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Kisah Para Rasul 4:13

Konteks

4:13 When they saw the boldness 1  of Peter and John, and discovered 2  that they were uneducated 3  and ordinary 4  men, they were amazed and recognized these men had been with Jesus.

Kisah Para Rasul 13:43

Konteks
13:43 When the meeting of the synagogue 5  had broken up, 6  many of the Jews and God-fearing proselytes 7  followed Paul and Barnabas, who were speaking with them and were persuading 8  them 9  to continue 10  in the grace of God.

Kisah Para Rasul 28:25

Konteks
28:25 So they began to leave, 11  unable to agree among themselves, after Paul made one last statement: “The Holy Spirit spoke rightly to your ancestors 12  through the prophet Isaiah
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[4:13]  1 tn Or “courage.”

[4:13]  2 tn Or “and found out.”

[4:13]  3 sn Uneducated does not mean “illiterate,” that is, unable to read or write. Among Jews in NT times there was almost universal literacy, especially as the result of widespread synagogue schools. The term refers to the fact that Peter and John had no formal rabbinic training and thus, in the view of their accusers, were not qualified to expound the law or teach publicly. The objection is like Acts 2:7.

[4:13]  4 tn For the translation of ἰδιῶται (idiwtai) as “ordinary men” see L&N 27.26.

[13:43]  5 sn See the note on synagogue in 6:9.

[13:43]  6 tn BDAG 607 s.v. λύω 3 has “λυθείσης τ. συναγωγῆς when the meeting of the synagogue had broken up Ac 13:43.”

[13:43]  7 tn Normally the phrase σεβόμενοι τὸν θεόν (sebomenoi ton qeon) refers to Gentiles (“God-fearers”) who believed in God, attended the synagogue, and followed the Mosaic law to some extent, but stopped short of undergoing circumcision. BDAG 918 s.v. σέβω 1.b lists in this category references in Acts 16:14; 18:7; with σεβόμενοι alone, Acts 13:50; 17:4, 17; the phrase is also found in Josephus, Ant. 14.7.2 (14.110). Unique to this particular verse is the combination σεβόμενοι προσηλύτων (sebomenoi proshlutwn). Later rabbinic discussion suggests that to be regarded as a proper proselyte, a Gentile male had to submit to circumcision. If that is the case here, these Gentiles in the synagogue at Pisidian Antioch should be regarded as full proselytes who had converted completely to Judaism and undergone circumcision. It is probably more likely, however, that προσηλύτων is used here in a somewhat looser sense (note the use of σεβομένας [sebomena"] alone to refer to women in Acts 13:50) and that these Gentiles were still in the category commonly called “God-fearers” without being full, technical proselytes to Judaism. See further K. G. Kuhn, TDNT 6:732-34, 743-44. Regardless, the point is that many Gentiles, as well as Jews, came to faith.

[13:43]  8 tn This is the meaning given for ἔπειθον (epeiqon) in this verse by BDAG 791 s.v. πείθω 1.b.

[13:43]  9 tn Grk “who, as they were speaking with them, were persuading them.”

[13:43]  10 tn The verb προμένειν (promenein) is similar in force to the use of μένω (menw, “to reside/remain”) in the Gospel and Epistles of John.

[28:25]  11 tn The imperfect verb ἀπελύοντο (apeluonto) has been translated as an ingressive imperfect.

[28:25]  12 tn Or “forefathers”; Grk “fathers.”



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