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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS
XI
XI: 1-3. The novel scene
which had transpired in Cęsarea was soon reported abroad
over the country. (1) "Now the apostles and
brethren throughout Judea heard that the Gentiles had
received the word of God. (2) And when Peter went
up to Jerusalem, they of the circumcision disputed with
him, (3) saying, You went into the house of men
uncircumcised, and did eat with them." The
prejudice from which Peter had been delivered was still
preying upon the hearts of his Jewish brethren, including
the other apostles. The same change is now to be wrought
in them which had already been effected in him. But there
is no repetition, in their case, of the vision and voices
which had occurred in his. On the contrary, there is
nothing brought to bear upon them but what is contained in
the words of Peter.
4-17. (4) "But Peter related the matter to them
in order from the beginning, saying, (5) I was in
the city of Joppa, praying, and saw, in a trance, a
vision, a certain vessel like a great sheet descending,
let down from heaven by the four corners, and it came to
me. (6) Having looked intently into it, I
perceived and saw four-footed animals, and wild beasts,
and reptiles of the earth, and birds of the air. (7) And
I heard a voice, saying to me, Arise, Peter; kill and eat.
(8) But I said, Not so, Lord; for nothing common or
unclean has at any time entered into my mouth. (9) But
the voice from heaven answered me, What God has cleansed,
do not you make common. (10) This was done three
times, and all was drawn up into heaven again. (11) And
behold, three men immediately came to the house in which I
was, sent to me from Cęsarea, (12) and the
Spirit told me to go with them, doubting nothing. But
these six brethren also went with me, and we entered into
the man's house. (13) Then he told us that he had
seen an angel in his house, standing and saying to him,
Send to Joppa, and call for Simon who is surnamed Peter,
(14) who will speak words to you by which you and all
your house will be saved. (15) And while I was
beginning to speak, the Holy Spirit fell upon them as upon
us in the beginning. (16) Then I remembered the
word of the Lord, that he said, John immersed in water,
but you shall be immersed in the Holy Spirit. (17) Since,
then, God gave to them the same gift as to us who already
believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I, that I
should be able to withstand God?" The events
here rehearsed by Peter had removed his own prejudice, and
now, through the words which he addressed to the
brethren, the same vision of unclean animals, with the
command to kill and eat; the same command of the Spirit to
go with the Gentile messengers; the authority of the angel
who had ordered him to be sent for; and, finally, the same
immersion of those Gentiles in the Holy Spirit, are all
pressing upon their minds and hearts, with precisely the
same import that they did upon his.
18. The effect of these influences was the same upon them
that it had been upon Peter. (18) "When they
heard these things they held their peace, and glorified
God, saying, Then has God to the Gentiles also [142] granted
repentance in order to life." So greatly are
their hearts enlarged, that they now glorify God for the
very things on account of which they had just been
censuring Peter.
We have, in this incident, an exhibition of the actual
method by which the minds of Christians were enlightened,
and their hearts enlarged. We see that Peter was first
enlightened by a combination of facts, visions, and words,
so as to understand the will of God in the matter,
and that through this enlightened understanding he
was made to feel the weight of divine authority.
Although the Spirit of God dwelt in him continually, and
imparted ideas to his understanding directly, yet, when
his heart was to be relieved from an injurious
prejudice, the end was accomplished by means of ideas
communicated to his understanding. Thus the case stands
with Peter, who occupies the position of an original
recipient of truth.
With the brethren in Jerusalem, who occupied the exact
position toward this particular subject which we do to all
revealed truth, there is this difference, that all
the influence, both upon the understanding and the
emotional nature, exerted in their case, reached them through
Peter's words. Still, the influence was not inherent in
the words, but in the facts of which the
words were the medium of communication. Moreover, the
facts had such an influence only because they indicated
the will of God. It was then, at last, the moral power of
God, embodied in the facts reported by Peter, but brought
to bear through the words of Peter, which so
changed their hearts. They had only to believe what Peter
reported, in order to feel this power. If they had
retained their prejudice after this, they would have felt
that they were resisting God.
In precisely this way the converting and sanctifying
influence of the Holy Spirit reaches the hearts of men
now. We do not have direct communication with heavenly
beings, as Peter had, but, like the brethren in Jerusalem,
we hear from his lips, and the lips and pens of other
original recipients, the same truth which affected their
minds and hearts, and we find ours affected by it in the
same way. When we resist, we are resisting not Peter and
Paul, but the Holy Spirit, by whom they spoke and wrote.
The fact that the Holy Spirit dwells in us is no proof
that his action upon our moral sentiments is direct or
immediate; for he dwelt in Peter, and in the apostles who
arraigned Peter; yet his action upon even their hearts was
mediate, through ideas communicated. He who asserts
for us a species of spiritual influence which was not
exerted even upon the apostles and other inspired me, is,
to say the least, a daring speculator.
19. The scene of the narrative is now about to change to
another Roman province, and to the city of Antioch.
Preparatory to this transition, the historian glances back
over a period of several years, to the dispersion of the
Jerusalem Church. He had made that event his point of
departure in rehearsing the labors of Philip and the early
history of Saul, and now, with a degree of system in his
arrangement which should not be overlooked, he starts
again at the same point to sweep over another part of the
wide field before him. (19) "Now they who were
scattered abroad from the persecution which arose about
Stephen, traveled as far as Phenicia, and Cyprus, and
Antioch, [143] speaking the
word to none but Jews." From this we learn that
while Philip was preaching in Samaria, and Saul in
Damascus and Arabia, others of the brethren were spreading
the truth into Phenicia, the island of Cyprus, and Antioch
in Syria. Thus the knowledge of salvation was sounded out
from Jerusalem simultaneously into all the surrounding
provinces.
20, 21. Among the brethren engaged in these labors, Luke
chooses to follow in a narrative only those who founded
the Church in Antioch. (20) "And some of them
were men of Cyprus and Cyrene, who, having come into
Antioch, spoke to the Hellenists, preaching the Lord
Jesus. (21) The hand of the Lord was with them,
and a great number believed and turned to the Lord."
These men were not immediately from Cyprus and Cyrene, but
were a part of those dispersed from Jerusalem. The
expression, "Some of them," referring to the
preceding sentence, thus designates them. The Hellenists
were doubtless numerous in Antioch, from the fact if its
being the chief commercial city of Western Asia; and these
brethren, being also Hellenists, were best suited for
reaching their ears.
22-24. Jerusalem was still the chief center of religious
influence, being the chief residence of the apostles. They
kept a watchful eye upon the movements of brethren in all
directions, supplying help and counsel according to the
demand of circumstances. They were anxious to hear of
every new success, and the brethren were equally glad to
report it. (22) "Then tidings of these things
came to the ears of the Church in Jerusalem, and they sent
forth Barnabas to go as far as Antioch. (23) When
he arrived and saw the favor of God, he rejoiced, and
exhorted them all with purpose of heart to cling to the
Lord. (24) For he was a good man, and full of the
Holy Spirit and faith; and a great multitude were added to
the Lord." It is not often that Luke bestows a
direct encomium upon the characters of whom he writes, as
he does here upon Barnabas. But it was proper, in this
case, that the selection of Barnabas for this mission, in
preference to other brethren, should be accounted for by
stating the noble qualities which led to the choice. He
was certainly a most proper man to send to a congregation
of young disciples, to exhort them to cling to the Lord.
25. While Barnabas was engaged in these faithful labors in
Antioch, he seems to have longed for the co-operation of a
kindred spirit. He had not forgotten the converted
persecutor, whom he had kindly taken by the hand when all
the apostles were suspicious of him, and introduced to the
confidence of the brethren. An act of kindness often makes
as deep an impression on the heart of the benefactor as on
that of the recipient. The heart of Barnabas had followed
Saul when the brethren sent him away to Tarsus, and now
that he needs a fellow-laborer, his heart directs him
where to seek. (25) "Then Barnabas departed to
Tarsus to seek Saul; (26) and having found him he
brought him to Antioch." The attachment being
mutual, he found no difficulty in securing the object of
his mission.
26. The united efforts of two such men as Barnabas and
Saul, in a community where the gospel was already
favorably heard, could not fail of good results. (26)
"And it came to pass, that during a whole year
they were associated together in the Church, and taught a
great multitude; [144] and
the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch."
There has been much dispute as to whether this new name
was given by Barnabas and Saul under divine authority, or
by the Gentiles of Antioch, or by the disciples
themselves. It would serve no practical purpose to decide
between the latter two suppositions, for, with whichever
party it originated, it was subsequently accepted by the
disciples in general.
As to the supposition that the name was given by direct
revelation through Barnabas and Saul, a thorough
discussion of its merits would require more verbal
criticism than is suited to the design of this work, and,
at the same time, be less decisive in reference to the
authority of the name in question, than the course of
investigation which we prefer to institute. We retain,
therefore, the common version of the passage, which is
sustained by the great mass of critics of all ages and all
parties, while we seek a more certain basis on which to
rest the divine authority of the new name than verbal
criticism can establish.
If the New Testament furnishes any names for the people of
God, its authority in reference to their use is not less
imperative than in reference to any other use of language.
We can have no more right, in this case, to substitute
other names for them, or to add others to them, than to do
the same in reference to the names of the apostles, of the
Holy Spirit, or of Christ.
Religious names are significant. They not only distinguish
the bodies to which they belong, as do modern names of
individuals, but they distinguish them by a condensed
description of their peculiarities. All the peculiarities
of a religious denomination are expressed by the
denominational name in its current import. Hence, to call
a Baptist by the name Methodist would be worse than to
call Smith by the name of Jones; for, besides miscalling
him, it would be misrepresenting his religious principles.
It is true, that, in thus miscalling the Baptist, you have
not changed him into a Methodist, for he remains the same
by whatever name you call him. Still, you have miscalled
him and done him injustice. Truth and justice, therefore,
require us to use religious names with reference to their
significance.
If denominational names are significant, those originally
applied to the body of Christ are not less so. They
distinguish the people of God by designating some of their
peculiarities. These peculiarities were found either in
the relations which they sustained, or in the character
which they exhibited to the world. The first relation
which attracted the attention of the world, as they
followed Jesus from place to place, was that of teacher
and pupils. This suggested the name disciples, or learners,
by which they were first designated, and which is the most
common designation in the gospel narratives. From the fact
that there were disciples of John, with whom they might be
confounded, they were, at first, styled "disciples of
Jesus." But when John had decreased, and Jesus had
increased, the limiting words were dispensed with, and the
term disciple was appropriated, so that,
standing alone, it always meant a disciple of Jesus. In
the four gospels the limiting words are commonly employed;
but in Acts, where Luke is giving some of their history as
a great people spreading through the earth, after once
calling them "disciples of the Lord," at the
time [145] Saul starts after them to
Damascus, he drops the limiting words, and thence
throughout the whole narrative he calls them simply the
"disciples."
When the disciples assumed a new relation to their
teacher, it necessarily brought them into a new relation
to one another. From the nature of the moral lessons which
they were learning, and which they were required to put
into immediate practice, this relation became very
intimate and very affectionate. It gave rise to their
designation as "the brethren." They were
so styled first by Jesus, saying to them: "Be not
called Rabbi; for one is your teacher, and all you are brethren."{1}
This term, however, as a distinctive appellation of the
whole body, is used only once in the gospel narratives,
where John says of the report that he would not die:
"This saying went abroad among the brethren."{2}
In Acts it frequently occurs in this sense; but still more
frequently in the Epistles. The latter being addressed to
the brethren, and treating of their mutual obligations,
this term most naturally takes precedence in them, and the
term disciple, which is used in speaking of
a brother rather than to him, is as naturally
omitted. This accounts for the fact that the latter term
is not once found in the Epistles.
This increasing currency of the term brethren in
the later apostolic age is intimately associated with the
introduction of another name which came into use in the
same period. Jesus frequently called the disciples his own
brethren, and taught them, in praying to say, "Our
Father, who art in heaven;" but the title,
"children of God," which grew out of the
relation thus indicated, was not applied to them during
this early period. It is not so applied in any of the
gospels but John's, and in this only in two instances,
where it is evident that he is using the phraseology of
the time in which he writes rather than of the period of
which he writes.{3}
This appellation, as a current and cotemporaneous title,
is found only in the Epistles, being brought into use
after the disciples had obtained more exalted conceptions
of the blessed privileges and high honors which God had
conferred upon them. It extorted an admiring comment from
John, in his old age: "Behold, what manner of love
the Father bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons
of God!"{4}
By this time the disciples exhibited to the world a
well-defined character. It was such as identified them
with those who, in the Old Testament, were called saints,
and this suggested the use of this term as one of their
appellations. The persecutions which they were enduring
still further identified them with the holy "prophets
who were before them." This name occurs first on the
lips of Ananias when he objected to approaching Saul of
Tarsus. He says to the Lord, "I have heard by many of
this man, how much evil he has done to thy saints
in Jerusalem." In the Epistles this name is used more
frequently than any other.
All of the names we have now considered are well adapted
to their specific purposes; but all of them presuppose
some knowledge of the people whom they are intended to
distinguish. An entire stranger would not at first know
who was meant by the disciples, or the brethren;
[146] but would ask, Disciples of
whom? brethren of whom? Nor would he know who were the children
of God, or the saints, until you had informed
him to what certain characters these terms apply. There
was need, therefore, of a name less ambiguous to those who
had the least information on the subject--one better
adapted to the great world. This, like all the others,
originated from circumstances which demanded it for
immediate use. When a Church was established in Antioch,
it became an object of inquiry to strangers, brought
thither by the pursuits of commerce, from all parts of the
world. They were strangers to the cause of Christ in
reference to all but the wonderful career of its founder.
The whole world had heard something of Christ, as the
remarkable personage who was put to death under Pontius
Pilate, though many had heard nothing of the early history
of his Church. From this fact, when strangers came to
Antioch, and heard the new party who were attracting so
much attention there, called Christians, they at
once recognized them as followers of that Christ of
whom they had already heard. This explains the fact stated
in the text, that "the disciples were called Christians
first in Antioch." The fact that Luke here adopts
it, and that both Paul and Peter afterward recognized it,
gives it all the validity of inspired usage, and,
therefore, all the weight of divine authority. That it is
a New Testament name is undisputed, and this renders its
divine authority indisputable.
This name, whether given by divine or by human authority,
was not designed as an exclusive appellation, seeing that
the others were continued in use after its introduction.
It merely took its proper place among the other names, to
answer its own special purpose.
To sum up the facts now adduced, the New Testament usage
in reference to names is this: When the followers of Jesus
were contemplated with reference to their relation to him
as their great teacher, they were called disciples.
When the mind of the speaker was fixed more particularly
on their relation to one another, they were styled brethren.
When their relation to God was in the foreground, they
were called children of God. When they were
designated with special reference to character, they were
called saints. But when they were spoken of with
the most general reference to their great leader, they
were called Christians. A practical observance of
the exact force of each of these names would soon conform
our speech to the primitive model, and would check a
tendency to exalt any one name above another, by giving to
each its proper place.
The names now enumerated are all that are furnished by the
New Testament. We have assumed above that it would be
subversive of divine authority for disciples to adopt any
other names. The truth of this assumption is demonstrated
by the rebuke which Paul administers to the Corinthians
for this very sin. He says to them: "It has been
declared to me, my brethren, by them who are of the
household of Chloe, that there are contentions among you.
Now this I say, that each of you says, I am of Paul, and I
of Apollos, and I of Cephas, and I of Christ. Is Christ
divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you immersed
into the name of Paul?"{5}
Now, if it was sinful for these brethren to assume the
names of men, how can it be [147] innocent
in us to do the very same thing? The question demands the
most solemn and trembling consideration of this
generation.
It is no extenuation of this fault to urge that the
divisions which now exist are of a different character
from those in Corinth; for the difference is entirely in
their favor. They had not gone so far as to divide the
Church into separate organizations, but had merely formed
parties within it, like the parties of the present day,
which sometimes exist within a single denomination. The
sin of to-day is, therefore, much greater than theirs.
It is equally vain to excuse our sin, by urging that the
party names now worn are necessary, in order to
distinguish the parties from one another. If the existence
of the parties themselves were authorized by the
Scriptures, this excuse would be valid; for we could not
censure ourselves for the unavoidable results of that
which is itself right. But the existence of party
divisions constitutes the chief crime in the case,
and leads to the sin of party names, as stealing
leads to lying. The thief must inevitably lie, or
acknowledge his theft; so the partisan must either cling
to his party name, or give up his party. The name, in the
mean time, is a necessary evil, but, being self-imposed,
it is none the less evil from being necessary.
Not to multiply words upon this point, it is sufficiently
evident, from the above considerations, that parties and
party names among Christians should be obliterated. If we
say that it is impossible to obliterate them, we
are simply saying that it is impossible to bring
Christians back to the New Testament model--for, in the
New Testament period, there were no such divisions, and
therefore a restoration of that state of the Church would
be the destruction of parties and party names. If this is
impossible, it can only be from one cause, and that is,
that men professing to take the word of God as their guide
are so hypocritical in this profession, that they will, at
all hazard, persevere in despising its authority in
reference to a prominent item of duty. How shameful it is,
that men will uphold parties and party names, which they
know perfectly that a strict conformity to the New
Testament would utterly destroy! There is only one means
of escape from this crying sin. Those who love God must
break loose at once, as individuals, from the bondage of
party, and take a position where they may be upholders of
no party, and wearers of no party name. All who act thus
will find themselves planted together on the plain letter
of the Scriptures, as their only rule of faith and
practice.
In addition to the observations already submitted on this
topic, we remark that every significant name which a man
wears imposes some obligation upon him, and appeals to him
incessantly, though silently, to discharge this obligation
faithfully. Does a man in foreign country declare himself
an American, he realizes that there is a peculiar
demeanor required by the fact, and feels constantly called
upon to act worthy of the name he wears. Even a man's
patronymic, which means no more than that he belongs to a
certain family, is forever warning him not to disgrace the
name of his father. So it must be with all religious
names.
Is a man called a disciple of Jesus? He remembers
that it is the part of a disciple to learn what his
teacher imparts, and to imitate his [148] example.
Whenever he is reminded that this is his name, he feels
the necessity of studying the teachings of Jesus, and
walking in his footsteps. Whenever he finds himself
neglecting these duties, his very name rebukes him. This
thought was not overlooked by the great Teacher himself.
He says to those Jews who believed on him, "If you
continue in my word, you are truly my disciples,
and you shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free."{6}
Again he says, "It is enough for the disciple
to be as his teacher;" and "whosoever
does not bear his cross and come after me,
can not be my disciple."{7}
Thus he gives emphasis to that exhortation which the name
itself is constantly sounding in the ear of conscience.
But the disciple is also one of the brethren--a
brother to the Lord Jesus, who is the oldest brother of a
large family. This name is full of affection and sympathy.
I can not meet a man and call him brother, without
some thought of the fraternal sympathy which should exist
between us. If, when my heart is poisoned by unkind
feelings toward a disciple, he meets me and calls me brother,
I feel reproached by the word, and am choked in the
attempt to pronounce it in return. It will never let me
forget the law of love. Its influence is recognized by
Peter, who says, "Seeing you have purified your souls
in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned
love of the brethren, see that you love one another
with a pure heart fervently."{8}
There is another obligation involved in this name, arising
from the fact that the brothers in one family stand on an
equal footing in reference to authority, no one having
supremacy over the others, but all subject to the father.
Jesus makes use of this fact as the ground of a serious
injunction. "Be not called Rabbi; for one is your
teacher, and all you are brethren; and call no man
on earth your Father, for One who is in heaven is
your Father; neither be called Leaders, for one is
your Leader, the Christ."{9}
The fact that we are brethren is thus made to bear
directly against that thirsting for titles of distinction,
and for rank and authority in the Church of Christ, which
is invariably the offspring of an unholy ambition. The
modern Leaders of sects--the ghostly Fathers
of mystic Babylon, and the swelling titles by which Doctors
of Divinity, and the Reverend and Right
Reverend Bishops and Archbishops of the present age
are distinguished, exhibit the most flagrant contempt for
this solemn commandment of the Lord. A man who understands
the meaning of the fact that he is one among many brethren,
is guarded, by the humility of this title, from
participation in a sin like this.
If such are the obligations implied in the names disciple
and brethren, what shall we say of that more
exalted title, children of God? It originates from
a supposed likeness between them and their Father. We are
commanded to love our enemies, to bless them who curse us,
to do good to them who hate us, and pray for them who
persecute us, that we may be children of our Father
who is in heaven.{10}
Thus the very highest moral obligations imposed in the
word of God must ever press upon the soul of him who ears
this title, inciting him to become a partaker of the
divine nature. [149]
When, in addition to these appellations, you call a man a saint,
you thrust him as a companion into the midst of all the
holy men of old, and make him struggle to be like them. So
palpable is the force of this name, that the mass of
professed Christians have long since ceased to wear it.
When men apostasized from what its meaning indicates, it
hung so heavily upon the conscience, that it became like a
coal of fire on their heads, and they found relief in
throwing it off from themselves and appropriating it to a
few of the worthy dead. If we would ever come back from
the long apostasy of ages, we must learn to wear the name saint,
and walk worthy of the company with which it identifies
us. The term saint means a holy one, and
Peter exhorts, "As he who called you is holy, so be
ye holy in all manner of behavior; because it is written,
Be ye holy for I am holy."{11}
The name Christian embodies within itself, in a
more generic form, all the obligations specifically
expressed by the other names. Being derived from the name
of him who is "head over all things for the
Church," whose name is above every name, it is a
title of peculiar honor and glory. It calls upon the man
who wears it to act a part in consonance with the historic
memories which cluster around it, and encourages him with
the reflection that he wears a high dignity even when
despised and spit upon by the powers of earth. So thought
Peter, when this name was most despised. He says, "If
any suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed,
but let him glorify God on this account." "If ye
are reproached for the name of Christ, happy are you; for
the spirit of glory and of God rests upon you."{12}
When the servant of Christ remembers that all these names
belong to him; that, because he is supposed to be learning
of Christ, he is called a disciple; because he is
one of the happy and loving family of equals, they call
him brother; because the Father of that family,
whose character he strives to imitate, is God himself, he
is called a child of God; that, because he is
presumed to be holy, he is called a saint; and
that, for all these reasons, he wears the name of him who
by his mediation and intercession enables him to be all
that he is, how powerful the incentive to every virtue,
constantly yet silently pressing upon his conscience, and
how stern the rebuke to every vice!
When we turn from this deep and holy philosophy of
scriptural names, to consider the import of mere partisan
badges, how heartless they all appear! The constant and
only influence of party names is to intensify mere
partisan feelings. The man who wears the name Methodist
feels called upon by the fact to simply act like a
Methodist; and when that name is appealed to among those
who honor it, it is only to exhort one another to
diligence in that which is peculiarly expected of a mere
Methodist. So with all other party names. There is nothing
in any of them to excite the longings of a sin-sick soul,
and hence they are never appealed to when sinners are
exhorted to repent. On the contrary, the most zealous
partisans are often heard to assure sinners, "Our
object is not to make Presbyterians of you, or Methodists,
or Baptists; but we want you to become Christians."
How strange it is that men will pertinaciously cling to
names which they are thus ashamed of in the presence of
penitent sinners, when there are others [150] at
hand given by God himself, full of honor to the wearer,
and of attraction to all who seek salvation!
27-30. We have dwelt long upon the new name given in
Antioch; we must now consider other interesting events
which occurred there about the close of the year in which
Barnabas and Saul labored there together. (27) "In
those days prophets came down from Jerusalem to Antioch,
(28) and one of them, named Agabus, arose and
signified through the Spirit that there would be a great
famine throughout the whole world, which also occurred in
the days of Claudius. (29) Then the disciples,
every one according as he was prospered, determined to
send relief to the brethren who dwelt in Judea; (30) which
also they did, sending it to the elders by the hand of
Barnabas and Saul."
This is the first account we have of the gift of prophesy
among the disciples, but Agabus and his companions appear
to have been already known as prophets, doubtless from
previous exercise of this gift. The brethren, therefore,
did not hesitate to give full credit to the prediction,
and knowing that such a famine must cause peculiar
distress among the extremely poor in Judea, they were
prompt to supply their wants even before the period of
distress arrived. Their benevolence is not less remarkable
than that of the Church in Jerusalem at the beginning. The
poor for whom that Church provided were in their midst,
and suffering from present want; but the disciples in
Antioch anticipate a state of distress yet in the future,
on the part of brethren to whom they are personally
unknown, and provide for it in advance. No more striking
evidence could be given, at once, of their benevolence,
and their confidence in the predictions of their own
prophets.
This benevolent supply was sent to the Elders, by
whom, we are to understand, it was distributed to the
final recipients. This is the first time that elders, as a
distinct class, are mentioned in connection with the
congregations of disciples. They are mentioned, however,
as a class of officials then well known, and,
consequently, we must infer that they had been appointed
in the Churches at a still earlier period.
{1} @Matt.
xxiii: 8.
{2} @John
xxi: 23.
{3} @John
i: 12; xi: 52.
{4} @1
John iii: 1.
{5} @1
Cor. i: 11-13.
{6} @John
viii: 31, 32.
{7} @Matt.
x: 24; Luke xiv: 27.
{8} @1
Peter i: 22.
{9} @Matt.
xxiii: 8, 10.
{10} @Matt.
v: 44, 45.
{11} @1
Peter i: 15, 16.
{12} @1
Peter iv: 14-16.
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