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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS I.
I: 1, 2. A NARRATIVE of Jesus of Nazareth, designed to
convince men that he is the Christ, would most naturally
begin with his birth and terminate with his ascension to
heaven. Such was the "former narrative" which
Luke had addressed to Theophilus, and he alludes to it as
such in introducing his present work: (1) "The
former treatise I composed, O Theophilus, concerning all
that Jesus began both to do and to teach, (2) until
the day in which, having given commandment through the
Holy Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen, he was
taken up."
This reference to his former narrative is most appropriate
in its place, inasmuch as the one now undertaken is based
entirely upon it. The specific reference to "the day
in which, having given commandment through the Holy Spirit
to the apostles whom he had chosen, he was taken up"
is still more in point, from the fact that all the
authority which the apostles had for the labors Luke is
about to narrate was derived from the commandment given on
that day. The history of that day furnishes but one
commandment then given, which was the apostolic
commission. In this commission, then, Luke locates the
starting point of his present narrative.
If we would appreciate the narrative thus briefly
introduced to us, we must begin with the author, by a
proper understanding of this commission.
During the personal ministry of Jesus, he authorized no
human being to announce his Messiahship. On the contrary,
whenever he discovered a disposition to do so, he
uniformly forbade it, and this not only to various
recipients of his healing power, but to the apostles
themselves. When Peter made the memorable confession,
"Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living
God," we are told that, at the close of the
conversation, "he charged his disciples that they
should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ."{1}
Such was his uniform injunction on similar occasions. Even
when Peter, James, and John had witnessed his
transfiguration, and heard God himself proclaim him his
Son, as they came down from the mount, "Jesus charged
them, saying, Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of
man is risen from the dead."{2}
[9]
This stern prohibition, quite surprising to most readers
of the New Testament, may be accounted for, in part, by a
desire to avoid that political ferment, which, in the
existing state of the public mind, might have resulted
from a general belief among the Jews that he was their
Messiah. But there is a much more imperative reason for
it, found in the mental and moral condition of the
disciples themselves. Their crude conceptions of the
Messiahship, their gross misconception of the nature of
the expected Kingdom, their misunderstanding of much that
he had taught them, and their imperfect remembrance of
that which they had understood, rendered them incapable of
presenting his claims truthfully, not to say infallibly,
to the world. Moreover, their faith had not, as yet,
acquired the strength necessary to the endurance of
privations and persecutions. While laboring under these
defects, they were most wisely prohibited from preaching
that he was the Christ.
During the last night he spent on earth, Jesus at length
informed them that this restriction would soon be removed,
and they should receive the qualifications necessary to be
his witnesses. He says, "The Advocate, the Holy
Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach
you all things, and bring all things to your
remembrance, whatsoever I have said to you."{3}
"I have many things to say to you, but you can not
bear them now; howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is
come, he will guide you into all the truth."{4}
"He shall testify of me: and you also shall testify,
because you have been with me from the beginning."{5}
In these words they have a promise that they shall testify
of Jesus, with the Holy Spirit for their guide; but the
promise looks to the future for its fulfillment.
Finally, "in the day in which he was taken up,"
he gives them the commandment which is to unseal their
lips, and authorizes them to preach the glad tidings to
every creature. Without this commandment, they could not
have dared to tell any many that he was the Christ; with
it, they are authorized to begin the labors which our
historian is about to narrate. But even yet there is one
restriction laid upon them; for they have not yet received
the promised qualifications. "He commanded them that
they should not depart from Jerusalem; but await the
promise of the Father, which you have heard from me."{6}
Such was the necessity for the commandment in question,
and for the limitation which attended it when given. The
items of which it is composed are not fully stated by
either one of the historians, but must be collected from
the partial statements of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Matthew
presents three of them, as follows: "Go, disciple
all nations, immersing them into the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, teaching
them to observe and do all whatsoever I have commanded
you."{7}
Mark presents five items in these words: "Go preach
the gospel to every creature; he who believes
and is immersed shall be saved; he who believes
not shall be condemned."{8}
Luke simply states that Jesus said, "Thus it behoved
[10] the Christ to suffer, and to
rise from the dead the third day, and that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in his
name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem."{9}
If we combine these items, by arranging them in their
natural order of succession, we will have the commission
fully stated.
The command quoted by Mark, "Preach the gospel to
every creature," necessarily comes first. The
command, "Disciple all nations," is next in
order; for it is by means of preaching that they were to
make disciples. But when a man is made a disciple he
becomes a believer; and Matthew and Mark agree in
the statement that he who believes, or in Matthew's
style, he who is discipled, is then to be immersed.
Luke, however, says that repentance must be
preached, and as repentance precedes obedience, we are
compelled to unite it with faith, as antecedent to
immersion. Next after immersion comes Mark's statement,
"he shall be saved." But salvation may be either
that which the pardoned sinner now enjoys, or that to be
enjoyed after the resurrection from the dead: hence this
term would be ambiguous but for Luke's version of it, who
quotes that "remission of sins" is to be
preached. This limits the meaning of the promise to that
salvation which consists in remission of sins. Next after
this comes the command, "teaching them to observe and
do" what I have commanded you. Finally, they were to
proclaim that they who believed not, and, consequently,
complied not with the terms of the commission, should be
condemned. In brief, they were commanded to go into all
the world, and make disciples of all nations by preaching
the gospel to every creature; to immerse all penitent
believers into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
of the Holy Spirit, promising such the remission of their
sins; then teaching them all their duties and privileges,
as disciples of Jesus. In the mean time, all were to be
assured that he who believed not should be condemned.
Making this commission the starting point of his
narrative, Luke proceeds, after a few more preliminary
observations, to relate the manner in which it was
executed. This is the key to the whole narrative. We will
find the apostles adhering strictly to its guidance. Their
actions will furnish a complete counterpart to the items
of their commission, and the best exposition of its
meaning. For the strongest confirmation of the brief
exposition just given, we refer to the course of the
narrative as set forth in the following pages.
3. As our author is about to present the apostles
testifying to the resurrection of Jesus, he sees proper,
in his introduction, to state briefly the ground of the
qualifications for this testimony. He does this in the
remainder of the paragraph of which we have already quoted
a part: (3) " To whom, also, he presented himself
alive, after his suffering, by many infallible proofs,
being seen by them during forty days, and speaking the
things pertaining to the kingdom of God." From
the concluding chapters of the former narrative, we learn
more particularly the nature and number of these
infallible proofs. These, having been fully stated by
himself and others, are not here [11] repeated.
We learn here, however, a fact not there related: that the
space from the resurrection to the ascension was forty
days.
4, 5. To account for the delay of the apostles in
Jerusalem after receiving their commission, and to prepare
the reader for the scenes of the coming Pentecost, the
historian next relates a part of the conversation which
had taken place on the day of the ascension: (4) "And
being assembled with them, he commanded them not to depart
from Jerusalem, but to await the promise of the Father,
which you have heard from me. (5) For John,
indeed, immersed in water; but you shall be immersed in
the Holy Spirit, not many days hence." The
command not to depart from Jerusalem is mistaken, by some
commentators, for the commandment mentioned above, as
being given on the day he was taken up. But, in truth, as
we have already seen, the commission constituted that
commandment, while this is merely a limitation of the
commission, in reference to the time and place of
beginning. The "promise of the Father"
which they were to await, is the promise of the Holy
Spirit, which they had heard from him on the night of the
betrayal, and which they now learn, is to be fulfilled in
by their immersion in the Spirit. On this use of the term immersion
see the Commentary,
2: 16-18.
6-8. We are informed by Matthew that Jesus prefaced the
commission by announcing, "All authority in heaven
and on earth is given to me." It was, probably, this
announcement that led to the inquiry which Luke next
repeats. Being informed that all authority is now given to
him, the disciples expected to see him begin to exercise
it in the way they had long anticipated. (6) "Now
when they were come together, they asked him, saying,
Lord, wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to
Israel? (7) But he said to them, It is not for
you to know the times or seasons which the Father has
appointed in his own authority. (8) But you shall
receive power, when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and
you shall be witnesses for me in Jerusalem, and in all
Judea, and Samaria, and to the uttermost part of the
earth."
The question, "Lord, wilt thou at this time restore
the kingdom to Israel?" indicates two interesting
facts: First, that the apostles still misconceived
the nature of Christ's kingdom; second, that the
kingdom was not yet established. Both these facts deserve
some attention at our hands, especially the latter.
Their misconceptions consisted in the expectation that
Christ would re-establish the earthly kingdom of Israel,
and restore it to its ancient glory, under its own
personal reign. In his reply, the Savior does not
undertake to correct this misconception, but leaves it as
a part of that work of enlightenment yet to be effected by
the Holy Spirit.
The time at which the kingdom of Christ was inaugurated is
the point of transition from the preparatory dispensation,
many elements of which were but temporary, into the
present everlasting dispensation, which is to know no
change, either of principles or of ordinances, in the
course of time. It is necessary to determine this point in
order to know what laws and ordinances of the Bible belong
to the present dispensation. All things enjoined
subsequent [12] to this period are
binding upon us as citizens of the kingdom of Christ; but
nothing enjoined as duty or granted as a privilege, under
former dispensations, is applicable to us, unless it is
specifically extended to us. It requires no less divine
authority to extend into the kingdom of Christ the
institutions of the Jewish kingdom than it did to
establish them at first. This proposition is self-evident.
To fix, therefore, most definitely this period is a matter
of transcendent importance, and must here have all the
space that it requires. It is a question of fact, to be
determined by positive Scripture statements.
The expression "kingdom of heaven" is used only
by Matthew. In the connections where he uses this
expression, the other three historians uniformly say
"kingdom of God." This fact shows that the two
expressions are equivalent. Explaining the former by the
latter, we conclude that the "kingdom of heaven"
is not heaven, but simply a kingdom of God, without
regard to locality. This kingdom is also called by Christ
his own, as the Son of man; for he says, "There are
some standing here who shall not taste of death till they
see the Son of man coming in his kingdom."{10}
The Apostle Paul also speaks of the "kingdom of God's
dear Son,"{11}
and says "He must reign till he has put all
enemies under his feet."{12}
Of the kingdom of God, then, Jesus is the king; hence the
time at which he became a king is the time at which
"the kingdom of Christ and of God"{13}
began. Furthermore, as it was Jesus, the Son of
man, who was made the king, it is evident that the
kingdom could not have commenced till after he became
the Son of man. This consideration at once refutes the
theory which dates the beginning of the kingdom in the
days of Abraham.
But it is not only Jesus the Son of man, but Jesus
who died, that was made king. "We see
Jesus," says Paul, "who was made a little lower
than the angels, on account of the suffering of death,
crowned with glory and honor."{14}
It was after his death, and not during his natural life,
that he was made a king. It is necessary, therefore, to
reject the other theory, which locates the beginning of
the kingdom in the days of John the Immerser.
Finally, it was after his resurrection and his ascension
to heaven that he was made a king. For Paul says,
"Being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself,
and became obedient unto death, even the death of the
cross; wherefore, God hath highly exalted him, and
given him a name that is above every name, that at
the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things
in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the
earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus
Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father."{15}
It is here we are to locate that glorious scene described
by David and by Paul, in which God said to him, "Sit
thou on my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy
footstool."{16}
He "sat down on the right hand of the throne of
God,"{17}
and the Father said, "Let all the angels of God
worship him."{18}
At this [13] word, among the
gathering and circling hosts of heaven, every knee was
bowed and every tongue confessed that Jesus is "Lord
of lord and King of kings." It was then that the
kingdom of God was inaugurated in heaven; and it was in
immediate anticipation of it, with all things in readiness
and waiting, that Jesus said to his disciples, as he was
about to ascend on high, "All authority, in heaven
and on earth is given to me."
Having now fixed the time at which the kingdom was
inaugurated in heaven, we are prepared to inquire when it
began to be administered on earth. It began, of course,
with the first administrative act on earth, and this was
the sending of the Holy Spirit upon the apostles on the
day of Pentecost. On that occasion, Peter says, "This
Jesus has God raised up, whereof we are witnesses.
Therefore, being to the right hand of God exalted,
and having received from the Father the promise of the
Holy Spirit, he has shed forth this which you now see
and hear." "Therefore, let all the house
of Israel know assuredly, that God has made that same
Jesus whom you have crucified, both Lord and Christ."{19}
This event is here assumed as the proof of his exaltation,
and the history shows it to be the first act of the
newly-crowned King which took effect on earth. These facts
are consistent with no other conclusion than that the
kingdom of Christ was inaugurated on earth on the first
Pentecost after his ascension.
We might assume that the above argument is conclusive, and
here dismiss the subject, but for some passages of
Scripture which are supposed to favor a different
conclusion. It was said by Jesus, "The law and the
prophets were until John; since that time the kingdom of
God is preached, and every man presses into it."{20}
Again: "Woe unto you, Scribes and Pharisees,
hypocrites! for you shut up the kingdom of heaven against
men; for your neither go in yourselves, nor will you
suffer those who are entering, to go in."{21}
And again: "If I cast out demons by the Spirit of
God, then is the kingdom of God come to you."{22}
It is argued, from these and kindred passages, that the
law and the prophets ceased, as authority, with the
beginning of John's ministry; that the kingdom of heaven
then began, and men were pressing into it, while Scribes
and Pharisees were striving to keep them from entering it;
and that Jesus recognizes it as an existing institution,
in the remark, "Then is the kingdom of God come to
you."
But there are other passages in the gospels which appear
to conflict with these, and are inconsistent with this
conclusion. The constant preaching of John, of Jesus, and
of the Seventy, was, "The kingdom of heaven is at
hand;" eggike, "is near."
Jesus exclaims, "Among them who are born of women
there hath not arisen a greater than John the Immerser;
notwithstanding, he that is least in the kingdom is
greater than he."{23}
Again: "There are some standing here who shall not
taste of death till they see the kingdom of
God."{24}
And, finally, the question we are now considering,
"Lord, wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom
[14] to Israel?" It is evident,
from these passages, first, that John was not in
the kingdom, for otherwise the least in the kingdom
could not be greater than he; second, that the
generation then living were yet to see the kingdom
of God; third, that the disciples themselves were
still looking for it in the future. If it be urged,
in reference to the first of these conclusions, that the
kingdom, of which John was not a citizen, is the kingdom
in its future glory, the assumption is refuted by the very
next verse in the context: "From the days of John the
Immerser till now the kingdom of heaven suffers violence,
and the violent take it by force."{25}
Whatever may be the true interpretation of these rather
obscure words, they certainly can refer to the kingdom of
glory.
Now, no hypothesis upon this subject can be accepted which
does not provide for a complete reconciliation of these
apparently conflicting passages of Scripture. The
hypothesis that the kingdom was inaugurated by John can
not do so; for, in that case, it is inconceivable that
John himself was not a member of it, and equally so that
he should constantly preach, "The kingdom of heaven is
near." Again: if it was inaugurated during the
personal ministry of Jesus, it is unaccountable that he
should state, as a startling fact, that some of those
present with him should live to see it, or that the
disciples themselves should be ignorant of its existence.
This hypothesis, therefore, is incapable of reconciling
the various statements on the subject, and must, for this
reason, be dismissed.
On the other hand, if we admit, according to the
irresistible force of the facts first adduced in this
inquiry, that the kingdom was inaugurated in heaven when
Jesus was coronated, and that it began to be formally
administered on earth on the next succeeding Pentecost,
there is no difficulty in fully reconciling all the
passages quoted above. It was necessary to the existence
of the kingdom on earth not only that the king should be
upon his throne, but that he should have earthly subjects.
In order, however, that men should acknowledge themselves
his subjects the moment that he became their king, it was
necessary that they should be previously prepared for
allegiance. This preparation could be made in no other way
than by inducing men, in advance, to adopt the principles
involved in the government, and to acknowledge the right
of the proposed ruler to become their king. This was the
work of John and of Jesus. When men began, under the
influence of their teaching, to undergo this preparation
they were, with all propriety of speech, said to be pressing
into the kingdom of God. Those who opposed them were
striving to keep them from entering the kingdom; and to
both parties it could be said, "The kingdom of God is
come to you." It had come to them in the
influence of its principles. "From the days of John
the Immerser the kingdom of heaven was preached," not
as an existing institution, but in its elementary
principles, and by asserting the pretensions of the
prospective king. Thus, we find that the various
statements in the gospels upon this subject, when
harmonized in the only way of which they are [15] capable,
lead us back to our former conclusion, with increased
confidence in its correctness.
We may pursue the same inquiry in an indirect method, by
determining when the previous kingdom of God among the
Jews terminated. As they both, with their conflicting
peculiarities, could not be in formal existence among the
same people at the same time, the new one could not begin
till the old one terminated. That the law and prophets
were until John, Jesus declares; but he does not declare
that they continued no longer. On the contrary, he was
himself "a minister of the circumcision,"{26}
and kept the law till his death. The law and the prophets
were, until John, the only revelation from God.
Since then the gospel of the coming kingdom was preached
in addition to it, and was designed to fulfill the
law and the prophets by preparing the people for a
"better covenant." Even the sacrifices of the
altar, however, continued, with the sanction of Jesus, up
to the very moment that he expired on the cross. Then
"the vail of the temple was rent in two from the top
to the bottom," indicating the end of that
dispensation. All the sacrifices being then fulfilled in
him, and a new and living way being consecrated for us,
not under the vail, as the high priest had gone,
but through the vail--that is to say, his flesh{27}--he
put an end to the priesthood of Aaron,{28}
and took out of the way the handwriting of ordinances,
nailing it to his cross.{29}
At the death of Christ, therefore, the old kingdom came to
its legal end, and on the next Pentecost the new kingdom
began.
Regarding this, now, as a settled conclusion, we proceed
to consider, briefly, the Savior's answer to the question
which has detained us so long. He said to them, "It
is not for you to know the times or the seasons which God
has appointed in his own authority." By the
expression "in his own authority," I suppose
Jesus intended to indicate that the times and seasons of
God's purposes are reserved more specially under his own
sovereign control, and kept back more carefully from the
knowledge of men, than the purposes themselves. It is
characteristic of prophesy that it deals much more in
facts and the succession of events than in definite dates
and periods. The apostles were to be agents in
inaugurating the kingdom, but, as proper preparation for
their work did not depend upon a foreknowledge of the
time, it was not important to reveal it to them.
But it was all-important that they should receive the
necessary power: hence Jesus adds, "But you
shall receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon
you." The power here promised is not authority,
for this he had given them in the commission; but it is
that miraculous power to know all the truth, and work
miracles in proof of their mission, which he had promised
them before his death. He says to them, virtually, It is
not for you to know the time at which I will establish my
kingdom, but you shall receive power to inaugurate it on
earth when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. This is an
additional proof that the kingdom was inaugurated on the
day of Pentecost.
While promising them the requisite power, Jesus takes
occasion [16] to mark out their
successive fields of labor: first "in
Jerusalem," next, "in all Judea," then
"in Samaria," and finally, "to the
uttermost part of the earth." It is not to be
imagined that this arrangement of their labors was
dictated by partiality for the Jews, or was merely
designed to fulfill prophesy. It was rather foretold
through the prophets, because there were good reasons why
it should be so. One reason, suggested by the commentators
generally, for beginning in Jerusalem, was the propriety
of first vindicating the claims of Jesus in the same city
in which he was condemned. But the controlling reason was
doubtless this: the most devout portion of the Jewish
people, that portion who had been most influenced by the
preparatory preaching of John and of Jesus, were always
collected at the great annual festivals, and hence the
most successful beginning could there be made. Next
to these, the inhabitants of the rural districts of Judea
were best prepared, by the same influences, for the
gospel; then the Samaritans, who had seen some of the
miracles of Jesus; and, last of all, the Gentiles. Thus
the rule of success was made their guide from place
to place, and it became the custom of the apostles, even
in heathen lands, to preach the gospel "first to the
Jew" and "then to the Gentile." The result
fully justified the rule; for the most signal triumph of
the gospel was in Judea, and the most successful approach
to the Gentiles of every region was through the Jewish
synagogue.
9. Having completed his brief notice of the last interview
between Jesus and the disciples, Luke says, (9) "And
when he had spoken these things, while they were
beholding, he was taken up, and a cloud received him out
of their sight." We learn from Luke's former
narrative, that it was while Jesus was in the act of
blessing them, with uplifted hands, that he was parted
from them and borne aloft into heaven.{30}
The cloud which floated above formed a background, to
render the outline of the person more distinct while in
view, and to suddenly shut him off from view as he entered
its bosom. Thus all the circumstances of this most fitting
departure were calculated to preclude the suspicion of
deception or of optical illusion.
It has been urged by some skeptical writers, that the
silence of Matthew and John, in reference to the
ascension, who were eye-witnesses of the scene, if it
really occurred, while is mentioned only by Luke and Mark,
who were not present, is ground of suspicion that the
latter derived their information from impure sources. Even
Olshausen acknowledges that, at one time, he was
disquieted on this point, because he could not account for
this peculiar difference in the course of the four
historians.{31}
That the testimony of Mark and Luke, however, is credible,
is made apparent to all who believe in the resurrection
of Jesus, by simply inquiring, what became of his
body after it was raised? It was certainly raised immortal
and incorruptible. There is nothing in his resurrection to
distinguish it from that of Lazarus, or the widow's son of
Nain, so that he should be called "the first fruits
of them who slept,"{32}
but the fact that he rose to die no more. But when he was
about to leave [17] the earth, there
was only this alternative, that his body should return
again to the grave, or ascend up into heaven. So far,
therefore, is the account of the ascension from being
incredible, that even if none of the historians had
mentioned it, we would still be constrained to conclude
that, at some time, and in some manner, it did take place.
We may further observe, that though Matthew and John do
not mention the ascension, the latter reports a
conversation with Mary the Magdalene at the sepulcher, in
which Jesus clearly intimated that it would take place. He
said to her, "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended
to my Father."{33}
And that his ascension would be visible, he had intimated
to the disciples, when he said, "Doth this offend
you? What if you shall see the Son of Man ascend
up where he was before?"{34}
But still the question recurs, why should Matthew and John
omit an account of this remarkable event, and why should
Like and Mark, who were not eye-witnesses, make mention of
it? It would be sufficient to answer, For a similar
reason, no doubt, to that which led each of these writers
to omit some interesting facts which are mentioned by
others.
But we may find a still more definite answer by examining
the last chapter of each of the four gospels. It will be
observed, that John saw fit to close his narrative with
the fishing scene which occurred on the shore of Galilee,
making no mention at all of the last day's interview. Of
course, it would have required a departure from, this plan
to have mentioned the ascension. Matthew brings his
narrative to a close with a scene on a mountain in
Galilee, whereas the ascension took place from Mount
Olivet, near Jerusalem. There was nothing in his closing
remarks to suggest mention of the ascension, unless it be
his account of the commission; but the commission was
really first given to them at that time,{35}
though finally repeated on the day of the ascension.{36}
On the other hand, Mark and Luke both chose, for their
concluding paragraphs, such a series of events as leads
them to speak of the last day's interview; and as the
ascension was the closing event of the day, it would have
been most unnatural for them not to mention it. Still
further, in the introduction to the book of Acts, the
leading events of which are to have constant reference to
an ascended and glorified Redeemer, Luke felt still
greater necessity for giving a formal account of the
ascension.
10, 11. Not only the ascension of Jesus to heaven, but his
future coming to judgment, is to be a prominent topic in
the coming narrative, hence the introduction here of
another fact, which not even Luke had mentioned before.
(10) "And while they were gazing into heaven, as
he went away, behold, two men stood by them in white
apparel, (11) who also said, Men of Galilee, why
stand ye gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus, who was
taken up from you into heaven, shall so come, in the same
manner that you have seen him going into heaven."
These "two men in white apparel" were,
undoubtedly, angels in human form. This is the natural
conclusion from the words they utter, and [18] is
confirmed by the fact that two others who appeared at the
sepulcher, and are called "men in shining
garments" by Luke,{37}
are called "two angels in white" by John.{38}
Luke speaks of them according to their appearance; John,
according to the reality.
It should be observed that the angels stated not merely
that Jesus would come again, but that he would come
in like manner as they had seen him go; that is,
visibly and in his glorified humanity. It is a positive
announcement of a literal and visible second coming.
12. At the rebuke of the angel, the disciples withdrew
their longing gaze from the cloud into which Jesus had
entered, and cheered by the promise of his return, (12)
"Then they returned into Jerusalem from the Mount
called Olivet, which was near Jerusalem, distant a
Sabbath-day's journey." The ascension took place
near Bethany,{39}
which was nearly two miles from Jerusalem,{40}
and on the further side of Mount Olivet. It was the nearer
side of the Mount, which was distant a Sabbath-day's
journey, or seven-eighths of a mile. We learn, from Luke's
former narrative, that they returned to Jerusalem
"with great joy."{41}
Their sorrow at parting from the Lord was turned into joy
at the hope of seeing him again.
13. "And when they were come in, they went up
into an upper room, where were abiding Peter, and James,
and John, and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and
Matthew, James son of Alpheus, and Simon Zelotes, and
Judas brother of James." This enumeration of the
apostles very appropriately finds place here, showing that
all of those to whom the commission was given were at
their post, ready to begin work, and waiting for the
promised power from on high.
14. The manner in which these men spent the time of their
waiting, which was an interval of ten days, was such as we
would expect: (14) " These all continued with one
accord in prayer and supplication, with the women, and
Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers."
The chief scene of this worship was not the upper room
where the eleven were abiding, but the temple; for we
learn, from Luke's former narrative, that they "were
continually in the temple, praising and blessing
God."{42}
The mother of Jesus is here mentioned for the last time in
New Testament history. The fact that she still remained
with the disciples, instead of returning to Nazareth,
indicates that John was faithful to the dying request of
Jesus, and continued to treat her as his own mother.{43}
Though the prominence here given to her name shows that
she was regarded with great respect by the apostles, the
manner in which Luke speaks of her shows that he had not
dreamed of the worship which was yet to be offered to her
by an idolatrous church.
Whether those here called the "brothers" of
Jesus were the sons of Mary, or more distant relatives of
Jesus, is not easily determined, from the fact that the
Greek word is ambiguous. The Catholic dogma of the
perpetual virginity of Mary is dependent upon the solution
of this question, but it properly belongs to commentaries
[19] on the gospels, and to these the
reader is referred for the arguments, pro and con.
15-18. We next have an account of the selection of an
apostle to fill the place of Judas. There is no intimation
that Jesus had authorized this procedure; on the contrary,
it would be presumed that, as he himself had selected the
original twelve, he would, in like manner, fill the
vacancy, if he intended that it should be filled. Neither
had the apostles yet received that power from on high
which would enable them to act infallibly in a matter of
this kind. From these considerations, it has been supposed
by some that the whole procedure was both unauthorized and
invalid. But the fact that Matthias was afterward "numbered
with the eleven apostles,"{44}
and that the whole body were from that time called
"the twelve,"{45}
shows that the transaction was sanctioned by the apostles
even after they were fully inspired. This gave it the sanction
of inspired authority, whatever may have been its origin.
Moreover, Jesus had promised them that they should sit
upon twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel,{46}
and the fulfillment of this promise required that the
number should be filled up. The Apostle Paul was not
reckoned among "the twelve." He distinguishes
himself from them in @1
Cor. xv: 5, 8. "He was seen by Cephas, then by
the twelve," and "he was seen by me
also, as by one born out of due time."
The particular time within the ten days, at which this
selection was made, is not designated. The incident is
introduced in these terms: (15) "And in those
days, Peter stood up in the midst of the disciples, and
said, (the number of the names together was about one
hundred and twenty,) (16) Brethren, this
scripture must needs have been fulfilled which the Holy
Spirit, through the mouth of David, spoke before
concerning Judas, who was guide to them that seized Jesus.
(17) For he was numbered with us, and had obtained
part of this ministry. (18) Now this man
purchased a field with the reward of iniquity, and falling
headlong, he burst asunder in the midst, and all his
bowels gushed out."
The parenthetical statement that the number of names
together were about one hundred and twenty is not to be
understood as including all who then believed on Jesus,
but only those who were then and there assembled. Paul
states that Jesus was seen, after his resurrection, by
"above five hundred brethren at once."{47}
The hundred and twenty were, perhaps, all who were then in
the city of Jerusalem.
The statement in reference to the fate of Judas is
supposed by most commentators to be part of a parenthesis
thrown in by Luke, though some contend that it is part of
Peter's speech.{48}
If the latter supposition is true, there is no ambiguity
in it to the original hearers, for they all well knew that
the field referred to was purchased by the Sanhedrim with
money which Judas forced upon them, and which was invested
in this way because they could find no other suitable use
for it.{49}
Knowing this, they could but understand Peter as meaning
that Judas had indirectly caused the field [20] to
be purchased. But whether the words are Peter's or Luke's,
it must be admitted that a reader unacquainted with the
facts in the case would be misled by them. Luke, however,
presumed upon the information of his first readers, and
that knowledge of the facts which they possessed has been
transmitted to us by Matthew, so that we have as little
difficulty as they did in discovering the true meaning of
the remark.
As respects the manner of the death of Judas, the common
method of reconciling Luke's account with that of Matthew
is undoubtedly correct. We must suppose them both to be
true, and combine the separate statements. The whole
affair stands thus: "He went out and hanged
himself;"{50}
and, by the breaking of either the limb on which he hung,
or the cord, "falling headlong, he burst asunder in
the midst, and all his bowels gushed out."
19. The next statement, (19) "And it was known to
all the dwellers in Jerusalem, so that that field is
called, in their proper tongue, Aceldama, that is to say,
the field of blood," is undoubtedly a
parenthesis by Luke. Peter was addressing the very people
in whose proper tongue the place was called Aceldama, and
would not, of course, translate it to them. Hence,
we can not attribute these words to him. But Luke was
writing in Greek, and felt called upon to translate Hebrew
words which he might use into Greek, and the fact that
this is done here prove the words to be his.
20. The historian now resumes the report of Peter's
speech, which he had interrupted by the parenthesis. In
the remarks already quoted, Peter bases the action which
he proposes, not upon any commandment of Jesus, but upon a
prophesy uttered by David. He also states, as the ground
for the application of that prophesy which he is about to
make, the fact that Judas had been numbered with them, and
had "obtained part of this ministry." He now
quotes the prophesy alluded to: (20) "For it is
written in the book of Psalms, Let his habitation be
desolate, and let no man dwell therein.{51}
His office let another take."{52}
These two passages from the Psalms, when read in their
original context, seem to apply to the wicked in general,
and there is not the slightest indication that David had
Judas in prophetic view when he uttered them. This is an
instance, therefore, of the particular application of a
general prophetic sentiment. If it be proper that the
habitation of a wicked man should become desolate, and
that whatever office he held should be given to another,
then it was pre-eminently proper that such a crime as that
of Judas should be thus punished, and that so important an
office as that of Judas should be filled by a
worthy successor.
21, 22. It is of some moment to observe here that the
question on which Peter is discoursing has not reference
to the original appointment of an apostle, but to the
selection of a successor to an apostle. The
qualifications, therefore, are found necessary to an
election, must always be possessed by one who proposes to
be a successor to an apostle. He states these
qualification in the next sentence: (21) "Wherefore,
of these men who have accompanied us all the [21] time
that the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, (22) beginning
from the immersion of John till the day he was take up
from us, must one be made a witness with us of his
resurrection." There being no other instance in
the New Testament of the selection of a successor to an
apostle, this is our only scriptural guide upon the
subject, and therefore, it is unscriptural for any man to
lay claim to the office who has not been a companion of
Jesus and a witness of his resurrection. The reason for
confining the selection to those who had accompanied Jesus
from the beginning, is because such would be the most
reliable witnesses to his identity after the resurrection.
One less familiar with his person would, certis
paribus, be less perfectly guarded against imposition.
Peter here, like Paul in @1
Cor. xv, makes the whole value of apostolic testimony
depend upon ability to prove the resurrection of Jesus.
23-26. "Then they appointed two, Joseph, called
Barsabas, who was surnamed Justus and Matthias. (24) And
they prayed, and said, Thou Lord, who knowest the hearts
of all men, show which one of these two thou hast chosen
(25) to receive the lot of this ministry and
apostleship, from which Judas, by transgression, fell,
that he might go to his own place. (26) And they
gave forth their lots, and the lot fell upon Matthias, and
he was numbered together with the eleven apostles."
It will be observed that the brethren did not themselves
select Matthias; but, having first appointed two persons
between whom the choice should be made, they prayed the
Lord to show which one he had chosen, and then cast
lots, understanding that the one upon whom the lot fell
was the Lord's choice. The reason that they did not make
the selection themselves was evidently because they
thought proper that the Lord, who had chosen Judas, should
also choose his successor. If it be inquired why, then,
they ventured to confine the Lord's choice to these two,
the most plausible answer is that suggested by Dr.
Alexander, that, after careful examination of the parties
present, they were the only two who possessed the
qualifications named by Peter. Whether the selection of
these two was made by the body of disciples, or by the
apostles alone, it is unimportant to determine. The case
does not, as many have supposed, furnish a precedent on
the subject of popular election of church officers; for
the selection of the two persons between whom an election
was to be made, was not the election itself; and when the
election took place, it was made by the Lord, and not by
the disciples or the apostles. One of them cast or drew
the lots, but the Lord determined on whom the lot should
fall.
The prayer offered by the apostles on this occasion is a
model of its kind. They had a single object for which they
bowed before the Lord, and to the proper presentation of
this they confine their words. They do not repeat a single
thought, neither do they elaborate one beyond the point
perspicuity. The question having reference to the
spiritual as well as the historical characteristics of the
two individuals, most appropriately do they address the
Lord as kardiognosta, the heart-knower.
They do not pray, Show which thou wilt chose, or dost
choose, as though there was need of reflection with the
Lord before the choice; but, "show which one of these
two thou hast [22] chosen."
They describe the office they desire the Lord to fill, as
the "ministry and apostleship from which Judas, by
transgression, fell, that he might go to his own place."
He had been in a place of which he proved himself
unworthy, and they have no hesitation in referring to the
fact that he had now gone to his own place. That
place is, of course, the place to which hypocrites go
after death. Here is a simple address to the Lord,
beautifully appropriate to the petition they are about to
present; then the petition itself concisely expressed, and
the prayer is concluded. So brief a prayer, on any
occasion in this voluble age, would scarcely be recognized
as a prayer at all, so prone are men to the delusion that
they will be heard for their much speaking.
{1} @Matt.
xvi: 20.
{2} @Matt.
xvii: 9.
{3} @John
xiv: 26.
{4} @John
xvi: 12, 13.
{5} @John
xv: 26, 27.
{6} Verse
4, below.
{7} @Matt.
xxviii: 19, 20.
{8} @Mark
xvi: 15, 16.
{9} @Luke
xxiv: 46, 47.
{10} @Matt.
xvi: 28.
{11} @Col.
i: 13.
{12} @1
Cor. xv: 25.
{13} @Eph.
v: 5.
{14} @Heb.
ii. 9.
{15} @Phil.
ii: 8, 11.
{16} @Ps.
cx: 1; Heb. 1:13.
{17} @Heb.
xii: 2.
{18} @Heb.
i: 6.
{19} @Acts
ii: 32-36.
{20} @Luke
xvi: 16.
{21} @Matt.
xxiii: 13.
{22} @Matt.
xii: 28.
{23} @Matt.
xi: 11.
{24} @Luke
ix: 27.
{25} @Matt.
xi: 12.
{26} @Rom.
xv: 8.
{27} @Heb.
x: 20.
{28} @Heb.
vii: 11, 12.
{29} @Col.
ii: 14.
{30} @Luke
xxiv: 50, 51.
{31}
Com. in loco.
{32} @1
Cor. xv: 20.
{33} @John
xx: 17.
{34} @John
vi: 62.
{35} @Matt.
xxviii: 16-18.
{36} @Mark
xvi: 14-19.
{37} @Luke
xxiv: 4.
{38} @John
xx: 12.
{39} @Luke
xxiv: 50.
{40} @John
xi: 18.
{41} @Luke
xxiv: 52.
{42} @Luke
xxiv: 53.
{43} @John
xix: 26, 27.
{44} @Acts
i: 26.
{45} @Acts
vi: 2.
{46} @Matt.
xix: 28.
{47} @1
Cor. xv: 6.
{48}
Alexander in loco.
{49} @Matt.
xxvii: 3-8.
{50} @Matt.
xxvii: 5.
{51} @Ps.
lxix: 26.
{52} @Ps.
cix: 8.
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