Jewish Tactics
Acts 13:50-52
But the Jews stirred up the devout and honorable women, and the chief men of the city, and raised persecution against Paul and Barnabas…


The fact brings before us another feature of the relations between Jews and Gentiles at this period. They "compassed sea and land to make one proselyte." They found it easiest to make proselytes of women. Such conversions had their good and their bad sides. In many cases there was a real longing for a higher and purer life than was found in the infinite debasement of Greek and Roman society, which found its satisfaction in the life and faith of Israel. But with many, such as Juvenal speaks of when he describes ("Sat." 6:542) the Jewish teacher who gains influence over women, "The trembling Jewess whispers in her ear, And tells her of the laws of Solymae" (i.e., Jerusalem). The change brought with it new elements of superstition and weakness, and absolute submission of conscience to its new directors, and thus the Rabbis were often to the wealthier women of Greek and Roman cities what Jesuit confessors were in France and Italy in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Here we get the darker side of the picture. The Jews stir up the women of the upper class, and they stir up their husbands. The latter were content apparently to acquiesce in their wives accepting the Judaism with which they had become familiar, but resented the intrusion of a new and, in one sense, more exacting doctrine.

(Dean Plumptre.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: But the Jews stirred up the devout and honourable women, and the chief men of the city, and raised persecution against Paul and Barnabas, and expelled them out of their coasts.

WEB: But the Jews stirred up the devout and prominent women and the chief men of the city, and stirred up a persecution against Paul and Barnabas, and threw them out of their borders.




Israel's Temporary Rejection
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