collapse all  

Text -- Acts 7:57 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
7:57 But they covered their ears, shouting out with a loud voice, and rushed at him with one intent.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Witness | Stephen | Revenge | Priest | Persecution | Jerusalem | Intolerance | Homicide | Government | EAR | Defense | Anger | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , 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

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- Stopped their ears ( suneschon ta ōta autōn ). Second aorist active of sunechō , to hold together. They held their ears together with their han...

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. Mat 26:65).

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- Rushed upon him with one accord ( hōrmēsan homothumadon ep' auton ). Ingressive aorist active indicative of hormaō , to rush impetuously as the...

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 (Luk 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.

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- 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 te...

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 (Act 21:30.).

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- Stoned ( elithoboloun ). Imperfect active indicative of lithoboleō , began to stone, from lithobolos (lithos , stone, ballō , to throw), late G...

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 Luk 13:34. Stoning was the Jewish punishment for blasphemy (Lev 24:14-16).

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- The witnesses ( hoi martureōs ). The false testifiers against Stephen suborned by the Pharisees (Act 6:11, Act 6:13). These witnesses had the privi...

The witnesses ( hoi martureōs ).

The false testifiers against Stephen suborned by the Pharisees (Act 6:11, Act 6:13). These witnesses had the privilege of casting the first stones (Deu 13:10; Deu 17:7) against the first witness for Christ with death ( martyr in our modern sense of the word).

Robertson: Act 7:57 - -- 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 ...

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 (Act 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.

Vincent: Act 7:57 - -- Stopped ( συνέσχον ) Lit., held together.

Stopped ( συνέσχον )

Lit., held together.

Wesley: Act 7:57 - -- Before any sentence passed.

Before any sentence passed.

JFB: Act 7:57-58 - -- To men of their mould and in their temper, Stephen's last seraphic words could but bring matters to extremities, though that only revealed the diaboli...

To men of their mould and in their temper, Stephen's last seraphic words could but bring matters to extremities, though that only revealed the diabolical spirit which they breathed.

Clarke: Act 7:57 - -- They - stopped their ears - As a proof that he had uttered blasphemy, because he said, He saw Jesus standing at the right hand of God. This was a fe...

They - stopped their ears - As a proof that he had uttered blasphemy, because he said, He saw Jesus standing at the right hand of God. This was a fearful proof against them; for if Jesus was at the right hand of God, then they had murdered an innocent person; and they must infer that God’ s justice must speedily avenge his death. They were determined not to suffer a man to live any longer who could say he saw the heavens opened and Jesus Christ standing at the right hand of God.

Calvin: Act 7:57 - -- 57.Crying with a loud voice This was either a vain show of zeal, as hypocrites are almost always pricked forward with ambition to break out into immo...

57.Crying with a loud voice This was either a vain show of zeal, as hypocrites are almost always pricked forward with ambition to break out into immoderate heat; as Caiaphas when he heard Christ say thus, After this ye shall see the Son of man, etc., did rent his clothes in token of indignation, as if it were intolerable blasphemy; or else certainly the preaching of the glory of Christ was unto them such a torment, that they must needs burst through madness. And I am rather of this mind; for Luke saith afterward, that they were carried violently, as those men which have no hold of themselves use to leap out immoderately. 479

TSK: Act 7:57 - -- they cried : Act 7:54, Act 21:27-31, Act 23:27 stopped : Psa 58:4; Pro 21:13; Zec 7:11

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Act 7:57 - -- Then they cried out - That is, probably, "the people,"not the members of the council It is evident he was put to death in a popular tumult. The...

Then they cried out - That is, probably, "the people,"not the members of the council It is evident he was put to death in a popular tumult. They had charged him with blasphemy; and they regarded what he had now said as full proof of it.

And stopped their ears - That they might hear no more blasphemy.

With one accord - In a tumult; unitedly.

Poole: Act 7:57 - -- They cried out the rabble, or multitude. Stopped their ears that they might show their great detestation of what was said, and might not contract a...

They cried out the rabble, or multitude.

Stopped their ears that they might show their great detestation of what was said, and might not contract any guilt from it.

And ran upon him with one accord: this violence and fury was both against the law of God and the law of the land; and the number of zealots (there were some amongst that people eminently so called) provoked the Romans to destroy both city and temple.

Gill: Act 7:57 - -- Then they cried out with a loud voice,.... These were not the sanhedrim, but the common people; the Ethiopic version reads, "the Jews cried out"; whic...

Then they cried out with a loud voice,.... These were not the sanhedrim, but the common people; the Ethiopic version reads, "the Jews cried out"; which, they did, in a very clamorous way, either through rage and madness, or in a show of zeal against blasphemy; and cried out, either to God to avenge the blasphemy, or rather to the sanhedrim to pass a sentence on him, or, it may be, to excite one another to rise up at once, and kill him, as they did:

and stopped their ears; with their fingers, pretending they could not bear the blasphemy that was uttered. This was their usual method; hence they say, o.

"if a man hears anything that is indecent, (or not fit to be heard,) let him put his fingers in his ears hence the whole ear is hard, and the tip of it soft, that when he hears anything that is not becoming, he may bend the tip of the ear within it.''

By either of these ways these men might stop their ears; either by putting in their fingers, or by turning the tip of the ear inward.

And ran upon him with one accord; without any leave of the sanhedrim, or waiting for their determination, in the manner the zealots did; See Gill on Mat 10:4, Joh 16:2.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Act 7:57 They covered their ears to avoid hearing what they considered to be blasphemy.

Geneva Bible: Act 7:57 ( 10 ) Then they cried out with a loud voice, and stopped their ears, and ( a ) ran upon him with one accord, ( 10 ) The zeal of hypocrites and super...

expand all
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 7:57 - --notes on verse 54     

MHCC: Act 7:54-60 - --Nothing is so comfortable to dying saints, or so encouraging to suffering saints, as to see Jesus at the right hand of God: blessed be God, by faith w...

Matthew Henry: Act 7:54-60 - -- We have here the death of the first martyr of the Christian church, and there is in this story a lively instance of the outrage and fury of the pers...

Barclay: Act 7:54-60 - --A speech like this could only have one end; Stephen had courted death and death came. But Stephen did not see the faces distorted with rage. His ga...

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 7:54--8:2 - --3. Stephen's death 7:54-8:1a Stephen's speech caused a revolution in the Jews' attitude toward the disciples of Jesus, and his martyrdom began the fir...

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 7:54-60 - --54-60. The exasperation of the Sanhedrim was the more intense, from the fact that the denunciation hurled upon them was not a sudden burst of passion,...

expand all
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...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #22: To open links on Discovery Box in a new window, use the right click. [ALL]
created in 0.31 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA