*16:3 Paul had been stoned at Lystra, at the instigation of the Jews, so why is he concerned to please them? And after he joined Paul how much time was Timothy going to spend in his home town? A curious proceeding.
†16:4 One of the dogmas was that circumcision was not necessary, so was Paul hedging?
‡16:5 Evidently they were enthusiastically sharing the Good News. There must have come to be hundreds of congregations throughout Asia Minor.
§16:7 Perhaps 6% of the Greek manuscripts add ‘of Jesus’ (as in NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
*16:8 Paul and Silas were sufficiently in tune with the Holy Spirit that He could lead them. The areas mentioned were basically unevangelized, so their attempt was a ‘natural’, but those areas would be reached later as the News radiated out from Ephesus to all Asia. God wanted to get the Church started in Europe, and in particular the area where Greek was the mother tongue.
†16:10 At this point Luke joined the party.
‡16:10 Perhaps 5% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘God’ instead of ‘Lord’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
§16:12 A Roman colony—this conferred status and some privileges.
*16:13 Instead of “where prayer was customarily made”, perhaps 2% if the Greek manuscripts, of objectively inferior quality, have ‘where we supposed a place of prayer to be’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
†16:13 Evidently there was no synagogue in Philippi. Prayer meetings usually have more women than men.
‡16:17 I follow the best line of transmission in reading ‘Silas’; some 60% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘us’, as in most versions. Luke, who was there, is focusing the account on the two who were put in prison.
§16:17 I find it to be curious that what the demon said was precisely true! So why did that truth not result in many conversions? Presumably because the Holy Spirit did not apply it, coming from a demon. Instead of “to us”, perhaps 20% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘to you’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.). Did the demon have the girl include herself, or not?
*16:18 The ‘hour of prayer’ was observed every day by God-fearing Jews. So the apostles would pass at a predictable time each day.
†16:18 But Paul, she was giving you free advertising! Evidently he didn't want advertising from the enemy, and in this he followed the Lord's example (Mark 3:11-12).
‡16:19 This was a put up job. It would take a day or two to make clear that the girl was now useless. The magistrates had probably been getting a ‘cut’. Some rabble had been mobilized to join in—the whole proceeding had been organized in advance. They figured they could beat up on two Jews with impunity.
§16:24 Their backs are bleeding from ‘many stripes’ and their feet are in stocks (you try to sit up so as not to lie on your wounded back; all of which gets pretty ‘old’ pretty fast)—a great time for a praise meeting!
*16:26 A proper earthquake could shake the doors open, but not unlock chains (unless it was their anchors that came loose from the walls).
†16:27 Better a quick death than the humiliation that would follow (culminating in a slow death).
‡16:28 For the prisoners to be free and not run was really supernatural! The jailor understands that he is in the presence of a higher power.
§16:30 Philippi was not all that large, and the members of his household would be information gatherers. He was doubtless aware of the slave girl's ‘advertising’, etc.
*16:31 Perhaps 3% of the Greek manuscripts, of inferior quality, omit ‘Christ’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
†16:33 Very appropriate—he washed their wounds and restored their dignity, so they could baptize him. Note again that baptism followed immediately. (Would there have been enough water there to dunk them? Probably not.) Note that everyone in the family was baptized, which would put them under Christ's protection, but that procedure was imposed by the head of the household, whether or not there was personal commitment to Jesus on the part of each one.
‡16:37 The officers were still there. Paul decided to give the magistrates a much-needed lesson, but then acquiesced in leaving the city without further fuss.