Acts 10
Centurion
See on Luk 7:2.
Band (σπείρης)
See on Mar 15:16.
Italian
Probably because consisting of Roman soldiers, and not of natives of the country.

Devout (εὐσεβὴς)
See on godliness, 2Pe 1:3.
Prayed (δεόμενος)
See on prayers, Luk 5:33.
by all but angel ears
The good Cornelius knelt alone,
Nor dream'd his prayers and tears
Would help a world undone.
while upon his terrac'd roof
The lov'd apostle to his Lord,
In silent thought aloof
For heavenly vision soared."
Keble, Christian Year.

A vision
See on Act 7:31.
Evidently (φανερῶς)
Better, clearly or distinctly, as opposed to a fancy.


When he looked (ἀτενίσας)
Rev., more accurately, fastening his eyes. Compare Act 7:55; and see on Luk 4:20.

A tanner
Showing that the strictness of the Jewish law was losing its hold on Peter; since the tanner's occupation was regarded as unclean by strict Jews, and the tanners were commanded to dwell apart. "If a tanner married without mentioning his trade, his wife was permitted to get a divorce. The law of levirate marriage might be set aside if the brother-in-law of the childless widow was a tanner. A tanner's yard must be at least fifty cubits from any town" (Farrar, "Life and Work of St. Paul").
By the seaside
Outside the walls, both for proximity to the business, and because of the ceremonial requirement referred to above. Mr. William C. Prime, describing a visit to Joppa, says: "I was walking along the sea-beach, looking for shells, and at about a fourth of a mile from the city, to the southward, I found two tanneries directly on the seaside. I observed that the rocks in front of them were covered with the water a few inches deep, and that they soaked their hides on these rocks, and also submitted them to some process in the water which I did not stop to understand" ("Tent-life in the Holy Land").
Of them that waited on him continually (προσκαρτερούντων τῶν αὐτῷ)
See on Act 1:14.

Declared (ἐξηγησάμενος)
Better, as Rev., rehearsed. See on Luk 24:35.

They (ἐκείνων)
Those messengers, the servants and the soldier. The pronoun has a more specific reference than the English they.

10 Very hungry (πρόσπεινος)
Only here in New Testament.
Would have eaten (ἤθελε γεύσασθαι)
Rev., correctly, desired to eat. γευέσθαι is rendered both to eat and to taste, more frequently the latter. See Mat 27:34; Joh 2:9; 1Pe 2:3; and compare Act 20:11.
He fell into a trance (ἐπέπεσεν ἐπ' αὐτὸν ἔκστασις)
Lit., an ecstasy fell upon him. The best texts, however, read ἐγένετο, came upon him, or happened to him. See on astonishment, Mar 5:42. Luke alone employs the word in this sense of ecstasy or trance.

11 Saw (θεωρεῖ)
Rev., better, and more literally, beholdeth. See on Luk 10:18. The present tense is graphically introduced into the narrative.
Unto him
The best texts omit.
Sheet (ὀθόνην)
Only here and Act 11:5. Originally fine linen; later, sail-cloth or a sail. Dr. J. Rawson Lumby suggests that the word, "applied to loose, bellying sails of ships," may indicate that the form of vessel which appeared to Peter "recalled an image most familiar to his previous life - the wind-stretched canvas of the craft on the Lake of Galilee" ("Expositor," iii., 272).
Knit (δεδεμένον)
If this is retained, we must render bound, or attached; but the best texts omit, together with the following and. Render, as Rev., let down by four corners. Compare Act 11:5.
Corners (ἀρχαῖς)
Lit., beginnings; the extremity or corner, marking a beginning of the sheet. "We are to imagine the vessel, looking like a colossal four-cornered linen cloth letting itself down, while the corners attached to heaven to support the whole." The word is used in this sense by Herodotus, describing the sacrifices of the Scythians. The victim's forefeet are bound with a cord, "and the person who is about to offer, taking his station behind the victim, pulls the end (ἀρχὴν) of the rope, and thereby throws the animal down" (iv., 60). The suggestion of ropes holding the corners of the sheet (Alford, and, cautiously, Farrar) is unwarranted by the usage of the word. It was the technical expression in medical language for the ends of bandages. The word for sheet in this passage was also the technical term for a bandage, as was the kindred word ὀθόνιον, used of the linen bandages in which the Lord's body was swathed. See Luk 24:12; Joh 19:40; Joh 20:5, Joh 20:6, Joh 20:7. Mr. Hobart says: "We have thus in this passage a technical medical phrase - the ends of a bandage - used for the ends of a sheet, which hardly any one except a medical man would think of employing" ("Medical Language of St. Luke").

12 All manner of four-footed beasts (πάντα τὰ τετράποδα)
Lit., all the four-footed beasts. Without exception, clean and unclean. Not, of very many kinds.
Wild beasts
The best texts omit.

14 Not so (μηδαμῶς)
Stronger: by no means. that simple and audacious self-confidence which in his (Peter's) character was so singularly mingled with fits of timidity and depression, he boldly corrects the voice which orders him, and reminds the divine Interlocutor that he must, so to speak, have made an oversight" (Farrar, "Life and Works of Paul"). Compare Mat 16:22.
Common (κοινὸν)
Unholy.

15 Call not thou common (σὺ μὴ κοίνου)
The thought goes deeper than merely styling Lit., do not thou defile. Do not profane it by regarding and calling it common. Rev., "make not thou common."

17 Doubted (διηπόρει)
See on Luk 9:7.
In himself
On reflection, as compared with his ecstatic state.
Had made inquiry (διερωτήσαντες)
inquired out;" having asked their way through (διά) streets and houses, until they found the dwelling of the tanner, who was an obscure man, and not easily found.

18 Called
A general summons to any one within, in order to make inquiries.

19 Thought on (διενθυμουμένου)
Was earnestly (διά) pondering.

22 Was warned (ἐχρηματίσθη)
See on Mat 2:12.

24 Near (ἀναγκαίους)
The word originally means necessary; hence of those who are bound by necessary or natural ties; blood-relations. But as relatives or kinsmen is expressed by συγγενεῖς, this must be taken in the sense of intimate friends, a meaning which it has in later Greek writers.

25 Worshipped (προσεκύνησεν)
An unfortunate translation, according to modern English usage, but justified by the usage of earlier English, according to which to worship meant simply to honor. Worship is worthship, or honor paid to dignity or worth. This usage survives in the expressions worshipful and your worship. In the marriage-service of the English Church occurs the phrase, "With my body I thee worship." So Wycliffe renders Mat 19:19, "Worship thy father and thy mother;" and Joh 12:26, "If any man serve me, my Father shall worship him." Here the meaning is that Cornelius paid reverence by prostrating himself after the usual oriental manner.

28 An unlawful thing (ἀθέμιτόν)
The word is peculiar to Peter, being used only here and 1Pe 4:3. See note there. It emphasizes the violation of established order, being from the same root as τίθημι, to lay down or establish. The Jews professed to ground this prohibition on the law of Moses; but there is no direct command in the Mosaic law forbidding Jews to associate with those of other nations. But Peter's statement is general, referring to the general practice of the Jews to separate themselves in common life from uncircumcised persons. Juvenal says that the Jews were taught by Moses "not to show the way except to one who practises the same rites, and to guide the circumcised alone to the well which they seek" (Sat., xiv., 104, 105). Tacitus also says of the Jews that "among themselves they are inflexibly faithful, and ready with charitable aid, but hate all others as enemies. They keep separate from all strangers in eating, sleeping, and matrimonial connections" ("Histories," v., 5).
Of another nation (ἀλλοφύλῳ)
Only here in New Testament. Used of the Philistines, 1 Samuel 13:3-5 (Sept.).
Me
Emphatic, by contrast with ye. Ye know," etc., "but God hath showed me."

29 With what intent (τίνι λόγῳ)
More strictly, for what reason.

30 Four days ago (ἀπὸ τετάρτης ἡμέρας)
Lit., from the fourth day; reckoning backward from the day on which he was speaking.
I was fasting, and
The best texts omit.
At the ninth hour I prayed (τὴν ἐνάτην προσευχόμενος)
Lit., praying during the ninth hour. With the omission of I was fasting, and, the rendering is as Rev., Four days ago, until this hour, I was keeping the ninth hour of prayer.

31 Said (φησι)
Rev., saith. The historical present, giving vividness to the narrative.

33 Well (καλῶς)
You have done a courteous and handsome thing in coming. Compare 3Jo 1:5, 3Jo 1:6.

34 I perceive
See on Act 4:13.
Respecter of persons (προσωπολήπτης)
See on respect of persons, Jam 2:1. Only here in New Testament.

36 The word (τὸν λόγον)
The message.

37 That word (ῥῆμα)
The contents of the message: the report or history which it proclaimed.

38 Anointed (ἔχρισεν)
See on Christ, Mat 1:1.
Went about (διῆλθεν)
Lit., went through (the country). Compare Act 8:4.
And healing
The and (καὶ) has a particularizing force: doing good, and in particular, healing.
Oppressed (καταδυναστευομένους)
Only here and Jam 2:6, on which see note.

39 They slew
The best texts insert καὶ, also: also they slew;" also having an incressive force. They added this crowning atrocity to other persecutions.
Tree
See on Luk 23:31.

40 Shewed him openly (ἔδωκεν αὐτὸν ἐμφανῆ γενέσθαι)
Lit., gave him to become manifest. Compare, for the construction, Act 2:27.

41 Chosen before (προκεχειροτονημένοις)
Only here in New Testament. The simple verb χειροτονέω, to appoint, occurs Act 14:23; 2Co 8:19; and originally means to stretch out the hand for the purpose of giving a vote. Hence to elect by show of hands, and generally to appoint. Plato uses the word of the election of leaders of choruses ("Laws," 765). In later ecclesiastical usage it signified ordain, as bishops or deacons.
Who (οἵτινες)
The compound pronoun marks them more strongly as belonging to the class of eye-witnesses.

42 Testify (διαμαρτύρασθαι)
See on Act 2:40.
Remission
See on Luk 3:3; and Jam 5:15.

43 His name
As in the Lord's prayer: not simply the title, but all that is embraced and expressed by the name: Christ's "entire perfection, as the object revealed to the believer for his apprehension, confession, and worship" (Meyer).

44 The Holy Ghost fell
The only example of the bestowment of the Spirit before baptism.

45 They of the circumcision
From this point Luke distinguishes Christians into two classes - those of the circumcision and those of the uncircumcision; calling the former, Jews, and the latter Gentiles or Greeks.
Were amazed
See on Act 2:7.

47 Water (τὸ ὕδωρ)
Note the article: the water; co-ordinating the water with the Spirit (see 1Jo 5:8), and designating water as the recognized and customary element of baptism.