1244 lines
87 KiB
XML
1244 lines
87 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Acts.xxii" n="xxii" next="Acts.xxiii" prev="Acts.xxi" progress="23.18%" title="Chapter XXI">
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<h2 id="Acts.xxii-p0.1">A C T S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Acts.xxii-p0.2">CHAP. XXI.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Acts.xxii-p1">We have, with a great deal of pleasure, attended
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the apostle in his travels throughout the Gentile nations to preach
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the gospel, and have seen a great harvest of souls gathered in to
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Christ; there we have seen likewise what persecutions he endured;
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yet still out of them all the Lord presently delivered him,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.3.11" parsed="|2Tim|3|11|0|0" passage="2Ti 3:11">2 Tim. iii. 11</scripRef>. But now we
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are to attend him to Jerusalem, and there into lasting bonds; the
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days of his service now seem to be over, and nothing to remain but
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days of suffering, days of darkness, for they are many. It is a
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thousand pities that such a workman should be laid aside; yet so it
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is, and we must not only acquiesce, as his friends then did,
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saying, "The will of the Lord be done;" but we must believe, and
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shall find reason to do so, that Paul in the prison, and at the
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bar, is as truly glorifying God, and serving Christ's interest, as
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Paul in the pulpit was. In this chapter we have, I. A journal of
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Paul's voyage from Ephesus to Cæsarea, the next sea-port to
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Jerusalem, some places he touched at, and his landing there,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.1-Acts.21.7" parsed="|Acts|21|1|21|7" passage="Ac 21:1-7">ver. 1-7</scripRef>. II. The
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struggles he had with his friends at Cæsarea, who mightily opposed
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his going up to Jerusalem, but could not prevail, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.8-Acts.21.14" parsed="|Acts|21|8|21|14" passage="Ac 21:8-14">ver. 8-14</scripRef>. III. Paul's journey from
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Cæsarea to Jerusalem, and the kind entertainment which the
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Christians there gave him, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.15-Acts.21.17" parsed="|Acts|21|15|21|17" passage="Ac 21:15-17">ver.
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15-17</scripRef>. IV. His compliance with the persuasions of the
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brethren there, who advised him so far to compliment the Jews as to
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go and purify that it might appear he was no such enemy to the
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Mosaic rites and ceremonies as he was reported to be, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.18-Acts.21.26" parsed="|Acts|21|18|21|26" passage="Ac 21:18-26">ver. 18-26</scripRef>. V. The turning of this
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very thing against him by the Jews, and the apprehending of him in
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the temple as a criminal thereupon, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.27-Acts.21.30" parsed="|Acts|21|27|21|30" passage="Ac 21:27-30">ver. 27-30</scripRef>. VI. The narrow escape he had
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of being pulled to pieces by the rabble, and the taking of him into
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fair and legal custody by the chief captain, who permitted him to
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speak for himself to the people, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.31-Acts.21.40" parsed="|Acts|21|31|21|40" passage="Ac 21:31-40">ver. 31-40</scripRef>. And so we have him made a
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prisoner, and shall never have him otherwise to the end of the
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history of this book.</p>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxii-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21" parsed="|Acts|21|0|0|0" passage="Ac 21" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxii-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.1-Acts.21.7" parsed="|Acts|21|1|21|7" passage="Ac 21:1-7" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.21.1-Acts.21.7">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxii-p1.10">Paul's Voyage to Cæsarea; Paul's Arrival at
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Ptolemais.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxii-p2">1 And it came to pass, that after we were gotten
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from them, and had launched, we came with a straight course unto
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Coos, and the <i>day</i> following unto Rhodes, and from thence
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unto Patara: 2 And finding a ship sailing over unto
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Phenicia, we went aboard, and set forth. 3 Now when we had
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discovered Cyprus, we left it on the left hand, and sailed into
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Syria, and landed at Tyre: for there the ship was to unlade her
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burden. 4 And finding disciples, we tarried there seven
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days: who said to Paul through the Spirit, that he should not go up
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to Jerusalem. 5 And when we had accomplished those days, we
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departed and went our way; and they all brought us on our way, with
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wives and children, till <i>we were</i> out of the city: and we
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kneeled down on the shore, and prayed. 6 And when we had
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taken our leave one of another, we took ship; and they returned
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home again. 7 And when we had finished <i>our</i> course
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from Tyre, we came to Ptolemais, and saluted the brethren, and
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abode with them one day.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p3">We may observe here,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p4">I. How much ado Paul had to get clear from
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Ephesus, intimated in the first words of the chapter, <i>after we
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had gotten from them,</i> that is, were drawn from them as by
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violence. It was a force put upon both sides; Paul was loth to
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leave them, and they were loth to part with him, and yet there was
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no remedy, but so it must be. When good people are taken away by
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death, they are, as it were, gotten from their friends here below,
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who struggled hard to have detained them if possible.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p5">II. What a prosperous voyage they had
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thence. Without any difficulty, <i>they came with a straight
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course,</i> by direct sailing, <i>to Coos,</i> a famous Grecian
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island,—<i>the next day to Rhodes,</i> talked of for the Colossus
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there,—<i>thence to Patara,</i> a famous port, the metropolis of
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Lycia (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.1" parsed="|Acts|21|1|0|0" passage="Ac 21:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>); here
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they very happily <i>found a ship sailing over into Phenicia,</i>
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the very course they were steering, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.2" parsed="|Acts|21|2|0|0" passage="Ac 21:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>. Providence must be acknowledged
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when things happen thus opportunely, and we are favoured by some
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little circumstances that contribute to the expediting of our
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affairs; and we must say, <i>It is God that maketh our way
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perfect.</i> This ship that was bound for Phenicia (that is, Tyre)
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they took the convenience of, <i>went on board, and set sail</i>
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for Tyre. In this voyage <i>they discovered Cyprus,</i> the island
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that Barnabas was of, and which he took care of, and therefore Paul
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did not visit it, but <i>we left it on the left hand</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.3" parsed="|Acts|21|3|0|0" passage="Ac 21:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>), <i>sailed</i> upon the
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coast of <i>Syria, and</i> at length <i>landed at Tyre,</i> that
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celebrated mart of the nations, so it had been, but was now
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reduced; yet something of a trade it had still, <i>for there the
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ship was to unlade her burden,</i> and did so.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p6">III. The halt that Paul made at Tyre; when
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he had arrived there, he was upon the coast of the land of Israel,
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and found now that he could compass the remainder of his journey
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within the time he had fixed.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p7">1. <i>At Tyre he found disciples,</i> some
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that had embraced the gospel, and professed the Christian faith.
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Observe, Wherever Paul came, he enquired what disciples were there,
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found them out, and associated with them; for we know what is the
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usage with birds of a feather. When Christ was upon earth, though
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he went sometimes into the coast of Tyre, yet he never went thither
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to preach the gospel there; nor did he think fit to afford to Tyre
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and Sidon the advantages which Chorazin and Bethsaida had, though
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he knew that if they had had them they would have made a better
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improvement of them, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.10.13-Luke.10.14" parsed="|Luke|10|13|10|14" passage="Lu 10:13,14">Luke x. 13,
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14</scripRef>. But, after the enlarging of the gospel-commission,
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Christ was preached at Tyre, and had disciples there; and to this,
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some think, that prophecy concerning Tyre had reference (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.23.18" parsed="|Isa|23|18|0|0" passage="Isa 23:18">Isa. xxiii. 18</scripRef>), <i>Her merchandise
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and her hire shall be holiness to the Lord.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p8">2. Paul, <i>finding those disciples at
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Tyre, tarried there seven days,</i> they urging him to stay with
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them as long as he could. He staid seven days at Troas (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.6" parsed="|Acts|20|6|0|0" passage="Ac 20:6"><i>ch.</i> xx. 6</scripRef>), and here so many
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days at Tyre, that he might be sure to spend one Lord's day with
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them, and so might have an opportunity of preaching publicly among
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them; for it is the desire of good men to do good wherever they
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come, and where we find disciples we may either benefit them or be
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benefited by them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p9">3. The disciples at Tyre were endowed with
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such gifts that they could by the Spirit foretel the troubles Paul
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would meet with at Jerusalem; for <i>the Holy Ghost witnessed it in
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every city,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.23" parsed="|Acts|20|23|0|0" passage="Ac 20:23"><i>ch.</i> xx.
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23</scripRef>. Being a thing that would be so much talked of when
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it came to pass, God saw fit to have it much prophesied of before,
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that people's faith, instead of being offended, might be confirmed.
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And withal they were endowed with such graces that foreseeing his
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troubles, out of love to him and concern for the church, especially
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the churches of the Gentiles, that could ill spare him, they begged
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of him <i>that he would not go up to Jerusalem,</i> for they hoped
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the decree was conditional: If he go up, he will come into trouble
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there; as the prediction to David <i>that the men of Keilah will
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deliver him up</i> (that is, if he <i>venture himself with
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them</i>); and therefore they said to him, <i>by the Spirit, that
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he should not go up,</i> because they concluded it would be most
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for the glory of God that he should continue at liberty; and it was
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not at all their fault to think so, and consequently to dissuade
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him; but it was their mistake, for his trial would be for the glory
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of God and the furtherance of the gospel, and he knew it; and the
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importunity that was used with him, to dissuade him from it,
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renders his pious and truly heroic resolution the more
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illustrious.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p10">4. The disciples of Tyre, though they were
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none of Paul's converts, yet showed a very great respect to Paul,
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whose usefulness in the church they had heard so much of when he
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departed from Tyre. Though they had had but seven days'
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acquaintance with him, yet, as if he had been some great man, they
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all came together, <i>with their wives and children,</i> solemnly
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to take leave of him, to beg his blessing, and to bring him as far
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on his way as the sea would permit them. Note, (1.) We should pay
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respect, not only to our own ministers, that are over us in the
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Lord, and admonish us, and, for their work's sake among us,
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<i>esteem them highly in love,</i> but we must, as there is
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occasion, testify our love and respect to all the faithful
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ministers of Christ, both for his sake whose ministers they are,
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and for their work's sake among others. (2.) We must, in a
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particular manner, honour those whom God hath singularly honoured,
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by making them eminently useful in their generation. (3.) It is
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good to train up children in a respect to good people and good
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ministers. This was particularly remarkable at Tyre, which we have
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not met with any where else, that they brought their wives and
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children to attend Paul, to do him the more honour and to receive
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benefit by his instructions and prayers; and as angry notice was
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taken of the children of the idolaters of Bethel, that mocked a
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prophet, so, no doubt, gracious notice was taken of the children of
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the disciples at Tyre, that honoured an apostle, as Christ accepted
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the hosannas of the little children. (4.) We should be good
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husbands of our opportunities, and make the utmost we can of them
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for the good of our souls. <i>They brought Paul on his way,</i>
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that they might have so much the more of his company and his
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prayers. Some refer us to <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.45.12" parsed="|Ps|45|12|0|0" passage="Ps 45:12">Ps. xlv.
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12</scripRef>, as a prediction of this, <i>The daughter of Tyre
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shall be there with a gift;</i> for it is probable that they made
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some presents to Paul at parting, as usual to our friends that are
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going to sea, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.10" parsed="|Acts|28|10|0|0" passage="Ac 28:10"><i>ch.</i> xxviii.
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10</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p11">5. They parted with prayer, as Paul and the
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Ephesians elders had done, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.36" parsed="|Acts|20|36|0|0" passage="Ac 20:36"><i>ch.</i>
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xx. 36</scripRef>. Thus Paul has taught us by example, as well as
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rule, to pray always, to pray without ceasing. <i>We kneeled down
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on the shore and prayed.</i> Paul prayed for himself, prayed for
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them, prayed for all the churches; as he was much in prayer so he
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was mighty in prayer. They prayed upon the shore, that their last
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farewell might be sanctified and sweetened with prayer. Those that
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are going to sea should, when they quit the shore, commit
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themselves to God by prayer, and put themselves under his
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protection, as those that hope, even when they leave the <i>terra
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firma,</i> to find firm footing for their faith in the providence
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and promise of God. They kneeled down on the shore, though we may
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suppose it either stony or dirty, and there prayed. Paul would
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<i>that men should pray every where,</i> and so he did himself;
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and, where he lifted up his prayer, he bowed his knees. Mr. George
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Herbert says, <i>Kneeling never spoiled silk stockings.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p12">6. They parted at last (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.6" parsed="|Acts|21|6|0|0" passage="Ac 21:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>): <i>When we had taken our leave
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one of another,</i> with the most affectionate embraces and
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expressions of love and grief, <i>we took ship</i> to be gone, and
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<i>they returned home again,</i> each complaining that this is a
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parting world. Observe how they disposed of themselves: "We, that
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had a journey before us, took ship, thankful that we had a ship to
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carry us; and those, who had no occasions to call them abroad
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returned home again, thankful that they had a home to go to."
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<i>Rejoice Zebulun in thy going out, and Issachar in thy tents.</i>
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Paul left his blessing behind him with those that returned home,
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and those that staid sent their prayers after those that went to
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sea.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p13">IV. Their arrival at Ptolemais, which was
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not far from Tyre (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.27" parsed="|Acts|21|27|0|0" passage="Ac 21:27"><i>v.</i>
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27</scripRef>): <i>We came to Ptolemais,</i> which some think is
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the same place with Accho, which we find in the tribe of Asher,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Judg.1.31" parsed="|Judg|1|31|0|0" passage="Jdg 1:31">Judg. i. 31</scripRef>. Paul begged
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leave to go ashore there, <i>to salute the brethren,</i> to enquire
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of their state, and to testify his good will to them; though he
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could not stay long with them, yet he would not pass by them
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without paying his respects to them, and he <i>abode with them one
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day,</i> perhaps it was a Lord's day; better a short stay than no
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visit.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxii-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.8-Acts.21.14" parsed="|Acts|21|8|21|14" passage="Ac 21:8-14" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.21.8-Acts.21.14">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxii-p13.4">The Prophecy of Agabus; Paul's Adherence to
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His Resolution to Visit Jerusalem.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxii-p14">8 And the next <i>day</i> we that were of Paul's
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company departed, and came unto Cæsarea: and we entered into the
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house of Philip the evangelist, which was <i>one</i> of the seven;
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and abode with him. 9 And the same man had four daughters,
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virgins, which did prophesy. 10 And as we tarried
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<i>there</i> many days, there came down from Judæa a certain
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prophet, named Agabus. 11 And when he was come unto us, he
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took Paul's girdle, and bound his own hands and feet, and said,
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Thus saith the Holy Ghost, So shall the Jews at Jerusalem bind the
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man that owneth this girdle, and shall deliver <i>him</i> into the
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hands of the Gentiles. 12 And when we heard these things,
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both we, and they of that place, besought him not to go up to
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Jerusalem. 13 Then Paul answered, What mean ye to weep and
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to break mine heart? for I am ready not to be bound only, but also
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to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus. 14 And
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when he would not be persuaded, we ceased, saying, The will of the
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Lord be done.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p15">We have here Paul and his company arrived
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at length at Cæsarea, where he designed to make some stay, it being
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the place where the gospel was first preached to the Gentiles, and
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<i>the Holy Ghost fell upon them,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.10.1 Bible:Acts.10.44" parsed="|Acts|10|1|0|0;|Acts|10|44|0|0" passage="Ac 10:1,44"><i>ch.</i> x. 1, 44</scripRef>. Now here we are
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told,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p16">I. Who it was that entertained Paul and his
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company <i>at Cæsarea.</i> He seldom had occasion to go to a public
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house, but, wherever he came, some friend or other took him in, and
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bade him welcome. Observe, those that had sailed together parted
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when the voyage was accomplished, according as their business was.
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"Those that were concerned in the cargo staid where the ship was
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<i>to unlade her burden</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.3" parsed="|Acts|21|3|0|0" passage="Ac 21:3"><i>v.</i>
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3</scripRef>); others, when they came to Ptolemais, went as their
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occasions led them; but we that were of Paul's company went where
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he went, and came to Cæsarea." Those that travel together through
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this world will separate at death, and then it will appear who are
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of Paul's company and who are not. Now at Cæsarea.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p17">1. They were entertained by Philip the
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evangelist, whom we left at Cæsarea many years ago, after he had
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baptized the eunuch (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.8.40" parsed="|Acts|8|40|0|0" passage="Ac 8:40"><i>ch.</i> viii.
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40</scripRef>), and there we now find him again. (1.) He was
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originally a deacon, one of the seven that were chosen to serve
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tables, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.6.5" parsed="|Acts|6|5|0|0" passage="Ac 6:5"><i>ch.</i> vi. 5</scripRef>.
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(2.) He was now and had long been an evangelist, one that went
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about to plant and water churches, as the apostles did, and gave
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himself, as they did, <i>to the word and prayer;</i> thus, having
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<i>used the office of a deacon well, he purchased to himself a good
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degree;</i> and, having been <i>faithful in a few things, was made
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ruler over many things.</i> (3.) He had a house at Cæsarea, fit to
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entertain Paul and all his company, and he bade him and them very
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welcome to it; <i>We entered into the house of Philip the
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evangelist, and we abode with him.</i> Thus does it become
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Christians and ministers, according as their ability is, to <i>use
|
||
hospitality one to another, without grudging,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p17.3" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.4.9" parsed="|1Pet|4|9|0|0" passage="1Pe 4:9">1 Pet. iv. 9</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p18">2. This Philip <i>had four maiden
|
||
daughters, who did prophesy,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.9" parsed="|Acts|21|9|0|0" passage="Ac 21:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. It intimates that they prophesied
|
||
of Paul's troubles at Jerusalem, as others had done, and dissuaded
|
||
him from going; or perhaps they prophesied for his comfort and
|
||
encouragement, in reference to the difficulties that were before
|
||
him. Here was a further accomplishment of that prophecy, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Joel.2.28" parsed="|Joel|2|28|0|0" passage="Joe 2:28">Joel ii. 28</scripRef>, of such a plentiful
|
||
pouring out of the Spirit upon all flesh that their <i>sons and
|
||
their daughters should prophesy,</i> that is, foretel things to
|
||
come.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p19">II. A plain and full prediction of the
|
||
sufferings of Paul, by a noted prophet, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.10-Acts.21.11" parsed="|Acts|21|10|21|11" passage="Ac 21:10,11"><i>v.</i> 10, 11</scripRef>. 1. Paul and his company
|
||
tarried many days at Cæsarea, perhaps Cornelius was yet living
|
||
there, and (though Philip lodged them) yet might be many ways kind
|
||
to them, and induce them to stay there. What cause Paul saw to
|
||
tarry so long there, and to make so little haste at the latter end
|
||
of his journey to Jerusalem, when he seemed so much in haste at the
|
||
beginning of it, we cannot tell; but we are sure he did not stay
|
||
either there or any where else to be idle; he measured his time by
|
||
days, and numbered them. 2. <i>Agabus the prophet came to Cæsarea
|
||
from Judea;</i> this was he of whom we read before, who came
|
||
<i>from Jerusalem to Antioch,</i> to foretel a general famine,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.11.27-Acts.11.28" parsed="|Acts|11|27|11|28" passage="Ac 11:27,28"><i>ch.</i> xi. 27, 28</scripRef>.
|
||
See how God dispenseth his gifts variously. To Paul was given the
|
||
word of wisdom and knowledge, as an apostle, by the Spirit, and the
|
||
gifts of healing; to Agabus, and to Philip's daughters, was given
|
||
prophecy, by the same Spirit—the foretelling of things to come,
|
||
which came to pass according to the prediction. See <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.12.8 Bible:1Cor.12.10" parsed="|1Cor|12|8|0|0;|1Cor|12|10|0|0" passage="1Co 12:8,10">1 Cor. xii. 8, 10</scripRef>. So that that
|
||
which was the most eminent gift of the Spirit under the Old
|
||
Testament, the foretelling of things to come, was under the New
|
||
Testament quite outshone by other gifts, and was bestowed upon
|
||
those that were of less note in the church. It should seem as if
|
||
Agabus came on purpose to Cæsarea, to meet Paul with this prophetic
|
||
intelligence. 3. He foretold Paul's bonds at Jerusalem, (1.) By a
|
||
sign, as the prophets of old did, Isaiah (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Isa.20.3" parsed="|Isa|20|3|0|0" passage="Isa 20:3"><i>ch.</i> xx. 3</scripRef>), Jeremiah (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.5" osisRef="Bible:Jer.13.1 Bible:Jer.27.2" parsed="|Jer|13|1|0|0;|Jer|27|2|0|0" passage="Jer 13:1,27:2"><i>ch.</i> xiii. 1; xxvii. 2</scripRef>),
|
||
Ezekiel (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.6" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.4.1 Bible:Ezek.12.3" parsed="|Ezek|4|1|0|0;|Ezek|12|3|0|0" passage="Eze 4:1,12:3"><i>ch.</i> iv. 1; xii.
|
||
3</scripRef>), and many others. <i>Agabus took Paul's girdle,</i>
|
||
when he laid it by, or perhaps took it from about him, and with it
|
||
<i>bound</i> first <i>his own hands, and then his own feet,</i> or
|
||
perhaps bound his hands and feet together; this was designed both
|
||
to confirm the prophecy (it was as sure to be done as if it were
|
||
done already) and to affect those about him with it, because that
|
||
which we see usually makes a greater impression upon us than that
|
||
which we only hear of. (2.) By an explication of the sign: <i>Thus
|
||
saith the Holy Ghost,</i> the Spirit of prophecy, <i>So shall the
|
||
Jews at Jerusalem bind the man that owneth this girdle, and,</i> as
|
||
they dealt with his Master (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p19.7" osisRef="Bible:Matt.20.18-Matt.20.19" parsed="|Matt|20|18|20|19" passage="Mt 20:18,19">Matt.
|
||
xx. 18, 19</scripRef>), <i>shall deliver him into the hands of the
|
||
Gentiles,</i> as the Jews in other places had all along endeavoured
|
||
to do, by accusing him to the Roman governors. Paul had this
|
||
express warning given him of his troubles, that he might prepare
|
||
for them, and that when they came they might be no surprise nor
|
||
terror to him; the general notice given us <i>that through much
|
||
tribulation we must enter into the kingdom of God</i> should be of
|
||
the same use to us.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p20">III. The great importunity which his
|
||
friends used with him to dissuade him from going forward to
|
||
Jerusalem, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.12" parsed="|Acts|21|12|0|0" passage="Ac 21:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>.
|
||
"Not only those of that place, but we that were of Paul's company,
|
||
and among the rest Luke himself, who had heard this often before,
|
||
and seen Paul's resolution notwithstanding, besought him with tears
|
||
that he would not go up to Jerusalem, but steer his course some
|
||
other way." Now, 1. Here appeared a commendable affection to Paul,
|
||
and a value for him, upon account of his great usefulness in the
|
||
church. Good men that are very active sometimes need to be
|
||
dissuaded from overworking themselves, and good men that are very
|
||
bold need to be dissuaded from exposing themselves too far. <i>The
|
||
Lord is for the body,</i> and so we must be. 2. Yet there was a
|
||
mixture of infirmity, especially in those of Paul's company, who
|
||
knew he undertook this journey by divine direction, and had seen
|
||
with what resolution he had before broken through the like
|
||
opposition. But we see in them the infirmity incident to us all;
|
||
when we see trouble at a distance, and have only a general notice
|
||
of it, we can make light of it; but when it comes near we begin to
|
||
shrink, and draw back. <i>Now that it toucheth thee thou art
|
||
troubled,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.4.5" parsed="|Job|4|5|0|0" passage="Job 4:5">Job iv. 5</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p21">IV. The holy bravery and intrepidity with
|
||
which Paul persisted in his resolution, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p21.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.13" parsed="|Acts|21|13|0|0" passage="Ac 21:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p22">1. He reproves them for dissuading him.
|
||
Here is a quarrel of love on both sides, and very sincere and
|
||
strong affections clashing with each other. They love him dearly,
|
||
and therefore oppose his resolution; he loves them dearly, and
|
||
therefore chides them for opposing it: <i>What mean you to weep and
|
||
to break my heart?</i> They were an offence to him, as Peter was to
|
||
Christ, when, in a like case, he said, <i>Master, spare
|
||
thyself.</i> Their weeping about him <i>broke his heart.</i> (1.)
|
||
It was a temptation to him, it shocked him, it began to weaken and
|
||
slacken his resolution, and caused him to entertain thoughts of
|
||
tacking about: "I know I am appointed to suffering, and you ought
|
||
to animate and encourage me, and to say that which will strengthen
|
||
my heart; but you, with your tears, break my heart, and discourage
|
||
me. What do you mean by doing thus? Has not our Master told us to
|
||
take up our cross? And would you have me to avoid mine?" (2.) It
|
||
was a trouble to him that they should so earnestly press him to
|
||
that in which he could not gratify them without wronging his
|
||
conscience. Paul was of a very tender spirit. As he was much in
|
||
tears himself, so he had a compassionate regard to the tears of his
|
||
friends; they made a great impression upon him, and would bring him
|
||
almost to yield to any thing. But now it breaks his heart, when he
|
||
is under a necessity of denying the request of his weeping friends.
|
||
It was an unkind kindness, a cruel pity, thus to torment him with
|
||
their dissuasions, and to add affliction to his grief. When our
|
||
friends are called out to sufferings, we shall show our love rather
|
||
by comforting them than by sorrowing for them. But observe, These
|
||
Christians at Cæsarea, if they could have foreseen the particulars
|
||
of that event, the general notice of which they received with so
|
||
much heaviness, would have been better reconciled to it for their
|
||
own sakes; for, when Paul was made a prisoner at Jerusalem, he was
|
||
presently sent to Cæsarea, the very place where he now was
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.33" parsed="|Acts|23|33|0|0" passage="Ac 23:33"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 33</scripRef>), and
|
||
there he continued at least <i>two years</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.27" parsed="|Acts|24|27|0|0" passage="Ac 24:27"><i>ch.</i> xxiv. 27</scripRef>), and he was a prisoner
|
||
at large, as appears (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p22.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.23" parsed="|Acts|24|23|0|0" passage="Ac 24:23"><i>ch.</i> xxiv.
|
||
23</scripRef>), orders being given that he should have liberty to
|
||
go among his friends, and his friends to come to him; so that the
|
||
church at Cæsarea had much more of Paul's company and help when he
|
||
was imprisoned than they could have had if he had been at liberty.
|
||
That which we oppose, as thinking it to operate much against us,
|
||
may be overruled by the providence of God to work for us, which is
|
||
a reason why we should follow providence, and not fear it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p23">2. He repeats his resolution to go forward,
|
||
notwithstanding: "<i>What mean you to weep thus? I am ready</i> to
|
||
suffer whatever is appointed for me. I am fully determined to go,
|
||
whatever comes of it, and therefore it is to no purpose for you to
|
||
oppose it. I am willing to suffer, and therefore why are you
|
||
unwilling that I should suffer? Am not I nearest myself, and
|
||
fittest to judge for myself? If the trouble found me unready, it
|
||
would be a trouble indeed, and you might well weep at the thoughts
|
||
of it. But, blessed be God, it does not. It is very welcome to me,
|
||
and therefore should not be such a terror to you. For my part, <i>I
|
||
am ready,</i>" <b><i>etoimos echo</i></b>—<i>I have myself in a
|
||
readiness,</i> as soldiers for an engagement. "I expect trouble, I
|
||
count upon it, it will be no surprise to me. I was told at first
|
||
<i>what great things I must suffer,</i>" <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.16" parsed="|Acts|9|16|0|0" passage="Ac 9:16"><i>ch.</i> ix. 16</scripRef>. "I am <i>prepared</i> for
|
||
it, by a clear conscience, a firm confidence in God, a holy
|
||
contempt of the world and the body, a lively faith in Christ, and a
|
||
joyful hope of eternal life. I can <i>bid it welcome,</i> as we do
|
||
a friend that we look for, and have made preparation for. I can,
|
||
through grace, not only bear it, but rejoice in it." Now, (1.) See
|
||
how far his resolution extends: You are told that I must be bound
|
||
at Jerusalem, and you would have me keep away for fear of this. I
|
||
tell you, "<i>I am ready not only to be bound, but,</i> if the will
|
||
of God be so, <i>to die at Jerusalem;</i> not only to lose my
|
||
liberty, but to lose my life." It is our wisdom to think of the
|
||
worst that may befal us, and to prepare accordingly, that we may
|
||
<i>stand complete in all the will of God.</i> (2.) See what it is
|
||
that carries him out thus, that makes him willing to suffer and
|
||
die: it is <i>for the name of the Lord Jesus.</i> All that a man
|
||
has will he give for his life; but life itself will Paul give for
|
||
the service and honour of the name of Christ.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p24">V. The patient acquiescence of his friends
|
||
in his resolution, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.14" parsed="|Acts|21|14|0|0" passage="Ac 21:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>. 1. They submitted to the wisdom of a good man. They
|
||
had carried the matter as far as they could with decency; but,
|
||
"<i>when he would not be persuaded, we ceased</i> our importunity.
|
||
Paul knows best his own mind, and what he has to do, and it becomes
|
||
us to leave it to himself, and not to censure him for what he does,
|
||
nor to say he is rash, and wilful, and humoursome, and has a spirit
|
||
of contradiction, as some people are apt to judge of those that
|
||
will not do just as they would have them do. No doubt, Paul has a
|
||
good reason for his resolution, though he sees cause to keep it to
|
||
himself, and God has gracious ends to serve in confirming him in
|
||
it." It is good manners not to over-press those in their own
|
||
affairs that will not be persuaded. 2. They submitted to the will
|
||
of a good God: <i>We ceased,</i> saying, <i>The will of the Lord be
|
||
done.</i> They did not resolve his resolution into his
|
||
stubbornness, but into his willingness to suffer, and God's will
|
||
that he should. <i>Father in heaven, thy will be done,</i> as it is
|
||
a rule to our prayers and to our practice, so it is to our
|
||
patience. This may refer, (1.) To Paul's present firmness; he is
|
||
inflexible, and unpersuadable, and in this they see the will of the
|
||
Lord done. "It is he that has wrought this fixed resolution in him,
|
||
and therefore we acquiesce in it." Note, In the turning of the
|
||
hearts of our friends or ministers, this way or that way (and it
|
||
may be quite another way than we could wish), we should eye the
|
||
hand of God, and submit to that. (2.) To his approaching
|
||
sufferings: "If there be no remedy, but Paul will run himself into
|
||
bonds, the will of the Lord Jesus be done. We have done all that we
|
||
could do on our parts to prevent it, and now we leave it to God, we
|
||
leave it to Christ, to whom the Father has committed all judgment,
|
||
and therefore we do, not as we will, but as he will." Note, When we
|
||
see trouble coming, and particularly that of our ministers' being
|
||
silenced or removed from us, it becomes us to say, <i>The will of
|
||
the Lord be done.</i> God is wise, and knows how to make all work
|
||
for good, and therefore "welcome his holy will." Not only, "The
|
||
will of the Lord must be done, and there is no remedy;" but, "Let
|
||
the will of the Lord be done, for his will is his wisdom, and he
|
||
doeth all according to the counsel of it; let him therefore do with
|
||
us and ours as seemeth good in his eyes." When a trouble is come,
|
||
this must allay our griefs, that the will of the Lord is done; when
|
||
we see it coming, this must silence our fears, that the will of the
|
||
Lord shall be done, to which we must say, <i>Amen,</i> let it be
|
||
done.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxii-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.15-Acts.21.26" parsed="|Acts|21|15|21|26" passage="Ac 21:15-26" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.21.15-Acts.21.26">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxii-p24.3">Paul's Visit to Jerusalem; Paul's Conformity
|
||
to the Jewish Law.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxii-p25">15 And after those days we took up our
|
||
carriages, and went up to Jerusalem. 16 There went with us
|
||
also <i>certain</i> of the disciples of Cæsarea, and brought with
|
||
them one Mnason of Cyprus, an old disciple, with whom we should
|
||
lodge. 17 And when we were come to Jerusalem, the brethren
|
||
received us gladly. 18 And the <i>day</i> following Paul
|
||
went in with us unto James; and all the elders were present.
|
||
19 And when he had saluted them, he declared particularly what
|
||
things God had wrought among the Gentiles by his ministry.
|
||
20 And when they heard <i>it,</i> they glorified the Lord, and said
|
||
unto him, Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are
|
||
which believe; and they are all zealous of the law: 21 And
|
||
they are informed of thee, that thou teachest all the Jews which
|
||
are among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not
|
||
to circumcise <i>their</i> children, neither to walk after the
|
||
customs. 22 What is it therefore? the multitude must needs
|
||
come together: for they will hear that thou art come. 23 Do
|
||
therefore this that we say to thee: We have four men which have a
|
||
vow on them; 24 Them take, and purify thyself with them, and
|
||
be at charges with them, that they may shave <i>their</i> heads:
|
||
and all may know that those things, whereof they were informed
|
||
concerning thee, are nothing; but <i>that</i> thou thyself also
|
||
walkest orderly, and keepest the law. 25 As touching the
|
||
Gentiles which believe, we have written <i>and</i> concluded that
|
||
they observe no such thing, save only that they keep themselves
|
||
from <i>things</i> offered to idols, and from blood, and from
|
||
strangled, and from fornication. 26 Then Paul took the men,
|
||
and the next day purifying himself with them entered into the
|
||
temple, to signify the accomplishment of the days of purification,
|
||
until that an offering should be offered for every one of them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p26">In these verses we have,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p27">I. Paul's journey to Jerusalem from
|
||
Cæsarea, and the company that went along with him. 1. They <i>took
|
||
up their carriages,</i> their bag and baggage, and as it should
|
||
seem, like poor travellers or soldiers, were their own porters; so
|
||
little had they of change of raiment. <i>Omnia mea mecum porto—My
|
||
property is all about me.</i> Some think they had with them the
|
||
money that was collected in the churches of Macedonia and Achaia
|
||
for the poor saints at Jerusalem. If they could have persuaded Paul
|
||
to go some other way, they would gladly have gone along with him;
|
||
but if, notwithstanding their dissuasive, he will go to Jerusalem,
|
||
they do no say, "Let him go by himself then;" but as Thomas, in a
|
||
like case, when Christ would go into danger at Jerusalem, <i>Let us
|
||
go and die with him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:John.11.16" parsed="|John|11|16|0|0" passage="Joh 11:16">John xi.
|
||
16</scripRef>. Their resolution to cleave to Paul was like that of
|
||
Ittai to cleave to David (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.15.21" parsed="|2Sam|15|21|0|0" passage="2Sa 15:21">2 Sam. xv.
|
||
21</scripRef>): <i>In what place my Lord the king shall be, whether
|
||
in death or life, there also will thy servant be.</i> Thus Paul's
|
||
boldness emboldened them. 2. Certain of the disciples of Cæsarea
|
||
went along with them. Whether they designed to go however, and took
|
||
this opportunity of going with so much good company, or whether
|
||
they went on purpose to see if they could do Paul any service and
|
||
if possible prevent his trouble, or at least minister to him in it,
|
||
does not appear. The less while that Paul is likely to enjoy his
|
||
liberty the more industrious they are to improve every opportunity
|
||
of conversation with him. Elisha kept close to Elijah when he knew
|
||
the time was at hand that he should be taken up. 3. They brought
|
||
with them an honest old gentleman that had a house of his own at
|
||
Jerusalem, in which he would gladly entertain Paul and his company,
|
||
<i>one Mnason of Cyprus</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.16" parsed="|Acts|21|16|0|0" passage="Ac 21:16"><i>v.</i>
|
||
16</scripRef>), <i>with whom we should lodge.</i> Such a great
|
||
concourse of people there was to the feast that it was a hard
|
||
matter to get lodgings; the public houses would be taken up by
|
||
those of the better sort, and it was looked upon as a scandalous
|
||
thing for those that had private houses to let their rooms out at
|
||
those times, but they must freely accommodate strangers with them.
|
||
Every one then would choose his friends to be his guests, and
|
||
Mnason took Paul and his company to be his lodgers; though he had
|
||
heard what trouble Paul was likely to come into, which might bring
|
||
those that entertained him into trouble too, yet he shall be
|
||
welcome to him, whatever comes of it. This Mnason is called an
|
||
<i>old disciple</i>—a disciple <i>from the beginning;</i> some
|
||
think, one of the seventy disciples of Christ, or one of the first
|
||
converts after the pouring out of the Spirit, or one of the first
|
||
that was converted by the preaching of the gospel in Cyprus,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.4" parsed="|Acts|13|4|0|0" passage="Ac 13:4"><i>ch.</i> xiii. 4</scripRef>. However
|
||
it was, it seems he had been long a Christian, and was now in
|
||
years. Note, It is an honourable thing to be an old disciple of
|
||
Jesus Christ, to have been enabled by the grace of God to continue
|
||
long in a course of duty, stedfast in the faith, and growing more
|
||
and more prudent and experienced to a good old age. And with these
|
||
old disciples one would choose to lodge; for the multitude of their
|
||
years will teach wisdom.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p28">II. Paul's welcome at Jerusalem. 1. Many of
|
||
the brethren there <i>received him gladly,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.17" parsed="|Acts|21|17|0|0" passage="Ac 21:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>. As soon as they had notice that
|
||
he was come to town, they went to his lodgings at Mnason's house,
|
||
and congratulated him on his safe arrival, and told him they were
|
||
glad to see him, and invited him to their houses, accounting it an
|
||
honour to be known to one that was such an eminent servant of
|
||
Christ. Streso observes that the word here used concerning the
|
||
welcome they gave to the apostles, <b><i>asmenos
|
||
apodechein,</i></b> is used concerning the welcome of the apostles'
|
||
doctrine, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.2.41" parsed="|Acts|2|41|0|0" passage="Ac 2:41"><i>ch.</i> ii. 41</scripRef>.
|
||
They <i>gladly received his word.</i> We think if we had Paul among
|
||
us we should gladly receive him; but it is a question whether we
|
||
should or no it, having his doctrine, we do not gladly receive
|
||
that. 2. They paid a visit to James and the elders of the church,
|
||
at a church-meeting (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p28.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.18" parsed="|Acts|21|18|0|0" passage="Ac 21:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>): "<i>The day following, Paul went unto James,</i>
|
||
and took us with him, that were his companions, to introduce us
|
||
into acquaintance with the church at Jerusalem." It should seem
|
||
that James was now the only apostle that was resident at Jerusalem;
|
||
the rest had dispersed themselves to preach the gospel in other
|
||
places. But still they forecasted to have an apostle at Jerusalem,
|
||
perhaps sometimes one and sometimes another, because there was a
|
||
great resort thither from all parts. James was now upon the spot,
|
||
and all the elders or presbyters that were the ordinary pastors of
|
||
the church, both to preach and govern, were present. Paul saluted
|
||
them all, paid his respects to them, enquired concerning their
|
||
welfare, and gave them the right hand of fellowship. He <i>saluted
|
||
them,</i> that is, he wished them all health and happiness, and
|
||
prayed to God to bless them. The proper signification of salutation
|
||
is, wishing salvation to you: <i>salve,</i> or <i>salus tibi
|
||
sit;</i> like <i>peace be unto you.</i> And such mutual
|
||
salutations, or good wishes, very well become Christians, in token
|
||
of their love to each other and joint regard to God.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p29">III. The account they had from him of his
|
||
ministry among the Gentiles, and their satisfaction in it. 1. He
|
||
gave them a narrative of the success of the gospel in those
|
||
countries where he had been employed, knowing it would be very
|
||
acceptable to them to hear of the enlarging of Christ's kingdom:
|
||
<i>He declared particularly what things God had wrought among the
|
||
Gentiles by his ministry,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.19" parsed="|Acts|21|19|0|0" passage="Ac 21:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. Observe how modestly he speaks,
|
||
not what things he had wrought (he was but the instrument), but
|
||
what God had wrought by his ministry. It was <i>not I, but the
|
||
grace of God which was with me.</i> He planted and watered, but God
|
||
gave the increase. He declared it particularly, that the grace of
|
||
God might appear the more illustrious in the circumstances of his
|
||
success. Thus David will tell others what God has done for his soul
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.66.16" parsed="|Ps|66|16|0|0" passage="Ps 66:16">Ps. lxvi. 16</scripRef>), as Paul
|
||
here what God has done by his hand, and both that their friends may
|
||
help them to be thankful. 2. Hence they took occasion to give
|
||
praise to God (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.20" parsed="|Acts|21|20|0|0" passage="Ac 21:20"><i>v.</i>
|
||
20</scripRef>): <i>When they heart it, they glorified the Lord.</i>
|
||
Paul ascribed it all to God, and to God they gave the praise of it.
|
||
They did not break out into high encomiums of Paul, but left it to
|
||
his Master to say to him, <i>Well done, good and faithful
|
||
servant;</i> but they gave glory to the grace of God, which was
|
||
extended to the Gentiles. Note, The conversion of sinners ought to
|
||
be the matter of our joy and praise as it is of the angels'. God
|
||
had honoured Paul more than any of them, in making his usefulness
|
||
more extensive, yet they did not envy him, nor were they jealous of
|
||
his growing reputation, but, on the contrary, <i>glorified the
|
||
Lord.</i> And they could not do more to encourage Paul to go on
|
||
cheerfully in his work than to glorify God for his success in it;
|
||
for, if God be praised, Paul is pleased.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p30">IV. The request of James and the elders of
|
||
the church at Jerusalem to Paul, or their advice rather, that he
|
||
would gratify the believing Jews by showing some compliance with
|
||
the ceremonial law, and appearing publicly in the temple to offer
|
||
sacrifice, which was not a thing in itself sinful; for the
|
||
ceremonial law, though it was by no means to be imposed upon the
|
||
Gentile converts (as the false teachers would have it, and thereby
|
||
endeavoured to subvert the gospel), yet it was not become unlawful
|
||
as yet to those that had been bred up in the observance of it, but
|
||
were far from expecting justification by it. It was dead, but not
|
||
buried; dead, but not yet deadly. And, being not sinful, they
|
||
thought it was a piece of prudence in Paul to conform thus far.
|
||
Observe the counsel they give to Paul herein, not as having
|
||
authority over him, but an affection for him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p31">1. They desired him to take notice of the
|
||
great numbers there were of the Jewish converts: <i>Thou seest,
|
||
brother, how many thousands of the Jews there are who believe.</i>
|
||
They called him brother, for they looked upon him as a
|
||
joint-commissioner with them in gospel-work. Though they were of
|
||
the circumcision and he the apostle of the Gentiles, though they
|
||
were conformists and he a nonconformist, yet they were brethren,
|
||
and owned the relation. Thou hast been in some of our assemblies,
|
||
and seest how numerous they are: <i>how many myriads of Jews
|
||
believe.</i> The word signifies, not thousands, but <i>ten
|
||
thousands.</i> Even among the Jews, who were most prejudiced
|
||
against the gospel, yet there were great multitudes that received
|
||
it; for the grace of God can break down the strongest holds of
|
||
Satan. The number of the names at first was but one hundred and
|
||
twenty, yet now many thousands. Let none therefore despise the day
|
||
of small things; for, though the beginning be small, God can make
|
||
the latter end greatly to increase. Hereby it appeared that God had
|
||
not quite cast away his people the Jews, for among them there was a
|
||
remnant, an election, that obtained (see <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1 Bible:Rom.11.5 Bible:Rom.11.7" parsed="|Rom|11|1|0|0;|Rom|11|5|0|0;|Rom|11|7|0|0" passage="Ro 11:1,5,7">Rom. xi. 1, 5, 7</scripRef>): <i>many thousands that
|
||
believed.</i> And this account which they could give to Paul of the
|
||
success of the gospel among the Jews was, no doubt, as grateful to
|
||
Paul as the account which he gave them of the conversion of the
|
||
Gentiles was to them; for his heart's desire and prayer to God for
|
||
the Jews was <i>that they might be saved.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p32">2. They informed him of a prevailing
|
||
infirmity these believing Jews laboured under, of which they could
|
||
not yet be cured: <i>They are all zealous of the law.</i> They
|
||
believe in Christ as the true Messiah, they rest upon his
|
||
righteousness and submit to his government; but they know the law
|
||
of Moses was of God, they have found spiritual benefit in their
|
||
attendance on the institutions of it, and therefore they can by no
|
||
means think of parting with it, no, nor of growing cold to it. And
|
||
perhaps they urged Christ's being <i>made under the law,</i> and
|
||
observing it (which was designed to be our deliverance from the
|
||
law), as a reason for their continuance under it. This was a great
|
||
weakness and mistake, to be so fond of the shadows when the
|
||
substance was come, to keep their necks under a yoke of bondage
|
||
when Christ had come to make them free. But see, (1.) The power of
|
||
education and long usage, and especially of a ceremonial law. (2.)
|
||
The charitable allowance that must be made in consideration of
|
||
these. These Jews that believed were not therefore disowned and
|
||
rejected as no Christians because they were for the law, nay, were
|
||
zealous for it, while it was only in their own practice, and they
|
||
did not impose it upon others. Their being zealous of the law was
|
||
capable of a good construction, which charity would put upon it;
|
||
and it was capable of a good excuse, considering what they were
|
||
brought up in, and among whom they lived.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p33">3. They gave him to understand that these
|
||
Jews, who were so zealous of the law, were ill-affected to him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.21" parsed="|Acts|21|21|0|0" passage="Ac 21:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>. Paul himself,
|
||
though as faithful a servant as any Christ ever had, yet could not
|
||
get the good word of all that belonged to Christ's family: "<i>They
|
||
are informed of thee</i> (and form their opinion of thee
|
||
accordingly) that thou not only dost not teach the Gentiles to
|
||
observe the law, as some would have had thee (we have prevailed
|
||
with them to drop that), but <i>dost teach all the Jews who are</i>
|
||
dispersed <i>among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, not to circumcise
|
||
their children nor to walk after the customs</i> of our nation,
|
||
which were of divine appointment, so far as they might be observed
|
||
even among the Gentiles, at a distance from the temple,—not to
|
||
observe the fasts and feasts of the church, not to wear their
|
||
phylacteries, nor abstain from unclean meats." Now, (1.) It was
|
||
true that Paul preached the abrogation of the law of Moses, taught
|
||
them that it was impossible to be justified by it, and therefore we
|
||
are not bound up any longer to the observance of it. But, (2.) It
|
||
was false that he taught them to forsake Moses; for the religion he
|
||
preached tended not to destroy the law, but to fulfil it. He
|
||
preached Christ (<i>the end of the law for righteousness</i>), and
|
||
repentance and faith, in the exercise of which we are to make great
|
||
use of the law. The Jews among the Gentiles whom Paul taught were
|
||
so far from forsaking Moses that they never understood him better,
|
||
nor ever embraced him so heartily as now when they were taught to
|
||
make use of him as a <i>schoolmaster to bring them to Christ.</i>
|
||
But even the believing Jews, having got this notion of Paul, that
|
||
he was an enemy to Moses, and perhaps giving too much regard to the
|
||
unbelieving Jews too, were much exasperated against him. Their
|
||
ministers, the elders here present, loved and honoured him, and
|
||
approved of what he did, and called him brother, but the people
|
||
could hardly be induced to entertain a favourable thought of him;
|
||
for it is certain the least judicious are the most censorious, the
|
||
weak-headed are the hot-headed. They could not distinguish upon
|
||
Paul's doctrine as they ought to have done, and therefore condemned
|
||
it in the gross, through ignorance.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p34">4. They therefore desired Paul that he
|
||
would by some public act, now that he had come to Jerusalem, make
|
||
it to appear that the charge against him was false, and that he did
|
||
not teach people to forsake Moses and to break the customs of the
|
||
Jewish church, for he himself retained the use of them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p35">(1.) They conclude that something of this
|
||
kind must be done: "<i>What is it therefore?</i> What must be done?
|
||
The <i>multitude will hear that thou art come</i> to town." This is
|
||
an inconvenience that attends men of fame, that their coming and
|
||
going are taken notice of more than other people's, and will be
|
||
talked of, by some for good-will and by others for ill-will. "When
|
||
they hear thou art come, <i>they must needs come together,</i> they
|
||
will expect that we call them together, to advise with them whether
|
||
we should admit thee to preach among us as a brother or no; or,
|
||
they will come together of themselves expecting to hear thee." Now
|
||
something must be done to satisfy them that Paul does not teach the
|
||
people to forsake Moses, and they think it necessary, [1.] For
|
||
Paul's sake, that his reputation should be cleared, and that so
|
||
good a man may not lie under any blemish, nor so useful a man
|
||
labour under any disadvantage which may obstruct his usefulness.
|
||
[2.] For the people's sake, that they may not continue prejudiced
|
||
against so good a man, nor lose the benefit of his ministry by
|
||
those prejudices. [3.] For their own sake, that since they knew it
|
||
was their duty to own Paul their doing it might not be turned to
|
||
their reproach among those that were under their charge.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p36">(2.) They produce a fair opportunity which
|
||
Paul might take to clear himself: "<i>Do this that we say unto
|
||
thee,</i> take our advice in this case. <i>We have four men,</i>
|
||
Jews who believe, of our own churches, and <i>they have a vow on
|
||
them,</i> a vow of Nazariteship for a certain time; their time has
|
||
now expired (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.23" parsed="|Acts|21|23|0|0" passage="Ac 21:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>),
|
||
and they are to offer their offering according to the law, when
|
||
they shave the head of their separation, a he-lamb for a
|
||
burnt-offering, a ewe-lamb for a sin-offering, and a ram for a
|
||
peace-offering, with other offerings pertinent to them, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p36.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.6.13-Num.6.20" parsed="|Num|6|13|6|20" passage="Nu 6:13-20">Num. vi. 13-20</scripRef>. Many used to do
|
||
this together, when their vow expired about the same time, either
|
||
for the greater expedition or for the greater solemnity. Now Paul
|
||
having so far of late complied with the law as to take upon him the
|
||
vow of a Nazarite, and to signify the expiration of it by shaving
|
||
his head at Cenchrea (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p36.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.18.18" parsed="|Acts|18|18|0|0" passage="Ac 18:18"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
xviii. 18</scripRef>), according to the custom of those who lived
|
||
at a distance from the temple, they desire him but to go a little
|
||
further, and to join with these four in offering the sacrifices of
|
||
a Nazarite: <i>'Purify thyself with them</i> according to the law;
|
||
and be willing not only to take that trouble, but to be at charges
|
||
with them, in buying sacrifices for this solemn occasion, and to
|
||
join with them in the sacrifice." This, they think, will
|
||
effectually stop the mouth of calumny, and every one will be
|
||
convinced that the report was false, that Paul was not the man he
|
||
was represented to be, did not teach the Jews to forsake Moses, but
|
||
that he himself, being originally a Jew, walked orderly, and kept
|
||
the law; and then all would be well.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p37">5. They enter a protestation that this
|
||
shall be no infringement at all of the decree lately made in favour
|
||
of the Gentile converts, nor do they intend by this in the least to
|
||
derogate from the liberty allowed them (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.25" parsed="|Acts|21|25|0|0" passage="Ac 21:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>): "<i>As touching the
|
||
Gentiles</i> who <i>believe, we have written and concluded,</i> and
|
||
resolve to abide by it, <i>that they observe no such things;</i> we
|
||
would not have them to be bound up by the ceremonial law by any
|
||
means, but only that they keep themselves from <i>things offered to
|
||
idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from
|
||
fornication;</i> but let not them be tied to the Jewish sacrifices
|
||
or purifications, nor any of their rites and ceremonies." They knew
|
||
how jealous Paul was for the preservation of the liberty of the
|
||
converted Gentiles, and therefore expressly covenant to abide by
|
||
that. Thus far is their proposal.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p38">V. Here is Paul's compliance with it. He
|
||
was willing to gratify them in this matter. Though he would not be
|
||
persuaded not to go to Jerusalem, yet, when he was there, he was
|
||
persuaded to do as they there did, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.26" parsed="|Acts|21|26|0|0" passage="Ac 21:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>. <i>Then Paul took the men,</i>
|
||
as they advised, and the very <i>next day, purifying himself with
|
||
them,</i> and not <i>with multitude nor tumult,</i> as he himself
|
||
pleads (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p38.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.18" parsed="|Acts|24|18|0|0" passage="Ac 24:18"><i>ch.</i> xxiv.
|
||
18</scripRef>), he <i>entered into the temple,</i> as other devout
|
||
Jews that came upon such errands did, to signify the accomplishment
|
||
of the days of purification to the priests; desiring the priest
|
||
would appoint a time when the offering should be offered for every
|
||
one of them, one for each. Ainsworth, on <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p38.3" osisRef="Bible:Num.6.18" parsed="|Num|6|18|0|0" passage="Nu 6:18">Num. vi. 18</scripRef>, quotes out of Maimonides a
|
||
passage which gives some light to this: <i>If a man say, Upon me
|
||
behalf the oblations of a Nazarite,</i> or, <i>Upon me be half the
|
||
shaving of a Nazarite, them he brings half the offerings by what
|
||
Nazarite he will, and that Nazarite pays his offering out of that
|
||
which is his.</i> So Paul did here; he contributed what he vowed to
|
||
the offerings of these Nazarites, and some think bound himself to
|
||
the law of Nazariteship, and to an attendance at the temple with
|
||
fastings and prayers for seven days, not designing that the
|
||
offering should be offered till them, which was what he signified
|
||
to the priest. Now it has been questioned whether James and the
|
||
elders did well to give Paul this advice, and whether he did well
|
||
to take it. 1. Some have blamed this occasional conformity of
|
||
Paul's, as indulging the Jews too much in their adherence to the
|
||
ceremonial law, and a discouragement of those who stood fast in the
|
||
liberty wherewith Christ had made them free. Was it not enough for
|
||
James and the elders of Jerusalem to connive at this mistake in the
|
||
Jewish converts themselves, but must they wheedle Paul to
|
||
countenance them in it? Had it not been better, when they had told
|
||
Paul how zealous the believing Jews were for the law, if they had
|
||
desired, whom God had endued with such excellent gifts, to take
|
||
pains with their people to convince them of their error, and to
|
||
show them that they were made free from the law by their marriage
|
||
to Christ? <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p38.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.7.4" parsed="|Rom|7|4|0|0" passage="Ro 7:4">Rom. vii. 4</scripRef>. To
|
||
urge him to encourage them in it by his example seems to have more
|
||
in it of fleshly wisdom than of the grace of God. Surely Paul knew
|
||
what he had to do better than they could teach him. But, 2. Others
|
||
think the advice was prudent and good, and Paul's following it was
|
||
justifiable enough, as the case stood. It was Paul's avowed
|
||
principle, <i>To the Jews became I as a Jew, that I might gain the
|
||
Jews,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p38.5" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.9.20" parsed="|1Cor|9|20|0|0" passage="1Co 9:20">1 Cor. ix. 20</scripRef>. He
|
||
had circumcised Timothy, to please the Jews; though he would not
|
||
constantly observe the ceremonial law, yet, to gain an opportunity
|
||
of doing good, and to show how far he could comply, he would
|
||
occasionally go to the temple and join in the sacrifices there.
|
||
Those that are weak in the faith are to be borne with, when those
|
||
that undermine the faith must be opposed. It is true, this
|
||
compliance of Paul's sped ill to him, for this very thing by which
|
||
he hoped to pacify the Jews did but provoke them, and bring him
|
||
into trouble; yet this is not a sufficient ground to go upon in
|
||
condemning it: Paul might do well, and yet suffer for it. But
|
||
perhaps the wise God overruled both their advice and Paul's
|
||
compliance with it to serve a better purpose than was intended; for
|
||
we have reason to think that when the believing Jews, who had
|
||
endeavoured by their zeal for the law to recommend themselves to
|
||
the good opinion of those who believed not, saw how barbarously
|
||
they used Paul (who endeavoured to oblige them), they were by this
|
||
more alienated from the ceremonial law than they could have been by
|
||
the most argumentative or affecting discourses. They saw it was in
|
||
vain to think of pleasing men that would be pleased with nothing
|
||
else but the rooting out of Christianity. Integrity and uprightness
|
||
will be more likely to preserve us than sneaking compliances. And
|
||
when we consider what a great trouble it must needs be to James and
|
||
the presbyters, in the reflection upon it, that they had by their
|
||
advice brought Paul into trouble, it should be a warning to us not
|
||
to press men to oblige us by doing any thing contrary to their own
|
||
mind.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxii-p38.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.27-Acts.21.40" parsed="|Acts|21|27|21|40" passage="Ac 21:27-40" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.21.27-Acts.21.40">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxii-p38.7">Paul Seized in the Temple; The Tumult at
|
||
Jerusalem.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxii-p39">27 And when the seven days were almost ended,
|
||
the Jews which were of Asia, when they saw him in the temple,
|
||
stirred up all the people, and laid hands on him, 28 Crying
|
||
out, Men of Israel, help: This is the man, that teacheth all
|
||
<i>men</i> every where against the people, and the law, and this
|
||
place: and further brought Greeks also into the temple, and hath
|
||
polluted this holy place. 29 (For they had seen before with
|
||
him in the city Trophimus an Ephesian, whom they supposed that Paul
|
||
had brought into the temple.) 30 And all the city was moved,
|
||
and the people ran together: and they took Paul, and drew him out
|
||
of the temple: and forthwith the doors were shut. 31 And as
|
||
they went about to kill him, tidings came unto the chief captain of
|
||
the band, that all Jerusalem was in an uproar. 32 Who
|
||
immediately took soldiers and centurions, and ran down unto them:
|
||
and when they saw the chief captain and the soldiers, they left
|
||
beating of Paul. 33 Then the chief captain came near, and
|
||
took him, and commanded <i>him</i> to be bound with two chains; and
|
||
demanded who he was, and what he had done. 34 And some cried
|
||
one thing, some another, among the multitude: and when he could not
|
||
know the certainty for the tumult, he commanded him to be carried
|
||
into the castle. 35 And when he came upon the stairs, so it
|
||
was, that he was borne of the soldiers for the violence of the
|
||
people. 36 For the multitude of the people followed after,
|
||
crying, Away with him. 37 And as Paul was to be led into the
|
||
castle, he said unto the chief captain, May I speak unto thee? Who
|
||
said, Canst thou speak Greek? 38 Art not thou that Egyptian,
|
||
which before these days madest an uproar, and leddest out into the
|
||
wilderness four thousand men that were murderers? 39 But
|
||
Paul said, I am a man <i>which am</i> a Jew of Tarsus, <i>a
|
||
city</i> in Cilicia, a citizen of no mean city: and, I beseech
|
||
thee, suffer me to speak unto the people. 40 And when he had
|
||
given him licence, Paul stood on the stairs, and beckoned with the
|
||
hand unto the people. And when there was made a great silence, he
|
||
spake unto <i>them</i> in the Hebrew tongue, saying,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p40">We have here Paul brought into a captivity
|
||
which we are not likely to see the end of; for after this he is
|
||
either hurried from one bar to another, or lies neglected, first in
|
||
one prison and then in another, and can neither be tried nor
|
||
bailed. When we see the beginning of a trouble, we know not either
|
||
how long it will last or how it will issue.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p41">I. We have here Paul seized, and laid hold
|
||
on.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p42">1. He was seized in the temple, when he was
|
||
there attending the days of his purifying, and the solemn services
|
||
of those days, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.27" parsed="|Acts|21|27|0|0" passage="Ac 21:27"><i>v.</i>
|
||
27</scripRef>. Formerly he had been well known in the temple, but
|
||
now he had been so long in his travels abroad that he had become a
|
||
stranger there; so that it was not till <i>the seven days were
|
||
almost ended</i> that he was taken notice of by those that had an
|
||
evil eye towards him. In the temple, where he should have been
|
||
protected, as in a sanctuary, he was most violently set upon by
|
||
those who did what they could to have his blood mingled with his
|
||
sacrifices—in the temple, where he should have been welcomed as
|
||
one of the greatest ornaments of it that ever had been there since
|
||
the Lord of the temple left it. The temple, which they themselves
|
||
pretended such a mighty zeal for, yet did they themselves thus
|
||
profane. Thus is the church polluted by none more than by popish
|
||
persecutors, under the colour of the church's name and
|
||
interest.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p43">2. The informers against him were the Jews
|
||
of Asia, not those of Jerusalem—the Jews of the dispersion, who
|
||
knew him best, and who were most exasperated against him. Those who
|
||
seldom came up to worship at the temple in Jerusalem themselves,
|
||
but contentedly lived at a distance from it, in pursuit of their
|
||
private advantages, yet appeared most zealous for the temple, as if
|
||
thereby they would atone for their habitual neglect of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p44">3. The method they took was to raise the
|
||
mob, and to incense them against him. They did not go to the high
|
||
priest, or the magistrates of the city, with their charge (probably
|
||
because they expected not to receive countenance from them), but
|
||
<i>they stirred up all the people,</i> who were at this time more
|
||
than ever disposed to any thing that was tumultuous and seditious,
|
||
riotous and outrageous. Those are fittest to be employed against
|
||
Christ and Christianity that are governed least by reason and most
|
||
by passion; therefore Paul described the Jewish persecutors to be
|
||
not only wicked, but absurd unreasonable men.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p45">4. The arguments wherewith they exasperated
|
||
the people against him were popular, but very false and unjust.
|
||
They cried out, "<i>Men of Israel, help.</i> If you are indeed men
|
||
of Israel, true-born Jews, that have a concern for your church and
|
||
your country, now is your time to show it, by helping to seize an
|
||
enemy to both." Thus <i>they cried after him as after a thief</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.30.5" parsed="|Job|30|5|0|0" passage="Job 30:5">Job xxx. 5</scripRef>), or after a
|
||
mad dog. Note, The enemies of Christianity, since they could never
|
||
prove it to be an ill thing, have been always very industrious,
|
||
right or wrong, to put it into an ill name, and so run it down by
|
||
outrage and outcry. It had become men of Israel to help Paul, who
|
||
preached up him who was so much the <i>glory of his people
|
||
Israel;</i> yet here the popular fury will not allow them to be men
|
||
of Israel, unless they will help against him. This was like,
|
||
<i>Stop thief,</i> or Athaliah's cry, <i>Treason, treason;</i> what
|
||
is wanting in right is made up in noise.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p46">5. They charge upon him both bad doctrine
|
||
and bad practice, and both against the Mosaic ritual.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p47">(1.) They charge upon him bad doctrine; not
|
||
only that he holds corrupt opinions himself, but that he vents and
|
||
publishes them, though not here at Jerusalem, yet in other places,
|
||
nay in all places, he teaches all men, every where; so artfully is
|
||
the crime aggravated, as if, because he was an itinerant, he was a
|
||
ubiquitary: "He spreads to the utmost of his power certain damnable
|
||
and heretical positions," [1.] Against the people of the Jews. He
|
||
had taught that Jews and Gentiles stand on the same level before
|
||
God, <i>and neither circumcision avails any thing nor
|
||
uncircumcision;</i> nay, he had taught against the unbelieving Jews
|
||
that they were rejected (and therefore had separated from them and
|
||
their synagogues), and this is interpreted to be speaking against
|
||
the whole nation, as if no doubt but <i>they were the people, and
|
||
wisdom must die with them</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.12.2" parsed="|Job|12|2|0|0" passage="Job 12:2">Job
|
||
xii. 2</scripRef>), whereas God, though he had cast them off, yet
|
||
had not <i>cast away his people,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.1" parsed="|Rom|11|1|0|0" passage="Ro 11:1">Rom. xi. 1</scripRef>. They were <i>Lo-ammi, not a
|
||
people</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p47.3" osisRef="Bible:Hos.1.9" parsed="|Hos|1|9|0|0" passage="Ho 1:9">Hos. i. 9</scripRef>), and
|
||
yet pretended to be the only people. Those commonly seem most
|
||
jealous for the church's name that belong to it in name only. [2.]
|
||
Against the law. His teaching men to believe the gospel as the end
|
||
of the law, and the perfection of it, was interpreted his preaching
|
||
against the law; whereas it was so far from making void the law
|
||
that it established it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p47.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.3.31" parsed="|Rom|3|31|0|0" passage="Ro 3:31">Rom. iii.
|
||
31</scripRef>. [3.] Against <i>this place,</i> the temple. Because
|
||
he taught men to pray every where, he was reproached as an enemy to
|
||
the temple, and perhaps because he sometimes mentioned the
|
||
destruction of Jerusalem and the temple, and of the Jewish nation,
|
||
which his Master had foretold. Paul had himself been active in
|
||
persecuting Stephen, and putting him to death for words spoken
|
||
<i>against this holy place,</i> and now the same thing is laid to
|
||
his charge. He that was then made use of as the tool is now set up
|
||
as the butt of Jewish rage and malice.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p48">(2.) They charge upon him bad practices. To
|
||
confirm their charge against him, as teaching people against this
|
||
holy place, they charge it upon him that he had himself polluted
|
||
it, and by an overt-act showed his contempt of it, and a design to
|
||
make it common. He <i>has brought Gentiles also into the
|
||
temple,</i> into the inner court of the temple, which none that
|
||
were uncircumcised were admitted, under any pretence, to come into;
|
||
there was written upon the wall that enclosed this inner court, in
|
||
Greek and Latin, <i>It is a capital crime for strangers to
|
||
enter.</i>—Josephus <i>Antiq.</i> 15. 417. Paul was himself a Jew,
|
||
and had right to enter into the court of the Jews. And they, seeing
|
||
some with him there that joined with him in his devotions,
|
||
concluded that Trophimus an Ephesian, who was a Gentile, was one of
|
||
them. Why? Did they see him there? Truly no; but they had seen him
|
||
with Paul in the streets of the city, which was no crime at all,
|
||
and therefore they affirm that he was with Paul in the inner court
|
||
of the temple, which was a heinous crime. They had seen him with
|
||
him in the city, and therefore they supposed that Paul had brought
|
||
him with him into the temple, which was utterly false. See here,
|
||
[1.] Innocency is no fence against calumny and false accusation. It
|
||
is no new thing for those that mean honestly, and act regularly, to
|
||
have things laid to their charge which they know not, nor ever
|
||
thought of. [2.] <i>Evil men dig up mischief,</i> and go far to
|
||
seek proofs of their false accusations, as they did here, who,
|
||
because they saw a Gentile with Paul in the city, will thence infer
|
||
that he was with him in the temple. This was a strained innuendo
|
||
indeed, yet by such unjust and groundless suggestions have wicked
|
||
men thought to justify themselves in the most barbarous outrages
|
||
committed upon the <i>excellent ones of the earth.</i> [3.] It is
|
||
common for malicious people to improve that against those that are
|
||
wise and good with which they thought to have obliged them and
|
||
ingratiated themselves with them. Paul thought to recommend himself
|
||
to their good opinion by going into the temple, he had not been so
|
||
maligned by them. This is the genius of ill-nature; <i>for my love,
|
||
they are my adversaries,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p48.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.4 Bible:Ps.69.10" parsed="|Ps|109|4|0|0;|Ps|69|10|0|0" passage="Ps 109:4,Ps 69:10">Ps. cix. 4; lxix. 10</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p49">We have Paul in danger of being pulled in
|
||
pieces by the rabble. They will not be at the pains to have him
|
||
before the high priest, or the sanhedrim; that is a roundabout way:
|
||
the execution shall be of a piece with the prosecution, all unjust
|
||
and irregular. They cannot prove the crime upon him, and therefore
|
||
dare not bring him upon a fair trial; nay, so greedily do they
|
||
thirst after his blood that they have not patience to proceed
|
||
against him by a due course of law, though they were ever so sure
|
||
to gain their point; and therefore, as those who neither feared God
|
||
nor regarded man, they resolved to knock him on the head
|
||
immediately.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p50">1. All the city was in an uproar, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p50.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.30" parsed="|Acts|21|30|0|0" passage="Ac 21:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>. The people, who though
|
||
they had little holiness themselves, yet had a mighty veneration
|
||
for the holy place, when they heard a hue-and-cry from the temple,
|
||
were up in arms presently, being resolved to stand by that with
|
||
their lives and fortunes. <i>All the city was moved,</i> when they
|
||
were called to from the temple, <i>Men of Israel, help,</i> with as
|
||
much violence as if the old complaint were revived (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p50.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.79.1" parsed="|Ps|79|1|0|0" passage="Ps 79:1">Ps. lxxix. 1</scripRef>), <i>O God, the heathen
|
||
are come into thine inheritance, thy holy temple have they
|
||
defiled.</i> Just such a zeal the Jews here show for God's temple
|
||
as the Ephesians did for Diana's temple, when Paul was informed
|
||
against as an enemy to that (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p50.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.19.29" parsed="|Acts|19|29|0|0" passage="Ac 19:29"><i>ch.</i> xix. 29</scripRef>): <i>The whole city was
|
||
full of confusion.</i> But God does not reckon himself at all
|
||
honoured by those whose zeal for him transports them to such
|
||
irregularities, and who, while they pretend to act for him, act in
|
||
such a brutish barbarous manner.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p51">2. They drew Paul out of the temple, and
|
||
shut the doors between the outer and inner court of the temple, or
|
||
perhaps the doors of the outer court. In dragging him furiously out
|
||
of the temple, (1.) They showed a real detestation of him as one
|
||
not fit to be suffered in the temple, nor to worship there, nor to
|
||
be looked upon as a member of the Jewish nation; as if his
|
||
sacrifice had been an abomination. (2.) They pretended a veneration
|
||
for the temple; like that of good Jehoiada, who would not have
|
||
Athaliah to be <i>slain in the house of the Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p51.1" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.11.15" parsed="|2Kgs|11|15|0|0" passage="2Ki 11:15">2 Kings xi. 15</scripRef>. See how absurd these
|
||
wicked men were; they condemned Paul for drawing people from the
|
||
temple, and yet, when he himself was very devoutly worshipping in
|
||
the temple, they drew him out of it. The officers of the temple
|
||
shut the doors, either, [1.] Lest Paul should find means to get
|
||
back and take hold of the horns of the altar, and so protect
|
||
himself by that sanctuary from their rage. Or rather, [2.] Lest the
|
||
crowd should by the running in of more to them be thrust back into
|
||
the temple, and some outrage should be committed, to the
|
||
profanation of that holy place. Those that made no conscience of
|
||
doing so ill a thing as the murdering of a good man for well-doing,
|
||
yet would be thought to scruple doing it in a holy place, or at a
|
||
holy time: <i>Not in the temple, as Not on the feast-day.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p52">3. They went about to kill him (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p52.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.31" parsed="|Acts|21|31|0|0" passage="Ac 21:31"><i>v.</i> 31</scripRef>), for they fell a
|
||
beating him (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p52.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.32" parsed="|Acts|21|32|0|0" passage="Ac 21:32"><i>v.</i> 32</scripRef>),
|
||
resolving to beat him to death by blows without number, a
|
||
punishment which the Jewish doctors allowed in some cases (not at
|
||
all to the credit of their nation), and called <i>the beating of
|
||
the rebels.</i> Now was Paul, like a lamb, thrown into a den of
|
||
lions, and made an easy prey to them, and, no doubt, he was still
|
||
of the same mind as when he said, <i>I am ready not only to be
|
||
bound, but to die at Jerusalem,</i> to die so great a death.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p53">III. We have here Paul rescued out of the
|
||
hands of his Jewish enemies by a Roman enemy. 1. Tidings were
|
||
brought of the tumult, and that the mob was up, <i>to the chief
|
||
captain of the band,</i> the governor of the castle, or, whoever he
|
||
was, the now commander-in-chief of the Roman forces that were
|
||
quartered in Jerusalem. Somebody that was concerned not for Paul,
|
||
but for the public peace and safety, gave this information to the
|
||
colonel, who had always a jealous and watchful eye upon these
|
||
tumultuous Jews, and he is the man that must be instrumental to
|
||
save Paul's life, when never a friend he had was capable of doing
|
||
him any service. 2. The tribune, or chief captain, got his forces
|
||
together with all possible expedition, and went to suppress the
|
||
mob: <i>He took soldiers</i> and <i>centurions,</i> and <i>ran down
|
||
to them.</i> Now at the feast, as at other such solemn times, the
|
||
guards were up, and the militia more within call than at other
|
||
times, and so he had them near at hand, and <i>he ran down unto the
|
||
multitude;</i> for at such times delays are dangerous. Sedition
|
||
must be crushed at first, lest it grow headstrong. 3. The very
|
||
sight of the Roman general frightened them from beating Paul; for
|
||
they knew they were doing what they could not justify, and were in
|
||
danger of being called in question for this day's uproar, as the
|
||
town clerk told the Ephesians. They were deterred from that by the
|
||
power of the Romans from which they ought to have been restrained
|
||
by the justice of God and the dread of his wrath. Note, God often
|
||
makes the earth to help the woman (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p53.1" osisRef="Bible:Rev.12.16" parsed="|Rev|12|16|0|0" passage="Re 12:16">Rev. xii. 16</scripRef>), and those to be a protection
|
||
to his people who yet have no affection for his people; they have
|
||
only a compassion for sufferers, and are zealous for the public
|
||
peace. The shepherd makes use even of his dogs for the defence of
|
||
his sheep. It is Streso's comparison here. See here how these
|
||
wicked people were frightened away at the very sight of the chief
|
||
captain; for the <i>king that sitteth on the throne of judgment
|
||
scattereth away all evil with his eyes.</i> The governor takes him
|
||
into custody. He rescued him, not out of a concern for him, because
|
||
he thought him innocent, but out of a concern for justice, because
|
||
he ought not to be put to death without trial; and because he knew
|
||
not how dangerous the consequence might be to the Roman government
|
||
of such tumultuous proceedings were not timely suppressed, nor what
|
||
such an outrageous people might do if once they knew their own
|
||
strength: he therefore takes Paul out of the hands of the mob into
|
||
the hands of the law (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p53.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.33" parsed="|Acts|21|33|0|0" passage="Ac 21:33"><i>v.</i>
|
||
33</scripRef>): <i>He took him, and commanded him to be bound with
|
||
two chains,</i> that the people might be satisfied he did not
|
||
intend to discharge him, but to examine him, <i>for he demanded
|
||
of</i> those who were so eager against him <i>who he was, and what
|
||
he had done.</i> This violent taking of him out of the hands of the
|
||
multitude, though there was all the reason in the world for it, yet
|
||
they laid to the charge of the chief captain as his crime
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p53.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.7" parsed="|Acts|24|7|0|0" passage="Ac 24:7"><i>ch.</i> xxiv. 7</scripRef>): <i>The
|
||
chief captain Lysias came with great violence, and took him out of
|
||
our hands,</i> which refers to this rescue as appears by comparing
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p53.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.27-Acts.23.28" parsed="|Acts|23|27|23|28" passage="Ac 23:27,28"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 27,
|
||
28</scripRef>, where the chief captain gives an account of it to
|
||
Felix.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p54">IV. The provision which the chief captain
|
||
made, with much ado, to bring Paul to speak for himself. One had
|
||
almost as good enter into a struggle with the winds and the waves,
|
||
as with such a mob as was here got together; and yet Paul made a
|
||
shift to get liberty of speech among them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p55">1. There was no knowing the sense of the
|
||
people; for when the chief captain enquired concerning Paul, having
|
||
perhaps never heard of his name before (such strangers were the
|
||
great ones to the excellent ones of the earth, and affected to be
|
||
so), <i>some cried one thing, and some another,</i> among the
|
||
multitude; so that it was impossible for the chief captain to know
|
||
their mind, when really they knew not either one another's mind or
|
||
their own, when every one pretended to give the sense of the whole
|
||
body. Those that will hearken to the clamours of the multitude will
|
||
know nothing for a certainty, any more than the builders of Babel,
|
||
when their tongues were confounded.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p56">2. There was no quelling the rage and fury
|
||
of the people; for when <i>the chief captain commanded that Paul
|
||
should be carried into the castle,</i> the tower of Antonia, where
|
||
the Roman soldiers kept garrison, near the temple, the soldiers
|
||
themselves had much ado to get him safely thither out of the noise,
|
||
the people were so violent (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p56.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.35" parsed="|Acts|21|35|0|0" passage="Ac 21:35"><i>v.</i>
|
||
35</scripRef>): <i>When he came upon the stairs,</i> leading up to
|
||
the castle, the soldiers were forced to take him up in their arms,
|
||
and carry him (which they might easily do, for he was a little man,
|
||
and his bodily presence weak), to keep him from the people, who
|
||
would have pulled him limb from limb if they could. When they could
|
||
not reach him with their cruel hands, they followed him with their
|
||
<i>sharp arrows, even bitter words: They followed, crying, Away
|
||
with him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p56.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.36" parsed="|Acts|21|36|0|0" passage="Ac 21:36"><i>v.</i> 36</scripRef>.
|
||
See how the most excellent persons and things are often run down by
|
||
a popular clamour. Christ himself was so, with, <i>Crucify him,
|
||
crucify him,</i> though they could not say what evil he had done.
|
||
<i>Take him out of the land of the living</i> (so the ancients
|
||
expound it), chase him out of the world.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p57">3. Paul at length begged leave of the chief
|
||
captain to speak to him (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p57.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.37" parsed="|Acts|21|37|0|0" passage="Ac 21:37"><i>v.</i>
|
||
37</scripRef>): <i>As he was to be led into the castle,</i> with a
|
||
great deal of calmness and composedness in himself, and a great
|
||
deal of mildness and deference to those about him, <i>he said unto
|
||
the chief captain, "May I speak unto thee?</i> Will it be no
|
||
offence, nor construed as a breach of rule, if I give thee some
|
||
account of myself, since my persecutors can give no account of me?"
|
||
What a humble modest question was this! Paul knew how to speak to
|
||
the greatest of men, and had many a time spoken to his betters, yet
|
||
he humbly begs to leave to speak to this commander, and will not
|
||
speak till he has obtained leave: <i>May I speak unto thee?</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p58">4. The chief captain tells him what notion
|
||
he had of him: <i>Canst thou speak Greek?</i> I am surprised to
|
||
hear thee speak a learned language; for, <i>Art not thou that
|
||
Egyptian who made an uproar?</i> The Jews made the uproar, and then
|
||
would have it thought that Paul had given them occasion for it, by
|
||
beginning first; for probably some of them whispered this in the
|
||
ear of the chief captain. See what false mistaken notions of good
|
||
people and good ministers many run away with, and will not be at
|
||
the pains to have the mistake rectified. It seems, there had lately
|
||
been an insurrection somewhere in that country, headed by an
|
||
Egyptian, who took on him to be a prophet. Josephus mentions this
|
||
story, that "an Egyptian raised a seditious party, promised to show
|
||
them the fall of <i>the walls of Jerusalem from the mount of
|
||
Olives,</i> and that they should enter the city upon the ruins."
|
||
The captain here says <i>that he led out into the wilderness four
|
||
thousand men that were murderers</i>—desperadoes, banditti,
|
||
raparees, cut-throats. What a degeneracy was there in the Jewish
|
||
nation, when there were found there so many that had such a
|
||
character, and could be drawn into such an attempt upon the public
|
||
peace! But Josephus says that "Felix the Roman president went out
|
||
against them, killed four hundred, and took two hundred prisoners,
|
||
and the rest were dispersed."—<i>Antiq.</i> 20. 171; <i>Wars</i>
|
||
2. 263. And Eusebius speaks of it, <i>Hist.</i> 2. 20. It happened
|
||
in the thirteenth year of Claudius, a little before those days,
|
||
about three years ago. The ringleader of this rebellion, it seems,
|
||
had made his escape, and the chief captain concluded that one who
|
||
lay under so great an odium as Paul seemed to lie under, and
|
||
against whom there was so great an outcry, could not be a criminal
|
||
of less figure than this Egyptian. See how good men are exposed to
|
||
ill-will by mistake.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p59">5. Paul rectifies his mistake concerning
|
||
him, by informing him particularly what he was; not such a
|
||
vagabond, a scoundrel, a rake, as that Egyptian, who could give no
|
||
good account of himself. No: <i>I am a man who is a Jew</i>
|
||
originally, and no Egyptian—a Jew both by nation and religion;
|
||
<i>I am of Tarsus, a city of Cilicia,</i> of honest parents and a
|
||
liberal education (Tarsus was a university), and, besides that,
|
||
<i>a citizen of no mean city.</i> Whether he means Tarsus or Rome
|
||
is not certain; they were neither of them mean cities, and he was a
|
||
freeman of both. Though the chief captain had put him under such an
|
||
invidious suspicion, that he was that Egyptian, he kept his temper,
|
||
did not break out into any passionate exclamations against the
|
||
times he lived in or the men he had to do with, did not render
|
||
railing for railing, but mildly denied the charge, and owned what
|
||
he was.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p60">6. He humbly desired a permission from the
|
||
chief captain, whose prisoner he now was, to speak to the people.
|
||
He does not demand it as a debt, though he might have done so, but
|
||
sues for it as a favour, which he will be thankful for: <i>I
|
||
beseech thee, suffer me to speak to the people.</i> The chief
|
||
captain rescued him with no other design than to give him a fair
|
||
hearing. Now, to show that his cause needs no art to give it a
|
||
plausible colour, he desires he may have leave immediately to
|
||
defend himself; for it needed no more than to be set in a true
|
||
light; nor did he depend only on the goodness of his cause, but
|
||
upon the goodness and fidelity of his patron, and that promise of
|
||
his to all his advocates, <i>that it should be given them in that
|
||
same hour what they should speak.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxii-p61">7. He obtained leave to plead his own
|
||
cause, for he needed not to have counsel assigned him, when the
|
||
Spirit of the Father was ready to dictate to him, <scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p61.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.10.20" parsed="|Matt|10|20|0|0" passage="Mt 10:20">Matt. x. 20</scripRef>. <i>The chief captain
|
||
gave him license</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxii-p61.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.40" parsed="|Acts|21|40|0|0" passage="Ac 21:40"><i>v.</i>
|
||
40</scripRef>), so that now he could speak with a good grace, and
|
||
with the more courage; he had, I will not say that favour, but that
|
||
justice, done him by the chief captain, which he could not obtain
|
||
from his countrymen the Jews; for they would not hear him, but the
|
||
captain would, though it were but to satisfy his curiosity. This
|
||
licence being obtained, (1.) The people were attentive to hear:
|
||
<i>Paul stood on the stairs,</i> which gave a little man like
|
||
Zaccheus some advantage, and consequently some boldness, in
|
||
delivering himself. A sorry pulpit it was, and yet better than
|
||
none; it served the purpose, though it was not, like Ezra's pulpit
|
||
of wood, made for the purpose. There he <i>beckoned with the hand
|
||
unto the people,</i> made signs to them to be quiet and to have a
|
||
little patience, for he had something to say to them; and so far he
|
||
gained his point that every one cried hush to his neighbour, and
|
||
there was made a profound silence. Probably the chief captain also
|
||
intimated his charge to all manner of people to keep silence; if
|
||
the people were not required to give audience, it was to no purpose
|
||
at all that Paul was allowed to speak. When the cause of Christ and
|
||
his gospel is to be pleaded, there ought to be a great silence,
|
||
that we may <i>give the more earnest heed,</i> and all little
|
||
enough. (2.) Paul addressed himself to speak, well assured that he
|
||
was serving the interest of Christ's kingdom as truly and
|
||
effectually as if he had been preaching in the synagogue: he
|
||
<i>spoke unto them in the Hebrew tongue,</i> that is, in their own
|
||
vulgar tongue, which was the language of their country, to which he
|
||
hereby owned not only an abiding relation, but an abiding
|
||
respect.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |