Agabus in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ag'-a-bus (Agabos): A Christian prophet of Jerusalem, twice
mentioned in Acts. (1) In Acts 11:27 f, we find him at
Antioch foretelling "a great famine over all the world,"
"which," adds the historian, "came to pass in the days of
Claudius." This visit of Agabus to Antioch took place in the
winter of 43-44 AD, and was the means of urging the
Antiochian Christians to send relief to the brethren in
Judea by the hands of Barnabas and Saul. Two points should
be noted. (a) The gift of prophet's here takes the form of
prediction. The prophet's chief function was to reveal moral
and spiritual truth, to "forth-tell" rather than to
"foretell"; but the interpretation of God's message
sometimes took the form of predicting events. (b) The phrase
"over all the world" (practically synonymous with the Roman
Empire) must be regarded as a rhetorical exaggeration if
strictly interpreted as pointing to a general and
simultaneous famine. But there is ample evidence of severe
periodical famines in various localities in the reign of
Claudius (e.g. Suet Claud. 18; Tac. Ann. xii.43), and of a
great dearth in Judea under the procurators Cuspius Fadus
and Tiberius Alexander, 44-48 AD (Ant., XX, ii, 6; v, 2),
which probably reached its climax circa 46 AD. (2) In Acts
21:10 f we find Agabus at Caesarea warning Paul, by a vivid
symbolic action (after the manner of Old Testament prophets;
compare Jer 13:1 ff; Ezek 3; 4) of the imprisonment and
suffering he would undergo if he proceeded to Jerusalem. (3)
In late tradition Agabus is included in lists of the seventy
disciples of Christ.
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