Bible Commentary

Acts 20:3

The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 20:3

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

When he had spent … there for there abode, A.V.; a plot was laid against him by the Jews for when the Jews laid wait for him, A.V.; for for into, A.V.; determined for purposed, A.V. ( ἐγένετο γνώμης, R.

T.). When he had spent three months. For this use of ποιεῖν, see ; :33. See also , where the R.V. varies the rendering, and seems to take ποιεῖν as a verb neuter, as the A.

V. does here, the accusative ( μῆνας τρεῖς) being taken as that of time how long. And a plot, etc. There is no "and" in the Greek. It is better to take the T.R., and to consider ποιήσας as a nominative pendens as ἐπιγνόντες is in , according to the reading of Meyer, Alford, etc.

A plot was laid against him by the Jews. It appears from this that Apollos had not succeeded in subduing the bigoted hatred of the Corinthian Jews. But probably the desperate measure of a plot against his life ( ἐπιβουλή, as in , ; of this chapter, and .

30) is an indication that many of their number had joined the Church; and that the unbelieving remnant, being foiled in argument, had recourse to violence. He determined; literally, according to the R.

T., he was of opinion. But the T.R. has ἐγένετο γνώμη, "his opinion was," the construction of the sentence being changed. The three months were probably chiefly spent at Corinth, according to the intention expressed in , though it would seem that he had stayed a longer time in Macedonia than he anticipated.

It was during his sojourn at Corinth that the Epistle to the Romans was written.

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