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Text -- Acts 26:1-18 (NET)

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Context
Paul Offers His Defense
26:1 So Agrippa said to Paul, “You have permission to speak for yourself.” Then Paul held out his hand and began his defense: 26:2 “Regarding all the things I have been accused of by the Jews, King Agrippa, I consider myself fortunate that I am about to make my defense before you today, 26:3 because you are especially familiar with all the customs and controversial issues of the Jews. Therefore I ask you to listen to me patiently. 26:4 Now all the Jews know the way I lived from my youth, spending my life from the beginning among my own people and in Jerusalem. 26:5 They know, because they have known me from time past, if they are willing to testify, that according to the strictest party of our religion, I lived as a Pharisee. 26:6 And now I stand here on trial because of my hope in the promise made by God to our ancestors, 26:7 a promise that our twelve tribes hope to attain as they earnestly serve God night and day. Concerning this hope the Jews are accusing me, Your Majesty! 26:8 Why do you people think it is unbelievable that God raises the dead? 26:9 Of course, I myself was convinced that it was necessary to do many things hostile to the name of Jesus the Nazarene. 26:10 And that is what I did in Jerusalem: Not only did I lock up many of the saints in prisons by the authority I received from the chief priests, but I also cast my vote against them when they were sentenced to death. 26:11 I punished them often in all the synagogues and tried to force them to blaspheme. Because I was so furiously enraged at them, I went to persecute them even in foreign cities. 26:12 “While doing this very thing, as I was going to Damascus with authority and complete power from the chief priests, 26:13 about noon along the road, Your Majesty, I saw a light from heaven, brighter than the sun, shining everywhere around me and those traveling with me. 26:14 When we had all fallen to the ground, I heard a voice saying to me in Aramaic, ‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? You are hurting yourself by kicking against the goads.’ 26:15 So I said, ‘Who are you, Lord?’ And the Lord replied, ‘I am Jesus whom you are persecuting. 26:16 But get up and stand on your feet, for I have appeared to you for this reason, to designate you in advance as a servant and witness to the things you have seen and to the things in which I will appear to you. 26:17 I will rescue you from your own people and from the Gentiles, to whom I am sending you 26:18 to open their eyes so that they turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a share among those who are sanctified by faith in me.’
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Agrippa King Herod Agrippa II; a great-grandson of Herod the Great
 · Damascus a city-state in Syria, located near Mt. Hermon at the edge of the Syrian desert (OS),a town near Mt. Hermon at the edge of the Syrian desert (OS)
 · Gentile a non-Jewish person
 · Hebrew Language an ancient Jewish language used in the Old Testament
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin
 · Jews the people descended from Israel
 · Nazareth a town in lower Galilee about halfway between the Sea of Galilee and the Mediterranean Sea
 · Pharisee a religious group or sect of the Jews
 · Satan a person, male (evil angelic),an angel that has rebelled against God
 · Saul the sixth king of Edom,son of Simeon and a Canaanite woman,son of Uzziah of Kohath son of Levi


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Paul | Defense | ANANIAS (1) | Readings, Select | Minister | Agrippa II. | Self-defense | FESTUS; PORCIUS | ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, 8-12 | Prisoners | Court | Zeal | PAUL, THE APOSTLE, 4 | Damascus | Converts | Testimony | APOSTLE | Missions | Hope | Immortality | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Act 26:1 Or “and began to speak in his own defense.”

NET Notes: Act 26:2 See the note on King Agrippa in 25:13.

NET Notes: Act 26:3 BDAG 218 s.v. δέομαι states, “In our lit. only w. the mng. to ask for something pleadingly, ask, request,” a...

NET Notes: Act 26:4 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

NET Notes: Act 26:5 See the note on Pharisee in 5:34.

NET Notes: Act 26:6 Or “forefathers”; Grk “fathers.”

NET Notes: Act 26:7 Grk “O King!”

NET Notes: Act 26:8 Grk “if.” The first-class conditional construction, which assumes reality for the sake of argument, has been translated as indirect discou...

NET Notes: Act 26:9 Grk “I thought to myself.” BDAG 255 s.v. δοκέω 2.a has “ἔδοξα ἐμα...

NET Notes: Act 26:10 Grk “when they were being executed”; but the context supports the sentencing rather than the execution itself (cf. L&N 30.103).

NET Notes: Act 26:11 Or “I pursued them even as far as foreign cities.”

NET Notes: Act 26:12 L&N 37.40 s.v. ἐπιτροπή states, “the full authority to carry out an assignment or commission ̵...

NET Notes: Act 26:13 The word “everywhere” has been supplied in the translation to clarify the meaning of περιλάμψα...

NET Notes: Act 26:14 Sayings which contain the imagery used here (kicking against the goads) were also found in Greek writings; see Pindar, Pythians 2.94-96; Euripides, Ba...

NET Notes: Act 26:15 Grk “said.”

NET Notes: Act 26:16 ‡ Some mss read “of the things in which you have seen me.” The accusative object με (me, “me”) is found after ...

NET Notes: Act 26:17 The antecedent of the relative pronoun is probably both the Jews (“your own people”) and the Gentiles, indicating the comprehensive commis...

NET Notes: Act 26:18 Or “and an inheritance.”

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