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But the word of God grew and multiplied.
Verse Takeaways
1
God's Word vs. Man's Power
Commentators highlight the stark contrast presented by Luke. In the preceding verse, the church's persecutor, King Herod, meets a gruesome end. Immediately following, the Word of God, which he tried to crush, "grew and multiplied." This juxtaposition shows that human opposition, even from the highest authorities, is ultimately powerless to stop God's divine plan.
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7
18th Century
Presbyterian
But the word of God grew, etc. Great success attended it. The persecutions had now ceased; and notwithstanding all the attempts which had …
Grew and multiplied (ηυξανεν κα επληθυνετο). Imperfect active and passive. Cf. 6:1. The reaction from the death of James and the i…
19th Century
Anglican
But the word of God grew and multiplied. The words describe a continuous expansion. The death of the chief persecutor pro…
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Luke’s third panel on the Christian mission within the Jewish world ends with a summary statement comparable to the summaries that conclude the two…
16th Century
Protestant
And the word of God. Once the tyrant was taken out of the way, the Church was suddenly delivered, as it were, out of the jaws of the wolf.…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
But the word of God grew and multiplied. The number of those who were converted by it, and embraced and professed it, inc…
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Many pagan princes claimed and received divine honors, but it was far more horrible impiety in Herod, who knew the word and worship of the living G…