(0.99826578947368) | (2Ti 1:18) |
2 tn Grk “all the ways he served in Ephesus.” |
(0.73833926315789) | (Act 19:21) |
5 sn Achaia was the Roman province of Achaia located across the Aegean Sea from Ephesus. Its principal city was Corinth. |
(0.73833926315789) | (Act 20:17) |
1 sn Miletus was a seaport on the western coast of Asia Minor about 45 mi (72 km) south of Ephesus. |
(0.65169705263158) | (1Ti 6:14) |
2 sn The command refers to the duties laid upon Timothy for his ministry in Ephesus (1 Tim 1:3-20; 6:2c-5). |
(0.65169705263158) | (2Ti 2:16) |
1 sn Profane chatter was apparently a characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus (cf. 1 Tim 1:3-4; 4:7; 6:20). |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 18:27) |
2 sn To cross over to Achaia. Achaia was organized by the Romans as a separate province in 27 |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:18) |
2 sn Making their deeds known. Ephesus was a major pagan religious center with much syncretistic “magical” practice. Coming to Jesus changed the lives and attitudes of these believers, creating a social impact. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:24) |
2 sn Artemis was the name of a Greek goddess worshiped particularly in Asia Minor, whose temple, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, was located just outside the city of Ephesus. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:27) |
2 sn Artemis was the name of a Greek goddess worshiped particularly in Asia Minor, whose temple, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, was located just outside the city of Ephesus. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:28) |
5 sn Artemis was a Greek goddess worshiped particularly in Asia Minor, whose temple, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, was located just outside the city of Ephesus. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:29) |
4 sn To the theater. This location made the event a public spectacle. The Grand Theater in Ephesus (still standing today) stood facing down the main thoroughfare of the city toward the docks. It had a seating capacity of 25,000. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:34) |
4 sn They all shouted…for about two hours. The extent of the tumult shows the racial and social tensions of a cosmopolitan city like Ephesus, indicating what the Christians in such locations had to face. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 19:35) |
4 sn Artemis was a Greek goddess worshiped particularly in Asia Minor, whose temple, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, was located just outside the city of Ephesus. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 20:15) |
5 sn Miletus was a seaport on the western coast of Asia Minor about 40 mi (70 km) south of Ephesus. From Mitylene to Miletus was about 125 mi (200 km). |
(0.56505478947368) | (Act 21:27) |
2 sn Note how there is a sense of Paul being pursued from a distance. These Jews may well have been from Ephesus, since they recognized Trophimus the Ephesian (v. 29). |
(0.56505478947368) | (1Ti 4:7) |
1 sn Those myths refer to legendary tales characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus and Crete. See parallels in 1 Tim 1:4; 2 Tim 4:4; and Titus 1:14. |
(0.56505478947368) | (2Ti 4:4) |
1 sn These myths were legendary tales characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus and Crete. See parallels in 1 Tim 1:4; 4:7; and Titus 1:14. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Tit 1:14) |
1 sn Jewish myths were legendary tales characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus and Crete. See parallels in 1 Tim 1:4; 4:7; and 2 Tim 4:4. |
(0.56505478947368) | (Tit 3:9) |
2 sn Fights about the law were characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus as well as in Crete (cf. 1 Tim 1:3-7; Titus 1:10, 14). |
(0.4784126) | (Act 19:24) |
1 tn BDAG 665 s.v. ναός 1.a states, “Specif. of temples: of replicas of the temple of Artemis at Ephesus 19:24…but here, near ἱερόν vs. 27…ναός can be understood in the more restricted sense shrine, where the image of the goddess stood.” |