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Friday, June 27th, 2025
the Week of Proper 7 / Ordinary 12
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Read the Bible

Jerome's Latin Vulgate

secundum Lucam 23:29

Quem inveni accusari de quæstionibus legis ipsorum, nihil vero dignum morte aut vinculis habentem criminis.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Caesarea;   Change of Venue;   Claudius Lysius;   Felix;   Letters;   Minister, Christian;   Paul;  

Dictionaries:

- Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Acts, book of;   Caesarea;   Felix;   War;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Ordination;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Lysias Claudius;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Acts;   Ambush;   Crimes and Punishments;   Letter;   Persecution in the Bible;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Caesarea;   Crime;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Letter;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Bernice;   Claudius;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Charge;   Claudius Lysias;   Epistle;   Tertullus;  

Parallel Translations

Clementine Latin Vulgate (1592)
Quem inveni accusari de quæstionibus legis ipsorum, nihil vero dignum morte aut vinculis habentem criminis.
Nova Vulgata (1979)
quem inveni accusari de quaestionibus legis ipsorum, nihil vero dignum morte aut vinculis habentem crimen.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

questions: Acts 23:6-9, Acts 18:15, Acts 24:5, Acts 24:6, Acts 24:10-21, Acts 25:19, Acts 25:20

but: Acts 25:7, Acts 25:8, Acts 25:11, Acts 25:25, Acts 26:31

Reciprocal: Deuteronomy 21:22 - General Jeremiah 26:16 - General John 18:35 - Amos I Acts 25:10 - as thou

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Whom I perceived to be accused of questions of their law,.... As about the resurrection of the dead, and a future state, which some in the council denied, and some asserted, which with this heathen man were idle and foolish questions; or about the defiling of the temple, and speaking contemptibly of the law of Moses, the people of the Jews, and the holy place, which was the cry of the populace against him, and were things the captain knew little of:

but to have nothing laid to his charge worthy of death, or of bonds: by the laws of the Romans; and yet he himself had bound him with two chains at the first taking of him, and afterwards ordered him to be bound with thongs, and scourged, of which he says nothing, being convinced of his error, and willing to hide it; however, he bears a full testimony to the innocence of the apostle.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Questions of their law - So he understood the whole controversy to be.

Worthy of death - By the Roman law. He had been guilty of no crime against the Roman people.

Or of bonds - Of chains, or of confinement.


 
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