Kisah Para Rasul 19:30
Konteks19:30 But when Paul wanted to enter the public assembly, 1 the disciples would not let him.
Kisah Para Rasul 25:23
Konteks25:23 So the next day Agrippa 2 and Bernice came with great pomp 3 and entered the audience hall, 4 along with the senior military officers 5 and the prominent men of the city. When Festus 6 gave the order, 7 Paul was brought in.
Kisah Para Rasul 9:12
Konteks9:12 and he has seen in a vision 8 a man named Ananias come in and place his hands on him so that he may see again.”
[19:30] 1 tn Or “enter the crowd.” According to BDAG 223 s.v. δῆμος 2, “in a Hellenistic city, a convocation of citizens called together for the purpose of transacting official business, popular assembly…εἰσελθεῖν εἰς τὸν δ. go into the assembly 19:30.”
[25:23] 2 sn See the note on King Agrippa in 25:13.
[25:23] 3 tn Or “great pageantry” (BDAG 1049 s.v. φαντασία; the term is a NT hapax legomenon).
[25:23] sn Agrippa and Bernice came with great pomp. The “royals” were getting their look at Paul. Everyone who was anyone would have been there.
[25:23] 4 tn Or “auditorium.” “Auditorium” may suggest to the modern English reader a theater where performances are held. Here it is the large hall where a king or governor would hold audiences. Paul once spoke of himself as a “spectacle” to the world (1 Cor 4:8-13).
[25:23] 5 tn Grk “the chiliarchs” (officers in command of a thousand soldiers). In Greek the term χιλίαρχος (ciliarco") literally described the “commander of a thousand,” but it was used as the standard translation for the Latin tribunus militum or tribunus militare, the military tribune who commanded a cohort of 600 men.
[25:23] 6 sn See the note on Porcius Festus in 24:27.
[25:23] 7 tn Grk “and Festus ordering, Paul was brought in.” Because of the length and complexity of the Greek sentence, a new sentence was begun in the translation, and καί (kai) has not been translated. The participle κελεύσαντος (keleusanto") has been taken temporally.
[9:12] 8 tc ‡ The words ἐν ὀράματι (en oramati, “in a vision”) are not found in some of the earliest and best
[9:12] sn Apparently while in Damascus Paul had a subsequent vision in the midst of his blindness, fulfilling the prediction in 9:6.