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PARALLEL HISTORY BIBLE - Acts 8:18


CHAPTERS: Acts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28     

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LXX- Greek Septuagint - Acts 8:18

θεασαμενος 2300 5666 δε 1161 ο 3588 σιμων 4613 οτι 3754 δια 1223 της 3588 επιθεσεως 1936 των 3588 χειρων 5495 των 3588 αποστολων 652 διδοται 1325 5743 το 3588 πνευμα 4151 το 3588 αγιον 40 προσηνεγκεν 4374 5656 αυτοις 846 χρηματα 5536

Douay Rheims Bible

And when Simon saw, that by the imposition of the hands of the apostles, the Holy Ghost was given, he offered them money,

King James Bible - Acts 8:18

And when Simon saw that through laying on of the apostles' hands the Holy Ghost was given, he offered them money,

World English Bible

Now when Simon saw that the Holy Spirit was given through the laying on of the apostles' hands, he offered them money,

Early Church Father Links

Anf-01 ix.iii.xxxiii Pg 15, Anf-03 iv.xi.xxxiv Pg 3, Anf-04 vi.v.ii.iii Pg 9, Anf-08 vi.iii.v.xxxv Pg 3, Npnf-103 iv.i.xvii.xix Pg 19, Npnf-103 iv.i.xvii.xxvi Pg 14, Npnf-104 v.iv.vi.xxi Pg 5, Npnf-104 v.v.iv.vii Pg 7, Npnf-104 iv.ix.xxiv Pg 127, Npnf-108 ii.XCI Pg 39, Npnf-108 ii.CXI Pg 10, Npnf-111 vi.xviii Pg 18, Npnf-111 vi.xviii Pg 24, Npnf-111 vi.xviii Pg 29, Npnf-207 ii.xx Pg 120, Npnf-207 ii.x Pg 93

World Wide Bible Resources


Acts 8:18

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

Anf-01 ix.iii.xxxiii Pg 15
Comp. Acts viii. 9; 18.

from them [on account of such miraculous interpositions]. For as she has received freely3277

3277


Anf-03 iv.xi.xxxiv Pg 3
Acts viii. 18–21. [Vol. I. pp. 171, 182, 193, 347.]

he applied his energies to the destruction of the truth, as if to console himself with revenge. Besides the support with which his own magic arts furnished him, he had recourse to imposture, and purchased a Tyrian woman of the name of Helen out of a brothel, with the same money which he had offered for the Holy Spirit,—a traffic worthy of the wretched man. He actually feigned himself to be the Supreme Father, and further pretended that the woman was his own primary conception, wherewith he had purposed the creation of the angels and the archangels; that after she was possessed of this purpose she sprang forth from the Father and descended to the lower spaces, and there anticipating the Father’s design had produced the angelic powers, which knew nothing of the Father, the Creator of this world; that she was detained a prisoner by these from a (rebellious) motive very like her own, lest after her departure from them they should appear to be the offspring of another being; and that, after being on this account exposed to every insult, to prevent her leaving them anywhere after her dishonour, she was degraded even to the form of man, to be confined, as it were, in the bonds of the flesh. Having during many ages wallowed about in one female shape and another, she became the notorious Helen who was so ruinous to Priam, and afterwards to the eyes of Stesichorus, whom, she blinded in revenge for his lampoons, and then restored to sight to reward him for his eulogies. After wandering about in this way from body to body, she, in her final disgrace, turned out a viler Helen still as a professional prostitute. This wench, therefore, was the lost sheep, upon whom the Supreme Father, even Simon, descended, who, after he had recovered her and brought her back—whether on his shoulders or loins I cannot tell—cast an eye on the salvation of man, in order to gratify his spleen by liberating them from the angelic powers. Moreover, to deceive these he also himself assumed a visible shape; and feigning the appearance of a man amongst men, he acted the part of the Son in Judea, and of the Father in Samaria. O hapless Helen, what a hard fate is yours between the poets and the heretics, who have blackened your fame sometimes with adultery, sometimes with prostitution!  Only her rescue from Troy is a more glorious affair than her extrication from the brothel. There were a thousand ships to remove her from Troy; a thousand pence were probably more than enough to withdraw her from the stews. Fie on you, Simon, to be so tardy in seeking her out, and so inconstant in ransoming her! How different from Menelaus! As soon as he has lost her, he goes in pursuit of her; she is no sooner ravished than he begins his search; after a ten years’ conflict he boldly rescues her:  there is no lurking, no deceiving, no cavilling. I am really afraid that he was a much better “Father,” who laboured so much more vigilantly, bravely, and perseveringly, about the recovery of his Helen.

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge, Chapter 8

VERSE 	(18) - 

2Ki 5:15,16; 8:9 Eze 13:19 Mt 10:8 1Ti 6:5


PARALLEL VERSE BIBLE

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