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732 lines
50 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Acts.xxvi" n="xxvi" next="Acts.xxvii" prev="Acts.xxv" progress="26.99%" title="Chapter XXV">
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<h2 id="Acts.xxvi-p0.1">A C T S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Acts.xxvi-p0.2">CHAP. XXV.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Acts.xxvi-p1">Some think that Felix was turned out, and Festus
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succeeded him, quickly after Paul's imprisonment, and that the two
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years mentioned in the close of the foregoing chapter are to be
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reckoned from the beginning of Nero's reign; but it seems more
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natural to compute them from Paul's being delivered into the hands
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of Felix. However, we have here much the same management of Paul's
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case as we had in the foregoing chapter; cognizance is here taken
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of it, I. By Festus the governor; it is brought before him by the
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Jews, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.1-Acts.25.3" parsed="|Acts|25|1|25|3" passage="Ac 25:1-3">ver. 1-3</scripRef>. The
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hearing of it is appointed to be, not at Jerusalem, as the Jews
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desired, out at Cæsarea, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.4-Acts.25.6" parsed="|Acts|25|4|25|6" passage="Ac 25:4-6">ver.
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4-6</scripRef>. The Jews appear against Paul and accuse him
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(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.7" parsed="|Acts|25|7|0|0" passage="Ac 25:7">ver. 7</scripRef>), but he stands upon
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his own innocency (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.8" parsed="|Acts|25|8|0|0" passage="Ac 25:8">ver. 8</scripRef>);
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and to avoid the removing of the cause to Jerusalem, to which he
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was pressed to consent, he at length appeals to Cæsar, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.9-Acts.25.12" parsed="|Acts|25|9|25|12" passage="Ac 25:9-12">ver. 9-12</scripRef>. II. By king Agrippa, to
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whom Festus relates his case (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.13-Acts.25.21" parsed="|Acts|25|13|25|21" passage="Ac 25:13-21">ver.
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13-21</scripRef>), and Agrippa desires he might have the hearing of
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it himself, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.22" parsed="|Acts|25|22|0|0" passage="Ac 25:22">ver. 22</scripRef>. The
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court is accordingly set, and Paul brought to the bar (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.23" parsed="|Acts|25|23|0|0" passage="Ac 25:23">ver. 23</scripRef>), and Festus opens the cause
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(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.24-Acts.25.27" parsed="|Acts|25|24|25|27" passage="Ac 25:24-27">ver. 24-27</scripRef>), to
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introduce Paul's defence in the next chapter.</p>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxvi-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25" parsed="|Acts|25|0|0|0" passage="Ac 25" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxvi-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.1-Acts.25.12" parsed="|Acts|25|1|25|12" passage="Ac 25:1-12" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.25.1-Acts.25.12">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxvi-p1.12">Paul Arraigned before Festus; Paul's Fourth
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Defence; Paul Appeals to Cæsar.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxvi-p2">1 Now when Festus was come into the province,
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after three days he ascended from Cæsarea to Jerusalem. 2
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Then the high priest and the chief of the Jews informed him against
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Paul, and besought him, 3 And desired favour against him,
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that he would send for him to Jerusalem, laying wait in the way to
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kill him. 4 But Festus answered, that Paul should be kept at
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Cæsarea, and that he himself would depart shortly <i>thither.</i>
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5 Let them therefore, said he, which among you are able, go
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down with <i>me,</i> and accuse this man, if there be any
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wickedness in him. 6 And when he had tarried among them more
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than ten days, he went down unto Cæsarea; and the next day sitting
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on the judgment seat commanded Paul to be brought. 7 And
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when he was come, the Jews which came down from Jerusalem stood
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round about, and laid many and grievous complaints against Paul,
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which they could not prove. 8 While he answered for himself,
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Neither against the law of the Jews, neither against the temple,
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nor yet against Cæsar, have I offended any thing at all. 9
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But Festus, willing to do the Jews a pleasure, answered Paul, and
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said, Wilt thou go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these
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things before me? 10 Then said Paul, I stand at Cæsar's
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judgment seat, where I ought to be judged: to the Jews have I done
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no wrong, as thou very well knowest. 11 For if I be an
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offender, or have committed any thing worthy of death, I refuse not
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to die: but if there be none of these things whereof these accuse
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me, no man may deliver me unto them. I appeal unto Cæsar. 12
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Then Festus, when he had conferred with the council, answered, Hast
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thou appealed unto Cæsar? unto Cæsar shalt thou go.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p3">We commonly say, "New lords, new laws, new
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customs;" but here was a new governor, and yet Paul had the same
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treatment from him that he had from the former, and no better.
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Festus, like Felix, is not so just to him as he should have been,
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for he does not release him; and yet not so unjust to him as the
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Jews would have had him to be, for he will not condemn him to die,
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nor expose him to their rage. Here is,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p4">I. The pressing application which the high
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priest and other Jews used with the governor to persuade him to
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abandon Paul; for to send him to Jerusalem was in effect to abandon
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him. 1. See how speedy they were in their applications to Festus
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concerning Paul. As soon as ever he <i>had come into the
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province,</i> and had taken possession of the government, into
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which, probably, he was installed at Cæsarea, within <i>three days
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he went up to Jerusalem,</i> to show himself there, and presently
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the priests were upon him to proceed against Paul. He staid
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<i>three days at Cæsarea,</i> where Paul was a prisoner, and we do
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not find that in that time Paul made any application to him to
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release him, though, no doubt, he could have made good friends,
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that he might hope to have prevailed by; but as soon as ever he
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comes up to Jerusalem the priests are in all haste to make an
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interest with him against Paul. See how restless a thing malice is.
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Paul more patiently bears the lengthening out of his imprisonment
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than his enemies do the delay of his prosecution even to the death.
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2. See how spiteful they were in their application. They
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<i>informed the governor against Paul</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.2" parsed="|Acts|25|2|0|0" passage="Ac 25:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>) before he was brought upon a fair
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trial, that so they might, if possible, prejudge the cause with the
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governor, and make him a party who was to be the judge. But this
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artifice, though base enough, they could not confide in; for the
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governor would be sure to hear him himself, and then all their
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informations against him would fall to the ground; and therefore
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they form another project much more base, and that is to
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assassinate Paul before he came upon his trial. These inhuman
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hellish methods, which all the world profess at least to abhor,
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have these persecutors recourse to, to gratify their malice against
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the gospel of Christ, and this too under colour of zeal for Moses.
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<i>Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum—Such was their dire
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religious zeal.</i> 3. See how specious the pretence was. Now that
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<i>the governor was himself at Jerusalem they desired he would send
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for Paul thither,</i> and try him there, which would save the
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prosecutors a great deal of labour, and looked most reasonable,
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because he was charged with having profaned the temple at
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Jerusalem, and it is usual for criminals to be tried in the court
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where the fact was committed; but that which they designed was to
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way-lay him as he was brought up, and to murder him upon the road,
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supposing that he would not be brought up under so strong a guard
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as he was sent down with, or that the officers that were to bring
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him up might be bribed to give them an opportunity for their
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wickedness. It is said, <i>They desired favour against Paul.</i>
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The business of prosecutors is to demand justice against one that
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they suppose to be a criminal, and, if he be not proved so, it is
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as much justice to acquit him as it is to condemn him if he be. But
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to desire favour against a prisoner, and from the judge too, who
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ought to be of counsel for him, is a very impudent thing. The
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favour ought to be for the prisoner, <i>in favorem vitæ—to favour
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his life,</i> but here they desire it against him. They will take
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it as a favour if the governor will but condemn Paul, though they
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can prove no crime upon him.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p5">II. The governor's resolution that Paul
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shall take his trial at Cæsarea, where he now is, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.4-Acts.25.5" parsed="|Acts|25|4|25|5" passage="Ac 25:4,5"><i>v.</i> 4, 5</scripRef>. See how he manages
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the prosecutors. 1. He will not do them the kindness to send for
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him to Jerusalem; no, he gave orders <i>that Paul should be kept at
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Cæsarea.</i> It does not appear that he had any suspicion, much
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less any certain information, of their bloody design to murder him
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by the way, as the chief priests had when he sent him to Cæsarea
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(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.30" parsed="|Acts|23|30|0|0" passage="Ac 23:30"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 30</scripRef>); but
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perhaps he was not willing so far to oblige the high priest and his
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party, or he would maintain the honour of his court at Cæsarea and
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require their attendance there, or he was not willing to be at the
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trouble or charge of bringing Paul up; whatever was his reason for
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refusing it, God made use of it as a means of preserving Paul out
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of the hands of his enemies. Perhaps now they were more careful to
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keep their conspiracy secret than they had been before, that the
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discovery of it might not be now, as it was then, the defeat of it.
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But though God does not, as then, bring it to light, yet he finds
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another way, as effectual, to bring it to nought, by inclining the
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heart of the governor, for some other reasons, not to remove Paul
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to Jerusalem. God is not tied to one method, in working out
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salvation for his people. He can suffer the designs against them to
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be concealed, and yet not suffer them to be accomplished; and can
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make even the carnal policies of great men to serve his gracious
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purposes. 2. Yet he will do them the justice to hear what they have
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to say against Paul, if they will go down to Cæsarea, and appear
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against him there: "<i>Let those among you who are able,</i> able
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in body and purse for such a journey, or able in mind and tongue to
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manage the prosecution—<i>let those among you</i> who are fit to
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be managers, <i>go down with me, and accuse this man;</i> or, those
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who are competent witnesses, who are able to prove any thing
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criminal upon him, let them go and give in their evidence, if there
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be any such wickedness in him as you charge upon him." Festus will
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not take it for granted, as they desire he should, that there is
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wickedness in him, till it is proved upon him, and he has been
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heard in his own defence; but, if he be guilty, it lies upon them
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to prove him so.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p6">III. Paul's trial before Festus. Festus
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staid <i>at Jerusalem about ten days,</i> and then <i>went down to
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Cæsarea,</i> and the prosecutors, it is likely, in his retinue; for
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he said they should <i>go down with him;</i> and, since they are so
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eager in the prosecution, he is willing this cause should be first
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called; and, that they may hasten home, he will despatch it <i>the
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next day.</i> Expedition in administering justice is very
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commendable, provided more haste be not made than good speed. Now
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here we have, 1. The court set, and the prisoner called to the bar.
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Festus <i>sat in the judgment-seat,</i> as he used to do when any
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cause was brought before him that was of consequence, and he
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<i>commanded Paul to be brought,</i> and to make his appearance,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.6" parsed="|Acts|25|6|0|0" passage="Ac 25:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. Christ, to
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encourage his disciples and keep up their spirits under such awful
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trials of their courage as this was to Paul, promised them that the
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day should come when they <i>should sit on thrones, judging the
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tribes of Israel.</i> 2. The prosecutors exhibiting their charges
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against the prisoner (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.7" parsed="|Acts|25|7|0|0" passage="Ac 25:7"><i>v.</i>
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7</scripRef>): <i>The Jews stood round about,</i> which intimates
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that they were many. <i>Lord, how are they increased that trouble
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me!</i> It intimates also that they were unanimous, they stood by
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one another, and resolved to hold together; and that they were
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intent upon the prosecution, and eager in clamouring against Paul.
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They <i>stood round about,</i> if possible, to frighten the judge
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into a compliance with their malicious design, or, at least, to
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frighten the prisoner, and to put him out of countenance; but in
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vain: he had too just and strong an assurance to be frightened by
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them. <i>They compassed me about like bees, but they are quenched
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as the fire of thorns,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.118.12" parsed="|Ps|118|12|0|0" passage="Ps 118:12">Ps.
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cxviii. 12</scripRef>. <i>When they stood round about him, they
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brought many and grievous accusations against Paul,</i> so it
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should be read. They charged him with high crimes and misdemeanors.
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The articles of impeachment were many, and contained things of a
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very heinous nature. They represented him to the court as black and
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odious as their wit and malice could contrive; but when they had
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opened the cause as they thought fit, and came to the evidence,
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there they failed: <i>they could not prove</i> what they alleged
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against him, for it was all false, and the complaints were
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groundless and unjust. Either the fact was not as they opened it,
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or there was no fault in it; <i>they laid to his charge things that
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he knew not,</i> nor they neither. It is no new thing for the most
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excellent ones of the earth to have all manner of evil said against
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them falsely, not only <i>in the song of the drunkards,</i> and
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upon <i>the seat of the scornful,</i> but even <i>before the
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judgment-seat.</i> 3. The prisoner's insisting upon his own
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vindication, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.8" parsed="|Acts|25|8|0|0" passage="Ac 25:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>.
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Whoever reproaches him, his own heart does not, and therefore his
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own tongue shall not; <i>though he die, he will not remove his
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integrity from him.</i> When it came to his turn to speak <i>for
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himself,</i> he insisted upon his general plea, Not guilty:
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<i>Neither against the law of the Jews, nor against the temple, nor
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yet against Cæsar, have I offended any thing at all.</i> (1.) He
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had not violated the law of the Jews, nor taught any doctrine
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destructive of it. <i>Did he make void the law by faith? No, he
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established the law.</i> Preaching Christ, <i>the end of the
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law,</i> was no offence against the law. (2.) He had not profaned
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the temple, nor put any contempt at all upon the temple-service;
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his helping to set up the gospel temple did not at all offend
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against that temple which was a type of it. (3.) He had not
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offended against Cæsar, nor his government. By this it appears that
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now his cause being brought before the government, to curry favour
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with the governor and that they might seem friends to Cæsar, they
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had charged him with some instances of disaffection to the present
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higher powers, which obliged him to purge himself as to that
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matter, and to protest that he was no enemy to Cæsar, not so much
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as those were who charged him with being so.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p7">IV. Paul's appeal to the emperor, and the
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occasion of it. This gave the cause a new turn. Whether he had
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before designed it, or whether it was a sudden resolve upon the
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present provocation, does not appear; but God puts it into his
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heart to do it, for the bringing about of that which he had said to
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him, <i>that he must bear witness to Christ at Rome,</i> for there
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the emperor's court was, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.11" parsed="|Acts|23|11|0|0" passage="Ac 23:11"><i>ch.</i>
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xxiii. 11</scripRef>. We have here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p8">1. The proposal which Festus made to Paul
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to go and take his trial at Jerusalem, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.9" parsed="|Acts|25|9|0|0" passage="Ac 25:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. <i>Festus</i> was <i>willing to
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do the Jews a pleasure,</i> inclined to gratify the prosecutors
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rather than the prisoner, as far as he could go with safety against
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one that was a citizen of Rome, and therefore asked him whether he
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would be willing to go up to Jerusalem, and clear himself there,
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where he had been accused, and where he might have his witnesses
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ready to vouch for him and confirm what he said. He would not offer
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to turn him over to the high priest and the sanhedrim, as the Jews
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would have had him; but, <i>Wilt thou go thither, and be judged of
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these things before me?</i> The president, if he had pleased, might
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have ordered him thither, but he would not do it without his own
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consent, which, if he could have wheedled him to give it, would
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have taken off the odium of it. In suffering times, the prudence of
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the Lord's people is tried as well as their patience; being sent
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forth therefore as sheep in the midst of wolves, they have need to
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be wise as serpents.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p9">2. Paul's refusal to consent to it, and his
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reasons for it. He knew, if he were removed to Jerusalem,
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notwithstanding the utmost vigilance of the president, the Jews
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would find some means or other to be the death of him; and
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therefore desires to be excused, and pleads, (1.) That, as a
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citizen of Rome, it was most proper for him to be tried, not only
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by the president, but in that which was properly his court, which
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sat at Cæsarea: <i>I stand at Cæsar's judgment-seat, where I ought
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to be judged,</i> in the city which is the metropolis of the
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province. The court being held in Cæsar's name, and by his
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authority and commission, before one that was delegated by him, it
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might well be said to be his judgment seat, as, with us, all writs
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run in the name of the sovereign, in whose name all courts are
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held. Paul's owning that he ought to be judged at Cæsar's
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judgment-seat plainly proves that Christ's ministers are not
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exempted from the jurisdiction of the civil powers, but ought to be
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subject to them, as far as they can with a good conscience; and, if
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they be guilty of a real crime, to submit to their censure; if
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innocent, yet to submit to their enquiry, and to clear themselves
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before them. (2.) That, as a member of the Jewish nation, he had
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done nothing to make himself obnoxious to them: <i>To the Jews have
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I done no wrong, as thou very well knowest.</i> It very well
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becomes those that are innocent to plead their innocency, and to
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insist upon it; it is a debt we owe to our own good name, not only
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not to bear false witness against ourselves, but to maintain our
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own integrity against those who bear false witness against us. (3.)
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That he was willing to abide by the rules of the law, and to let
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that take its course, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.11" parsed="|Acts|25|11|0|0" passage="Ac 25:11"><i>v.</i>
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11</scripRef>. If he be guilty of any capital crime that deserves
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death, he will not offer either to make resistance or to make his
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escape, will neither flee from justice nor fight with it: "I refuse
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not to die, but will accept of the punishment of my iniquity." Not
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that all who have committed any thing worthy of death are obliged
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to accuse themselves, and offer themselves to justice; but, when
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they are accused and brought to justice, they ought to submit, and
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to say both God and the government are righteous; as it is
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necessary that some should be made examples. But, if he be
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innocent, as he protests he is, "<i>If there be none of these
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things whereof these accuse me,</i>—if the prosecution be
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malicious and they are resolved to have my blood right or
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wrong,—<i>no man may deliver me unto them,</i> no, not the
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governor himself, without palpable injustice; for it is his
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business as much to protect the innocent as to punish the guilty;"
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and he claims his protection.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p10">3. His appealing to court. Since he is
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continually in danger of the Jews, and one attempt made after
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another to get him into their hands, <i>whose tender mercies were
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||
cruel,</i> he flies to the <i>dernier resort—the last refuge</i>
|
||
of oppressed innocency, and takes sanctuary there, since he cannot
|
||
have justice done him in any other way: "<i>I appeal unto
|
||
Cæsar.</i> Rather than be delivered to the Jews" (which Festus
|
||
seems inclined to consent to) "let me be delivered to Nero." When
|
||
David had divers times narrowly escaped the rage of Saul, and
|
||
concluded he was such a restless enemy that he should <i>one day
|
||
perish by his hands,</i> he came to this resolution, being in a
|
||
manner compelled to it, <i>There is nothing better for me than to
|
||
take shelter in the land of the Philistines,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.27.1" parsed="|1Sam|27|1|0|0" passage="1Sa 27:1">1 Sam. xxvii. 1</scripRef>. So Paul here. But it is a
|
||
hard case that a son of Abraham must be forced to appeal to a
|
||
Philistine, to a Nero, from those who call themselves the seed of
|
||
Abraham, and shall be safer in Gath or Rome than in Jerusalem.
|
||
<i>How is the faithful city become a harlot!</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p11">V. The judgment given upon the whole
|
||
matter. Paul is neither released nor condemned. His enemies hoped
|
||
the cause would be ended in his death; his friends hoped it would
|
||
be ended in his deliverance; but it proved neither so nor so, they
|
||
are both disappointed, the thing is left as it was. It is an
|
||
instance of the slow steps which Providence sometimes takes, not
|
||
bringing things to an issue so soon as we expect, by which we are
|
||
often made ashamed both of our hopes and of our fears, and are kept
|
||
still waiting on God. The cause had before been adjourned to
|
||
another time, now to another place, to another court, that Paul's
|
||
<i>tribulation might work patience.</i> 1. The president takes
|
||
advice upon the matter: <i>He conferred with the
|
||
council</i>—<b><i>meta tou symbouliou,</i></b> not with the
|
||
council of the Jews (that is called <b><i>synedrion</i></b>), but
|
||
with his own counsellors, who were always ready to assist the
|
||
governor with their advice. <i>In multitude of counsellors there is
|
||
safety;</i> and judges should consult both with themselves and
|
||
others before they pass sentence. 2. He determines to send him to
|
||
Rome. Some think Paul meant not an appeal to Cæsar's person, but
|
||
only to his court, the sentence of which he would abide by, rather
|
||
than be remitted to the Jew's council, and that Festus might have
|
||
chosen whether he would have sent him to Rome, or, at least,
|
||
whether he would have joined issue with him upon the appeal. But it
|
||
should seem, by what Agrippa said (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.32" parsed="|Acts|26|32|0|0" passage="Ac 26:32"><i>ch.</i> xxvi. 32</scripRef>), that <i>he might have
|
||
been set at liberty if he had not appealed to Cæsar</i>—that, by
|
||
the course of the Roman law, a Roman citizen might appeal at any
|
||
time to a superior court, even to the supreme, as causes with us
|
||
are removed by <i>certiorari,</i> and criminals by <i>habeas
|
||
corpus,</i> and as appeals are often made to the house of peers.
|
||
Festus, therefore, either of choice or of course, comes to this
|
||
resolution: <i>Hast thou appealed unto Cæsar? Unto Cæsar thou shalt
|
||
go.</i> He found there was something very extraordinary in the
|
||
case, which he was therefore afraid of giving judgment upon, either
|
||
one way or other, and the knowledge of which he thought would be an
|
||
entertainment to the emperor, and therefore he transmitted it to
|
||
his cognizance. In our judgment before God those that by justifying
|
||
themselves appeal to the law, to the law they shall go, and it will
|
||
condemn them; but those that by repentance and faith appeal to the
|
||
gospel, to the gospel they shall go, and it will save them.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxvi-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.13-Acts.25.27" parsed="|Acts|25|13|25|27" passage="Ac 25:13-27" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.25.13-Acts.25.27">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxvi-p11.3">Agrippa's Visit to Festus; Paul Arraigned
|
||
before Agrippa.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxvi-p12">13 And after certain days king Agrippa and
|
||
Bernice came unto Cæsarea to salute Festus. 14 And when they
|
||
had been there many days, Festus declared Paul's cause unto the
|
||
king, saying, There is a certain man left in bonds by Felix:
|
||
15 About whom, when I was at Jerusalem, the chief priests and the
|
||
elders of the Jews informed <i>me,</i> desiring <i>to have</i>
|
||
judgment against him. 16 To whom I answered, It is not the
|
||
manner of the Romans to deliver any man to die, before that he
|
||
which is accused have the accusers face to face, and have licence
|
||
to answer for himself concerning the crime laid against him.
|
||
17 Therefore, when they were come hither, without any delay on the
|
||
morrow I sat on the judgment seat, and commanded the man to be
|
||
brought forth. 18 Against whom when the accusers stood up,
|
||
they brought none accusation of such things as I supposed:
|
||
19 But had certain questions against him of their own superstition,
|
||
and of one Jesus, which was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be alive.
|
||
20 And because I doubted of such manner of questions, I
|
||
asked <i>him</i> whether he would go to Jerusalem, and there be
|
||
judged of these matters. 21 But when Paul had appealed to be
|
||
reserved unto the hearing of Augustus, I commanded him to be kept
|
||
till I might send him to Cæsar. 22 Then Agrippa said unto
|
||
Festus, I would also hear the man myself. To morrow, said he, thou
|
||
shalt hear him. 23 And on the morrow, when Agrippa was come,
|
||
and Bernice, with great pomp, and was entered into the place of
|
||
hearing, with the chief captains, and principal men of the city, at
|
||
Festus' commandment Paul was brought forth. 24 And Festus
|
||
said, King Agrippa, and all men which are here present with us, ye
|
||
see this man, about whom all the multitude of the Jews have dealt
|
||
with me, both at Jerusalem, and <i>also</i> here, crying that he
|
||
ought not to live any longer. 25 But when I found that he
|
||
had committed nothing worthy of death, and that he himself hath
|
||
appealed to Augustus, I have determined to send him. 26 Of
|
||
whom I have no certain thing to write unto my lord. Wherefore I
|
||
have brought him forth before you, and specially before thee, O
|
||
king Agrippa, that, after examination had, I might have somewhat to
|
||
write. 27 For it seemeth to me unreasonable to send a
|
||
prisoner, and not withal to signify the crimes <i>laid</i> against
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p13">We have here the preparation that was made
|
||
for another hearing of Paul before King Agrippa, not in order to
|
||
his giving judgment upon him, but in order to his giving advice
|
||
concerning him, or rather only to gratify his curiosity. Christ had
|
||
said, concerning his followers, <i>that they should be brought
|
||
before governors and kings.</i> In the former part of this chapter
|
||
Paul was brought before Festus the governor, here before Agrippa
|
||
the king, for a testimony to both. Here is,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p14">I. The kind and friendly visit which king
|
||
Agrippa made to Festus, now upon his coming into the government in
|
||
that province (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.13" parsed="|Acts|25|13|0|0" passage="Ac 25:13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
13</scripRef>): <i>After certain days, king Agrippa came to
|
||
Cæsarea.</i> Here is royal visit. Kings usually think it enough to
|
||
send their ambassadors to congratulate their friends, but here was
|
||
a king that came himself, that made the majesty of a prince yield
|
||
to the satisfaction of a friend; for personal converse is the most
|
||
pleasant among friends. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p15">1. Who the visitants were. (1.) King
|
||
Agrippa, the son of that Herod (surnamed <i>Agrippa</i>) who killed
|
||
James the apostle, and was himself eaten of worms, and great
|
||
grandson of Herod the Great, under whom Christ was born. Josephus
|
||
calls this <i>Agrippa the younger;</i> Claudius the emperor made
|
||
him king of Chalcis, and <i>tetrarch of Trachonitis and
|
||
Abylene,</i> mentioned <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.3.1" parsed="|Luke|3|1|0|0" passage="Lu 3:1">Luke iii.
|
||
1</scripRef>. The Jewish writers speak of him, and (as Dr.
|
||
Lightfoot tells us) among other things relate this story of him,
|
||
"That reading the law publicly, in the latter end of the year of
|
||
release, as was enjoined, the king, when he came to those words
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Deut.17.15" parsed="|Deut|17|15|0|0" passage="De 17:15">Deut. xvii. 15</scripRef>), <i>Thou
|
||
shalt not set a stranger king over thee, who is not of thy
|
||
brethren,</i> the tears ran down his cheeks, for he was not of the
|
||
seed of Israel, which the congregation observing, cried out, Be of
|
||
good comfort, king Agrippa, thou art our brother; for he was of
|
||
their religion, though not of their blood." (2.) Bernice came with
|
||
him. She was his own sister, now a widow, the widow of his uncle
|
||
Herod, king of Chalcis, after whose death she lived with this
|
||
brother of hers, who was suspected to be too familiar with her,
|
||
and, after she was a second time married to Polemon king of
|
||
Cilicia, she got to be divorced from him, and returned to her
|
||
brother king Agrippa. Juvenal (<i>Sat.</i> 6) speaks of a diamond
|
||
ring which Agrippa gave to Bernice, his incestuous sister:—</p>
|
||
<verse id="Acts.xxvi-p15.3">
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.4">———————Berenices</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.5">In digito factus pretiosior; hunc dedit olim</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.6">Barbarus incestæ, dedit hunc Agrippa sorori.</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.7"/>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.8">That far-famed gem which on the finger glow'd</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.9">Of Bernice (dearer thence), bestowed</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.10">By an incestuous brother.</l>
|
||
</verse>
|
||
<attr id="Acts.xxvi-p15.11"><span class="smallcaps" id="Acts.xxvi-p15.12">Gifford.</span></attr>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p16">And both Tacitus and Suetonius speak of a
|
||
criminal intimacy afterwards between her and Titus Vespasian.
|
||
Drusilla, the wife of Felix, was another sister. Such lewd people
|
||
were the great people generally in those times! <i>Say not that the
|
||
former days were better.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p17">2. What the design of this visit was: they
|
||
<i>came to salute Festus,</i> to give him joy of his new promotion,
|
||
and to wish him joy in it; they came to compliment him upon his
|
||
accession to the government, and to keep up a good correspondence
|
||
with him, that Agrippa, who had the government of Galilee, might
|
||
act in concert with Festus, who had the government of Judea; but it
|
||
is probable they came as much to divert themselves as to show
|
||
respect to him, and to share in the entertainments of his court,
|
||
and to show their fine clothes, which would do vain people no good
|
||
if they did not go abroad.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p18">II. The account which Festus gave to king
|
||
Agrippa of Paul and his case, which he gave.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p19">1. To entertain him, and give him some
|
||
diversion. It was a very remarkable story, and worth any man's
|
||
hearing, not only as it was surprising and entertaining, but, if it
|
||
were truly and fully told, very instructive and edifying; and it
|
||
would be particularly acceptable to Agrippa, not only because he
|
||
was a judge, and there were some points of law and practice in it
|
||
well worth his notice, but much more as he was a Jew, and there
|
||
were some points of religion in it much more deserving his
|
||
cognizance.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p20">2. To have his advice. <i>Festus</i> was
|
||
but newly come to be a judge, at least to be a judge in these
|
||
parts, and therefore was diffident of himself and of his own
|
||
ability, and willing to have the counsel of those that were older
|
||
and more experienced, especially in a matter that had so much
|
||
difficulty in it as Paul's case seemed to have, and therefore he
|
||
declared it to the king. Let us now see the particular account he
|
||
gives to king Agrippa concerning Paul, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.14-Acts.25.21" parsed="|Acts|25|14|25|21" passage="Ac 25:14-21"><i>v.</i> 14-21</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p21">(1.) He found him a prisoner when he came
|
||
into the government of this province; and therefore could not of
|
||
his own knowledge give an account of his cause from the beginning:
|
||
<i>There is a certain man left in bonds by Felix;</i> and
|
||
therefore, if there were any thing amiss in the first taking of him
|
||
into custody, Festus is not to answer for that, for he found him in
|
||
bonds. When <i>Felix, to do the Jews a pleasure, left Paul
|
||
bound,</i> though he knew him to be innocent, he knew not what he
|
||
did, knew not but he might fall into worse hands than he did fall
|
||
into, though they were none of the best.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p22">(2.) That the Jewish sanhedrim were
|
||
extremely set against him: "The <i>chief priests and the elders
|
||
informed me</i> against him as a dangerous man, and not fit to
|
||
live, and desired he might therefore be condemned to die." These
|
||
being great pretenders to religion, and therefore to be supposed
|
||
men of honour and honesty, Festus thinks he ought to give credit to
|
||
them; but Agrippa knows them better than he does, and therefore
|
||
Festus desires his advice in this matter.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p23">(3.) That he had insisted upon the Roman
|
||
law in favour of the prisoner, and would not condemn him unheard
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.16" parsed="|Acts|25|16|0|0" passage="Ac 25:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>): "<i>It is
|
||
not the manner of the Romans,</i> who herein govern themselves by
|
||
the law of nature and the fundamental rules of justice, to
|
||
<i>deliver any man to die,</i> to grant him to destruction" (so the
|
||
word is), "to gratify his enemies with his destruction, <i>before
|
||
the accused has the accusers face to face,</i> to confront their
|
||
testimony, and have both licence and time given him to answer for
|
||
himself." He seems to upbraid them as if they reflected upon the
|
||
Romans and their government in asking such a thing, or expecting
|
||
that they would condemn a man without trying him: "No," says he, "I
|
||
would have you to know, whatever you may allow of among yourselves,
|
||
the Romans allow not of such a piece of injustice among them."
|
||
<i>Audi et alteram partem—Hear the other side,</i> had become a
|
||
proverb among them. This rule we ought to be governed by in our
|
||
private censures in common conversation; we must not give men bad
|
||
characters, nor condemn their words and actions, till we have heard
|
||
what is to be said in their vindication. See <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:John.7.51" parsed="|John|7|51|0|0" passage="Joh 7:51">John vii. 51</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p24">(4.) That he had brought him upon his
|
||
trial, according to the duty of his place, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.17" parsed="|Acts|25|17|0|0" passage="Ac 25:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. That he had been expeditious in
|
||
it, and the prosecutors had not reason to complain of his being
|
||
dilatory, for <i>as soon as ever they had come</i> (and we are sure
|
||
they lost no time) <i>without any delay, on the morrow,</i> he had
|
||
brought on the cause. He had likewise tried him in the most solemn
|
||
manner: He <i>sat on the judgment-seat,</i> as they used to do in
|
||
weightier causes, while those that were of small moment they judged
|
||
<i>de plano—upon even ground.</i> He called a great court on
|
||
purpose for the trial of Paul, that the sentence might be
|
||
definitive, and the cause ended.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p25">(5.) That he was extremely
|
||
<i>disappointed</i> in the charge they brought against him
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.18-Acts.25.19" parsed="|Acts|25|18|25|19" passage="Ac 25:18,19"><i>v.</i> 18, 19</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>When the accusers stood up against him,</i> and opened their
|
||
indictment, <i>they brought no accusations of such things as I
|
||
supposed.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p26">[1.] He supposed by the eagerness of their
|
||
prosecution, and their urging it thus upon the Roman governors one
|
||
after another, <i>First,</i> That they had something to accuse him
|
||
of that was dangerous either to private property or the public
|
||
peace,—that they would undertake to prove him a robber, or a
|
||
murderer, or a rebel against the Roman power,—that he had been in
|
||
arms to head a sedition,—that if he were not that Egyptian who
|
||
lately made an uproar, and commanded a party of cut-throats, as the
|
||
chief captain supposed him to be, yet he was one of the same
|
||
kidney. Such were the outcries against the primitive Christians, so
|
||
loud, so fierce, that the standers-by, who judged of them by those
|
||
outcries, could not but conclude them the worst of men; and to
|
||
represent them so was the design of that clamour, as it was against
|
||
our Saviour. <i>Secondly,</i> That they had something to accuse him
|
||
of that was cognizable in the Roman courts, and which the governor
|
||
was properly the judge of, as Gallio expected (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.18.14" parsed="|Acts|18|14|0|0" passage="Ac 18:14"><i>ch.</i> xviii. 14</scripRef>); otherwise it was
|
||
absurd and ridiculous to trouble him with it, and really an affront
|
||
to him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p27">[2.] But to his great surprise he finds the
|
||
matter is neither so nor so; they had <i>certain questions against
|
||
him,</i> instead of proofs and evidences against him. The worst
|
||
they had to say against him was disputable whether it was a crime
|
||
or no-moot-points, that would bear an endless debate, but had no
|
||
tendency to fasten any guilt upon him, questions fitter for the
|
||
schools than for the judgment-seat. And they were questions <i>of
|
||
their own superstition,</i> so he calls their religion; or, rather,
|
||
so he calls that part of their religion which Paul was charged with
|
||
doing damage to. The Romans protected their religion according to
|
||
their law, but not their superstition, nor the tradition of their
|
||
elders. But the great question, it seems, was <i>concerning one
|
||
Jesus that was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be alive.</i> Some think
|
||
the superstition he speaks of was the Christian religion, which
|
||
Paul preached, and that he had the same notion of it that the
|
||
Athenians had, that it was the introducing of a new demon, even
|
||
Jesus. See how slightly this Roman speaks of Christ, and of his
|
||
death and resurrection, and of the great controversy between the
|
||
Jews and the Christians whether he were the Messiah promised or no,
|
||
and the great proof of his being the Messiah, his resurrection from
|
||
the dead, as if it were no more than this, There was one Jesus that
|
||
was dead, and Paul affirmed he was alive. In many causes issue is
|
||
joined upon this question, whether such a person that has been long
|
||
absent be living or dead, and proofs are brought on both sides; and
|
||
Festus will have it thought that this is a matter of no more
|
||
moment. Whereas this Jesus, whom he prides himself in being thus
|
||
ignorant of, as if he were below his notice, is he that <i>was
|
||
dead, and is alive, and lives for evermore, and has the keys of
|
||
hell and of death,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.1.18" parsed="|Rev|1|18|0|0" passage="Re 1:18">Rev. i.
|
||
18</scripRef>. What Paul affirmed concerning Jesus, that he is
|
||
alive, is a matter of such vast importance that if it be not true
|
||
we are all undone.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p28">(6.) That therefore he had proposed to Paul
|
||
that the cause might be adjourned to the Jewish courts, as best
|
||
able to take cognizance of an affair of this nature (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.20" parsed="|Acts|25|20|0|0" passage="Ac 25:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>): "<i>Because I doubted
|
||
of such manner of questions,</i> and thought myself unfit to judge
|
||
of things I did not understand, <i>I asked him whether he would go
|
||
to Jerusalem,</i> appear before the great sanhedrim, <i>and there
|
||
be judged of these matters.</i>" He would not force him to it, but
|
||
would be glad if Paul would consent to it, that he might not have
|
||
his conscience burdened with a cause of this nature.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p29">(7.) That Paul had chosen rather to remove
|
||
his cause to Rome than to Jerusalem, as expecting fairer play from
|
||
the emperor than from the priests: "He <i>appealed to be reserved
|
||
to the hearing of Augustus</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.21" parsed="|Acts|25|21|0|0" passage="Ac 25:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>), having no other way to stop
|
||
proceedings here in this inferior court; and therefore I
|
||
<i>commanded him to be kept</i> a close prisoner <i>till I might
|
||
send him to Cæsar,</i> for I did not see cause to refuse his
|
||
appeal, but rather was pleased with it."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p30">III. The bringing of him before Agrippa,
|
||
that he might have the hearing of his cause.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p31">1. The king desired it (<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.22" parsed="|Acts|25|22|0|0" passage="Ac 25:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>): "I thank you for your account
|
||
of him, but <i>I would also hear the man myself.</i>" Agrippa knows
|
||
more of this matter, of the cause and of the person, than Festus
|
||
does; he has heard of Paul, and knows of what vast concern this
|
||
question is, which Festus makes such a jest of, whether Jesus be
|
||
alive or no. And nothing would oblige him more than to hear Paul.
|
||
Many great men think it below them to take cognizance of the
|
||
matters of religion, except they can hear them like themselves in
|
||
the judgment-seat. Agrippa would not for all the world have gone to
|
||
a meeting to hear Paul preach, any more than Herod to hear Jesus;
|
||
and yet they are both glad to have them brought before them, only
|
||
to satisfy their curiosity. Perhaps Agrippa desired to hear him
|
||
himself, that he might be in a capacity to do him a kindness, and
|
||
yet did him none, only put some credit upon him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p32">2. Festus granted it: <i>To-morrow thou
|
||
shalt hear him.</i> There was a good providence in this, for the
|
||
encouragement of Paul, who seemed buried alive in his imprisonment,
|
||
and deprived of all opportunities of doing good. We know not of any
|
||
of his epistles that bore date from his prison at Cæsarea. What
|
||
opportunity he had of doing good to his friends that visited him,
|
||
and perhaps to a little congregation of them that visited him every
|
||
Lord's-day, was but a low and narrow sphere of usefulness, so that
|
||
he seemed to be thrown by as a <i>despised broken vessel, in which
|
||
there was no pleasure;</i> but this gives him an opportunity of
|
||
preaching Christ to a great congregation, and (which is more) to a
|
||
congregation of great ones. Felix heard him in private concerning
|
||
the faith of Christ. But Agrippa and Festus agree he shall be heard
|
||
in public. And we have reason to think that his sermon in the next
|
||
chapter, though it might not be so instrumental as some other of
|
||
his sermons for the conversion of souls, redounded as much to the
|
||
honour of Christ and Christianity as any sermon he ever preached in
|
||
his life.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p33">3. Great preparation was made for it
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.23" parsed="|Acts|25|23|0|0" passage="Ac 25:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>): <i>The next
|
||
day</i> there was a great appearance <i>in the place of
|
||
hearing,</i> Paul and his cause being much talked of, and the more
|
||
for their being much talked against.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p34">(1.) Agrippa and Bernice took this
|
||
opportunity to show themselves in state, and to make a figure, and
|
||
perhaps for that end desired the occasion, that they might see and
|
||
be seen; for <i>they came with great pomp,</i> richly dressed, with
|
||
gold and pearls, and costly array; with a great retinue of footmen
|
||
in rich liveries, which made a splendid show, and dazzled the eyes
|
||
of the gazing crowd. They came <b><i>meta polles
|
||
phantasias</i></b>—<i>with great fancy,</i> so the word is. Note,
|
||
Great pomp is but great fancy. It neither adds any read excellency,
|
||
nor gains any real respect, but feeds a vain humour, which wise men
|
||
would rather mortify than gratify. It is but a show, a dream, a
|
||
fantastical thing (so the word signifies), superficial, and <i>it
|
||
passeth away.</i> And the pomp of this appearance would put one for
|
||
ever out of conceit with pomp, when the pomp which Agrippa and
|
||
Bernice appeared in was, [1.] Stained by their lewd characters, and
|
||
all the beauty of it sullied, and all virtuous people that knew
|
||
them could not but contemn them in the midst of all this pomp as
|
||
vile persons, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.15.4" parsed="|Ps|15|4|0|0" passage="Ps 15:4">Ps. xv. 4</scripRef>.
|
||
[2.] Outshone by the real glory of the poor prisoner at the bar.
|
||
What was the honour of their fine clothes, compared with that of
|
||
his wisdom, and grace, and holiness, his courage and constancy in
|
||
suffering for Christ! His bonds in so good a cause were more
|
||
glorious than their chains of gold, and his guards than their
|
||
equipage. Who would be fond of worldly pomp that here sees so bad a
|
||
woman loaded with it and so good a man loaded with the reverse of
|
||
it?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p35">(2.) The chief captains and principal men
|
||
of the city took this opportunity to pay their respects to Festus
|
||
and to his guests. It answered the end of a ball at court, it
|
||
brought the fine folks together in their fine clothes, and served
|
||
for an entertainment. It is probable that Festus sent Paul notice
|
||
of it overnight, to be ready for a hearing the next morning before
|
||
Agrippa. And such confidence had Paul in the promise of Christ,
|
||
that it should be <i>given him in that same hour what he should
|
||
speak,</i> that he complained not of the short warning, nor was put
|
||
into confusion by it. I am apt to think that those who were to
|
||
appear in pomp perplexed themselves more with care about their
|
||
clothes than Paul, who was to appear as a prisoner, did with care
|
||
about his cause; for he knew whom he had believed, and who stood by
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxvi-p36">IV. The speech with which Festus introduced
|
||
the cause, when the court, or rather the audience, was set, which
|
||
is much to the same purport with the account he had just now given
|
||
to Agrippa. 1. He addressed himself respectfully to the company:
|
||
"<i>King Agrippa, and all men who are here present with us.</i>" He
|
||
speaks <i>to all the men</i>—<b><i>pantes andres,</i></b> as if he
|
||
intended a tacit reflection upon Bernice, a woman, for appearing in
|
||
a meeting of this nature; he does not refer any thing to her
|
||
judgment nor desire her counsel; but, "<i>All you that are present
|
||
that are men</i> (so the words are placed), I desire you to take
|
||
cognizance of this matter." The word used is that which signifies
|
||
men in distinction from women; what had Bernice to do here? 2. He
|
||
represents the prisoner as one that the Jews had a very great spite
|
||
against; not only the rulers, but <i>the multitude of them, both at
|
||
Jerusalem and here at Cæsarea,</i> cry out <i>that he ought not to
|
||
live any longer,</i> for they think he has lived too long already,
|
||
and if he live any longer it will be to do more mischief. They
|
||
could not charge him with any capital crime, but they wanted to
|
||
have him out of the way. 3. He confesses the prisoner's innocency;
|
||
and it was much for the honour of Paul and his bonds that he had
|
||
such a public acknowledgement as this from the mouth of his judge
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.25" parsed="|Acts|25|25|0|0" passage="Ac 25:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>): <i>I found
|
||
that he had committed nothing worthy of death.</i> Upon a full
|
||
hearing of the case, it appeared there was no evidence at all to
|
||
support the indictment: and therefore, though he was inclinable
|
||
enough to favour the prosecutors, yet his own conscience brought in
|
||
Paul <i>not guilty.</i> And why did he not discharge him then, for
|
||
he stood upon his deliverance? Why, truly, because he was so much
|
||
clamoured against, and he feared the clamour would turn upon
|
||
himself if he should release him. It is a pity but every man that
|
||
has a conscience should have courage to act according to it. Or
|
||
perhaps because there was so much smoke that he concluded there
|
||
could not but be some fire, which would appear at last, and he
|
||
would detain him a prisoner in expectation of it. 4. He acquaints
|
||
them with the present state of the case, that the prisoner had
|
||
appealed to the emperor himself (where by he put ann honour upon
|
||
his own cause, as knowing it not unworthy the cognizance of the
|
||
greatest of men), and that he had admitted his appeal: <i>I have
|
||
determined to send him.</i> And thus the cause now stood. 5. He
|
||
desires their assistance in examining the matter calmly and
|
||
impartially, now that there was no danger of their being
|
||
interrupted, as he had been with the noisiness and outrage of the
|
||
prosecutors-that he might have at least such an insight into the
|
||
cause as was necessary to his stating it to the emperor, <scripRef id="Acts.xxvi-p36.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.25.26-Acts.25.27" parsed="|Acts|25|26|25|27" passage="Ac 25:26,27"><i>v.</i> 26, 27</scripRef>. (1.) He thought
|
||
it <i>unreasonable to send a prisoner,</i> especially so far as
|
||
Rome, <i>and not withal to signify the crimes laid against him,</i>
|
||
that the matter might be prepared as much as possible, and put in a
|
||
readiness for the emperor's determination; for he is supposed to be
|
||
a man of great business, and therefore every affair must be laid
|
||
before him in as little compass as possible. (2.) He could not as
|
||
yet write <i>any thing certain</i> concerning Paul; so confused
|
||
were the informations that were given in against him, and so
|
||
inconsistent, that Festus could make nothing at all of them. He
|
||
therefore desired Paul might thus be publicly examined, that he
|
||
might be advised by them what to write. See what a great deal of
|
||
trouble and vexation those were put to, and to what delay, nay, and
|
||
to what hazard, in the administration of public justice, who live
|
||
at such a distance from Rome, and yet were subject to the emperor
|
||
of Rome. The same was this nation of ours put to (which is about as
|
||
far distant from Rome the other way) when it was in ecclesiastical
|
||
affairs subject to the pope of Rome, and appeals were upon all
|
||
occasions made to his court; and the same mischiefs, and a thousand
|
||
worse, would those bring upon us who would again entangle us in
|
||
that yoke of bondage.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |