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Acts 17:18
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People's Commentary (NT)
<< Acts 17:17   Acts 17:19 >>


Acts 17:18

Acts 17:18 Of the Epicureans, and of the Stoicks. Two of the philosophical schools then prevalent in Athens. The first held that the gods were careless about human affairs, and that a man's best course was to get as much pleasure out of life as possible. With them pleasure was the chief good. The Stoics were fatalists, believers in a sort of pantheism, and insisted on self-righteousness. Epicurus was the founder of the first sect; Zeno, of the second. What will this babbler say? A contemptuous expression. A setter forth of strange gods. He spoke of God and the risen Jesus. Some have thought that they mistook "Anastasis", the Greek for "resurrection", for the name of a goddess.




Other People's Commentary (NT) entries containing Acts 17:18:

Acts 17:18
1 Corinthians 1:22

 

<< Acts 17:17   Acts 17:19 >>

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