Mark 12:7

This.

12; Ge 3:15; 37:20; Ps 2:2,3; 22:12-15; Isa 49:7; 53:7,8

Mt 2:3-13,16; Joh 11:47-50; Ac 2:23; 5:28; 7:52; 13:27,28

Mark 14:1

1 A conspiracy against Christ.

3 Precious ointment is poured on his head by a woman.

10 Judas sells his Master for money.

12 Christ himself foretells how he shall be betrayed by one of his disciples;

22 after the passover prepared, and eaten, institutes his last supper;

26 declares aforehand the flight of all his disciples, and Peter's denial.

43 Judas betrays him with a kiss.

46 He is apprehended in the garden;

53 falsely accused and impiously condemned of the Jews' council;

65 shamefully abused by them;

66 and thrice denied of Peter.

two.

Mt 6:2; Lu 22:1,2; Joh 11:53-57; 13:1

the passover.

Ex 12:6-20; Le 23:5-7; Nu 28:16-25; De 16:1-8

chief.

Ps 2:1-5; Joh 11:47; Ac 4:25-28

by.

Ps 52:3; 62:4,9; 64:2-6; Mt 26:4

Luke 20:14-15

reasoned.

5; Mt 16:7; 21:25

the heir.

Ps 2:1-6,8; 89:27; Mt 2:2-16; Ro 8:17; Heb 1:2

let.

19; 19:47; 22:2; Ge 37:18-20; Mt 27:21-25; Joh 11:47-50; Ac 2:23

Ac 3:15

they.

Heb 13:12

What.

Mt 21:37-40; Mr 12:6-9

John 11:53

from.

Ne 4:16; 13:21; Ps 113:2; Mt 16:21; 22:46

they.

47; Ps 2:2; 31:13; 71:10; Mr 3:6; Ac 5:33; 9:23

put.

12:10; Ps 109:4,5; Jer 38:4,15; Mt 26:59; Mr 14:1

Acts 23:12

certain.

21,30; 25:3; Ps 2:1-3; 64:2-6; Isa 8:9,10; Jer 11:19; Mt 26:4

bound.

1Ki 19:2; 2Ki 6:31; Mt 27:25; Mr 6:23-26

under a curse. or, with an oath of execration.

Le 27:29; Jos 6:26; 7:1,15; Ne 10:29; Mt 26:74; *Gr:

1Co 16:22; Ga 3:13

that.Such execrable vows as these were not unusual among the Jews, who, from their perverted traditions, challenged to themselves a right of punishing without any legal process, those whom they considered transgressors of the law; and in some cases, as in the case of one who had forsaken the law of Moses, they thought they were justified in killing them. They therefore made no scruple of acquainting the chief priests and elders with their conspiracy against the life of Paul, and applying for their connivance and support; who, being chiefly of the sect of the Sadducees, and the apostle's bitterest enemies, were so far from blaming them for it, that they gladly aided and abetted them in this mode of dispatching him, and on its failure they soon afterwards determined upon making a similar attempt. (ch. 25:2, 3.) If these were, in their bad way, conscientious men, they were under no necessity of perishing for hunger, when the providence of God had hindered them from accomplishing their vow; for their vows of abstinence from eating and drinking were as easy to loose as to bind, any of their wise men or Rabbis having power to absolve them, as Dr. Lightfoot has shown from the Talmud.

1Sa 14:24,27,28,40-44; Ps 31:13
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