Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 17:18 - 17:18

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 17:18 - 17:18


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certain ... of the Epicureans - a well-known school of atheistic materialists, who taught that pleasure was the chief end of human existence; a principle which the more rational interpreted in a refined sense, while the sensual explained it in its coarser meaning.

and of the Stoics - a celebrated school of severe and lofty pantheists, whose principle was that the universe was under the law of an iron necessity, the spirit of which was what is called the Deity: and that a passionless conformity of the human will to this law, unmoved by all external circumstances and changes, is the perfection of virtue. While therefore the Stoical was in itself superior to the Epicurean system, both were alike hostile to the Gospel. “The two enemies it has ever had to contend with are the two ruling principles of the Epicureans and Stoics - Pleasure and Pride” [Howson].

What will this babbler say? - The word, which means “a picker-up of seeds,” bird-like, is applied to a gatherer and retailer of scraps of knowledge, a prater; a general term of contempt for any pretended teacher.

a setter forth of strange gods - “demons,” but in the Greek (not Jewish) sense of “objects of worship.”

because he preached Jesus and the resurrection - Not as if they thought he made these to be two divinities: the strange gods were Jehovah and the Risen Savior, ordained to judge the world.