaganda of the gospel as Jesus had commanded after they had received the Promise of the Father. But Stephen had proclaimed the same message of Christ and was now facing the same fate. Peter’s mind had been enlightened by the Holy Spirit so that he could rightly interpret Joel and David in the light of Pentecost. “So Stephen read the history of the Old Testament with new eyes in the light of the life and death of Jesus” (Furneaux).

7:2 Brethren and fathers [andres adelphoi kai pateres]. The spectators (brethren) and members of the Sanhedrin (fathers) as Paul in Ac 22:1. Hearken [akousate]. First aorist (ingressive) active imperative, Give me your attention now. The God of glory [Ho theos tēs doxēs]. The God characterized by glory (genitive case, genus or kind) as seen in the Shekinah, the visible radiance of God. Jesus is also called “the Glory” = the Shekinah in Jas 2:1. Cf. Ex 25:22; 40:34; Le 9:6; Heb 9:5. By these words Stephen refutes the charge of blasphemy against God in Ac 6:11. Appeared [ōphthē]. First aorist passive indicative of [horaō]. See on Lu 23:43. Before there was temple or tabernacle and away over in Mesopotamia (Ur of the Chaldees, Ge 11:31), even before [prin ē] with the infinitive) he dwelt in Haran [Charran], or Carrae not far from Edessa, where Crassus met death after his defeat by the Parthians B.C. 53).

7:3 Which I shall shew thee [hēn an soi deixō]. Indefinite relative clause with [an] and the aorist active subjunctive (same form in first person singular as the future active indicative). Abraham followed on as God led him.

7:4 When his father was dead [meta to apothanein auton]. [Meta] with the accusative of the articular infinitive and the accusative of general reference [auton], regular Greek idiom. In Ge 11:32 it is stated that Terah died at Haran at the age of 205. There are various explanations of the discrepancy, but no one that seems certain. It is possible (Hackett, Felten) that Abraham is mentioned first in Ge 11:26 because he became the most prominent and was really younger than Haran his brother who died before the first migration who was really sixty years older than Abraham. According to this view Terah was 130 years old at the birth of Abraham, leaving Abraham 75 at the death of Terah (205). Wherein ye now dwell [eis hēn humeis nun katoikeite]. Note [eis] in the sense of [en] as often. Note also emphatic use of [humeis] (ye) and now [nun].

7:5 Not so much as to set his foot on [oude bēma podos]. From De 2:5. Old word from [bainō], to go, to step. “Stepping of a foot,” only instance of this original meaning in the N.T. From this it comes to mean a platform reached by steps, official seat of a judge (Mt 27:19). The field purchased by Abraham (Ge 23:9-17) was not a gift from God. Promised [epēggeilato]. First aorist middle indicative of [epaggellō], common verb. See Ge 12:7; 17:8; 48:4 for this promise. So God appeared again to Abraham in a strange land. In possession [eis kataschesin]. Late word, in LXX, and in N.T. only here and verse 45. From [katechō], to hold back, then to hold fast (or down), to possess. It was fulfilled in the descendants of Abraham. When as yet he had no child [ouk ontos autōi teknou]. Genitive absolute with negative [ouk] rather than [] to emphasize actual absence of a child. He had only the promise of God about the land and the child.

7:6 On this wise [houtōs]. A free quotation from Ge 15:13. Should sojourn [estai paroikon]. Shall be a sojourner, [Paroikos] [para], beside, [oikos], home), one dwelling near one’s home, but not of it, so a stranger, foreigner, old word, often in LXX, temporary residence without full rights of citizenship (7:29; 13:17), and descriptive of Christians (Eph 2:19; 1Pe 1:17; 2:11). In a strange land [en gēi allotriāi]. In a land not one’s own, that belongs to another, alien as in Mt 17:25f., which see. Four hundred years [etē tetrakosia]. Accusative of duration of time. As in Ge 15:13, but a round number as in Ex 12:40 the time is 430 years. But in Ga 3:17 Paul, following the LXX in Ex 12:40, takes the 430 years to cover the period in Canaan and the stay in Egypt, cutting the sojourn in Egypt to about half. Josephus gives it both ways. Hackett suggests two solutions, one that there were two ways of reckoning the period among the Jews with no way of settling it, the other that by the 430 years in Egypt the writers meant to include Canaan also as merely the preliminary to the period in Egypt.

7:7 Will I judge [krinō egō]. Future (accent on [ō] active indicative of [krinō] and [egō] (I) expressed is emphatic. In this place [en tōi topōi toutōi]. Quoted from Ex 3:12 and referring to Sinai or Horeb, but Stephen applies it to the Promised Land.

7:8 The covenant of circumcision [diathēkēn peritomēs]. A covenant marked by (genitive) circumcision (no article) of which circumcision is the sign (Ro 4:11) as set forth in Ge 17:9-14. In the ancient Greek [diathēkē] was usually will (Latin, testamentum) and [sunthēkē] was used for covenant [sun], together, rather than [dia], between). But the LXX and the N.T. use [diathēkē] for covenant (will in Heb 9:15f.) as Lightfoot on Ga 3:16 says: “The LXX translation and New Testament writers probably preferred [diathēkē] as better expressing the free grace of God than [sunthēkē].” And so [kai houtōs]. After the covenant was made and as a sign and seal of it.

7:9 Moved with jealousy [zēlōsantes]. First aorist active participle of [zēloō], old verb from [zēlos] (Ac 5:17), to burn or boil with zeal, and then with envy as here (17:5, etc.) and Ge 37:11.

7:10 Delivered him out [exeilato auton ek]. First aorist middle indicative of [exaireō], old verb to take out, snatch out. Note repetition of [ek]. Pharaoh King of Egypt [Pharaō basileōs Aiguptou]. Pharaoh is not a name, but a title, the Egyptian perāā meaning great house.

7:11 Found no sustenance [ouch hēuriskon chortasmata]. Imperfect active, kept on not finding. Chortasmata is from chortazō, originally to feed with grass [chortos] or herbs. Old word, but only here in the N.T. and includes food for both men and animals. In Ge 24:25, 32 it is fodder for the cattle, a first necessity for owners of herds of cattle.

7:12 That there was corn [onta sitia]. Participle (present active of [eimi] in indirect discourse, after [akousas], “heard of corn being in Egypt.” [Sitia] is diminutive of [sitos] and means grain (wheat, barley, not our maize or Indian corn), old word also for provisions, victuals, here only in the N.T. The first time [prōton]. While Jacob himself remained in Canaan before he went down to Egypt and died there (verse 15f.).

7:13 At the second time [en tōi deuterōi]. This expression only here in the N.T. This second visit is recorded in Ge 45:1ff. Became manifest [phaneron egeneto]. In Ge 41:12 the fact that Joseph was a Hebrew had been incidentally mentioned to Pharaoh, but now it was made clear to him.

7:14 Three-score and fifteen souls [en psuchais hebdomēkonta pente]. Stephen follows the LXX which counts some grandchildren of Joseph and so makes it 75 whereas Ge 46:26 has 66 and then the next verse makes it 70 including Jacob and Joseph with his two sons. The use of [en] means “consisting in.”

7:16 They were carried over unto Shechem [metetethēsan eis Suchem]. First aorist passive of [metatithēmi], only here in the N.T. in this sense of changing places. Jacob was buried in the cave of Machpelah (Ge 50:13). The O.T. does not say where the sons of Jacob were buried save that Joseph was buried in Shechem (Jos 24:32). Possibly only “our fathers” without Jacob is the subject of “were carried.” Which Abraham bought [hōi ōnēsato Abraam]. Hackett is sure that our present text is wrong. Hort notes some sixty “primitive errors” in the critical text of the N.T. It is possible that this is also one. If “Jacob” is substituted for “Abraham,” the matter is cleared up. “It is quite as likely, judging a priori, that the word producing the error escaped from some early copyist as that so glaring an error was committed by Stephen” (Hackett). At any rate Abraham bought a burying-place, the cave of Machpelah, from Ephron the Hittite at Hebron (Ge 23:16), while Jacob bought a field from the sons of Hamor at Shechem (Ge 33:19; Jos 24:32). Abraham had built an altar at Shechem when he entered Canaan (Ge 12:6f.). It is possible, of course, that Abraham also bought the ground on which the altar stood. In Shechem [en Suchem]. This is the reading of Aleph B C instead of the Textus Receptus [tou Suchem] which makes it “Hamar the father of Sichem.” “In Shechem” is the true reading.

7:17 Drew nigh [ēggizen]. Imperfect active, was drawing nigh.

7:18 Another king [basileus heteros]. A different kind of king also, probably a king of the new dynasty after the shepherd kings had been expelled from Egypt. Who knew not Joseph [hos ouk ēidei ton Iōsēph]. Second past perfect of [oida] used like an imperfect. Joseph’s history and services meant nothing to the new king. “The previous dynasty had been that of the Hyksos: the new king was Ahmes who drove out the Hyksos” (Knobel).

7:19 Dealt subtilly [katasophisamenos]. First aorist middle participle of [katasophizomai], late compound [kata] and [sophizō], old verb, to make wise, to become wise, then to play the sophist), perfective use of [kata]. In the LXX, but here only in the N.T. To use fraud, craft, deceit. That they should cast out their babes [tou poiein ta brephē ektheta]. [Tou poiein] (genitive of the articular present infinitive) can be either design or result. The Revised Version here takes it as purpose while the Authorized as result. In either case Pharaoh required the Israelites to expose their children to death, a possible practice done voluntarily in heathen China and by heathen in so-called Christian lands. But the Israelites fought against such an iniquity. The word [ektheta] (exposed, cast out) is a verbal adjective from [ektithēmi]. It is an old word, but here only in the N.T. and not in the LXX. To the end they might not live [eis to mē zōogoneisthai]. Purpose with [eis] and the articular infinitive (present middle). This compound verb is from [zōogonos] (from [zōos], alive, and [genō], to bear) and is used by late writers and the LXX. It is three times in the N.T. (here, Lu 17:33; 1Ti 6:13) in the sense to preserve alive.

7:20 Exceeding fair [asteios tōi theōi]. Ethical dative, fair to God (as God looked at him). [Asteios] is from [astu], city, and so means “of the city,” with city manners and polish. Old word, only twice in the N.T. (here and Heb 11:23) and both times about Moses and taken from Ex 2:2. He was nourished [anetraphē]. Second aorist passive indicative of [anatrephō]. He was brought up at home for three months in defiance of the new Pharaoh.

7:21 When he was cast out [ektethentos autou]. Genitive absolute with first aorist passive participle of [ektithēmi]. Took up [aneilato]. Second aorist middle indicative (with first aorist vowel [a] instead of [e] as often in the Koinē) of [anaireō], common in the N.T. in the sense of take up and make away with, to kill as in verse 28, but here only in the N.T. in the original sense of taking up from the ground and with the middle voice (for oneself). Quoted here from Ex 2:5. The word was used of old for picking up exposed children as here. Vincent quotes Aristophanes (Clouds, 531): “I exposed (the child), and some other women, having taken it, adopted [aneileto] it.” Vulgate has sustulit. “Adopted” is the idea here. “After the birth of a child the father took it up to his bosom, if he meant to rear it; otherwise it was doomed to perish” (Hackett). Nourished him for her own son [anethrepsato auton heautēi eis huion]. Literally, “she nursed him up for herself [heautēi] besides middle voice) as a son.” This use of [eis] = as occurs in the old Greek, but is very common in the LXX as a translation of the Hebrew le. The tradition is that she designed Moses for the throne as the Pharaoh had no son (Josephus, Ant. ii. 9, 7).

7:22 Was instructed [epaideuthē]. First aorist passive indicative of [paideuō], to train a child [pais], the usual idea in ancient Greek as here. The notion of chastisement (Heb 12:6) is also in the old Greek and especially in the LXX and the N.T. Here with instrumental case [pasēi sophiāi] or the locative. The accusative would usually be retained after this verb. The priestly caste in Egypt was noted for their knowledge of science, astronomy, medicine, and mathematics. This reputation was proverbial (1Ki 4:30). Modern discoveries have thrown much light on the ancient civilization of Egypt. Moses, like Paul, was a man of the schools. Mighty in his words and works [dunatos en logois kai ergois autou]. The same phrase used of Jesus in Lu 24:19. The adjective [dunatos] is employed of Apollos as an interpreter of the Scriptures (Ac 18:24). Moses did not have the rhetorical skill or eloquence of Aaron (Ex 4:10), but his words like his deeds carried weight and power.

7:23 When he was well-nigh forty years old [Hōs eplērouto autōi tessarakontaetēs chronos]. A rather awkward Greek idiom for the English: “When a forty year old time (same idiom in Ac 13:18 and only twice in the N.T.) was being fulfilled [eplērouto], imperfect passive) for him (dative case).” The life of Moses is divided into three periods of forty years each (in Egypt 40 years, in Midian 40, governed Israel 40, 120 when he died, De 34:7). It came into his heart [anebē epi tēn kardian autou]. Second aorist active indicative of [anabainō], common verb. Came up as if from the lower deeps of his nature. This Hebrew image occurs in Jer 3:16; Isa 65:17; 1Co 2:9. To visit [episkepsasthai]. First aorist middle infinitive of [episkeptomai], old verb to go to see for oneself, with his own eyes, to help if possible. Used of God visiting his people (Lu 7:16). Our “visit” is from Latin video, to see, visito, to go to see. During the Welsh mining troubles the Prince of Wales made a sympathetic visit to see for himself the actual condition of the coal miners. Moses desired to know first hand how his kinsmen were faring.

7:24 Suffer wrong [adikoumenon]. Present passive participle of [adikēo]. By blows (Ex 2:11). Avenged [epoiēsen ekdikēsin]. First aorist active indicative of [poieō]. This idiom occurs in Lu 18:7 with [ekdikēsin] (this from [ekdikeō] and that from [ekdikos] without right or law [dikē] and then exacting law of right out of [ek] one, exacting vengeance). Him that was oppressed [tōi kataponoumenōi]. Present passive articular participle in the dative case of [kataponeo], to tire down with toil, to treat roughly, common in late Greek, in the N.T. only here and 2Pe 2:7 (sore distressed). The man was on the point of being overcome. Smiting [pataxas]. First aorist active participle of [patassō], in the old Greek the beat of the heart, only in the LXX and N.T. to smite a deadly blow as here like [plēssō].

7:25 He supposed [enomizen]. Imperfect active of [nomizō]. He was supposing, Stephen explains, when he smote the Egyptian. That his brethren understood [sunienai tous adelphous]. Present active infinitive of [suniēmi], to send (put) together, to grasp, to comprehend, in indirect discourse with the accusative of general reference. By his hand was giving them deliverance [dia cheiros autou didōsin sotērian autois]. Picturesque use of “hand” as in 2:23, present active indicative of [didōmi] retained in indirect discourse after imperfect [enomizen]. But they understood not [hoi de ou sunēkan]. Page notes “the rhetorical power of these words” from Stephen. [Sunēkan] (first aorist indicative, [k] aorist) refers to [sunienai] just before.

7:26 The day following [tēi epiousēi hēmerāi]. Locative case, “on the following day” (from [epeimi], to come upon, to approach, present active participle [epiōn -ousa, -on]. Common phrase in old Greek both with [hēmera] (day) as here and without as 16:11. Only in Acts in the N.T. Appeared [ōphthē]. First aorist passive indicative of [horaō] not with idea that only a vision but rather that it was sudden or unexpected. As they strove [machomenois]. Present middle participle of [machomai], actually fighting. Would have set them at one again [sunēllassen autous eis eirēnen]. Better, he tried to reconcile them (or change them into peace). It is the conative imperfect active as in Mt 3:14 of [sunallassō], only here in the N.T. though common in the old Greek. Vulgate has reconciliabat. The usual word in the N.T. for reconcile is [katallassō]. Do ye wrong one to another [adikeite allēlous]. The same word used in verse 24 of the wrong done one of the Hebrews by the Egyptian, but here both are “brethren.”

7:27 Thrust him away [apōsato auton]. First aorist middle indicative (Koinē for Attic [apeōsato] of [apōtheō], to push away from oneself in middle voice as here, common in old Greek. Again in verse 39; 13:46; Ro 11:1; 1Ti 1:19. It is always the man who is doing the wrong who is hard to reconcile.

7:28 Wouldest thou kill me? [mē anelein me su theleis]. Expecting the answer no, but a thrust direct at Moses, Do you wish to kill me (note [me su] right together, me thou). See Ex 2:14 quoted by Stephen.

7:29 Sojourner [paroikos]. Temporary dweller (cf. Abraham in verse 6) in Midian though for forty years.

7:30 Sentence begins with genitive absolute again. In a flame of fire in a bush [en phlogi puros batou]. Horeb in Ex 3:1; but Sinai and Horeb were “probably peaks of one mountain range” (Page), Horeb “the mountain of the dried-up ground,” Sinai “the mountain of the thorns.” Literally, “in the flame of fire of a bush” (two genitives, [puros] and [batou] dependent on [phlogi], flame). Descriptive genitives as in 9:15; 2Th 1:8. [Batos] (bush) is the wild acacia (mimosa nilotica). In Ex 3:20 it is Jehovah who speaks. Hence “angel” here with Stephen is understood to be the Angel of the Presence, the Eternal Logos of the Father, the Angel of Jehovah.

7:31 The sight [to horama]. Used of visions in the N.T. as in Mt 17:9. As he drew near [proserchomenou autou]. Genitive absolute with present middle participle of [proserchomai]. A voice of the Lord [phōnē kuriou]. Here the angel of Jehovah of verse 30 is termed Jehovah himself. Jesus makes powerful use of these words in his reply to the Sadducees in defence of the doctrine of the resurrection and the future life (Mr 12:26; Mt 22:32; Lu 20:37f.) that God here describes himself as the God of the living. Trembled [entromos genomenos]. Literally, becoming tremulous or terrified. The adjective [entromos] [en, tromos] from [tremō], to tremble, to quake) occurs in Plutarch and the LXX. In the N.T. only here and Ac 16:29. Durst not [ouk etolma]. Imperfect active, was not daring, negative conative imperfect.

7:33 Holy ground [gē hagia]. The priests were barefooted when they ministered in the temple. Moslems enter their mosques barefooted today. Cf. Jos 5:15. Sandal [hupodēma], bound under) is here “a distributive singular” (Hackett). Even the ground near the bush was “holy,” a fine example for Stephen’s argument.

7:34 I have surely seen [idōn eidon]. Imitation of the Hebrew infinitive absolute, (Ex 3:7) “Seeing I saw” (cf. Heb 6:14). The affliction [tēn kakōsin]. From [kakoō], to treat evilly (from [kakos], evil). Old word, here only in the N.T. and from Ex 3:7. Groaning [stenagmou]. Old word from [stenazō], to sigh, to groan. In the N.T. only here and Ro 8:26. Root [sten] in our word stentorian. I am come down [katebēn]. Second aorist active indicative of [katabainō], I came down. To deliver [exelesthai]. Second aorist middle infinitive of [exaireō], to take out for myself. I will send [aposteilō]. First aorist active subjunctive (hortatory of [apostellō], “Let me send”).

7:35 This Moses [Touton ton Mōusēn]. Rhetorical repetition follows this description of Moses (five times, anaphora, besides the use here, six cases of [houtos] here about Moses: verse 35 twice, 36, 37, 38, 40). Clearly Stephen means to draw a parallel between Moses and Jesus. They in Egypt denied [ērnēsanto] Moses as now you the Jews denied [ērnēsasthe], 3:13) Jesus. Those in Egypt scouted Moses as “ruler and judge” (verses 27, 35, [archonta kai dikastēn] and God “hath sent” [apestalken], perfect active indicative, state of completion) Moses “both a ruler and a deliverer” [archonta kai lutrōtēn] as Jesus was to be (Lu 1:68; 2:38; Heb 9:12; Tit 2:14). “Ransomer” or “Redeemer” [lutrōtēs] is not found elsewhere, [lutron] (ransom), [lutroō], to ransom, and [lutrōsis], ransoming or redemption, are found often. In Ac 5:31 Christ is termed “Prince and Saviour.” With the hand [sun cheiri]. So the correct text. The Pharisees had accused Stephen of blaspheming “against Moses and God” (6:11). Stephen here answers that slander by showing how Moses led the people out of Egypt in co-operation [sun] with the hand of the Angel of Jehovah.

7:37 Like unto me [hōs eme]. This same passage Peter quoted to the crowd in Solomon’s Porch (Ac 3:22). Stephen undoubtedly means to argue that Moses was predicting the Messiah as a prophet like himself who is no other than Jesus so that these Pharisees are in reality opposing Moses. It was a neat turn.

7:38 In the church in the wilderness [en tēi ekklēsiāi en tēi erēmōi]. Better rendered “congregation” here as in Heb 2:12 (Ps 22:22), the people of Israel gathered at Mt. Sinai, the whole nation. Moses is here represented as receiving the law from an angel as in Heb 2:2; Ga 3:19 (De 33:2, LXX) and so was a mediator [mesitēs] or middle man between the angel and the people whereas Jesus is the Mediator of a better covenant (Heb 8:6). But Exodus does not speak of an angel. Living oracles [logia zōnta]. A [logion] is a little word (diminutive of [logos]. Common in the old Greek, LXX, Philo, in ecclesiastical writers for sayings of Christ, Papias (for instance) saying that Matthew wrote in Hebrew (Aramaic) “Logia of Jesus.” Oxyrhynchus papyri fragments called “Logia of Jesus” are of much interest though only fragments. The Greeks used it of the “oracles” or brief sayings from Delphi. In the N.T. the word occurs only four times (Ac 7:38; Ro 3:2; Heb 5:12; 1Pe 4:11). Here the participle [zōnta], living, is the same used by Peter (1Pe 2:4f.), stone [lithos] of Christ and Christians. The words from God to Moses are still “living” today. In 1Pe 4:11 the word is applied to one who speaks [logia theou] (oracles of God). In Ro 3:2 Paul refers to the substance of the law and of prophecy. In Heb 5:12 the writer means the substance of the Christian religious teaching.

7:39 To whom [hōi]. That is Moses, this Moses. Would not be [ouk ēthelēsan genesthai]. Aorist active, negative aorist, were unwilling to become [genesthai] obedient. Thrust him from them [apōsanto]. Indirect middle of the very verb used of the man (verse 27) who “thrust” Moses away from him. Turned back [estraphēsan]. Second aorist passive indicative of [strephō], to turn. They yearned after the fleshpots of Egypt and even the gods of Egypt. It is easy now to see why Stephen has patiently led his hearers through this story. He is getting ready for the home-thrust.

7:40 Gods which shall go before us [theous hoi proporeusontai hēmōn]. Ex 32:1. As guides and protectors, perhaps with some allusion to the pillar of fire and of cloud that had gone before them (Ex 13:21). The future indicative here with [hoi] (relative) expresses purpose. Ye wot not [ouk oidamen]. We do not know. How quickly they had forgotten both God and Moses while Moses was absent in the mount with God. Become of him [egeneto autōi]. Happened to him. “This” [houtos] here is a contemptuous allusion to Moses by the people.

7:41 They made a calf [emoschopoiēsan]. First aorist active indicative of [moschopoieō], here only in the N.T. and unknown elsewhere. The LXX (Ex 32:3) has [epoiēse moschon] from which phrase the word is evidently made. Aaron made the calf, but so did the people (Ex 32:35). The idol [tōi eidōlōi]. Stephen calls it by the right name. The people said it was their way of worshipping Jehovah! So the Egyptians worshipped the bull Apis at Memphis as the symbol of Osiris (the sun). They had another sacred bull Mnevis at Leontopolis. [Eidōlon] (from [eidos], form or figure) is the image or likeness of anything. The heathen worship the god through the image or idol. Rejoiced [euphrainonto]. Imperfect, middle, kept on rejoicing (Ex 32:6,18) or making merry.

7:42 Gave them up [paredōken]. First aorist active indicative of [paradidōmi]. This same form occurs three times like clods on a coffin in a grave in Ro 1:24, 26, 28 where Paul speaks of God giving the heathen up to their lusts. To serve the host of heaven [latreuein tēi stratiāi tou ouranou]. The verb [latreuō] is used of the worship of God (Mt 4:10) as well as of idols as here (from [latron], hire, [latris], hireling, then to serve). But the worship of the host of heaven (De 17:3; 2Ki 17:16; 21:3; 2Ch 33:3,5; Jer 8:2; 19:13) is Sabaism or worship of the host [stratia] of heaven (sun, moon, and stars) instead of the Lord of hosts. This star-worship greatly injured the Jews. In the book of the prophets [en biblōi tōn prophētōn]. That is the twelve minor prophets which the Jews counted as one book (cf. Ac 13:40). This quotation is from Am 5:25-27. The greater prophets were Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel. Slain beasts [sphagia]. Here only in the N.T. (from Am 5:25) [sphagē], slaughter, [sphazō], to slay.

7:43 The tabernacle of Moloch [tēn skēnēn tou Moloch]. Or tent of Moloch which they took up after each halt instead of the tabernacle of Jehovah. Moloch was the god of the Amorites to whom children were offered as live sacrifices, an ox-headed image with arms outstretched in which children were placed and hollow underneath so that fire could burn underneath. The star of the god Rephan [to astron tou theou Rompha]. Spelled also Romphan and Remphan. Supposed to be Coptic for the star Saturn to which the Egyptians, Arabs, and Phoenicians gave worship. But some scholars take the Hebrew Kiyyoon to mean statues and not a proper name at all, “statues of your gods” carried in procession, making “figures” [tupous] with both “tabernacle” and “star” which they carried in procession. I will carry [metoikiō]. Attic future of [metoikisō] from [metoikizō]. Beyond Babylon [epekeina Babulōnos]. The Hebrew and the LXX have “beyond Damascus.” An adverbial preposition [ep’ ekeina] with [merē] understood) used in the old Greek and the LXX with the ablative case and meaning “beyond.” Here only in the N.T. in quotation from Am 5:27.

7:44 The tabernacle of the testimony [hē skēnē tou marturiou]. Probably suggested by the mention of “the tabernacle of Moloch” (verse 43). See on Mt 17:4 for discussion of [skēnē] (from [skia], shadow, root [ska], to cover). This first sanctuary was not the temple, but the tent in the wilderness. “Stephen passes on from the conduct of the Israelites to his other argument that God is not necessarily worshipped in a particular spot” (Page). According to the figure [kata ton tupon]. According to the type or pattern. [Tupos] is from [tuptō], to strike, to smite, and is the print of the blow (Joh 20:25), then the figure formed by a blow or impression like our type, a model or example. Quoted from Ex 25:40. Common word in the old Greek. That he had seen [hon heōrakei]. Past perfect active of [horaō], to see (double reduplication).

7:45 Which [hēn]. Agreeing with [skēnēn], not with [tupon]. In their turn [diadexamenoi]. First aorist middle participle of [diadechomai], to receive through another, to receive in sucession or in turn. Late Greek, only here in N.T. Deissmann (Bible Studies, p. 115) argues from a second century B.C. papyrus that [diadochos] means rather deputy or court official than successor. With Joshua [meta Iēsou]. With Jesus, the Greek form of Joshua (contracted from Jehoshua, Mt 1:21), as in Heb 4:8. When they entered on the possession of the nations [en tēi kataschesei tōn ethnōn]. Literally “in (or at the time of) the possession of the nations.” See on 7:5 for the only other N.T. instance of [kataschesis]. Which [hōn]. The nations, genitive by attraction to case of [ethnōn]. Thrust out [exōsen]. First aorist active indicative of [exōtheō], to push out, common verb, here, only in N.T. save some MSS. in Ac 27:39.

7:46 Asked [ēitēsato]. Aorist middle (indirect) indicative, asked for himself (as a favour to himself). Cf. 2Sa 7:2f. A habitation [skēnōma]. Like Ps 132:5, but it was a house that David proposed to build (2Sa 7:2), not a tent [skēnē] which already existed. [Skēnōma] here means a more permanent abode [oikon], house, in verse 47), though from the same root as [skēnē].

7:48 Howbeit [all’]. By contrast with what Solomon did and David planned. Note emphatic position of “not” [all’ ouch], “But not does the Most High dwell.” The presence of the Most High is not confined in any building, even one so splendid as Solomon’s Temple as Solomon himself foresaw and acknowledged in his prayer (1Ki 8:27; 2Ch 6:18). In houses made with hands [en cheiropoiētois]. No word here for “houses” or “temples” in correct text [naois] temples in Textus Receptus). Literally, “In things made with hands” [cheir], hand, [poiētos], verbal adjective of [poieō]. It occurs in Mr 14:58 of the temple and of the sanctuary of Moab (Isa 16:12). It occurs also in Ac 7:24; Heb 9:11, 24; Eph 2:11. Common in the old Greek. The prophet [ho prophētēs]. Isa 66:1. Isaiah taught plainly that heaven is God’s throne.

7:49 What manner of house [Poion oikon]. What sort of a house? This interrogative is sometimes scornful as in 4:7; Lu 6:32ff. (Page). So Stephen shows by Isaiah that Solomon was right that the temple was not meant to “confine” God’s presence and that Jesus had rightly shown that God is a spirit and can be worshipped anywhere by any individual of any race or land. It is a tremendous argument for the universality and spirituality of Christianity free from the shackles of Jewish racial and national limitations, but its very strength only angered the Sanhedrin to desperation.

7:51 Stiffnecked [sklērotrachēloi]. From [sklēros] (hard) and [trachēlos], neck, both old words, but this compound only in the LXX and here alone in the N.T. Critics assume that Stephen was interrupted at this point because of the sharp tone of the speech. That may be true, but the natural climax is sufficient explanation. Uncircumcised in heart [aperitmētoi kardiais]. Late adjective common in LXX and here only in the N.T. Verbal of [peritemnō], to cut around and [a] privative. Both of these epithets are applied to the Jews in the O.T. (Ex 32:9; 33:3,5; 34:9; Le 26:41; De 9:6; Jer 6:10). [Kardiais] is locative plural like [ōsin] (ears), but some MSS. have genitive singular [kardias] (objective genitive). No epithet could have been more galling to these Pharisees than to be turned “uncircumcised in heart” (Ro 2:29). They had only the physical circumcision which was useless. Ye always [humeis aei]. Emphatic position of humeis and “always” looks backward over the history of their forefathers which Stephen had reviewed. Resist [antipiptete]. Old word to fall against, to rush against. Only here in the N.T., but used in the O.T. which is here quoted (Nu 27:14). Their fathers had made “external worship a substitute for spiritual obedience” (Furneaux). Stephen has shown how God had revealed himself gradually, the revelation sloping upward to Christ Jesus. “And as he saw his countrymen repeating the old mistake—clinging to the present and the material, while God was calling them to higher spiritual levels—and still, as ever, resisting the Holy Spirit, treating the Messiah as the patriarchs had treated Joseph, and the Hebrews Moses—the pity of it overwhelmed him, and his mingled grief and indignation broke out in words of fire, such as burned of old on the lips of the prophets” (Furneaux). Stephen, the accused, is now the accuser, and the situation becomes intolerable to the Sanhedrin.

7:52 Which of the prophets [tina tōn prophētōn]. Jesus (Lu 11:47; Mt 23:29-37) had charged them with this very thing. Cf. 2Ch 36:16. Which shewed before [prokataggeilantas]. The very prophets who foretold the coming of the Messiah their fathers killed. The coming [tēs eleuseōs]. Not in ancient Greek or LXX and only here in the N.T. (in a few late writers). Betrayers [prodotai]. Just like Judas Iscariot. He hurled this old biting word at them. In the N.T. only here and Lu 6:16; 2Ti 3:4. It cut like a knife. It is blunter than Peter in Ac 3:13. Murderers [phoneis]. The climax with this sharp word used of Barabbas (3:14).

7:53 Ye who [hoitines]. The very ones who, quippe qui, often in Acts when the persons are enlarged upon (8:15; 9:35; 10:41, 47). As it was ordained by angels [eis diatagas aggelōn]. About angels see on 7:38. [Diatagē] (from [diatassō], to arrange, appoint) occurs in late Greek, LXX, inscriptions, papyri, Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, pp. 89ff., and in N.T. only here and Ro 13:2. At (or as) the appointment of angels (cf. Mt 10:41; 12:41 for this use of [eis]. And kept it not [kai ouk ephulaxate]. Like a whipcracker these words cut to the quick. They gloried in possessing the law and openly violated it (Ro 2:23).

7:54 When they heard [akouontes]. Present active participle of [akouō], while hearing. They were cut to the heart [dieprionto tais kardiais]. See 5:33 where the same word and form (imperfect passive of [diapriō] is used of the effect of Peter’s speech on the Sadducees. Here Stephen had sent a saw through the hearts of the Pharisees that rasped them to the bone. They gnashed on him with their teeth [ebruchon tous odontas ep’ auton]. Imperfect (inchoative) active of [bruchō] (Attic [brukō], to bite with loud noise, to grind or gnash the teeth. Literally, They began to gnash their teeth at [ep’] him (just like a pack of hungry, snarling wolves). Stephen knew that it meant death for him.

7:55 And Jesus standing [kai Iēsoun hestōta]. Full of the Holy Spirit, gazing steadfastly into heaven, he saw God’s glory and Jesus “standing” as if he had risen to cheer the brave Stephen. Elsewhere (save verse 56 also) he is pictured as sitting at the right hand of God (the Session of Christ) as in Mt 26:64; Mr 16:19; Ac 2:34; Eph 1:20; Col 3:1; Heb 1:3.

7:56 Opened [diēnoigmenous]. Perfect passive predicate participle of [dianoignumi] (cf. Mt 3:16; Lu 3:21). The son of man [ton huion tou anthrōpou]. Elsewhere in the N.T. in Christ’s own words. Here Stephen may refer to the words of Jesus as preserved in Mt 26:64.

7:57 Stopped their ears [suneschon ta ōta autōn]. Second aorist active of [sunechō], to hold together. They held their ears together with their hands and affected to believe Stephen guilty of blasphemy (cf. Mt 26:65). Rushed upon him with one accord [hōrmēsan homothumadon ep’ auton]. Ingressive aorist active indicative of [hormaō], to rush impetuously as the hogs did down the cliff when the demons entered them (Lu 8:33). No vote was taken by the Sanhedrin. No scruple was raised about not having the right to put him to death (Joh 8:31). It may have taken place after Pilate’s recall and before his successor came or Pilate, if there, just connived at such an incident that did not concern Rome. At any rate it was mob violence like modern lynching that took the law into the hands of the Sanhedrin without further formalities. Out of the city [ek tēs poleōs]. To keep from defiling the place with blood. But they sought to kill Paul as soon as they got him out of the temple area (Ac 21:30f.). Stoned [elithoboloun]. Imperfect active indicative of [lithoboleō], began to stone, from [lithobolos] [lithos], stone, [ballō], to throw), late Greek verb, several times in the N.T. as Lu 13:34. Stoning was the Jewish punishment for blasphemy (Le 24:14-16). The witnesses [hoi martures]. The false testifiers against Stephen suborned by the Pharisees (Ac 6:11,13). These witnesses had the privilege of casting the first stones (De 13:10; 17:7) against the first witness for Christ with death (martyr in our modern sense of the word). At the feet of a young man named Saul [para tous podas neaniou kaloumenou Saulou]. Beside [para] the feet. Our first introduction to the man who became the greatest of all followers of Jesus Christ. Evidently he was not one of the “witnesses” against Stephen, for he was throwing no stones at him. But evidently he was already a leader in the group of Pharisees. We know from later hints from Saul (Paul) himself that he had been a pupil of Gamaliel (Ac 22:3). Gamaliel, as the Pharisaic leader in the Sanhedrin, was probably on hand to hear the accusations against Stephen by the Pharisees. But, if so, he does not raise his voice against this mob violence. Saul does not seem to be aware that he is going contrary to the views of his master, though pupils often go further than their teachers.

7:59 They stoned [elithoboloun]. Same verb and tense repeated, they kept on stoning, they kept it up as he was calling upon the Lord Jesus and making direct prayer to him as “Lord Jesus” [Kurie Iēsou]. Receive my spirit [dexai to pneuma mou]. Aorist middle imperative, urgency, receive it now. Many have followed Stephen into death with these words upon their dying lips. See, 9:14, 21; 22:16.

7:60 Kneeled down [theis ta gonata]. Second aorist active participle of [tithēmi], placing the knees (on the ground). This idiom is not in the old Greek for kneeling, but Luke has it five times (Lu 22:41; Ac 7:60; 9:40; 22:36; 21:5) and Mark once (15:19). Jesus was standing at the right hand of God and Stephen knelt before him in worship and called on him in prayer. Lay not this sin to their charge [mē stēsēis autois tautēn tēn hamartian]. First aorist (ingressive) active subjunctive with [], regular Greek idiom, Place not to them or against them (dative [autois] this sin. The very spirit of Jesus towards his enemies as he died upon the Cross (Lu 23:34). He fell asleep [ekoimēthē]. First aorist passive indicative of [koimaō], to put to sleep. Old verb and the metaphor of sleep for death is common in all languages, but it is peculiarly appropriate here as Jesus used it of Lazarus. See also Ac 13:36; 1Co 15:18, etc. Our word cemetery [koimētērion] is the sleeping place of the dead. Knowling calls [ekoimēthē] here “a picture word of rest and calmness which stands in dramatic contrast to the rage and violence of the scene.”

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