“He killed James the brother of John with the sword,”
He had James, the brother of John, put to death with the sword.—James the son of Zebedee (one of the inner circle of apostles, Mark 13:3) is executed by sword (Greek: machaira, a short sword), a form of execution fitting governmental execution. His is the first apostolic martyrdom recorded in Acts; he fulfills Jesus's prediction (Mark 10:39) that James would drink his cup of martyrdom. The swift death-sentence shows Herod's ruthlessness and the stakes of Christian witness.
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Acts 12:2
“He killed James the brother of John with the sword,”
He had James, the brother of John, put to death with the sword.—James the son of Zebedee (one of the inner circle of apostles, Mark 13:3) is executed by sword (Greek: machaira, a short sword), a form of execution fitting governmental execution. His is the first apostolic martyrdom recorded in Acts; he fulfills Jesus's prediction (Mark 10:39) that James would drink his cup of martyrdom. The swift death-sentence shows Herod's ruthlessness and the stakes of Christian witness.
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He had James, the brother of John, put to death with the sword.—James the son of Zebedee (one of the inner circle of apostles, Mark 13:3) is executed by sword (Greek: machaira, a short sword), a form of execution fitting governmental execution. His is the first apostolic martyrdom recorded in Acts; he fulfills Jesus's prediction (Mark 10:39) that James would drink his cup of martyrdom. The swift death-sentence shows Herod's ruthlessness and the stakes of Christian witness.