Areopagus in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ar-e-op'-a-gus (Areios pagos; Acts 17:19,22. Mars' Hill,
17:22 the King James Version): A sort of spur jutting out
from the western end of the Acropolis and separated from it
by a very short saddle. Traces of old steps cut in the rock
are still to be seen. Underneath are deep grottoes, once the
home of the Eumenides (Furies). On the flat surface of the
summit are signs still visible of a smoothing of the stone
for seats. Directly below to the North was the old Athenian
agora, or market-place. To the East, on the descent from the
Acropolis, could be seen in antiquity a small semicircular
platform--the orchestra--from which rose the precipitous
rock of the citadel. Here the booksellers kept their stalls;
here the work of Anaxagoras could be bought for a drachma;
from here his physical philosophy was disseminated, then,
through Euripides, the poetic associate of Socrates and the
sophists, leavened the drama, and finally reached the people
of Athens. Then came the Stoics and Epicureans who taught
philosophy and religion as a system, not as a faith, and
spent their time in searching out some new thing in creed
and dogma and opinion. Five centuries earlier Socrates was
brought to this very Areopagus to face the charges of his
accusers. To this same spot the apostle Paul came almost
five hundred years after 399 BC, when the Attic martyr was
executed, with the same earnestness, the same deep-rooted
convictions, and with even greater ardor, to meet the
philosophers of fashion. The Athenian guides will show you
the exact place where the apostle stood, and in what
direction he faced when he addressed his audience. No city
has ever seen such a forest of statues as studded the
market-place, the streets and the sides and summit of the
Acropolis of Athens. A large part of this wealth of art was
in full view of the speaker, and the apostle naturally made
this extraordinary display of votive statues and offerings
the starting-point of his address. He finds the Athenians
extremely religious. He had found an altar to a god unknown.
Then he develops theme of the great and only God, not from
the Hebrew, but from the Greek, the Stoic point of view. His
audiences consisted, on the one hand, of the advocates of
prudence as the means, and pleasure as the end (the
Epicureans); on the other, of the advocates of duty, of
living in harmony with the intelligence which rules the
world for good. He frankly expresses his sympathy with the
nobler principles of the Stoic doctrine. But neither Stoic
nor Epicurean could believe the declarations of the apostle:
the latter believed death to be the end of all things, the
former thought that the soul at death was absorbed again
into that from which it sprang. Both understood Paul as
proclaiming to them in Jesus and Anastasis ("resurrection")
some new deities. When they finally ascertained that Jesus
was ordained by God to judge the world, and that Anastasis
was merely the resurrection of the dead, they were
disappointed. Some scoffed, others departed, doubtless with
the feeling that they had already given audience too long to
such a fanatic.
The Areopagus, or Hill of Ares, was the ancient seat...
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