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Text -- Luke 4:29 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
4:29 They got up, forced him out of the town, and brought him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they could throw him down the cliff.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Synagogue | STEPHEN | Reproof | Persecution | PUNISHMENTS | PALESTINE, 3 | Nazareth | Law | Jonah, Book of | Jesus, The Christ | JESUS CHRIST, 4C1 | Isaiah, The Book of | HILL; MOUNT; MOUNTAIN | Capernaum | BROW | Acropolis | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Lightfoot , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Luk 4:29 - -- They rose up and cast him forth ( anastantes exebalon ). Second aorist ingressive active participle and second aorist effective active indicative. A ...

They rose up and cast him forth ( anastantes exebalon ).

Second aorist ingressive active participle and second aorist effective active indicative. A movement towards lynching Jesus.

Robertson: Luk 4:29 - -- Unto the brow of the hill ( hēos ophruos tou orous ). Eyebrow (ophrus ), in Homer, then any jutting prominence. Only here in the N.T. Hippocrates ...

Unto the brow of the hill ( hēos ophruos tou orous ).

Eyebrow (ophrus ), in Homer, then any jutting prominence. Only here in the N.T. Hippocrates speaks of the eyebrow hanging over.

Robertson: Luk 4:29 - -- Was built ( ōikodomēto ). Past perfect indicative, stood built.

Was built ( ōikodomēto ).

Past perfect indicative, stood built.

Robertson: Luk 4:29 - -- That they might throw him down headlong ( hōste katakrēmnisai auton ). Neat Greek idiom with hōste for intended result, "so as to cast him do...

That they might throw him down headlong ( hōste katakrēmnisai auton ).

Neat Greek idiom with hōste for intended result, "so as to cast him down the precipice."The infinitive alone can convey the same meaning (Mat 2:2; Mat 20:28; Luk 2:23). Krēmnos is an overhanging bank or precipice from kremannumi , to hang. Kata is down. The verb occurs in Xenophon, Demosthenes, lxx, Josephus. Here only in the N.T. At the southwest corner of the town of Nazareth such a cliff today exists overhanging the Maronite convent. Murder was in the hearts of the people. By pushing him over they hoped to escape technical guilt.

Vincent: Luk 4:29 - -- The brow ( ὀφρύος ) Only here in New Testament. Wyc., cope, which is originally cap or hood. The word is used in medical language...

The brow ( ὀφρύος )

Only here in New Testament. Wyc., cope, which is originally cap or hood. The word is used in medical language both of the eyebrows and of other projections of the body. It would naturally occur to a physician, especially since the same epithets were applied to the appearance of the eyebrows in certain diseases as were applied to kills. Thus Hippocrates, describing a deadly fever, says, " The eyebrows seem to hang over, " the same word which Homer uses of a rock. So Aretaeus, describing the appearance of the eyebrows in elephantiasis, depicts them as προβλῆτες , projecting, and όχθώδεις , like mounds. Stanley says: " Most readers probably from these words imagine a town built on the summit of a mountain, from which summit the intended precipitation was to take place. This is not the situation of Nazareth; yet its position is still in accordance with the narrative. It is built upon, that is, on the side of a mountain, but the brow is not beneath, but over the town, and such a cliff as is here implied is found in the abrupt face of a limestone rock about thirty or forty feet high, overhanging the Maronite convent at the southwest corner of the town" (" Sinai and Palestine" ) .

Vincent: Luk 4:29 - -- Cast him down headlong ( κατακρημνίσαι ) Only here in New Testament, and in the Septuagint only in 2 Chronicles 25:12.

Cast him down headlong ( κατακρημνίσαι )

Only here in New Testament, and in the Septuagint only in 2 Chronicles 25:12.

JFB: Luk 4:28-29 - -- These allusions to the heathen, just as afterwards with Paul (Act 22:21-22).

These allusions to the heathen, just as afterwards with Paul (Act 22:21-22).

JFB: Luk 4:29 - -- Broke up the service irreverently and rushed forth.

Broke up the service irreverently and rushed forth.

JFB: Luk 4:29 - -- With violence, as a prisoner in their hands.

With violence, as a prisoner in their hands.

JFB: Luk 4:29 - -- Nazareth, though not built on the ridge of a hill, is in part surrounded by one to the west, having several such precipices. (See 2Ch 25:12; 2Ki 9:33....

Nazareth, though not built on the ridge of a hill, is in part surrounded by one to the west, having several such precipices. (See 2Ch 25:12; 2Ki 9:33.) It was a mode of capital punishment not unusual among the Romans and others. This was the first insult which the Son of God received, and it came from "them of His own household!" (Mat 10:36).

Clarke: Luk 4:29 - -- The brow of the hill - Mr. Maundrel tells us that this is still called "the Mountain of the Precipitation, and is half a league southward of Nazaret...

The brow of the hill - Mr. Maundrel tells us that this is still called "the Mountain of the Precipitation, and is half a league southward of Nazareth. In going to it, you cross first over the vale in which Nazareth stands; and then going down two or three furlongs, in a narrow cleft between the rocks, you there clamber up a short but difficult way on the right hand; at the top of which you find a great stone standing on the brink of a precipice, which is said to be the very place where our Lord was destined to be thrown down by his enraged neighbors."Maundrel’ s Journey, p. 116. Edit. 5th. 1732.

TSK: Luk 4:29 - -- and thrust : Joh 8:37, Joh 8:40,Joh 8:59, Joh 15:24, Joh 15:25; Act 7:57, Act 7:58, Act 16:23, Act 16:24, Act 21:28-32 brow : or, edge that : 2Ch 25:1...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Luk 4:29 - -- The brow of the hill whereon ... - The region in which Nazareth was is hilly, though Nazareth was situated "between"two hills, or in a vale amo...

The brow of the hill whereon ... - The region in which Nazareth was is hilly, though Nazareth was situated "between"two hills, or in a vale among mountains. The place to which they led the Saviour is still shown, and is called the "Mount of Precipitation."It is at a short distance to the south of Nazareth. See the notes at Mat 2:23.

Cast him down - This was the effect of a popular tumult. They had no legal right to take life on any occasion, and least of all in this furious and irregular manner. The whole transaction shows:

1.    That the character given of the Galileans elsewhere as being especially wicked was a just one.

2.    To what extremities the wickedness of the heart will lead people when it is acted out. And,

3.    That people are opposed to the truth, and that they would do anything, if not restrained, to manifest their opposition.

Poole: Luk 4:28-30 - -- Ver. 28-30. Unhappy Nazareth, where Christ had now lived more than thirty years! They had seen him growing up, increasing in wisdom and stature, and...

Ver. 28-30. Unhappy Nazareth, where Christ had now lived more than thirty years! They had seen him growing up, increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favour both with God and man , Luk 2:52 ; they had had the first fruits of his ministry, and, Luk 4:22 , they bare him witness, and wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth ; they knew his education, so as they could not think he had this wisdom and knowledge from any advantages of that, but must have it from Heaven; yet when they hear him preaching, and but touching them for their contempt and rejection of him, and tacitly comparing them with their forefathers in the time of Ahab, and preaching the doctrine of God’ s sovereign and free grace, and hinting to them that the grace of God should pass to the Gentiles, while they should be rejected, they are not able to bear him. Thus, Act 22:21 , the Jews heard Paul patiently, till he repeated God’ s commission to him to go unto the Gentiles ; then they cried, Away with such a fellow from the earth, for it is not fit he should live . This was according to the old prophecy, Deu 32:21 , (applied to the Jews by the apostle, Rom 10:19 ), that because they had moved God to jealousy with that which is not God, he would move them to jealousy with them that are not a people, and provoke them to anger with a foolish nation. This is further matter of observation, that wretched sinners, who cannot obtain of their lusts to be as good and holy as others, yet are ordinarily so proud, as they have no patience to hear that others are better than they, or have or shall have any more special share in God’ s favour. Those of Nazareth which were in the synagogue hearing these things, are filled with wrath, thrust Christ out of the city , as not fit to live among them, and go about to kill him, by throwing him down headlong from the brow of the hill upon which their city was built.

But he passing through the midst of them went his way How he got out of their hands, when they had laid hold of him, the Scripture doth not tell us, nor is it our concern to be curious to inquire. We read much the like passage, Joh 8:59 , when the Jews had taken up stones to stone him. We know it was an easy thing for him, who was God as well as man, to quit himself of any mortal enemies; but how he did it, whether by blinding their eyes, or altering the nature of his body, and making it imperceptible by them, or by a greater strength than they, (which the Divine nature could easily supply his human nature with), who is able to determine?

Lightfoot: Luk 4:29 - -- And rose up, and thrust him out of the city, and led him unto the brow of the hill whereon their city was built, that they might cast him down hea...

And rose up, and thrust him out of the city, and led him unto the brow of the hill whereon their city was built, that they might cast him down headlong.   

[That they might cast him down headlong.] By what authority, or by what legal process could those of Nazareth do this? There was, indeed, a court of judicature consisting of three men, because a synagogue was there; but it was not in the power of that court to decree any thing in capital matters. It may be asked, whether that license that was permitted the zealots extended thus far: "He that steals the consecrated dishes and curseth by a conjurer" (that is, curseth God in the name of an idol), "and goes in to a heathen woman (that is, openly, as Zimri, Num 25:6), the zealots slay him. And the priest that ministers in his uncleanness, his brethren the priests beat out his brains with clubs." But doth this license of the zealot belong to all persons upon all occasions? When Nathanael said, [ul Joh_1:46] "Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?" he does not seem there to reflect so much upon the smallness and insignificancy of the town, as the looseness and depravity of its manners.

Gill: Luk 4:29 - -- And rose up,.... In great wrath, and, in a noisy and tumultuous manner, before the service was well over, and without being regularly dismissed: an...

And rose up,.... In great wrath, and, in a noisy and tumultuous manner, before the service was well over, and without being regularly dismissed:

and thrust him out of the city; first out of the synagogue, and then out of their city, as unworthy to be in it, though an inhabitant of it; and as if he had done something deserving of death; and therefore to be punished as a malefactor without the city:

and led him unto the brow of the hill; the edge of it, where it run out, and hung over the precipice:

whereon their city was built; so that it was a city upon an hill, and very visible, to which Christ may allude in Mat 5:14. That they might cast him down headlong; and break him to pieces: in this manner ten thousand Edomites were destroyed by the Jews, in the times of Amaziah, 2Ch 25:12 though this was not an usual way with the Jews of putting persons to death, as with some other nations u; their four capital punishments were stoning, strangling, burning, and killing with the sword w: nor did the inhabitants of Nazareth proceed in any judicial manner with Christ, but hurried him away, in order to destroy him, without any formal process, in the manner the zealots did; though to put any man to death, or to inflict any punishment on a person on the sabbath day, as this was, was contrary to their own canon, which runs thus x;

"they do not inflict punishment on the sabbath day, even though it is the punishment of an affirmative precept; they do not beat one that is guilty, nor put to death, as it is said, Exo 35:3 "ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the sabbath day": this is a caution to the sanhedrim, that they do not burn on the sabbath day he that is condemned to burning; and this is the law with respect to any one that is liable to the other punishments.''

But these men, without any regard to the place where they were, and the worship they were concerned in, and the day of the sabbath which then was, rise up in great wrath and fury, and without any show of justice, and in the most brutish and barbarous manner attempt to take away the life of Christ.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Luk 4:29 The attempt to throw him down the cliff looks like “lynch law,” but it may really be an indication that Jesus was regarded as a false prop...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Luk 4:1-44 - --1 The temptation and fasting of Christ.14 He begins to preach.16 The people of Nazareth admire his gracious words, but being offended, seek to kill hi...

MHCC: Luk 4:14-30 - --Christ taught in their synagogues, their places of public worship, where they met to read, expound, and apply the word, to pray and praise. All the gi...

Matthew Henry: Luk 4:14-30 - -- After Christ had vanquished the evil spirit, he made it appear how much he was under the influence of the good Spirit; and, having defended himself ...

Barclay: Luk 4:16-30 - --One of Jesus' very early visits was to Nazareth, his home town. Nazareth was not a village. It is called a polis (4172) which means a town or city...

Constable: Luk 4:14--9:51 - --IV. Jesus' ministry in and around Galilee 4:14--9:50 Luke commenced Jesus' public ministry with His return to Ga...

Constable: Luk 4:14--5:12 - --A. Jesus' teaching ministry 4:14-5:11 This section of the Gospel records some of Jesus' initial preachin...

Constable: Luk 4:16-30 - --2. Jesus' teaching in Nazareth 4:16-30 In contrast to most people, the inhabitants of Jesus' hometown did not praise Him. When Jesus began to speak of...

College: Luk 4:1-44 - --LUKE 4 C. THE TEMPTATION OF JESUS (4:1-13) 1 Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the desert, 2 whe...

McGarvey: Luk 4:16-31 - -- LX. JESUS VISITS NAZARETH AND IS REJECTED. aMATT. XIII. 54-58; bMARK VI. 1-6; cLUKE IV. 16-31.    b1 And he went out from thence [fro...

Lapide: Luk 4:1-44 - --CHAPTER  4 Ver. 1.— And Jesus, being full of the Holy Ghost, returned from Jordan, having been there baptized by John a little time before, and ha...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Luke (Book Introduction) THE GOSPEL OF LUKE By Way of Introduction There is not room here for a full discussion of all the interesting problems raised by Luke as the autho...

JFB: Luke (Book Introduction) THE writer of this Gospel is universally allowed to have been Lucas (an abbreviated form of Lucanus, as Silas of Silvanus), though he is not expressly...

JFB: Luke (Outline) ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE FORERUNNER. (Luke 1:5-25) ANNUNCIATION OF CHRIST. (Luk 1:26-38) VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. (Luke 1:39-56) BIRTH AND CIRCUMCISION...

TSK: Luke (Book Introduction) Luke, to whom this Gospel has been uniformly attributed from the earliest ages of the Christian church, is generally allowed to have been " the belove...

TSK: Luke 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Luk 4:1, The temptation and fasting of Christ; Luk 4:14, He begins to preach; Luk 4:16, The people of Nazareth admire his gracious words,...

Poole: Luke 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4

MHCC: Luke (Book Introduction) This evangelist is generally supposed to have been a physician, and a companion of the apostle Paul. The style of his writings, and his acquaintance w...

MHCC: Luke 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Luk 4:1-13) The temptation of Christ. (v. 14-30) Christ in the synagogue of Nazareth. (Luk 4:31-44) He casts out an unclean spirit and heals the si...

Matthew Henry: Luke (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Gospel According to St. Luke We are now entering into the labours of another evangelist; his name ...

Matthew Henry: Luke 4 (Chapter Introduction) We left Christ newly baptized, and owned by a voice from heaven and the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him. Now, in this chapter, we have, I. A fu...

Barclay: Luke (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO SAINT LUKE A Lovely Book And Its Author The gospel according to St. Luke has been called the loveliest book ...

Barclay: Luke 4 (Chapter Introduction) The Battle With Temptation (Luk_4:1-13) The Galilaean Springtime (Luk_4:14-15) Without Honour In His Own Country (Luk_4:16-30) The Spirit Of An Un...

Constable: Luke (Book Introduction) Introduction Writer Several factors indicate that the writer of this Gospel was the sa...

Constable: Luke (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-4 II. The birth and childhood of Jesus 1:5-2:52 ...

Constable: Luke Luke Bibliography Alford, Henry. The Greek Testament. New ed. 4 vols. London: Rivingtons, 1880. ...

Haydock: Luke (Book Introduction) THE HOLY GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO ST. LUKE. INTRODUCTION St. Luke was a physician, a native of Antioch, the metropolis of Syria, a...

Gill: Luke (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO LUKE The writer of this Gospel, Luke, has been, by some, thought, as Origen a relates, to be the same with Lucius, mentioned in Ro...

College: Luke (Book Introduction) FOREWORD "Many have undertaken" to write commentaries on the Gospel of Luke, and a large number of these are very good. "It seemed good also to me" t...

College: Luke (Outline) OUTLINE There is general agreement among serious students of Luke's Gospel regarding its structure. I. Prologue Luke 1:1-4 II. Infancy Narrative...

Lapide: Luke (Book Introduction) S. LUKE'S GOSPEL Third Edition JOHN HODGES, AGAR STREET, CHARING CROSS, LONDON. 1892. INTRODUCTION. ——o—— THE Holy Gospel of Jesus Ch...

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