OT-LAW.filter - rwp naou:
rwp@
John:2:12 @{He went down to Capernaum} (\kateb eis Kapharnaoum autos\). Second aorist active indicative of \katabain\. Cana was on higher ground. This brief stay ({not many days}, \ou pollas hmeras\) in this important city (Tell Hum) on the north shore of Galilee was with Christ's mother, brothers (apparently friendly at first) and the six disciples, all in the fresh glow of the glory manifested at Cana. Surely Mary's heart was full.
rwp@John:2:21 @{But he spake of the temple of his body} (\ekeinos de elegen peri tou naou tou smatos autou\). Emphatic he (\ekeinos\) and imperfect tense (he had been speaking). This is John's view as he looks back at it, not what he understood when Jesus spoke the words.
rwp@Luke:11:51 @{From the blood of Abel to the blood of Zachariah} (\apo haimatos Abel hes haimatos Zachariou\). The blood of Abel is the first shed in the Old Testament (Genesis:4:10|), that of Zacharias the last in the O.T. canon which ended with Chronicles (2Chronicles:24:22|). Chronologically the murder of Uriah by Jehoiakim was later (Jeremiah:26:23|), but this climax is from Genesis to II Chronicles (the last book in the canon). See on ¯Matthew:23:35| for discussion of Zachariah as "the son of Barachiah" rather than "the son of Jehoiada." {Between the altar and the sanctuary} (\metaxu tou thusiastriou kai tou oikou\). Literally, between the altar and the house (Matthew:23:35| has temple, \naou\).
rwp@Mark:2:1 @{Again into Capernaum after some days} (\palin eis Kapharnaoum di' hmern\). After the first tour of Galilee when Jesus is back in the city which is now the headquarters for the work in Galilee. The phrase \di' hmern\ means days coming in between (\dia, duo\, two) the departure and return. {In the house} (\en oiki\). More exactly, {at home}, in the home of Peter, now the home of Jesus. Another picture directly from Peter's discourse. Some of the manuscripts have here \eis oikon\, illustrating the practical identity in meaning of \en\ and \eis\ (Robertson, _Grammar_, pp. 591-6). {It was noised} (\kousth\). It was heard (first aorist, passive indicative from \akou\, to hear). People spread the rumour, "He is at home, he is indoors."
rwp@Matthew:4:13 @{Dwelt in Capernaum} (\Katiksen eis Kapharnaoum\). He went first to Nazareth, his old home, but was rejected there (Luke:4:16-31|). In Capernaum (probably the modern \Tell Hm\) Jesus was in a large town, one of the centres of Galilean political and commercial life, a fishing mart, where many Gentiles came. Here the message of the kingdom would have a better chance than in Jerusalem with its ecclesiastical prejudices or in Nazareth with its local jealousies. Songs:Jesus "made his home" (\katiksen\) here.
rwp@Revelation:11:2 @{The court} (\tn auln\). The uncovered yard outside the house. There were usually two, one between the door and the street, the outer court, the other the inner court surrounded by the buildings (Mark:14:66|). This is here the outer court, "which is without the temple" (\tn exthen tou naou\), outside of the sanctuary, but within the \hieron\ where the Gentiles could go (carrying out the imagery of the Jerusalem temple). {Leave without} (\ekbale exthen\). Literally, "cast without" (second aorist active imperative of \ekball\. {Do not measure it} (\m autn metrsis\). Prohibition with \m\ and the first aorist active (ingressive) subjunctive of \metre\. This outer court is left to its fate. In Herod's temple the outer court was marked off from the inner by "the middle wall of partition" (\to mesoitoichon tou phragmou\, strkjv@Ephesians:2:15|), beyond which a Gentile could not go. In this outer court was a house of prayer for the Gentiles (Mark:11:17|), but now John is to cast it out and leave to its fate (given to the Gentiles in another sense) to be profaned by them. {They shall tread under foot} (\patsousin\). Future active of \pate\, here to trample with contempt as in strkjv@Luke:21:24|, even the holy city (Matthew:4:5; strkjv@Isaiah:48:2; strkjv@Nehemiah:11:1|). Charles thinks that only the heavenly city can be so called here (21:2,10; strkjv@22:19|) because of strkjv@11:8| (Sodom and Gomorrah). But the language may be merely symbolical. See strkjv@Daniel:9:24|. {Forty and two months} (\mnas tesserakonta kai duo\). Accusative of extent of time. This period in strkjv@Daniel:7:25; strkjv@12:7|. It occurs in three forms in the Apocalypse (forty-two months, here and strkjv@13:5|; 1260 days, strkjv@11:3; strkjv@12:6|; time, times and half a time or 3 1/2 years, strkjv@12:14| and so in Daniel). This period, however its length may be construed, covers the duration of the triumph of the Gentiles, of the prophesying of the two witnesses, of the sojourn of the woman in the wilderness.
rwp@Revelation:19:5 @{A voice from the throne} (\phn apo tou thronou\). Not the voice of God, nor of the Lamb, nor \ek tou naou\ (16:17|), but from an angel of the Presence. This angel summons all the servants of God to join in the antiphonal praise to God. {Give praise to our God} (\aineite ti thei hmn\). Present active imperative of \aine\, old verb, with the accusative elsewhere in N.T., but here with the dative as occasionally in the LXX (1Chronicles:16:36|, etc.).