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Text -- Acts 16:29 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
16:29 Calling for lights, the jailer rushed in and fell down trembling at the feet of Paul and Silas.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Paul a man from Tarsus who persecuted the church but became a missionary and writer of 13 Epistles
 · Silas a man who went with Peter and Paul on separate missionary journeys


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Silas | Scourging | Readings, Select | Prisoners | Philippi | Paul | PHILIPPIANS, THE EPISTLE TO THE | PERSECUTION | PAUL, THE APOSTLE, 5 | Minister | Macedonia | LAW IN THE NEW TESTAMENT | Jailer | God | Family | Criminals | Conviction | Converts | Conversion | ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, 13-OUTLINE | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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 16:29 - -- Trembling for fear ( entromos genomenos ). "Becoming terrified."The adjective entromos (in terror) occurs in N.T. only here and Act 7:32; Heb 12:21...

Trembling for fear ( entromos genomenos ).

"Becoming terrified."The adjective entromos (in terror) occurs in N.T. only here and Act 7:32; Heb 12:21.

Robertson: Act 16:29 - -- Fell down ( prosepesen ). Second aorist active indicative of prospiptō , old verb. An act of worship as Cornelius before Peter (Act 10:25), when pr...

Fell down ( prosepesen ).

Second aorist active indicative of prospiptō , old verb. An act of worship as Cornelius before Peter (Act 10:25), when prosekunēsen is used.

Vincent: Act 16:29 - -- A light ( φῶτα ) Rev., more correctly, lights . Several lamps, in order to search everywhere.

A light ( φῶτα )

Rev., more correctly, lights . Several lamps, in order to search everywhere.

Vincent: Act 16:29 - -- Sprang in See on ran in, Act 14:14.

Sprang in

See on ran in, Act 14:14.

JFB: Act 16:29-30 - -- How graphic this rapid succession of minute details, evidently from the parties themselves, the prisoners and the jailer, who would talk over every fe...

How graphic this rapid succession of minute details, evidently from the parties themselves, the prisoners and the jailer, who would talk over every feature of the scene once and again, in which the hand of the Lord had been so marvellously seen.

Clarke: Act 16:29 - -- He called for a light - That he might see how things stood, and whether the words of Paul were true; for on this his personal safety depended

He called for a light - That he might see how things stood, and whether the words of Paul were true; for on this his personal safety depended

Clarke: Act 16:29 - -- Came trembling - Terrified by the earthquake, and feeling the danger to which his own life was exposed

Came trembling - Terrified by the earthquake, and feeling the danger to which his own life was exposed

Clarke: Act 16:29 - -- Fell down before Paul and Silas - The persons whom a few hours before he, according to his office, treated with so much asperity, if not cruelty, as...

Fell down before Paul and Silas - The persons whom a few hours before he, according to his office, treated with so much asperity, if not cruelty, as some have supposed; though, by the way, it does not appear that he exceeded his orders in his treatment of the apostles.

Calvin: Act 16:29 - -- 29.Being astonished, he fell down This keeper was no less brought under with fear to show obedience to God than with the miracle prepared. − 215 He...

29.Being astonished, he fell down This keeper was no less brought under with fear to show obedience to God than with the miracle prepared. − 215 Hereby it appeareth what a good thing it is for men to be thrown down from their pride, that they may learn to submit themselves to God. He was hardened in his superstitions; therefore, he might with a lofty stomach − 216 have despised whatsoever Paul and Silas should have said, whom he had reproachfully − 217 thrust into the innermost part of the prison. Now, fear maketh him apt to be taught and gentle. Therefore, so often as the Lord shall strike us or cast us down, − 218 let us know that this is done that we may be brought in [to] order from our too much haughtiness. −

But it is a wonder that he was not reproved for falling down at their feet. For why did Paul wink at that which (as Luke recordeth) Peter would not suffer in Cornelius? ( Act 10:26.) I answer, that Paul doth therefore bear with the keeper, because he knoweth that he was not moved with superstition, but with fear of God’s judgment so to humble himself. It was a kind of worship common enough; but chiefly among the Romans it was a solemn thing when they would humbly crave any thing, or crave pardon, they fell down at their knees to whom they put their supplication. Therefore, there was no cause why Paul should be displeased with a man whom he saw simply humbled of God. For if there had been any thing committed contrary to the glory of God, he had not forgotten that zeal which he showed before among the men of Lycaonia. Therefore, by his silence, we gather that in this kind of worship there was nothing contrary to godliness or the glory of God. −

TSK: Act 16:29 - -- and came : Act 9:5, Act 9:6, Act 24:25; Psa 99:1, Psa 119:120; Isa 66:2, Isa 66:5; Jer 5:22, Jer 10:10; Dan 6:26 and fell : Isa 60:14; Rev 3:9

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Act 16:29 - -- Then he called for a light - Greek: lights, in the plural. Probably several torches were brought by his attendants. And came trembling - ...

Then he called for a light - Greek: lights, in the plural. Probably several torches were brought by his attendants.

And came trembling - Alarmed at the earthquake; amazed that the prisoners were still there; confounded at the calmness of Paul and Silas and overwhelmed at the proof of the presence of God. Compare Jer 5:22, "Fear ye not me, saith the Lord? will ye not tremble at my presence? etc."

And fell down - This was an act of profound reverence. See the notes on Mat 2:11. It is evident that he regarded them as the favorites of God, and was con strained to recognize them as religious teachers.

Poole: Act 16:29 - -- He called for a light or lights, which prisons are not usually without. Came trembling: what a sudden and great change can God make! he comes tremb...

He called for a light or lights, which prisons are not usually without.

Came trembling: what a sudden and great change can God make! he comes trembling to those feet which he had put into the stocks so lately.

Fell down before Paul and Silas by which he would give a civil respect unto them, it being an ordinary rite amongst the Eastern nations (as endless examples in Scripture witness) to pay their respects; and from them it spread itself into Greece: which respect Paul and Silas do not refuse, because it was barely civil, and did show the humility aud brokenness of the jailer’ s heart. Yet Peter would not accept of the like from Cornelius, Act 10:25,26 , because it was more than a bare civil respect which Cornelius would have given him.

Gill: Act 16:29 - -- Then he called for a light,.... Or "lights"; he ordered his servants to bring in some candles; the Syriac version renders it, "he lighted a light for ...

Then he called for a light,.... Or "lights"; he ordered his servants to bring in some candles; the Syriac version renders it, "he lighted a light for himself"; and the Ethiopic version, "he brought a light": whilst he was under the influence of Satan, and going about a work of darkness, namely, to destroy himself, he was in no concern for a light; but when he was delivered from the temptation and snare, he calls for light:

and sprang in; leaped in at once, in all haste, into the inner prison:

and came trembling; not as before, because of the prisoners and their escape; nor merely or so much on account of the earthquake, though the terror of that might not be as yet over; but chiefly through the horror of his conscience, and the dreadful sense he had of himself as a sinner, and of his lost state and condition by nature; the law had entered into his conscience, and had worked wrath there; the Spirit of God had convinced him of his sin and misery, and there was a fearful looking for of fiery indignation in him:

and fell down before Paul and Silas; not in a way of religious adoration, for they would never have admitted that; but in token of civil respect unto them, and of his great veneration for them, as was the manner of the eastern people; the Syriac version renders it, "he fell down at their feet", and so in Velesius's readings; at those feet, which he had before made fast in the stocks: a strange change and sudden alteration this! what is it that almighty power and efficacious grace cannot do?

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Act 16:29 Fell down. The earthquake and the freeing of the prisoners showed that God’s power was present. Such power could only be recognized. The open do...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Act 16:1-40 - --1 Paul having circumcised Timothy,7 and being called by the Spirit from one country to another,14 converts Lydia,16 and casts out a spirit of divinati...

Combined Bible: Act 16:29 - --30. As soon as he could collect his senses, he recollected that the calm speaker who had called to him had been preaching salvation in the name of the...

Maclaren: Act 16:19-34 - --The Riot At Philippi And when her masters saw that the hope of their gains was gone, they caught Paul and Silas, and drew them into the market place ...

MHCC: Act 16:25-34 - --The consolations of God to his suffering servants are neither few nor small. How much more happy are true Christians than their prosperous enemies! As...

Matthew Henry: Act 16:25-34 - -- We have here the designs of the persecutors of Paul and Silas baffled and broken. I. The persecutors designed to dishearten and discourage the preac...

Barclay: Act 16:25-40 - --If Lydia came from the top end of the social scale and the slave-girl from the bottom, the Roman jailer was one of the sturdy middle class who made u...

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 16:6--19:21 - --C. The extension of the church to the Aegean shores 16:6-19:20 The missionary outreach narrated in this ...

Constable: Act 16:11--17:16 - --2. The ministry in Macedonia 16:11-17:15 Luke recorded Paul's ministry in Philippi, Thessalonica...

Constable: Act 16:11-40 - --Ministry in Philippi 16:11-40 Luke devoted more space to Paul's evangelizing in Philippi than he did to the apostle's activities in any other city on ...

College: Act 16:1-40 - --ACTS 16 3. The Visit to Derbe and Lystra (16:1-4) 1 He came to Derbe and then to Lystra, where a disciple named Timothy lived, whose mother was a Je...

McGarvey: Act 16:29-30 - --29, 30. As soon as he could collect his senses, he recollected that the calm speaker who had called to him had been preaching salvation in the name of...

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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 16 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Act 16:1, Paul having circumcised Timothy, Act 16:7, and being called by the Spirit from one country to another, Act 16:14. converts Lydi...

Poole: Acts 16 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 16

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 16 (Chapter Introduction) (Act 16:1-5) Paul takes Timothy to be his assistant. (Act 16:6-15) Paul proceeds to Macedonia, The conversion of Lydia. (Act 16:16-24) An evil spiri...

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 16 (Chapter Introduction) It is some rebuke to Barnabas that after he left Paul we hear no more of him, of what he did or suffered for Christ. But Paul, as he was recommende...

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 16 (Chapter Introduction) A Son In The Faith (Act_16:1-5) The Gospel Comes To Europe (Act_16:6-10) Europe's First Convert (Act_16:11-15) The Demented Slave-Girl (Act_16:16...

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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