Berea in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
A city of Macedon, whither Paul withdrew, with Silas and
Timothy, at his first visit to Europe, from Jewish
persecution at Thessalonica, whence also, when the
persecutors followed him from Thessalonica, he retired
seawards to proceed to Athens (Acts 17:10-15). The Berean
Jews were "more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that
they received the word (preached) with all readiness of mind
(not in a cavilling, critical spirit), and (yet not in a
credulous spirit, for they) searched the Scriptures daily
whether those things were so." (See Isaiah 8:20; John 5:39;
Galatians 1:8-9.) The result was necessarily, "many
believed; also of honorable women, which were Greeks, and of
men not a few."
Sopater, or Sosipater, one of them, became Paul's
missionary companion (Acts 20:4; Romans 16:21) in returning
to Asia from his second visit to Europe, where he had been
with him at Corinth. Now Verria, or Kara-verria, commanding
a wide view of the plain of the Axius and Haliacmon; one of
the most pleasant towns of Roumelia, with 20,000
inhabitants. One of the two roads from Thessalonica to Berea
passed by Pella. A road led from Berea to Dium, whence
probably Paul sailed to Athens, leaving Silas and Timothy
behind.
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