Bible Commentary

Acts 18:1

The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1

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

He for Paul, A.V. and T.R. After these things, etc. No hint is given by St. Luke as to the length of Paul's sojourn at Athens. But as the double journey of the Beroeans, who accompanied him to Athens, back to Beraea, and of Timothy from Beraea to Athens, amounted to above five hundred miles, we cannot suppose it to have been less than a month; and it may have been a good deal more. His reasonings in the synagogue with the Jews and devout Greeks, apparently on successive sabbaths, his daily disputations in the Agora, apparently not begun till after he had "waited" some time for Silas and Timothy, the knowledge he had acquired of the numerous temples and altars at Athens, and the phrase with which this chapter begins, all indicate a stay of some length. Came to Corinth. If by land, a forty miles' or two days' journey, through Eleusis and Megara; if by sea, a day's sail. Lewin thinks he came by sea, and that it was in winter, and that possibly one of the shipwrecks mentioned in may have occurred at this time. Corinth, at this time a Roman colony, the capital of the province of Achaia, and the residence of the proconsul. It was a great commercial city, the center of the trade of the Levant, and consequently a great resort of the Jews. It had a very large Greek population. Ancient Corinth had been destroyed by Mummins, surnamed Achaicus, R.C. 146, and remained waste ( ἐρήμη) many years. Julius Caesar founded a Roman colony on the old site (Howson), "consisting principally of freedmen, among whom were great numbers of the Jewish race." Corinth, as a Roman colony, had its duumviri, as appears by coins of the reign of Claudius

. So in classical authors, Livia and Livilla, Drusa and Drusilla, are used of the same persons. Prisca is a not uncommon name for Roman women. The masculine Priscus occurs very frequently. Aquila and Priscilla were among the most active Christians, and the most devoted friends of St. Paul (, ; , , ; ; ); and were evidently persons of culture as well as piety. Lately; προσφάτως (i.q. πρόσφατον, Pindar, etc.), only found here in the New Testament. But it occurs in the LXX. of and , and in the apocryphal books repeatedly, and in Polybius. The adjective πρόσφατος, which is also used by the LXX. and the Apocrypha and in classical Greek for "new," is used only once in the New Testament, in . It means properly "newly killed," hence anything "recent," "fresh, or "new." Both the adjective and the adverb are very common in medical writings. Claudius had commanded all the Jews to depart from Rome. Suetonius mentions the fact, but unfortunately does not say in what year of Claudius's reign it took place. His account is that, in consequence of frequent disturbances and riots among the Jews at the instigation of Chrestus, Claudius drove them from Rome. It seems almost certain, as Renan says, especially combining Tacitus's account ('Annal.,' 15.44) of the spread of Christianity in the city of Rome before the time of Nero, that Chrestus (Greek χρηστός,) is only a corruption of the name Christ, similar to that found on three or four inscriptions before the time of Constantine, where Christians are called χρηστιανοί, and to the formation of the French word Chretien—in old French Chrestien; and that the true account of these riots is that they were attacks of the unbelieving Jews upon Christian Jews, similar to these at Jerusalem (.), at Antioch in Pisidia (), at Iconium and Lystra (.), and at Thessalonica and Beraea (.). The Romans did not discriminate between Jews and Christian Jews, and thought that those who called Christ their King were fighting under his leadership. Tertullian and Lactantius both speak of the vulgar pronunciation, Chrestianus and Chrestus. Howson also adopts the above explanation. But Meyer thinks that Chrestus was, as Suetonius says, a Jewish leader of insurrection at Rome. The question bears on the passage before us chiefly as the solution does or does not prove the existence of Christians at Rome at this time, and affects the probability of Aquila and Priscilla being already Christians when they came to Corinth, before they made St. Paul's acquaintance.

Recommended reading

More for Acts 18:1

Continue with other commentaries and DiscipleDeck content connected to this verse, chapter, or topic.

Other commentaries

Matthew Henry on Acts 18:1-6Acts 18:1-6 · Matthew Henry Concise CommentaryThough Paul was entitled to support from the churches he planted, and from the people to whom he preached, yet he worked at his calling. An honest trade, by which a man may get his bread, is not to be looked upon with c…Paul Visits CorinthActs 18:1-6 · Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole BiblePAUL VISITS CORINTH. We do not find that Paul was much persecuted at Athens, nor that he was driven thence by any ill usage, as he was from those places where the Jews had or could make any interest; but this reception…The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-28Acts 18:1-28 · The Pulpit CommentaryEXPOSITIONThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-3Acts 18:1-3 · The Pulpit CommentaryChristian friendship. Unselfish friendship, the union of human souls in the bands of a close, unworldly, self-sacrificing love, has always been a spectacle that has fascinated men, one on which they have dwelt with pecu…The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-11Acts 18:1-11 · The Pulpit CommentaryTruth before the citadel. When the apostle of Jesus Christ confronted the heathenism of Corinth, we may say that, in his person, Divine truth was opening its attack on the very citadel of sin; such was its "abysmal prof…The Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-17Acts 18:1-17 · The Pulpit CommentaryPaul at Corinth. I. HIS WORK AT CORINTH. 1. Its humble and self-denying beginning. (Acts 18:1-4.). 2. Courageous progress. (Acts 18:5-8.) When Timothy and Silas came, Paul, instead of throwing the work upon their should…
commentaryMatthew Henry on Acts 18:1-6Though Paul was entitled to support from the churches he planted, and from the people to whom he preached, yet he worked at his calling. An honest trade, by which a man may get his bread, is not to be looked upon with c…Matthew HenrycommentaryPaul Visits CorinthPAUL VISITS CORINTH. We do not find that Paul was much persecuted at Athens, nor that he was driven thence by any ill usage, as he was from those places where the Jews had or could make any interest; but this reception…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-17Paul at Corinth. I. HIS WORK AT CORINTH. 1. Its humble and self-denying beginning. (Acts 18:1-4.). 2. Courageous progress. (Acts 18:5-8.) When Timothy and Silas came, Paul, instead of throwing the work upon their should…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-11Truth before the citadel. When the apostle of Jesus Christ confronted the heathenism of Corinth, we may say that, in his person, Divine truth was opening its attack on the very citadel of sin; such was its "abysmal prof…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-3Christian friendship. Unselfish friendship, the union of human souls in the bands of a close, unworldly, self-sacrificing love, has always been a spectacle that has fascinated men, one on which they have dwelt with pecu…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-4A glimpse into apostolic life. Corinth. Change of method. In Athens a public challenge offered both to the philosophers and to the citizens generally in the market-place, as well as reasonings with the Jews in the synag…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1Corinth as a model sphere of missionary labor. The service of the apostle no city or district is more fully detailed than his service at Corinth, and there is so much of interest connected with that city, that we may co…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18:1-28EXPOSITIONJoseph S. Exell and contributors