1299 lines
90 KiB
XML
1299 lines
90 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Acts.xxix" n="xxix" next="Rom" prev="Acts.xxviii" progress="29.71%" title="Chapter XXVIII">
|
||
<h2 id="Acts.xxix-p0.1">A C T S.</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="Acts.xxix-p0.2">CHAP. XXVIII.</h3>
|
||
<p class="intro" id="Acts.xxix-p1">We are the more concerned to take notice of and to
|
||
improve what is here recorded concerning blessed Paul because,
|
||
after the story of this chapter, we hear no more of him in the
|
||
sacred history, though we have a great deal of him yet before us in
|
||
his epistles. We have attended him through several chapters from
|
||
one judgment-seat to another, and could at last have taken leave of
|
||
him with the more pleasure if we had left him at liberty; but in
|
||
this chapter we are to condole with him, and yet congratulate him.
|
||
I. We condole with him as a poor shipwrecked passenger, stripped of
|
||
all; and yet congratulate him, 1. As singularly owned by his God in
|
||
his distress, preserved himself from receiving hurt by a viper that
|
||
fastened on his hand (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.1-Acts.28.6" parsed="|Acts|28|1|28|6" passage="Ac 28:1-6">ver.
|
||
1-6</scripRef>), and being made an instrument of much good in the
|
||
island on which they were cast, in healing many that were sick, and
|
||
particularly the father of Publius, the chief man of the island,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.7-Acts.28.9" parsed="|Acts|28|7|28|9" passage="Ac 28:7-9">ver. 7-9</scripRef>. 2. As much
|
||
respected by the people there, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.10" parsed="|Acts|28|10|0|0" passage="Ac 28:10">ver.
|
||
10</scripRef>. II. We condole with him as a poor confined prisoner,
|
||
carried to Rome under the notion of a criminal removed by "habeas
|
||
corpus" (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.11-Acts.28.16" parsed="|Acts|28|11|28|16" passage="Ac 28:11-16">ver. 11-16</scripRef>),
|
||
and yet we congratulate him, 1. Upon the respect shown him by the
|
||
Christians at Rome, who came a great way to meet him, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.15" parsed="|Acts|28|15|0|0" passage="Ac 28:15">ver. 15</scripRef>. 2. Upon the favour he found
|
||
with the captain of the guard, into whose custody he was delivered,
|
||
who suffered him to dwell by himself, and did not put him in the
|
||
common prison, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.16" parsed="|Acts|28|16|0|0" passage="Ac 28:16">ver. 16</scripRef>. 3.
|
||
Upon the free conference he had with the Jews at Rome, both about
|
||
his own affair (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.17-Acts.28.22" parsed="|Acts|28|17|28|22" passage="Ac 28:17-22">ver.
|
||
17-22</scripRef>) and upon the subject of the Christian religion in
|
||
general (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.23" parsed="|Acts|28|23|0|0" passage="Ac 28:23">ver. 23</scripRef>), the
|
||
issue of which was that God was glorified, many were edified, the
|
||
rest left inexcusable, and the apostles justified in preaching the
|
||
gospel to the Gentiles, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.24-Acts.28.29" parsed="|Acts|28|24|28|29" passage="Ac 28:24-29">ver.
|
||
24-29</scripRef>. 4. Upon the undisturbed liberty he had to preach
|
||
the gospel to all comers in his own house for two years together,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.30-Acts.28.31" parsed="|Acts|28|30|28|31" passage="Ac 28:30-31">ver. 30-31</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28" parsed="|Acts|28|0|0|0" passage="Ac 28" type="Commentary"/>
|
||
<scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p1.12" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.1-Acts.28.10" parsed="|Acts|28|1|28|10" passage="Ac 28:1-10" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.28.1-Acts.28.10">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxix-p1.13">Paul's Voyage towards Rome.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxix-p2">1 And when they were escaped, then they knew
|
||
that the island was called Melita. 2 And the barbarous
|
||
people showed us no little kindness: for they kindled a fire, and
|
||
received us every one, because of the present rain, and because of
|
||
the cold. 3 And when Paul had gathered a bundle of sticks,
|
||
and laid <i>them</i> on the fire, there came a viper out of the
|
||
heat, and fastened on his hand. 4 And when the barbarians
|
||
saw the <i>venomous</i> beast hang on his hand, they said among
|
||
themselves, No doubt this man is a murderer, whom, though he hath
|
||
escaped the sea, yet vengeance suffereth not to live. 5 And
|
||
he shook off the beast into the fire, and felt no harm. 6
|
||
Howbeit they looked when he should have swollen, or fallen down
|
||
dead suddenly: but after they had looked a great while, and saw no
|
||
harm come to him, they changed their minds, and said that he was a
|
||
god. 7 In the same quarters were possessions of the chief
|
||
man of the island, whose name was Publius; who received us, and
|
||
lodged us three days courteously. 8 And it came to pass,
|
||
that the father of Publius lay sick of a fever and of a bloody
|
||
flux: to whom Paul entered in, and prayed, and laid his hands on
|
||
him, and healed him. 9 So when this was done, others also,
|
||
which had diseases in the island, came, and were healed: 10
|
||
Who also honoured us with many honours; and when we departed, they
|
||
laded <i>us</i> with such things as were necessary.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p3">What a great variety of places and
|
||
circumstances do we find Paul in! He was a planet, and not a fixed
|
||
star. Here we have him in an island to which, in all probability,
|
||
he had never come if he had not been thrown upon it by a storm; and
|
||
yet it seems God has work for him to do here. Even stormy winds
|
||
fulfil God's counsel, and an ill wind indeed it is that blows
|
||
nobody any good; this ill wind blew good to the island of Melita;
|
||
for it gave them Paul's company for three months, who was a
|
||
blessing to every place he came to. This island was called Melita,
|
||
lying between Sicily and Africa, twenty miles long, and twelve
|
||
broad; it lies furthest from the continent of any island in the
|
||
Mediterranean; it is about sixty miles from Sicily. It has been
|
||
famous since for the knights of Malta, who, when the Turks overran
|
||
that part of Christendom, made a noble stand, and gave some check
|
||
to the progress of their arms. Now here we have,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p4">I. The kind reception which the inhabitants
|
||
of this island gave to the distressed strangers that were
|
||
shipwrecked on their coast (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.2" parsed="|Acts|28|2|0|0" passage="Ac 28:2"><i>v.</i>
|
||
2</scripRef>): <i>The barbarous people showed us no little
|
||
kindness.</i> God had promised that there should be no loss of any
|
||
man's life; and, <i>as for God, his work is perfect.</i> If they
|
||
had escaped the sea, and when they came ashore had perished for
|
||
cold or want, it had been all one; therefore Providence continues
|
||
its care of them, and what benefits we receive by the hand of man
|
||
must be acknowledged to come from the hand of God; for every
|
||
creature is that to us, and no more, that he makes it to be, and
|
||
when he pleases, as he can make enemies to be at peace, so he can
|
||
make strangers to be friends, friends in need, and those are
|
||
friends indeed—friends <i>in adversity,</i> and that is <i>the
|
||
time that a brother is born for.</i> Observe, 1. The general notice
|
||
taken of the kindness which the natives of Malta showed to Paul and
|
||
his company. They are called <i>barbarous people,</i> because they
|
||
did not, in language and customs, conform either to the Greeks or
|
||
Romans, who looked (superciliously enough) upon all but themselves
|
||
as barbarians, though otherwise civilized enough, and perhaps in
|
||
some cases more civil than they. These barbarous people, however
|
||
they were called so, were full of humanity: They <i>showed us not
|
||
little kindness.</i> So far were they from making a prey of this
|
||
shipwreck, as many, I fear, who are called Christian people, would
|
||
have done, that they laid hold of it as an opportunity of showing
|
||
mercy. <i>The Samaritan</i> is a better neighbour to the poor
|
||
wounded man <i>than the priest or Levite.</i> And verily we have
|
||
not found greater humanity among Greeks, or Romans, or Christians,
|
||
than among these barbarous people; and it is written for our
|
||
imitation, that we may hence learn to be compassionate to those
|
||
that are in distress and misery, and to relieve and succour them to
|
||
the utmost of our ability, as those <i>that know we ourselves are
|
||
also in the body.</i> We should be ready <i>to entertain strangers,
|
||
as Abraham, who sat at his tent door to invite passengers in</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.2" parsed="|Heb|13|2|0|0" passage="Heb 13:2">Heb. xiii. 2</scripRef>), but
|
||
especially strangers in distress, as these were. <i>Honour all
|
||
men.</i> If Providence hath so <i>appointed the bounds of our
|
||
habitation</i> as to give us an opportunity of being frequently
|
||
serviceable to persons at a loss, we should not place it among the
|
||
inconveniences of our lot, but the advantages of it; because <i>it
|
||
is more blessed to give than to receive.</i> Who knows but these
|
||
barbarous people had their lot cast in this island for such a time
|
||
as this! 2. A particular instance of their kindness: <i>They
|
||
kindled a fire,</i> in some large hall or other, and <i>they
|
||
received us everyone</i>—made room for us about the fire, and bade
|
||
us all welcome, without asking either what country we were of or
|
||
what religion. In swimming <i>to the shore,</i> and coming on
|
||
<i>the broken pieces of the ship,</i> we must suppose that they
|
||
were sadly wet, that they had not a dry thread on them; and, as if
|
||
that were not enough, to complete the deluge, waters from above met
|
||
those from below, and it rained so hard that this would wet them to
|
||
the skin presently; and <i>it was a cold rain too,</i> so that they
|
||
wanted nothing so much as a good fire (for they had eaten heartily
|
||
but just before on ship-board), and this they got for them
|
||
presently, <i>to warm them, and dry their clothes.</i> It is
|
||
sometimes as much a piece of charity to poor families to supply
|
||
them with fuel as with food or raiment. <i>Be you warmed,</i> is as
|
||
necessary as <i>Be you filled.</i> When in the extremities of bad
|
||
weather we find ourselves fenced against the rigours of the season,
|
||
by the accommodations of a warm house, bed, clothes, and a good
|
||
fire, we should think how many lie exposed <i>to the present rain,
|
||
and to the cold,</i> and pity them, and pray for them, and help
|
||
them if we can.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p5">II. The further danger that Paul was in by
|
||
a viper's fastening on his hand, and the unjust construction that
|
||
the people put upon it. Paul is among strangers, and appears one of
|
||
the meanest and most contemptible of the company, therefore God
|
||
distinguishes him, and soon causes him to be taken notice of.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p6">1. When the fire was to be made, and too be
|
||
made bigger, that so great a company might all have the benefit of
|
||
it, Paul was as busy as any of them in gathering sticks, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.3" parsed="|Acts|28|3|0|0" passage="Ac 28:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. Though he was free from
|
||
all, and of greater account than any of them, <i>yet he made
|
||
himself servant of all.</i> Paul was an industrious active man, and
|
||
loved to be doing when any thing was to be done, and never
|
||
contrived to take his ease. Paul was a humble self-denying man, and
|
||
would stoop to any thing by which he might be serviceable, even to
|
||
the gathering of sticks to make a fire of. We should reckon nothing
|
||
below us but sin, and be willing to condescend to the meanest
|
||
offices, if there be occasion, for the good of our brethren. The
|
||
people were ready to help them; yet Paul, wet and cold as he is,
|
||
will not throw it all upon them, but will help himself. Those that
|
||
receive benefit by the fire should help to carry fuel to it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p7">2. The sticks being old dry rubbish, it
|
||
happened there was a viper among them, that lay as dead till it
|
||
came to the heat, and then revived, or lay quiet till it felt the
|
||
fire, and then was provoked, and flew at him that unawares threw it
|
||
into the fire, and <i>fastened upon his hand,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.3" parsed="|Acts|28|3|0|0" passage="Ac 28:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. Serpents and such
|
||
venomous creatures commonly lie among sticks; hence we read of him
|
||
<i>that leans on the wall, and a serpent bites him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.5.19" parsed="|Amos|5|19|0|0" passage="Am 5:19">Amos v. 19</scripRef>. It was so common that
|
||
people were by it frightened from tearing hedges (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.10.8" parsed="|Eccl|10|8|0|0" passage="Ec 10:8">Eccl. x. 8</scripRef>): <i>Whoso breaketh a
|
||
hedge, a serpent shall bite him.</i> As there is a snake under the
|
||
green grass, so there is often under the dry leaves. See how many
|
||
perils human life is exposed to, and what danger we are in from the
|
||
inferior creatures, which have many of them become enemies to men,
|
||
since men became rebels to God; and what a mercy it is that we are
|
||
preserved from them as we are. We often meet with that which is
|
||
mischievous where we expect that which is beneficial; and many come
|
||
by hurt when they are honestly employed, and in the way of their
|
||
duty.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p8">3. The barbarous people concluded that
|
||
Paul, being a prisoner, was certainly a murderer, who had appealed
|
||
to Rome, to escape justice in his own country, and that this viper
|
||
was sent by divine justice to be the avenger of blood; or, if they
|
||
were not aware that he was a prisoner, they supposed that he was in
|
||
his flight; and <i>when they saw the venomous animal hand on his
|
||
hand,</i> which it seems he could not, or would not, immediately
|
||
throw off, but let it hang, they concluded, "<i>No doubt this man
|
||
is a murderer,</i> has shed innocent blood, and therefore,
|
||
<i>though he has escaped the sea, yet</i> divine <i>vengeance</i>
|
||
pursues him, and fastens upon him now that he is pleasing himself
|
||
with the thoughts of that escape, and will <i>not suffer him to
|
||
live.</i>" Now in this we may see,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p9">(1.) Some of the discoveries of natural
|
||
light. They were barbarous people, perhaps had no books nor
|
||
learning among them, and yet they knew naturally, [1.] That there
|
||
is a God that governs the world, and a providence that presides in
|
||
all occurrences, that things do not come to pass by chance, no, not
|
||
such a thing as this, but by divine direction. [2.] That evil
|
||
pursues sinners, that there are good works which God will reward
|
||
and wicked works which he will punish; there is a divine
|
||
<i>nemesis—a vengeance,</i> which sooner or later will reckon for
|
||
enormous crimes. They believe not only that there is a God, but
|
||
that this God hath said, <i>Vengeance is mine, I will repay,</i>
|
||
even to death. [3.] That murder is a heinous crime, and which shall
|
||
not long go unpunished, that <i>whoso sheds man's blood,</i> if his
|
||
blood be not shed by man (by the magistrate, as it ought to be) it
|
||
shall be shed by the righteous Judge of heaven and earth, who is
|
||
the avenger of wrong. Those that think they shall go unpunished in
|
||
any evil way will be judged out of the mouth of these barbarians,
|
||
who could say, without book, <i>Woe to the wicked, for it shall be
|
||
ill with them, for the reward of their hands shall be given
|
||
them.</i> Those who, because they have escaped many judgments are
|
||
secure, and say, <i>We shall have peace though we go on,</i> and
|
||
have their hearts so much the more <i>set to do evil because
|
||
sentence against their evil works is not executed speedily,</i> may
|
||
learn from these illiterate people that, though malefactors have
|
||
escaped the vengeance of the sea, yet there is no outrunning divine
|
||
justice, <i>vengeance suffers not to live.</i> In Job's time you
|
||
might ask <i>those that to by the way,</i> ask the next body you
|
||
met, and they would tell you that <i>the wicked is reserved to the
|
||
day of destruction.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p10">(2.) Some of the mistakes of natural light,
|
||
which needed to be rectified by divine revelation. In two things
|
||
their knowledge was defective:—[1.] That they thought all wicked
|
||
people were punished in this life; that divine vengeance never
|
||
suffers great and notorious sinners, such as murderers are, to live
|
||
long; but that, if <i>they come up out of the pit, they shall be
|
||
taken in the snare</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.48.43-Jer.48.44" parsed="|Jer|48|43|48|44" passage="Jer 48:43,44">Jer.
|
||
xlviii. 43, 44</scripRef>), if <i>they flee from a lion, a bear
|
||
shall meet them</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Amos.5.19" parsed="|Amos|5|19|0|0" passage="Am 5:19">Amos v.
|
||
19</scripRef>), if they escape being drowned, a viper shall fasten
|
||
upon them; whereas it is not so. The wicked, even murderers,
|
||
sometimes <i>live, become old, yea, are mighty in power;</i> for
|
||
the day of vengeance is to come in the other world, <i>the great
|
||
day of wrath;</i> and though some are made examples of in this
|
||
world, to prove that there is a God and a providence, yet many are
|
||
left unpunished, to prove that there is a judgment to come. [2.]
|
||
That they thought all who were remarkably afflicted in this life
|
||
were wicked people; that a man on whose hand a viper fastens may
|
||
thence be judged to be a murderer, as if those on whom the tower in
|
||
Siloam fell must needs be greater sinners than all in Jerusalem.
|
||
This mistake Job's friends went upon, in their judgment upon his
|
||
case; but divine revelation sets this matter in a true light—that
|
||
all things come ordinarily alike to all, that good men are
|
||
oftentimes greatly afflicted in this life, for the exercise and
|
||
improvement of their faith and patience.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p11">4. When he shook off the viper from his
|
||
hand, yet they expected that divine vengeance would ratify the
|
||
censure they had passed, and <i>that he would have swollen</i> and
|
||
burst, through the force of the poison, or <i>that he would have
|
||
fallen down dead suddenly.</i> See how apt men are, when once they
|
||
have got an ill opinion of a man, though ever so unjust, to abide
|
||
by it, and to think that God must necessarily confirm and ratify
|
||
their peevish sentence. It was well they did not knock him down
|
||
themselves, when they saw he did not swell and fall down; but so
|
||
considerate they are as to let Providence work, and to attend the
|
||
motions of it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p12">III. Paul's deliverance from the danger,
|
||
and the undue construction the people put upon this. The viper's
|
||
fastening on his hand was a trial of his faith; and it was found to
|
||
praise, and honour, and glory: for, 1. It does not appear that it
|
||
put him into any fright or confusion at all. He did not shriek or
|
||
start, nor, as it would be natural for us to do, throw it off with
|
||
terror and precipitation; for he suffered it to hang on so long
|
||
that the people had time to take notice of it and to make their
|
||
remarks upon it. Such a wonderful presence of mind he had, and such
|
||
a composure, as no man could have upon such a sudden accident, but
|
||
by the special aids of divine grace, and the actual belief and
|
||
consideration of that word of Christ concerning his disciples
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Mark.16.18" parsed="|Mark|16|18|0|0" passage="Mk 16:18">Mark xvi. 18</scripRef>), <i>They
|
||
shall take up serpents.</i> This it is to have <i>the heart fixed,
|
||
trusting in God.</i> 2. He carelessly <i>shook off the viper into
|
||
the fire,</i> without any difficulty, calling for help, or any
|
||
means used to loosen its hold; and it is probable that it was
|
||
consumed in the fire. Thus, in the strength of the grace of Christ,
|
||
believers shake off the temptations of Satan, with a holy
|
||
resolution, saying, as Christ did, <i>Get thee behind me, Satan;
|
||
The Lord rebuke thee;</i> and thus they <i>keep themselves, that
|
||
the wicked one toucheth them not,</i> so as to fasten upon them,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:1John.5.18" parsed="|1John|5|18|0|0" passage="1Jo 5:18">1 John v. 18</scripRef>. When we
|
||
despise the censures and reproaches of men, and look upon them with
|
||
a holy contempt, having the testimony of conscience for us, then we
|
||
do, as Paul here, <i>shake off the viper into the fire.</i> It does
|
||
us no harm, except we fret at it, or be deterred by it from our
|
||
duty, or be provoked to render railing for railing. 3. He was none
|
||
the worse. Those that thought it would have been his death
|
||
<i>looked a great while, but saw no harm at all come to him.</i>
|
||
God hereby intended to make him remarkable among these barbarous
|
||
people, and so to make way for the entertainment of the gospel
|
||
among them. It is reported that after this no venomous creature
|
||
would live in that island, any more than in Ireland; but I do not
|
||
find that the matter of fact is confirmed, though the popish
|
||
writers speak of it with assurance. 4. They then magnified him as
|
||
much as before they had vilified him: <i>They changed their minds,
|
||
and said that he was a god</i>—an immortal god; for they thought
|
||
it impossible that a mortal man should have a viper hang on his
|
||
hand so long and be never the worse. See the uncertainty of popular
|
||
opinion, how it turns with the wind, and how apt it is to run into
|
||
extremes both ways; from <i>sacrificing to Paul and Barnabas to
|
||
stoning them;</i> and here, from condemning him as a murderer to
|
||
idolizing him as a god.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p13">IV. The miraculous cure of an old gentleman
|
||
that was ill of a fever, and of others that were otherwise
|
||
diseased, by Paul. And, with these confirmations of the doctrine of
|
||
Christ, no doubt there was a faithful publication of it. Observe,
|
||
1. The kind entertainment which <i>Publius, the chief man of the
|
||
island,</i> gave to these distressed strangers; he had a
|
||
considerable estate in the island, and some think was governor, and
|
||
he <i>received them and lodged them three days very
|
||
courteously,</i> that they might have time to furnish themselves in
|
||
other places at the best hand. It is happy when God gives a large
|
||
heart to those to whom he has given a large estate. It became him,
|
||
who was the chief man of the island, to be most hospitable and
|
||
generous,—who was the richest man, to be rich in good works. 2.
|
||
The illness of <i>the father of Publius:</i> He <i>lay sick of a
|
||
fever and a bloody flux,</i> which often go together, and, when
|
||
they do, are commonly fatal. Providence ordered it that he should
|
||
be ill just at this time, that the cure of him might be a present
|
||
recompence to Publius for his generosity, and the cure of him by
|
||
miracle a recompence particularly for his kindness to Paul, whom he
|
||
received in the name of a prophet, and had this prophet's reward.
|
||
3. His cure: Paul took cognizance of his case, and though we do not
|
||
find he was urged to it, for they had no thought of any such thing,
|
||
yet he entered in, not as a physician to heal him by medicines, but
|
||
as an apostle to heal him by miracle; and he prayed to God, in
|
||
Christ's name, for his cure, and then laid his hands on him, and he
|
||
was perfectly well in an instant. Though he must needs be in years,
|
||
yet he recovered his health, and the lengthening out of his life
|
||
yet longer would be a mercy to him. 4. The cure of many others, who
|
||
were invited by this cure to apply to Paul. If he can heal diseases
|
||
so easily, so effectually, he shall soon have patients enough; and
|
||
he <i>bade them all welcome,</i> and sent them away with what they
|
||
came for. He did not plead that he was a stranger there, thrown
|
||
accidentally among them, under no obligations to them and waiting
|
||
to be gone by the first opportunity, and therefore might be excused
|
||
from receiving their applications. No, a good man will endeavour to
|
||
do good wherever the providence of God casts him. Paul reckoned
|
||
himself a debtor, not only to the Greeks, but to the Barbarians,
|
||
and thanked God for an opportunity of being useful among them. Nay,
|
||
he was particularly obliged to these inhabitants of Malta for the
|
||
seasonable shelter and supply they had afforded him, and hereby he
|
||
did in effect discharge his quarters, which should encourage us to
|
||
entertain strangers, for some thereby have entertained angels and
|
||
some apostles unawares. God will not be behind—hand with any for
|
||
kindness shown to his people in distress. We have reason to think
|
||
that Paul with these cures preached the gospel to them, and that,
|
||
coming thus confirmed and recommended, it was generally embraced
|
||
among them. And, if so, never were any people so enriched by a
|
||
shipwreck on their coasts as these Maltese were.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p14">V. The grateful acknowledgement which even
|
||
these barbarous people made of the kindness Paul had done them, in
|
||
preaching Christ unto them. They were civil to him, and to the
|
||
other ministers that were with him, who, it is likely, were
|
||
assisting to him in preaching among them, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.10" parsed="|Acts|28|10|0|0" passage="Ac 28:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. 1. They <i>honoured us with
|
||
many honours.</i> They showed them all possible respect; they saw
|
||
God honoured them, and therefore they justly thought themselves
|
||
obliged to honour them, and thought nothing too much by which they
|
||
might testify the esteem they had for them. Perhaps they made them
|
||
free of their island by naturalizing them, and admitted them
|
||
members of their guilds and fraternities. The faithful preachers of
|
||
the gospel are worthy of a double honour, especially when they
|
||
succeeded in their labours. 2. <i>When we departed, they loaded us
|
||
with such things as were necessary;</i> or, they put on board such
|
||
things as we had occasion for. Paul could not labour with his hands
|
||
here, for he had nothing to work upon, and therefore accepted the
|
||
kindness of the good people of Melita, not as a fee for his cures
|
||
(freely he had received, and freely he gave), but as the relief of
|
||
his wants, and theirs that were with him. And, having reaped of
|
||
their spiritual things, it was but just they should make them those
|
||
returns, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.9.11" parsed="|1Cor|9|11|0|0" passage="1Co 9:11">1 Cor. ix. 11</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.11-Acts.28.16" parsed="|Acts|28|11|28|16" passage="Ac 28:11-16" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.28.11-Acts.28.16">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxix-p14.4">Paul at Rome.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxix-p15">11 And after three months we departed in a ship
|
||
of Alexandria, which had wintered in the isle, whose sign was
|
||
Castor and Pollux. 12 And landing at Syracuse, we tarried
|
||
<i>there</i> three days. 13 And from thence we fetched a
|
||
compass, and came to Rhegium: and after one day the south wind
|
||
blew, and we came the next day to Puteoli: 14 Where we found
|
||
brethren, and were desired to tarry with them seven days: and so we
|
||
went toward Rome. 15 And from thence, when the brethren
|
||
heard of us, they came to meet us as far as Appii forum, and The
|
||
three taverns: whom when Paul saw, he thanked God, and took
|
||
courage. 16 And when we came to Rome, the centurion
|
||
delivered the prisoners to the captain of the guard: but Paul was
|
||
suffered to dwell by himself with a soldier that kept him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p16">We have here the progress of Paul's voyage
|
||
towards Rome, and his arrival there at length. A rough and
|
||
dangerous voyage he had hitherto had, and narrowly escaped with his
|
||
life; but after a storm comes a calm: the latter part of his voyage
|
||
was easy and quiet.</p>
|
||
<verse id="Acts.xxix-p16.1">
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.2">Per varios casus, per tot discrimina rerum,</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.3">Tendimus ad Latium————</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.4"/>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.5">Through various hazards and events we move</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.6">To Latium.</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.7"/>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.8">Tendimus ad cœlum.</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.9">We make for heaven.</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.10"/>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.11">————Dabit Deus his quoque finem.</l>
|
||
<l class="t1" id="Acts.xxix-p16.12">To these a period will be fixed by Heaven.</l>
|
||
</verse>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p17">We have here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p18">I. Their leaving Malta. That island was a
|
||
happy shelter to them, but it was not their home; when they are
|
||
refreshed they must put to sea again. The difficulties and
|
||
discouragements we have met with in our Christian course must not
|
||
hinder us from pressing forward. Notice is here taken, 1. Of the
|
||
time of their departure: <i>After three months,</i> the three
|
||
winter months. Better lie by, though they lay upon charges, than go
|
||
forward while the season was dangerous. Paul had warned them
|
||
against venturing to sea in winter weather, and they would not take
|
||
the warning; but, now that they had learned it by the difficulties
|
||
and dangers they had gone through, he needed not to warn them:
|
||
their learning did them good when they had paid dearly for it.
|
||
Experience is therefore called the mistress of fools, because those
|
||
are fools that will not learn till experience has taught them. 2.
|
||
Of the ship in which they departed. It was in a ship of Alexandria;
|
||
so was that which was cast away, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.27.6" parsed="|Acts|27|6|0|0" passage="Ac 27:6"><i>ch.</i> xxvii. 6</scripRef>. This ship had <i>wintered
|
||
in that isle,</i> and was safe. See what different issues there are
|
||
of men's undertakings in this world. Here were two ships, both of
|
||
Alexandria, both bound for Italy, both thrown upon the same island,
|
||
but one is wrecked there and the other is saved. Such occurrences
|
||
may often be observed. Providence sometimes favours those that deal
|
||
in the world, and prospers them, that people may be encouraged to
|
||
set their hands to worldly business; at other times Providence
|
||
crosses them, that people may be warned not to set their hearts
|
||
upon it. Events are thus varied, that we may learn both how to want
|
||
and how to abound. The historian takes notice of the sign of the
|
||
ship, which probably gave it its name: it was <i>Castor and
|
||
Pollux.</i> Those little foolish pagan deities, which the poets had
|
||
made to preside over storms and to protect seafaring men, as gods
|
||
of the sea, were painted or graven upon the fore-part of the ship,
|
||
and thence the ship took its name. I suppose this is observed for
|
||
no other reason than for the better ascertaining of the story, that
|
||
ship being well known by that name and sign by all that dealt
|
||
between Egypt and Italy. Dr. Lightfoot thinks that Luke mentions
|
||
this circumstance to intimate the men's superstition, that they
|
||
hoped they should have better sailing under this badge than they
|
||
had had before.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p19">II. Their landing in or about Italy, and
|
||
the pursuing of their journey towards Rome. 1. They landed first at
|
||
Syracuse in Sicily, the chief city of that island. There they
|
||
<i>tarried three days,</i> probably having some goods to put
|
||
ashore, or some merchandise to make there; for it seems to have
|
||
been a trading voyage that this ship made. Paul had now his
|
||
curiosity gratified with the sight of places he had often heard of
|
||
and wished to see, particularly Syracuse, a place of great
|
||
antiquity and note; and yet, it should seem, there were no
|
||
Christians there. 2. From Syracuse they came to Rhegium, a city in
|
||
Italy, directly opposite to Messina in Sicily, belonging to the
|
||
kingdom of Calabria or Naples. There, it seems they staid one day;
|
||
and a very formal story the Romish legends tell of Paul's preaching
|
||
here at this time, and the fish coming to the shore to hear
|
||
him,—that with a candle he set a stone pillar on fire, and by that
|
||
miracle convinced the people of the truth of his doctrine, and they
|
||
were many of them baptized, and he ordained Stephen, one of his
|
||
companions in this voyage, to be their bishop,—and all this, they
|
||
tell you, was done in this one day; whereas it does not appear that
|
||
they did so much as go ashore, but only came to an anchor in the
|
||
road. 3. From Rhegium they came to Puteoli, a sea-port town not far
|
||
from Naples, now called <i>Pozzolana.</i> The ship of Alexandria
|
||
was bound for that port, and therefore there Paul, and the rest
|
||
that were bound for Rome, were put ashore, and went the remainder
|
||
of their way by land. At Puteoli they <i>found brethren,</i>
|
||
Christians. Who brought the knowledge of Christ hither we are not
|
||
told, but here it was, so wonderfully did the leaven of the gospel
|
||
diffuse itself. God has many that serve and worship him in places
|
||
where we little think he has. And observe, (1.) Though it is
|
||
probable there were but few brethren in Puteoli, yet Paul found
|
||
them out; either they heard of him, or he enquired them out, but as
|
||
it were by instinct they got together. Brethren in Christ should
|
||
find out one another, and keep up communion with each other, as
|
||
those of the same country do in a foreign land. (2.) They desired
|
||
Paul and his companions to <i>tarry with them seven days,</i> that
|
||
is, to forecast to stay at least one Lord's day with them, and to
|
||
assist them in their public worship that day. They knew not whether
|
||
ever they should see Paul at Puteoli again, and therefore he must
|
||
not go without giving them a sermon or two, or more. And Paul was
|
||
willing to allow them so much of his time; and the centurion under
|
||
whose command Paul now was, perhaps having himself friends or
|
||
business at Puteoli, agreed to stay one week there, to oblige Paul.
|
||
4. From Puteoli they went forward towards Rome; whether they
|
||
travelled on foot, or whether they had beasts provided for them to
|
||
ride on (as <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.24" parsed="|Acts|23|24|0|0" passage="Ac 23:24"><i>ch.</i> xxiii.
|
||
24</scripRef>), does not appear; but to Rome they must go, and this
|
||
was their last stage.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p20">III. The meeting which the Christians at
|
||
Rome gave to Paul. It is probable that notice was sent to them by
|
||
the Christians at Puteoli, as soon as ever Paul had come thither,
|
||
how long he intended to stay there, and when he would set forward
|
||
for Rome, which gave an opportunity for this interview.
|
||
Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p21">1. The great honour they did to Paul. They
|
||
had heard much of his fame, what use God had made of him, and what
|
||
eminent service he had done to the kingdom of Christ in the world,
|
||
and to what multitudes of souls he had been a spiritual father.
|
||
They had heard of his sufferings, and how God had owned him in
|
||
them, and therefore they not only longed to see him, but thought
|
||
themselves obliged to show him all possible respect, as a glorious
|
||
advocate for the cause of Christ. He had some time ago written a
|
||
long epistle to them, and a most excellent one, <i>the epistle to
|
||
the Romans,</i> in which he had not only expressed his great
|
||
kindness for them, but had given them a great many useful
|
||
instructions, in return for which they show him this respect. They
|
||
<i>went to meet him,</i> that they might bring him in state, as
|
||
ambassadors and judges make their public entry, though he was a
|
||
prisoner. Some of them went as far as <i>Appii-forum,</i> which was
|
||
fifty-one miles from Rome; others to a place called the <i>Three
|
||
Taverns,</i> which was twenty-eight miles (some reckon it
|
||
thirty-three miles) from Rome. They are to be commended for it,
|
||
that they were so far from being ashamed of him, or afraid of
|
||
owning him, because he was a prisoner, that for that very reason
|
||
they counted him worthy of double honour, and were the more careful
|
||
to show him respect.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p22">2. The great comfort Paul had in this. Now
|
||
that he was drawing near to Rome, and perhaps heard at Puteoli what
|
||
character the emperor Nero now had, and what a tyrant he had of
|
||
late become, he began to have some melancholy thoughts about his
|
||
appeal to Cæsar, and the consequences of it. He was drawing near to
|
||
Rome, where he had never been, where there were few that knew him
|
||
or that he knew, and what things might befal him here he could not
|
||
tell; but he began to grow dull upon it, till he met with these
|
||
good people that came from Rome to show him respect; and <i>when he
|
||
saw them,</i> (1.) He <i>thanked God.</i> We may suppose he thanked
|
||
them for their civility, told them again and again how kindly he
|
||
took it; but this was not all: he <i>thanked God.</i> Note, If our
|
||
friends be kind to us, it is God that makes them so, that puts it
|
||
into their hearts, and into the power of their hands, to be so, and
|
||
we must give him the glory of it. He thanked God, no doubt, for the
|
||
civility and generosity of the barbarous people at Melita, but much
|
||
more for the pious care of the Christian people at Rome for him.
|
||
When he saw so many Christians that were of Rome, he thanked God
|
||
that the gospel of Christ had had such wonderful success there in
|
||
the metropolis of the empire. When we go abroad, or but look
|
||
abroad, into the world, and meet with those, even in strange
|
||
places, that bear up Christ's name, and fear God, and serve him, we
|
||
should lift up our hearts to heaven in thanksgiving; blessed be God
|
||
that there are so many excellent ones on this earth, bad as it is.
|
||
Paul had thanked God for the Christians at Rome before he had ever
|
||
seen them, upon the report he had heard concerning them (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.8" parsed="|Rom|1|8|0|0" passage="Ro 1:8">Rom. i. 8</scripRef>): <i>I thank my God for you
|
||
all.</i> But now that he saw them (and perhaps they appeared more
|
||
fashionable and genteel people than most he had conversed with, or
|
||
more grave, serious, and intelligent, than most) <i>he thanked
|
||
God.</i> But this was not all: (2.) He <i>took courage.</i> It put
|
||
new life into him, cheered up his spirits, and banished his
|
||
melancholy, and now he can enter Rome a prisoner as cheerfully as
|
||
ever he had entered Jerusalem at liberty. he finds there are those
|
||
there who love and value him, and whom he may both converse with
|
||
and consult with as his friends, which will take off much of the
|
||
tediousness of his imprisonment, and the terror of his appearing
|
||
before Nero. Note, it is an encouragement to those who are
|
||
travelling towards heaven to meet with their fellow travellers, who
|
||
are their <i>companions in the kingdom and patience of Jesus
|
||
Christ.</i> When we see the numerous and serious assemblies of good
|
||
Christians, we should not only give thanks to God, but take courage
|
||
to ourselves. And this is a good reason why respect should be shown
|
||
to good ministers, especially when they are in sufferings, and have
|
||
contempt put upon them, that it encourages them, and makes both
|
||
their sufferings and their services more easy. Yet it is observable
|
||
that though the Christians at Rome were now so respectful to Paul,
|
||
and he had promised himself so much from their respect, yet they
|
||
failed him when he most needed them; for he says (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p22.2" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.16" parsed="|2Tim|4|16|0|0" passage="2Ti 4:16">2 Tim. iv. 16</scripRef>), <i>At my first
|
||
answer, no man stood with me, but all men forsook me.</i> They
|
||
could easily take a ride of forty or fifty miles to go and meet
|
||
Paul, for the pleasantness of the journey; but to venture the
|
||
displeasure of the emperor and the disobliging of other great men,
|
||
by appearing in defence of Paul and giving evidence for him, here
|
||
they desire to be excused; when it comes to this, they will rather
|
||
ride as far out of town to miss him as now they did to meet him,
|
||
which is an intimation to us to cease from man, and to encourage
|
||
ourselves in the Lord our God. The courage we take from his
|
||
promises will never fail us, when we shall be ashamed of that which
|
||
we took from men's compliments. <i>Let God be true, but every man a
|
||
liar.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p23">IV. The delivering of Paul into custody at
|
||
Rome, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.16" parsed="|Acts|28|16|0|0" passage="Ac 28:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. He is
|
||
now come to his journey's end. And, 1. He is still a prisoner. He
|
||
had longed to see Rome, but, when he comes there, he is delivered,
|
||
with other prisoners, to the <i>captain of the guard,</i> and can
|
||
see no more of Rome than he will permit him. How many great men had
|
||
made their entry into Rome, crowned and in triumph, who really were
|
||
the plagues of their generation! But here a good man makes his
|
||
entry into Rome, chained and triumphed over as a poor captive, who
|
||
was really the greatest blessing to his generation. This thought is
|
||
enough to put one for ever out of conceit with this world. 2. Yet
|
||
he has some favour shown him. He is a prisoner, but not a close
|
||
prisoner, not in the common jail: <i>Paul was suffered to dwell by
|
||
himself,</i> in some convenient private lodgings which his friends
|
||
there provided for him, and a soldier was appointed to be his
|
||
guard, who, we hope, was civil to him, and let him take all the
|
||
liberty that could be allowed to a prisoner, for he must be very
|
||
ill-natured indeed that could be so to such a courteous obliging
|
||
man as Paul. Paul, being suffered to dwell by himself, could the
|
||
better enjoy himself, and his friends, and his God, than if he had
|
||
been lodged with the other prisoners. Note, This may encourage
|
||
God's prisoners, that he can give them favour in the eyes of those
|
||
that carry them captive (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.106.46" parsed="|Ps|106|46|0|0" passage="Ps 106:46">Ps. cvi.
|
||
46</scripRef>), as Joseph in the eyes of his keeper (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p23.3" osisRef="Bible:Gen.39.21" parsed="|Gen|39|21|0|0" passage="Ge 39:21">Gen. xxxix. 21</scripRef>), and Jehoiachin in
|
||
the eyes of the king of Babylon, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p23.4" osisRef="Bible:2Kgs.25.27-2Kgs.25.28" parsed="|2Kgs|25|27|25|28" passage="2Ki 25:27,28">2
|
||
Kings xxv. 27, 28</scripRef>. When God does not deliver his people
|
||
presently out of bondage, yet, if he either make it easy to them or
|
||
them easy under it, they have reason to be thankful.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p23.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.17-Acts.28.22" parsed="|Acts|28|17|28|22" passage="Ac 28:17-22" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.28.17-Acts.28.22">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxix-p23.6">Paul at Rome.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxix-p24">17 And it came to pass, that after three days
|
||
Paul called the chief of the Jews together: and when they were come
|
||
together, he said unto them, Men <i>and</i> brethren, though I have
|
||
committed nothing against the people, or customs of our fathers,
|
||
yet was I delivered prisoner from Jerusalem into the hands of the
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.18" parsed="|Rom|18|0|0|0" passage="Romans. 18">Romans. 18</scripRef> Who, when they had examined me, would have let
|
||
<i>me</i> go, because there was no cause of death in me. 19
|
||
But when the Jews spake against <i>it,</i> I was constrained to
|
||
appeal unto Cæsar; not that I had ought to accuse my nation of.
|
||
20 For this cause therefore have I called for you, to see
|
||
<i>you,</i> and to speak with <i>you:</i> because that for the hope
|
||
of Israel I am bound with this chain. 21 And they said unto
|
||
him, We neither received letters out of Judæa concerning thee,
|
||
neither any of the brethren that came showed or spake any harm of
|
||
thee. 22 But we desire to hear of thee what thou thinkest:
|
||
for as concerning this sect, we know that every where it is spoken
|
||
against.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p25">Paul, with a great deal of expense and
|
||
hazard, is brought a prisoner to Rome, and when he has come nobody
|
||
appears to prosecute him or lay any thing to his charge; but he
|
||
must call his own cause; and here he represents it to the chief of
|
||
the Jews at Rome. It was not long since, by an edict of Claudius,
|
||
all the Jews were banished from Rome, and kept out till his death;
|
||
but, in the five years since then, many Jews had come thither, for
|
||
the advantage of trade, though it does not appear that they were
|
||
allowed any synagogue there or place of public worship; but these
|
||
<i>chief of the Jews</i> were those of best figure among them, the
|
||
most distinguished men of that religion, who had the best estates
|
||
and interests. <i>Paul called them together,</i> being desirous to
|
||
stand right in their opinion, and that there might be a good
|
||
understanding between him and them. And here we are told,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p26">I. What he said to them, and what account
|
||
he gave them of his cause. He speaks respectfully to them, calls
|
||
them men and brethren, and thereby intimates that he expects to be
|
||
treated by them both as a man and as a brother, and engages to
|
||
treat them as such and to tell them nothing but the truth; for
|
||
<i>we are members one of another—all we are brethren.</i> Now, 1.
|
||
He professes his own innocency, and that he had not given any just
|
||
occasion to the Jews to bear him such an ill will as generally they
|
||
did: "I have <i>committed nothing against the people</i> of the
|
||
Jews, have done nothing to the prejudice of their religion or civil
|
||
liberties, have added no affliction to their present miseries, they
|
||
know I have not; nor have I committed any thing <i>against the
|
||
customs of our fathers,</i> either by abrogating or by innovating
|
||
in religion." It is true Paul did not impose the customs of the
|
||
fathers upon the Gentiles: they were never intended for them. But
|
||
it is as true that he never opposed them in the Jews, but did
|
||
himself, when he was among them, conform to them. He never
|
||
quarrelled with them for practising according to the usages of
|
||
their own religion, but only for their enmity to the Gentiles,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Gal.2.12" parsed="|Gal|2|12|0|0" passage="Ga 2:12">Gal. ii. 12</scripRef>. Paul had the
|
||
testimony of his conscience for him that he had done his duty to
|
||
the Jews. 2. He modestly complains of the hard usage he had met
|
||
with—that, though he had given them no offence, yet <i>he was
|
||
delivered prisoner from Jerusalem into the hands of the Romans.</i>
|
||
If he had spoken the whole truth in this matter, it would have
|
||
looked worse than it did upon the Jews, for they would have
|
||
murdered him without any colour of law or justice if the Romans had
|
||
not protected him; but, however, they accused him as a criminal,
|
||
before Felix the governor, and, demanding judgment against him,
|
||
were, in effect delivering him prisoner into the hands of the
|
||
Romans, when he desired no more than a fair and impartial trial by
|
||
their own law. 3. He declares the judgment of the Roman governors
|
||
concerning him, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.18" parsed="|Acts|28|18|0|0" passage="Ac 28:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>. They examined him, enquired into his case, heard
|
||
what was to be said against him, and what he had to say for
|
||
himself. The chief captain examined him, so did Felix, and Festus,
|
||
and Agrippa, and they could find no cause of death in him; nothing
|
||
appeared to the contrary but that he was an honest, quiet,
|
||
conscientious, good man, and therefore they would never gratify the
|
||
Jews with a sentence of death upon him; but, on the contrary, would
|
||
have let him go, and have let him go on in his work too, and have
|
||
given him no interruption, for they all heard him and liked his
|
||
doctrine well enough. It was for the honour of Paul that those who
|
||
most carefully examined his case acquitted him, and none condemned
|
||
him but unheard, and such as were prejudiced against him. 4. He
|
||
pleads the necessity he was under to remove himself and his cause
|
||
to Rome; and that it was only in his own defence, and not with any
|
||
design to recriminate, or exhibit a cross bill against the
|
||
complainants, (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.19" parsed="|Acts|28|19|0|0" passage="Ac 28:19"><i>v.</i>
|
||
19</scripRef>): <i>When the Jews spoke against it,</i> and entered
|
||
a caveat against his discharge, designing, if they could not have
|
||
him condemned to die, yet to have him made a prisoner for life, he
|
||
was <i>constrained to appeal unto Cæsar,</i> finding that the
|
||
governors, one after another, stood so much in awe of the Jews that
|
||
they could not discharge him, for fear of making him their enemies,
|
||
which made it necessary for him to pray the assistance of the
|
||
higher powers. This was all he aimed at in this appeal; not to
|
||
accuse his nation, but only to vindicate himself. Every man has a
|
||
right to plead in his own defence, who yet ought not to find fault
|
||
with his neighbours. It is an invidious thing to accuse, especially
|
||
to accuse a nation, such a nation. Paul made intercession for them,
|
||
but never against them. The Roman government had at this time an
|
||
ill opinion of the Jewish nation, as factious, turbulent,
|
||
disaffected, and dangerous; and it had been an easy thing for a man
|
||
with such a fluent tongue as Paul had, a citizen of Rome, and so
|
||
injured as he was, to have exasperated the emperor against the
|
||
Jewish nation. But Paul would not for ever so much do such a thing;
|
||
he was for making the best of every body, and not making bad worse.
|
||
5. He puts his sufferings upon the true footing, and gives them
|
||
such an account of the reason of them as should engage them not
|
||
only not to join with his persecutors against him, but to concern
|
||
themselves for him, and to do what they could on his behalf
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.20" parsed="|Acts|28|20|0|0" passage="Ac 28:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>): "<i>For
|
||
this cause I have called for you,</i> not to quarrel with you, for
|
||
I have no design to incense the government against you, but to
|
||
<i>see you and speak with you</i> as my countrymen, and men that I
|
||
would keep up a correspondence with, because <i>for the hope of
|
||
Israel I am bound with this chain.</i>" He carried the mark of his
|
||
imprisonment about with him, and probably was chained to the
|
||
soldier that kept him; and it was, (1.) Because he preached that
|
||
the Messiah was come, who was the hope of Israel, he whom Israel
|
||
hoped for. "Do not all the Jews agree in this, that the Messiah
|
||
will be the glory of his people Israel? And therefore he is to be
|
||
hoped for, and this Messiah I preach, and prove he is come. They
|
||
would keep up such a hope of a Messiah yet to come as must end in a
|
||
despair of him; I preach such a hope in a Messiah already come as
|
||
must produce a joy in him." (2.) Because he preached that the
|
||
resurrection of the dead would come. This also was the hope of
|
||
Israel; so he had called it, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p26.5" osisRef="Bible:Acts.23.6 Bible:Acts.24.15 Bible:Acts.26.6-Acts.26.7" parsed="|Acts|23|6|0|0;|Acts|24|15|0|0;|Acts|26|6|26|7" passage="Ac 23:6,24:15,26:6,7"><i>ch.</i> xxiii. 6; xxiv. 15; xxvi. 6,
|
||
7</scripRef>. "They would have you still expect a Messiah that
|
||
would free you from the Roman yoke, and make you great and
|
||
prosperous upon earth, and it is this that occupies their thoughts;
|
||
and they are angry at me for directing their expectations to the
|
||
great things of another world, and persuading them to embrace a
|
||
Messiah who will secure those to them, and not external power and
|
||
grandeur. I am for bringing you to the spiritual and eternal
|
||
blessedness upon which our fathers by faith had their eye, and this
|
||
is what they hate me for,—because I would take you off from that
|
||
which is the cheat of Israel, and will be its shame and ruin, the
|
||
notion of a temporal Messiah, and lead you to that which is the
|
||
true and real hope of Israel, and the genuine sense of all the
|
||
promises made to the fathers, a spiritual kingdom of holiness and
|
||
love set up in the hearts of men, to be the pledge of, and
|
||
preparative for, the joyful resurrection of the dead and the life
|
||
of the world to come."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p27">II. What was their reply. They own, 1. That
|
||
they had nothing to say in particular against him; nor had any
|
||
instructions to appear as his prosecutors before the emperor,
|
||
either by letter or word of mouth (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p27.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.21" parsed="|Acts|28|21|0|0" passage="Ac 28:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>): "<i>We have neither received
|
||
letters out of Judea concerning thee</i> (have no orders to
|
||
prosecute thee) <i>nor have any of the brethren</i> of the Jewish
|
||
nation that have lately come up to Rome (as many occasions drew the
|
||
Jews thither now that their nation was a province of that empire)
|
||
<i>shown or spoken any harm of thee.</i>" This was very strange,
|
||
that that restless and inveterate rage of the Jews which had
|
||
followed Paul wherever he went should not follow him to Rome, to
|
||
get him condemned there. Some think they told a lie here, and had
|
||
orders to prosecute him, but durst not own it, being themselves
|
||
obnoxious to the emperor's displeasure, who though he had not, like
|
||
his predecessors, banished them all from Rome, yet gave them no
|
||
countenance there. But I am apt to think that what they said was
|
||
true, and Paul now found he had gained the point he aimed at in
|
||
appealing to Cæsar, which was to remove his cause into a court to
|
||
which they durst not follow it. This was David's policy, and it was
|
||
his security (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p27.2" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.27.1" parsed="|1Sam|27|1|0|0" passage="1Sa 27:1">1 Sam. xxvii.
|
||
1</scripRef>): <i>There is nothing better for me than to escape
|
||
into the land of the Philistines, and Saul shall despair of me, to
|
||
seek me any more in any coasts of Israel; so shall I escape out of
|
||
his hands:</i> and it proved so, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p27.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.4" parsed="|Acts|28|4|0|0" passage="Ac 28:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. <i>When Saul heard that David had
|
||
fled to Gath, he sought no more again for him.</i> Thus did Paul by
|
||
his appeal: he fled to Rome, where he was out of their reach; and
|
||
they said, "Even let him go." 2. That they desired to know
|
||
particularly concerning the doctrine he preached, and the religion
|
||
he took so much pains to propagate in the face of so much
|
||
opposition (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p27.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.22" parsed="|Acts|28|22|0|0" passage="Ac 28:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>):
|
||
"<i>We desire to hear of thee what thou thinkest</i>—<b><i>ha
|
||
phroneis</i></b> what thy opinions or sentiments are, what are
|
||
those things which thou art so wise about, and hast such a relish
|
||
of and such a zeal for; for, though we know little else of
|
||
Christianity, we know <i>it is a sect every where spoken
|
||
against.</i>" Those who said this scornful spiteful word of the
|
||
Christian religion were Jews, <i>the chief of the Jews at Rome,</i>
|
||
who boasted of their knowledge (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p27.5" osisRef="Bible:Rom.2.17" parsed="|Rom|2|17|0|0" passage="Ro 2:17">Rom.
|
||
ii. 17</scripRef>), and yet this was all they knew concerning the
|
||
Christian religion, that it was a <i>sect every where spoken
|
||
against.</i> They put it into an ill name, and then ran it down.
|
||
(1.) They looked upon it to be a sect, and this was false. True
|
||
Christianity establishes that which is of common concern to all
|
||
mankind, and is not built upon such narrow opinions and private
|
||
interests as sects commonly owe their original to. It aims at no
|
||
worldly benefit or advantage as sects do; but all its gains are
|
||
spiritual and eternal. And, besides, it has a direct tendency to
|
||
the uniting of the children of men, and not the dividing of them,
|
||
and setting them at variance, as sects have. (2.) They said it was
|
||
every where spoken against, and this was too true. All that they
|
||
conversed with spoke against it, and therefore they concluded every
|
||
body did: most indeed did. It is, and always has been, the lot of
|
||
Christ's holy religion to be every where spoken against.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p27.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.23-Acts.28.29" parsed="|Acts|28|23|28|29" passage="Ac 28:23-29" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.28.23-Acts.28.29">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxix-p27.7">Paul at Rome.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxix-p28">23 And when they had appointed him a day, there
|
||
came many to him into <i>his</i> lodging; to whom he expounded and
|
||
testified the kingdom of God, persuading them concerning Jesus,
|
||
both out of the law of Moses, and <i>out of</i> the prophets, from
|
||
morning till evening. 24 And some believed the things which
|
||
were spoken, and some believed not. 25 And when they agreed
|
||
not among themselves, they departed, after that Paul had spoken one
|
||
word, Well spake the Holy Ghost by Esaias the prophet unto our
|
||
fathers, 26 Saying, Go unto this people, and say, Hearing ye
|
||
shall hear, and shall not understand; and seeing ye shall see, and
|
||
not perceive: 27 For the heart of this people is waxed
|
||
gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes have they
|
||
closed; lest they should see with <i>their</i> eyes, and hear with
|
||
<i>their</i> ears, and understand with <i>their</i> heart, and
|
||
should be converted, and I should heal them. 28 Be it known
|
||
therefore unto you, that the salvation of God is sent unto the
|
||
Gentiles, and <i>that</i> they will hear it. 29 And when he
|
||
had said these words, the Jews departed, and had great reasoning
|
||
among themselves.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p29">We have here a short account of a long
|
||
conference which Paul had with the Jews at Rome about the Christian
|
||
religion. Though they were so far prejudiced against it, because it
|
||
was every where spoken against, as to call it <i>a sect,</i> yet
|
||
they were willing to give it a hearing, which was more than the
|
||
Jews at Jerusalem would do. It is probable that these Jews at Rome,
|
||
being men of larger acquaintance with the world and more general
|
||
conversation, were more free in their enquiries than the bigoted
|
||
Jews at Jerusalem were, and would not answer this matter before
|
||
they heard it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p30">I. We are here told how Paul managed this
|
||
conference in defence of the Christian religion. The Jews appointed
|
||
the time, a day was set for this dispute, that all parties
|
||
concerned might have sufficient notice, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p30.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.23" parsed="|Acts|28|23|0|0" passage="Ac 28:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. Those Jews seemed well disposed
|
||
to receive conviction, and yet it did not prove that they all were
|
||
so. Now when the day came,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p31">1. There were <i>many got together to
|
||
Paul.</i> Though he was a prisoner and could not come out to them,
|
||
yet they were willing to come to him to his lodging. And the
|
||
confinement he was now under, if duly considered, instead of
|
||
prejudicing them against his doctrine, ought to confirm it to them;
|
||
for it was a sign not only that he believed it, but that he thought
|
||
it worth suffering for. One would visit such a man as Paul in his
|
||
prison rather than not have instruction from him. And he made room
|
||
for them in his lodging, not fearing to give offence to the
|
||
government, so that he might do good to them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p32">2. He was very large and full in his
|
||
discourse with them, seeking their conviction more than his own
|
||
vindication. (1.) He expounded, or explained, the kingdom of God to
|
||
them,—showed them the nature of that kingdom and the glorious
|
||
purposes and designs of it, that it is heavenly and spiritual,
|
||
seated in the minds of men, and shines not in external pomp, but in
|
||
purity of heart and life. That which kept the Jews in their
|
||
unbelief was a misunderstanding of the kingdom of God, as if it
|
||
came with observation; let but that be expounded to them, and set
|
||
in a true light, and they will be brought into obedience to it.
|
||
(2.) He not only expounded the kingdom of God, but he testified
|
||
it,—plainly declared it to them, and confirmed it by incontestable
|
||
proofs, that the kingdom of God by the Messiah's administration was
|
||
come, and was now set up in the world. He attested the
|
||
extraordinary powers in the kingdom of grace by which bore his
|
||
testimony to it from his own experience of its power and influence
|
||
upon him, and the manner of his being brought into subjection to
|
||
it. (3.) He not only expounded and testified the kingdom of God,
|
||
but he persuaded them, urged it upon their consciences and pressed
|
||
them with all earnestness to embrace the kingdom of God, and submit
|
||
to it, and not to persist in an opposition to it. He followed his
|
||
doctrine (the explication and confirmation of it) with a warm and
|
||
lively application to his hearers, which is the most proper and
|
||
profitable method of preaching. (4.) He persuaded them concerning
|
||
Jesus. The design and tendency of his whole discourse were to bring
|
||
them to Christ, to convince them of his being the Messiah, and to
|
||
engage them to believe in him as he is offered in the gospel. He
|
||
urged upon them, <b><i>ta peri tou Iesou</i></b>—<i>the things
|
||
concerning Jesus,</i> the prophecies of him, which he read to them
|
||
<i>out of the law of Moses and out of the prophets,</i> as pointing
|
||
at the Messiah, and showed how they had all had their
|
||
accomplishment in this Jesus. They being Jews, he dealt with them
|
||
out of the scriptures of the Old Testament, and demonstrated that
|
||
these were so far from making against Christianity that they were
|
||
the great proofs of it; so that, if we compare the history of the
|
||
New Testament with the prophecy of the Old, we must conclude that
|
||
this Jesus is he that should come, and we are to look for no
|
||
other.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p33">3. He was very long; for he continued his
|
||
discourse, and it should seem to have been a continued discourse,
|
||
from <i>morning till evening;</i> perhaps it was a discourse eight
|
||
or ten hours long. The subject was curious—he was full of it—it
|
||
was of vast importance—he was in good earnest, and his heart was
|
||
upon it—he knew not when he should have such another opportunity,
|
||
and therefore, without begging pardon for tiring their patience, he
|
||
kept them all day; but it is probable that he spent some of the
|
||
time in prayer with them and for them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p34">II. What was the effect of this discourse.
|
||
One would have thought that so good a cause as that of
|
||
Christianity, and managed by such a skilful hand as Paul's, could
|
||
not but carry the day, and that all the hearers would have yielded
|
||
to it presently; but it did not prove so: the child Jesus is set
|
||
for the fall of some and the rising again of others, a foundation
|
||
stone to some and a stone of stumbling to others. 1. <i>They did
|
||
not agree among themselves,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.25" parsed="|Acts|28|25|0|0" passage="Ac 28:25"><i>v.</i> 25</scripRef>. Some of them thought Paul was
|
||
in the right, others would not admit it. This is that division
|
||
which Christ came to send, that fire which he came to kindle,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.49 Bible:Luke.12.51" parsed="|Luke|12|49|0|0;|Luke|12|51|0|0" passage="Lu 12:49,51">Luke xii. 49, 51</scripRef>. Paul
|
||
preached with a great deal of plainness and clearness, and yet his
|
||
hearers could not agree about the sense and evidence of what he
|
||
preached. 2. <i>Some believed the things that were spoken, and some
|
||
believed not,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p34.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.24" parsed="|Acts|28|24|0|0" passage="Ac 28:24"><i>v.</i>
|
||
24</scripRef>. There was the disagreement. Such as this has always
|
||
been the success of the gospel; to some it has been <i>a savour of
|
||
life unto life,</i> to others <i>a savour of death unto death.</i>
|
||
Some are wrought upon by the word, and others hardened; some
|
||
receive the light, and others shut their eyes against it. So it was
|
||
among Christ's hearers, and the spectators of his miracles, some
|
||
believed and some blasphemed. If all had believed, there had been
|
||
no disagreement; so that all the blame of the division lay upon
|
||
those who would not believe.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p35">III. The awakening word which Paul said to
|
||
them at parting. He perceived by what they muttered that there were
|
||
many among them, and perhaps the greater part, that were obstinate,
|
||
and would not yield to the conviction of what he said; and they
|
||
were getting up to be gone, they had had enough of it: "Hold," says
|
||
Paul, "take one word with you before you go, and consider of it
|
||
when you come home: what do you think will be the effect of your
|
||
obstinate infidelity? What will you do in the end hereof? What will
|
||
it come to?"</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p36">1. "You will by the righteous judgment of
|
||
God be sealed up under unbelief. You harden your own hearts, and
|
||
God will harden them as he did Pharaoh's'; and this is what was
|
||
prophesied of concerning you. Turn to that scripture (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.6.9-Isa.6.10" parsed="|Isa|6|9|6|10" passage="Isa 6:9,10">Isa. vi. 9, 10</scripRef>), and read it
|
||
seriously, and tremble lest the case there described should prove
|
||
to be your case." As there are in the Old Testament gospel
|
||
promises, which will be accomplished in all that believe, so there
|
||
are gospel threatenings of spiritual judgments, which will be
|
||
fulfilled in those that believe not; and this is one. It is part of
|
||
the commission given to Isaiah the prophet; he is sent to make
|
||
those worse that would not be made better. <i>Well spoke the Holy
|
||
Ghost by</i> Esaias <i>the prophet unto our fathers.</i> What was
|
||
spoken by <span class="smallcaps" id="Acts.xxix-p36.2">Jehovah</span> is here said to be
|
||
spoken by the Holy Ghost, which proves that the Holy Ghost is God;
|
||
and what was spoken to Isaiah is here said to be spoken by him to
|
||
their fathers, for he was ordered to tell the people what God said
|
||
to him; and, though what is there said had in it much of terror to
|
||
the people and of grief to the prophet, yet it is here said to be
|
||
well spoken. Hezekiah said concerning a message of wrath, <i>Good
|
||
is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.39.8" parsed="|Isa|39|8|0|0" passage="Isa 39:8">Isa. xxxix. 8</scripRef>. And <i>he that
|
||
believes not shall be damned</i> is gospel, as well as, <i>He that
|
||
believes shall be saved,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.4" osisRef="Bible:Mark.16.16" parsed="|Mark|16|16|0|0" passage="Mk 16:16">Mark xvi.
|
||
16</scripRef>. Or this may be explained by that of our Saviour
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.15.7" parsed="|Matt|15|7|0|0" passage="Mt 15:7">Matt. xv. 7</scripRef>), "<i>Well did
|
||
Esaias prophesy of you.</i> The Holy Ghost said to your fathers,
|
||
that which would be fulfilled in you, <i>Hearing you shall hear,
|
||
and shall not understand.</i>" (1.) "That which was their great sin
|
||
against God is yours; and that is this, you will not see. You shut
|
||
your eyes against the most convincing evidence possible, and will
|
||
not admit the conclusion, though you cannot deny the premises:
|
||
<i>Your eyes you have closed,</i>" <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.27" parsed="|Acts|28|27|0|0" passage="Ac 28:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>. This intimates an obstinate
|
||
infidelity, and a willing slavery to prejudice. "As your fathers
|
||
would not see God's hand lifted up against them in his judgments
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.7" osisRef="Bible:Isa.26.11" parsed="|Isa|26|11|0|0" passage="Isa 26:11">Isa. xxvi. 11</scripRef>), so you
|
||
will not see God's hand stretched out to you in gospel grace." It
|
||
was true of these unbelieving Jews that they were prejudiced
|
||
against the gospel; they did not see, because they were resolved
|
||
they would not, and none so blind as those that will not see. They
|
||
would not prosecute their convictions, and for this reason would
|
||
not admit them. They have purposely <i>closed their eyes, lest they
|
||
should see with their eyes</i> the great things which belong to
|
||
their everlasting peace, should see the glory of God, the
|
||
amiableness of Christ, the deformity of sin, the beauty of
|
||
holiness, the vanity of this world, and the reality of another.
|
||
They will not be changed and governed by these truths, and
|
||
therefore will not receive the evidence of them, <i>lest they
|
||
should hear with their ears</i> that which they are loth to hear,
|
||
the wrath of God revealed from heaven against them, and the will of
|
||
God revealed from heaven to them. They stop their ears, like the
|
||
deaf adder, that <i>will not hearken to the voice of the charmer,
|
||
charm he ever so wisely.</i> Thus their fathers did; they <i>would
|
||
not hear,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.8" osisRef="Bible:Zech.7.11-Zech.7.12" parsed="|Zech|7|11|7|12" passage="Zec 7:11,12">Zech. vii. 11,
|
||
12</scripRef>. And that which they are afraid of in shutting up
|
||
their eyes and ears, and barricading (as it were) both their
|
||
learning senses against him that made both the hearing ear and the
|
||
seeing eye, is, <i>lest they should understand with their heart,
|
||
and should be converted, and I should heal them.</i> They kept
|
||
their mind in the dark, or at least in a constant confusion and
|
||
tumult, lest, if they should admit a considerate sober thought,
|
||
they should understand with their heart how much it is both their
|
||
duty and their interest to be religious, and so by degrees the
|
||
truth should be too hard for them, and they should be converted
|
||
from the evil ways which they take pleasure in, to those exercises
|
||
to which they have now an aversion. Observe, God's method is to
|
||
bring people first to see and he and so to understand with their
|
||
hearts, and then to convert them, and bow their wills, and so heal
|
||
them, which is the regular way of dealing with a rational soul; and
|
||
therefore Satan prevents the conversion of souls to God by blinding
|
||
the mind and darkening the understanding, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.9" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.4.4" parsed="|2Cor|4|4|0|0" passage="2Co 4:4">2 Cor. iv. 4</scripRef>. And the case is very sad when
|
||
the sinner joins with him herein, and puts out his own eyes. <i>Ut
|
||
liberius peccent, libenter ignorant—They plunge into ignorance,
|
||
that they may sin the more freely.</i> They are in love with their
|
||
disease, and are afraid lest God should heal them; like Babylon of
|
||
old, We would have healed her, and she would not be healed,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.10" osisRef="Bible:Jer.51.9" parsed="|Jer|51|9|0|0" passage="Jer 51:9">Jer. li. 9</scripRef>. This was the
|
||
sin. (2.) "That which was the great judgment of God upon them for
|
||
this sin is his judgment upon you, and that is, you shall be blind.
|
||
God will give you up to a judicial infatuation: <i>Hearing you
|
||
shall hear</i>—you shall have the word of God preached to you over
|
||
and over—<i>but you shall not understand</i> it; because you will
|
||
not give your minds to understand it, God will not give you
|
||
strength and grace to understand it. <i>Seeing you shall
|
||
see</i>—you shall have abundance of miracles and signs done before
|
||
your eyes—<i>but you shall not perceive</i> the convincing
|
||
evidence of them. Take heed lest what Moses said to your fathers
|
||
should be true of you (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.11" osisRef="Bible:Deut.29.4" parsed="|Deut|29|4|0|0" passage="De 29:4">Deut. xxix.
|
||
4</scripRef>), <i>The Lord has not given you a heart to perceive,
|
||
and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day;</i> and what
|
||
Isaiah said to the men of his generation (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p36.12" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.10-Isa.29.12" parsed="|Isa|29|10|29|12" passage="Isa 29:10-12">Isa. xxix. 10-12</scripRef>), <i>The Lord has poured
|
||
out upon you the spirit of deep sleep, and has closed your
|
||
eyes.</i>" What with their resisting the grace of God and rebelling
|
||
against the light, and God's withdrawing and withholding his grace
|
||
and light from them,—what with their not receiving the love of the
|
||
truth, and God's giving them up for that to strong delusions, to
|
||
believe a lie,—what with their wilful and what with their judicial
|
||
hardness, <i>the heart of this people is waxed gross, and their
|
||
ears are dull of hearing.</i> They are stupid and senseless, and
|
||
not wrought upon by all that can be said to them. No physic that
|
||
can be given them operates upon them, nor will reach them, and
|
||
therefore their disease must be adjudged incurable, and their case
|
||
desperate. How should those be happy that will not be healed of a
|
||
disease that makes them miserable? And how should those be healed
|
||
that will not be converted to the use of the methods of cure? And
|
||
how should those be converted that will not be convinced either of
|
||
their disease or of their remedy? And how should those be convinced
|
||
that <i>shut their eyes and stop their ears?</i> Let all that hear
|
||
the gospel, and do not heed it, tremble at this doom; for, when
|
||
once they are thus given up to hardness of heart, they are already
|
||
in the suburbs of hell; for who shall heal them, if God do not?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p37">2. "Your unbelief will justify God in
|
||
sending the gospel to the Gentile world, which is the thing you
|
||
look upon with such a jealous eye (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.28" parsed="|Acts|28|28|0|0" passage="Ac 28:28"><i>v.</i> 28</scripRef>): therefore seeing you put the
|
||
grace of God away from you, and will not submit to the power of
|
||
divine truth and love, seeing you will not be converted and healed
|
||
in the methods which divine wisdom has appointed, <i>therefore be
|
||
it known unto you that the salvation of God is sent unto the
|
||
Gentiles,</i> that salvation which was of the Jews only (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.2" osisRef="Bible:John.4.22" parsed="|John|4|22|0|0" passage="Joh 4:22">John iv. 22</scripRef>), the offer of it is made
|
||
to them, the means of it afforded to them, and they stand fairer
|
||
for it than you do; it is sent to them, and they will hear it, and
|
||
receive it, and be happy in it." Now Paul designs hereby, (1.) To
|
||
abate their displeasure at the preaching of the gospel to the
|
||
Gentiles, by showing them the absurdity of it. They were angry that
|
||
the salvation of God was sent to the Gentiles, and thought it was
|
||
too great a favour done to them; but, if they thought that
|
||
salvation of so small a value as not to be worthy of their
|
||
acceptance, surely they could not grudge it to the Gentiles as too
|
||
good for them, nor envy them for it. The salvation of God was sent
|
||
into the world, the Jews had the first offer of it, it was fairly
|
||
proposed to them, it was earnestly pressed upon them, but they
|
||
refused it; they would not accept the invitation which was given to
|
||
them first to the wedding-feast and therefore must thank themselves
|
||
if other guests be invited. If they will not strike the bargain,
|
||
nor come up to the terms, they ought not to be angry at those that
|
||
will. They cannot complain that the Gentiles took it over their
|
||
heads, or out of their hands, for they had quite taken their hands
|
||
off it, nay, <i>they had lifted up the heel against it;</i> and
|
||
therefore it is their fault, for <i>it is through their fall that
|
||
salvation is come to the Gentiles,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.3" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.11" parsed="|Rom|11|11|0|0" passage="Ro 11:11">Rom. xi. 11</scripRef>. (2.) To improve their
|
||
displeasure at the favour done to the Gentiles to their advantage,
|
||
and to bring good out of that evil; for when he had spoken of this
|
||
very thing in his epistle to the Romans, the benefit which the
|
||
Gentiles had by the unbelief and rejection of the Jews, he says, he
|
||
took notice of it on purpose that he might provoke his dear
|
||
countrymen the Jews <i>to a holy emulation, and might save some of
|
||
them,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.4" osisRef="Bible:Rom.11.14" parsed="|Rom|11|14|0|0" passage="Ro 11:14">Rom. xi. 14</scripRef>. The
|
||
Jews have rejected the gospel of Christ, and pushed it off to the
|
||
Gentiles, but it is not yet too late to repent of their refusal,
|
||
and to accept of the salvation which they did make light of; they
|
||
may say No, and take it, as the elder brother in the parable, who,
|
||
when he was bidden to <i>go work in the vineyard,</i> first said,
|
||
<i>I will not,</i> and yet <i>afterwards repented and went,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.5" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.29" parsed="|Matt|21|29|0|0" passage="Mt 21:29">Matt. xxi. 29</scripRef>. Is the
|
||
gospel sent to the Gentiles? Let us go after it rather than come
|
||
short of it. And will they hear it, who are thought to be out of
|
||
hearing, and have been so long like the idols they worshipped,
|
||
<i>that have ears and hear not?</i> And shall not we hear it, whose
|
||
privilege it is to have God so nigh to us in all that we call upon
|
||
him for? Thus he would have them to argue, and to be shamed into
|
||
the belief of the gospel by the welcome it met with among the
|
||
Gentiles. And, if it had not that effect upon them, it would
|
||
aggravate their condemnation, as it did that of the scribes and
|
||
Pharisees, who, when they saw the publicans and harlots submit to
|
||
John's baptism, did not afterwards thereupon repent of their folly,
|
||
<i>that they might believe him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p37.6" osisRef="Bible:Matt.21.32" parsed="|Matt|21|32|0|0" passage="Mt 21:32">Matt. xxi. 32</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p38">IV. The breaking up of the assembly, as it
|
||
should seem, in some disorder. 1. They turned their backs upon
|
||
Paul. Those of them that believed not were extremely nettled at
|
||
that last word which he said, that they should be judicially
|
||
blinded, and that the light of the gospel should shine among those
|
||
that sat in darkness. <i>When Paul had said these words,</i> he had
|
||
said enough for them, and <i>they departed,</i> perhaps not so much
|
||
enraged as some others of their nation had been upon the like
|
||
occasion, but stupid and unconcerned, no more affected, either with
|
||
those terrible words in the close of his discourse or all the
|
||
comfortable words he had spoken before, than the seats they sat on.
|
||
They departed, many of them with a resolution never to hear Paul
|
||
preach again, nor trouble themselves with further enquiries about
|
||
this matter. 2. They set their faces one against another; for they
|
||
had great disputes among themselves. There was not only a quarrel
|
||
between those who believed and those who believed not, but even
|
||
among those who believed not there were debates. Those that agreed
|
||
to depart from Paul, yet agreed not in the reasons why they
|
||
departed, but had <i>great reasoning among themselves.</i> Many
|
||
have great reasoning who yet do not reason right, can find fault
|
||
with one another's opinions, and yet not yield to truth. Nor will
|
||
men's reasoning among themselves convince them, without the grace
|
||
of God to open their understandings.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Acts.xxix-p38.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.30-Acts.28.31" parsed="|Acts|28|30|28|31" passage="Ac 28:30-31" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Acts.28.30-Acts.28.31">
|
||
<h4 id="Acts.xxix-p38.2">Paul Preaches Two Years at
|
||
Rome.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Acts.xxix-p39">30 And Paul dwelt two whole years in his own
|
||
hired house, and received all that came in unto him, 31
|
||
Preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching those things which
|
||
concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no man
|
||
forbidding him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p40">We are here taking our leave of the history
|
||
of blessed Paul; and therefore, since God saw it not fit that we
|
||
should know any more of him, we should carefully take notice of
|
||
every particular of the circumstances in which we must here leave
|
||
him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p41">I. It cannot but be a trouble to us that we
|
||
must leave him in bonds for Christ, nay, and that we have no
|
||
prospect given us of his being set at liberty. <i>Two whole
|
||
years</i> of that good man's life are here spent in confinement,
|
||
and, for aught that appears, he was never enquired after, all that
|
||
time, by those whose prisoner he was. He appealed to Cæsar, in hope
|
||
of a speedy discharge from his imprisonment, the governors having
|
||
signified to his imperial majesty concerning the prisoner <i>that
|
||
he had done nothing worthy of death or bonds,</i> and yet he is
|
||
detained a prisoner. So little reason have we to trust in men,
|
||
especially despised prisoners in great men; witness the case of
|
||
Joseph, whom <i>the chief butler remembered not, but forgot,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.40.23" parsed="|Gen|40|23|0|0" passage="Ge 40:23">Gen. xl. 23</scripRef>. Yet some think
|
||
that though it be not mentioned here, yet it was in the former of
|
||
these two years, and early too in that year, that he was first
|
||
brought before Nero, and then his bonds in Christ were manifest in
|
||
Cæsar's court, as he says, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.2" osisRef="Bible:Phil.1.13" parsed="|Phil|1|13|0|0" passage="Php 1:13">Phil. i.
|
||
13</scripRef>. And at this first answer it was that <i>no man stood
|
||
by him,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.3" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.16" parsed="|2Tim|4|16|0|0" passage="2Ti 4:16">2 Tim. iv. 16</scripRef>.
|
||
But it seems, instead of being set at liberty upon this appeal, as
|
||
he expected, he hardly escaped out of the emperor's hands with his
|
||
life; he calls it a deliverance out of the mouth of the lion,
|
||
<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.4" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.17" parsed="|2Tim|4|17|0|0" passage="2Ti 4:17">2 Tim. iv. 17</scripRef>, and his
|
||
speaking there of his first answer intimates that since that he had
|
||
a second, in which he had come off better, and yet was not
|
||
discharged. During these two years' imprisonment he wrote his
|
||
epistle to the Galatians, then his second epistle to Timothy, then
|
||
those to the Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, and to Philemon,
|
||
in which he mentions several things particularly concerning his
|
||
imprisonment; and, lastly, his epistle to the Hebrews just after he
|
||
was set at liberty, as Timothy also was, who, coming to visit him,
|
||
was upon some account or other made his fellow-prisoner (<i>with
|
||
whom,</i> writes Paul to the Hebrews, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.5" osisRef="Bible:Heb.13.23" parsed="|Heb|13|23|0|0" passage="Heb 13:23">xiii. 23</scripRef>, <i>if he come shortly, I will see
|
||
you</i>), but how or by what means he obtained his liberty we are
|
||
not told, only that two years he was a prisoner. Tradition says
|
||
that after his discharge he went from Italy to Spain, thence to
|
||
Crete, and so with Timothy into Judea, and thence went to visit the
|
||
churches in Asia, and at length came a second time to Rome, and
|
||
there was beheaded in the last year of Nero. But Baronius himself
|
||
owns that there is no certainty of any thing concerning him betwixt
|
||
his release from this imprisonment and his martyrdom; but it is
|
||
said by some that Nero, having, when he began to play the tyrant,
|
||
set himself against the Christians, and persecuted them (and he was
|
||
the first of the emperors that made a law against them, as
|
||
Tertullian says, <i>Apol.</i> cap. 5), the church at Rome was much
|
||
weakened by that persecution, and this brought Paul the second time
|
||
to Rome, to re-establish the church there, and to comfort the souls
|
||
of the disciples that were left, and so he fell a second time into
|
||
Nero's hand. And Chrysostom relates that a young woman that was one
|
||
of Nero's misses (to speak modishly) being converted, by Paul's
|
||
preaching, to the Christian faith, and so brought off from the lewd
|
||
course of life she had lived, Nero was incensed against Paul for
|
||
it, and ordered him first to be imprisoned, and then put to death.
|
||
But to keep to this short account here given of it, 1. It would
|
||
grieve one to think that such a useful man as Paul was should be so
|
||
long in restraint. Two years he was a prisoner under Felix
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.6" osisRef="Bible:Acts.24.27" parsed="|Acts|24|27|0|0" passage="Ac 24:27"><i>ch.</i> xxiv. 27</scripRef>), and,
|
||
besides all the time that passed between that and his coming to
|
||
Rome, he is here two years more a prisoner under Nero. How many
|
||
churches might Paul have planted, how many cities and nations might
|
||
he have brought over to Christ, in these five years' time (for so
|
||
much it was at least), if he had been at liberty! But God is wise,
|
||
and will show that he is not debtor to the most useful instruments
|
||
he employs, but can and will carry on his own interest, both
|
||
without their services and by their sufferings. Even Paul's bonds
|
||
fell out <i>to the furtherance of the gospel,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.7" osisRef="Bible:Phil.1.12-Phil.1.14" parsed="|Phil|1|12|1|14" passage="Php 1:12-14">Phil. i. 12-14</scripRef>. 2. Yet even Paul's
|
||
imprisonment was in some respects a kindness to him, for these
|
||
<i>two years he dwelt in his own hired house,</i> and that was
|
||
more, for aught I know, than ever he had done before. He had always
|
||
been accustomed to sojourn in the houses of others, now he has a
|
||
house of his own—his own while he pays the rent of it; and such a
|
||
retirement as this would be a refreshment to one who had been all
|
||
his days an itinerant. He had been accustomed to be always upon the
|
||
remove, seldom staid long at a place, but now he lived for two
|
||
years in the same house; so that the bringing of him into this
|
||
prison was like Christ's call to his disciples <i>to come into a
|
||
desert place, and rest awhile,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.8" osisRef="Bible:Mark.6.31" parsed="|Mark|6|31|0|0" passage="Mk 6:31">Mark
|
||
vi. 31</scripRef>. When he was at liberty, he was in continual fear
|
||
by reason of <i>the lying in wait of the Jews</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p41.9" osisRef="Bible:Acts.20.19" parsed="|Acts|20|19|0|0" passage="Ac 20:19"><i>ch.</i> xx. 19</scripRef>), but now his
|
||
prison was his castle. Thus <i>out of the eater came forth meat,
|
||
and out of the strong sweetness.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p42">II. Yet it is a pleasure to us (for we are
|
||
sure it was to him) that, though we leave him in bonds for Christ,
|
||
yet we leave him at work for Christ, and this made his bonds easy
|
||
that he was not by them bound out from serving God and doing good.
|
||
His prison becomes a temple, a church, and then it is to him a
|
||
palace. His hands are tied, but, thanks be to God, his mouth is not
|
||
stopped; a faithful zealous minister can better bear any hardship
|
||
than being silenced. Here is Paul a prisoner, and yet a preacher;
|
||
he is bound, but the word of the Lord is not bound. When he wrote
|
||
his epistle to the Romans, he said <i>he longed to see them, that
|
||
he might impart unto them some spiritual gift</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p42.1" osisRef="Bible:Rom.1.11" parsed="|Rom|1|11|0|0" passage="Ro 1:11">Rom. i. 11</scripRef>); he was glad <i>to see
|
||
some of them</i> (<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p42.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.15" parsed="|Acts|28|15|0|0" passage="Ac 28:15"><i>v.</i>
|
||
15</scripRef>), but it would not be half his joy unless he could
|
||
impart to them some spiritual gift, which here he has an
|
||
opportunity to do, and then he will not complain of his
|
||
confinement. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p43">1. To whom he preached: to all that had a
|
||
mind to hear him, whether Jews or Gentiles. Whether he had liberty
|
||
to go to other houses to preach does not appear; it is likely not;
|
||
but whoever would had liberty to come to his house to hear, and
|
||
they were welcome: <i>He received all that came to him.</i> Note,
|
||
Ministers' doors should be open to such as desire to receive
|
||
instruction from them, and they should be glad of an opportunity to
|
||
advise those that are in care about their souls. Paul could not
|
||
preach in a synagogue, or any public place of meeting that was
|
||
sumptuous and capacious, but he preached in a poor cottage of his
|
||
own. Note, When we cannot do what we would in the service of God we
|
||
must do what we can. Those ministers that have but little hired
|
||
houses should rather preach in them, if they may be allowed to do
|
||
that, than be silent. <i>He received all that came to him,</i> and
|
||
was not afraid of the greatest, nor ashamed of the meanest. He was
|
||
ready to preach on the first day of the week to Christians, on the
|
||
seventh day to Jews, and to all who would come on any day of the
|
||
week; and he might hope the better to speed because <i>they came in
|
||
unto him,</i> which supposed a desire to be instructed and a
|
||
willingness to learn, and where these are it is probable that some
|
||
good may be done.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p44">2. What he preached. He does not fill their
|
||
heads with curious speculations, nor with matters of state and
|
||
politics, but he keeps to his text, minds his business as an
|
||
apostle. (1.) He is God's ambassador, and therefore <i>preaches the
|
||
kingdom of God,</i> does all he can to preach it up, negotiates the
|
||
affairs of it, in order to the advancing of all its true interests.
|
||
He meddles not with the affairs of the kingdoms of men; let those
|
||
treat of them whose work it is. He preaches the kingdom of God
|
||
among men, and the word of that kingdom; the same that he defended
|
||
in his public disputes, <i>testifying the kingdom of God</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p44.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.28.23" parsed="|Acts|28|23|0|0" passage="Ac 28:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>), he enforced
|
||
in his public preaching, as that which, if received aright, will
|
||
make us all wise and good, wiser and better, which is the end of
|
||
preaching. (2.) He is an agent for Christ, a friend of the
|
||
bridegroom, and therefore <i>teaches those things which concern the
|
||
Lord Jesus Christ</i>—the whole history of Christ, his
|
||
incarnation, doctrine, life, miracles, death, resurrection,
|
||
ascension; all that relates to the mystery of godliness. Paul stuck
|
||
still to his principle—to know and preach <i>nothing but Christ,
|
||
and him crucified.</i> Ministers, when in their preaching they are
|
||
tempted to diverge from that which is their main business, should
|
||
reduce themselves with this question, What does this concern the
|
||
Lord Jesus Christ? What tendency has it to bring us to him, and to
|
||
keep us walking in him? <i>For we preach not ourselves, but
|
||
Christ.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Acts.xxix-p45">3. With what liberty he preached. (1.)
|
||
Divine grace gave him a liberty of spirit. He preached <i>with all
|
||
confidence,</i> as one that was himself well assured of the truth
|
||
of what he preached—that it was what he durst stand by; and of the
|
||
worth of it—that it was what he durst suffer for. He was <i>not
|
||
ashamed of the gospel of Christ.</i> (2.) Divine Providence gave
|
||
him a liberty of speech: <i>No man forbidding him,</i> giving him
|
||
any check for what he did or laying any restraint upon him. The
|
||
Jews that used to forbid him to speak to the Gentiles had no
|
||
authority here; and the Roman government as yet took no cognizance
|
||
of the profession of Christianity as a crime. Herein we must
|
||
acknowledge the hand of God, [1.] Setting bounds to the rage of
|
||
persecutors; where he does not turn the heart, yet he can tie the
|
||
hand and bridle the tongue. Nero was a bloody man, and there were
|
||
many, both Jews and Gentiles, in Rome, that hated Christianity; and
|
||
yet so it was, unaccountably, that Paul though a prisoner was
|
||
connived at in preaching the gospel, and it was not construed a
|
||
breach of the peace. Thus God makes <i>the wrath of men to praise
|
||
him, and restrains the remainder of it,</i> <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p45.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.76.10" parsed="|Ps|76|10|0|0" passage="Ps 76:10">Ps. lxxvi. 10</scripRef>. Though there were so many that
|
||
had it in their power to forbid Paul's preaching (even the common
|
||
soldier that kept him might have done it), yet God so ordered it,
|
||
<i>that no man did forbid him.</i> [2.] See God here providing
|
||
comfort for the relief of the persecuted. Though it was a very low
|
||
and narrow sphere of opportunity that Paul was here placed in,
|
||
compared with what he had been in, yet, such as it was, he was not
|
||
molested nor disturbed in it. Though it was not a wide door that
|
||
was opened to him, yet it was kept open, and no man was suffered to
|
||
shut it; and it was to many an effectual door, so that there were
|
||
saints even in Cæsar's household, <scripRef id="Acts.xxix-p45.2" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.22" parsed="|Phil|4|22|0|0" passage="Php 4:22">Phil. iv. 22</scripRef>. When the city of our
|
||
solemnities is thus made a quiet habitation at any time, and we are
|
||
fed from day to day with the bread of life, no man forbidding us,
|
||
we must give thanks to God for it and prepare for changes, still
|
||
longing for that holy mountain in which there shall never be any
|
||
pricking brier nor grieving thorn.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |