10:17 Lord, you have heard 2 the request 3 of the oppressed;
you make them feel secure because you listen to their prayer. 4
66:19 However, God heard;
he listened to my prayer.
116:1 I love the Lord
because he heard my plea for mercy, 6
10:1 Now there was a man in Caesarea 13 named Cornelius, a centurion 14 of what was known as the Italian Cohort. 15
1 tn Heb “on the third day.”
2 sn You have heard. The psalmist is confident that God has responded positively to his earlier petitions for divine intervention. The psalmist apparently prayed the words of vv. 16-18 after the reception of an oracle of deliverance (given in response to the confident petition of vv. 12-15) or after the Lord actually delivered him from his enemies.
3 tn Heb “desire.”
4 tn Heb “you make firm their heart, you cause your ear to listen.”
5 sn Psalm 116. The psalmist thanks the Lord for delivering him from a life threatening crisis and promises to tell the entire covenant community what God has done for him.
6 tn Heb “I love because the
7 tn Or “a precious treasure”; KJV “greatly beloved”; NASB, NIV “highly esteemed.”
8 tn This sentence is perhaps a compound hendiadys (“give serious consideration to the revelatory vision”).
9 tn Grk “that you always hear me.”
10 tn The word “this” is not in the Greek text. Direct objects in Greek were often omitted when clear from the context.
11 tn Or “your gifts to the needy.”
12 sn This statement is a paraphrase rather than an exact quotation of Acts 10:4.
13 sn Caesarea was a city on the coast of Palestine south of Mount Carmel (not Caesarea Philippi). It was known as “Caesarea by the sea” (BDAG 499 s.v. Καισάρεια 2). Largely Gentile, it was a center of Roman administration and the location of many of Herod the Great’s building projects (Josephus, Ant. 15.9.6 [15.331-341]).
14 sn A centurion was a noncommissioned officer in the Roman army or one of the auxiliary territorial armies, commanding a centuria of (nominally) 100 men. The responsibilities of centurions were broadly similar to modern junior officers, but there was a wide gap in social status between them and officers, and relatively few were promoted beyond the rank of senior centurion. The Roman troops stationed in Judea were auxiliaries, who would normally be rewarded with Roman citizenship after 25 years of service. Some of the centurions may have served originally in the Roman legions (regular army) and thus gained their citizenship at enlistment. Others may have inherited it, like Paul.
15 sn A cohort was a Roman military unit of about 600 soldiers, one-tenth of a legion (BDAG 936 s.v. σπεῖρα). The Italian Cohort has been identified as cohors II Italica which is known to have been stationed in Syria in
16 tn Or “More and more believers were added to the Lord.”