Ac 13:4-12. ARRIVING IN CYPRUS THEY PREACH IN THE SYNAGOGUES OF SALAMIS--AT PAPHOS, ELYMAS IS STRUCK BLIND, AND THE GOVERNOR OF THE ISLAND IS CONVERTED.
4, 5. departed unto Seleucia--the seaport of Antioch, from which it
lay nearly due west fifteen miles, and five from the Mediterranean
shore, on the river Orontes.
thence sailed to Cyprus--whose high mountain summits are easily
seen in clear weather from the coast [COLONEL
CHESNEY in
HOWSON]. "Four
reasons may have induced them to turn in first to this island: (1) Its
nearness to the mainland; (2) It was the native place of Barnabas, and
since the time when Andrew found his brother Simon, and brought him to
Jesus, and "Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus," family
ties had not been without effect on the progress of the Gospel. (3) It
could not be unnatural to suppose that the truth would be welcomed in
Cyprus when brought by Barnabas and his kinsman Mark, to their own
connections or friends. The Jews were numerous in Salamis. By sailing
to that city, they were following the track of the synagogues; and
though their mission was chiefly to the Gentiles, their surest course
for reaching them was through the proselytes and Hellenizing Jews. (4)
Some of the Cypriotes were already Christians. Indeed, no one place
out of Palestine, except Antioch, had been so honorably associated with
the work of successful evangelization" [HOWSON].
JFB.
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