874 lines
62 KiB
XML
874 lines
62 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Acts.xxiii" n="xxiii" next="Acts.xxiv" prev="Acts.xxii" progress="24.29%" title="Chapter XXII">
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<h2 id="Acts.xxiii-p0.1">A C T S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Acts.xxiii-p0.2">CHAP. XXII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Acts.xxiii-p1">In the close of the foregoing chapter we had Paul
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bound, according to Agabus's prophecy of the hard usage he should
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receive from the Jews at Jerusalem, yet he had his tongue set at
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liberty, by the permission the chief captain gave him to speak for
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himself; and so intent he is upon using that liberty of speech
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which is allowed him, to the honour of Christ and the service of
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his interest, that he forgets the bonds he is in, makes no mention
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of them, but speaks of the great things Christ had done for him
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with as much ease and cheerfulness as if nothing had been done to
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ruffle him or put him into disorder. We have here, I. His address
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to the people, and their attention to it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.1-Acts.22.2" parsed="|Acts|22|1|22|2" passage="Ac 22:1,2">ver. 1, 2</scripRef>. II. The account he gives of
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himself. 1. What a bigoted Jew he had been in the beginning of his
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time, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.3-Acts.22.5" parsed="|Acts|22|3|22|5" passage="Ac 22:3-5">ver. 3-5</scripRef>. 2. How he
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was miraculously converted and brought over to the faith of Christ,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.6-Acts.22.11" parsed="|Acts|22|6|22|11" passage="Ac 22:6-11">ver. 6-11</scripRef>. 3. How he was
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confirmed and baptized by the ministry of Ananias, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.12-Acts.22.16" parsed="|Acts|22|12|22|16" passage="Ac 22:12-16">ver. 12-16</scripRef>. 4. How he was
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afterwards called, by an immediate warrant from heaven, to be the
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apostle of the Gentiles, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.17-Acts.22.21" parsed="|Acts|22|17|22|21" passage="Ac 22:17-21">ver.
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17-21</scripRef>. III. The interruption given him upon this by the
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rabble, who could not bear to hear any thing said in favour of the
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Gentiles, and the violent passion they flew into upon it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.22-Acts.22.23" parsed="|Acts|22|22|22|23" passage="Ac 22:22,23">ver. 22, 23</scripRef>. IV. Paul's second
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rescue out of the hands of the rabble, and the further course which
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the chief captain took to find out the true reason of this mighty
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clamour against Paul, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.24-Acts.22.25" parsed="|Acts|22|24|22|25" passage="Ac 22:24,25">ver. 24,
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25</scripRef>. V. Paul's pleading his privilege as a Roman citizen,
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by which he was exempted from this barbarous method of inquisition,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.26-Acts.22.29" parsed="|Acts|22|26|22|29" passage="Ac 22:26-29">ver. 26-29</scripRef>. VI. The
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chief captain's removing the cause into the high priest's court,
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and Paul's appearing there, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.30" parsed="|Acts|22|30|0|0" passage="Ac 22:30">ver.
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30</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxiii-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22" parsed="|Acts|22|0|0|0" passage="Ac 22" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxiii-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.1-Acts.22.2" parsed="|Acts|22|1|22|2" passage="Ac 22:1-2" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.22.1-Acts.22.2">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxiii-p1.12">Paul's First Defence.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxiii-p2">1 Men, brethren, and fathers, hear ye my defence
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<i>which I make</i> now unto you. 2 (And when they heard
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that he spake in the Hebrew tongue to them, they kept the more
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silence: and he saith,)</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p3">Paul had, in the <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.40" parsed="|Acts|21|40|0|0" passage="Ac 21:40">last verse of the foregoing chapter</scripRef>, gained a
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great point, by commanding so profound a silence after so loud a
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clamour. Now here observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p4">I. With what an admirable composure and
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presence of mind he addresses himself to speak. Never was poor man
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set upon in a more tumultuous manner, nor with more rage and fury;
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and yet, in what he said, 1. There appears o fright, but his mind
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is sedate and composed. Thus he makes his own words good, <i>None
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of these things move me;</i> and David's (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.3.6" parsed="|Ps|3|6|0|0" passage="Ps 3:6">Ps. iii. 6</scripRef>), <i>I will not be afraid of ten
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thousands of people that have set themselves against me round
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about.</i> 2. There appears no passion. Though the suggestions
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against him were all frivolous and unjust, though it would have
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vexed any man alive to be charged with profaning the temple just
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then when he was contriving and designing to show his respect to
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it, yet he breaks out into no angry expressions, but is <i>led as a
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lamb to the slaughter.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p5">II. What respectful titles he gives even to
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those who thus abused him, and how humbly he craves their
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attention: "<i>Men, brethren, and fathers,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.1" parsed="|Acts|22|1|0|0" passage="Ac 22:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. <i>To you, O men, I call;</i>
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men, that should hear reason, and be ruled by it; men, from whom
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one may expect humanity. You, <i>brethren</i> of the common people;
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you, <i>fathers</i> of the priests." Thus he lets them know that he
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was one of them, and had not renounced his relation to the Jewish
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nation, but still had a kindness and concern for it. Note, Though
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we must not give flattering titles to any, yet we ought to give
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titles of due respect to all; and those we would do good to we
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should endeavour not to provoke. Though he was rescued out of their
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hands, and was taken under the protection of the chief captain, yet
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he does not fall foul upon them, with, <i>Hear now, you rebels;</i>
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but compliments them with, <i>Men, brethren, and fathers.</i> And
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observe, he does not exhibit a charge against them, does not
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recriminate, Hear now what I have to say against you, but, Hear now
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what I have to say for myself: <i>Hear you my defence;</i> a just
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and reasonable request, for every man that is accused has a right
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to answer for himself, and has not justice done him if his answer
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be not patiently and impartially heard.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p6">III. The language he spoke in, which
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recommended what he said to the auditory; <i>He spoke in the Hebrew
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tongue,</i> that is, the vulgar language of the Jews, which, at
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this time, was not the pure Old-Testament Hebrew, but the Syriac, a
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dialect of the Hebrew, or rather a corruption of it, as the Italian
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of the Latin. However, 1. It showed his continued respect to his
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countrymen, the Jews. Though he had conversed so much with the
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Gentiles, yet he still retained the Jews' language, and could talk
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it with ease; by this it appears he is a Jew, <i>for his speech
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betrayeth him.</i> 2. What he said was the more generally
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understood, for that was the language every body spoke, and
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therefore to speak in that language was indeed to appeal to the
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people, by which he might have somewhat to insinuate into their
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affections; and therefore, <i>when they heard that he spoke in the
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Hebrew tongue, they kept the more silence.</i> How can it be
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thought people should give any attention to that which is spoken to
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them in a language they do not understand? The chief captain was
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surprised to hear him speak Greek (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.37" parsed="|Acts|21|37|0|0" passage="Ac 21:37"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 37</scripRef>), the Jews were surprised
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to hear him speak Hebrew, and both therefore think the better of
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him. But how would they have been surprised if they had enquired,
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as they ought to have done, and found in what variety of tongues
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<i>the Spirit gave him utterance!</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.14.18" parsed="|1Cor|14|18|0|0" passage="1Co 14:18">1 Cor. xiv. 18</scripRef>, <i>I speak with tongues more
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than you all.</i> But the truth is, many wise and good men are
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therefore slighted only because they are not known.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxiii-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.3-Acts.22.21" parsed="|Acts|22|3|22|21" passage="Ac 22:3-21" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.22.3-Acts.22.21">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxiii-p6.4">Paul's First Defence.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxiii-p7">3 I am verily a man <i>which am</i> a Jew, born
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in Tarsus, <i>a city</i> in Cilicia, yet brought up in this city at
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the feet of Gamaliel, <i>and</i> taught according to the perfect
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manner of the law of the fathers, and was zealous toward God, as ye
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all are this day. 4 And I persecuted this way unto the
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death, binding and delivering into prisons both men and women.
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5 As also the high priest doth bear me witness, and all the
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estate of the elders: from whom also I received letters unto the
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brethren, and went to Damascus, to bring them which were there
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bound unto Jerusalem, for to be punished. 6 And it came to
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pass, that, as I made my journey, and was come nigh unto Damascus
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about noon, suddenly there shone from heaven a great light round
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about me. 7 And I fell unto the ground, and heard a voice
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saying unto me, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? 8 And I
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answered, Who art thou, Lord? And he said unto me, I am Jesus of
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Nazareth, whom thou persecutest. 9 And they that were with
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me saw indeed the light, and were afraid; but they heard not the
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voice of him that spake to me. 10 And I said, What shall I
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do, Lord? And the Lord said unto me, Arise, and go into Damascus;
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and there it shall be told thee of all things which are appointed
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for thee to do. 11 And when I could not see for the glory of
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that light, being led by the hand of them that were with me, I came
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into Damascus. 12 And one Ananias, a devout man according to
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the law, having a good report of all the Jews which dwelt
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<i>there,</i> 13 Came unto me, and stood, and said unto me,
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Brother Saul, receive thy sight. And the same hour I looked up upon
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him. 14 And he said, The God of our fathers hath chosen
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thee, that thou shouldest know his will, and see that Just One, and
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shouldest hear the voice of his mouth. 15 For thou shalt be
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his witness unto all men of what thou hast seen and heard.
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16 And now why tarriest thou? arise, and be baptized, and wash away
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thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord. 17 And it came to
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pass, that, when I was come again to Jerusalem, even while I prayed
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in the temple, I was in a trance; 18 And saw him saying unto
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me, Make haste, and get thee quickly out of Jerusalem: for they
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will not receive thy testimony concerning me. 19 And I said,
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Lord, they know that I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them
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that believed on thee: 20 And when the blood of thy martyr
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Stephen was shed, I also was standing by, and consenting unto his
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death, and kept the raiment of them that slew him. 21 And he
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said unto me, Depart: for I will send thee far hence unto the
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Gentiles.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p8">Paul here gives such an account of himself
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as might serve not only to satisfy the chief captain that he was
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not that Egyptian he took him to be, but the Jews also that he was
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not that enemy to their church and nation, to their law and temple,
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they took him to be, and that what he did in preaching Christ, and
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particularly in preaching him to the Gentiles, he did by a divine
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commission. He here gives them to understand,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p9">I. What his extraction and education were.
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1. That he was one of their own nation, <i>of the stock of Israel,
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of the seed of Abraham, a Hebrew of the Hebrews,</i> not of any
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obscure family, or a renegado of some other nation: "No, <i>I am
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verily a man who is a Jew,</i> <b><i>aner Ioudaios</i></b>—<i>a
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Jewish man;</i> I am a man, and therefore ought not to be treated
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as a beast; a man who is a Jew, not a barbarian; I am a sincere
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friend to your nation, for I am one of it, and should defile my own
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nest if I should unjustly derogate from the honour of your law and
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your temple." 2. That he was born in a creditable reputable place,
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<i>in Tarsus, a city of Cilicia,</i> and was by his birth a freeman
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of that city. He was not born in servitude, as some of the Jews of
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the dispersion, it is likely, were; but he was a gentleman born,
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and perhaps could produce his certificate of his freedom in that
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ancient and honourable city. This was, indeed, but a small matter
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to make any boast of, and yet it was needful to be mentioned at
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this time to those who insolently trampled upon him, as if he were
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to be ranked with the children of fools, yea, the children of base
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men, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.30.8" parsed="|Job|30|8|0|0" passage="Job 30:8">Job xxx. 8</scripRef>. 3. That he
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had a learned and liberal education. He was not only a Jew, and a
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gentleman, but a scholar. He <i>was brought up</i> in Jerusalem,
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the principal seat of the Jewish learning, and <i>at the feet of
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Gamaliel,</i> whom they all knew to be an eminent doctor of the
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Jewish law, of which Paul was designed to be himself a teacher; and
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therefore he could not be ignorant of their law, nor be thought to
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slight it because he did not know it. His parents had brought him
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very young to this city, designing him for a Pharisee; and some
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think his being brought up at the feet of Gamaliel intimates, not
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only that he was one of his pupils, but that he was, above any
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other, diligent and constant in attending his lectures, observant
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of him, and obsequious to him, in all he said, as <i>Mary,</i> that
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<i>sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word.</i> 4. That he was in
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his early days a very forward and eminent professor of the Jews'
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religion; his studies and learning were all directed that way. So
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far was he from being principled in his youth with any disaffection
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to the religious usages of the Jews that there was not a young man
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among them who had a greater and more entire veneration for them
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than he had, was more strict in observing them himself, or more hot
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in enforcing them upon others. (1.) He was an intelligent professor
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of their religion, and had a clear head. He minded his business at
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Gamaliel's feet, and was there <i>taught according to the perfect
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manner of the law of the fathers.</i> What departures he had made
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from the law were not owing to any confused or mistaken notions of
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it, for he understood it to a nicety, <b><i>kata
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akribeian</i></b>—<i>according to the most accurate and exact
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method.</i> He was not trained up in the principles of the
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latitudinarians, had nothing in him of a Sadducee, but was of that
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sect that was most studious in the law, kept most close to it, and,
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to make it more strict than it was, added to it the traditions of
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the elders, the law of the fathers, the law which was given to
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them, and which they gave to their children, and so it was handed
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down to us. Paul had as great a value for antiquity, and tradition,
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and the authority of the church, as any of them had; and there was
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never a Jew of them all that understood his religion better than
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Paul did, or could better give an account of it or a reason for it.
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(2.) He was an active professor of their religion, and had a warm
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heart: <i>I was zealous towards God, as you all are this day.</i>
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Many that are very well skilled in the theory of religion are
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willing to leave the practice of it to others, but Paul was as much
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a zealot as a rabbi. He was zealous against every thing that the
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law prohibited, and for every thing that the law enjoined; and this
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was zeal towards God, because he thought it was for the honour of
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God and the service of his interests; and here he compliments his
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hearers with a candid and charitable opinion of them, <i>that they
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all were this day zealous towards God; he bears them record</i>
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(<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.10.2" parsed="|Rom|10|2|0|0" passage="Ro 10:2">Rom. x. 2</scripRef>), <i>that they
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have a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge.</i> In hating
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him, and casting him out, they said, <i>Let the Lord be
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glorified</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.66.5" parsed="|Isa|66|5|0|0" passage="Isa 66:5">Isa. lxvi.
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5</scripRef>), and, though this did by no means justify their rage,
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yet it enabled those that prayed, <i>Father, forgive them,</i> to
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plead, as Christ did, <i>For they know not what they do.</i> And
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when Paul owns that he had been zealous for God in the law of
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Moses, <i>as they were this day,</i> he intimates his hope that
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they might be zealous for God, in Christ, as he was this day.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p10">II. What a fiery furious persecutor he had
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been of the Christian religion in the beginning of his time,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.4-Acts.22.5" parsed="|Acts|22|4|22|5" passage="Ac 22:4,5"><i>v.</i> 4, 5</scripRef>. He
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mentions this to make it the more plainly and evidently to appear
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that the change which was wrought upon him, when he was converted
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to the Christian faith, was purely the effect of a divine power;
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for he was so far from having any previous inclinations to it, or
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favourable opinions of it, that immediately before that sudden
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change was wrought in him he had the utmost antipathy imaginable to
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Christianity, and was filled with rage against it to the last
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degree. And perhaps he mentions it to justify God in his present
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trouble; how unrighteous soever those were that persecuted him, God
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was righteous, who permitted them to do it, for time was when he
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was a persecutor; and he may have a further view in it to invite
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and encourage those people to repent, for he himself had been <i>a
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blasphemer, and a persecutor,</i> and yet obtained mercy. Let us
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view Paul's picture of himself when he was a persecutor. 1. He
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hated Christianity with a mortal enmity: <i>I persecuted this way
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unto the death,</i> that is, "Those that walked in this way I
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aimed, if possible, to be the death of." <i>He breathed out
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slaughter against them,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.1" parsed="|Acts|9|1|0|0" passage="Ac 9:1"><i>ch.</i>
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ix. 1</scripRef>. When <i>they were put to death, he gave his voice
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against them,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.10" parsed="|Acts|26|10|0|0" passage="Ac 26:10"><i>ch.</i> xxvi.
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10</scripRef>. Nay, he persecuted not only those that walked in
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this way, but the way itself, Christianity, which was branded as a
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byway, a sect; he aimed to persecute this to the death, to be the
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ruin of this religion. He <i>persecuted it to the death,</i> that
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is, he could have been willing himself to die in his opposition to
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Christianity, so some understand it. He would contentedly have lost
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his life, and would have thought it well laid out, in defence of
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the laws and traditions of the fathers. 2. He did all he could to
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frighten people from this way, and out of it, by <i>binding and
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delivering into prison both men and women;</i> he filled the jails
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with Christians. Now that he himself was bound, he lays a
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particular stress upon this part of his charge against himself,
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that he had bound the Christians, and carried them to prison; he
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likewise reflects upon it with a special regret that he had
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imprisoned not only the men, but the women, the weaker sex, who
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ought to be treated with particular tenderness and compassion. 3.
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He was employed by the great sanhedrim, the high priest, and all
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the estate of the elders, as an agent for them, in suppressing this
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new sect; so much had he already signalized himself for his zeal
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against it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.5" parsed="|Acts|22|5|0|0" passage="Ac 22:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>. The
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high priest can witness for him that he was ready to be employed in
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any service against the Christians. When they heard that many of
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the Jews at Damascus had embraced the Christian faith, to deter
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others from doing the like they resolved to proceed against them
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with the utmost severity, and could not think of a fitter person to
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be employed in that business, nor one more likely to go through
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with it, than Paul. They therefore sent him, and letters by him, to
|
||
the Jews at Damascus, here called <i>the brethren,</i> because they
|
||
all descended from one common stock, and were of one family in
|
||
religion too, ordering them to be assisting to Paul in seizing
|
||
those among them that had turned Christians, and bringing them up
|
||
prisoners to Jerusalem, in order to their being punished as
|
||
deserters from the faith and worship of the God of Israel; and so
|
||
might either be compelled to retract, or be put to death for a
|
||
terror to others. Thus did Saul make <i>havoc of the church,</i>
|
||
and was in a fair way, if he had gone on awhile, to ruin it, and
|
||
root it out. "Such a one," says Paul, "I was at first, just such as
|
||
you now are. I know the heart of a persecutor, and therefore pity
|
||
you, and pray that you may know the heart of a convert, as God soon
|
||
made me to do. <i>And who was I that I could withstand
|
||
God?</i>"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p11">III. In what manner he was converted and
|
||
made what he now was. It was not from any natural or external
|
||
causes; he did not change his religion from an affectation of
|
||
novelty, for he was then as well affected to antiquity as he used
|
||
to be; nor did it arise from discontent because he was disappointed
|
||
in his preferment, for he was now, more than ever, in the way of
|
||
preferment in the Jewish church; much less could it arise from
|
||
covetousness, or ambition, or any hope of mending his fortune in
|
||
the world by turning Christian, for it was to expose himself to all
|
||
manner of disgrace and trouble; nor had he any conversation with
|
||
the apostles or any other Christians, by whose subtlety and
|
||
sophistry he might be thought to have been wheedled into this
|
||
change. No, it was the Lord's doing, and the circumstances of the
|
||
doing of it were enough to justify him in the change, to all those
|
||
who believe there is a supernatural power; and none can condemn him
|
||
for it, without reflecting upon that divine energy by which he was
|
||
he rein overruled. He relates the story of his conversion here very
|
||
particularly, as we had it before (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.1-Acts.9.19" parsed="|Acts|9|1|9|19" passage="Ac 9:1-19"><i>ch.</i> ix.</scripRef>), aiming to show that it was
|
||
purely the act of God. 1. He was a fully bent upon persecuting the
|
||
Christians just before Christ arrested him as ever. He <i>made his
|
||
journey, and was come nigh to Damascus</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.6" parsed="|Acts|22|6|0|0" passage="Ac 22:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>), and had no other thought than to
|
||
execute the cruel design he was sent upon; he was not conscious of
|
||
the least compassionate relentings towards the poor Christians, but
|
||
still represented them to himself as heretics, schismatics, and
|
||
dangerous enemies both to church and state. 2. It was <i>a light
|
||
from heaven</i> that first startled him, <i>a great light,</i>
|
||
which <i>shone suddenly round about him,</i> and the Jews knew that
|
||
God is light, and his angels angels of light, and that such a light
|
||
as this shining at noon, and therefore exceeding that of the sun,
|
||
must be from God. Had it shone in upon him into some private room,
|
||
there might have been a cheat in it, but it shone upon him in the
|
||
open road, at high noon, and so strongly <i>that it struck him to
|
||
the ground</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.7" parsed="|Acts|22|7|0|0" passage="Ac 22:7"><i>v.</i>
|
||
7</scripRef>), and all <i>that were with him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.14" parsed="|Acts|26|14|0|0" passage="Ac 26:14"><i>ch.</i> xxvi. 14</scripRef>. They could not
|
||
deny but that surely the Lord was in this light. 3. It was a voice
|
||
<i>from heaven</i> that first begat in him awful thoughts of Jesus
|
||
Christ, of whom before he had had nothing but hateful spiteful
|
||
thoughts. The voice called to him by name, to distinguish him from
|
||
<i>those that journeyed with him, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou
|
||
me?</i> And when he asked, <i>Who art thou, Lord?</i> it was
|
||
answered, <i>I am Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou persecutest,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.8" parsed="|Acts|22|8|0|0" passage="Ac 22:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>. By which it
|
||
appeared that this Jesus of Nazareth, whom they also were now
|
||
persecuting, was one that spoke from heaven, and they knew it was
|
||
dangerous resisting one that did so, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.6" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.25" parsed="|Heb|12|25|0|0" passage="Heb 12:25">Heb. xii. 25</scripRef>. 4. Lest it should be objected,
|
||
"How came this light and voice to work such a change upon him, and
|
||
not upon those that journeyed with him?" (though, it is very
|
||
probable, it had a good effect upon them, and that they thereupon
|
||
became Christians), he observes <i>that his fellow travellers saw
|
||
indeed the light, and were afraid</i> they should be consumed with
|
||
fire from heaven, their own consciences, perhaps, now telling them
|
||
that the way they were in was not good, but like Balaam's when he
|
||
was going to curse Israel, and therefore they might expect to meet
|
||
an angel with a flaming glittering sword; but, though the light
|
||
made them afraid, they heard not the voice of him that spoke to
|
||
Paul, that is, they did not distinctly hear the words. Now faith
|
||
comes by hearing, and therefore that change was now presently
|
||
wrought upon him that heard the words, and heard them directed to
|
||
himself, which was not wrought upon those who only saw the light;
|
||
and yet it might afterwards be wrought upon them too. 5. He assures
|
||
them that when he was thus startled he referred himself entirely to
|
||
a divine guidance; he did not hereupon presently cry out, "Well, I
|
||
will be a Christian," but, "<i>What shall I do, Lord?</i> Let the
|
||
same voice from heaven that has stopped me in the wrong way guide
|
||
me into the right way, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.10" parsed="|Acts|22|10|0|0" passage="Ac 22:10"><i>v.</i>
|
||
10</scripRef>. Lord, tell me what I shall do, and I will do it."
|
||
And immediately he had directions to go to Damascus, and there he
|
||
should hear further from him that now spoke to him: "No more needs
|
||
to be said from heaven, <i>there it shall be told thee,</i> by a
|
||
man like thyself, in the name of him that now speaks to thee,
|
||
<i>all things which are appointed for thee to do.</i>" The
|
||
extraordinary ways of divine revelation, by visions, and voices,
|
||
and the appearance of angels, were designed, both in the Old
|
||
Testament and in the New, only to introduce and establish the
|
||
ordinary method by the scriptures and a standing ministry, and
|
||
therefore were generally superseded when these were settled. The
|
||
angel did not preach to Cornelius himself, but bade him send for
|
||
Peter; so the voice here tells not Paul what he shall do, but bids
|
||
him go to Damascus, and there it shall be told him. 6. As a
|
||
demonstration of the greatness of that light which fastened upon
|
||
him, he tells them of the immediate effect it had upon his
|
||
eye-sight (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.11" parsed="|Acts|22|11|0|0" passage="Ac 22:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>):
|
||
<i>I could not see for the glory of that light.</i> It struck him
|
||
blind for the present. <i>Nimium sensibile lædit sensum—Its
|
||
radiance dazzled him.</i> Condemned sinners are struck blind, as
|
||
the Sodomites and Egyptians were, by the power of darkness, and it
|
||
is a lasting blindness, like that of the unbelieving Jews; but
|
||
convinced sinners are struck blind, as Paul here was, not by
|
||
darkness, but by light: they are for the present brought to be at a
|
||
loss within themselves, but it is in order to their being
|
||
enlightened, as the putting of clay upon the eyes of the blind man
|
||
was the designed method of his cure. Those that were with Paul had
|
||
not the light so directly darted into their faces as Paul had unto
|
||
his, and therefore they were not blinded, as he was; yet,
|
||
considering the issue, who would not rather have chosen his lot
|
||
than theirs? They, having their sight, led <i>Paul by the hand into
|
||
the city.</i> Paul, being a Pharisee, was proud of his spiritual
|
||
eyesight. The Pharisees said, <i>Are we blind also?</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.9" osisRef="Bible:John.9.40" parsed="|John|9|40|0|0" passage="Joh 9:40">John ix. 40</scripRef>. Nay, they were confident
|
||
<i>that they themselves were guides to the blind,</i> and <i>lights
|
||
to those that were in darkness,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.10" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.19" parsed="|Rom|2|19|0|0" passage="Ro 2:19">Rom. ii. 19</scripRef>. Now Paul was thus struck with
|
||
bodily blindness to make him sensible of his spiritual blindness,
|
||
and his mistake concerning himself, when he was <i>alive without
|
||
the law,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p11.11" osisRef="Bible:Rom.7.9" parsed="|Rom|7|9|0|0" passage="Ro 7:9">Rom. vii. 9</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p12">IV. How he was confirmed in the change he
|
||
had made, and further directed what he should do, by Ananias who
|
||
lived at Damascus.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p13">Observe, 1. The character here given of
|
||
Ananias. He was not a man that was any way prejudiced against the
|
||
Jewish nation or religion, but was himself <i>a devout man
|
||
according to the law;</i> if not a Jew by birth, yet one that had
|
||
been proselyted to the Jewish religion, and therefore called a
|
||
devout man, and thence advanced further to the faith of Christ; and
|
||
he conducted himself so well that he had a <i>good report of all
|
||
the Jews that dwelt at Damascus.</i> This was the first Christian
|
||
that Paul had any friendly communication with, and it was not
|
||
likely that he should instil into him any such notions as they
|
||
suspected him to espouse, injurious to the law or to this holy
|
||
place.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p14">2. The cure immediately wrought by him upon
|
||
Paul's eyes, which miracle was to confirm Ananias's mission to
|
||
Paul, and to ratify all that he should afterwards say to him. He
|
||
<i>came to him</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.13" parsed="|Acts|22|13|0|0" passage="Ac 22:13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
13</scripRef>); and, to assure him that he came to him from Christ
|
||
(the very same who had torn and would heal him, had smitten, but
|
||
would bind him up, had taken away his sight, but would restore it
|
||
again, with advantage), he <i>stood by him, and said, Brother Saul,
|
||
receive thy sight.</i> Power went along with this word, and <i>the
|
||
same hour,</i> immediately, he recovered his sight, and <i>looked
|
||
up upon him,</i> ready to receive from him the instructions sent by
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p15">3. The declaration which Ananias makes to
|
||
him of the favour, the peculiar favour, which the Lord Jesus
|
||
designed him above any other.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p16">(1.) In the present manifestation of
|
||
himself to him (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.14" parsed="|Acts|22|14|0|0" passage="Ac 22:14"><i>v.</i>
|
||
14</scripRef>): <i>The God of our fathers has chosen thee.</i> This
|
||
powerful call is the result of a particular choice; his calling God
|
||
the God of our fathers intimates that Ananias was himself a Jew by
|
||
birth, that observed the law of the fathers, and lived upon the
|
||
promise made unto the fathers; and he gives a reason why he said
|
||
<i>Brother Saul,</i> when he speaks of God as the God of our
|
||
fathers: <i>This God of our fathers has chosen thee that thou
|
||
shouldst,</i> [1.] <i>Know his will,</i> the will of his precept
|
||
that is to be done by thee, the will of his providence that is to
|
||
be done concerning thee. He hath chosen thee that thou shouldst
|
||
know it in a more peculiar manner; not of man nor by man, but
|
||
immediately by <i>the revelation of Christ,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Gal.1.1-Gal.1.2" parsed="|Gal|1|1|1|2" passage="Ga 1:1,2">Gal. i. 1, 12</scripRef>. Those whom God hath chosen he
|
||
hath chosen to know his will, and to do it. [2.] <i>That thou
|
||
shouldst see that Just One, and shouldst hear the voice of his
|
||
mouth,</i> and so shouldst know his will immediately from himself.
|
||
This was what Paul was, in a particular manner, chosen to above
|
||
others; it was a distinguishing favour, that he should see Christ
|
||
here upon earth after his ascension into heaven. Stephen saw him
|
||
<i>standing at the right hand of God,</i> but Paul saw him standing
|
||
at his right hand. This honour none had but Paul. Stephen saw him,
|
||
but we do not find that he heard the voice of his mouth, as Paul
|
||
did, who says, <i>he was last of all seen of me, as of one born out
|
||
of due time,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.15.8" parsed="|1Cor|15|8|0|0" passage="1Co 15:8">1 Cor. xv.
|
||
8</scripRef>. Christ is here called <i>that Just One;</i> for he is
|
||
Jesus Christ the righteous, and suffered wrongfully. Observe, Those
|
||
whom God has chosen to know his will must have an eye to Christ,
|
||
and must see him, and hear the voice of his mouth; for it is by him
|
||
that God has made known his will, his good-will to us, and he has
|
||
said, <i>Hear you him.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p17">(2.) In the after-manifestation of himself
|
||
by him to others (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.15" parsed="|Acts|22|15|0|0" passage="Ac 22:15"><i>v.</i>
|
||
15</scripRef>): "<i>Thou shalt be his witness,</i> not only a
|
||
monument of his grace, as a pillar may be, but a witness <i>viva
|
||
voce—by word of mouth;</i> thou shalt publish his gospel, as that
|
||
which thou hast experienced the power of, and been delivered into,
|
||
the mould of; <i>thou shalt be his witness unto all men,</i>
|
||
Gentiles as well as Jews, <i>of what thou hast seen and heard,</i>
|
||
now at the very first." And finding Paul so particularly relating
|
||
the manner of his conversation in his apologies for himself, here
|
||
and <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.1-Acts.26.32" parsed="|Acts|26|1|26|32" passage="Ac 26:1-32"><i>ch.</i> xxvi.</scripRef>, we
|
||
have reason to think that he frequently related the same narrative
|
||
in his preaching for the conversion of others; he told them what
|
||
God had done for his soul, to encourage them to hope that he would
|
||
do something for their souls.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p18">4. The counsel and encouragement he gave
|
||
him to join himself to the Lord Jesus by baptism (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.16" parsed="|Acts|22|16|0|0" passage="Ac 22:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>): <i>Arise, and be
|
||
baptized,</i> He had in his circumcision been given up to God, but
|
||
he must now by baptism be given up to God in Christ—must embrace
|
||
the Christian religion and the privileges of it, in submission to
|
||
the precepts of it. This must now be done immediately upon his
|
||
conversion, and so was added to his circumcision: but to the seed
|
||
of the faithful it comes in the room of it; for it is, as that was
|
||
to Abraham and his believing seed, <i>a seal of the righteousness
|
||
which is by faith.</i> (1.) The great gospel privilege which by
|
||
baptism we have sealed to us is the remission of sins: <i>Be
|
||
baptized and wash away thy sins;</i> that is, "Receive the comfort
|
||
of the pardon of thy sins in the through Jesus Christ and lay hold
|
||
of his righteousness for that purpose, and receive power against
|
||
sin for the mortifying of thy corruption;" for our being washed
|
||
includes our being both justified and sanctified, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.6.11" parsed="|1Cor|6|11|0|0" passage="1Co 6:11">1 Cor. vi. 11</scripRef>. Be baptized, and rest
|
||
not in the sign, but make sure of the thing signified, the putting
|
||
away of the filth of sin. (2.) The great gospel duty which by our
|
||
baptism we are bound to is <i>to call on the name of the Lord, the
|
||
Lord Jesus;</i> to acknowledge him to be our Lord and our God, and
|
||
to apply to him accordingly; to give honour to him, to put all our
|
||
petitions in his hand. To <i>call on the name of Jesus Christ our
|
||
Lord</i> (Son of David, have mercy on us) is the periphrasis of a
|
||
Christian, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p18.3" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.1.2" parsed="|1Cor|1|2|0|0" passage="1Co 1:2">1 Cor. i. 2</scripRef>. We
|
||
must <i>wash away our sins, calling on the name of the Lord;</i>
|
||
that is, we must seek for the pardon of our sins in Christ's name,
|
||
and in dependence on him and his righteousness. In prayer, we must
|
||
not any longer call God the God of Abraham, but the Father of our
|
||
Lord Jesus Christ, and in him our Father; in every prayer, our eye
|
||
must be to Christ. (3.) We must do this quickly. <i>Why tarriest
|
||
thou?</i> Our covenanting with God in Christ is needful work, that
|
||
must not be deferred. The case is so plain that it is needless to
|
||
deliberate; and the hazard so great that it is folly to delay. Why
|
||
should not that be done at the present time that must be done some
|
||
time, or we are undone?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p19">V. How he was commissioned to go and preach
|
||
the gospel to the Gentiles. This was the great thing for which they
|
||
were so angry at him, and therefore it was requisite he should for
|
||
this, in a special manner, produce a divine warrant; and here he
|
||
does it. This commission he did not receive presently upon his
|
||
conversion, for this was <i>at Jerusalem,</i> whither he did not go
|
||
till <i>three years after,</i> or more (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Gal.1.18" parsed="|Gal|1|18|0|0" passage="Ga 1:18">Gal. i. 18</scripRef>); and whether it was then, or
|
||
afterwards, that he had this vision here spoken of, we are not
|
||
certain. But, to reconcile them, if possible, to his preaching the
|
||
gospel among the Gentiles, he tells them, 1. That he received his
|
||
orders to do it when he was at prayer, begging of God to appoint
|
||
him his work and to show him the course he should steer; and (which
|
||
was a circumstance that would have some weight with those he was
|
||
now speaking to) he was <i>at prayer in the temple,</i> which was
|
||
to be called <i>a house of prayer for all people;</i> not only in
|
||
which all people should pray, but in which all people should be
|
||
prayed for. Now as Paul's praying in the temple was an evidence,
|
||
contrary to their malicious suggestion, that he had a veneration
|
||
for the temple, though he did not make an idol of it as they did;
|
||
so God's giving him this commission there in the temple was an
|
||
evidence that the sending him to the Gentiles would be no prejudice
|
||
to the temple, unless the Jews by their infidelity made it so. Now
|
||
it would be a great satisfaction to Paul afterwards, in the
|
||
execution of this commission, to reflect upon it that he received
|
||
it when he was at prayer. 2. He received it in a vision. He fell
|
||
<i>into a trance</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.17" parsed="|Acts|22|17|0|0" passage="Ac 22:17"><i>v.</i>
|
||
17</scripRef>), his external senses, for the present, locked up; he
|
||
was in an ecstasy, as when he was <i>caught up into the third
|
||
heaven,</i> and was not at that time sensible whether he was <i>in
|
||
the body or out of the body.</i> In this trance he saw Jesus
|
||
Christ, not with the eyes of his body, as at his conversion, but
|
||
represented to the eye of his mind (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.18" parsed="|Acts|22|18|0|0" passage="Ac 22:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>): <i>I saw him saying unto
|
||
me.</i> Our eye must be upon Christ when we are receiving the law
|
||
from his mouth; and we must not only hear him speak, but see him
|
||
speaking to us. 3. Before Christ gave him a commission to go to the
|
||
Gentiles, he told him it was to no purpose for him to think of
|
||
doing any good at Jerusalem; so that they must not blame him, but
|
||
themselves, if he be sent to the Gentiles. Paul came to Jerusalem
|
||
full of hopes that, by the grace of God, he might be instrumental
|
||
to bring those to the faith of Christ who had stood it out against
|
||
the ministry of the other apostles; and perhaps this was what he
|
||
was now praying for, that he, having had his education at Jerusalem
|
||
and being well known there, might be employed in gathering the
|
||
children of Jerusalem to Christ that were not yet gathered, which
|
||
he thought he had particular advantages for doing of. But Christ
|
||
crosses the measures he had laid: "<i>Make haste,</i>" says he,
|
||
"<i>and get thee quickly out of Jerusalem;</i>" for, though thou
|
||
thinkest thyself more likely to work upon them than others, thou
|
||
wilt find they are more prejudiced against thee than against any
|
||
other, and therefore "<i>will not receive thy testimony concerning
|
||
me.</i>" As God knows before who will receive the gospel, so he
|
||
knows who will reject it. 4. Paul, notwithstanding this, renewed
|
||
his petition that he might be employed at Jerusalem, because they
|
||
knew, better than any did, what he had been before his conversion,
|
||
and therefore must ascribe so great a change in him to the power of
|
||
almighty grace, and consequently give the greater regard to his
|
||
testimony; thus he reasoned, both with himself and with the Lord,
|
||
and thought he reasoned justly (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.19-Acts.22.20" parsed="|Acts|22|19|22|20" passage="Ac 22:19,20"><i>v.</i> 19, 20</scripRef>): "<i>Lord,</i>" says he,
|
||
"<i>they know</i> that I was once of their mind, that I was as
|
||
bitter an enemy as any of them to such as believed on thee, that I
|
||
irritated the civil power against them, and <i>imprisoned them,</i>
|
||
and turned the edge of the spiritual power against them too, and
|
||
<i>beat them in every synagogue.</i>" And therefore they will not
|
||
impute my preaching Christ to education nor to any prepossession in
|
||
his favour (as they do that of other ministers), but will the more
|
||
readily regard what I say because they know I have myself been one
|
||
of them: particularly in Stephen's case; they know that when he was
|
||
stoned I was standing by, I was aiding and abetting and
|
||
<i>consenting to his death,</i> and in token of this <i>kept the
|
||
clothes of those that stoned him.</i> Now "Lord," says he, "if I
|
||
appear among them, preaching the doctrine that Stephen preached and
|
||
suffered for, they will no doubt receive my testimony." "No," says
|
||
Christ to him, "they will not; but will be more exasperated against
|
||
thee as a deserter from, than against others whom they look upon
|
||
only as strangers to, their constitution." 5. Paul's petition for a
|
||
warrant to preach the gospel at Jerusalem is overruled, and he has
|
||
peremptory orders to go among the Gentiles (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.21" parsed="|Acts|22|21|0|0" passage="Ac 22:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>): <i>Depart, for I will send
|
||
thee far hence, unto the Gentiles.</i> Note, God often gives
|
||
gracious answers to the prayers of his people, not in the thing
|
||
itself that they pray for, but in something better. Abraham prays,
|
||
<i>O that Ishmael may live before thee;</i> and God hears him for
|
||
Isaac. So Paul here prays that he may be an instrument of
|
||
converting souls at Jerusalem: "No," says Christ, "but thou shalt
|
||
be employed among the Gentiles, and <i>more shall be the children
|
||
of the desolate than those of the married wife.</i>" It is God that
|
||
appoints his labourers both their day and their place, and it is
|
||
fit they should acquiesce in his appointment, though it may cross
|
||
their own inclinations. Paul hankers after Jerusalem: to be a
|
||
preacher there was the summit of his ambition; but Christ designs
|
||
him greater preferment. He shall not enter into other men's labours
|
||
(as the other apostles did, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.6" osisRef="Bible:John.4.38" parsed="|John|4|38|0|0" passage="Joh 4:38">John iv.
|
||
38</scripRef>), but shall break up new ground, and <i>preach the
|
||
gospel where Christ was not named,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p19.7" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.20" parsed="|Rom|15|20|0|0" passage="Ro 15:20">Rom. xv. 20</scripRef>. So often does Providence
|
||
contrive better for us than we for ourselves; to the guidance of
|
||
that we must therefore refer ourselves. <i>He shall choose our
|
||
inheritance for us.</i> Observe, Paul shall not go to preach among
|
||
the Gentiles without a commission: <i>I will send thee.</i> And, if
|
||
Christ send him, his Spirit will go along with him, he will stand
|
||
by him, will carry him on, and bear him out, and give him to see
|
||
the fruit of his labours. Let not Paul set his heart upon
|
||
Jerusalem, for he must be sent far hence; his call must be quite
|
||
another way, and his work of another kind. And it might be a
|
||
mitigation of the offence of this to the Jews that he did not set
|
||
up a Gentile church in the neighbouring nations; others did this in
|
||
their immediate vicinity; he was sent to places at a distance, a
|
||
vast way off, where what he did could not be thought an annoyance
|
||
to them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p20">Now, if they would lay all this together,
|
||
surely they would see that they had no reason to be angry with Paul
|
||
for preaching among the Gentiles, or construe it as an act of
|
||
ill-will to his own nation, for he was compelled to it, contrary to
|
||
his own mind, by an overruling command from heaven.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxiii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.22-Acts.22.30" parsed="|Acts|22|22|22|30" passage="Ac 22:22-30" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.22.22-Acts.22.30">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxiii-p20.2">Paul's First Defence.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxiii-p21">22 And they gave him audience unto this word,
|
||
and <i>then</i> lifted up their voices, and said, Away with such a
|
||
<i>fellow</i> from the earth: for it is not fit that he should
|
||
live. 23 And as they cried out, and cast off <i>their</i>
|
||
clothes, and threw dust into the air, 24 The chief captain
|
||
commanded him to be brought into the castle, and bade that he
|
||
should be examined by scourging; that he might know wherefore they
|
||
cried so against him. 25 And as they bound him with thongs,
|
||
Paul said unto the centurion that stood by, Is it lawful for you to
|
||
scourge a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned? 26 When the
|
||
centurion heard <i>that,</i> he went and told the chief captain,
|
||
saying, Take heed what thou doest: for this man is a Roman.
|
||
27 Then the chief captain came, and said unto him, Tell me, art
|
||
thou a Roman? He said, Yea. 28 And the chief captain
|
||
answered, With a great sum obtained I this freedom. And Paul said,
|
||
But I was <i>free</i> born. 29 Then straightway they
|
||
departed from him which should have examined him: and the chief
|
||
captain also was afraid, after he knew that he was a Roman, and
|
||
because he had bound him. 30 On the morrow, because he would
|
||
have known the certainty wherefore he was accused of the Jews, he
|
||
loosed him from <i>his</i> bands, and commanded the chief priests
|
||
and all their council to appear, and brought Paul down, and set him
|
||
before them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p22">Paul was going on with this account of
|
||
himself, had shown them his commission to preach among the Gentiles
|
||
without any peevish reflections upon the Jews, and we may suppose
|
||
designed next to show how he was afterwards, by a special direction
|
||
of the Holy Ghost at Antioch, separated to this service, how tender
|
||
he was of the Jews, how respectful to them, and how careful to give
|
||
them the precedency in all places whither he came, and to unite
|
||
Jews and Gentiles in one body; and then to show how wonderfully God
|
||
had owned him, and what good service had been done to the interest
|
||
of God's kingdom among men in general, without damage to any of the
|
||
true interests of the Jewish church in particular. But, whatever he
|
||
designs to say, they resolve he shall say no more to them: <i>They
|
||
gave him audience to this word.</i> Hitherto they had heard him
|
||
with patience and some attention. But when he speaks of being sent
|
||
to the Gentiles, though it was what Christ himself said to him,
|
||
they cannot bear it, not so much as to hear the Gentiles named,
|
||
such an enmity had they to them, and such a jealousy of them. Upon
|
||
the mention of this, they have no manner of patience, but forget
|
||
all rules of decency and equity; thus were they <i>provoked to
|
||
jealousy by those that were no people,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.10.19" parsed="|Rom|10|19|0|0" passage="Ro 10:19">Rom. x. 19</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p23">Now here we are told how furious and
|
||
outrageous the people were against Paul, for mentioning the
|
||
Gentiles as taken into the cognizance of divine grace, and so
|
||
justifying his preaching among them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p24">I. They interrupted him, by lifting up
|
||
their voice, to put him into confusion, and that nobody might hear
|
||
a word he said. Galled consciences kick at the least touch; and
|
||
those who are resolved not to be rules by reason commonly resolve
|
||
not to hear it if they can help it. And the spirit of enmity
|
||
against the gospel of Christ commonly shows itself in silencing the
|
||
ministers of Christ and his gospel, and stopping their mouths, as
|
||
the Jews did Paul's here. Their fathers had said to the best of
|
||
seers, <i>See not,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.30.10" parsed="|Isa|30|10|0|0" passage="Isa 30:10">Isa. xxx.
|
||
10</scripRef>. And so they to the best of speakers, <i>Speak not.
|
||
Forbear, wherefore shouldst thou be smitten?</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.25.16" parsed="|2Chr|25|16|0|0" passage="2Ch 25:16">2 Chron. xxv. 16</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p25">II. They clamoured against him as one that
|
||
was unworthy of life, much more of liberty. Without weighing the
|
||
arguments he had urged in his own defence, or offering to make any
|
||
answer to them, they cried out with a confused noise, "<i>Away with
|
||
such a fellow</i> as this <i>from the earth,</i> who pretends to
|
||
have a commission to preach to the Gentiles; why, <i>it is not fit
|
||
that he should live.</i>" Thus the men that have been the greatest
|
||
blessings of their age have been represented not only as the
|
||
burdens of the earth, but the plague of their generation. He that
|
||
was worthy of the greatest honours of life is condemned as not
|
||
worthy of life itself. See what different sentiments God and men
|
||
have of good men, and yet they both agree in this that they are not
|
||
likely to live long in this world. Paul says of the godly Jews that
|
||
they were men of <i>whom the world was not worthy,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.38" parsed="|Heb|11|38|0|0" passage="Heb 11:38">Heb. xi. 38</scripRef>. And therefore they must
|
||
be removed, that the world may be justly punished with the loss of
|
||
them. The ungodly Jews here say of Paul that it was not fit he
|
||
should live; and therefore he must be removed, that the world may
|
||
be eased of the burden of him, as of the two witnesses, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.11.10" parsed="|Rev|11|10|0|0" passage="Re 11:10">Rev. xi. 10</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p26">III. They went stark mad against Paul, and
|
||
against the chief captain for not killing him immediately at their
|
||
request, or throwing him as a pry into their teeth, that they might
|
||
devour him (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.23" parsed="|Acts|22|23|0|0" passage="Ac 22:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>);
|
||
as men whose reason was quite lost in passion, they cried out like
|
||
roaring lions or raging bears, and howled like the evening wolves;
|
||
they <i>cast off their clothes</i> with fury and violence, as much
|
||
as to say that thus they would tear him if they could but come at
|
||
him. Or, rather, they thus showed how ready they were to stone him;
|
||
those that stoned Stephen threw off their clothes, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.20" parsed="|Acts|22|20|0|0" passage="Ac 22:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. Or, they <i>rent their
|
||
clothes,</i> as if he had spoken blasphemy; and <i>threw dust into
|
||
the air,</i> in detestation of it; or signifying how ready they
|
||
were to throw stones at Paul, if the chief captain would have
|
||
permitted them. But why should we go about to give a reason for
|
||
these experiences of fury, which they themselves could not account
|
||
for? All they intended was to make the chief captain sensible how
|
||
much they were enraged and exasperated at Paul, so that he could
|
||
not do any thing to gratify them more than to let them have their
|
||
will against him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p27">IV. The chief captain took care for his
|
||
safety, by ordering him to be brought into the castle, <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.24" parsed="|Acts|22|24|0|0" passage="Ac 22:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>. A prison sometimes has
|
||
been a protection to good men from popular rage. Paul's hour was
|
||
not yet come, he had not finished his testimony, and therefore God
|
||
raised up one that took care of him, when none of his friends durst
|
||
appear on his behalf. <i>Grant not, O Lord, the desire of the
|
||
wicked.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p28">V. He ordered him the torture, to force
|
||
from him a confession of some flagrant crimes which had provoked
|
||
the people to such an uncommon violence against him. <i>He ordered
|
||
that he should be examined by scourging</i> (as now in some
|
||
countries by the rack), that <i>he might know wherefore they cried
|
||
so against him.</i> Herein he did not proceed fairly; he should
|
||
have singled out some of the clamorous tumultuous complainants, and
|
||
taken them into the castle as breakers of the peace, and should
|
||
have examined them, and by scourging too, what they had to lay to
|
||
the charge of a man that could give so good an account of himself,
|
||
and did not appear to have done any thing worthy of death or of
|
||
bonds. It was proper to ask them, but not at all proper to ask
|
||
Paul, <i>wherefore they cried so against him.</i> He could tell
|
||
that he had given them no just cause to do it; if there were any
|
||
cause, let them produce it. No man is bound to accuse himself,
|
||
though he be guilty, much less ought he to be compelled to accuse
|
||
himself when he is innocent. Surely the chief captain did not know
|
||
the Jewish nation when he concluded that he must needs have done
|
||
something very bad whom they cried out against. Had they not just
|
||
thus cried out against our Lord Jesus, <i>Crucify him, crucify
|
||
him,</i> when they had not one word to say in answer to the judge's
|
||
question, <i>Why, what evil has he done?</i> Is this a fair or just
|
||
occasion to scourge Paul, that a rude tumultuous mob cry out
|
||
against him, but cannot tell why or wherefore, and therefore he
|
||
must be forced to tell?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p29">VI. Paul pleaded his privilege as a Roman
|
||
citizen, by which he was exempted from all trials and punishments
|
||
of this nature (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.25" parsed="|Acts|22|25|0|0" passage="Ac 22:25"><i>v.</i>
|
||
25</scripRef>): <i>As they bound him with thongs,</i> or leathern
|
||
bands, to the whipping post, as they used to bind the vilest of
|
||
malefactors in bridewell from whom they would extort a confession,
|
||
he made no outcry against the injustice of their proceedings
|
||
against an innocent man, but very mildly let them understand the
|
||
illegality of their proceedings against him as a citizen of Rome,
|
||
which he had done once before at Philippi after he had been
|
||
scourged (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.16.37" parsed="|Acts|16|37|0|0" passage="Ac 16:37"><i>ch.</i> xvi.
|
||
37</scripRef>), but here he makes use of it for prevention. He
|
||
<i>said to the centurion that stood by,</i> "You know the law; pray
|
||
<i>is it lawful for you</i> who are yourselves Romans to <i>scourge
|
||
a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned?</i>" The manner of his
|
||
speaking plainly intimates what a holy security and serenity of
|
||
mind this good man enjoyed, not disturbed either with anger or fear
|
||
in the midst of all those indignities that were done him, and the
|
||
danger he was in. The Romans had a law (it was called <i>lex
|
||
Sempronia</i>), that if any magistrate did chastise or condemn a
|
||
freeman of Rome, <i>indicta causa—without hearing him speak for
|
||
himself, and deliberating upon the whole of his case,</i> he should
|
||
be liable to the sentence of the people, who were very jealous of
|
||
their liberties. It is indeed the privilege of every man not to
|
||
have wrong done him, except it be proved he has done wrong; as it
|
||
is of every Englishman by <i>Magna Charta</i> not to be dis-seized
|
||
of his life or freehold, but by a verdict of twelve men of his
|
||
peers.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxiii-p30">VII. The chief captain was surprised at
|
||
this, and put into a fright. He had taken Paul to be a vagabond
|
||
Egyptian, and wondered he could speak Greek (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.37" parsed="|Acts|21|37|0|0" passage="Ac 21:37"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 37</scripRef>), but is much more
|
||
surprised now he finds that he is as good a gentleman as himself.
|
||
How many men of great worth and merit are despised because they are
|
||
not known, are looked upon and treated as the offscouring of all
|
||
things, when those that count them so, if they knew their true
|
||
character, would own them to be of the excellent ones of the earth!
|
||
The chief captain had centurions, under-officers, attending him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.32" parsed="|Acts|21|32|0|0" passage="Ac 21:32"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 32</scripRef>. One of
|
||
these reports this matter to the chief captain (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.26" parsed="|Acts|22|26|0|0" passage="Ac 22:26"><i>v.</i> 26</scripRef>): <i>Take heed what thou doest,
|
||
for this man is a Roman,</i> and what indignity is done to him will
|
||
be construed an offence against the majesty of the Roman people, as
|
||
they loved to speak. They all knew what a value was put upon this
|
||
privilege of the Roman citizens. Tully extols it in one of his
|
||
orations against Verres, <i>O nomen dulce libertatis, O jus eximium
|
||
nostræ civitatis! O lex Porcia! O leges Semproniæ; facinus est
|
||
vincere Romanum civem, scelus verberare—O Liberty! I love thy
|
||
charming name; and these our Porcian and Sempronian laws, how
|
||
admirable! It is a crime to bind a Roman citizen, but an
|
||
unpardonable one to beat him.</i> "Therefore" (says the centurion)
|
||
"let us look to ourselves; if this man be a Roman, and we do him
|
||
any indignity, we shall be in danger to lose our commissions at
|
||
least." Now, 1. The chief captain would be satisfied of the truth
|
||
of this from his own mouth (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.27" parsed="|Acts|22|27|0|0" passage="Ac 22:27"><i>v.</i>
|
||
27</scripRef>): "<i>Tell me, art thou a Roman?</i> Art thou
|
||
entitled to the privileges of a Roman citizen?" "Yes," says Paul,
|
||
"<i>I am;</i>" and perhaps produced some ticket or instrument which
|
||
proved it; for otherwise they would scarcely have taken his word.
|
||
2. The chief captain very freely compares notes with him upon this
|
||
matter, and it appears that the privilege Paul had as a Roman
|
||
citizen was of the two more honourable than the colonel's; for the
|
||
colonel owns that his was purchased: "I am a freeman of Rome; but
|
||
<i>with a great sum obtained I this freedom,</i> it cost me dear,
|
||
how came you by it?" "Why truly," says Paul, "<i>I was
|
||
free-born.</i>" Some think he became entitled to this freedom by
|
||
the place of his birth, as a native of Tarsus, a city privileged by
|
||
the emperor with the same privileges that Rome itself enjoyed;
|
||
others rather think it was by his father or grandfather having
|
||
served in the war between Cæsar and Antony, or some other of the
|
||
civil wars of Rome, and being for some signal piece of service
|
||
rewarded with a freedom of the city, and so Paul came to be
|
||
free-born; and here he pleads it for his own preservation, for
|
||
which end not only we may but we ought to use all lawful means. 3.
|
||
This put an immediate stop to Paul's trouble. Those that were
|
||
appointed to examine him by scourging quitted the spot; they
|
||
<i>departed from him</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.29" parsed="|Acts|22|29|0|0" passage="Ac 22:29"><i>v.</i>
|
||
29</scripRef>), lest they should run themselves into a snare. Nay,
|
||
and the colonel himself, though we may suppose him to have a
|
||
considerable interest, was afraid when he heard he was a Roman,
|
||
because, though he had not beaten him, yet he had bound him in
|
||
order to his being beaten. Thus many are restrained from evil
|
||
practices by the fear of man who would not be restrained from them
|
||
by the fear of God. See here the benefit of human laws and
|
||
magistracy, and what reason we have to be thankful to God for them;
|
||
for even when they have given no countenance nor special protection
|
||
to God's people and ministers, yet, by the general support of
|
||
equity and fair dealing between man and man, they have served to
|
||
check the rage of wicked and unreasonable illegal men, who
|
||
otherwise would know no bounds, and to say, <i>Hitherto it shall
|
||
come, but no further; here shall its proud waves by stayed.</i> And
|
||
therefore this service we owe to all in authority, to pray for
|
||
them, because this benefit we have reason to expect from them,
|
||
whether we have it or no, as long as we are quiet and peaceable—to
|
||
live <i>quiet and peaceable lives in all godliness and honesty,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.6" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.2.1-1Tim.2.2" parsed="|1Tim|2|1|2|2" passage="1Ti 2:1,2">1 Tim. ii. 1, 2</scripRef>. 4. The
|
||
governor, the next day, brought Paul before the sanhedrim,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.30" parsed="|Acts|22|30|0|0" passage="Ac 22:30"><i>v.</i> 30</scripRef>. He first
|
||
<i>loosed him from his bands,</i> that those might not prejudge his
|
||
cause, and that he might not be charged with having pinioned a
|
||
Roman citizen, and then summoned the chief priests and all their
|
||
council to come together to take cognizance of Paul's case, for he
|
||
found it to be a matter of religion, and therefore looked upon them
|
||
to be the most proper judges of it. Gallio in this case discharged
|
||
Paul; finding it to be a matter of their law, he drove the
|
||
prosecutors from the judgement-seat (<scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.18.16" parsed="|Acts|18|16|0|0" passage="Ac 18:16"><i>ch.</i> xviii. 16</scripRef>), and would not concern
|
||
himself at all in it; but this Roman, who was a military man, kept
|
||
Paul in custody, and appealed from the rabble to the general
|
||
assembly. Now, (1.) We may hope that hereby he intended Paul's
|
||
safety, as thinking, if he were an innocent and inoffensive man,
|
||
though the multitude might be incensed against him, yet the chief
|
||
priests and elders would do him justice, and clear him; for they
|
||
were, or should be, men of learning and consideration, and their
|
||
court governed by rules of equity. When the prophet could find no
|
||
good among the poorer sort of people, he concluded that it was
|
||
because they <i>knew not the way of the Lord, nor the judgments of
|
||
their God,</i> and promised himself that he should speed better
|
||
among the great men, as the chief captain here did, but soon found
|
||
himself disappointed there: these have <i>altogether broken the
|
||
yoke, and burst the bonds,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxiii-p30.9" osisRef="Bible:Jer.5.4-Jer.5.5" parsed="|Jer|5|4|5|5" passage="Jer 5:4,5">Jer.
|
||
v. 4, 5</scripRef>. But, (2.) That which he is here said to aim at
|
||
is the gratifying of his own curiosity: He <i>would have known the
|
||
certainty wherefore he was accused of the Jews.</i> Had he sent for
|
||
Paul to his own chamber, and talked freely with him, he might soon
|
||
have learned from him that which would have done more than satisfy
|
||
his enquiry, and which might have persuaded him to be a Christian.
|
||
But it is too common for great men to affect to set that at a
|
||
distance from them which might awaken their consciences, and to
|
||
desire to have no more of the knowledge of God's ways than may
|
||
serve them to talk of.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |