Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 28:11 - 28:11

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 28:11 - 28:11


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

we departed in a ship of Alexandria - (See on Act 27:6).

which had wintered in the isle - no doubt driven m by the same storm which had wrecked on its shores the apostle’s vessel - an incidental mark of consistency in the narrative.

whose sign - or “figurehead”; the figure, carved or painted on the bow, which gave name to the vessel. Such figureheads were anciently as common as now.

was Castor and Pollux - the tutelar gods of mariners, to whom all their good fortune was ascribed. St. Anthony is substituted for them in the modern superstitions of Mediterranean (Romanist) sailors. They carry his image in their boats and ships. It is highly improbable that two ships of Alexandra should have been casually found, of which the owners were able and willing to receive on board such a number of passengers (Act 27:6). We may then reasonably conceive that it was compulsory on the owners to convey soldiers and state travelers [Webster and Wilkinson].