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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS
XIX
XIX: 1-7. Having sketched briefly the visit of Apollos to
Ephesus, and thus prepared the way for an account of
Paul's labors in the same city, the historian now reaches
the point for which he had so hurriedly passed over the
apostle's journey from Antioch through Galatia and Phrygia
and around to Ephesus.{1}
The appointment which he left in Ephesus, as he passed
through on his way to Jerusalem,{2}
is now to be fulfilled. (1) "Now while Apollos
was in Corinth, Paul, having passed through the upper
districts, came to Ephesus, and finding certain disciples,
(2) said to them, Have you received the Holy Spirit
since you believed? But they said to him, We have not so
much as heard that the Holy Spirit is given. (3) He
said to them, Into what, then, were you immersed? They
said, Into John's immersion. (4) Then Paul said,
John indeed immersed with the immersion of repentance,
saying to the people that they should believe on him who
would come after him, that is, on the Christ Jesus.
(5) And when they heard this they were immersed into
the name of the Lord Jesus. (6) And when Paul
laid hands on them, the Holy Spirit came upon them, and
they spoke with tongues and prophesied. (7) All
the men were about twelve."
This passage is valuable chiefly because it shows how the
apostles dealt with parties who, at that time, were
immersed with John's immersion. This, no doubt, was Luke's
object in introducing it. In order to understand the case,
it is necessary to keep distinctly in view the facts
stated of the parties previous to and subsequent to their
immersion by Paul. They are called disciples, and
were known as such when Paul found them; for it is said
"he found certain disciples." They were
disciples, not of John, but of Jesus; for the uniform
currency of the term disciple, throughout Acts,
requires us to so understand it. This is further evident
from Paul's question, "Have you received the Holy
Spirit since you believed?" The term believed
evidently refers to Jesus as its object. They were known,
then, as disciples of Jesus, and were so recognized by
Paul.
Up to the moment of his conversation with them, Paul knew
nothing of any irregularity in their obedience; for this
was made known, to his surprise, during the conversation.
When, therefore, he asked the question, "Have you
received the Holy Spirit since you believed?" he
could not have referred to that gift of the Spirit which
all disciples receive; for he would take this for granted,
from the fact that they were disciples. He must, then,
have had reference to the miraculous gift, which some
disciples did not receive.
It is inconceivable that these disciples were ignorant of
the existence of the Holy Spirit, hence a literal
rendering of their reply, "We have not so much as
heard that there is a Holy Spirit," would convey a
false idea. The supplement given is necessary to
complete the sense, [233] as it is
in @John
vii: 39, where it is said, "The Holy Spirit was
not yet, because Jesus was not yet risen." The term given
must be supplied, in the latter case, in order to avoid
the denial of the existence of the Spirit previous to the
resurrection; and, in the former, to avoid the declaration
of an ignorance on the part of these men inconsistent with
the fact that they were disciples.
This answer at once revealed to Paul that there was some
irregularity in their religious history; for no one could
be properly discipled without learning that the Holy
Spirit was to be given. He at once perceived, too, that
the irregularity must have been connected with their
immersion; for he inquires, "Into what, then, were
you immersed?" If the gift of the Spirit had no
connection with immersion, this inquiry would have been
inapposite, and Paul would not have propounded it. But the
apostles taught as Peter did on the day of Pentecost, when
he said, "Repent and be immersed, every one of you,
in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins,
and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."
It is only on the supposition that Paul knew this to be
the universal teaching of rightly-informed brethren, that
he inferred something wrong about their immersion, from
their ignorance of the gift of the Holy Spirit. This
supposition, however, which is a necessary, not an
optional one, makes the whole matter very plain. Paul's
first question had reference to the miraculous gift of the
Spirit; but when they said they knew not that the Holy
Spirit was given, he saw that they were ignorant of even
the ordinary gift, which is promised to all who repent and
are immersed, and that they were immersed without proper
instruction.
Their reply, that they were immersed into John's
immersion, relieved the case of all obscurity, and Paul
then understood it perfectly. He explained, that John's
immersion was one of repentance, to be followed by
faith in the Messiah when he should come. Those immersed
by him believed that the Messiah was coming; but they did
not, until after their immersion, believe that Jesus
was the Messiah, nor did they have a promise of the Holy
Spirit. They were not, therefore, immersed into the name
of Jesus or that of the Holy Spirit. This is further
evident from the fact that Paul commanded these twelve to
be "immersed into the name of the Lord Jesus,"
which the authority of the commission requires us to
understand as equivalent to the expression, "into the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit." These points of defect, however, were not
peculiar to the immersion of the twelve, but attached also
to that of the twelve apostles, the hundred and twenty
disciples, and the five hundred who saw Jesus together in
Galilee after the resurrection,{3}
none of whom were reimmersed. What, then, led to the
immersion of these parties? If their immersion had taken
place, like that of all the others just named, while
John's immersion was still an existing institution, no
reason could be given for their reimmersion. This, then,
forces us to the conclusion that they had been immersed
with John's immersion after it had ceased to be
administered by divine authority. Apollos had been
recently preaching this obsolete immersion in Ephesus, and
these persons may have been immersed by him. If so, they
submitted [234] to an institution
which had been abrogated more than twenty years, and this
was the defect that led to their reimmersion. The general
conclusion, from all the premises, is this: that persons
who were immersed with John's immersion, while it was in
lawful existence, were received into the Church of Christ
without reimmersion. But persons who were thus immersed,
after the introduction of apostolic immersion, were
reimmersed. The reason why Apollos was not reimmersed as
well as the twelve, was, doubtless, because, like the
apostles and the other original disciples, he was immersed
during the ministry of John.
8-12. It is worthy of note that Paul commenced his labors
in Ephesus by rectifying what he found wrong in the few
disciples already there, before he undertook to add to
their number. It is an example worthy of imitation to the
full extent that may be found practicable. When he had
accomplished this, he was prepared to grapple with the
Jewish and pagan errors which pervaded the community. (8)
"Then he went into the synagogue, and spoke
boldly for about three months, discussing and persuading
the things concerning the kingdom of God. (9) But
when some were hardened and unbelieving, and spoke evil of
the way before the multitude, he departed from them and
separated the disciples, discussing daily in the school of
one Tyrannus. (10) This continued for two years,
so that all who dwelt in Asia heard the word of the Lord
Jesus, both Jews and Greeks. (11) And God worked
unusual miracles by the hands of Paul, (12) so
that handkerchiefs or aprons were carried from his person
to the sick, and the diseases departed from them, and the
wicked spirits went out of them." This scene in
the Jewish synagogue is quite uniform in its details, with
other which we have noticed. Here is the same earnest
argument and persuasion upon the one invariable theme; the
same increasing obstinacy and evil speaking on the part of
the unbelieving Jews, and the same final separation of
Paul and the few who believed, from the synagogue and the
majority who controlled it. As the private house of Justus
had been his retreat in Corinth, the school-house of
Tyrannus was his resort in Ephesus. Such incidents have
their counterpart in the history of all men who have
attempted, from that day to this, to correct the religious
teachings of their cotemporaries. All such attempts are
regarded by prevailing religious parties as troublesome
innovations, and the houses erected for public worship are
often closed against them. But such petty annoyances are
not sufficient now, as they were not then, to suppress the
truth. Paul, in the school-house of Tyrannus, had access
to the ears of many who would never have entered a
synagogue, and who were conciliated by the very fact that
it was the Jews who persecuted him. The
circumstances gained him a favorable hearing from the
Greeks, while the unusual miracles wrought gave
overwhelming attestation to the words he spoke.
13-17. It is difficult to imagine how men could witness
miracles so astonishing and not acknowledge the presence
of divine power. We would suppose that even atheism would
be confounded in the presence of such manifestations, and
that the most hardened sinner would tremble. How deep the
depravity, then, of men, even Jews by birth and education,
who would see in them nothing but the tricks of a
[235] skillful and designing
magician. Simon the sorcerer had offered to purchase this
power with money, and Bar-jesus had sought to convince
Sergius Paulus that it was a cheat; but the former was
made to tremble under the withering rebuke of Peter, and
the latter had been smitten with blindness by the power
which he reviled. A similar display of human depravity,
followed by a castigation equally severe, occurred in
connection with the unusual miracles just mentioned. (13)
"Then certain of the wandering Jewish exorcists
undertook to call the name of the Lord Jesus over those
who had wicked spirits, saying, We adjure you by the Jesus
whom Paul preaches. (14) And they were seven sons
of Sceva, a Jewish high priest, who did this. (15) But
the wicked spirit answered and said, Jesus I know, and
Paul I am acquainted with; but who are you? (16) And
the man in whom the wicked spirit was, leaped upon them,
and overcame them, and prevailed against them, so that
they fled, naked, and wounded, out of the house. (17)
And this became known to all the Jews and Greeks
dwelling in Ephesus, and fear fell upon them all, and the
name of the Lord Jesus was magnified." Nothing
is more mortifying, or better calculated to provoke the
contempt of the community, than the unexpected exposure of
mysterious pretensions such as were assumed by these
exorcists. The spirit was enraged at their insulting
pretensions, and doubtless enjoyed the joke of exposing
them. The seven resisted until they were stripped and
wounded, when they fled, presenting a very ludicrous
aspect as they passed along the streets. While all Ephesus
was laughing at them, it was remembered that the spirit
acknowledged the authority of Jesus, and of Paul, and that
a licentious use of the name of Jesus was the cause of all
their trouble. The mirth awakened by the event was soon
changed to reverence for the name of Jesus, which they now
saw was not, as the exorcists had pretended, a mere
conjurer's talisman.
18-20. The exposure of the seven exorcists reflected
discredit upon all the pretenders to magic in Ephesus,
while the name of Jesus was magnified. The effects upon
the public mind were immense and astonishing. (18) "Then
many of those who believed came and confessed and declared
their practices. (19) And many of those who
practiced curious arts, brought together their books, and
burned them before all. And they counted the value of
them, and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver.
(20) So mightily did the word of God grow and prevail."
The believers who "came and confessed and declared
their practices," had not, till now, realized the
impropriety of those arts, which their heathen education
had taught them to regard with reverence. That others, who
were not yet disciples, did the same thing, and even
burned up their books, is a striking proof of the fear
that fell upon them all. The pieces of silver in which the
value of the books was computed were doubtless the Attic
didrachma; for it was a Greek city, and this was the most
common silver coin among the Greeks. It was worth fifteen
cents of Federal money, and the value of all the books was
seven thousand five hundred dollars; a sufficient
indication of the extent to which these arts prevailed,
and of the number and value of the books written in
explanation of them. This whole account is in full
accordance with the profane history of Ephesus, which
[236] represents it as the chief
center of magic arts in the whole Roman empire.{4}
21, 22. The conclusion of the preceding events brought
Paul to a period of comparative quiet, in which he began
to think of leaving Ephesus. (21) "When these
things were accomplished, Paul purposed in spirit to pass
through Macedonia and Achaia, and go to Jerusalem, saying,
After I have been there, I must also see Rome. (22) So
he sent into Macedonia two of those who were ministering
to him, Timothy and Erastus; but he himself stayed in Asia
for a season."
It is supposed by some that, previous to this period, Paul
had made a short visit to Corinth, and returned again to
Ephesus. This supposition is based upon expressions in the
Second Epistle to the Corinthians, which are understood to
imply such a visit. I regard the evidence, however, as
insufficient for a safe conclusion, and will, therefore,
treat the narrative as though no such visit had taken
place. The reader who is curious to investigate the
question should refer to Mr. Howson on the affirmative,{5}
and Paley on the negative.{6}
The First Epistle to the Corinthians was written from
Ephesus, as we learn from the remark, (@chapter
xvi: 8, 9,) "I will tarry in Ephesus until
Pentecost; for a great and effectual door is opened to me,
and there are many adversaries." It was also during
the present visit that it was written, for, during his
first visit, he did not tarry at all.{7}
The exact date of the epistle is best fixed within the
period covered by the words "he himself stayed in
Asia for a season;" for it was then that "a
great and effectual door" was first opened to him.
Other evidences of the date concur with these, and are
fully stated by Mr. Howson.{8}
This is not really the first epistle Paul wrote to the
Corinthians; for in it he speaks of another, which he had
previously written, upon the subject of fornication. He
says: "I wrote to you in an epistle not to keep
company with fornicators."{9}
This is all we know of the subject-matter of the epistle,
which is lost; and perhaps it was for the reason that it
treated of this subject alone, and in a less detailed
method than does the epistle now called the first, that it
was not preserved with the other two.
Subsequent to the date of the lost epistle, some members
of the household of Chloe had brought him information of
great disorders and corruption in the Church in Corinth.{10}
He learned that the congregation was distracted by party
strife;{11}
that fornication, and even incest were still tolerated by
them;{12}
that some of them were engaged in litigation before the
civil courts;{13}
that his own apostolic authority was called in question;{14}
that their women, contrary to the prevailing rules of
modesty, took part in the worship with unvailed faces;{15}
that some confusion and strife had arisen in reference to
the spiritual gifts among them;{16}
that some among them were even denying the resurrection;{17}
and that the Lord's supper was profaned by feasting and
drunkenness.{18}
Besides all this, he had received a letter from them
calling for information in reference to marriage and [237]
divorce, and the eating of meats
offered to idols.{19}
To answer their questions, and to correct and rebuke these
disorders, was the object of the epistle. The temper in
which it is written appears calm and stern; yet it is not
conceivable that Paul could hear of corruptions so gross
in a Church which had cost him so much labor and anxiety,
without intense pain. Though no such feeling was allowed
to manifest itself in the epistle, he was constrained
afterward, to confess it, and say to them, "Out of much
affliction and anguish of heart, I wrote to you, with many
tears."{20}
It was, therefore, with a heart full of anguish in
reference to some results of his past labors, but buoyed
up by the opening of a wide and effectual door in his
present field, that he sent Timothy and Erastus into
Macedonia, but remained himself in Asia for a season.
23-27. (23) "Now, about that period, there arose
no small stir concerning the way. (24) For a
certain man named Demetrius, a silversmith, brought no
little employment to the artisans by making silver shrines
of Diana, (25) Calling them together, and the
workmen employed about such things, he said, Men, you
understand that by this employment we have our wealth.
(26) And you see and hear that not only at Ephesus,
but in almost the whole of Asia, this Paul, by his
persuasion, has turned away a great multitude, saying that
they are not gods which are made with hands; (27) and
not only is this our business in danger of coming into
contempt, but also the temple of the great goddess Diana
will be despised, and the majesty of her whom all Asia and
the world worships will be destroyed." This is
the most truthful and candid of all the speeches ever
uttered against Paul. The charge that he had said these
were not gods which were made with hands, was literally
true, and free from exaggeration. The appeals, too, by
which he sought to stir up the passions of his hearers,
were candid; for he appeals directly to their pecuniary
interest, which was suffering; to their veneration for the
temple, which was counted one of the seven wonders of the
world and to their reverence for the goddess who was the
chief object of their worship. The statement of the
effects already produced by Paul's preaching throughout
the city and the province, endangering their whole system
of idolatry, was equally truthful. Whether he is entitled
to the same degree of credit in reference to the motive
which prompted him, is more doubtful; for the fact that
the class of men in Ephesus had the greatest pecuniary
interest in the worship of Diana were the first to defend
her sinking cause, is a suspicious circumstance,
especially when we remember that these artisans had better
reason than any others to know that the pieces of silver
which they had molded and polished with their own hands
were not gods. It appears to have been a corrupt
determination to save their traffic at all hazards, which
made them ignore the evidence of their own senses, and
rendered them impervious to the arguments and
demonstrations of Paul.
28, 29. The prospect of pecuniary ruin enraged the
artisans, while their veneration for the goddess suggested
the best theme on which to give vent to their wrath before
the people. (28) "And when they heard this they
were full of wrath, and cried out, saying, Great is Diana
of the [238] Ephesians.
(29) And the whole city was filled with confusion; and
having caught Gaius and Aristarchus, Macedonians, Paul's
companions in travel, they rushed with one accord into the
theater." The outcry, "Great is Diana of
the Ephesians," awakened the old enthusiasm of all
the idolaters who heard it, and the tone of rage with
which it was uttered, suggesting some assault upon the
honor of the goddess, threw the gathering mob into a
frenzy. It was a kind of providence in reference to Paul,
that he happened to be out of their reach. Not finding
him, they seize his companions, and rushing into the
theater, where criminals were sometimes exposed to wild
beasts, they are about to take the part of the wild beasts
themselves. What was the fate of Gaius and Aristarchus is
not here stated, though both names occur afterward in the
history, and probably designate the same individuals.{21}
30, 31. When Paul heard the tumult, and knew that his
companions had been dragged within the theater, he could
but suppose that they were torn to pieces. This thought
alone was intensely harrowing to his feelings; but it was
still more so to know that they were suffering in his
stead. He could not endure to remain inactive at such a
crisis, but resolved to die with them. (30) "But
Paul, having determined to go in to the people, the
disciples would not permit him; (31) and some of
the Asiarchs,{22}
also, who were his friends, sent to him and entreated
him not to trust himself within the theater." By
such means he was restrained from his desperate purpose,
after having fully made up his mind to die. The
desperation to which he was driven he afterward describes
to the Corinthians in this touching language: "We
would not have you ignorant, brethren, of our trouble
which came to us in Asia, that we were exceedingly pressed
down beyond our strength, so that we despaired even of
life: but we had within ourselves the sentence of death,
that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God who
raises the dead."{23}
Giving up all hope of life, as he started toward the
theater, and trusting in Him who raises the dead, when the
tumult had subsided, and he was assured of safety, he felt
much as if he had been raised from the dead. He therefore
says, in the same connection, "Who delivered me from
so grievous a death, and is delivering, in whom I trust
that he will even yet deliver us: you also helping by
prayer for us, that for the gift bestowed on us by means
of many persons, thanks may be given by man on our
behalf."{24}
32-34. Leaving the apostle, for a time, in the cloud of
sorrow which we will find still enveloping him when we
meet him again, we turn to witness the proceedings within
the theater. (32) "Now some were crying one thing
and some another; for the assembly was confused, and the
greater part knew not on what account they had come
together. (33) And they put forward Alexander out
of the crowd, the Jews urging him forward. And Alexander,
waving his hand, wished to make a defense to the people.
(34) But knowing that he was a Jew, all with one
voice, for about two hours, cried out, Great is Diana of
the Ephesians." There were two reasons why the
Jews should feel some anxiety to defend themselves before
this mob. First, It was well known in Ephesus that
[239] they were as much opposed to
idols and idol worship as were the disciples. Second,
The fact that the apostle and many of his brethren were
Jews, naturally attracted toward all the Jews the hatred
which had been aroused against them. A courageous and
manly adherence to their own principles would have
prompted them to share with the disciples the obloquy of
their common position; but they were endeavoring to
persuade the multitude that Paul and his party should not
be identified with themselves. The cowardly trick was
perceived by the multitude, as soon as they perceived that
it was a Jew who was trying to address them, and they gave
it the rebuke it deserved by refusing to hear him.
35-41. The rage of an excited multitude, unless it find
some new fuel to keep up the flame, will naturally subside
in a few hours. While it is at its height, it becomes only
the more furious the more it is opposed; but when it
begins to subside, frequently a few well-chosen words are
sufficient to restore quiet. Acting upon this principle,
the city authorities had not, thus far, interfered with
the mob; but when they were exhausted by long-continued
vociferation, the following well-timed and well-worded
speech was addressed to them. (35) "But the
public clerk, having quieted the people, said, Men of
Ephesus, what man is there who does not know that the city
of Ephesus is a worshiper of the great goddess Diana, and
of the image which fell down from Jupiter? (36) Seeing,
then, that these things can not be spoken against, you
ought to be quieted, and do nothing rashly. (37) For
you have brought hither these men, who are neither robbers
of temples nor blasphemers of your goddess. (38) If,
then, Demetrius, and the artisans who are with him, have a
complaint against any one, the courts are open, and there
are proconsuls; let them accuse one another. (39) But
if you are making inquiry concerning other matters, it
shall be determined in a lawful assembly. (40) For
we are in danger of being called to account for this day's
tumult, there being no cause for which we will be able to
give an account of this concourse. (41) And
having spoken thus, he dismissed the assembly."
This is evidently the speech of a man well skilled in the
management of popular assemblies, and, doubtless, its
happy adaptation to the circumstances is what suggested to
Luke the propriety of preserving it. It is probable that
the speaker, like the Asiarchs who interfered to keep Paul
out of danger, was a friend to the apostle, and a man of
too much intelligence to receive with blind credulity the
popular delusion in reference to the temple and image of
Diana. The speech, indeed, has a ring of insincerity about
it, indicating that the speaker was merely humoring the
popular superstition for the special purpose before him.
Upon this hypothesis the speech appears the more
ingenious. The confident assumption that the divine honors
bestowed on their goddess, and the belief that her image
fell from heaven, were so well known that no man would
call them in question, was soothing to their excited
feelings, and the remark that the unquestionable certainty
of these facts ought to make them feel entirely composed
on the subject, brought them, by a happy turn of thought,
to the very composure which he desired, and which they
fancied was the result of a triumphant vindication of
their cause. Advancing, then, to the case of the
disciples, like a trained advocate, he ignores the real
charge [240] against them, that of
denying that they are gods which are made with hands, and
declares that they are neither temple robbers, nor revilers
of their goddess. Then, as for the men who had
excited them to this disturbance, the proconsular courts
were the proper place for complaints like theirs, and they
had no right to disturb the people with such
matters. Finally, he gives them a gentle hint as to the
unlawfulness of their assemblage, and the probability that
they would be called to account for it by the Roman
authorities. This last remark had special force with the
majority, who, according to Luke, "knew not on what
account they had come together;" and the whole speech
was well aimed toward the result which followed, the
dispersion of the mob. The city authorities had reason to
congratulate themselves that so fierce a mob had been so
successfully controlled, and the disciples could but be
thankful to God that they had escaped so well.
{1} @Acts
xviii: 23.
{2} @Acts
xviii: 21.
{3} @1
Cor. xv: 6.
{4} See
Life and Ep., vol. 2, p. 21.
{5} Ib.
p. 26.
{6} Horę
Paulinę on 2 Cor xiii: 1.
{7} @Acts
xviii: 19, 20.
{8} Vol.
2, p. 33.
{9} @1
Cor. v: 9-13.
{10} @1
Cor. i: 11.
{11} @1
Cor. ch. i, ii, iii.
{12} @1
Cor. ch. v.
{13} @1
Cor. ch. vi.
{14} @1
Cor. ch. iv. and ix.
{15} @1
Cor. xi: 1-16.
{16} @1
Cor. ch. xii, xiii, xiv.
{17} @1
Cor. xv: 12.
{18} @1
Cor. xi: 17-34.
{19} @1
Cor. vii: 1; viii: 1.
{20} @2
Cor. ii: 4.
{21} @
Acts xx: 4; xxvii: 2.
{22}
This was the title of officials chosen to preside over the
annual games in the province of Asia.--HOWSON, ii: 83.
{23} @2
Cor. i: 8, 9.
{24} @2
Cor. i: 10, 11.
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