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Acts 21:37--22:29

21:37


21:38

Egyptian .............. Assassins <124 4607> [that.]

"This Egyptian rose A.D. 55."


21:39

I am <1473 1510> [I am.]

Cilicia <2791> [Cilicia.]

a citizen <4177> [a citizen.]

allow <2010> [suffer.]


21:40

on <1909> [on.]

gestured <2678> [and beckoned.]

<4183> [a great.]

Aramaic <1446> [Hebrew.]


22:1

Brothers <80> [brethren.]

my <3450> [my. Greek all.]


22:2

Aramaic <1446> [in.]


22:3

a Jew <2453> [Jew.]

in Tarsus ....... in <1722 5019> [in Tarsus.]

Cilicia <2791> [a city.]

under <3844> [at.]

Gamaliel <1059> [Gamaliel.]

educated <3811> [taught.]

was <5225> [was.]


22:4

I persecuted <1377 3739> [I persecuted.]

<5026> [this.]


22:5

both ..... and .............. also <2532> [also.]

both ..... and ... whole ............ also <2532 3956> [and all.]

brothers <80> [the brethren.]


22:6

As ... was en route <4198> [that.]

It is evident that the apostle considered his extraordinary conversion as a most complete demonstration of the truth of Christianity; and when all the particulars of his education, his previous religious principles, his zeal, his enmity against Christians, and his prospects of secular honours and preferments by persecuting them, are compared with the subsequent part of his life, and the sudden transition from a furious persecutor to a zealous preacher of the gospel, in which he laboured and suffered to the end of his life, and for which he died a martyr, it must convince every candid and impartial person that no rational account can be given of this change, except what he himself assigns; and consequently, if that be true, that Christianity is Divine.

As ... was en route <4198> [that.]

Damascus <1154> [Damascus.]

about ........... around <4012> [about.]


22:7

Saul Saul <4549> [Saul.]

why <5101> [why.]


22:8

I .... are you ....... I am <1473 1510> [I am.]

whom <3739> [whom.]


22:9

saw <2300> [saw.]

Those ......... but <1161> [but.]


22:10

What <5101> [What.]

there <2546> [there.]


22:11

Since <5613> [when.]

led by the hand <5496> [being.]


22:12

man <5100> [one.]

<2152> [a devout.]

well spoken <3140> [having.]


22:13

Brother <80> [Brother.]


22:14

God <2316> [The God.]

has already chosen <4400> [hath.]

Then ................. to see ..... and <1161 2532 1492> [and see.]

to know ....... Righteous One <1097 1342> [that.]

to hear <191> [hear.]


22:15

<2071> [thou shalt.]

of what <3739> [of.]


22:16

what <5101> [why.]

Get up <450> [arise.]

calling on <1941> [calling.]


22:17

I <3427> [when.]

<3450> [while.]


22:18

saw <1492> [saw.]

Hurry <4692> [Make.]

because <1360> [for.]


22:19

they ... know <1987> [know.]

beat <1194> [beat.]


22:20

witness <3144> [martyr.]

Stephen <4736> [Stephen.]

approving <4909> [consenting.]


22:21

Go <4198> [Depart.]

because <3754> [for.]


22:22

Away <142> [Away.]

For <1063> [for.]


22:23

throwing off <4495> [cast.]


22:24

commanding officer <5506> [The chief.]

As the chief captain did not understand Hebrew, he was ignorant of the charge against Paul, and also of the defence which the apostle had made; but as he saw that they grew more and more outrageous, he supposed that Paul must have given them the highest provocation, and therefore, according to the barbarous and irrational practice which has existed in all countries, he determined to put him to the torture, in order to make him confess his crime.

Paul ............ to interrogate ..... him ..... so that ............ at Paul <846 2443 426> [that he should.]


22:25

centurion <1543> [the centurion.]

<1487> [Is it.]

By the Roman law, no magistrate was allowed to punish a Roman citizen capitally, or by inflicting stripes, or even binding him; and the single expression, I am a Roman citizen, arrested their severest decrees, and obtained, if not an escape, at least a delay of his punishment.


22:26

<3708> [Take.]


22:28

But <1161> [But.]

It is extremely probable that the inhabitants of Tarsus, born in that city, had the same rights and privileges as Roman citizens, in consequence of a grant or charter from Julius C‘sar, from whom it was called Juliopolis. But if this were not the case, St. Paul's father, or some of his ancestors, might have been rewarded with the freedom of the city of Rome, for his fidelity and bravery in some military service, as Josephus says several of the Jews were; or his father might have obtained it by purchase, as in the instance of the chief captain.


22:29

[examined him. or, tortured him.]

commanding officer <5506> [the chief.]




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