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Psalms 2:2

Context

2:2 The kings of the earth 1  form a united front; 2 

the rulers collaborate 3 

against the Lord and his anointed king. 4 

Psalms 2:6

Context

2:6 “I myself 5  have installed 6  my king

on Zion, my holy hill.”

Psalms 89:20

Context

89:20 I have discovered David, my servant.

With my holy oil I have anointed him as king. 7 

Isaiah 61:1

Context
The Lord Will Rejuvenate His People

61:1 The spirit of the sovereign Lord is upon me,

because the Lord has chosen 8  me. 9 

He has commissioned 10  me to encourage 11  the poor,

to help 12  the brokenhearted,

to decree the release of captives,

and the freeing of prisoners,

Luke 4:18

Context

4:18The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,

because he has anointed 13  me to proclaim good news 14  to the poor. 15 

He has sent me 16  to proclaim release 17  to the captives

and the regaining of sight 18  to the blind,

to set free 19  those who are oppressed, 20 

John 1:41

Context
1:41 He first 21  found his own brother Simon and told him, “We have found the Messiah!” 22  (which is translated Christ). 23 

John 3:34

Context
3:34 For the one whom God has sent 24  speaks the words of God, for he does not give the Spirit sparingly. 25 

Acts 4:27

Context

4:27 “For indeed both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, assembled together in this city against 26  your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, 27 

Acts 10:38

Context
10:38 with respect to Jesus from Nazareth, 28  that 29  God anointed him with the Holy Spirit and with power. He 30  went around doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, 31  because God was with him. 32 
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[2:2]  1 sn The expression kings of the earth refers somewhat hyperbolically to the kings who had been conquered by and were subject to the Davidic king.

[2:2]  2 tn Or “take their stand.” The Hebrew imperfect verbal form describes their action as underway.

[2:2]  3 tn Or “conspire together.” The verbal form is a Niphal from יָסַד (yasad). BDB 413-14 s.v. יָסַד defines the verb as “establish, found,” but HALOT 417 s.v. II יסד proposes a homonym meaning “get together, conspire” (an alternate form of סוּד, sud).

[2:2]  4 tn Heb “and against his anointed one.” The Davidic king is the referent (see vv. 6-7).

[2:6]  5 tn The first person pronoun appears before the first person verbal form for emphasis, reflected in the translation by “myself.”

[2:6]  6 tn Or perhaps “consecrated.”

[89:20]  7 tn The words “as king” are supplied in the translation for clarification, indicating that a royal anointing is in view.

[61:1]  8 tn Heb “anointed,” i.e., designated to carry out an assigned task.

[61:1]  9 sn The speaker is not identified, but he is distinct from the Lord and from Zion’s suffering people. He possesses the divine spirit, is God’s spokesman, and is sent to release prisoners from bondage. The evidence suggests he is the Lord’s special servant, described earlier in the servant songs (see 42:1-4, 7; 49:2, 9; 50:4; see also 51:16).

[61:1]  10 tn Or “sent” (NAB); NCV “has appointed me.”

[61:1]  11 tn Or “proclaim good news to.”

[61:1]  12 tn Heb “to bind up [the wounds of].”

[4:18]  13 sn The phrase he has anointed me is an allusion back to Jesus’ baptism in Luke 3:21-22.

[4:18]  14 tn Grk “to evangelize,” “to preach the gospel.”

[4:18]  15 sn The poor is a key term in Luke. It refers to the pious poor and indicates Jesus’ desire to reach out to those the world tends to forget or mistreat. It is like 1:52 in force and also will be echoed in 6:20 (also 1 Pet 2:11-25). Jesus is commissioned to do this.

[4:18]  16 tc The majority of mss, especially the later Byzantines, include the phrase “to heal the brokenhearted” at this point (A Θ Ψ 0102 Ë1 Ï). The phrase is lacking in several weighty mss (א B D L W Ξ Ë13 33 579 700 892* pc lat sys co), including representatives from both the Alexandrian and Western texttypes. From the standpoint of external evidence, the omission of the phrase is more likely original. When internal evidence is considered, the shorter reading becomes almost certain. Scribes would be much more prone to add the phrase here to align the text with Isa 61:1, the source of the quotation, than to remove it from the original.

[4:18]  17 sn The release in view here is comprehensive, both at a physical level and a spiritual one, as the entire ministry of Jesus makes clear (Luke 1:77-79; 7:47; 24:47; Acts 2:38; 5:31; 10:43).

[4:18]  18 sn Again, as with the previous phrase, regaining of sight may well mean more than simply miraculously restoring physical sight, which itself pictures a deeper reality (Luke 1:77-79; 18:35-43).

[4:18]  19 sn The essence of Jesus’ messianic work is expressed in the phrase to set free. This line from Isa 58 says that Jesus will do what the nation had failed to do. It makes the proclamation messianic, not merely prophetic, because Jesus doesn’t just proclaim the message – he brings the deliverance. The word translated set free is the same Greek word (ἄφεσις, afesi") translated release earlier in the verse.

[4:18]  20 sn Again, as with the previous phrases, oppressed may well mean more than simply political or economic oppression, but a deeper reality of oppression by sin (Luke 1:77-79; 18:35-43).

[1:41]  21 tc Most witnesses (א* L Ws Ï) read πρῶτος (prwtos) here instead of πρῶτον (prwton). The former reading would be a predicate adjective and suggest that Andrew “was the first” person to proselytize another regarding Jesus. The reading preferred, however, is the neuter πρῶτον, used as an adverb (BDAG 893 s.v. πρῶτος 1.a.β.), and it suggests that the first thing that Andrew did was to proselytize Peter. The evidence for this reading is early and weighty: Ì66,75 א2 A B Θ Ψ 083 Ë1,13 892 al lat.

[1:41]  22 sn Naturally part of Andrew’s concept of the Messiah would have been learned from John the Baptist (v. 40). However, there were a number of different messianic expectations in 1st century Palestine (see the note on “Who are you?” in v. 19), and it would be wrong to assume that what Andrew meant here is the same thing the author means in the purpose statement at the end of the Fourth Gospel, 20:31. The issue here is not whether the disciples’ initial faith in Jesus as Messiah was genuine or not, but whether their concept of who Jesus was grew and developed progressively as they spent time following him, until finally after his resurrection it is affirmed in the climactic statement of John’s Gospel, the affirmation of Thomas in 20:28.

[1:41]  23 tn Both Greek “Christ” and Hebrew and Aramaic “Messiah” mean “the one who has been anointed.”

[3:34]  24 tn That is, Christ.

[3:34]  25 tn Grk “for not by measure does he give the Spirit” (an idiom). Leviticus Rabbah 15:2 states: “The Holy Spirit rested on the prophets by measure.” Jesus is contrasted to this. The Spirit rests upon him without measure.

[4:27]  26 sn The application of Ps 2:1-2 is that Jews and Gentiles are opposing Jesus. The surprise of the application is that Jews are now found among the enemies of God’s plan.

[4:27]  27 sn A wordplay on “Christ,” v. 26, which means “one who has been anointed.”

[10:38]  28 sn The somewhat awkward naming of Jesus as from Nazareth here is actually emphatic. He is the key subject of these key events.

[10:38]  29 tn Or “how.” The use of ὡς (Jws) as an equivalent to ὅτι (Joti) to introduce indirect or even direct discourse is well documented. BDAG 1105 s.v. ὡς 5 lists Acts 10:28 in this category.

[10:38]  30 tn Grk “power, who.” The relative pronoun was replaced by the pronoun “he,” and a new sentence was begun in the translation at this point to improve the English style, due to the length of the sentence in Greek.

[10:38]  31 tn The translation “healing all who were oppressed by the devil” is given in L&N 22.22.

[10:38]  32 sn See Acts 7:9.



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