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Delitzsche Hebrew New Testament
מעשי השליחים 8:38
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ויצו להעמיד את המרכבה וירדו שניהם אל תוך המים פילפוס והסריס ויטבל אותו׃
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
and he baptized: John 3:22, John 3:23, John 4:1
Reciprocal: Acts 16:15 - when
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And he commanded the chariot to stand still,.... That is, the eunuch ordered his chariot driver to stop; for to him it better agrees to give this order than to Philip; though otherwise the words are so placed, that it would be difficult to say who gave the command.
And they went down both into the water, both Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him: upon which Calvin has this note;
"hence we see what was the manner of baptizing with the ancients, for they plunged the whole body into water.''
And indeed, other mode had been practised then, as sprinkling or pouring of water, there would have been no necessity of their going out of the chariot, and much less of their going down into the water; and as for change of apparel, it cannot be reasonably thought that so great a man should take so long a journey without it. In like manner the Jewish ablutions and purifications, which were performed by immersion, and therefore called baptisms, Hebrews 9:10 are spoken of in the same sort of language as here: so a profluvious person, and a woman that had lain in, were obliged ש×ר×× ×××××, "to go down and dip" k.
"It is a tradition of the Rabbins l, that he that sees any nocturnal pollution on the day of atonement,
×××¨× ×××××, "goes down and dips himself".--And so all that are obliged to dipping, dip according to their custom on the day of atonement; the profluvious person, man or woman, the leprous person, man or woman, the husband of a menstruous woman, and one defiled with the dead, dip according to their custom on the day of atonement.''
k T. Bab. Nidda, fol. 42. 1. & 43. 1. l T. Bab. Yoma, fol. 88. 1.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And they went down both into the water - This passage has been made the subject of much discussion on the subject of baptism. It has been adduced in proof of the necessity of immersion. It is not proposed to enter into that subject here (see the Editorsâ Notes at Matthew 3:6, Matthew 3:16). It may be remarked here that the preposition ειÌÏ eis, translated âinto,â does not of necessity mean that they went âintoâ the water. Its meaning would be as well expressed by âtoâ or âunto,â or as we should say, âthey went âtoâ the water,â without meaning to determine whether they went âintoâ it or not. Out of âtwenty-sixâ significations which Schleusner has given the word, this is one, and one which frequently occurs: John 11:38, âJesus, therefore, groaning in himself, cometh to ειÌÏ eis the graveâ - assuredly not âintoâ the grave; Luke 11:49, âI send them prophets,â Greek, âI send to ειÌÏ eis them prophetsâ - âtoâ them, not âintoâ them, compare Romans 2:4, 1 Corinthians 14:36; Matthew 12:41, âThey repented at ειÌÏ eis the preaching of Jonasâ - not into his preaching; John 4:5, âThen cometh he âtoâ ειÌÏ eis a city of Samaria,â that is, ânear to it,â for the context shows that he had not yet entered âintoâ it, compare Acts 7:6, Acts 7:8; John 21:4, âJesus stood âonâ ειÌÏ eis the shore,â that is, not âin,â but ânearâ the shore. These passages show:
- That the word does not necessarily mean that they entered âintoâ the water. But,
- If it did, it does not necessarily follow that the eunuch was immersed. There might be various ways of baptizing, even after they were âinâ the water, besides immersing. Sprinkling or pouring might be performed there as well as elsewhere. The most solemn act of baptism that I ever saw performed was, when I was a boy, in the river on the banks of which I was born, where the minister and the candidate went both of them âintoâ the Myer, and, when near to the middle of the river, the candidate kneeled down in the water, and the minister with a bowl âpouredâ water on his head. Yet if the fact had been stated, in reference to this case, that âthey went both down âintoâ the water, and came up out of the water,â and it had been hence inferred that the man was âimmersed,â it would have been wholly a false inference. No such immersion occurred, and there is, from the narrative here, no more evidence that it occurred in the case of the eunuch. See βαÏÏιÌÎ¶Ï baptizoÌ.
(3)It is incumbent on those who maintain that âimmersionâ is the only valid mode of baptism to prove that this passage cannot possibly mean anything else, and that there was no other mode practiced by the apostles.
(4)It would still be incumbent to show that if this were the common and even the only mode then, in a warm climate, that it is indispensable that this mode should be practiced everywhere else. No such positive command can be adduced. And it follows, therefore, that it cannot be proved that immersion is the only lawful mode of baptism. See the Editorsâ Notes at Matthew 3:6, Matthew 3:16.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 38. And they went down — They alighted from the chariot into the water. While Philip was instructing him, and he professed his faith in Christ, he probably plunged himself under the water, as this was the plan which appears to have been generally followed among the Jews in their baptisms; but the person who had received has confession of faith was he to whom the baptism was attributed, as it was administered by his authority.