Actes 19:33

33 Alors on fit sortir de la foule Alexandre, que les Juifs poussaient en avant; et Alexandre, faisant signe de la main, voulait parler au peuple.

Actes 19:33 Meaning and Commentary

Acts 19:33

And they drew Alexander out of the multitude
Or "some of the multitude brought forth Alexander"; into the theatre, in order to kill him, by casting him to the wild beasts. Some think this is the same with Alexander the coppersmith, who apostatized upon this danger he was exposed to, and became a blasphemer, and a great enemy of the apostle, and did him much evil, ( 1 Timothy 1:20 ) ( 2 Timothy 4:14 ) . This man, though his name was a Greek name, yet was a Jew, as is expressed in ( Acts 19:34 ) and from the times of Alexander the great, who was at Jerusalem, this name became common among the Jews; (See Gill on Acts 4:6).

The Jews putting him forward;
being equally enemies to him, as being under a profession of Christianity, as the Heathens were; or as the Syriac version reads, "the people of the Jews", that were there, out of themselves, pitched upon him as a proper person to still the uproar; and they brought him out of the multitude, to a convenient place, where he might be heard; and they the rather were forward to this, that he might lay all the blame of this confusion and uproar upon Paul and his companions, whom the Jews had an aversion to, as well as the Gentiles:

and Alexander beckoned with the hand;
for silence, that he might be heard:

and would have made his defence unto the people;
which looks as if he was a Christian, or at least was charged with being one, and was in danger of his life on that account; and therefore was desirous of being heard, that he might make an apology for the Christians, or remove such an imputation from himself, if he was not.

Actes 19:33 In-Context

31 quelques-uns même des Asiarques, qui étaient ses amis, envoyèrent vers lui, pour l'engager à ne pas se rendre au théâtre.
32 Les uns criaient d'une manière, les autres d'une autre, car le désordre régnait dans l'assemblée, et la plupart ne savaient pas pourquoi ils s'étaient réunis.
33 Alors on fit sortir de la foule Alexandre, que les Juifs poussaient en avant; et Alexandre, faisant signe de la main, voulait parler au peuple.
34 Mais quand ils reconnurent qu'il était Juif, tous d'une seule voix crièrent pendant près de deux heures: Grande est la Diane des Ephésiens!
35 Cependant le secrétaire, ayant apaisé la foule, dit: Hommes Ephésiens, quel est celui qui ignore que la ville d'Ephèse est la gardienne du temple de la grande Diane et de son simulacre tombé du ciel?
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.