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Saturday, October 19th, 2024
the Week of Proper 23 / Ordinary 28
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Nowe Przymierze Zaremba

Ewangelia Łukasza 11:7

a tamten ze środka odpowiada: Daj mi spokój, drzwi zamknięte, dzieci śpią przy mnie - nie mogę wstać i dać ci!

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Jesus, the Christ;   Jesus Continued;   Prayer;   Thompson Chain Reference - Ask;   Christ;   Church;   Family;   Importunity;   Prayer;   Secret Prayer;   United Prayer;   Unwise Prayers;   Wicked, the;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Beds;   Houses;   Parables;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Parable;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Prayer;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Christ, Christology;   Friend, Friendship;   Prayer;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Lord's Prayer;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Bed;   Prayer;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Banquet;   Family;   Lord's Prayer, the;   Luke, Gospel of;   Prayer;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Parable;   Prayer;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Bed;   Character;   Children;   Claim;   Discourse;   Friendship;   Intercession ;   Luke, Gospel According to;   Old Testament (Ii. Christ as Student and Interpreter of).;   Parable;   Prayer (2);   Property (2);   Reality;   Winter ;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Chief parables and miracles in the bible;   Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types - Door;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Jesus of Nazareth;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Bed;   Father;   Jesus Christ (Part 2 of 2);   Prayer;   Prayers of Jesus;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Christianity in Its Relation to Judaism;  

Devotionals:

- Every Day Light - Devotion for March 15;   My Utmost for His Highest - Devotion for September 12;  

Parallel Translations

Biblia Gdańska (1632)
A on będąc w domu, odpowiedziałby mówiąc: Nie uprzykrzaj mi się; już są drzwi zamknięte, a dziatki moje są ze mną w pokoju; nie mogę wstać, abym ci dał.
Nowa Biblia Gdańska (2012)
A on, odpowiadając ze środka, by powiedział: Nie przynoś mi kłopotów. Drzwi są już zamknięte, a moje dzieci są ze mną w łożu. Nie jestem w stanie wstać i ci dać.
Biblia Tysiąclecia
A on będąc w domu, odpowiedziałby mówiąc: Nie uprzykrzaj mi się; już są drzwi zamknięte, a dziatki moje są ze mną w pokoju; nie mogę wstać, abym ci dał.
Uwspółcześniona Biblia Gdańska
A on z wewnątrz odpowie: Nie naprzykrzaj mi się. Drzwi są już zamknięte i moje dzieci są ze mną w łóżku. Nie mogę wstać i dać ci.
Biblia Brzeska (1563)
A on będąc w domu odpowiedziałby mówiąc: Nie uprzykrzaj mi się. Jużci drzwi zamkniono, a dziatki moje są na łożu ze mną, i nie mogęć wstać, abychci dał.
Biblia Warszawska
A tamten z mieszkania odpowie mu: Nie naprzykrzaj mi się, drzwi już są zamknięte, dzieci moje są ze mną w łóżku, nie mogę wstać i dać ci.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Trouble: Luke 7:6, Galatians 6:17

the door: Luke 13:25, Matthew 25:10

Reciprocal: Genesis 44:26 - General Deuteronomy 9:14 - Let me Song of Solomon 5:3 - have put Luke 8:49 - trouble 3 John 1:8 - to receive

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And he from within shall answer and say,.... The friend within doors, shall reply to him that is without at his door, in the street:

trouble me not; by knocking at the door, and importuning to rise and lend loaves; whereby his rest would be disturbed, and trouble given him;

the door is now shut; being very late at night, and which could not be opened without noise and inconvenience:

and my children are with me in bed: sleeping, as the Persic version adds; there were none, children, or servants up, to let him in:

I cannot rise; without disturbing them:

and give thee; the loaves desired.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

And he said unto them ... - Jesus proceeds to show that, in order to obtain the blessing, it was necessary to “persevere” in asking for it. For this purpose he introduces the case of a friend’s asking bread of another for one who had come to him unexpectedly. His design is solely to show the necessity of being “importunate” or persevering in prayer to God.

At midnight - A time when it would be most inconvenient for his friend to help him; an hour when he would naturally be in bed and his house shut.

Three loaves - There is nothing particularly denoted by the number “three” in this place. Jesus often threw in such particulars merely to fill up the story, or to preserve the consistency of it.

My children are with me in bed - This does not necessarily mean that they were in the “same bed” with him, but that they were “all” in bed, the house was still, the door was shut, and it was troublesome for him to rise at that time of night to accommodate him. It should be observed, however, that the customs of Orientals differ in this respect from our own. Among them it is not uncommon indeed it is the common practice for a whole family - parents, children, and servants - to sleep in the same room. See “The Land and the Book,” vol. i. p. 180. This is “not” to be applied to God, as if it were troublesome to him to be sought unto, or as if “he” would ever reply to a sinner in that manner. All that is to be applied to God in this parable is simply that it is proper to “persevere” in prayer. As a “man” often gives because the request is “repeated,” and as one is not discouraged because the favor that he asks of his neighbor is “delayed,” so God often answers us after long and importunate requests.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Luke 11:7. My children are with me in bed — Or, I and my children are in bed; this is Bishop PEARCE'S translation, and seems to some preferable to the common one. See a like form of speech in 1 Corinthians 16:11, and in Ephesians 3:18. However, we may conceive that he had his little children, ταπαιδια, in bed with him; and this heightened the difficulty of yielding to his neighbour's request.

But if he persevere knocking. (At si ille perseveraverit pulsans.) This sentence is added to the beginning of Luke 11:8, by the Armenian, Vulgate, four copies of the Itala, Ambrose, Augustin, and Bede. On these authorities (as I find it in no Greek MS.) I cannot insert it as a part of the original text; but it is necessarily implied; for, as Bishop Pearce justly observes, unless the man in the parable be represented as continuing to solicit his friend, he could not possibly be said to use importunity: once only to ask is not to be importunate.


 
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