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Psalms 22:22

Context

22:22 I will declare your name to my countrymen! 1 

In the middle of the assembly I will praise you!

Psalms 22:25

Context

22:25 You are the reason I offer praise 2  in the great assembly;

I will fulfill my promises before the Lord’s loyal followers. 3 

Psalms 40:9-10

Context

40:9 I have told the great assembly 4  about your justice. 5 

Look! I spare no words! 6 

O Lord, you know this is true.

40:10 I have not failed to tell about your justice; 7 

I spoke about your reliability and deliverance;

I have not neglected to tell the great assembly about your loyal love and faithfulness. 8 

Psalms 66:16

Context

66:16 Come! Listen, all you who are loyal to God! 9 

I will declare what he has done for me.

Psalms 111:1

Context
Psalm 111 10 

111:1 Praise the Lord!

I will give thanks to the Lord with my whole heart,

in the assembly of the godly and the congregation.

Psalms 119:46

Context

119:46 I will speak 11  about your regulations before kings

and not be ashamed.

Acts 4:8-12

Context
4:8 Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, 12  replied, 13  “Rulers of the people and elders, 14  4:9 if 15  we are being examined 16  today for a good deed 17  done to a sick man – by what means this man was healed 18 4:10 let it be known to all of you and to all the people of Israel that by the name of Jesus Christ 19  the Nazarene whom you crucified, whom God raised from the dead, this man stands before you healthy. 4:11 This Jesus 20  is the stone that was rejected by you, 21  the builders, that has become the cornerstone. 22  4:12 And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among people 23  by which we must 24  be saved.”

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[22:22]  1 tn Or “brothers,” but here the term does not carry a literal familial sense. It refers to the psalmist’s fellow members of the Israelite covenant community (see v. 23).

[22:25]  2 tn Heb “from with you [is] my praise.”

[22:25]  3 tn Heb “my vows I will fulfill before those who fear him.” When asking the Lord for help, the psalmists would typically promise to praise the Lord publicly if he intervened and delivered them.

[40:9]  4 sn The great assembly is also mentioned in Pss 22:25 and 35:18.

[40:9]  5 tn Heb “I proclaim justice in the great assembly.” Though “justice” appears without a pronoun here, the Lord’s just acts are in view (see v. 10). His “justice” (צֶדֶק, tsedeq) is here the deliverance that originates in his justice; he protects and vindicates the one whose cause is just.

[40:9]  6 tn Heb “Look! My lips I do not restrain.”

[40:10]  7 tn Heb “your justice I have not hidden in the midst of my heart.”

[40:10]  8 tn Heb “I have not hidden your loyal love and reliability.”

[66:16]  9 tn Heb “all of the fearers of God.”

[111:1]  10 sn Psalm 111. The psalmist praises God for his marvelous deeds, especially the way in which he provides for and delivers his people. The psalm is an acrostic. After the introductory call to praise, every poetic line (twenty-two in all) begins with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet.

[119:46]  11 tn The series of four cohortatives with prefixed vav (ו) conjunctive in vv. 46-48 list further consequences of the anticipated positive divine response to the request made in v. 43.

[4:8]  12 sn Filled with the Holy Spirit. The narrator’s remark about the Holy Spirit indicates that Peter speaks as directed by God and for God. This fulfills Luke 12:11-12 (1 Pet 3:15).

[4:8]  13 tn Grk “Spirit, said to them.”

[4:8]  14 tc The Western and Byzantine texts, as well as one or two Alexandrian witnesses, read τοῦ ᾿Ισραήλ (tou Israhl, “of Israel”) after πρεσβύτεροι (presbuteroi, “elders”; so D E Ψ 33 1739 Ï it), while most of the better witnesses, chiefly Alexandrian (Ì74 א A B 0165 1175 vg sa bo), lack this modifier. The longer reading was most likely added by scribes to give literary balance to the addressees in that “Rulers” already had an adjunct while “elders” was left absolute.

[4:9]  15 tn This clause is a first class condition. It assumes for the sake of argument that this is what they were being questioned about.

[4:9]  16 tn Or “questioned.” The Greek term ἀνακρίνω (anakrinw) points to an examination similar to a legal one.

[4:9]  17 tn Or “for an act of kindness.”

[4:9]  18 tn Or “delivered” (σέσωται [seswtai], from σώζω [swzw]). See 4:12.

[4:10]  19 tn Or “Messiah”; both “Christ” (Greek) and “Messiah” (Hebrew and Aramaic) mean “one who has been anointed.”

[4:11]  20 tn Grk “This one”; the referent (Jesus) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[4:11]  21 tn The word “you” is inserted into the quotation because Peter is making a direct application of Ps 118:22 to his hearers. Because it is not in the OT, it has been left as normal type (rather than bold italic). The remarks are like Acts 2:22-24 and 3:12-15.

[4:11]  22 sn A quotation from Ps 118:22 which combines the theme of rejection with the theme of God’s vindication/exaltation.

[4:12]  23 tn Here ἀνθρώποις (anqrwpoi") has been translated as a generic noun (“people”).

[4:12]  24 sn Must be saved. The term used here (δεῖ, dei, “it is necessary”) reflects the necessity set up by God’s directive plan.



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