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Text -- Acts 7:41 (NET)

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Context
7:41 At that time they made an idol in the form of a calf, brought a sacrifice to the idol, and began rejoicing in the works of their hands.
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Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Act 7:41 - -- They made a calf ( emoschopoiēsan ). First aorist active indicative of moschopoieō , here only in the N.T. and unknown elsewhere. The lxx (Exodus...

They made a calf ( emoschopoiēsan ).

First aorist active indicative of moschopoieō , here only in the N.T. and unknown elsewhere. The lxx (Exodus 32:3) has epoiēse moschon from which phrase the word is evidently made. Aaron made the calf, but so did the people (Exo 32:35).

Robertson: Act 7:41 - -- The idol ( tōi eidōlōi ). Stephen calls it by the right name. The people said it was their way of worshipping Jehovah! So the Egyptians worship...

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.

Robertson: Act 7:41 - -- Rejoiced ( euphrainonto ). Imperfect, middle, kept on rejoicing (Exo 32:6, Exo 32:18) or making merry.

Rejoiced ( euphrainonto ).

Imperfect, middle, kept on rejoicing (Exo 32:6, Exo 32:18) or making merry.

Vincent: Act 7:41 - -- They made a calf ( ἐμοσχοποίησαν ) Only here in New Testament, and not in Septuagint. Bengel says, " A very notorious crime is d...

They made a calf ( ἐμοσχοποίησαν )

Only here in New Testament, and not in Septuagint. Bengel says, " A very notorious crime is denoted by an extraordinary and newly-coined word." This was in imitation of the Egyptian bull-worship. Several of these animals were worshipped at different places in Egypt. Apis was worshipped at Memphis. Herodotus says: " Now this Apis, or Epaphus, is the calf of a cow which is never afterward able to bear young. The Egyptians say that fire comes down from heaven upon the cow, which thereupon conceives Apis. The calf which is so called has the following marks: He is black, with a square spot of white upon his forehead, and on his back the figure of an eagle. The hairs in his tail are double, and there is a beetle upon his tongue" (iii., 28). He was regarded by the Egyptians, not merely as an emblem, but as a god. He was lodged in a magnificent court, ornamented with figures twelve cubits high, which he never quitted except on fixed days, when he was led in procession through the streets. His festival lasted seven days, and all came forward from their houses to welcome him as he passed. He was not allowed to reach the natural term of his life. If a natural death did not remove him earlier, he was drowned when he reached the age of twenty-five, and was then embalmed and entombed in one of the sepulchral chambers of the Serapeum, a temple devoted expressly to the burial of these animals.

Another sacred bull was maintained at Heliopolis, in the great Temple of the Sun, under the name of Mnevis , and was honored with a reverence next to Apis. Wilkinson thinks that it was from this, and not from Apis, that the Israelites borrowed their notions of the golden calf. " The offerings, dancing, and rejoicings practised on the occasion, were doubtless in imitation of a ceremony they had witnessed in honor of Mnevis during their sojourn in Egypt" (" Ancient Egyptians," 2 sen, vol. ii., p. 197). A third sacred bull, called Bacis, was maintained at Hermonthis, near Thebes. It was a huge, black animal, and its hairs were said to grow the wrong way. Other bulls and cows did not hold the rank of gods, but were only sacred.

Vincent: Act 7:41 - -- Offered ( ἀνήγαγον ) Lit., led up. See on Jam 2:21.

Offered ( ἀνήγαγον )

Lit., led up. See on Jam 2:21.

Wesley: Act 7:41 - -- In imitation of Apis, the Egyptian god: and rejoiced in the works of their hands - In the god they had made.

In imitation of Apis, the Egyptian god: and rejoiced in the works of their hands - In the god they had made.

JFB: Act 7:35-41 - -- Here, again, "the stone which the builders refused is made the head of the corner" (Psa 118:22).

Here, again, "the stone which the builders refused is made the head of the corner" (Psa 118:22).

Calvin: Act 7:41 - -- 41.And they made a calf We may easily gather by that which goeth before, why they were more delighted in that figure than in any other. For although ...

41.And they made a calf We may easily gather by that which goeth before, why they were more delighted in that figure than in any other. For although Egypt did swarm with innumerable idols, yet it is well known that they made the greatest account of an ox. And whence is it that they are so desirous to have an idol, save only because they were turned back into Egypt, as Stephen hath already said? We must note the speech when he saith that they offered sacrifice to the idol. Aaron commandeth the people to assemble themselves together to worship God; they come all together. Therefore they testify that they mean nothing less [any thing rather] than to defraud God of his worship, howsoever they translate the same unto the calf; yea, rather, they are determined to worship God in the image of the calf. But because they forsook the true God, by making an idol, whatsoever followeth afterward it is judged to be given to the idol, because God refuseth all wicked worshipping. For it is not meet to account that as bestowed upon him which he hath not commanded; and because he forbids them expressly to erect any visible image unto him, that is mere sacrilege whatsoever is done afterward in honor thereof.

They rejoiced over the works This speech is taken out of Isaiah, yet, out of the prophets, who, in like sort, upbraid unto the Jews that they were delighted in their own inventions. And surely it is wonderful madness, when men arrogate unto themselves anything in God’s matters. I take this rejoicing to be that solemn dancing whereof Moses speaketh, in the thirty-second chapter of Exodus. Yet Stephen toucheth a common vice, wherewith idolaters are infected. For although it be altogether unlawful for men to attempt anything in religion which God hath not appointed, yet do they invent everything unadvisedly, and setting light by the Word of God, they make choice of the works of their own hands; but Stephen showeth that while they take such pleasure in this liberty, they displease God so much the more. But if we will have God to allow our worship, we must abstain from the works of our hands, that is, from our own inventions; for all that which men invent of themselves is nothing else but sacrilegious profanation. The idol is properly so called reproachfully, as it were a thing nothing worth, because no reason doth suffer man to make God. 450

TSK: Act 7:41 - -- they : Exo 32:2-8, Exo 32:17-20; Deu 9:12-18; Neh 9:18; Psa 106:19-21 rejoiced : Isa 2:8, Isa 2:9, Isa 44:9-20; Hos 9:1, Hos 9:10; Hab 2:18-20

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Act 7:41 - -- And they made a calf - This was made of the ear-rings and ornaments which they had brought from Egypt, Exo 32:2-4. Stephen introduces this to r...

And they made a calf - This was made of the ear-rings and ornaments which they had brought from Egypt, Exo 32:2-4. Stephen introduces this to remind them how prone the nation had been to reject God, and to walk in the ways of sin.

Poole: Act 7:41 - -- They made a calf in imitation of the Egyptians, who worshipped their god Apis in that, or the like form of an ox. The idol the calf which they had ...

They made a calf in imitation of the Egyptians, who worshipped their god Apis in that, or the like form of an ox.

The idol the calf which they had made, which they could not be so sottish as to terminate their worship in, knowing that they themselves had made it, and it had not made them; yet they are for this charged to have committed idolatry, 1Co 10:6,7 .

Rejoiced which joy they express by feasting, singing, and dancing, Exo 32:6 .

The works of their own hands so this idol, and idols generally, are called, Psa 115:4 135:15 which is enough to speak their emptiness and vanity; vain man can make but vain gods.

Gill: Act 7:41 - -- And they made a calf in those days,.... Whilst Moses was in the mount; this was done in imitation of the Egyptian idol Apis or Serapis, which was an o...

And they made a calf in those days,.... Whilst Moses was in the mount; this was done in imitation of the Egyptian idol Apis or Serapis, which was an ox or a bullock; and it was made of the golden earnings of the people, which were melted down, and cast into the form of a calf, and graved by Aaron with a graving tool, Exo 32:2 And so the Syriac version here reads in the singular number, "and he made them a calf"; this was a most shameful and scandalous piece of idolatry. The Jews themselves are so sensible of the horribleness of it, and of the guilt of it, and of the reproach that lies on them for it, that it is common for them to say c,

"there is not a generation, or an age, in which there is not an ounce of the sin of the calf.''

Or, as elsewhere d expressed,

"no punishment befalls thee, O Israel, in "which there is not an ounce of the sin of the calf".''

And offered sacrifice unto the idol; an altar was built, and proclamation made, that the next day would be the feast of the Lord; and accordingly early in the morning the people rose, and offered both burnt offerings and peace offerings, Exo 32:5 and rejoiceth in the works of their own hands; for so the calf was; and which rejoicing they showed by eating, and drinking, and singing, and dancing.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Act 7:41 Or “in what they had done.”

Geneva Bible: Act 7:41 And they made a ( n ) calf in those days, and offered sacrifice unto the idol, and rejoiced in the works of their own hands. ( n ) This was the super...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Act 7:1-60 - --1 Stephen, permitted to answer to the accusation of blasphemy,2 shows that Abraham worshipped God rightly, and how God chose the fathers,20 before Mos...

Combined Bible: Act 7:41 - --Stephen next shows that the same people who so often rejected the servants of God, likewise rejected God himself. (41) " They made a calf in those day...

MHCC: Act 7:30-41 - --Men deceive themselves, if they think God cannot do what he sees to be good any where; he can bring his people into a wilderness, and there speak comf...

Matthew Henry: Act 7:30-41 - -- Stephen here proceeds in his story of Moses; and let any one judge whether these are the words of one that was a blasphemer of Moses or no; nothing ...

Barclay: Act 7:37-53 - --The speech of Stephen begins to accelerate. All the time by implication it has been condemning the attitude of the Jews; now that implicit condemnat...

Constable: Act 6:8--9:32 - --II. THE WITNESS IN JUDEA AND SAMARIA 6:8--9:31 In this next major section of Acts, Luke narrated three significa...

Constable: Act 6:8--8:2 - --A. The martyrdom of Stephen 6:8-8:1a Luke presented the events surrounding Stephen's martyrdom in Jerusa...

Constable: Act 7:2-53 - --2. Stephen's address 7:2-53 As a Hellenistic Jew, Stephen possessed a clearer vision of the univ...

Constable: Act 7:17-43 - --Stephen's view of Moses and the Law 7:17-43 Stephen continued his review of Israel's his...

Constable: Act 7:37-43 - --The teaching of Moses 7:37-43 Stephen continued dealing with the Mosaic period of Israel's history, but focused more particularly now on Moses' teachi...

College: Act 7:1-60 - --ACTS 7 2. Stephen's Defense (7:1-53) The Old Testament Patriarchs (7:1-8) 1 Then the high priest asked him, " Are these charges true?" 2 To this h...

McGarvey: Act 7:41-43 - --41-43. Stephen next shows that the same people who so often rejected the servants of God, likewise rejected God himself. (41) " They made a calf in th...

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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 7 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Act 7:1, Stephen, permitted to answer to the accusation of blasphemy, Act 7:2, shows that Abraham worshipped God rightly, and how God cho...

Poole: Acts 7 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 7

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) (v. 1-50) Stephen's defence. (Act 7:51-53) Stephen reproves the Jews for the death of Christ. (Act 7:54-60) The martyrdom of Stephen.

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) When our Lord Jesus called his apostles out to be employed in services and sufferings for him, he told them that yet the last should be first, and ...

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 7 (Chapter Introduction) Stephen's Defence (Act_7:1-7) The Man Who Came Out (Act_7:1-7 Continued) Down Into Egypt (Act_7:8-16) The Man Who Never Forgot His Fellow-Country...

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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