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Excerpt from Horæ Hebraicæ Et Talmudicæ, Vol. 4 of 4: Hebrew and Talmudical Exercitations Upon the Gospels, the Acts, Some Chapters of St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, and the First Epistle to the Corinthians
Kat innperév mi} Ao'yov, of those that were eyewitnesses, and min isters of the word or whether he came to this understanding of things from the first, he himself having been from the be ginning an eyewitness and a minister; or, lastly, whether he does not by the word e'wwgw declare that he understood all these things from heaven, and from above. We have taken it in this last sense in our notes upon that place, as being beyond all controversy that he was divinely inspired, and the Spirit from above governed his pen while he was writing those things. But whether it might not mean, according to the second sense (for the first we wholly disallow), viz. That St. Luke was amongst those who adhered to our Saviour Christ from his very first preaching of the gospel, I leave it to the inquiry of the reader to determine.
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