Actes 28:1

1 Après s'être sauvés, ils reconnurent que l'île s'appelait Malte.

Actes 28:1 Meaning and Commentary

Acts 28:1

And when they were escaped
From the danger they were exposed to by shipwreck, and were got safe to land; this is omitted in the Syriac version:

then they knew that the island was called Melita;
an island toward the African shore, where it is placed both by Pliny F7, and Ptolomy {h}; in which, the latter says, was the city Melita: it lies between Sicily and Tripolis of Barbary, and is now called Malta: it was famous for the knights of Rhodes, which are now called the knights of Malta: it has its name from (jlm) , "to escape", it being formerly a refuge to the Phoenicians, especially in stormy weather, in their long voyage from Tyre to Gades; and was indeed a place of escape to the Apostle Paul, and those that were with him. And perhaps it might be so called from its being a refuge for pirates; for Cicero F9 says, here pirates used to winter almost every year, and yet did not spoil the temple of Juno, as Verres did: though some say it was so called from the great abundance of honey found in it; for it was a very pleasant and fruitful island, bringing forth great plenty of wheat, rye, flax, cummin, cotton, figs, wine, roses, thyme, lavender, and many other sweet and delightful herbs, from whence bees did gather great plenty of honey. It was, according to Pliny, distant from Camerina eighty four miles, and from Lilybaeum a hundred and thirteen; and it is said to be distant from the promontory of Sicily an hundred miles, though others say sixty; and that it was so far from Syracuse, which is the next place the apostle came to in this voyage, was from Africa an hundred and ninety miles. On the east side, a little from the chief city of it, now called Malta, was a famous temple of Juno, spoiled by Verres, as before observed; and on the south side another of Hercules, the ruins of both which are yet to be seen. The compass of the island is about sixty miles, the length twenty, and the breadth twelve, and has in it five ports, and about sixty villages.


FOOTNOTES:

F7 Nat. Hist. l 3. c. 8.
F8 Geograph. l. 4. c. 3.
F9 Orat. 9. in Verrem, c. 17.

Actes 28:1 In-Context

1 Après s'être sauvés, ils reconnurent que l'île s'appelait Malte.
2 Et les Barbares nous traitaient avec une humanité peu commune; car ils allumèrent du feu, et ils nous recueillirent tous, à cause de la pluie qui tombait, et du froid.
3 Or Paul ayant ramassé un faisceau de broussailles, et l'ayant mis au feu, une vipère en sortit à cause de la chaleur, et s'attacha à sa main.
4 Et quand les Barbares virent cette bête qui pendait à sa main, ils se dirent les uns aux autres: Assurément cet homme est un meurtrier, puisque après qu'il a été sauvé de la mer, la Justice ne permet pas qu'il vive.
5 Mais lui, ayant secoué la vipère dans le feu, n'en reçut aucun mal.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.