20. But . . . that they abstain from pollutions of idols--that is,
things polluted by having been offered in sacrifice to idols. The
heathen were accustomed to give away or sell portions of such animals.
From such food James would enjoin the Gentile converts to abstain, lest
it should seem to the Jews that they were not entirely weaned from
idolatry.
and from fornication--The characteristic sin of heathendom,
unblushingly practiced by all ranks and classes, and the indulgence of
which on the part of the Gentile converts would to Jews, whose
Scriptures branded it as an abomination of the heathen, proclaim them to
be yet joined to their old idols.
and from things strangled--which had the blood in them.
and from blood--in every form, as peremptorily forbidden to the
Jews, and the eating of which, therefore, on the part of the Gentile
converts, would shock their prejudices. See on
Ac 15:28.
JFB.
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