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Robbers Of Churches

Robbers Of Churches

Robbers Of Churches

This is the Authorized Version rendering of the word used by the town-clerk of Ephesus on the occasion of the riot described in Acts 19. For ye have brought hither these men, which are neither robbers of churches, nor yet blasphemers of your goddess (Act 19:37). The term churches according to the Elizabethan usage could be applied to pagan temples. The Revised Version substitutes the word temples for churches, but this is also a mis-translation, and there is strong evidence in favour of Ramsays view that the passage should be translated thus-guilty neither in act nor in language of disrespect to the established religion of the city. The term could now apply to any person guilty of any form of action disrespectful to the established worship.

Instances of the narrower, more literal meaning of the term occur in Rom 2:22 and in 2Ma 4:42. In the former passage St. Paul asks: Thou that abhorrest idols, dost thou rob temples? Dost thou rob temples, and so, for the sake of gain, come in contact with abominations without misgiving? (Cf. Denney, Expositors Greek Testament , Romans, London, 1900, p. 600). In the latter passage, the term church-robber is applied to Lysimachus, brother of Menelaus the high priest, who was killed in a riot (170 b.c.). He and his brother had committed sacrilege by stealing the sacred vessels, and this conduct provoked the disturbance. Thus many of them they wounded, and some they struck to the ground, and all of them they forced to flee: but as for the church-robber himself him they killed beside the treasury.

Literature.-W. M. Ramsay, St. Paul the Traveller, London, 1895, The Church in the Roman Empire, do., 1893; J. T. Wood, Discoveries at Ephesus, do., 1876.

R. Strong.

Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church

Robbers Of Churches

ROBBERS OF CHURCHES.See Churches [Robbers of].

Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible