1101 lines
75 KiB
XML
1101 lines
75 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Acts.xxv" n="xxv" next="Acts.xxvi" prev="Acts.xxiv" progress="26.00%" title="Chapter XXIV">
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<h2 id="Acts.xxv-p0.1">A C T S.</h2>
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<h3 id="Acts.xxv-p0.2">CHAP. XXIV.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Acts.xxv-p1">We left Paul a prisoner at Cæsarea, in Herod's
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judgment-hall, expecting his trial to come on quickly; for in the
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beginning of his imprisonment his affairs moved very quickly, but
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afterwards very slowly. In this chapter we have his arraignment and
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trial before Felix the governor at Cæsarea; here is, I. The
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appearing of the prosecutors against him, and the setting of the
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prisoner to the bar, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.1-Acts.24.2" parsed="|Acts|24|1|24|2" passage="Ac 24:1,2">ver. 1,
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2</scripRef>. II. The opening of the indictment against him by
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Tertullus, who was of counsel for the prosecutors, and the
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aggravating of the charge, with abundance of compliments to the
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judge, and malice to the prisoner, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.2-Acts.24.8" parsed="|Acts|24|2|24|8" passage="Ac 24:2-8">ver. 2-8</scripRef>. III. The corroborating of the
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charge by the testimony of the witnesses, or rather the prosecutors
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themselves, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.9" parsed="|Acts|24|9|0|0" passage="Ac 24:9">ver. 9</scripRef>. IV. The
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prisoner's defence, in which, with all due deference to the
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governor (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.10" parsed="|Acts|24|10|0|0" passage="Ac 24:10">ver. 10</scripRef>), he
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denies the charge, and challenges them to prove it (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.11-Acts.24.13" parsed="|Acts|24|11|24|13" passage="Ac 24:11-13">ver. 11-13</scripRef>), owns the truth, and
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makes an unexceptionable profession of his faith, which he declares
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was it that they hated him for (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.14-Acts.24.16" parsed="|Acts|24|14|24|16" passage="Ac 24:14-16">ver. 14-16</scripRef>), and gives a more particular
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account of what had passed from their first seizing him,
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challenging them to specify any ill they had found in him,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.17-Acts.24.21" parsed="|Acts|24|17|24|21" passage="Ac 24:17-21">ver. 17-21</scripRef>. V. The
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adjourning of the cause, and the continuing of the prisoner in
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custody, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.22-Acts.24.23" parsed="|Acts|24|22|24|23" passage="Ac 24:22,23">ver. 22, 23</scripRef>.
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VI. The private conversation that was between the prisoner and the
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judge, by which the prisoner hoped to do good to the judge and the
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judge thought to get money by the prisoner, but both in vain,
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<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.24-Acts.24.26" parsed="|Acts|24|24|24|26" passage="Ac 24:24-26">ver. 24-26</scripRef>. VII. The
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lengthening out of Paul's imprisonment for two years, till another
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governor came (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.27" parsed="|Acts|24|27|0|0" passage="Ac 24:27">ver. 27</scripRef>),
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where he seems as much neglected as there had been ado about
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him.</p>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxv-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24" parsed="|Acts|24|0|0|0" passage="Ac 24" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Acts.xxv-p1.12" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.1-Acts.24.9" parsed="|Acts|24|1|24|9" passage="Ac 24:1-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.24.1-Acts.24.9">
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<h4 id="Acts.xxv-p1.13">The Speech of Tertullus.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxv-p2">1 And after five days Ananias the high priest
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descended with the elders, and <i>with</i> a certain orator
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<i>named</i> Tertullus, who informed the governor against Paul.
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2 And when he was called forth, Tertullus began to accuse
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<i>him,</i> saying, Seeing that by thee we enjoy great quietness,
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and that very worthy deeds are done unto this nation by thy
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providence, 3 We accept <i>it</i> always, and in all places,
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most noble Felix, with all thankfulness. 4 Notwithstanding,
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that I be not further tedious unto thee, I pray thee that thou
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wouldest hear us of thy clemency a few words. 5 For we have
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found this man <i>a</i> pestilent <i>fellow,</i> and a mover of
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sedition among all the Jews throughout the world, and a ringleader
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of the sect of the Nazarenes: 6 Who also hath gone about to
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profane the temple: whom we took, and would have judged according
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to our law. 7 But the chief captain Lysias came <i>upon
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us,</i> and with great violence took <i>him</i> away out of our
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hands, 8 Commanding his accusers to come unto thee: by
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examining of whom thyself mayest take knowledge of all these
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things, whereof we accuse him. 9 And the Jews also assented,
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saying that these things were so.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p3">We must suppose <i>that Lysias, the chief
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captain,</i> when he had <i>sent away Paul to Cæsarea,</i> gave
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notice to the chief priests, and others that had appeared against
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Paul, that if they had any thing to accuse him of they must follow
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him to Cæsarea, and there they would find him, and a judge ready to
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hear them-thinking, perhaps, they would not have given themselves
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so much trouble; but what will not malice do?</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p4">I. We have here the cause followed against
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Paul, and it is vigorously carried on. 1. Here is no time lost, for
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they are ready for a hearing <i>after five days;</i> all other
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business is laid aside immediately, to prosecute Paul; so intent
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are evil men to do evil! Some reckon <i>these five days</i> from
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Paul's being first seized, and with most probability, for he says
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here (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.11" parsed="|Acts|24|11|0|0" passage="Ac 24:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>) <i>that
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it was but twelve days since he came up to Jerusalem,</i> and he
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had <i>spent seven in his purifying the temple,</i> so that these
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five must be reckoned from the last of those. 2. Those who had been
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his judges do themselves appear here as his prosecutors.
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<i>Ananias</i> himself <i>the high priest,</i> who had sat to judge
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him, now stands to inform against him. One would wonder, (1.) That
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he should thus disparage himself, and forget the dignity of his
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place. She <i>the high priest</i> turn informer, and leave all his
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business in <i>the temple at Jerusalem,</i> to go to be called as a
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prosecutor in <i>Herod's judgment-hall?</i> Justly did God make
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<i>the priests contemptible and base,</i> when they made themselves
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so, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Mal.2.9" parsed="|Mal|2|9|0|0" passage="Mal 2:9">Mal. ii. 9</scripRef>. (2.) That he
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should thus discover himself and his enmity against Paul!. If men
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of the first rank have a malice against any, they think it policy
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to employ others against them, and to play least in sight
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themselves, because of the odium that commonly attends it; but
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Ananias is not shamed to own himself a sworn enemy to Paul. <i>The
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elders</i> attended him, to signify their concurrence with him, and
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to invigorate the prosecution; for they could not find any
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attorneys or solicitors that would follow it with so much violence
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as they desired. The pains that evil men take in an evil matter,
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their contrivances, their condescensions, and their unwearied
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industry, should shame us out of our coldness and backwardness, and
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out indifference in that which is good.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p5">II. We have here the cause pleaded against
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Paul. The prosecutors brought <i>with them a certain orator named
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Tertullus,</i> a Roman, skilled in the Roman law and language, and
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therefore fittest to be employed in a cause before <i>the Roman
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governor,</i> and most likely to gain favour. The high priest, and
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elders, though they had their own hearts spiteful enough, did not
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think their own tongues sharp enough, and therefore retained
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Tertullus, who probably was noted for a satirical wit, to be of
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counsel for them; and, no doubt, they gave him a good fee, probably
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out of the treasury of the temple, which they had the command of,
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it being a cause wherein the church was concerned and which
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therefore must not be starved. Paul is set to the bar before Felix
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the governor: <i>He was called forth,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.2" parsed="|Acts|24|2|0|0" passage="Ac 24:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>. Tertullus's business is, on the
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behalf of the prosecutors, to open the information against him, and
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he is a man that will say any thing for his fee; mercenary tongues
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will do so. No cause so unjust but can find advocates to plead it;
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and yet we hope many advocates are so just as not knowingly to
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patronise an unrighteous cause, but Tertullus was none of these:
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his speech (or at least an abstract of it, for it appears, by
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Tully's orations, that the Roman lawyers, on such occasions, used
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to make long harangues) is here reported, and it is made up of
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flattery and falsehood; it calls evil good, and good evil.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p6">1. One of the worst of men is here
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applauded as one of the best of benefactors, only because he was
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the judge. Felix is represented by the historians of his own
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nation, as well as by Josephus the Jew, as a very bad man, who,
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depending upon his interest in the court, allowed himself in all
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manner of wickedness, was a great oppressor, very cruel, and very
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covetous, patronising and protecting assassins.—Joseph.
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<i>Antiq.</i> 20. 162-165. And yet Tertullus here, in the name of
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the high priest and elders, and probably by particular directions
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from them and according to the instructions of his breviate,
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compliments him, and extols him to the sky, as if he were so good a
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magistrate as never was the like: and this comes the worse from the
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high priest and the elders, because he had given a late instance of
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his enmity to their order; for Jonathan the high priest, or one of
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the chief priests, having offended him by too free an invective
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against the tyranny of his government, he had him murdered by some
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villains whom he hired for that purpose who afterwards did the like
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for others, as they were hired: <i>Cujus facinoris quia nemo ultor
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extitit, invitati hac licentia sicarii multos confodiebant, alios
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propter privatas inimicitias, alios conducti pecunia, etiam in ipso
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templo—No one being found to punish such enormous wickedness, the
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assassins, encouraged by this impunity, stabbed several persons,
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some from personal malice, some for hire, and that even in the
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temple itself.</i> An yet, to engage him to gratify their malice
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against Paul, and to return them that kindness for their kindness
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in overlooking all this, they magnify him as the greatest blessing
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to their church and nation that ever came among them.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p7">(1.) They are very ready to own it
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(<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.2" parsed="|Acts|24|2|0|0" passage="Ac 24:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>): "<i>By thee
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we,</i> of the church, <i>enjoy great quietness,</i> and we look
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upon thee as our patron and protector, <i>and very worthy deeds are
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done,</i> from time to time, <i>to the whole nation of the Jews, by
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thy providence</i>—thy wisdom, and care, and vigilance." To give
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him his due, he had been instrumental to suppress the insurrection
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of that Egyptian of whom the chief captain spoke (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.38" parsed="|Acts|21|38|0|0" passage="Ac 21:38"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 38</scripRef>); but will the
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praise of that screen him from the just reproach of his tyranny and
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oppression afterwards? See here, [1.] The unhappiness of great men,
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and a great unhappiness it is, to have their services magnified
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beyond measure, and never to be faithfully told of their faults;
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and hereby they are hardened and encouraged in evil. [2.] The
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policy of bad men, by flattering princes in what they do amiss to
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draw them in to do worse. The bishops of Rome got themselves
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confirmed in their exorbitant church power, and have been assisted
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in persecuting the servants of Christ, by flattering and caressing
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usurpers and tyrants, and so making them the tools of their malice,
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as the high priest, by his compliments, designed to make Felix
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here.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p8">(2.) They promise to retain a grateful
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sense of it (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.3" parsed="|Acts|24|3|0|0" passage="Ac 24:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>):
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"<i>We accept it always, and in all places,</i> every where and at
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all times we embrace it, we admire it, <i>most noble Felix, with
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all thankfulness.</i> We will be ready, upon any occasion, to
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witness for thee, that thou art a wise and good governor, and very
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serviceable to the country." And, if it had been true that he was
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such a governor, it had been just that they should thus accept his
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good offices with all thankfulness. The benefits which we enjoy by
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government, especially by the administration of wise and good
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governors, are what we ought to be thankful for, both to God and
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man. This is part of the honour due to magistrates, to acknowledge
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the quietness we enjoy under their protection, and the worthy deeds
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done by their prudence.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p9">(3.) They therefore expect his favour in
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this cause, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.4" parsed="|Acts|24|4|0|0" passage="Ac 24:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>.
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They pretend a great care not to intrench upon his time: We will
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<i>not be further tedious to thee;</i> and yet to be very confident
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of his patience: <i>I pray thee that thou wouldest hear us of thy
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clemency a few words.</i> All this address is only <i>ad captandam
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benefolentiam—to induce him to give countenance to their
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cause;</i> and they were so conscious to themselves that it would
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soon appear to have more malice than matter in it that they found
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it necessary thus to insinuate themselves into his favour. Every
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body knew that the high priest and the elders were enemies to the
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Roman government, and were uneasy under all the marks of that yoke,
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and therefore, in their hearts, hated Felix; and yet, to gain their
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ends against Paul, they, by their counsel, show him all this
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respect, as they did to Pilate and Cæsar when they were persecuting
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our Saviour. Princes cannot always judge of the affections of their
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people by their applauses; flattery is one thing, and true loyalty
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is another.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p10">2. One of the best of men is here accused
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as one of the worst of malefactors, only because he was the
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prisoner. After a flourish of flattery, in which you cannot see
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matter for words, he comes to his business, and it is to inform his
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excellency concerning the prisoner at the bar; and this part of his
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discourse is as nauseous for its raillery as the former part is for
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its flattery. I pity the man, and believe he has no malice against
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Paul, nor does he think as he speaks in calumniating him, any more
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than he did in courting Felix; but, a I cannot but be sorry that a
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man of wit and sense should have such a saleable tongue (as one
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calls it), so I cannot but be angry at those dignified men that had
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such malicious hearts as to put such words into his mouth. Two
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things Tertullus here complains of to Felix, in the name of the
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high priest and the elders:—</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p11">(1.) That the peace of the nation was
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disturbed by Paul. They could not have baited Christ's disciples if
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they had not first dressed them up in the skins of wild beasts, nor
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have given them as they did the vilest of treatment if they had not
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first represented them as the vilest of men, though the characters
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they gave of them were absolutely false and there was not the least
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colour nor foundation for them. Innocence, may excellence and
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usefulness, are no fence against calumny, no, nor against the
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impressions of calumny upon the minds both of magistrates and
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multitudes to excite their fury and jealousy; for, be the
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representation ever so unjust, when it is enforced, as here it was,
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with gravity and pretence of sanctity, and with assurance and
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noise, something will stick. The old charge against God's prophets
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was that they were the troublers of the land, and against God's
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Jerusalem that it was a rebellious city, hurtful to kings and
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provinces (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Ezra.4.15 Bible:Ezra.4.19" parsed="|Ezra|4|15|0|0;|Ezra|4|19|0|0" passage="Ezr 4:15,19">Ezra iv. 15,
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19</scripRef>), and against our Lord Jesus that he perverted the
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nation, and forbade to give tribute to Cæsar. It is the very same
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against Paul here; and, though utterly false, is averred with all
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the confidence imaginable. They do not say, "We suspect him to be a
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dangerous man, and have taken him up upon that suspicion;" but, as
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if the thing were past dispute, "<i>We have found him</i> to be so;
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we have often and long found him so;" as if he were a traitor and
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rebel already convicted. And yet, after all, there is not a word of
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truth in this representation; but, if Paul's just character be
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enquired into, it will be found directly the reverse of this.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p12">[1.] Paul was a useful man, and a great
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blessing to his country, a man of exemplary candour and goodness,
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blessing to all, and provoking to none; and yet he is here called
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<i>a pestilent fellow</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.5" parsed="|Acts|24|5|0|0" passage="Ac 24:5"><i>v.</i>
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5</scripRef>): "<i>We have found him,</i>
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<b><i>loimon</i></b>—<i>pestem—the plague</i> of the nation, a
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walking pestilence, which supposes him to be a man of a turbulent
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spirit, malicious and ill-natured, and one that threw all things in
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disorder wherever he came." They would have it thought that he had
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dome a more mischief in his time than a plague could do,—that the
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mischief he did was spreading and infectious, and that he made
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others as mischievous as himself,—that it was of as fatal
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consequence as the plague is, killing and destroying, and laying
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all waste,—that it was as much to be dreaded and guarded against
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as a plague is. Many a good sermon he had preached, and many a good
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work he had done, and for these he is called a pestilent
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fellow.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p13">[2.] Paul was a peace-maker, was a preacher
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of that gospel which has a direct tendency to <i>slay all
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enmities,</i> and to establish true and lasting peace; he lived
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peaceably and quietly himself, and taught others to do so too, and
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yet is here represented as <i>a mover of sedition among all the
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Jews throughout all the world.</i> The Jews were disaffected to the
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Roman government; those of them that were most bigoted were the
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most so. This Felix knew, and had therefore a watchful eye upon
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them. Now they would fain make him believe that this Paul was the
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man that made them so, whereas they themselves were the men that
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sowed the seeds of faction and sedition among them: and they knew
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it; and the reason why they hated Christ and his religion was
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because he did not go about to head them in a opposition to the
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Romans. The Jews were every where much set against Paul, and
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stirred up the people to clamour against him; they moved sedition
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in all places where he came, and then cast the blame unjustly upon
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him as if he had been the mover of the sedition; as Nero not long
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after set Rome on fire, and then said the Christians did it.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p14">[3.] Paul was a man of catholic charity,
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who did not affect to be singular, but made himself the servant of
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all for their good; and yet he is here charged as being a
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<i>ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes,</i> a standard-bearer
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of that sect, so the word signifies. When Cyprian was condemned to
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die for being a Christian, this was inserted in hi sentence, that
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he was <i>auctor iniqui nominis et signifer—The author and
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standard-bearer of a wicked cause.</i> Now it was true that Paul
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was an active leading man in propagating Christianity. But,
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<i>First,</i> It was utterly false that this was a sect; he did not
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draw people to a party or private opinion, nor did he make his own
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opinions their rule. True Christianity establishes that which is of
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common concern to all mankind, publishes good-will to men, and
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shows us God in Christ reconciling the world to himself, and
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therefore cannot be thought to take its rise from such narrow
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||
opinions and private interests as sects owe their origin to. True
|
||
Christianity has a direct tendency to the uniting of the children
|
||
of men, and the gathering of them together in one; and, as far as
|
||
it obtains its just power and influence upon the minds of men, will
|
||
make them meek and quiet, and peaceable and loving, and every way
|
||
easy, acceptable, and profitable one to another, and therefore is
|
||
far from being a sect, which is supposed to lead to division and to
|
||
sow discord. True Christianity aims at no worldly benefit or
|
||
advantage, and therefore must by no means be called a sect. Those
|
||
that espouse a sect are governed in it by their secular interest,
|
||
they aim at wealth and honour; but the professors of Christianity
|
||
are so far from this that they expose themselves thereby to the
|
||
loss and ruin of all that is dear to them in this world.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> It is invidiously called <i>the sect of the
|
||
Nazarenes,</i> by which Christ was represented as of Nazareth,
|
||
whence no good thing was expected to arise; whereas he was of
|
||
Bethlehem, where the Messiah was to be born. Yet he was pleased to
|
||
call himself, <i>Jesus of Nazareth,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.22.8" parsed="|Acts|22|8|0|0" passage="Ac 22:8"><i>ch.</i> xxii. 8</scripRef>. And the scripture has put
|
||
an honour on the name, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.2.23" parsed="|Matt|2|23|0|0" passage="Mt 2:23">Matt. ii.
|
||
23</scripRef>. And therefore, though intended for a reproach, the
|
||
Christians had not reason to be ashamed of sharing with their
|
||
Master in it. <i>Thirdly,</i> It was false that Paul was the author
|
||
of standard-bearer of this sect; for he did not draw people to
|
||
himself, but to Christ-did not preach himself, but Christ
|
||
Jesus.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p15">[4.] Paul had a veneration for the temple,
|
||
as it was the place which God had chosen to put his name there, and
|
||
had lately himself with reverence attended the temple-service; and
|
||
yet it is here charged upon him that he went about to <i>profane
|
||
the temple,</i> and that he designedly put contempt upon it, and
|
||
violated the laws of it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.6" parsed="|Acts|24|6|0|0" passage="Ac 24:6"><i>v.</i>
|
||
6</scripRef>. Their proof of this failed; for that they alleged as
|
||
matter of act was utterly false, and they knew it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.29" parsed="|Acts|21|29|0|0" passage="Ac 21:29"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 29</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p16">(2.) That the course of justice against
|
||
Paul was obstructed by the chief captain. [1.] They pleaded that
|
||
they <i>took him, and would have judged him according to their
|
||
law.</i> This was false; they did not go about to judge him
|
||
according to their law, but, contrary to all law and equity, went
|
||
about to <i>beat him to death</i> or to <i>pull him to pieces,</i>
|
||
without hearing what he had to say for himself-went about, under
|
||
pretence of having him into their court, to throw him into the
|
||
hands of ruffians that lay in wait to destroy him. Was this judging
|
||
him according to their law? It is easy for men, when they know what
|
||
they should have done, to say, this they would have done, when they
|
||
meant nothing less. [2.] They reflected upon the chief captain as
|
||
having done them an injury in rescuing Paul out of their hands;
|
||
whereas he therein not only did him justice, but them the greatest
|
||
kindness that could be, in preventing the guilt they were bringing
|
||
upon themselves: <i>The chief captain Lysias came upon us and with
|
||
great violence</i> (but really no more than was necessary) <i>took
|
||
him out of our hands,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.7" parsed="|Acts|24|7|0|0" passage="Ac 24:7"><i>v.</i>
|
||
7</scripRef>. See how persecutors are enraged at their
|
||
disappointments, which they ought to e thankful for. When David in
|
||
a heat of passion was going upon a bloody enterprise, he thanked
|
||
Abigail for stopping him, and God for sending her to do it, so soon
|
||
did he correct and recover himself. But these cruel men justify
|
||
themselves, and reckon him their enemy who kept them (as David
|
||
there speaks) from shedding blood with their own hands. [3.] They
|
||
referred the matter to Felix and his judgment, yet seeming uneasy
|
||
that they were under a necessity of doing so, the chief captain
|
||
having obliged them to it (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.8" parsed="|Acts|24|8|0|0" passage="Ac 24:8"><i>v.</i>
|
||
8</scripRef>): "It was he that forced us to give your excellency
|
||
this trouble, and ourselves too; for," <i>First,</i> "He
|
||
<i>commanded his accusers to come to thee,</i> that though mightest
|
||
hear the charge, when it might as well have been ended in the
|
||
inferior court." <i>Secondly,</i> "He has left it to thee to
|
||
examine him, and try what thou canst get out of him, and whether
|
||
thou canst by his confession come to the knowledge of those things
|
||
which we lay to his charge."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p17">III. The assent of the Jews to this charge
|
||
which Tertullus exhibited (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.9" parsed="|Acts|24|9|0|0" passage="Ac 24:9"><i>v.</i>
|
||
9</scripRef>): <i>They confirmed it, saying that those things were
|
||
so.</i> 1. Some think this expresses the proof of their charge by
|
||
witnesses upon oath, that were examined as to the particulars of
|
||
it, and attested them. And no wonder if, when they had found an
|
||
orator that would say it, they found witnesses that would swear it,
|
||
for money. 2. It rather seems to intimate the approbation which the
|
||
high priest and the elders gave to what Tertullus said. Felix asked
|
||
them, "Is this your sense, and is it all that you have to say?" And
|
||
they answered, "Yes it is;" and so they made themselves guilty of
|
||
all the falsehood that was in his speech. Those that have not the
|
||
wit and parts to do mischief with that some others have, that
|
||
cannot make speeches and hold disputes against religion, yet make
|
||
themselves guilty of the mischiefs others do, by assenting to that
|
||
which others do, and saying, These things are so, repeating and
|
||
standing by what is said, to <i>pervert the right ways of the
|
||
Lord.</i> Many that have not learning enough to plead for Baal yet
|
||
have wickedness enough to vote for Baal.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxv-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.10-Acts.24.21" parsed="|Acts|24|10|24|21" passage="Ac 24:10-21" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.24.10-Acts.24.21">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxv-p17.3">Paul's Third Defence.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxv-p18">10 Then Paul, after that the governor had
|
||
beckoned unto him to speak, answered, Forasmuch as I know that thou
|
||
hast been of many years a judge unto this nation, I do the more
|
||
cheerfully answer for myself: 11 Because that thou mayest
|
||
understand, that there are yet but twelve days since I went up to
|
||
Jerusalem for to worship. 12 And they neither found me in
|
||
the temple disputing with any man, neither raising up the people,
|
||
neither in the synagogues, nor in the city: 13 Neither can
|
||
they prove the things whereof they now accuse me. 14 But
|
||
this I confess unto thee, that after the way which they call
|
||
heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers, believing all things
|
||
which are written in the law and in the prophets: 15 And
|
||
have hope toward God, which they themselves also allow, that there
|
||
shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust.
|
||
16 And herein do I exercise myself, to have always a
|
||
conscience void of offence toward God, and <i>toward</i> men.
|
||
17 Now after many years I came to bring alms to my nation,
|
||
and offerings. 18 Whereupon certain Jews from Asia found me
|
||
purified in the temple, neither with multitude, nor with tumult.
|
||
19 Who ought to have been here before thee, and object, if
|
||
they had ought against me. 20 Or else let these same
|
||
<i>here</i> say, if they have found any evil doing in me, while I
|
||
stood before the council, 21 Except it be for this one
|
||
voice, that I cried standing among them, Touching the resurrection
|
||
of the dead I am called in question by you this day.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p19">We have here Paul's defence of himself, in
|
||
answer to Tertullus's charge, and there appears in it a great deal
|
||
of the spirit of wisdom and holiness, and an accomplishment of
|
||
Christ's promise to his followers that when they were before
|
||
governors and kings, for his sake, it should be <i>given them in
|
||
that same hour what they should speak.</i> Though Tertullus had
|
||
said a great many provoking things, yet Paul did not interrupt him,
|
||
but let him go on to the end of his speech, according to the rules
|
||
of decency and the method in courts of justice, that the plaintiff
|
||
be allowed to finish his evidence before the defendant begins his
|
||
plea. And when he had done, he did not presently fly out into
|
||
passionate exclamations against the iniquity of the times and the
|
||
men (<i>O tempora! O mores!—Oh the degeneracy of the times!</i>)
|
||
but he waited for a permission from the judge to speak in his turn,
|
||
and had it. The <i>governor beckoned to him to speak,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.10" parsed="|Acts|24|10|0|0" passage="Ac 24:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. And now he also may
|
||
have leave to speak out, under the protection of the governor,
|
||
which was more than he could hitherto obtain. And, when he did
|
||
speak, he made no reflections at all upon Tertullus, who he knew
|
||
spoke for his fee, and therefore despised what he said, and
|
||
levelled his defence against those that employed him. And here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p20">I. He addressed himself very respectfully
|
||
to the governor, and with a confidence that he would do him
|
||
justice. Here are not such flattering compliments as Tertullus
|
||
soothed him up with, but, which was more truly respectful, a
|
||
profession that he <i>answered for himself cheerfully,</i> and with
|
||
good assurance <i>before him,</i> looking upon him, though not as
|
||
one that was his friend, yet as one that would be fair and
|
||
impartial. He thus expresses his expectation that he would be so,
|
||
to engage him to be so. It was likewise the language of one that
|
||
was conscious to himself of his own integrity, and whose heart did
|
||
not reproach him, whoever did. He did not stand trembling at the
|
||
bar; on the contrary, he was very cheerful when he had one to be
|
||
his judge that was not a party, but an indifferent person. Nay,
|
||
when he considers who his judge is, he <i>answers the more
|
||
cheerfully;</i> and why so? He does not say, "Because I know thee
|
||
to be a judge of inflexible justice and integrity, that hatest
|
||
bribes, and in giving judgment fearest God, and regardest not man;"
|
||
for he could not justly say this of him, and therefore would not
|
||
say it, though it were to gain his favour ever so much; but, <i>I
|
||
the more cheerfully answer from myself,</i> because <i>I know thou
|
||
hast been many years a judge to this nation,</i> and this was very
|
||
true, and being so, 1. He could say of his own knowledge that there
|
||
had not formerly been any complaints against Paul. Such clamours as
|
||
they raised are generally against old offenders; but, though he had
|
||
long say judge there, he never had Paul brought before him till
|
||
now; and therefore he was not so dangerous a criminal as he was
|
||
represented to be. 2. He was well acquainted with the Jewish
|
||
nation, and with their temper and spirit. He knew how bigoted they
|
||
were to their own way, what furious zealots they were against all
|
||
that did not comply with them, how peevish and perverse they
|
||
generally were, and therefore would make allowances for that in
|
||
their accusation of him, and not regard that which he had reason to
|
||
think came so much from part-malice. Though he did not know him, he
|
||
knew his prosecutors, and by this might guess what manner of man he
|
||
was.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p21">II. He denies the facts that he was charged
|
||
with, upon which their character of him was grounded. <i>Moving
|
||
sedition,</i> and <i>profaning the temple,</i> were the crimes for
|
||
which he stood indicted, crimes which they knew the Roman governors
|
||
were not accustomed to enquire into, and therefore they hoped that
|
||
the governor would return him back to them to be judged by their
|
||
law, and this was all they wished for. But Paul desires that though
|
||
he would not enquire into the crimes he would protect one that was
|
||
unjustly charged with them from those whom he knew to be spiteful
|
||
and ill-natured enough. Now he would have him to understand (and
|
||
what he said he was ready, if required, to make out by
|
||
witnesses),</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p22">1. That he came up to Jerusalem on purpose
|
||
to worship God in peace and holiness, so far was he from any design
|
||
to move sedition among the people or to profane the temple. He came
|
||
to keep up his communion with the Jews, not to put any affront upon
|
||
them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p23">2. That it was but twelve days since he
|
||
came up to Jerusalem, and he came up to Jerusalem, and he had been
|
||
six days a prisoner; he was alone, and it could not be supposed
|
||
that in so short a time he could do the mischief they charged upon
|
||
him. And, as for what he had done in other countries, they knew
|
||
nothing of it but by uncertain report, by which the matter was very
|
||
unfairly represented.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p24">3. That he had demeaned himself at
|
||
Jerusalem very quietly and peaceably, and had made no manner of
|
||
stir. If it had been true (as they alleged) that he was a <i>mover
|
||
of sedition among all the Jews,</i> surely he would have been
|
||
industrious to make a party at Jerusalem: but he did not do so. He
|
||
was in the temple, attending the public service there. He was in
|
||
the synagogues where the law was read and opened. He went about in
|
||
the city among his relations and friends, and conversed freely in
|
||
the places of concourse; and he was a man of a great genius and an
|
||
active spirit, and yet they could not charge him with offering any
|
||
thing either against the faith or against the peace of the Jewish
|
||
church. (1.) He had nothing in him of a contradicting spirit, as
|
||
the movers of sedition have; he had no disposition to quarrel or
|
||
oppose. They never found him <i>disputing with any man,</i> either
|
||
affronting the learned with captious cavils or perplexing the weak
|
||
and simple with curious subtleties. He was ready, if asked, to give
|
||
a reason of his own hope, and to give instruction to others; but he
|
||
never picked a quarrel with any man about his religion, nor made
|
||
that the subject of debate, and controversy, and perverse dispute,
|
||
which ought always to be treated of with humility and reverence,
|
||
with meekness and love. (2.) He had nothing in him of a turbulent
|
||
spirit: "They never found me <i>raising up the people,</i> by
|
||
incensing them against their governors in church or state or
|
||
suggesting to them fears and jealousies concerning public affairs,
|
||
nor by setting them at variance one with another or sowing discord
|
||
among them." He behaved as became a Christian and minister, with
|
||
love and quietness, and due subjection to lawful authority. The
|
||
weapons of his warfare were not carnal, not did he ever mention or
|
||
think of such a thing as taking up arms for the propagating of the
|
||
gospel or the defence of the preachers of it; though he could have
|
||
made, perhaps, as strong a party among the common people as his
|
||
adversaries, yet he never attempted it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p25">4. That as to what they had charged him
|
||
with, of moving sedition in other countries, he was wholly
|
||
innocent, and they could not make good the charge (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.13" parsed="|Acts|24|13|0|0" passage="Ac 24:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>): <i>Neither can the
|
||
prove the things whereof the now accuse me.</i> Hereby, (1.) He
|
||
maintains his own innocency; for when he says, They cannot prove
|
||
it, he means, The matter is not so. He was no enemy to the public
|
||
peace; he had done no real prejudice, but a great deal of real
|
||
service, and would gladly have done more, to the nation of the
|
||
Jews. He was so far from having any antipathy to them that he had
|
||
the strongest affection imaginable for them, and a most passionate
|
||
desire for their welfare, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.9.1-Rom.9.3" parsed="|Rom|9|1|9|3" passage="Ro 9:1-3">Rom. ix.
|
||
1-3</scripRef>. (2.) He bemoans his own calamity, that he was
|
||
accused of those things which could not be proved against him. And
|
||
it has often been the lot of very worthy good men to be thus
|
||
injured, to have things laid to their charge which they are the
|
||
greatest distance from and abhor the though of. But, while they are
|
||
lamenting this calamity, this may be their rejoicing, even the
|
||
<i>testimony of their consciences</i> concerning their integrity.
|
||
(3.) He shows the iniquity of his prosecutors, who said that which
|
||
they knew they could not prove, and thereby did him wrong in his
|
||
name, liberty, and life, and did the judge wrong too, in imposing
|
||
upon him, and doing what in them lay to pervert his judgment. (4.)
|
||
He appeals to the equity of his judge, and awakens him to look
|
||
about him, that he might not be drawn into a snare by the violence
|
||
of the prosecution. The judge must give sentence <i>secundum
|
||
allegata et probata—according to that which is not only alleged
|
||
but proved,</i> and therefore must enquire, and search, and ask
|
||
diligently, whether the thing be true and certain (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p25.3" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.14" parsed="|Deut|13|14|0|0" passage="De 13:14">Deut. xiii. 14</scripRef>); he cannot otherwise
|
||
give a right judgment.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p26">III. He gives a fair and just account of
|
||
himself, which does at once both clear him from crime and likewise
|
||
intimate what was the true reason of their violence in prosecuting
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p27">1. He acknowledges himself to be one whom
|
||
they looked upon as a heretic, and that was the reason of their
|
||
spleen against him. The chief captain had observed, and the
|
||
governor now cannot but observe, an uncommon violence and fury in
|
||
his prosecutors, which they know not what to make of, but, guessing
|
||
at the crime by the cry, conclude he must needs have been a very
|
||
bad man only for that reason. Now Paul here unriddles the matter: I
|
||
confess that <i>in the way which they call heresy</i>—or a
|
||
<i>sect, so worship I the God of my fathers.</i> The controversy is
|
||
in a matter of religion, and such controversies are commonly
|
||
managed with most fury and violence. Note, It is no new thing for
|
||
the right way of worshipping God to be called heresy; and for the
|
||
best of God's servants to be stigmatized and run down as sectaries.
|
||
The reformed churches are called heretical ones by those who
|
||
themselves hate to be reformed, and are themselves heretics. Let us
|
||
therefore never be driven off from any good way by its being put in
|
||
to an ill name; for true and pure Christianity is never the worse,
|
||
nor to be the worse thought of, for its being called heresy; no,
|
||
not though it be called so by the high priest and the elders.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p28">2. He vindicates himself from this
|
||
imputation. They call Paul a heretic, but he is not so; for,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p29">(1.) He <i>worships the God of his
|
||
fathers,</i> and therefore is right in the object of his worship.
|
||
He does not say, <i>Let us go after other gods, which we have not
|
||
known, and let us serve them,</i> as the false prophet is supposed
|
||
to do, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p29.1" osisRef="Bible:Deut.13.2" parsed="|Deut|13|2|0|0" passage="De 13:2">Deut. xiii. 2</scripRef>. If so,
|
||
they might justly call his way heresy, a drawing of them aside into
|
||
a by-path, and a dangerous one; but he worships the God of Abraham,
|
||
Isaac, and Jacob, not only the God whom they worshipped, but the
|
||
God who took them into covenant with himself, and was and would be
|
||
called their God. Paul adheres to that covenant, and sets up no
|
||
other in opposition to it. The <i>promise made unto the fathers</i>
|
||
Paul preached as <i>fulfilled to the children</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p29.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.13.32-Acts.13.33" parsed="|Acts|13|32|13|33" passage="Ac 13:32,33"><i>ch.</i> xiii. 32, 33</scripRef>), and so
|
||
directed both his own devotions and those of others to God, as the
|
||
<i>God of their fathers.</i> He also refers to the practice of all
|
||
his pious ancestors: <i>I worship</i> the same God that all my
|
||
fathers worshipped. His religion was so far from being chargeable
|
||
with novelty that it gloried in its antiquity, and in an
|
||
uninterrupted succession of its professors. Note, It is very
|
||
comfortable in our worshipping God to have an eye to him as the God
|
||
of our fathers. Our fathers trusted in him, and were owned by him,
|
||
and he engaged to be their God, and the God of their seed. He
|
||
approved himself theirs, and therefore, if we serve him as they
|
||
did, he will be ours; what an emphasis is laid upon this, <i>He is
|
||
my father's God, and I will exalt him!</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p29.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.15.2" parsed="|Exod|15|2|0|0" passage="Ex 15:2">Exod. xv. 2</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p30">(2.) He <i>believes all things which are
|
||
written in the law and the prophets,</i> and therefore is right in
|
||
the rule of his worship. His religion is grounded upon, and
|
||
governed by, the holy scriptures; they are his oracle and
|
||
touchstone, and he speaks and acts according to them. He receives
|
||
the scriptures entire, and believes all things that are there
|
||
written; and he receives them pure, for he says no other things
|
||
than what are contained in them, as he explains himself, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.26.22" parsed="|Acts|26|22|0|0" passage="Ac 26:22"><i>ch.</i> xxvi. 22</scripRef>. He sets not up
|
||
any other rule of faith, or practice but the scriptures-not
|
||
tradition, nor the authority of the church, nor the infallibility
|
||
of any man or company of men on earth, nor the light within, nor
|
||
human reason; but divine revelation, as it is in the scripture, is
|
||
that which he resolves to live and die by, and therefore he is not
|
||
a heretic.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p31">(3.) He has his eye upon a future state,
|
||
and is a believing expectant of that, and therefore is right in the
|
||
end of his worship. Those that turn aside to heresy have a regard
|
||
to this world, and some secular interest, but Paul aims to make
|
||
heaven of his religion, and neither more nor less (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.15" parsed="|Acts|24|15|0|0" passage="Ac 24:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>): "<i>I have hope
|
||
towards God,</i> all my expectation is from him, and therefore all
|
||
my desire is towards him and all my dependence upon him; my hope is
|
||
towards God and not towards the world, towards another world and
|
||
not towards this. I depend upon God and upon his power, that
|
||
<i>there shall be a resurrection of the dead</i> at the end of
|
||
time, of all, both <i>the just and unjust;</i> and the great thing
|
||
I aim at in my religion is to obtain a joyful and happy
|
||
resurrection, a share in the resurrection of the just." Observe
|
||
here, [1.] That there shall be a resurrection of the dead, the dead
|
||
bodies of men, of all men from the beginning to the end of time. It
|
||
is certain, not only that the soul does not die with the body, but
|
||
that the body itself shall live again; we have not only another
|
||
life to live when our present life is at an end, but there is to be
|
||
another world, which shall commence when this world is at an end,
|
||
into which all the children of men must enter at once by a
|
||
resurrection from the dead, as they entered into this, one after
|
||
another, by their birth. [2.] It shall be a resurrection <i>both of
|
||
the just and of the unjust,</i> the sanctified and the
|
||
unsanctified, of those that did well, and to them our Saviour has
|
||
told us that it will be a <i>resurrection of life;</i> and of those
|
||
that did evil, and to them that it will be a resurrection of
|
||
condemnation, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p31.2" osisRef="Bible:John.5.29" parsed="|John|5|29|0|0" passage="Joh 5:29">John v. 29</scripRef>.
|
||
See <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p31.3" osisRef="Bible:Dan.12.2" parsed="|Dan|12|2|0|0" passage="Da 12:2">Dan. xii. 2</scripRef>. This
|
||
implies that it will be a resurrection to a final judgment, by
|
||
which all the children of men will be determined to everlasting
|
||
happiness or misery in a world of retribution, according to what
|
||
they were and what they did in this state of probation and
|
||
preparation. The just shall rise by virtue of their union with
|
||
Christ as their head; the unjust shall rise by virtue of Christ's
|
||
dominion over them as their Judge. [3.] God is to be depended upon
|
||
for the resurrection of the dead: I have <i>hope towards God,</i>
|
||
and in God, that there shall be a resurrection; it shall be
|
||
effected by the almighty power of God, in performance of the word
|
||
which God hath spoken; so that those who doubt of it betray their
|
||
ignorance both of the scriptures and of the power of God, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p31.4" osisRef="Bible:Matt.22.29" parsed="|Matt|22|29|0|0" passage="Mt 22:29">Matt. xxii. 29</scripRef>. [4.] The resurrection
|
||
of the dead is a fundamental article of our creed, as it was also
|
||
of that of the Jewish church. It is what <i>they themselves also
|
||
allow;</i> nay, it was the expectation of the ancient patriarchs,
|
||
witness Job's confession of his faith; but it is more clearly
|
||
revealed and more fully confirmed by the gospel, and therefore
|
||
those who believed it should have been thankful to the preachers of
|
||
the gospel for their explications and proofs of it, instead of
|
||
opposing them. [5.] In all our religion we ought to have an eye to
|
||
the other world, and to serve God in all instances with a
|
||
confidence in him <i>that there will be a resurrection of the
|
||
dead,</i> doing all in preparation for that, and expecting our
|
||
recompence in that.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p32">(4.) His conversation is of a piece with
|
||
his devotion (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.16" parsed="|Acts|24|16|0|0" passage="Ac 24:16"><i>v.</i>
|
||
16</scripRef>): <i>And herein do I exercise myself, to have always
|
||
a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men.</i>
|
||
Prophets and their doctrine were to be tried by their fruits. Paul
|
||
was far from having made shipwreck of a good conscience, and
|
||
therefore it is not likely he has made shipwreck of the faith, the
|
||
mystery of which is best held in a pure conscience. This
|
||
protestation of Paul's is to the same purport with that which he
|
||
made before the high priest (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p32.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.1" parsed="|Acts|23|1|0|0" passage="Ac 23:1"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
xxiii. 1</scripRef>): <i>I have lived in all good conscience;</i>
|
||
and this was his rejoicing. Observe, [1.] What was Paul's aim and
|
||
desire: To <i>have a conscience void of offence.</i> Either,
|
||
<i>First,</i> "A conscience not offending; not informing me wrong,
|
||
nor flattering me, nor dealing deceitfully with me, nor in any
|
||
thing misleading me." Or, <i>Secondly,</i> A conscience not
|
||
offended; it is like Job's resolution, "<i>My heart shall not
|
||
reproach me,</i> that is, I will never give it any occasion to do
|
||
so. This is what I am ambitious of, to keep upon good terms with my
|
||
own conscience, that it may have no cause either to question the
|
||
goodness of my spiritual state or to quarrel with me for any
|
||
particular action. I am as careful not to offend my conscience as I
|
||
am not to offend a friend with whom I daily converse; nay, as I am
|
||
not to offend a magistrate whose authority I am under, and to whom
|
||
I am accountable; for conscience is God's deputy in my soul." [2.]
|
||
What was his care and endeavour, in pursuance of this: "<i>I
|
||
exercise myself</i>—<b><i>asko</i></b>. I make it my constant
|
||
business, and govern myself by this intention; I discipline myself,
|
||
and live by rule" (those that did so were called <i>ascetics,</i>
|
||
from the word here used), "abstain from many a thing which my
|
||
inclination leads me to, and abound in all the exercises of
|
||
religion that are most spiritual, with this in my eye, that I may
|
||
keep peace with my own conscience." [3.] The extent of this care:
|
||
<i>First,</i> To all times: <i>To have always a conscience void of
|
||
offence,</i> always void of gross offence; for though Paul was
|
||
conscious to himself that he <i>had not yet attained
|
||
perfection,</i> and the evil that he would not do yet he did, yet
|
||
he was <i>innocent from the great transgression.</i> Sins of
|
||
infirmity are uneasy to conscience, but they do not wound it, and
|
||
waste it, as presumptuous sins do; and, though offence may be given
|
||
to conscience, yet care must be taken that it be not an abiding
|
||
offence, but that by the renewed acts of faith and repentance the
|
||
matter may be taken up again quickly. This however we must always
|
||
exercise ourselves in, and, though we come short, we must follow
|
||
after. <i>Secondly,</i> To all things: <i>Both towards God, and
|
||
towards man.</i> His conscientious care extended itself to the
|
||
whole of his duty, and he was afraid of breaking the law of love
|
||
either to God or his neighbour. Conscience, like the magistrate, is
|
||
<i>custos utriusque tabulæ—the guardian of each table.</i> We must
|
||
be very cautious that we do not think, or speak, or do any thing
|
||
amiss, either against God or man, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p32.3" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.8.21" parsed="|2Cor|8|21|0|0" passage="2Co 8:21">2
|
||
Cor. viii. 21</scripRef>. [4.] The inducement to it: <i>Herein,</i>
|
||
<b><i>en touto,</i></b> <i>for this cause;</i> so it may be read.
|
||
"Because I look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of
|
||
the world to come, therefore I thus exercise myself." The
|
||
consideration of the future state should engage us to be
|
||
universally conscientious in our present state.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p33">IV. Having made confession of his faith, he
|
||
gives a plain and faithful account of his case, and of the wrong
|
||
done him by his persecutors. Twice he had been rescued by the chief
|
||
captain out of the hands of the Jews, when they were ready to pull
|
||
him to pieces, and he challenges them to prove him guilty of any
|
||
crime either time.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p34">1. In the temple. Here they fell furiously
|
||
upon him as an enemy to their nation and the temple, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.28" parsed="|Acts|21|28|0|0" passage="Ac 21:28"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 28</scripRef>. But was there any
|
||
colour for the charge? No, but evidence sufficient against it, (1.)
|
||
It was very hard to accuse him as an <i>enemy to their nation,</i>
|
||
when after long absence from Jerusalem he came to <i>bring alms to
|
||
his nation,</i> money which (though he had need enough himself of
|
||
it) he had collected among his friends, for the relief of the poor
|
||
at Jerusalem. He not only had no malice to that people, but he had
|
||
a very charitable concern for them, and was ready to do them all
|
||
good offices; and were they his adversaries for his love? <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.109.4" parsed="|Ps|109|4|0|0" passage="Ps 109:4">Ps. cix. 4</scripRef>. (2.) It was very hard to
|
||
accuse him of having profaned the temple when he brought offerings
|
||
to the temple, and was himself at charges therein (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p34.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.24" parsed="|Acts|21|24|0|0" passage="Ac 21:24"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 24</scripRef>), and was found
|
||
<i>purifying himself in the temple,</i> according to the law
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p34.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.18" parsed="|Acts|24|18|0|0" passage="Ac 24:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>), and that in
|
||
a very quiet decent manner, <i>neither with multitude nor with
|
||
tumult.</i> Though he was a man so much talked of, he was far from
|
||
coveting to show himself when he came to Jerusalem, or to be
|
||
crowded after, but went to the temple, as much as was possible,
|
||
<i>incognito.</i> They were Jews from Asia, his enemies, that
|
||
caused him to be taken notice of; they had not pretence to make a
|
||
tumult and raise a multitude against him, for he had neither
|
||
multitude nor tumult for him. And as to what was perhaps suggested
|
||
to Felix that he had brought Greeks into the temple, contrary to
|
||
their law, and the governor ought to reckon with him for that, the
|
||
Romans having stipulated with the nations that submitted to them to
|
||
preserve them in their religion, he challenges them to prove it
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p34.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.19" parsed="|Acts|24|19|0|0" passage="Ac 24:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>): "Those Jews
|
||
of Asia ought to have been <i>here before thee,</i> that they might
|
||
have been examined, whether <i>they had aught against me,</i> that
|
||
they would stand by and swear to;" for some that will not scruple
|
||
to tell a lie have such heavings of conscience that they scruple
|
||
confirming it with an oath.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p35">2. In the council: "Since the Jews of Asia
|
||
are not here to prove any thing upon me done amiss in the temple,
|
||
let <i>these same</i> that are <i>here,</i> the high priest and the
|
||
elders, say whether they have <i>found any evil doing in me,</i> or
|
||
whether I was guilty of any misdemeanor <i>when I stood before the
|
||
council,</i> when also they were ready to pull me in pieces,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p35.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.20" parsed="|Acts|24|20|0|0" passage="Ac 24:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. When I was
|
||
there, they could not take offence at any thing I said; for all I
|
||
said was, <i>Touching the resurrection of the dead I am called in
|
||
question by you this day</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p35.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.21" parsed="|Acts|24|21|0|0" passage="Ac 24:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>), which gave no offence to any
|
||
one but the Sadducees. This I hope was no crime, that I stuck to
|
||
that which is the faith of the whole Jewish church, excepting those
|
||
whom they themselves call heretics."</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxv-p35.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.22-Acts.24.27" parsed="|Acts|24|22|24|27" passage="Ac 24:22-27" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.24.22-Acts.24.27">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxv-p35.4">Paul Converses with Felix; Felix Trembles;
|
||
Paul's Trial Adjourned.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxv-p36">22 And when Felix heard these things, having
|
||
more perfect knowledge of <i>that</i> way, he deferred them, and
|
||
said, When Lysias the chief captain shall come down, I will know
|
||
the uttermost of your matter. 23 And he commanded a
|
||
centurion to keep Paul, and to let <i>him</i> have liberty, and
|
||
that he should forbid none of his acquaintance to minister or come
|
||
unto him. 24 And after certain days, when Felix came with
|
||
his wife Drusilla, which was a Jewess, he sent for Paul, and heard
|
||
him concerning the faith in Christ. 25 And as he reasoned of
|
||
righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come, Felix trembled,
|
||
and answered, Go thy way for this time; when I have a convenient
|
||
season, I will call for thee. 26 He hoped also that money
|
||
should have been given him of Paul, that he might loose him:
|
||
wherefore he sent for him the oftener, and communed with him.
|
||
27 But after two years Porcius Festus came into Felix' room:
|
||
and Felix, willing to show the Jews a pleasure, left Paul
|
||
bound.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p37">We have here the result of Paul's trial
|
||
before Felix, and what was the consequence of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p38">I. Felix adjourned the cause, and took
|
||
further time to consider of it (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.22" parsed="|Acts|24|22|0|0" passage="Ac 24:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>): He <i>had a more perfect
|
||
knowledge of that way</i> which the Jews called heresy than the
|
||
high priest and the elders thought he had. He understood something
|
||
of the Christian religion; for, living at Cæsarea, where Cornelius,
|
||
a Roman centurion, was, who was a Christian, from him and others he
|
||
had got a notion of Christianity, that it was not such an evil
|
||
thing as it was represented. He himself knew some of that way to be
|
||
honest good men, and very conscientious, and therefore he put off
|
||
the prosecutors with an excuse: "<i>When the chief captain shall
|
||
come down</i> hither, <i>I will know the uttermost of your
|
||
matter,</i> or I shall know the truth, whether this Paul did go
|
||
about to raise sedition or no; you are parties, he is an
|
||
indifferent person. Either Paul deserves to be punished for raising
|
||
the tumult, or you do for doing it yourselves and then charging it
|
||
upon him; and I will hear what he says, and determine accordingly
|
||
between you." Now, 1. It was a disappointment to the high priest
|
||
and the elders that Paul was not condemned, or remitted to their
|
||
judgment, which they wished for and expected. But thus sometimes
|
||
God restrains the wrath of his people's enemies by the agency, not
|
||
of their friends, but of such as are strangers to them. And though
|
||
they be so, if they have but some <i>knowledge of their way,</i>
|
||
they cannot but appear for their protection. 2. It was an injury to
|
||
Paul that he was not released. Felix ought to have <i>avenged him
|
||
of his adversaries,</i> when he so plainly saw there was nothing
|
||
but malice in the prosecution, and to have delivered <i>him out of
|
||
the hand of the wicked,</i> according to the duty of a judge,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p38.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.82.4" parsed="|Ps|82|4|0|0" passage="Ps 82:4">Ps. lxxxii. 4</scripRef>. But he was a
|
||
judge that neither feared God nor regarded man, and what good could
|
||
be expected from him? It is a wrong not only to deny justice, but
|
||
to delay it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p39">II. He detained the prisoner in custody,
|
||
and would not take bail for him; else here at Cæsarea Paul had
|
||
friends enough that would gladly have been his security. Felix
|
||
thought a man of such a public character as Paul was had many
|
||
friends, as well as many enemies, and he might have an opportunity
|
||
of obliging them, or making a hand of them, if he did not presently
|
||
release him, and yet did show him countenance; and therefore, 1. He
|
||
continued him a prisoner, commanded a centurion or captain to keep
|
||
him, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p39.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.23" parsed="|Acts|24|23|0|0" passage="Ac 24:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. He did
|
||
not commit him to the common jail, but, being first made an
|
||
army-prisoner, he shall still be so. 2. Yet he took care he should
|
||
be <i>a prisoner at large—in libera custodia;</i> his keeper must
|
||
let him have liberty, not bind him nor lock him up, but make his
|
||
confinement as easy to him as possible; let him have the liberty of
|
||
the castle, and, perhaps, he means liberty to take the air, or go
|
||
abroad upon his parole: and Paul was such an honest man that they
|
||
might take his word for his return. The high priest and the elders
|
||
grudged him his life, but Felix generously allows him a sort of
|
||
liberty; for he had not those prejudices against him and his way
|
||
that they had. He also gave orders that none of his friends should
|
||
be hindered from coming to him; the centurion must not forbid any
|
||
of his acquaintances from ministering to him; and a man's prison is
|
||
as it were his own house if he has but his friends about him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p40">III. He had frequent conversation with him
|
||
afterwards in private, once particularly, not long after his public
|
||
trial, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p40.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.24-Acts.24.25" parsed="|Acts|24|24|24|25" passage="Ac 24:24,25"><i>v.</i> 24, 25</scripRef>.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p41">1. With what design <i>Felix sent for
|
||
Paul.</i> He had a mind to have some talk with him <i>concerning
|
||
the faith in Christ,</i> the Christian religion; he had some
|
||
knowledge of that way, but he desired to have an account of it from
|
||
Paul, who was so celebrated a preacher of that faith, above the
|
||
rest. Those that would enlarge their knowledge must discourse with
|
||
men of their own profession, and those that would be acquainted
|
||
with any profession should consult those that excel in the
|
||
knowledge of it; and therefore Felix had a mind to talk with Paul
|
||
more freely than he could in open court, where he observed Paul
|
||
upon his guard, <i>concerning the faith of Christ;</i> and this
|
||
only to satisfy his curiosity, or rather the curiosity of <i>his
|
||
wife Drusilla, who was a Jewess,</i> daughter of Herod Agrippa,
|
||
that was eaten of worms. Being educated in the Jewish religion, she
|
||
was more inquisitive concerning the Christian religion, which
|
||
pretended to be the perfection of that, and desired to hear Paul
|
||
discourse of it. But it was no great matter what religion she was
|
||
of; for, whatever it was, she was a reproach and scandal to it-a
|
||
Jewess, but an adulteress; she was another man's wife when Felix
|
||
took her to be his wife, and she lived with him in whoredom and was
|
||
noted for an impudent woman, yet she desires to hear <i>concerning
|
||
the faith of Christ.</i> Many are fond of new notions and
|
||
speculations in religion, and can hear and speak of them with
|
||
pleasure, who yet hate to come under the power and influence of
|
||
religion, can be content to have their judgments informed but not
|
||
their lives reformed.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p42">2. What the account was which Paul gave him
|
||
of the Christian religion; by the idea he had of it, he expected to
|
||
be amused with a mystical divinity, but, as Paul represents it to
|
||
him, he is alarmed with a practical divinity. Paul, being asked
|
||
<i>concerning the faith in Christ, reasoned</i> (for Paul was
|
||
always a rational preacher) concerning <i>righteousness,
|
||
temperance, and judgment to come.</i> It is probable that he
|
||
mentioned the peculiar doctrines of Christianity concerning the
|
||
death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and his being <i>the
|
||
Mediator between God and man;</i> but he hastened to his
|
||
application, in which he designed to come home to the consciences
|
||
of his hearers.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p43">(1.) He discoursed with clearness and
|
||
warmth <i>of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to come;</i>
|
||
and here he showed, [1.] That the faith in Christ is designed to
|
||
enforce upon the children of men the great laws of justice and
|
||
temperance. <i>The grace of God teacheth us to live soberly and
|
||
righteously,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p43.1" osisRef="Bible:Titus.2.12" parsed="|Titus|2|12|0|0" passage="Tit 2:12">Tit. ii.
|
||
12</scripRef>. Justice and temperance were celebrated virtues among
|
||
the heathen moralists; if the doctrine Paul preaches, which Felix
|
||
has heard of as proclaiming liberty, will but free him from an
|
||
obligation to these, he will readily embrace it: "<i>No,</i>" says
|
||
Paul, "it is so far from doing so that it strengthens the
|
||
obligations of those sacred laws; it binds all under the highest
|
||
penalties to be <i>honest in all their dealings,</i> and to
|
||
<i>render to all their due;</i> to <i>deny themselves,</i> and
|
||
<i>to keep under the body, and bring it into subjection.</i>" The
|
||
world and the flesh being in our baptism renounced, all our
|
||
pursuits of the world and all our gratifications of the desires of
|
||
the body are to be under the regulations of religion. <i>Paul
|
||
reasoned of righteousness and temperance,</i> to convince Felix of
|
||
his unrighteousness and intemperance, of which he had been
|
||
notoriously guilty, that, seeing the odiousness of them, and his
|
||
obnoxiousness to the wrath of God for them (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p43.2" osisRef="Bible:Eph.5.6" parsed="|Eph|5|6|0|0" passage="Eph 5:6">Eph. v. 6</scripRef>), he might enquire concerning the
|
||
faith of Christ, with a resolution to embrace it. [2.] That by the
|
||
doctrine of Christ is discovered to us the judgment to come, by the
|
||
sentence of which the everlasting state of all the children of men
|
||
will be finally and irreversibly determined. Men have their day
|
||
now, Felix hath his; but God's day is coming, <i>when everyone
|
||
shall give account of himself to God, the Judge of all.</i> Paul
|
||
reasoned concerning this; that is, he showed what reason we have to
|
||
believe <i>that there is a judgment to come,</i> and what reason we
|
||
have, in consideration thereof, to be religious.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p44">(2.) From this account of the heads of
|
||
Paul's discourse we may gather, [1.] That Paul in his preaching had
|
||
no respect to persons, for the word of God, which he preached, has
|
||
not: he urged the same convictions and instructions upon the Roman
|
||
governor that he did upon other people. [2.] That Paul in his
|
||
preaching aimed at the consciences of men, and came close to them,
|
||
sought not to please their fancy nor to gratify their curiosity,
|
||
but led them to a sight of their sins and a sense of their duty and
|
||
interest. [3.] That Paul preferred the serving of Christ, and the
|
||
saving of souls, before his own safety. He lay at the mercy of
|
||
Felix, who had power (as Pilate said) <i>to crucify him</i> (or,
|
||
which was as bad, to deliver him back to the Jews), <i>and he had
|
||
power to release him.</i> Now when Paul had his ear, and had him in
|
||
a good humour, he had a fair opportunity of ingratiating himself
|
||
with him, and obtaining a release, nay, and of incensing him
|
||
against his prosecutors: and, on the contrary, if he disobliged
|
||
him, and put him out of humour, he might do himself a great
|
||
diskindness by it; but he is wholly negligent of these
|
||
considerations, and is intent upon doing good, at least discharging
|
||
his duty. [4.] That Paul was willing to take pains, and run
|
||
hazards, in his work, even where there was little probability of
|
||
doing good. Felix and Drusilla were such hardened sinners that it
|
||
was not at all likely they should be brought to repentance by
|
||
Paul's preaching, especially under such disadvantages; and yet Paul
|
||
deals with them as one that did not despair of them. Let the
|
||
watchman give fair warning, and then they have delivered their own
|
||
souls, though they should not prevail to deliver the souls they
|
||
watch for.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p45">3. What impressions Paul's discourse made
|
||
upon this great but wicked man: <i>Felix trembled,</i>
|
||
<b><i>emphobos genomenos</i></b>—<i>being put into a fright,</i>
|
||
or made <i>a terror to himself, a magor-missabib,</i> as Pashur,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.20.3-Jer.20.4" parsed="|Jer|20|3|20|4" passage="Jer 20:3,4">Jer. xx. 3, 4</scripRef>. Paul never
|
||
trembled before him, but he was made to tremble before Paul. "If
|
||
this be so, as Paul says, what will become of me in another world?
|
||
If the unrighteous and intemperate will be condemned in the
|
||
judgment to come, I am undone, for ever undone, unless I lead a new
|
||
course of life." We do not find that Drusilla trembled, though she
|
||
was equally guilty, for she was a Jewess, and depended upon the
|
||
ceremonial law, which she adhered to the observance of, to justify
|
||
her; but Felix for the present could fasten upon nothing to pacify
|
||
his conscience, and therefore trembled. See here, (1.) The power of
|
||
the word of God, when it comes with commission; it is searching, it
|
||
is startling, it can strike a terror into the heart of the most
|
||
proud and daring sinner, by <i>setting his sins in order before
|
||
him,</i> and showing him <i>the terrors of the Lord.</i> (2.) The
|
||
workings of natural conscience; when it is startled and awakened,
|
||
it fills the soul with horror and amazement at its own deformity
|
||
and danger. Those that are themselves <i>the terror of the mighty
|
||
in the land of the living</i> have hereby been made a terror to
|
||
themselves. A prospect of the judgment to come is enough to make
|
||
the stoutest heart to tremble, as when it comes indeed it will make
|
||
<i>the mighty men and the chief captains</i> to call in vain <i>to
|
||
rocks and mountains to shelter them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p46">4. How Felix struggled to get clear of
|
||
these impressions, and to shake off the terror of his convictions;
|
||
he did by them as he did by Paul's prosecutors (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p46.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.25" parsed="|Acts|24|25|0|0" passage="Ac 24:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>), <i>he deferred them;</i> he
|
||
said, <i>Go thy way for this time, when I have a convenient season
|
||
I will call for thee.</i> (1.) He trembled and that was all. Paul's
|
||
trembling (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p46.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.6" parsed="|Acts|9|6|0|0" passage="Ac 9:6"><i>ch.</i> ix. 6</scripRef>),
|
||
and the <i>jailer's</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p46.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.16.29" parsed="|Acts|16|29|0|0" passage="Ac 16:29"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
xvi. 29</scripRef>), ended in their conversion, but this of Felix
|
||
did not. Many are startled by the word of God who are not
|
||
effectually changed by it. Many are in fear of the consequences of
|
||
sin, and yet continue in love and league with sin. (2.) He did not
|
||
fight against his convictions, nor fly in the face of the word or
|
||
of the preacher of it, to be revenged on them for making his
|
||
conscience fly in his face; he did not say to Paul, as Amaziah to
|
||
the prophet, <i>Forbear, why shouldst thou be smitten?</i> He did
|
||
not threaten him with a closer confinement, or with death, for
|
||
touching him (as John Baptist did Herod) in the sore place. But,
|
||
(3.) He artfully shifted off his convictions by putting off the
|
||
prosecution of them to another time. He has nothing to object
|
||
against what Paul has said; it is weighty and worth considering.
|
||
But, like a sorry debtor, he begs a day; Paul has spent himself,
|
||
and has tired him and his lady, and therefore, "<i>Go thy way for
|
||
this time</i>—break off here, business calls me away; but <i>when
|
||
I have a convenient season,</i> and have nothing else to do, <i>I
|
||
will call for thee,</i> and hear what thou hast further to say."
|
||
Note, [1.] Many lose all the benefit of their convictions for want
|
||
of striking while the iron is hot. If Felix, now that he trembled,
|
||
had but asked, as Paul and the jailer did when they trembled,
|
||
<i>What shall I do?</i> he might have been brought to the faith of
|
||
Christ, and have been a <i>Felix</i> indeed, <i>happy</i> for ever;
|
||
but, by dropping his convictions now, he lost them for ever, and
|
||
himself with them. [2.] In the affairs of our souls, delays are
|
||
dangerous; nothing is of more fatal consequence than men's putting
|
||
off their conversion from time to time. They will repent, and turn
|
||
to God, but not yet; the matter is adjourned to some more
|
||
convenient season, when such a business or affair is compassed,
|
||
when they are so much older; and then convictions cool and wear
|
||
off, good purposes prove to no purpose, and they are more hardened
|
||
than ever in their evil way. Felix put off this matter to a more
|
||
convenient season, but we do not find that this more convenient
|
||
season ever came; for the devil cozens us of all our time by
|
||
cozening us of the present time. The present season is, without
|
||
doubt, the most convenient season. <i>Behold, now is the accepted
|
||
time. To-day if you will hear his voice.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxv-p47">IV. After all, he detained him a prisoner,
|
||
and left him so, when two years after he was removed from the
|
||
government, <scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p47.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.26-Acts.24.27" parsed="|Acts|24|26|24|27" passage="Ac 24:26,27"><i>v.</i> 26,
|
||
27</scripRef>. He was convinced in his conscience that Paul had
|
||
done <i>nothing worthy of death or of bonds,</i> and yet had not
|
||
the honesty to release him. To little purpose had Paul reasoned
|
||
with him about righteousness, though he then trembled at the
|
||
thought of his own iniquity, who could thus persist in such a
|
||
palpable piece of injustice. But here we are told what principles
|
||
he was governed by herein; and they were such as make the matter
|
||
yet much worse. 1. The love of money. He would not release Paul
|
||
because he hoped to make his market of him, and that at length his
|
||
friends would make a purse to purchase his liberty, and then he
|
||
would satisfy his conscience by releasing him when he could withal
|
||
satisfy his covetousness by it; but he cannot find in his heart to
|
||
do his duty as a judge, unless he can get money by it: <i>He hoped
|
||
that money would have been given him of Paul,</i> or somebody for
|
||
him, and then he would have loosed him, and set him at liberty. In
|
||
hopes of this, he detains him a prisoner, and <i>sends for him the
|
||
oftener, and communes with him;</i> not any more about the faith of
|
||
Christ (he had had enough of that, and of the judgment to come;
|
||
Paul must not return to those subjects, nor go on with them), but
|
||
about his discharge, or ransom rather, out of his present
|
||
captivity. He cannot for shame ask Paul what he will give him to
|
||
release him, but he sends for him to feel his pulse, and gives him
|
||
an opportunity to ask why he would take to release him. And now we
|
||
see what became of his promise both to Paul and to himself, that he
|
||
would hear more of Christ at some other convenient season. Here
|
||
were many seasons convenient enough to have talked that matter
|
||
through, but nothing is done in it; all his business now is to get
|
||
money by Paul, not to get the knowledge of Christ by him. Note, It
|
||
is just with God to say concerning those who trifle with their
|
||
convictions, and think they can have the grace of God at command
|
||
when they please, <i>My Spirit shall no more strive with them.</i>
|
||
When men will not hear God's voice <i>to-day, while it is called
|
||
to-day,</i> the heart is commonly <i>hardened by the deceitfulness
|
||
of sin.</i> Paul was but a poor man himself, <i>silver and gold he
|
||
had none</i> to give, to purchase his liberty; but Felix knew there
|
||
were those who wished well to him who were able to assist him. He
|
||
having lately collected a great deal of money for the poor saints
|
||
to relieve them, it might also be expected that the rich saints
|
||
should contribute some to release him, and I wonder it was not
|
||
done. Though Paul is to be commended that he would not offer money
|
||
to Felix, nor beg money of the churches (his great and generous
|
||
soul disdained both), yet I know not whether his friends are to be
|
||
commended, nay, whether they can be justified, in not doing it for
|
||
him. They ought to have solicited the governor as pressingly for
|
||
him as his enemies did against him: and if a <i>gift was necessary
|
||
to make room for them</i> (as Solomon speaks) and to bring them
|
||
before great men, they might lawfully have done it. I ought not to
|
||
bribe a man to do an unjust thing, but, if he will not do me
|
||
justice without a fee, it is but doing myself justice to give it to
|
||
him; and, if they might do it, it was a shame they did not do it. I
|
||
blush for them, that they would let such an eminent and useful man
|
||
as Paul lie in the jail, when a little money would have fetched him
|
||
out, and restored him to his usefulness again. The Christians here
|
||
at Cæsarea, where he now was, had parted with their tears to
|
||
prevent his going to the prison (<scripRef id="Acts.xxv-p47.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.21.13" parsed="|Acts|21|13|0|0" passage="Ac 21:13"><i>ch.</i> xxi. 13</scripRef>), and could they not find
|
||
in their hearts to part with their money to help him out? Yet there
|
||
might be a providence of God in it; Paul's bonds must be for the
|
||
furtherance of the gospel of Christ, and therefore he must continue
|
||
in bonds. However, this will not excuse Felix, who ought to have
|
||
released an innocent man, without demanding or accepting any thing
|
||
for it: the judge that will not do right without a bribe will no
|
||
doubt do wrong for a bribe. 2. Men-pleasing. Felix was recalled
|
||
from his government about <i>two years after this,</i> and Porcius
|
||
Festus was put in his place, and one should have expected he would
|
||
have at least concluded his government with this act of justice,
|
||
the release of Paul, but he did not; he <i>left Paul bound,</i> and
|
||
the reason here given is because he was <i>willing to do the Jews a
|
||
pleasure.</i> Though he would not deliver him <i>to death, to
|
||
please them,</i> yet he would continue him a prisoner rather than
|
||
offend them; and he did it in hope hereby to atone for the many
|
||
offences he had done against them. He did not think Paul had either
|
||
interest or inclination to complain of him at court, for detaining
|
||
him so long in custody, against all law and equity; but he was
|
||
jealous of the high priest and elders, that they would be his
|
||
accusers to the emperor for the wrongs he had done them, and
|
||
therefore hopes by gratifying them in this matter to stop their
|
||
mouths. Thus those who do some base things are tempted to do more
|
||
to screen themselves and bear them out. If Felix had not injured
|
||
the Jews, he needed not to have done this to please them; but, when
|
||
he had done it, it seems he did not gain his point. The Jews,
|
||
notwithstanding this, accused him to the emperor, and some
|
||
historians say he was sent bound to Rome by Festus; and, if so,
|
||
surely his remembering how light he had made of Paul's bonds would
|
||
help to make his own chain heavy. Those that aim to please God by
|
||
doing good will have what they aim at; but so will not those that
|
||
seek to please men by doing evil.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |