The Acts of the Apostles: A Newly Discovered Commentary, By J. B. Lightfoot alt

The Acts of the Apostles

A Newly Discovered Commentary

The Lightfoot Legacy Set

by J. B. Lightfoot
Edited by Ben Witherington III and Todd D. Still
Assisted by Jeanette M. Pifer

The Acts of the Apostles
Ebook
  • Length: 399 pages
  • Published: October 16, 2014
  • Imprint: IVP Academic
  • ISBN: 9780830896738
Other Formats:

Preaching's Survey of Bibles and Bible Reference

Biblical Foundations Award Winner

InterVarsity Press is proud to present The Lightfoot Legacy, a three-volume set of previously unpublished material from J. B. Lightfoot, one of the great biblical scholars of the modern era.

In the spring of 2013, Ben Witherington III discovered hundreds of pages of biblical commentary by Lightfoot in the Durham Cathedral Library. While incomplete, these commentaries represent a goldmine for historians and biblical scholars, as well as for the many people who have found Lightfoot's work both informative and edifying, deeply learned and pastorally sensitive.

Among those many pages were two sets of lecture notes on the Acts of the Apostles. Together they amount to a richly detailed, albeit unfinished, commentary on Acts 1-21. The project of writing a commentary on Acts had long been on Lightfoot's mind, and in the 1880s he wrote an article about the book for the second British edition of William Smith's Dictionary of the Bible. Thankfully, that is not all he left behind.

Now on display for all to see, these commentary notes reveal a scholar well ahead of his time, one of the great minds of his or any generation. Well over a century later, The Acts of the Apostles remains a relevant and significant resource for the church today.

"Everyone who has read J. B. Lightfoot's great commentaries on the letters of Paul wishes for more. Thanks to Ben Witherington's diligent search and editorial labors we now have more. What could be better? We are now in possession of Lightfoot's commentary on a substantial portion of the book of Acts, which will allow us to see more clearly how the bishop of Durham understood the circumstances in which Paul's letters were written. As we would expect, Lightfoot's comments on the text of Acts are rich with pertinent parallels from Greek and Latin authors. The publication of Lightfoot's long-lost commentary is momentous."

Craig A. Evans, Payzant Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Acadia University

"To have Lightfoot on Acts is astonishingly valuable, for three reasons. First, Lightfoot is peerless among biblical commentators of his day, and shows a breadth of learning and understanding which always illuminates the text he comments on. Second, Lightfoot deals in this commentary with key issues that are current today in study of Acts, such as the text, the historical value of the Acts narrative, the speeches of Acts and the portrait of Paul. Third, this book enlarges our understanding ofLightfoot's massive scholarship; he is truly a giant among New Testament scholars, and to watch him work—as in this book on Acts—is an education in the questions to ask, approaches to take and ways to draw evidence from disparate sources together to produce a coherent whole. We are greatly in debt to Ben Witherington, Todd Still and their collaborators for bringing this material to light for our day."

Steve Walton, Professorial Research Fellow in New Testament, St Mary?s University, Twickenham, and Honorary Research Fellow, Tyndale House, Cambridge

"A profound debt of gratitude is owed to Professors Witherington and Still for relentlessly pursuing, recovering, and editing J. B. Lightfoot?s notes on Acts. Harnack said it best: Lightfoot was a true liberal for he was 'an independent, free scholar . . . in the absolute sense of the word. He has never defended tradition for the tradition's sake.' We need more liberals like that today!"

Daniel B. Wallace, Dallas Theological Seminary

"Joseph Barber Lightfoot has been, for me, in many ways the epitome of what the commentator on New Testament and early church texts can and should aspire to. His detailed knowledge of the literature of the time was unsurpassed, and his ability to shed the light of that knowledge on the New Testament writings was without peer. His commentaries on New Testament texts and the early Fathers retain a relevance and a value to this day almost unique for nineteenth-century scholarship. That a fullerpublication of his writings is now available in these volumes is a wonderful bonus for those who want to hear these New Testament and early church texts as they were first heard."

James D. G. Dunn, Emeritus Lightfoot Professor of Divinity, University of Durham

"J. B. Lightfoot was perhaps the greatest New Testament exegete in the nineteenth-century English-speaking world, and his works remain useful today. The discovery of his previously unpublished research, which addresses in a balanced and informed way many issues still debated today, is an epochal event in New Testament studies."

Craig Keener, Asbury Theological Seminary

"When I was a seminary student, one of my professors had given a full explanation of a critical passage in Galatians when a student across the room asked aloud, 'So then, do you disagree with J. B. Lightfoot?' The professor, given to the well-timed pause, looked first to the right and then to the left and then ended the silence with the rhetorical question, 'What does a mouse say to a lion?' Lightfoot, indeed, is an exegetical lion, and this incredible discovery by Ben Witherington and now publication of fresh materials by Lightfoot will mean a whole new generation can be exposed to the stalking, roaring presence of the nineteenth century's finest exegete of the life of Paul."

Scot McKnight, Northern Seminary

"The discovery of hitherto unknown exegetical works by J. B. Lightfoot is a rare gift, full of potential for fresh insight both about the man himself (acknowledged worldwide as the leading scholar of his day) and, as he would have wished, about texts which he knew so well and which themselves express the heart of the gospel. Hearty congratulations to finder, editor and publisher on an unexpected and exciting addition to the core library of seminal biblical studies."

N. T. Wright, professor of New Testament, University of St. Andrews, and former bishop of Durham

"Thanks to Witherington and his associates and to IVP for bringing this cache of material from the great J. B. Lightfoot into the public domain. His previously published works have remained important (his multivolume study of the apostolic fathers is essential for these writings), and this hitherto unpublished material will now also likely come to be seen as a valuable resource."

Larry Hurtado, University of Edinburgh

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CONTENTS

Abbreviations
Foreword
Editors? Introduction: J. B. Lightfoot as Biblical Commentator

Part I: Introduction to Commenting in General

Part II: Introduction to Acts—Preliminary Matters

Part III:The Commentary on Acts


The Superscript

The Preface

Ascension, Judas? Demise, the Filling Up of the Twelve (Acts 1)
Excursus: On the Historical Problem of the Varying Accounts of Judas? Demise

Pentecost and Its Aftermath (Acts 2)

The Beginnings and Trials of the Church in Jerusalem
(Acts 3?6)
Excursus: The Sanhedrin and the High Priests
Excursus: The Primacy of Peter
Excursus: The Diaconate

The First Martyr for Christ (Acts 7)
Excursus: The Tabernacle
Excursus: The Authenticity of the Speech of St. Stephen

Simon, the Samaritans, and Philip (Acts 8)
Excursus: Simon Magus
Excursus: Conversion of theEthiopian

The Conversion of Saul (Acts 9)

The Surprising Story of Cornelius (Acts 10)

Trouble in Zion—Peter Explains (Acts 11)

The Persecuted Church and the Dawn of the Mission of the Persecutor (Acts12)

The First Missionary Journey (Acts 13?14)
Excursus: St. Paul?s Apostolic Journeys

The Apostolic Council and Its Aftermath (Acts 15)

The Second Missionary Journey (Acts 16)

Macedonia and On to Athens (Acts 17)
Excursus: The History of St. Paul?s Days at Thessalonike

And So to Corinth (Acts 18)

Finally at Ephesus (Acts 19)

The Third Missionary Journey (Acts 19:21?21:39)
Excursus: Timothy and Erastus
Excursus: The Speech of St. Paul at Miletus

Conclusions on the Rest of Acts

Appendix A: Lightfoot?s Article on Acts for Smith?s Dictionary of the Bible
Appendix B: Illustrations of the Acts from Recent Discoveries
Appendix C: St. Paul?s History After the Close of the Acts
Appendix D: The Obituary/Homage to Lightfoot

Author Index
Scripture Index

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J. B. Lightfoot

Joseph Barber Lightfoot (1828–1889), also known as J. B. Lightfoot, was an English theologian, preacher, canon of St Paul's Cathedral and bishop of Durham. His writings include essays on biblical and historical subject matter, commentaries on Pauline epistles and studies on the Apostolic Fathers as well as four posthumously published volumes of sermons. Lightfoot attended King Edward?s School in Birmingham before attending Trinity College in Cambridge where he was elected a Fellow of his college. He became a tutor of Trinity College in 1857 and later a professor of divinity, editing the Journal of Classical and Sacred Philology from 1854 to 1859. In 1871, Lightfoot became canon of St. Paul?s Cathedral, preaching regularly and participating in various ecclesiastical activities. He gained enormous popularity for his work Essays on the Work Entitled Supernatural Religion, a defense of the New Testament in response to Walter Richard Cassel?s Supernatural Religion. In 1870, Lightfoot became Bishop of Durham, where he continued his theological study, writing, and preaching. Lightfoot wrote commentaries on Galatians, Philippians and Colossians and Philemon, and his newly discovered commentary notes on Acts, John, 2 Corinthians and 1 Peter are being published in the three-volume Lightfoot Legacy set.

Ben Witherington III

Ben Witherington III (PhD, University of Durham) is Jean R. Amos Professor of New Testament for Doctoral Studies at Asbury Theological Seminary. He has written over forty books, including The Jesus Quest and The Paul Quest, bothof which were selected as top biblical studies works by Christianity Today. His books also include The Indelible Image, Women and the Genesis of Christianity, The Gospel Code, A Week in the Life of Corinth, and commentaries on the entire New Testament.

Todd D. Still

Todd D. Still (PhD, University of Glasgow) is Charles J. and Eleanor McLerran DeLancey Dean and the William M. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures at the George W. Truett Theological Seminary of Baylor University. He is the author of Thinking through Paul: A Survey of His Life, Letters, and Theology (coauthored with Bruce W. Longenecker), Philippians Philemon, and Jesus and Paul Reconnected: Fresh Pathways into an Old Debate.