Emhin ne sunu ẹghe nan rẹ re ẹlinmhin nọn khiale nin ẹbho bhi iluemhin ọsi Pẹnticọst
1. Ta ebe sunu bhi iluemhin ọsi Pẹnticọst.
Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
JERUSALEM—THE CENTER OF JUDAISM
Much of the action of the first chapters of Acts takes place in Jerusalem. This city stands among the hills of Judea’s central mountain range, about 34 miles (55 km) east of the Mediterranean Sea. In 1070 B.C.E., King David conquered the hilltop fortress of Mount Zion, located here, and the city that grew up around it became the capital of the ancient nation of Israel.
Close by Mount Zion stands Mount Moriah, where, according to ancient Jewish tradition, Abraham attempted to sacrifice Isaac, some 1,900 years before the events described in Acts. Mount Moriah became part of the city when Solomon built the first temple of Jehovah atop it. This edifice came to be the focal point of Jewish public life and worship.
It was to Jehovah’s temple that all devout Jews regularly gathered from all over the inhabited earth to sacrifice, worship, and observe seasonal festivals. They did so in obedience to God’s command: “Three times a year, all your males should appear before Jehovah your God in the place that he chooses.” (Deut. 16:16) Jerusalem was also the seat of the Great Sanhedrin, the Jewish high court and national administrative council.
2. Emhin ọhan-ilo nela sunu bhi Pẹnticọst 33 C.E.?
2 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
3. (a) Bezẹle nin mhan ha da sabọ yọle ghe ukpẹdẹ kpataki Pẹnticọst 33 C.E. khin rẹji oga nọn khiale? (b) Be Pita rẹ noo “isanhan ọsi Agbejele” yẹ, ẹghe nin ọle rẹ ha re ọta man bhi Pẹnticọst 33 C.E.?
3 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
“Ele Rebhe Da Si Egbe Koko Bhi Ejianlẹn Ọkpa” ( Acts 2:1-4 )
4. Be agbotu ọsi Kristiẹn ẹlẹnan rẹ lu iwẹnna yẹ nin Kristiẹn bhi ore nin ọhẹnhẹn munhẹn ha lu bhi ukpe 33 C.E.?
4 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
5. Elele nela ribhi ikolo nan ha deba Kristiẹn do bhi ore nin ọhẹnhẹn bi ọnan do ẹlẹnan?
5 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
ROME—CAPITAL OF AN EMPIRE
During the period of time covered by the book of Acts, Rome was the largest and politically the most important city in the then-known world. It was the capital of an empire that at its peak dominated lands stretching from Britain to North Africa and from the Atlantic Ocean to the Persian Gulf.
Rome was a melting pot of cultures, races, languages, and superstitions. A network of well-maintained roads brought travelers and merchandise from every corner of the empire. At the nearby port of Ostia, ships that plied busy trade routes unloaded foodstuffs and luxury goods destined for the city.
By the first century C.E., well over a million people lived in Rome. Perhaps half of the population were slaves—condemned criminals, children sold or abandoned by their parents, and prisoners captured during campaigns by the Roman legions. Among those brought to Rome as slaves were Jews from Jerusalem, following the conquest of that city by Roman General Pompey in 63 B.C.E.
Most of the free population were paupers, who lived in crowded multistory housing and depended on government subsidies. The emperors, however, adorned their capital with some of the most magnificent public buildings ever seen. Among them were theaters and great stadiums that offered such spectacles as stage performances, gladiatorial contests, and chariot racing—all free for the entertainment of the masses.
6, 7. Be Kristiẹn ẹlẹnan rẹ ha lu iwẹnna nan rẹ tẹmhọn Osẹnobulua bhi otọ agbọn rebhe yẹ nin Jesu mun nin ele?
6 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
7 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
8. Urẹkpa nela mhan miẹn bhi obọ agbotu?
8 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
“Ele [Da Họn Bhi] Urolo Nọnsele” ( Acts 2:5-13 )
“We hear them speaking in our languages about the magnificent things of God.”—Acts 2:11
9, 10. Be ibhio mhan eso rẹ zegbere yẹ rẹ rẹkpa ẹbho ne zẹ urolo ọbhebhe?
9 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
10 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
11. Be imhan ha rẹ muegbe ọbhi otọ yẹ rẹ ha tẹmhọn Osẹnobulua man ẹbho ne zẹ urolo ọbhebhe?
11 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
JEWS IN MESOPOTAMIA AND EGYPT
The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ (175 B.C.–A.D. 135) states: “In Mesopotamia, Media and Babylonia lived the descendants of members of the kingdom of the ten tribes [of Israel], and of the kingdom of Judah, once deported there by the Assyrians and the Babylonians.” According to Ezra 2:64, only 42,360 Israelites returned to Jerusalem from their Babylonian exile. This took place in 537 B.C.E. Flavius Josephus remarks that in the first century C.E., the Jews who “dwelt about Babylonia” numbered into the tens of thousands. In the third to the fifth centuries C.E., these communities produced the work known as the Babylonian Talmud.
Documentary evidence exists of a Jewish presence in Egypt at least as early as the sixth century B.C.E. During that period, Jeremiah directed a message to Jews living in various localities of Egypt, including Memphis. (Jer. 44:1, ftn.) It is likely that large numbers immigrated to Egypt during the Hellenistic period. Josephus says that Jews were among the first settlers of Alexandria. In time, an entire section of this city was allotted to them. In the first century C.E., Jewish writer Philo asserted that a million of his fellow countrymen lived throughout Egypt, from “the side of Libya to the boundaries of Ethiopia.”
“Pita . . . Da Kpanọ Mundia” ( Acts 2:14-37 )
12. (a) Be Joẹl nin akhasẹ tale ọbhi otọ rẹji ọne emhin ọhan-ilo nọn sunu bhi Pẹnticọst 33 C.E.? (b) Bezẹle nin edibo nesi Jesu da mun ọkhọle ọbhọ ghe ebi Joẹl tale dẹ munsẹ bhi ore nin ọhẹnhẹn?
12 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
13, 14. Be Pita rẹ dọnmhegbe yẹ rẹ ta ọta nọn ha sẹ ọkhọle ọsi ẹbho ne ka ọle ehọ? Be imhan ha rẹ sabọ lu iriọ yẹ?
13 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
14 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
CHRISTIANITY IN PONTUS
Among those who heard Peter’s speech at Pentecost 33 C.E. were Jews from Pontus, a district of northern Asia Minor. (Acts 2:9 ) Evidently, some of them took the good news back to their homeland, for those to whom Peter addressed his first letter included believers who were “scattered about” in such places as Pontus. (1 Pet. 1:1 ) His writing reveals that these Christians had been “distressed by various trials” because of their faith. (1 Pet. 1:6 ) Likely, this included opposition and persecution.
Further tests faced by Christians in Pontus are alluded to in correspondence between Pliny the Younger, governor of the Roman province of Bithynia and Pontus, and Emperor Trajan. Writing from Pontus in about 112 C.E., Pliny reported that the “contagion” of Christianity threatened everyone, regardless of gender, age, or rank. Pliny gave those accused of being Christians opportunity to deny it, and those who would not, he executed. Any who cursed Christ or recited a prayer to the gods or to Trajan’s statue were released. Pliny acknowledged that these were things that “those who are really Christians cannot be made to do.”
“Ọdeọde Bhi Ẹwẹ Bha . . . Mianmẹn” ( Acts 2:38-47 )
15. (a) Ọta nela Pita tale? Be ki sunu ẹghe nin ọle ki rẹ tale fo? (b) Bezẹle nin ẹbho ne bunbun ne họn ọta nọn mhẹn bhi ukpẹdẹ Pẹnticọst da sẹ ene ha sabọ mianmẹn bhi ọne ukpẹdẹ nin?
15 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
WHO WERE THE PROSELYTES?
“Both Jews and proselytes” heard Peter’s preaching at Pentecost 33 C.E.—Acts 2:10 .
Among the qualified men appointed to care for the “necessary matter” of the daily distribution of food was Nicolaus, who is identified as “a proselyte of Antioch.” (Acts 6:3-5 ) Proselytes were Gentiles, that is, non-Jews, who had converted to Judaism. They were considered Jews in all respects, since they accepted the God and the Law of Israel, rejected all other gods, underwent circumcision (if male), and joined themselves to the nation of Israel.
After the Jews were released from exile in Babylon in 537 B.C.E., many settled far from the land of Israel but continued to practice Judaism. By this means, people throughout the ancient Near East and beyond became acquainted with the Jewish religion. Ancient writers, such as Horace and Seneca, testify that multitudes in different lands who were attracted to the Jews and their beliefs joined their communities and became proselytes.
16. Be Kristiẹn bhi ore nin ọhẹnhẹn rẹ rẹman yẹ ghe ele mhọn ọkhọle nan rẹ zegbere?
16 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
17. Be ọria ha lu nọn da sabọ sẹ ọnọn ha mianmẹn?
17 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo
18. Isẹhoa nela tuje a nin edibo nesi Jesu ne mianmẹn fo?
18 Tie Ọne Uduọle Bhi Ebo