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PARALLEL HISTORY BIBLE - Acts 17:23


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LXX- Greek Septuagint - Acts 17:23

διερχομενος 1330 5740 γαρ 1063 και 2532 αναθεωρων 333 5723 τα 3588 σεβασματα 4574 υμων 5216 ευρον 2147 5627 και 2532 βωμον 1041 εν 1722 ω 3739 επεγεγραπτο 1924 5718 αγνωστω 57 θεω 2316 ον 3739 ουν 3767 αγνοουντες 50 5723 ευσεβειτε 2151 5719 τουτον 5126 εγω 1473 καταγγελλω 2605 5719 υμιν 5213

Douay Rheims Bible

For passing by, and seeing your idols, I found an altar also, on which was written: To the unknown God. What therefore you worship, without knowing it, that I preach to you:

King James Bible - Acts 17:23

For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.

World English Bible

For as I passed along, and observed the objects of your worship, I found also an altar with this inscription: 'TO AN UNKNOWN GOD.' What therefore you worship in ignorance, this I announce to you.

Early Church Father Links

Anf-02 vi.iv.v.xii Pg 24.1, Anf-03 iv.viii.ii.ix Pg 5, Anf-05 iii.iii.v.xxii Pg 4, Anf-09 xv.iii.vi.v Pg 10, Npnf-104 v.v.iv.xxx Pg 6, Npnf-110 VI_1 Pg 23, Npnf-111 vi.xxxviii Pg 9, Npnf-111 vi.xxxviii Pg 10, Npnf-111 vi.xxxviii Pg 17, Npnf-111 vi.xlii Pg 10, Npnf-111 vi.xxxi Pg 10, Npnf-113 v.v.iii Pg 4, Npnf-202 ii.viii.xviii Pg 5, Npnf-211 iv.v.viii.xx Pg 7

World Wide Bible Resources


Acts 17:23

Early Christian Commentary - (A.D. 100 - A.D. 325)

Anf-02 vi.iv.v.xii Pg 24.1


Anf-03 iv.viii.ii.ix Pg 5
Ignotis Deis. Comp. Acts xvii. 23.

Does, then, a man worship that which he knows nothing of? Then, again, as they had certain gods, they ought to have been contented with them, without requiring select ones. In this want they are even found to be irreligious! For if gods are selected as onions are,925

925 Ut bulbi. This is the passage which Augustine quotes (de Civit. Dei, vii. 1) as “too facetious.”

then such as are not chosen are declared to be worthless. Now we on our part allow that the Romans had two sets of gods, common and proper; in other words, those which they had in common with other nations, and those which they themselves devised. And were not these called the public and the foreign926

926 Adventicii, “coming from abroad.”

gods? Their altars tell us so; there is (a specimen) of the foreign gods at the fane of Carna, of the public gods in the Palatium. Now, since their common gods are comprehended in both the physical and the mythic classes, we have already said enough concerning them. I should like to speak of their particular kinds of deity. We ought then to admire the Romans for that third set of the gods of their enemies,927

927 Touching these gods of the vanquished nations, compare The Apology, xxv.; below, c. xvii.; Minucius Felix, Octav. xxv.

because no other nation ever discovered for itself so large a mass of superstition. Their other deities we arrange in two classes: those which have become gods from human beings, and those which have had their origin in some other way. Now, since there is advanced the same colourable pretext for the deification of the dead, that their lives were meritorious, we are compelled to urge the same reply against them, that no one of them was worth so much pains.  Their fond928

928 Diligentem.

father Æneas, in whom they believed, was never glorious, and was felled with a stone929

929 See Homer, Il. v. 300.

—a vulgar weapon, to pelt a dog withal, inflicting a wound no less ignoble! But this Æneas turns out930

930 Invenitur.

a traitor to his country; yes, quite as much as Antenor. And if they will not believe this to be true of him, he at any rate deserted his companions when his country was in flames, and must be held inferior to that woman of Carthage,931

931 Referred to also above, i. 18.

who, when her husband Hasdrubal supplicated the enemy with the mild pusillanimity of our Æneas, refused to accompany him, but hurrying her children along with her, disdained to take her beautiful self and father’s noble heart932

932 The obscure “formam et patrem” is by Oehler rendered “pulchritudinem et generis nobilitatem.”

into exile, but plunged into the flames of the burning Carthage, as if rushing into the embraces of her (dear but) ruined country. Is he “pious Æneas” for (rescuing) his young only son and decrepit old father, but deserting Priam and Astyanax? But the Romans ought rather to detest him; for in defence of their princes and their royal933

933 The word is “eorum” (possessive of “principum”), not “suæ.”

house, they surrender934

934 Dejerant adversus.

even children and wives, and every dearest pledge.935

935 What Tertullian himself thinks on this point, see his de Corona, xi.

They deify the son of Venus, and this with the full knowledge and consent of her husband Vulcan, and without opposition from even Juno. Now, if sons have seats in heaven owing to their piety to their parents, why are not those noble youths936

936 Cleobis and Biton; see Herodotus i. 31.

of Argos rather accounted gods, because they, to save their mother from guilt in the performance of some sacred rites, with a devotion more than human, yoked themselves to her car and dragged her to the temple? Why not make a goddess, for her exceeding piety, of that daughter937

937 See Valerius Maximus, v. 4, 1.

who from her own breasts nourished her father who was famishing in prison? What other glorious achievement can be related of Æneas, but that he was nowhere seen in the fight on the field of Laurentum? Following his bent, perhaps he fled a second time as a fugitive from the battle.938

938 We need not stay to point out the unfairness of this statement, in contrast with the exploits of Æneas against Turnus, as detailed in the last books of the Æneid.

In like manner, Romulus posthumously becomes a god. Was it because he founded the city? Then why not others also, who have built cities, counting even939

939 Usque in.

women? To be sure, Romulus slew his brother in the bargain, and trickishly ravished some foreign virgins. Therefore of course he becomes a god, and therefore a Quirinus (“god of the spear”), because then their fathers had to use the spear940

940 We have thus rendered “quiritatem est,” to preserve as far as one could the pun on the deified hero of the Quirites.

on his account. What did Sterculus do to merit deification? If he worked hard to enrich the fields stercoribus,941

941 We insert the Latin, to show the pun on Sterculus; see The Apology, c. xxv. [See p. 40, supra.]

(with manure,) Augias had more dung than he to bestow on them. If Faunus, the son of Picus, used to do violence to law and right, because struck with madness, it was more fit that he should be doctored than deified.942

942 Curaria quam consecrari.

If the daughter of Faunus so excelled in chastity, that she would hold no conversation with men, it was perhaps from rudeness, or a consciousness of deformity, or shame for her father’s insanity. How much worthier of divine honour than this “good goddess943

943 Bona Dea, i.e., the daughter of Faunus just mentioned.

was Penelope, who, although dwelling among so many suitors of the vilest character, preserved with delicate tact the purity which they assailed! There is Sanctus, too,944

944 See Livy, viii. 20, xxxii. 1; Ovid, Fasti, vi. 213, etc. Compare also Augustine, de Civ. Dei, xviii. 19.  [Tom, vii. p. 576.]

who for his hospitality had a temple consecrated to him by king Plotius; and even Ulysses had it in his power to have bestowed one more god upon you in the person of the most refined Alcinous.

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge, Chapter 17

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