*21:4 After repeated warnings, God plainly tells Paul not to go! What sort of mental block might Paul have had that would cause him to disobey a plain command?
†21:5 Luke makes a point of recording that even the children went along—interesting. Evidently those families actively involved their children in their practice of the Christian Faith. Now that is an excellent example!
‡21:8 AV and NKJV have ‘we who were Paul's companions’, based on some 13% of the Greek manuscripts. Some 46% have ‘those who were Paul's companions’. I follow the best line of transmission, with some 39% here, in reading “we”.
§21:9 What does this information contribute to the account? Why are we told that they were virgins? Is it risky to marry a prophetess?
*21:13 His being willing to suffer and die was totally beside the point—God told him not to go!
†21:14 What else could they do, short of tying Paul up? However, they were asking the Lord to overrule.
‡21:18 This was obviously a put up job. They were ready and waiting for him.
§21:20 Instead of ‘the Lord’, some 30% of the Greek manuscripts read ‘God’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
*21:20 They listened politely, but had a different agenda. What follows is an obvious ‘put down’. There probably were not ‘tens of thousands’ of believing Jews, and if they were genuine followers of Jesus Christ, they should not have been so bound to Jewish customs. Besides ‘putting Paul in his place’ they were imposing a false legalism on him, to which he should not have capitulated. But he was disobeying God anyway, just by being there.
†21:21 I suspect that this was a false charge.
‡21:22 Perhaps 2% of the Greek manuscripts, of inferior quality, omit ‘the assembly will gather’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
§21:25 Some 2% of the Greek manuscripts, of inferior quality, omit ‘that they need observe no such thing except’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
*21:25 What happened here was exceedingly serious: to James there were two classes of Christian, Jew and non-Jew. He still sees the Jew as superior to the Gentile, which is contrary to the doctrine of the Church as expounded in Paul's letters, that we believe to be inspired. To James it was not enough for a Jew to believe into Jesus; he still had to obey the Law of Moses and the Jewish customs. This was evidently the prevailing view in Jerusalem and environs. Such a view actually represented rebellion against God. Then came judgment: Jerusalem was destroyed, which included its church, and the Aegean area became the heartland of the Church. For centuries Judea was no more than a backwater on the fringes of the Christian river.
†21:31 Why didn't they succeed? Maybe they got in each other's way.
‡21:33 I like this commander; he did not hide behind his men. This was a chiliarch, who commanded up to a thousand men.
§21:35 But since they had really been trying to kill him, he was doubtless wounded and weak.
*21:36 But really, why should they be so stirred up? Presumably there was supernatural participation.