Acts 28:2

"When we had escaped, then they learned that the island was called Malta."

Key Reflection

This verse highlights God's providential care, as the escape from shipwreck led the travelers to discover their new location, Malta, which meant "honey" in Greek—a symbol of divine provision and sustenance. The incident underscores that even in unexpected circumstances, God has a purposeful plan for His people.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

Verse 2. And the barbarous people. See Barnes "Ro 1:14". The Greeks regarded all as barbarians who did not speak their language; and applied the name to all other nations but their own. It does not denote, as it does sometimes with us, people of savage, uncultivated, and cruel habits, but simply those whose speech was unintelligible. See 1 Co 14:11. The island is supposed to have been peopled at first by the Phoecians, afterwards by the Phoenicians, and afterwards by a colony from Carthage. The language of the Maltese was that of Africa, and hence it was called by the Greeks the language of barbarians. It was a language which was unintelligible to the Greeks and Latins. The rain.

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