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22 After removing him, God[a] raised up[b] David their king. He testified about him:[c]I have found David[d] the son of Jesse to be a man after my heart,[e] who will accomplish everything I want him to do.’[f] 23 From the descendants[g] of this man[h] God brought to Israel a Savior, Jesus, just as he promised.[i] 24 Before[j] Jesus[k] arrived, John[l] had proclaimed a baptism for repentance[m] to all the people of Israel.

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Footnotes

  1. Acts 13:22 tn Grk “he”; the referent (God) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
  2. Acts 13:22 sn The expression raised up refers here to making someone king. There is a wordplay here: “raising up” refers to bringing someone onto the scene of history, but it echoes with the parallel to Jesus’ resurrection.
  3. Acts 13:22 tn Grk “about whom.” The relative pronoun (“whom”) was replaced by the pronoun “him” and a new sentence was begun in the translation at this point to improve the English style, due to the length of the sentence in Greek. The verb εἶπεν (eipen) has not been translated (literally “he said testifying”) because it is redundant when combined with the participle μαρτυρήσας (marturēsas, “testifying”). Instead the construction of verb plus participle has been translated as a single English verb (“testified”).
  4. Acts 13:22 sn A quotation from Ps 89:20.
  5. Acts 13:22 sn A quotation from 1 Sam 13:14.
  6. Acts 13:22 tn Or “who will perform all my will,” “who will carry out all my wishes.”
  7. Acts 13:23 tn Or “From the offspring”; Grk “From the seed.”sn From the descendants (Grk “seed”). On the importance of the seed promise involving Abraham, see Gal 3:6-29.
  8. Acts 13:23 sn The phrase this man is in emphatic position in the Greek text.
  9. Acts 13:23 tn Grk “according to [his] promise.” The comparative clause “just as he promised” is less awkward in English.sn Just as he promised. Note how Paul describes Israel’s history carefully to David and then leaps forward immediately to Jesus. Paul is expounding the initial realization of Davidic promise as it was delivered in Jesus.
  10. Acts 13:24 tn Grk “John having already proclaimed before his coming a baptism…,” a genitive absolute construction which is awkward in English. A new sentence was begun in the translation at this point.
  11. Acts 13:24 tn Grk “he”; the referent (Jesus) has been specified in the context for clarity, since God is mentioned in the preceding context and John the Baptist in the following clause.
  12. Acts 13:24 sn John refers here to John the Baptist.
  13. Acts 13:24 tn Grk “a baptism of repentance”; the genitive has been translated as a genitive of purpose.