Matthew 21:31

did.

7:21; 12:50; Eze 33:11; Lu 15:10; Ac 17:30; 2Pe 3:9

The first.

2Sa 12:5-7; Job 15:6; Lu 7:40-42; 19:22; Ro 3:19

Verily.

5:18; 6:5; 18:3

the publicans.

9:9; 20:16; Lu 7:29,37-50; 15:1,2; 19:9,10; Ro 5:20; 9:30-33

1Ti 1:13-16

Matthew 21:43

The kingdom.

41; 8:11,12; 12:28; Isa 28:2; Lu 17:20,21; Joh 3:3,5

a nation.

Ex 19:6; Isa 26:2; 1Co 13:2; 1Pe 2:9

Luke 8:1

1 Women minister unto Christ of their substance.

4 Christ, after he had preached from place to place, attended by his apostles, propounds the parable of the sower,

16 and the candle;

19 declares who are his mother, and brethren;

22 rebukes the winds;

26 casts the legion of devils out of the man into the herd of swine;

37 is rejected of the Gadarenes,;

43 heals the woman of her bloody issue;

49 and raises from death Jairus's daughter.

that.

4:43,44; Mt 4:23; 9:35; 11:1; Mr 1:39; Ac 10:38

the glad.

2:10,11; 4:18; Isa 61:1-3; Mt 13:19; Ac 13:32; Ro 10:15

and the.

6:14-16; Mt 10:2-4; Mr 3:16-19

Luke 8:10

Unto.

10:21-24; Ps 25:14; Mt 11:25; 13:11,12; 16:17; Mr 4:11; Ro 16:25

1Co 2:7-11; 12:11; Eph 3:3-9; Col 1:26-28; 2:2; 1Ti 3:16

1Pe 1:10-12

that seeing.

De 29:4; Isa 6:9; 29:14; 44:18; Jer 5:21; Mt 13:14-17; Joh 12:40

Ac 28:26,27; Ro 11:7-10

Acts 28:31

Cir. A.M. 4069. A.D. 65. Preaching.

23; 8:12; 20:25; Mt 4:23; Mr 1:14; Lu 8:1

and teaching.

5:42; 23:11

with.

4:29,31; Eph 6:19,20; Php 1:14; Col 4:3,4; 2Ti 4:17 CONCLUDING REMARKS ON THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES. The Acts of the Apostles is a most valuable portion of Divine revelation; and, independently of its universal reception in the Christian church, as an authentic and inspired production, it bears the most satisfactory internal evidence of its authenticity and truth. St. Luke's long attendance upon St. Paul, and his having been an eyewitness of many of the facts which he has recorded, independently of his Divine inspiration, render him a most suitable and credible historian; and his medical knowledge, for he is allowed to have been a physician, enabled him both to form a proper judgment of the miraculous cures which were performed by St. Paul, and to give an authentic and circumstantial detail of them. The plainness and simplicity of the narrative are also strong circumstances in its favour. The history of the Acts is one of the most important parts of the Sacred History, for without it neither the Gospels nor Epistles could have been so clearly understood; but by the aid of it the whole scheme of the Christian revelation is set before us in a clear and easy view.
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