Joel 2:29 | |
29. And also upon the servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my spirit. | 29. Atque etiam super servoset super ancillas in diebus illis effundam Spiritum meam. |
As the particle
Surely it is a greater thing when they are taught who were before superior to others, and whom the Lord had set over the Church, and when they appear as new men, after having received a gift which the Lord had not previously conferred on them. When, therefore, new light appears in such men, it is certainly a greater thing than when the Spirit is poured out on the common people. We now then see the Prophet's meaning as to the servants and the handmaids. 1
He then repeats,
1 However true in itself is what is here advanced, yet the exposition seems rather too refined, and what the passage does not require. The difficulty stated will vanish, when we consider that "all flesh" is a general expression, afterwards particularized and limited: and "and all flesh," according to what is subsequently specified, evidently means all conditions of men, men in all states and of every age, and not the whole of mankind. "And also," in verse 29, is very emphatical, as the persons afterwards mentioned were of the lowest grade, "servants and handmaids," that is, slaves: and such were many of the first converts to Christianity. See Galatians 3:28; Colossians 3:11. Though the word for 'servants' does not necessarily mean those in a servile condition, yet it has that meaning. The same is true of the word for handmaids. Hagar, expressly called a bondwoman by Paul, is called by this name, Genesis 16:1. And to view the words as signifying slaves, would make the prophecy more striking, as being literally fulfilled at the first promulgation of the Gospel.
Back to BibleStudyGuide.org. These files are public domain. This electronic edition was downloaded from the Christian Classics Ethereal Library. |