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Text -- Acts 14:16 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
14:16 In past generations he allowed all the nations to go their own ways,
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Zeal | WAY | REVELATION, 1-2 | Paul | PHILOSOPHY | PAUL, THE APOSTLE, 5 | Minister | Lystra | Lycaonia | LOIS | Homage | God | Gentiles | GALATIANS, EPISTLE TO THE | FORGIVENESS | Barnabas | ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, 8-12 | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Combined Bible , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Act 14:16 - -- In the generations gone by ( en tais parōichēmenais geneais ). Perfect middle participle from paroichomai , to go by, old verb, here alone in the...

In the generations gone by ( en tais parōichēmenais geneais ).

Perfect middle participle from paroichomai , to go by, old verb, here alone in the N.T.

Robertson: Act 14:16 - -- Suffered ( eiasen ). Constative aorist active indicative of eaō (note syllabic augment). Paul here touches God in history as he did just before i...

Suffered ( eiasen ).

Constative aorist active indicative of eaō (note syllabic augment). Paul here touches God in history as he did just before in creation. God’ s hand is on the history of all the nations (Gentile and Jew), only with the Gentiles he withdrew the restraints of his grace in large measure (Act 17:30; Rom 1:24, Rom 1:26, Rom 1:28), judgment enough for their sins.

Robertson: Act 14:16 - -- To walk in their ways ( poreuesthai tais hodois autōn ). Present middle infinitive, to go on walking, with locative case without en . This philosop...

To walk in their ways ( poreuesthai tais hodois autōn ).

Present middle infinitive, to go on walking, with locative case without en . This philosophy of history does not mean that God was ignorant or unconcerned. He was biding his time in patience.

Vincent: Act 14:16 - -- Times ( γενεαῖς ) More correctly, generations, as Rev.

Times ( γενεαῖς )

More correctly, generations, as Rev.

Wesley: Act 14:16 - -- He prevents their objection, "But if these things are so, we should have heard the in from our fathers." Suffered - An awful judgment, all nations - T...

He prevents their objection, "But if these things are so, we should have heard the in from our fathers." Suffered - An awful judgment, all nations - The multitude of them that err does not turn error into truth, to walk in their own ways - The idolatries which they had chosen.

JFB: Act 14:14-18 - -- Barnabas is put first here, apparently as having been styled the "Jupiter" of the company.

Barnabas is put first here, apparently as having been styled the "Jupiter" of the company.

JFB: Act 14:14-18 - -- Rather (according to the true reading), "ran forth."

Rather (according to the true reading), "ran forth."

JFB: Act 14:14-18 - -- This was something more than that abhorrence of idolatry which took possession of the Jews as a nation from the time of the Babylonish captivity: it w...

This was something more than that abhorrence of idolatry which took possession of the Jews as a nation from the time of the Babylonish captivity: it was that delicate sensibility to everything which affects the honor of God which Christianity, giving us in God a reconciled Father, alone can produce; making the Christian instinctively feel himself to be wounded in all dishonor done to God, and filling him with mingled horror and grief when such gross insults as this are offered to him.

JFB: Act 14:16 - -- That is, without extending to them the revelation vouchsafed to the seed of Abraham, and the grace attending it; compare Act 17:30; 1Co 1:21. Yet not ...

That is, without extending to them the revelation vouchsafed to the seed of Abraham, and the grace attending it; compare Act 17:30; 1Co 1:21. Yet not without guilt on their part was this privation (Rom 1:20, &c.).

Clarke: Act 14:16 - -- Who in times past suffered all nations, etc. - The words παντα τα εθνη, which we here translate, all nations, should be rendered, all th...

Who in times past suffered all nations, etc. - The words παντα τα εθνη, which we here translate, all nations, should be rendered, all the Gentiles, merely to distinguish them from the Jewish people: who having a revelation, were not left to walk in their own ways; but the heathens, who had not a revelation, were suffered to form their creed, and mode of worship, according to their own caprice.

Calvin: Act 14:16 - -- 16.In times past Because the men of Lystra might object that that God was unknown hitherto, Paul and Barnabas prevent them and say, that all men wand...

16.In times past Because the men of Lystra might object that that God was unknown hitherto, Paul and Barnabas prevent them and say, that all men wandered indeed in darkness, and that all mankind was stricken with blindness, but that they deny that any prejudice must be made − 34 according to the perverse ignorance of the world. These were two no small lets for the unbelievers, long antiquity of time, and the consent almost of all nations. Paul and Barnabas remove both in this place, If, say they, men have erred many years, [ages,] and if the world have wandered without reason and judgment, let not, therefore, the truth of God, when it appeareth, be less precious to you. For seeing that it is eternal, and is not changed, it is an unmeet thing that the long prescription of years should be set against it. They prove that there is no more aid or patronage to be found in the number of men. There is no cause (say they) why the conspiracy of all the whole world should keep you from coming to the right way. Blindness hath got the upper hand among all people; but God doth now (appear and) give light to you. Therefore, your eyes must be open, and you must not slumber and sleep in darkness, though all people have been drowned therein hitherto. −

Their ways If he had only said that men were deceived until that time through God’s sufferance, we might easily gather thereby that all men can do nothing else but err, so long as they be not governed of God. Yet he speaketh far more plainly when he calleth errors the ways of men. For we are plainly taught by this what the wisdom and understanding of man’s mind can do in beholding and keeping the way of salvation. All people [nations] (saith he) have walked in their own ways; that is, they have wandered in darkness and death. It is all one as if he should say, that there is no sparkle of true reason in all the whole world. −

Therefore, there is but one rule of true godliness, that is, that the faithful, casting from them all confidence in their own wit, do submit themselves to God. For the ways of men are now as they were in times past; and the examples of all times teach how miserably blind those men be who have not the word of God to give them light, though they think they can pass other men in quickness of sight. Immediately after the beginning of the world, the more part fell away unto diverse superstitions and wicked worshippings. Whence came that, save only because it pleased them to follow their own imaginations? When it might have seemed that the world was purged with the flood, it fell again [relapsed] straightway to the same vices. Therefore, there is nothing more deadly than to lean to our own wisdom. −

But Paul and Barnabas show no cause here why the Lord suffered the world to err so long; and assuredly we must count the will of God alone the chiefest law of equity. God hath always a good reason for his worlds; but because it is oftentimes hid from us, it is our duty reverently to wonder at his secret counsel. We must, indeed, confess that the world was worthy of [deserved] such destruction; but there can no other reason be brought why the Lord had mercy rather on one age than on another, save only because it seemed good to him that it should be so. Therefore, Paul calleth that time which was appointed of God for preaching the gospel, the time of fullness, ( Gal 4:4,) lest any other opportunity be sought. And we must remember that which we had in the first chapter, that it is not for us to know the times and seasons which the Father hath placed in his own power. So that the cavil of the Papists is refuted, who say that it cannot be that God suffered his Church to err so long. For whence, I pray you, came the Gentiles but from the ark of Noah, when there was a certain singular purity of the Church? ( Gen 9:9.) Also, the posterity of holy Shem, together with others, did degenerate. Yea, Israel, the peculiar people of the Lord, was also left for a long time. Wherefore, it is no marvel if God did punish the contempt of his word with the same blindness under the reign of his Son as he did in times past. −

Defender: Act 14:16 - -- God was not unconcerned with this pagan ignorance, but was patient. As Paul later told the Athenians, "God winked at" it for a time (Act 17:30). The p...

God was not unconcerned with this pagan ignorance, but was patient. As Paul later told the Athenians, "God winked at" it for a time (Act 17:30). The pagans did have ample evidence, in both creation and conscience, of the true God (Rom 1:20; Rom 2:15), as well as the witness from the Jews in their midst, so they were "without excuse" (Rom 1:20) if they did not acknowledge Him. In fact many had, indeed, already come to "fear God" (Act 13:16, Act 13:26) and listen to His Word in the synagogues (Act 13:42), even though they had been reluctant to become proselytes to the full Jewish religion. It was such as these latter who most readily responded to the gospel of Christ when they finally heard it."

TSK: Act 14:16 - -- suffered : Act 17:30; Psa 81:12, Psa 147:20; Hos 4:17; Rom 1:21-25, Rom 1:28; Eph 2:12; 1Pe 4:3

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Act 14:16 - -- Who in times past - Previous to the gospel; in past ages. Suffered all nations - Permitted all nations; that is, all Gentiles, Act 17:30....

Who in times past - Previous to the gospel; in past ages.

Suffered all nations - Permitted all nations; that is, all Gentiles, Act 17:30. "And the times of this ignorance God winked at."

To walk in their own ways - To conduct themselves without the restraints and instructions of a written law. They were permitted to follow their own reason and passions, and their own system of religion. God gave them no written laws, and sent to them no messengers. Why he did this we cannot determine. It might have been, among other reasons, to show to the world conclusively:

(1) The insufficiency of reason to guide people in the matters of religion. The experiment was made under the most favorable circumstances. The most enlightened nations, the Greeks and Romans, were left to pursue the inquiry, and failed no less than the most degraded tribes of people. The trial was made for four thousand years, and attended with the same results everywhere.

\caps1 (2) i\caps0 t showed the need of revelation to guide man.

\caps1 (3) i\caps0 t evinced, beyond the possibility of mistake, the depravity of man. In all nations, in all circumstances, people had shown the same alienation from God. By suffering them to walk in their own ways, it was seen that those ways were sin, and that some power more than human was necessary to bring people back to God.

Poole: Act 14:16 - -- There were two main objections which these heathen idolaters might make against the gospel, and the worship of the true God: and they are, first, fr...

There were two main objections which these heathen idolaters might make against the gospel, and the worship of the true God: and they are, first, from the antiquity, secondly, from the universality, of that false worship; both which the apostle here gives a critical answer unto, telling them, that the reason why so many, and for so long a time had followed idols, was from the just judgment of God upon them, as Psa 81:12 Rom 1:24,28 .

Their own ways ways of our choosing, and not of God’ s commanding, are false ways.

Haydock: Act 14:16 - -- He left not himself without testimony. Inasmuch as the Gentiles had always the light of reason, and such lights, that the created things of this wor...

He left not himself without testimony. Inasmuch as the Gentiles had always the light of reason, and such lights, that the created things of this world, and from the visible effects of God's providence, they might have come to the knowledge of the true God, the creator of all things. See Romans chap. i. (Witham) ---

God did not leave himself without testimony among the Gentiles. He did not leave them without the means of discovering the way which led to him. They had the law of nature engraved in their hearts, the knowledge of good and evil, &c. (Menochius) ---

Therefore they were inexcusable, if they did not know him. The invisible things of God, his eternal divinity might have been known to them from the consideration of the visible creation. (Romans i. 20.)

Gill: Act 14:16 - -- Who in times past,.... For many hundred years past; even ever since God chose and separated the people of Israel from the rest of the nations, to be a...

Who in times past,.... For many hundred years past; even ever since God chose and separated the people of Israel from the rest of the nations, to be a peculiar people to himself: from that time he

suffered all nations to walk in their own ways; of ignorance, superstition, and idolatry; which they devised, and chose, and delighted in: not that he gave them any licence to walk in these ways, without being chargeable with sin, or with impunity; but he left them to themselves, to the dim light and law of nature, and gave them no written law, nor any external revelation of his mind and will; nor did he send any prophets or ministers of his unto them, to show them the evil of their ways, and turn them from them, and direct them to the true God, and the right way of worshipping him; but left them to take their own methods, and pursue the imagination of their own hearts: but the apostle suggests, that the case was now altered, and God had sent them and other ministers of his, among all nations of the world, to protest against their superstition and idolatry; and to reclaim them from their evil ways, and to direct them to the true and living God, and his worship, and to preach salvation by his Son Jesus Christ.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Act 14:16 Or “all the Gentiles” (in Greek the word for “nation” and “Gentile” is the same). The plural here alludes to the v...

Geneva Bible: Act 14:16 ( 5 ) Who in times past ( g ) suffered all nations to walk in their own ways. ( 5 ) Custom, be it ever so old, does not excuse the idolaters. ( g ) ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Act 14:1-28 - --1 Paul and Barnabas are persecuted from Iconium.8 At Lystra Paul heals a cripple, whereupon they are reputed as gods.19 Paul is stoned.21 They pass th...

Combined Bible: Act 14:16 - --notes one verse 14     

Maclaren: Act 14:11-22 - --Deified And Stoned And when the people saw what Paul had done, they lifted up their voices saying in the speech of Lycaonia, The gods are come down t...

MHCC: Act 14:8-18 - --All things are possible to those that believe. When we have faith, that most precious gift of God, we shall be delivered from the spiritual helplessne...

Matthew Henry: Act 14:8-18 - -- In these verses we have, I. A miraculous cure wrought by Paul at Lystra upon a cripple that had been lame from his birth, such a one as was miraculo...

Barclay: Act 14:8-18 - --At Lystra Paul and Barnabas were involved in a strange incident. The explanation of their being taken for gods lies in the legendary history of Lycao...

Constable: Act 9:32--Rom 1:1 - --III. THE WITNESS TO THE UTTERMOST PART OF THE EARTH 9:32--28:31 Luke next recorded the church's expansion beyond...

Constable: Act 12:25--16:6 - --B. The extension of the church to Cyprus and Asia Minor 12:25-16:5 Luke recorded that Jesus came to brin...

Constable: Act 13:13--14:26 - --3. The mission to Asia Minor 13:13-14:25 Having evangelized Barnabas' homeland the missionaries ...

Constable: Act 14:8-20 - --Ministry in Lystra 14:8-20a 14:8 Like Antioch of Pisidia, Lystra (modern Zoldera) was a Roman colony.580 It was the most eastern of the fortified citi...

College: Act 14:1-28 - --ACTS 14 8. The Visit to Iconium (14:1-7) 1 At Iconium Paul and Barnabas went as usual into the Jewish synagogue. There they spoke so effectively tha...

McGarvey: Act 14:14-18 - --14-18. Nothing could have been more unexpected or more painful to the humble missionaries, than a demonstration of this kind. The purpose of the pries...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Acts (Book Introduction) THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES By Way of Introduction But for the Acts we should know nothing of the early apostolic period save what is told in the Epi...

JFB: Acts (Book Introduction) THIS book is to the Gospels what the fruit is to the tree that bears it. In the Gospels we see the corn of wheat falling into the ground and dying: in...

JFB: Acts (Outline) INTRODUCTION--LAST DAYS OF OUR LORD UPON EARTH--HIS ASCENSION. (Act 1:1-11) RETURN OF THE ELEVEN TO JERUSALEM--PROCEEDINGS IN THE UPPER ROOM TILL PEN...

TSK: Acts (Book Introduction) The Acts of the Apostles is a most valuable portion of Divine revelation; and, independently of its universal reception in the Christian church, as an...

TSK: Acts 14 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Act 14:1, Paul and Barnabas are persecuted from Iconium; Act 14:8, At Lystra Paul heals a cripple, whereupon they are reputed as gods; Ac...

Poole: Acts 14 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 14

MHCC: Acts (Book Introduction) This book unites the Gospels to the Epistles. It contains many particulars concerning the apostles Peter and Paul, and of the Christian church from th...

MHCC: Acts 14 (Chapter Introduction) (Act 14:1-7) Paul and Barnabas at Iconium. (Act 14:8-18) A cripple healed at Lystra, The people would have sacrificed to Paul and Barnabas. (Act 14:...

Matthew Henry: Acts (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Acts of the Apostles We have with an abundant satisfaction seen the foundation of our holy religion...

Matthew Henry: Acts 14 (Chapter Introduction) We have, in this chapter, a further account of the progress of the gospel, by the ministry of Paul and Barnabas among the Gentiles; it goes on conq...

Barclay: Acts (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES A Precious Book In one sense Acts is the most important book in the New Testament. It is the simple truth t...

Barclay: Acts 14 (Chapter Introduction) On To Iconium (Act_14:1-7) The Courage Of Paul (Act_14:19-20) Confirming The Church (Act_14:21-28)

Constable: Acts (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title "Acts of the Apostles" is very ancient. The Anti-Marcioni...

Constable: Acts (Outline) Outline I. The witness in Jerusalem 1:1-6:7 A. The founding of the church 1:1-2:46 ...

Constable: Acts Acts Bibliography Albright, William Foxwell. The Archaeology of Palestine. 1949. Revised ed. Pelican Archaeolog...

Haydock: Acts (Book Introduction) THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES. INTRODUCTION. St. Luke, who had published his gospel, wrote also a second volume, which, from the first ages, hath bee...

Gill: Acts (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ACTS This book, in some copies, is called, "The Acts of the holy Apostles". It contains an history of the ministry and miracles of ...

College: Acts (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION As early as the second century the title "The Acts of the Apostles" was given to this document. Before that time the work probably circu...

College: Acts (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE CHURCH IN JERUSALEM - 1:1-8:1a A. INTRODUCTION OF THE BOOK - 1:1-3 B. THE COMMISSIONING OF THE APOSTLES - 1:4-8 C. THE ASCENSI...

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