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<p>Paul here gives such an account of himself as might serve not only to satisfy the chief captain that he was not that Egyptian he took him to be, but the Jews also that he was not that enemy to their church and nation, to their law and temple, they took him to be, and that what he did in preaching Christ, and particularly in preaching him to the Gentiles, he did by a divine commission. He here gives them to understand,</p>
<p class="tab-1">I. What his extraction and education were. 1. That he was one of their own nation, <i>of the stock of Israel, of the seed of Abraham, a Hebrew of the Hebrews</i>, not of any obscure family, or a renegado of some other nation: “No, <i>I am verily a man who is a Jew</i>, <b><i>aner Ioudaios</i></b><i>a Jewish man</i>; I am a man, and therefore ought not to be treated as a beast; a man who is a Jew, not a barbarian; I am a sincere friend to your nation, for I am one of it, and should defile my own nest if I should unjustly derogate from the honour of your law and your temple.” 2. That he was born in a creditable reputable place, <i>in Tarsus, a city of Cilicia</i>, and was by his birth a freeman of that city. He was not born in servitude, as some of the Jews of the dispersion, it is likely, were; but he was a gentleman born, and perhaps could produce his certificate of his freedom in that ancient and honourable city. This was, indeed, but a small matter to make any boast of, and yet it was needful to be mentioned at this time to those who insolently trampled upon him, as if he were to be ranked with the children of fools, yea, the children of base men, <a class="bibleref" title="Job.30.8" href="/passage/?search=Job.30.8">Job 30:8</a>. 3. That he had a learned and liberal education. He was not only a Jew, and a gentleman, but a scholar. He <i>was brought up</i> in Jerusalem, the principal seat of the Jewish learning, and <i>at the feet of Gamaliel</i>, whom they all knew to be an eminent doctor of the Jewish law, of which Paul was designed to be himself a teacher; and therefore he could not be ignorant of their law, nor be thought to slight it because he did not know it. His parents had brought him very young to this city, designing him for a Pharisee; and some think his being brought up at the feet of Gamaliel intimates, not only that he was one of his pupils, but that he was, above any other, diligent and constant in attending his lectures, observant of him, and obsequious to him, in all he said, as <i>Mary</i>, that <i>sat at Jesus feet, and heard his word</i>. 4. That he was in his early days a very forward and eminent professor of the Jews religion; his studies and learning were all directed that way. So far was he from being principled in his youth with any disaffection to the religious usages of the Jews that there was not a young man among them who had a greater and more entire veneration for them than he had, was more strict in observing them himself, or more hot in enforcing them upon others. (1.) He was an intelligent professor of their religion, and had a clear head. He minded his business at Gamaliels feet, and was there <i>taught according to the perfect manner of the law of the fathers</i>. What departures he had made from the law were not owing to any confused or mistaken notions of it, for he understood it to a nicety, <b><i>kata akribeian</i></b><i>according to the most accurate and exact method</i>. He was not trained up in the principles of the latitudinarians, had nothing in him of a Sadducee, but was of that sect that was most studious in the law, kept most close to it, and, to make it more strict than it was, added to it the traditions of the elders, the law of the fathers, the law which was given to them, and which they gave to their children, and so it was handed down to us. Paul had as great a value for antiquity, and tradition, and the authority of the church, as any of them had; and there was never a Jew of them all that understood his religion better than Paul did, or could better give an account of it or a reason for it. (2.) He was an active professor of their religion, and had a warm heart: <i>I was zealous towards God, as you all are this day</i>. Many that are very well skilled in the theory of religion are willing to leave the practice of it to others, but Paul was as much a zealot as a rabbi. He was zealous against every thing that the law prohibited, and for every thing that the law enjoined; and this was zeal towards God, because he thought it was for
<p class="tab-1">II. What a fiery furious persecutor he had been of the Christian religion in the beginning of his time, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.4,Acts.22.5" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.4,Acts.22.5"><span class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.4">Acts 22:4</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.5">5</span></a>. He mentions this to make it the more plainly and evidently to appear that the change which was wrought upon him, when he was converted to the Christian faith, was purely the effect of a divine power; for he was so far from having any previous inclinations to it, or favourable opinions of it, that immediately before that sudden change was wrought in him he had the utmost antipathy imaginable to Christianity, and was filled with rage against it to the last degree. And perhaps he mentions it to justify God in his present trouble; how unrighteous soever those were that persecuted him, God was righteous, who permitted them to do it, for time was when he was a persecutor; and he may have a further view in it to invite and encourage those people to repent, for he himself had been <i>a blasphemer, and a persecutor</i>, and yet obtained mercy. Let us view Pauls picture of himself when he was a persecutor. 1. He hated Christianity with a mortal enmity: <i>I persecuted this way unto the death</i>, that is, “Those that walked in this way I aimed, if possible, to be the death of.” <i>He breathed out slaughter against them</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.9.1" href="/passage/?search=Acts.9.1">Acts 9:1</a>. When <i>they were put to death, he gave his voice against them</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.26.10" href="/passage/?search=Acts.26.10">Acts 26:10</a>. Nay, he persecuted not only those that walked in this way, but the way itself, Christianity, which was branded as a byway, a sect; he aimed to persecute this to the death, to be the ruin of this religion. He <i>persecuted it to the death</i>, that is, he could have been willing himself to die in his opposition to Christianity, so some understand it. He would contentedly have lost his life, and would have thought it well laid out, in defence of the laws and traditions of the fathers. 2. He did all he could to frighten people from this way, and out of it, by <i>binding and delivering into prison both men and women</i>; he filled the jails with Christians. Now that he himself was bound, he lays a particular stress upon this part of his charge against himself, that he had bound the Christians, and carried them to prison; he likewise reflects upon it with a special regret that he had imprisoned not only the men, but the women, the weaker sex, who ought to be treated with particular tenderness and compassion. 3. He was employed by the great sanhedrim, the high priest, and all the estate of the elders, as an agent for them, in suppressing this new sect; so much had he already signalized himself for his zeal against it, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.5" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.5">Acts 22:5</a>. The high priest can witness for him that he was ready to be employed in any service against the Christians. When they heard that many of the Jews at Damascus had embraced the Christian faith, to deter others from doing the like they resolved to proceed against them with the utmost severity, and could not think of a fitter person to be employed in that business, nor one more likely to go through with it, than Paul. They therefore sent him, and letters by him, to the Jews at Damascus, here called <i>the brethren</i>, because they all descended from one common stock, and were of one family in religion too, ordering them to be assisting to Paul in seizing those among them that had turned Christians, and bringing them up prisoners to Jerusalem, in order to their being punished as deserters from the faith and worship of the God of Israel; and so might either be compelled to retract, or be put to death for a terror to others. Thus did Saul make <i>havoc of the church</i>, and was in a fair way, if he had gone on awhile, to ruin it, and root it out. “Such a
<p class="tab-1">III. In what manner he was converted and made what he now was. It was not from any natural or external causes; he did not change his religion from an affectation of novelty, for he was then as well affected to antiquity as he used to be; nor did it arise from discontent because he was disappointed in his preferment, for he was now, more than ever, in the way of preferment in the Jewish church; much less could it arise from covetousness, or ambition, or any hope of mending his fortune in the world by turning Christian, for it was to expose himself to all manner of disgrace and trouble; nor had he any conversation with the apostles or any other Christians, by whose subtlety and sophistry he might be thought to have been wheedled into this change. No, it was the Lords doing, and the circumstances of the doing of it were enough to justify him in the change, to all those who believe there is a supernatural power; and none can condemn him for it, without reflecting upon that divine energy by which he was he rein overruled. He relates the story of his conversion here very particularly, as we had it before (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.9.1-Acts.9.19" href="/passage/?search=Acts.9.1-Acts.9.19">Acts 9:1-19</a>), aiming to show that it was purely the act of God. 1. He was a fully bent upon persecuting the Christians just before Christ arrested him as ever. He <i>made his journey, and was come nigh to Damascus</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.6" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.6">Acts 22:6</a>), and had no other thought than to execute the cruel design he was sent upon; he was not conscious of the least compassionate relentings towards the poor Christians, but still represented them to himself as heretics, schismatics, and dangerous enemies both to church and state. 2. It was <i>a light from heaven</i> that first startled him, <i>a great light</i>, which <i>shone suddenly round about him</i>, and the Jews knew that God is light, and his angels angels of light, and that such a light as this shining at noon, and therefore exceeding that of the sun, must be from God. Had it shone in upon him into some private room, there might have been a cheat in it, but it shone upon him in the open road, at high noon, and so strongly <i>that it struck him to the ground</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.7" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.7">Acts 22:7</a>), and all <i>that were with him</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.26.14" href="/passage/?search=Acts.26.14">Acts 26:14</a>. They could not deny but that surely the Lord was in this light. 3. It was a voice <i>from heaven</i> that first begat in him awful thoughts of Jesus Christ, of whom before he had had nothing but hateful spiteful thoughts. The voice called to him by name, to distinguish him from <i>those that journeyed with him, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me</i>? And when he asked, <i>Who art thou, Lord</i>? it was answered, <i>I am Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou persecutest</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.8" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.8">Acts 22:8</a>. By which it appeared that this Jesus of Nazareth, whom they also were now persecuting, was one that spoke from heaven, and they knew it was dangerous resisting one that did so, <a class="bibleref" title="Heb.12.25" href="/passage/?search=Heb.12.25">Heb. 12:25</a>. 4. Lest it should be objected, “How came this light and voice to work such a change upon him, and not upon those that journeyed with him?” (though, it is very probable, it had a good effect upon them, and that they thereupon became Christians), he observes <i>that his fellow travellers saw indeed the light, and were afraid</i> they should be consumed with fire from heaven, their own consciences, perhaps, now telling them that the way they were in was not good, but like Balaams when he was going to curse Israel, and therefore they might expect to meet an angel with a flaming glittering sword; but, though the light made them afraid, they heard not the voice of him that spoke to Paul, that is, they did not distinctly hear the word
<p class="tab-1">IV. How he was confirmed in the change he had made, and further directed what he should do, by Ananias who lived at Damascus.</p>
<p class="tab-1">Observe, 1. The character here given of Ananias. He was not a man that was any way prejudiced against the Jewish nation or religion, but was himself <i>a devout man according to the law</i>; if not a Jew by birth, yet one that had been proselyted to the Jewish religion, and therefore called a devout man, and thence advanced further to the faith of Christ; and he conducted himself so well that he had a <i>good report of all the Jews that dwelt at Damascus</i>. This was the first Christian that Paul had any friendly communication with, and it was not likely that he should instil into him any such notions as they suspected him to espouse, injurious to the law or to this holy place.</p>
<p class="tab-1">2. The cure immediately wrought by him upon Pauls eyes, which miracle was to confirm Ananiass mission to Paul, and to ratify all that he should afterwards say to him. He <i>came to him</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.13" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.13">Acts 22:13</a>); and, to assure him that he came to him from Christ (the very same who had torn and would heal him, had smitten, but would bind him up, had taken away his sight, but would restore it again, with advantage), he <i>stood by him, and said, Brother Saul, receive thy sight</i>. Power went along with this word, and <i>the same hour</i>, immediately, he recovered his sight, and <i>looked up upon him</i>, ready to receive from him the instructions sent by him.</p>
<p class="tab-1">3. The declaration which Ananias makes to him of the favour, the peculiar favour, which the Lord Jesus designed him above any other.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(1.) In the present manifestation of himself to him (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.14" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.14">Acts 22:14</a>): <i>The God of our fathers has chosen thee</i>. This powerful call is the result of a particular choice; his calling God the God of our fathers intimates that Ananias was himself a Jew by birth, that observed the law of the fathers, and lived upon the promise made unto the fathers; and he gives a reason why he said <i>Brother Saul</i>, when he speaks of God as the God of our fathers: <i>This God of our fathers has chosen thee that thou shouldst</i>, [1.] <i>Know his will</i>, the will of his precept that is to be done by thee, the will of his providence that is to be done concerning thee. He hath chosen thee that thou shouldst know it in a more peculiar manner; not of man nor by man, but immediately by <i>the revelation of Christ</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="Gal.1.1,Gal.1.2" href="/passage/?search=Gal.1.1,Gal.1.2"><span class="bibleref" title="Gal.1.1">Gal. 1:1</span>, <span class="bibleref" title="Gal.1.2">2</span></a>. Those whom God hath chosen he hath chosen to know his will, and to do it. [2.] <i>That thou shouldst see that Just One, and shouldst hear the voice of his mouth</i>, and so shouldst know his will immediately from himself. This was what Paul was, in a particular manner, chosen to above others; it was a distinguishing favour, that he should see Christ here upon earth after his ascension into heaven. Stephen saw him <i>standing at the right hand of God</i>, but Paul saw him standing at his right hand. This honour none had but Paul. Stephen saw him, but we do not find that he heard the voice of his mouth, as Paul did, who says, <i>he was last of all seen of me, as of one born out of due time</i>, <a class="bibleref" title="1Cor.15.8" href="/passage/?search=1Cor.15.8">1 Cor. 15:8</a>. Christ is here called <i>that Just One</i>; for he is Jesus Christ the righteous, and suffered wrongfully. Observe, Those whom God has chosen to know his will must have an eye to Christ, and must see him, and hear the voice of his mouth; for it is by him that God has made known his will, his good-will to us, and he has said, <i>Hear you him</i>.</p>
<p class="tab-1">(2.) In the after-manifestation of himself by him to others (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.15" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.15">Acts 22:15</a>): “<i>Thou shalt be his witness</i>, not only a monument of his grace, as a pillar may be, but a witness <i>viva voce—by word of mouth</i>; thou shalt publish his gospel, as that which thou hast experienced the power of, and been delivered into, the mould of; <i>thou shalt be his witness unto all men</i>, Gentiles as well as Jews, <i>of what thou hast seen and heard</i>, now at the very first.” And finding Paul so particularly relating the manner of his conversation in his apologies for himself, here and <a class="bibleref" title="Acts.26.1-Acts.26.32" href="/passage/?search=Acts.26.1-Acts.26.32">Acts 26:1-32</a>, we have reason to think that he frequently related the same narrative in his preaching for the conversion of others; he told them what God had done for his soul, to encourage them to hope that he would do something for their souls.</p>
<p class="tab-1">4. The counsel and encouragement he gave him to join himself to the Lord Jesus by baptism (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.16" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.16">Acts 22:16</a>): <i>Arise, and be baptized</i>, He had in his circumcision been given up to God, but he must now by baptism be given up to God in Christ—must embrace the Christian religion and the privileges of it, in submission to the precepts of it. This must now be done immediately upon his conversion, and so was added to his circumcision: but to the seed of the faithful it comes in the room of it; for it is, as that was to Abraham and his believing seed, <i>a seal of the righteousness which is by faith</i>. (1.) The great gospel privilege which by baptism we have sealed to us is the remission of sins: <i>Be baptized and wash away thy sins</i>; that is, “Receive the comfort of the pardon of thy sins in the through Jesus Christ and lay hold of his righteousness for that purpose, and receive power against sin for the mortifying of thy corruption;” for our being washed includes our being both justified and sanctified, <a class="bibleref" title="1Cor.6.11" href="/passage/?search=1Cor.6.11">1 Cor. 6:11</a>. Be baptized, and rest not in the sign, but make sure of the thing signified, the putting away of the filth of sin. (2.) The great gospel duty which by our baptism we are bound to is <i>to call on the name of the Lord, the Lord Jesus</i>; to acknowledge him to be our Lord and our God, and to apply to him accordingly; to give honour to him, to put all our petitions in his hand. To <i>call on the name of Jesus Christ our Lord</i> (Son of David, have mercy on us) is the periphrasis of a Christian, <a class="bibleref" title="1Cor.1.2" href="/passage/?search=1Cor.1.2">1 Cor. 1:2</a>. We must <i>wash away our sins, calling on the name of the Lord</i>; that is, we must seek for the pardon of our sins in Christs name, and in dependence on him and his righteousness. In prayer, we must not any longer call God the God of Abraham, but the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and in him our Father; in every prayer, our eye must be to Christ. (3.) We must do this quickly. <i>Why tarriest thou</i>? Our covenanting with God in Christ is needful work, that must not be deferred. The case is so plain that it is needless to deliberate; and the hazard so great that it is folly to delay. Why should not that be done at the present time that must be done some time, or we are undone?</p>
<p class="tab-1">V. How he was commissioned to go and preach the gospel to the Gentiles. This was the great thing for which they were so angry at him, and therefore it was requisite he should for this, in a special manner, produce a divine warrant; and here he does it. This commission he did not receive presently upon his conversion, for this was <i>at Jerusalem</i>, whither he did not go till <i>three years after</i>, or more (<a class="bibleref" title="Gal.1.18" href="/passage/?search=Gal.1.18">Gal. 1:18</a>); and whether it was then, or afterwards, that he had this vision here spoken of, we are not certain. But, to reconcile them, if possible, to his preaching the gospel among the Gentiles, he tells them, 1. That he received his orders to do it when he was at prayer, begging of God to appoint him his work and to show him the course he should steer; and (which was a circumstance that would have some weight with those he was now speaking to) he was <i>at prayer in the temple</i>, which was to be called <i>a house of prayer for all people</i>; not only in which all people should pray, but in which all people should be prayed for. Now as Pauls praying in the temple was an evidence, contrary to their malicious suggestion, that he had a veneration for the temple, though he did not make an idol of it as they did; so Gods giving him this commission there in the temple was an evidence that the sending him to the Gentiles would be no prejudice to the temple, unless the Jews by their infidelity made it so. Now it would be a great satisfaction to Paul afterwards, in the execution of this commission, to reflect upon it that he received it when he was at prayer. 2. He received it in a vision. He fell <i>into a trance</i> (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.17" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.17">Acts 22:17</a>), his external senses, for the present, locked up; he was in an ecstasy, as when he was <i>caught up into the third heaven</i>, and was not at that time sensible whether he was <i>in the body or out of the body</i>. In this trance he saw Jesus Christ, not with the eyes of his body, as at his conversion, but represented to the eye of his mind (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.18" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.18">Acts 22:18</a>): <i>I saw him saying unto me</i>. Our eye must be upon Christ when we are receiving the law from his mouth; and we must not only hear him speak, but see him speaking to us. 3. Before Christ gave him a commission to go to the Gentiles, he told him it was to no purpose for him to think of doing any good at Jerusalem; so that they must not blame him, but themselves, if he be sent to the Gentiles. Paul came to Jerusalem full of hopes that, by the grace of God, he might be instrumental to bring those to the faith of Christ who had stood it out against the ministry of the other apostles; and perhaps this was what he was now praying for, that he, having had his education at Jerusalem and being well known there, might be employed in gathering the children of Jerusalem to Christ that were not yet gathered, which he thought he had particular advantages for doing of. But Christ crosses the measures he had laid: “<i>Make haste</i>,” says he, “<i>and get thee quickly out of Jerusalem</i>;” for, though thou thinkest thyself more likely to work upon them than others, thou wilt find they are more prejudiced against thee than against any other, and therefore “<i>will not receive thy testimony concerning me</i>.” As God knows before who will receive the gospel, so he knows who will reject it. 4. Paul, notwithstanding this, renewed his petition that he might be employed at Jerusalem, because they knew, better than any did, what he had been before his conversion, and therefore must ascribe so great a change in him to the power of almighty grace, and consequently give the greater regard to his testimony; thus he reasoned, both with himself and with the Lord, and thought he reasoned justly (<a class="bibleref" title="Acts.22.19,Acts.22.20" href="/passage/?search=Acts.22.19,Acts.22.20"><span class="bible
<p class="tab-1">Now, if they would lay all this together, surely they would see that they had no reason to be angry with Paul for preaching among the Gentiles, or construe it as an act of ill-will to his own nation, for he was compelled to it, contrary to his own mind, by an overruling command from heaven.</p>