Acts 8:10

10 Whom they regarded from ye lest to the greatest sayinge: this felow is the great power of God.

Acts 8:10 Meaning and Commentary

Acts 8:10

To whom they all gave heed
Were not only attentive to the strange things he did, and to the wonderful things he gave out concerning himself; but they believed what he said and did as real things, and were obedient to him: and that

from the least to the greatest;
which does not so much respect age, though the Ethiopic version renders it, "from the younger of them to the eldest of them", as state and condition; persons of every rank and quality, high and low, rich and poor, magistrates and subjects, from the meanest to the greatest of them; and so the Syriac version renders it, "both great", or "noble, and mean"; he drew the attention, and commanded the regard, both of princes and peasants, of the learned and unlearned, of the great men, and of the common people, who one and all wondered at him, and applauded him:

saying, this man is the great power of God;
or as the Alexandrian copy and some others, and the Vulgate Latin version read, "this is the power of God which is called great"; they took him for the supreme Deity, or as Justin Martyr F8 expresses it, they accounted him the first, or chief God, or they looked upon him to be the Messiah, "the great power of God": as the Syriac version renders it; and who should be great, and called the Son of the Highest, ( Luke 1:32 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F8 Ut supra. (Apolg. 2. p. 69.)

Acts 8:10 In-Context

8 And ther was great ioye in that cite.
9 And ther was a certayne man called Simon which before tyme in the same cite vsed witche crafte and bewitched the people of Samarie sayinge that he was a man yt coulde do greate thinges
10 Whom they regarded from ye lest to the greatest sayinge: this felow is the great power of God.
11 And him they set moche by because of longe tyme with sorcery he had mocked the.
12 But assone as they beleved Philippes preachynge of the kyngdome of God and of the name of Iesu Christ they were baptised bothe men and wemen.
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