19And there came thither certain Jews from Antioch and Iconium, who persuaded the people, and having stoned Paul, drew him out of the city, supposing he had been dead. 20Howbeit, as the disciples stood round about him, he rose up, and came into the city: and the next day he departed with Barnabas to Derbe. In the passage above are all the available details. The Jews came from where Paul had previously been. They had intended to stone him there and he had escaped. What is interesting, even perhaps amazing, is how fickle the people of Lystra appeared to be. In the verses preceding this, they had regarded Paul as a god and wanted to sacrifice to him. We are not told the detail of what the Jews said. Whatever it was, it completely turned their opinion around. So, the simple answer is -we don't know.
The people of Lystra stoned Paul because they mistook him and Barnabas for gods after witnessing the healing of a lame man. They attempted to offer sacrifices to them, but when Paul and Barnabas explained they were just men, the crowd turned against them.
They were stoned due to their work and preaching.
The people of Lystra thought that Paul and Barnabas were gods after witnessing a miraculous healing. They believed Paul was Hermes, the messenger god, and Barnabas was Zeus, the chief of the gods, and tried to offer sacrifices to them.
St. Paul was stoned in Lystra, as described in the Biblical book of Acts. He was dragged out of the city, stoned, and left for dead by a hostile crowd.
Acts 14:6-18 records that they were in the region of Lycaonia in which there were two cities, namely Lystra and Derbe. The particular city in which a crippled man was healed was Lystra. This event led to their being called gods, namely Mercury and Jupiter. Since the healing occured at Lystra it may be reasonably inferred that they were so named at Lystra although there were undoubtedly people from other locations present.
The apostle who was stoned but survived was Paul, also known as Saint Paul or the Apostle Paul. He was stoned in Lystra but managed to recover and continue his missionary work.
Modern day Derbe is believed to be located near the town of Kerti Huyuk in present-day Turkey. Derbe was one of the stops on the missionary journey of the apostle Paul as described in the New Testament.
The people of Lystra thought Paul was the god Mercurius (Hermes) after he healed the crippled man.
The people of Lystra thought that Paul and Barnabas were gods after witnessing a miraculous healing. They believed Paul was Hermes, the messenger god, and Barnabas was Zeus, the chief of the gods, and tried to offer sacrifices to them.
st paul was stoned at the city Lystra.
When Paul miraculously healed a man who was crippled from birth, the people of the town of Lystra took him to be Hermes (Mercury) and Barbabas to be Zeus (Jupiter). The encounter is recorded in Acts 14.
St. Paul was stoned in Lystra, as described in the Biblical book of Acts. He was dragged out of the city, stoned, and left for dead by a hostile crowd.
Acts 14:6-18 records that they were in the region of Lycaonia in which there were two cities, namely Lystra and Derbe. The particular city in which a crippled man was healed was Lystra. This event led to their being called gods, namely Mercury and Jupiter. Since the healing occured at Lystra it may be reasonably inferred that they were so named at Lystra although there were undoubtedly people from other locations present.
Paul Paul visited Corinth, Antioch, Inconium, , Piisdia, Lystra, Thessalonica.
Lystra is 160 cm.
Lystra Gretter died in 1951.
Lystra Gretter was born in 1858.
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Lystra was born on August 25, 1983, in Korea.