Bible Commentary

Acts 8:26

The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 8:26

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

But an angel for and the angel, A.V.; the same is for which is, A.V. An angel. "The angel," as in A.V., is right, just as ὄνομα κυρίου (; . 39; , etc.) and הוָהֹיְ משֵׁ in Hebrew mean "the Name of the Lord," not "a Name" (see ; , notes).

The south, meaning that part of Judaea which was called "the south country;" Hebrew בגֶנֶּהַ (; ; etc.). This is generally rendered in the LXX. by πρὸς λίβα or πρὸς νότον.

But in , in Symraachus, μεσηνβρία stands as the rendering of בגֶנֶּחַ. As regards the words, the same is desert, it is observable that in and ἔρημος is the LXX.

rendering of מבֶנֶחַ, and that part of the country is called "the wilderness of Judaea." The words of the angel, therefore, mean, not that Gaza is desert, nor that the read itself is desert, but that the country to which he was directing Philip's journey was part of that known as the desert; αὕτη does not refer to ὁδός or to γάζα, but to χώρα, understood as contained in ἔρημος.

The meaning of the whole sentence I take to be as follows:—"Take thy journey in [or, 'by'] the south [comp. ; ; ; . lids far as [ ἐπί, 'notans locum vel terminum ad quem' (Schleusner)] the road that goes from Jerusalem to Gaza, where the country is desert."

Philip was to proceed from Samaria along the south country till he came to where the Jerusalem road met his road. That district, he is reminded, was desert, part, i.e., or the desert of Judaea. The spot was probably selected for that very reason, as affording the privacy necessary for the eunuch to read in his chariot, and for Philip to join him and expound the Word of God to him.

Chrysostom (followed by others) takes κατὰ μεσημβρίαν in the sense of "at noonday in the most violent heat," though he also renders it "southwards" (Hem., 19.).

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