NT.filter - rwp revived:
rwp@
Acts:9:21 @{Were amazed} (\existanto\). Imperfect middle indicative of \existmi\. They continued to stand out of themselves in astonishment at this violent reversal in Saul the persecutor. {Made havock} (\porthsas\). First aorist active participle of \porthe\, to lay waste, an old verb, but only here and strkjv@Galatians:1:13,23| by Paul, an interesting coincidence. It is the old proverb about Saul among the prophets (1Samuel:10:12|) revived with a new meaning (Furneaux). {Had come} (\elluthei\). Past perfect indicative active. {Might bring} (\agagi\). Second aorist (effective) active subjunctive of \ag\ with \hina\ (purpose). {Bound} (\dedemenous\). Perfect passive participle of \de\. Interesting tenses.
rwp@John:11:53 @{Songs:from that day} (\ap' ekeins oun ts hmeras\). The raising of Lazarus brought matters to a head so to speak. It was now apparently not more than a month before the end. {They took counsel} (\ebouleusanto\). First aorist middle indicative of \bouleu\, old verb to take counsel, in the middle voice for themselves, among themselves. The Sanhedrin took the advice of Caiaphas seriously and plotted the death of Jesus. {That they might put him to death} (\hina apokteinsin auton\). Purpose clause with \hina\ and first aorist active subjunctive of \apoktein\. It is an old purpose (5:18; strkjv@7:19; strkjv@8:44,59; strkjv@10:39; strkjv@11:8|) now revived with fresh energy due to the raising of Lazarus.
rwp@Luke:3:1 @{Now in the fifteenth year} (\en etei de pentekaidekati\). Tiberius Caesar was ruler in the provinces two years before Augustus Caesar died. Luke makes a six-fold attempt here to indicate the time when John the Baptist began his ministry. John revived the function of the prophet (\Ecce Homo\, p. 2|) and it was a momentous event after centuries of prophetic silence. Luke begins with the Roman Emperor, then mentions Pontius Pilate Procurator of Judea, Herod Antipas Tetrarch of Galilee (and Perea), Philip, Tetrarch of Iturea and Trachonitis, Lysanias, Tetrarch of Abilene (all with the genitive absolute construction) and concludes with the high-priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas (son-in-law and successor of Annas). The ancients did not have our modern system of chronology, the names of rulers as here being the common way. Objection has been made to the mention of Lysanias here because Josephus (_Ant_. XXVII. I) tells of a Lysanias who was King of Abila up to B.C. 36 as the one referred to by Luke with the wrong date. But an inscription has been found on the site of Abilene with mention of "Lysanias the tetrarch" and at the time to which Luke refers (see my _Luke the Historian in the Light of Research_, pp. 167f.). Songs:Luke is vindicated again by the rocks.
rwp@Luke:19:45 @{Began to cast out} (\rxato ekballein\). Songs:Mark:11:15| whereas strkjv@Matthew:21:12| has simply "he cast out." See Mark and Matthew for discussion of this second cleansing of the temple at the close of the public ministry in relation to the one at the beginning in strkjv@John:2:14-22|. There is nothing gained by accusing John or the Synoptics of a gross chronological blunder. There was abundant time in these three years for all the abuses to be revived.
rwp@Matthew:18:8 @In verses 8| and 9| we have one of the dualities or doublets in Matthew (5:29-30|). Jesus repeated his pungent sayings many times. Instead of \eis geennan\ (5:29|) we have \eis to pur to ainion\ and at the end of verse 9| \tou puros\ is added to \tn geennan\. This is the first use in Matthew of \ainios\. We have it again in strkjv@19:16,29| with \zo\, in strkjv@25:41| with \pur\, in strkjv@25:46| with \kolasin\ and \zon\. The word means ageless, without beginning or end as of God (Romans:16:26|), without beginning as in strkjv@Romans:16:25|, without end as here and often. The effort to make it mean "\aeonian\" fire will make it mean "\aeonian\" life also. If the punishment is limited, _ipso facto_ the life is shortened. In verse 9| also \monophthalmon\ occurs. It is an Ionic compound in Herodotus that is condemned by the Atticists, but it is revived in the vernacular _Koin_. Literally one-eyed. Here only and strkjv@Mark:9:47| in the New Testament.
rwp@Philippians:3:13 @{Not yet} (\oup\). But some MSS. read \ou\ (not). {To have apprehended} (\kateilphenai\). Perfect active infinitive of same verb \katalamban\ (perfective use of \kata\, to grasp completely). Surely denial enough. {But one thing} (\hen de\). No verb in the Greek. We can supply \poi\ (I do) or \dik\ (I keep on in the chase), but no verb is really needed. "When all is said, the greatest art is to limit and isolate oneself" (Goethe), concentration. {Forgetting the things which are behind} (\ta men opis epilanthanomenos\). Common verb, usually with the genitive, but the accusative in the _Koin_ is greatly revived with verbs. Paul can mean either his old pre-Christian life, his previous progress as a Christian, or both (all of it). {Stretching forward} (\epekteinomenos\). Present direct middle participle of the old double compound \epektein\ (stretching myself out towards). Metaphor of a runner leaning forward as he runs.
rwp@Philippians:4:10 @{I rejoice} (\echarn\). Second aorist passive indicative of \chair\, a timeless aorist. I did rejoice, I do rejoice. {Greatly} (\megals\). Old adverb, only here in N.T., from \megas\ (great). {Now at length} (\d pote\). In N.T. only here and strkjv@Romans:1:10|. \Pote\ is indefinite past (interval), \d\ immediate present. {Ye have revived} (\anethalete\). Second aorist active indicative of old poetic word (Homer), \anathall\, to sprout again, to shoot up, to blossom again. Songs:in the LXX five times, though rare and literary word. {Your thought for me} (\to huper emou phronein\). Accusative case of the articular present active infinitive the object of \anethalete\ used transitively. "You caused your thinking of me to bloom afresh." {Wherein} (\eph' hi\). "In which," "upon which" (locative case). A loose reference to Paul's interests as involved in their thinking of him. {Ye did indeed take thought} (\kai ephroneite\). Imperfect active, "ye were also (or had been also) thinking." {Ye lacked opportunity} (\kaireisthe\). Imperfect middle of \akaireomai\, late and rare word, here only in N.T., from \akairos\ (\a\ privative, \kairos\), not to have a chance, the opposite of \eukaire\ (Mark:6:31|).
rwp@Romans:7:9 @{I was alive} (\ezn\). Imperfect active. Apparently, "the lost paradise in the infancy of men" (Denney), before the conscience awoke and moral responsibility came, "a seeming life" (Shedd). {Sin revived} (\h hamartia anezsen\). Sin came back to life, waked up, the blissful innocent stage was over, "the commandment having come" (\elthouss ts entols\, genitive absolute). {But I died} (\eg de apethanon\). My seeming life was over for I was conscious of sin, of violation of law. I was dead before, but I did not know. Now I found out that I was spiritually dead.