6-9. when Paul perceived--from the discussion which plainly had by
this time arisen between the parties.
that the one part were Sadducees, and the other Pharisees, he cried
out--raising his voice above both parties.
I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee--The true reading seems to be,
"the son of Pharisees," that is, belonging to a family who from father
to son had long been such.
of the hope and resurrection of the dead--that is, not the vague hope
of immortality, but the definite expectation of the resurrection.
I am called in question--By this adroit stroke, Paul engages the whole
Pharisaic section of the council in his favor; the doctrine of a
resurrection being common to both, though they would totally differ in
their application of it. This was, of course, quite warrantable, and
the more so as it was already evident that no impartiality in trying his
cause was to be looked for from such an assembly.
JFB.
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