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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS II
II: 1. Thus far our
author has been engaged in preliminary statements, which
were necessary to the proper introduction of his main
theme. He has furnished us a list of the eleven apostles,
and the appointment of the twelfth; rehearsed briefly
their qualifications as witnesses of the resurrection;
informed us that they were in Jerusalem, dwelling in an
upper room, but spending the most of their time in the
temple, and waiting for the promised power to inaugurate
on earth the kingdom of Christ. He now proceeds to give an
account of the descent of the Holy Spirit, and enters upon
the main theme of the narrative, (1) "When the
day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one
accord in one place."
The day of Pentecost was the fiftieth day after the
Passover. It was celebrated, according to the law of
Moses, by offering the first fruits of the wheat harvest,
in the form of two loaves made of fine flour.{1}
On account of the seven weeks intervening between it and
the Passover, it is styled, in the Old Testament,
"the feast of weeks." But the fact that it
occurred on the fiftieth day, gave it, in later ages,
under the prevalence of the Greek language, the name of Pentecost,
which is a Greek adjective meaning fiftieth.
This is one of the three annual festivals at which the law
required every male Jew of the whole nation to be present.{2}
The condemnation and death of Jesus had occurred during
one of these feasts, and now, the next universal gathering
of the devout Jews is most wisely chosen as the occasion
for the vindication of his character and the beginning of
his kingdom. It is the day on which the law was given on
Mount Sinai, and henceforth it is to commemorate the
giving of a better law, founded on better promises. It is
remarkable that the day of giving the law was celebrated
throughout the Jewish ages, without one word in the Old
Testament to indicate that it was designed to commemorate
that event. In like manner, the day of the week on which
the Holy Spirit descended has been celebrated from that
time till this, though no formal reason is given in the
New Testament for its observance. The absence of inspired
explanations, however, has not left the world in doubt
upon the latter subject; for the two grand events which
occurred on that day--the resurrection of Jesus and the
descent of the Holy Spirit, are of such transcendent
importance, that all minds at once agree in attributing to
them, and especially to the former, the celebration of the
day. [23]
That we are right in assuming that this Pentecost occurred
on the first day of the week, there is no room for doubt,
though Dr. Hackett advocates a different hypothesis. After
stating that the Lord was crucified on Friday, he says,
"The fiftieth day, or Pentecost (beginning, of
course, with the evening of Friday, the second day of the
Passover) would occur on the Jewish Sabbath." He
seems to have forgotten, for the moment, that Friday was
"preparation day,"{3}
and that Saturday was, therefore, the first day of
unleavened bread.{4}
According to the law, the count began on "the morrow
after" this day, which was Sunday.{5}
Counting seven full weeks and one day from that time,
would throw the fiftieth day, or Pentecost on Sunday,
beginning at six o'clock Saturday evening, and closing at
the same hour Sunday evening. As certainly as Jesus arose
on Sunday, he died on Friday; and as certainly as this
Friday was the preparation day of the Passover, so
certainly did the Pentecost occur on Sunday.
Why Luke uses the expression, "When the day of
Pentecost was fully come," is best explained
in this way. The day began with sunset, and the first part
of it was night, which was unsuited for the purpose of
these events. The day was not fully come
until daylight.
It is important to determine who are the parties declared
by Luke to be "all with one accord in one
place;" for upon this depends the question whether
the whole hundred and twenty disciples, or only the twelve
apostles, were filled with the Holy Spirit. The words are
almost uniformly referred, by commentators, to the hundred
and twenty. Any who will read @the
first four verses of this chapter, noticing the
connection of the pronoun "they," which occurs
in each of them, will see, at a glance, that it has,
throughout, the same antecedent, and, therefore, all the
parties said in @the
first verse to be together in one place, are said in @the
fourth to be filled with the Holy Spirit, and to speak
in other tongues. The question, then, Who were filled with
the Holy Spirit? depends upon the reference of the pronoun
in the statement, "They were all together in
one place." Those who suppose that the whole hundred
and twenty are referred to, have to go back to the @fifteenth
verse of the preceding chapter to find the antecedent.
But, if we obliterate the unfortunate separation between
the first and second chapters, and take the @last
verse of the former into its connection with @the
latter, we will find the true and obvious antecedent
much nearer at hand. It would read thus: "The lot
fell upon Matthias, and he was numbered together with the
eleven apostles. And when the day of Pentecost was
fully come, they were all with one accord in one
place." It is indisputable that the antecedent to they
is the term apostles; and it is merely the division
of the text into chapters, severing the close grammatical
connection of the words, which has hid this most obvious
fact from commentators and readers. The apostles alone,
therefore, are said to have been filled with the Holy
Spirit. This conclusion is not only evident from the
context, but it is required by the very terms of the
promise concerning the Holy Spirit. It [24] was
to the apostles alone, on the night of the betrayal, that
Jesus had promised the miraculous aid of the Spirit, and
to them alone he had said, on the day of ascension,
"You shall be immersed in the Holy Spirit." It
involves both a perversion of the text, and a
misconception of the design of the event,{6}
to suppose that the immersion in the Holy Spirit was
shared by the whole hundred and twenty.
2. It was the apostles, then, and they alone, who were
assembled together: (2) "And suddenly there came
a sound out of heaven, as of a rushing mighty wind, and it
filled all the house where they were sitting."
What house this was has been variously conjectured; but
the supposition of Olshausen, that it was one of the
thirty spacious rooms around the temple court, described
by Josephus and called oikoi, houses,
is most agreeable to all the facts. Wherever it was, the
crowd described below gathered about them, and this
required more space than any private house would afford,
especially the upper room where the apostles had been
lodging.
3, 4. Simultaneous with the sound, (3) "There
appeared to them tongues, distributed, as of fire, and it
sat upon each one of them. (4) And they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak in other
tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance."
This is the immersion in the Holy Spirit which had been
promised by Jesus, and for which the apostles had been
waiting since his ascension. It is highly important that
we should understand in which it consisted, and the
necessity for its occurrence.
There is not, in the New Testament, a definition of
the immersion in the Holy Spirit, but we have here what is
possibly better, a living instance of its occurrence. The
historian gives us a distinct view of men in the act of
being immersed in the Spirit, so that, in order to
understand it, we have to look on, and tell what we see
and hear. We see, then, flaming tongues, like flames of
fire, distributed so that one rests upon each of the
twelve apostles. In the clause, "it sat upon each of
them," the singular pronoun it is used after
the plural tongues, to indicate that not all, but
only one of the tongues sat upon each apostle, the term distributed
having already suggested the contemplation of them singly.
We see this, and we hear all twelve at once
speaking in languages to them unknown. We see a divine
power present with these men, for to no other power can we
attribute these tongues. We hear the unmistakable effects
of a divine power acting upon their minds; for no other
power could give them an instantaneous knowledge of
language which they had never studied. The immersion,
therefore, consists in their being so filled with the Holy
Spirit as to be attended by a miraculous physical power,
and to exercise a miraculous intellectual power. If there
is any other endowment conferred upon them, the historian
is silent in reference to it, and we have no right to
assume it. Their ability to speak in other
languages is not an effect upon their tongues directly,
but merely a result of the knowledge imparted to
them. Neither are we to regard the nature of the
sentiments uttered by them as proof of any miraculous moral
[25] endowment; for pious sentiments
are the only kind which the Spirit of God would dictate,
and they are such as these men, who had been for some time
"continually in the temple, praising and blessing
God,"{7}
and "continuing with one consent in prayer and
supplication,"{8}
would be expected to utter, if they spoke in public at
all.
We have already said something of the necessity of this
event;{9}
but, at the risk of some repetition, we must here advert
to the subject again. What the apostles needed, at this
point in their history, was not moral courage, or
devoutness of spirit; for they had already recovered from
the alarm produced by the crucifixion, and were now boldly
entering the temple together every day, and spending their
whole time in devout worship. Their defects were such as
no degree of courage or of piety could supply. It was power
that they wanted--power to remember all that Jesus had
taught them; to understand the full meaning of all his
words; of his death; of his resurrection; to pierce the
heavens, and declare with certainty things which had
transpired there; and to know the whole truth concerning
the will of God and the duty of men. There is only one
source from which this power could be derived, and this
the Savior had promised them, when he said, "You
shall receive power (dunamin,) when
the Holy Spirit comes upon you."{10}
This power they now received, and upon the exercise of it
depends the entire authority of apostolic teaching.
But power to establish the kingdom and to proselyte the
world involved not merely the possession of the miraculous
mental power above named, but the ability to prove that
they did not possess it. This could best be done by an
indisputable exercise of it. To exercise it, however, by
merely beginning to speak the truth infallibly, would not
answer the purpose, for men would inquire, How can you
assure us that this which you speak is the truth? To
answer this question satisfactorily, they gave such an
exhibition of the superhuman knowledge which they
possessed as could be tested by their hearers. They might
have done this by penetrating the minds of the auditors,
and declaring to them their secret thoughts or past
history; but this would have addressed itself to only one
individual at a time. Or they might, like the prophets of
old, have foretold some future event, the occurrence of
which would prove their inspiration; but this would have
required some considerable lapse of time, and would not,
therefore, have answered the purpose of immediate
conviction. There is, indeed, but one method conceivable,
by which they could exhibit this power to the immediate
conviction of a multitude, and that is the method adopted
on this occasion, speaking in other tongues, as the
Spirit gave them utterance. If any man doubts this, let
him imagine and state, if he can, some other method. True,
they might have wrought miracles of healing, but this
would have been no exhibition of miraculous mental
endowments. If wrought in confirmation of the claim that
they were inspired, it would have proved it; still, the
proof would have been indirect, requiring the minds of the
audience to pass through a course of reasoning before
reaching the conclusion. The proof, in this case, is
direct, being an [26] exhibition
of the power which they claimed. By the only method, then,
of which we can conceive, the apostles, as soon as they
became possessed of the promised power, exhibited to the
multitude an indisputable exercise of it.
It should be observed, that this exhibition could be
available to its purpose only when individuals were
present who understood the languages spoken. Otherwise,
they would have no means of testing the reality of the
miracle. Hence, to serve the purpose of proof where this
circumstance did not exist, the apostles were supplied
with the power of working physical miracles; and inasmuch
as this circumstance did not often exist in the course of
their ministry, they had resort almost uniformly to the
indirect method of proof by a display of miraculous
physical power.
5. The circumstances of the present occasion were happily
suited to this wonderful display of divine power, the like
of which had never been witnessed, even in the astonishing
miracles of Moses and of Jesus. (5) "Now there
were dwelling in Jerusalem, Jews, devout men, from every
nation under heaven." The native tongues of
these Jews were those of the nations in which they were
born, but they had also been instructed by their parents
in the dialect of Judea. This enabled them to understand
the tongues which were spoken by the apostles, and to test
the reality of the miracle.
6-12. "And when this sword occurred, the
multitude came together, and were confounded, because each
one heard them speaking in his own dialect." The
historian here seems to exhaust his vocabulary of terms to
express the confusion of the multitude upon witnessing the
scene. Not content with saying they were confounded,
he adds, (7)
"And all were amazed and marveled, saying to one
another, Behold, are not all these are speaking Galileans?
(8) And how do we hear, each one in our own dialect in
which we were born? (9) Parthians, and Medes, and
Elamites; and those inhabiting Mesopotamia, Judea and
Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, (10) Phrygia and
Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya about Cyrene; and
Roman strangers, both Jews and proselytes, (11) Cretes
and Arabians; we hear them speaking in our own tongues the
wonderful works of God." Not
yet satisfied with his attempts to express their feelings,
Luke adds, (12) "And they were all amazed, and
perplexed, saying one to another, What does this mean?"
13. We have in this last sentence an instance of the
peculiar use of the term all in the New Testament,
to signify a great mass; for after saying that "all
were amazed," etc. Luke immediately adds, (13) "But
others, mocking, said, These men are full of sweet wine."
The wine was not new, as rendered in the common
version; for new wine was not intoxicating; but it
was old, and very intoxicating, though by a peculiar
process it had been kept sweet.{11}
In order that we may discriminate accurately concerning
the effects of this phenomenon, we must observe that the
only effects thus far produced upon the multitude, are
perplexity and amazement among the greater part, and
merriment among the few. It was impossible that any of
them, without an explanation, could [27] understand
the phenomenon; and without being understood, it could
have no moral or religious effect upon them.
It was, indeed, quite natural, that some of the audience,
to whom most of the languages spoken at first sounded like
mere gibberish, and who were of too trivial a
disposition to inquire further into the matter, should
exclaim that the apostles were drunk. This being
true of the phenomenon while unexplained, it is evident
that all the moral power which it is to exert upon the
multitude must reach their minds and hearts through
the words in which the explanation is given. To
this explanation our attention is now directed.
14, 15. "Then Peter, standing up with the eleven,
lifted up his voice and said to them, Men of Judea, and
all you who dwell in Jerusalem, be this known to you, and
hearken to my words: (15) for these men are not
drunk as you suppose, seeing it is but the third hour of
the day." After all that has been said of this
defense against the charge of drunkenness, it must be
admitted that it is not conclusive; for men might be
drunk, as they often were and are, at any hour of either
day or night. Still, the fact that men are not often
found drunk so early in the day, rendered the defense
sufficiently plausible to ward off the present effect of a
charge which had been preferred in mere levity, while
Peter relies upon the speech he is about to make for a
perfect refutation of the charge, and for an impression
upon the multitude, of which they little dreamed. He
proceeds to speak in such a way as only a sober man could
speak, and this is the best way to refute a charge of
drunkenness.
16-18. Peter continues: (16) "But this is that
which was spoken through the prophet Joel; (17) And
it shall come to pass in the last days, says God, I will
pour out from my Spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and
your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall
see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams:
(18) And on my men-servants and on my maid-servants,
in those days, I will pour out from my Spirit, and they
shall prophesy."
From this passage it is evident that the immediate effects
of the outpouring of the Spirit, so far as the recipients
are concerning, are mental, and not moral effects. The
prophesy contemplates, not a miraculous elevation of the
moral nature, but an inspiration of the mind, by which
prophesy, and prophetic dreams and visions would be
experienced. If the entrance of the Holy Spirit into men,
to operate by an abstract exertion of divine power, which
is certainly the nature of the operation here
contemplated, was designed to take effect immediately upon
the heart, it is certainly most unaccountable, that
neither by the prophet foretelling the event, not by Luke
describing it, is one word said in reference to such an
effect. On the contrary, the only effects foretold by the
prophet are dreams, visions, and prophesy, and the only
one described by the historian is that species of prophesy
which consists in speaking in unknown tongues. We desire
to note such observations as this, wherever the text
suggests them, in order to correct prevailing errors upon
this subject. It will be found the uniform testimony of
recorded facts, that the power of the Holy Spirit took
immediate effect upon the intellectual faculties, leaving
the moral nature of inspired men to the effect of the [28]
ideas revealed, in precisely the same
manner that the hearts of their hearers were affected by
the same ideas when uttered by inspired lips.{12}
It is quite common with pedobaptist writers and speakers
to make use of the expression, "I will pour out
my Spirit," to prove that pouring may be the
action of baptism. The substance of the argument, as
stated by Dr. Alexander,{13}
as follows: "The extraordinary influences of the Holy
Spirit are repeatedly described, both in the language and
the types of the Old Testament, as poured on the
recipient. . . . This effusion is the very thing
for which they (the apostles) are here told to wait; and
therefore, when they heard it called a baptism, whatever
may have been the primary usage of the word, they must
have seen its Christian sense to be compatible with such
an application." That the apostles must have expected
something to occur, in their reception of the Holy Spirit,
to which the term baptism would properly apply, is
undoubtedly true, for Jesus had promised that they should
be baptized in the Holy Spirit. But, in the event
itself, there are two facts clearly distinguishable, and
capable of separate consideration: 1st. The coming of the
Holy Spirit upon them, called an outpouring. 2d.
The effect which followed this coming. It is
important to inquire to which of these the term baptism
is applied. Dr. Alexander, and those who argue with him,
assume that it is applied to the former. He says,
"This effusion is the very thing," which
they had "heard called a baptism." If this
assumption is true, then the conclusion follows, that
baptism consisted in that movement of the Spirit expressed
by the word pour: otherwise there would be no
ground for the assumption that the word pour is
used as an equivalent for the word baptize. If the
act of pouring, then, was the baptism, most
undoubtedly the thing poured, was the thing baptized;
but it was the Holy Spirit that was poured, and not
the apostles; hence, the Holy Spirit, and not the apostles,
was baptized.
The absurdity of this conclusion drives us back to search
for the baptism in the effect of the outpouring,
rather than in the outpouring itself. This, indeed, the
language of the Savior unquestionably requires; for he
says, "You shall be baptized." These
words express an effect of which they were to be
the subjects. This effect can not be expressed by the term
pour, for the apostles were not and could not be poured.
The effect was to depend upon the coming or
pouring; for Jesus explains the promise, "You shall
be baptized in the Spirit," by saying, "You
shall receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon
you." This is still further proof that it is an
effect which the outpouring of the Spirit produced, that
is called a baptism. But if it be said, that, at any rate,
we have here a baptism effected by pouring, we
reply that this very fact proves the baptism and the
pouring to be two different things; and that an immersion
may be effected by pouring.
We further remark, that there was no literal pouring in
the case; for the Holy Spirit is not a liquid, that it
might be literally poured. The term pour, here, is
used metaphorically. In our vague [29] conception
of the nature of Spirit, there is such an analogy between
it and a subtle fluid, that the action, which, in the
plain style of the Savior, is called a coming of
the Spirit, may, in the highly figurative style of the
prophet Joel, be properly styled an outpouring of
the Spirit. The analogy, therefore, which justifies the
use of the word pour, is not that between baptism
and the act of pouring, but that between a subtle fluid
and our inadequate conceptions of spirit.
We now proceed to consider the propriety of styling the
effect in question an immersion. When Jesus said,
"John baptized in water, but you shall be baptized in
the Holy Spirit," his words suggested an analogy
between John's baptism and that of the Spirit. But they
could not have so far mistaken this analogy as to suppose
that their bodies were to be subjects of the Spirit
baptism, for this is forbidden by the very nature of the
case. But they would naturally expect that their spirits
would be the subjects of the baptism in the Spirit, as
their bodies had been of the baptism in water. The
event corresponded to this expectation; for they were
"filled with the Holy Spirit;" he
pervaded and possessed all their mental powers, so that,
as Jesus had promised, it was not they that spoke, but the
Spirit of their Father that spoke in them.{14}
Their spirits were as literally and completely immersed
in the Holy Spirit, as their bodies had been in the waters
of Jordan.
19-21. So much of Peter's quotation from Joel as we have
now considered was in process of fulfillment at the time
he was speaking, and is of quite easy interpretation; but
not so with the remaining portion: (19) "And I
will show wonders in heaven above, and signs on the earth
below, blood, and fire, and smoky vapor. (20) The
sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into
blood, before that great and illustrious day of the Lord
come. (21) And it shall come to pass that every
one who will call on the name of the Lord shall be saved."
It is quite evident that there was nothing transpiring at
the time of Peter's speech to which the multitude could
look as the fulfillment of these words; hence the remark
with which he introduces the quotation, "This
is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel," is to
be understood only of the manifestation of the Holy
Spirit. The remainder of the prediction must have still
looked to the future for its fulfillment. How far in the
future is not indicated, expect that the events mentioned
were to take place, "before that great and
illustrious day of the Lord." This day of the Lord is
certainly spoken of as a day of terror and danger; and no
doubt the salvation contemplated in the words, "every
one who will call on the name of the Lord shall be
saved," is salvation from the dangers of "that
great and illustrious day." The interpretation of the
whole passage, therefore, depends upon determining what is
meant by that day. Is it the day of destruction of
Jerusalem, or of the final judgment? The best way to
settle this question is to examine the use of the phrase,
"day of the Lord," in both Old Testament and
New.
In the @first
eleven verses of the second chapter of Joel, the
phrase [30] "day of the
Lord" occurs three times, and designates a time when
the land should be desolated by locusts, insects, and
drought. But with the passage now under consideration, in
the latter part of the same chapter, the prophet begins a
new theme, and therefore speaks of some other great and
terrible day. Throughout the prophesies of Joel, and of
all the Old Testament prophets, this phrase is used
invariably to designate a day of disaster. Isaiah calls
the time in which Babylon was to be destroyed, "the
day of the Lord," and says of it, "The stars of
heaven, and the constellations thereof, shall not give
their light; the sun shall be darkened in its going forth,
and the moon shall not cause her light to shine."{15}
Ezekiel, in like manner, foretelling the desolation of
Egypt, says, "The day of the Lord is near; a cloudy
day; it shall be the time of the heathen."{16}
Obadiah uses the same phrase in reference to the
destruction of Edom;{17}
Amos, in reference to the captivity of Israel;{18}
and Zechariah, in reference to the final siege of
Jerusalem.{19}
And induction of these passages establishes the conclusion
that "the day of the Lord," with the prophets,
is always a day of calamity, the precise nature of which
is to be determined in each case by the context. In some
cases the context is so obscure as not to determine the
reference with certainty. The text before us possesses
some of this obscurity, yet with the aid of the above
remarks, and the use made of the passage by Peter, we may
determine the reference with no small degree of certainty.
It is evident from Peter's application of the first part
of the quotation to the the advent of the Spirit, that the
latter part, which is contemplated as still future, was to
be fulfilled after the scene then transpiring. Now, if the
dangers of the day, as indicated by the words employed,
were such as concerned the Jews alone, there would be good
ground to suppose that reference was had to the
destruction of Jerusalem. But the parties contemplated in
the prophesy are "all flesh;" therefore,
all classes of men are embraced in the prophetic view, and
the "day of the Lord" must, according to Old
Testament usage, be a day of terror in which all are
interested. But in the destruction of Jerusalem the Jews
alone had any thing to dread; hence this can not be the
reference. It must, then, be the day of judgment; for this
is the only day of pre-eminent terror yet awaiting all
mankind.
This conclusion is confirmed by the invariable usage of
New Testament writers. The apostolic writings afford
little ground indeed for the prominence that has been
given to commentators to the destruction of Jerusalem, in
their interpretations of prophesy. There was another and
far different day, in their future, to which they gave the
appellation, "the day of the Lord." Paul says,
"Deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of
the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of
the Lord Jesus."{20}
"We are your rejoicing, even as ye also are ours, in
the day of the Lord Jesus."{21}
"Yourselves know perfectly that the day of the
Lord so comes as a thief in the night."{22}
"But the day of the Lord will comes as a thief
[31] in the night."{23}
These are all the occurrences of this expression in the
New Testament, and they show conclusively that "the
day of the Lord," with the apostles, was the day of
judgment.
The great and illustrious day must not be confounded with
the "signs and wonders" mentioned by the
prophet; for these are to occur before that day.
Whatever may be the exact symbolic meaning of the
"blood and fire, and smoky vapor," and the
darkening of the sun and moon, they represent events which
are to take place before the day of judgment.
Having now determined the reference of the day in
question, we can at once decide what salvation is
contemplated in the declaration, "Every one who will
call on the name of the Lord shall be saved." The
only salvation connected with the day of judgment is the
salvation from sin and death. The reference,
therefore, is to this, and not to salvation from the
destruction of Jerusalem.
This salvation is made to depend upon calling on the
name of the Lord, an expression equivalent to prayer.
It is, of course, acceptable prayer which is intended, and
it therefore implies the existence of that disposition and
conduct necessary to acceptable worship. Certainly no one
calling upon the name of the Lord while persisting in
disobedience can be included in this promise.
Thus far, in his discourse, Peter has directed his
attention to the single object of proving the inspiration
of himself and his associates. This was logically
necessary previous to the utterance of a single word by
authority, and most logically has he conducted his
argument. The amazement of the people, upon beholding the
miraculous scene, was a tacit acknowledgment of their
inability to account for it. They were well prepared,
therefore, to hear Peter's explanation. But if even he had
attributed the effects which they witnessed to any less
than divine power, they must have rejected his explanation
as unsatisfactory. The question with them, indeed, was
not, whether this was a divine or human manifestation,
but, admitting its divinity, they asked one another,
"What does this mean?" When, therefore,
Peter simply declares, that this is a fulfillment of
Joel's prophesy concerning the outpouring of the Spirit of
God, they had no alternative but to receive his
explanation, while the fact that it was a fulfillment of
prophesy gave to it additional solemnity.
If Peter had closed his discourse at this point, the
multitude would have gone away convinced of his
inspiration, but not one of them would have been
converted. All this has yet been said and done is
preparatory; a necessary preparation for what is to
follow. We are yet to search for the exact influence which
turned their minds and hearts toward Jesus Christ.
22-24. It is impossible, at this distance of space and
time, to realize, even in a faint degree, the effect upon
the minds so wrought up and possessed of such facts,
produced by the announcement next made by Peter. (22)
"Men of Israel, hear these words. Jesus of
Nazareth, a man approved by God among you, by miracles and
wonders and signs which God did by him, in the midst of
you, as you yourselves know; (23) him, delivered
by the determined purpose [32] and
foreknowledge of God, you have taken, and by wicked hands
have crucified and slain; (24) whom God has
raised up, having loosed the pains of death, because it
was not possible that he should be held under it."
Filled with amazement, as they were already, by a visible
and audible manifestation of the Spirit of God, they now
see that the whole of this amazing phenomenon is
subservient to the name of the Nazarene whom they had
despised and crucified. This conviction is brought home to
them, too, in a sentence so replete with overwhelming
facts, as to make them reel and stagger under a succession
of fearful blows rapidly repeated. In one breath they have
just heard no less than seven startling propositions: 1st.
That Jesus had been approved by God among them, by
miracles and wonders and signs which God had done by him.
2d. That they, themselves, knew this to be so. 3d.
That it was not from impotence on his part, but in
accordance with the purpose and foreknowledge of God, that
he was yielded up to them. 4th. That when thus yielded up
they had put him to death, by the torture of crucifixion.
5th. That they had done this with wicked hands. 6th. That
God had raised him from the dead. 7th. That it was not
possible that death should hold him.
Here is a complete epitome of the four gospels, condensed
into one short sentence. The name "Jesus of
Nazareth" brought vividly before their minds a
well-known personage, and all his illustrious history
flashes across their memory. The first assertion
concerning him is an appeal to his miracles as a
demonstration that he was from God. There is no need of
argument to make this demonstration clear; nor of evidence
to prove the reality of the miracles; for they were done
"in your midst, as you yourselves also know."
The fearfulness of the murder is magnified by the thought,
that he had been voluntarily delivered to them, in
accordance with a deliberate purpose of God long ago
declared by the prophets. The manner of his death makes it
more fearful still. They had nailed him to the cross, and
compelled him to die like a felon. These things being so,
how penetrating the appeal to their consciences,
"with wicked hands you have crucified and
slain him!" This was no time for nice distinctions
between what a man does himself, and what he does by
another. The "wicked hands" are not, as some
suppose, the hands of Roman soldiers, who had performed
the actual work of his execution, but the hands of wicked
Jews. Here, before him, were the very persons who had been
assembled but fifty days before at the Passover, and had taken
a hand in the proceedings of that awful day. He
appeals to their individual consciousness of guilt; and
this gives an intensity to the effect of his discourse
upon their hearts, which it could not otherwise have
possessed. Conscious of fearful guilt in having thus
cruelly murdered the attested servant of God; and suddenly
revealed to themselves as actors in the darkest scene of
prophetic vision, how shall they endure the additional
thought, that God has raised the crucified from the dead?
Never did mortal lips pronounce, in so brief a space, so
many thoughts of so terrific import to the hearers. We
might challenge the world to find a parallel to it in the
speeches of all her orators, or the songs [33] of
all her poets. There is not, indeed, such a thunderbolt in
the burdens of all the prophets of Israel, nor among the
mighty voices which echo through the pages of the
Apocalypse. It is the first announcement to the world of a
risen and glorified Redeemer.
25-28. There are two points in this announcement which
required proof, and to the presentation of this Peter
immediately proceeds. Having stated that Jesus was
delivered according to the determined purpose of God, he
now quotes that purpose as expressed by David in the @16th
Psalm. (25) "For David says concerning him, I
foresaw the Lord always before my face; for he is on my
right hand, that I should not be moved. (26) Therefore
did my heart rejoice, and my tongue was glad. Moreover, my
flesh shall rest in hope; (27) because thou wilt
not leave my soul in hades, neither wilt thou suffer thy
Holy One to see corruption. (28) Thou hast made
known to me the ways of life; thou wilt make me full of
joy with thy countenance." Only so much of this
quotation as refers to the resurrection suits the special
purpose of the speaker, the preceding portion serving only
to connectedly introduce it.
The words, "Thou shalt make known to me the ways of
life," constitute the affirmative assertion of a
restoration to life, which had been negatively expressed,
"Thou wilt not leave my soul in hades, neither wilt
thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption" The words
"Thou wilt make me full of joy with thy
countenance," no doubt refer to that joy set before
Jesus, for which "he endured the cross, despising the
shame, and is now set down at the right hand of the throne
of God."{24}
It is commonly agreed among interpreters, that in the
sentence, "Thou wilt not leave my soul in hades,
neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see
corruption," there is no distinction intended between
the condition of the soul and that of the body; but that
the whole is merely equivalent to the statement, Thou wilt
not leave me among the dead. I am
constrained, however, to adopt the opinion advanced, but
not defended, by Olshausen, that the apostle does intend
to fix our attention upon the body and soul of Jesus
separately. The most obvious reason for this opinion is
the fact that his body and soul are spoken of separately,
and with separate reference to their respective places of
abode during the period of death. The soul can not see
corruption, neither can the body go into hades; but when
men die, ordinarily, their bodies see corruption, and
their souls enter, not the grave, but hades. The words in
question declare, in reference to both the body and soul
of Jesus, that which must have occurred in his
resurrection, that the one was not left in hades, neither
did the other see corruption. The apostle, in commenting
upon them, makes the distinction still more marked, by
saying, (verse
31, below), "He spoke of the resurrection of
Christ, that his soul should not be left in hades,
nor his flesh see corruption." Why do both the
prophet and the apostle so carefully make the distinction,
unless they wish to fix attention upon it?
The term hades designates the place of disembodied
spirits. It is, as its etymology indicates, (a,
privative; idein, to see) the
unseen. The [34] Greeks were good
at giving names to things. When they watched a friend
sinking into the arms of death, they could see, by the
motion of the frame and the light of the eye, the
continued presence of the soul, until at last, the muscles
were all motionless, and the eye fixed and leaden. They
could still see the body, and after it had been deposited
in the grave they could revisit it and see it again. But
where is the soul? You see it no longer. There are no
signs of its presence. It is gone; and its invisible abode
they call hades, the unseen. That the soul
of Jesus entered hades is undeniable. That it returned
again to the body at the resurrection is asserted by
Peter; and it is this return which was predicted by the
prophet, and which caused the exultation both of himself
and the apostle.
The resurrection of Jesus is not appreciated by the
religious world now, as it was by the apostles. As
respects the return of his soul from hades, Protestant
writers have fled so far from the justly-abhorred
purgatory of the Catholic, and the gloomy soul-sleeping of
the Materialist, that they have passed beyond the
Scripture doctrine, and either ignore altogether the
existence of an intermediate state, or deny that the souls
of the righteous are short of ultimate happiness during
this period. On the other hand, they have so great a
tendency to absolute spiritualism in their conceptions of
the future state, that they fail to appreciate the
necessity for the resurrection of the body of Jesus, or to
exult, as the apostles did, in anticipation of the
resurrection of their own bodies. As long as men entertain
the idea that their spirits enter into final bliss and
glory immediately after death, they can never be made to
regard the resurrection of the body as a matter of
importance. This idea has been produced a general
skepticism among the masses, in reference to a
resurrection of the body; for men are very apt to doubt
the certainty of future events for which they see no
necessity. As respects the resurrection of the body of
Jesus, the most popular conception of its necessity is no
doubt this, that it was merely to comply with the
predictions of the prophets and of Jesus himself. It would
be far more rational to suppose that it was made a subject
of prophesy, because there was some grand necessity that
it should occur.
It would occupy too much space, in a work of this kind, to
fully develop this subject, we must, therefore, content
ourselves with only a few observations, the complete
vindication of the correctness of which we must forego.
When the eternal Word became flesh, he assumed all the
limitations and dependencies which belong to men;
"for it behooved him to be made in all things like
his brethren."{25}
One of these limitations was the inability to work without
a body; hence, to him, as well as to his brethren, there
was a night coming in which he could not work. He says,
"I must work the works of him who sent me while it is
day; the night is coming when no man can work."{26}
This night can not be the period after the resurrection,
for then he did work. It must, then, be the period of
death, while his soul was absent from his body. During
this period, he himself asserts, he could do no work, and
certainly neither history nor prophesy refer [35] to
any work which he then did. It was the Jewish Sabbath
among the living, and he observed it with absolute
stillness in hades. If he had appeared to his disciples,
as angels appear to men, convincing them that he was still
alive, and could then have gone to heaven in his mere
spiritual nature, who could say there was any necessity
for a resurrection of that body in which all his
sufferings were endured, and through which all temptations
had reached him? But he could not be. Hades was to him a
night of inactivity, as it is to all his disciples, though
to neither is it a state of unconsciousness. If it had
continued forever, then the further work of redemption,
which could only be effected by a mediator in heaven, a
Christ on the throne, sending down the Holy Spirit,
directing the labors of men and angels, and finally
raising the dead to judgment, would have remained undone
forever. It was this thought which caused the exultation
of the apostles, in view of the recovery of his soul from
the inactivity of hades, and its reunion with the
uncorrupted and now incorruptible body. "He was
delivered for our offenses," but "was raised
again for our justification."{27}
His death was the atonement, enabling God to be just in
justifying those who believe on Jesus; but his
resurrection enabled him to enter heaven with his own
blood, securing eternal redemption for us. The
resurrection was, therefore, an imperious necessity in his
case, and it will be in ours; for not till he comes again
will we enter the mansions he is preparing for us, and
receive the crown of righteousness which he will give to
all them, who love his appearing.{28}
29-31. Having exhibited, in the quotation from David,
"the determined purpose, and foreknowledge of
God," in reference to the resurrection of Jesus, the
apostle, never overlooking the logical necessities of his
argument, next considers the only objection which his
hearers would likely to urge against his prophetic proof.
In the words quoted, David speaks in the first person, and
this might lead some to object, that he was speaking of
himself, and not of the Messiah. If, however, it be proved
that he did not speak of himself, they would readily admit
that he spoke in the name of the Christ. Peter proves
this, in these words: (29) "Brethren, let me
freely speak to you of the patriarch David, that he is
both dead and buried, and his sepulcher is with us to this
day. (30) Being a prophet, then, and knowing that
God had sworn to him, that from the fruit of his loins he
would raise up the Christ, according to the flesh, to sit
on his throne; (31) foreseeing this, he spoke of
the resurrection of the Christ, that his soul was not left
in hades, neither did his flesh see corruption."
David's own flesh having seen corruption, as they
themselves admitted, and his soul being still in hades,
there was no alternative but to admit that he spoke of the
Messiah. This brief argument not only refuted the supposed
objection, but opened the minds of his hearers, to an
entirely new conception of the prophetic throne of David,
and of the Messiah, who was to occupy it; showing, that
instead of being the ruler of an earthly kingdom, however,
glorious, he was to sit upon the throne of the whole
universe.
32, 33. Thus far in his argument, the speaker has proved
that the [36] Messiah must rise from
the dead to ascend his throne; but he has yet to prove
that Jesus was thus raised, and was, therefore, the
Messiah of whom David had spoken. He proves the
resurrection by the testimony of himself and the eleven
other witnesses standing with him: (32) "This
Jesus has God raised up, of which we are all witnesses."
Here the twelve unimpeached witnesses testifying to a
sensible fact, and presenting their testimony with all the
authority belonging to miraculously attested messengers
from God. This was sufficient, as to the resurrection. But
it must also be proved that after he arose he ascended to
heaven and sat down upon his throne. It would be
unavailing, for this purpose, to urge the fact that the
twelve had seen him ascend; for their eyes had followed
him no further than the cloud which received him out of
sight. But he presents, in proof, this immersion in the
Holy Spirit, which the multitude were witnessing, and
which could be effected by no one beneath the throne of
God. (33) "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." What they then saw and
heard was both the proof that he who sent it down had
ascended the throne of heaven, and the assurance that
Peter spoke by divine authority in declaring this fact.
34, 35. One more point established, not so much in proof
of the exaltation of Christ, as to show that it also was a
subject of prophesy, and this inimitable argument will be
complete. (34) "For David has not ascended into
the heavens, but he himself says, The Lord said to my
Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, (35) until I
make thy foes thy footstool." The Pharisees
themselves admitted that in this passage David referred to
the Messiah, and had been much puzzled by the admission in
a memorable conversation with Jesus;{29}
but Peter, unwilling to take any thing as granted, which
might afterward be made a ground of objection, carefully
guards the application, as he had done that of the previous
quotation by David, by the remark that David himself
had not ascended to heaven; hence, he could not, in these
words, be speaking of himself. This admitted, it must be
granted that he spoke of the Messiah, for certainly David
would call no other his Lord.
36. The progressive advances of his argument being now
complete, those of them which needed proof being sustained
by conclusive evidence, and the remainder consisting in
facts well known to his audience, he announces his final
conclusion in these bold and confident terms: (36) "Therefore,
let all the house of Israel know assuredly, that God has
made that same Jesus whom you have crucified both Lord and
Christ."
37. It has already been observed, that up to the moment in
which Peter arose to address the audience, although the
immersion in the Holy Spirit had occurred, and its effects
had been fully witnessed by the people, no change had
taken place in their minds in reference to Jesus Christ,
neither did they experience any emotion, except confusion
and amazement at a phenomenon which they could not
comprehend. This fact proves, conclusively, that there was
no power in the [37] miraculous
manifestation of the Spirit, which they witnesses, in
itself alone, to produce in them the desired change. All
the power which belonged to this event must have come
short of the desired effect, but for a medium distinct
from itself, through which it reached the minds and hearts
of the people. The medium was the words of Peter.
He spoke; and when he had announced the conclusion of his
argument, Luke says: (37) "Now when they heard
this, they were pierced to the heart, and said to Peter
and the other apostles, Brethren, what shall we do?"
In this exclamation there is a manifest confession that
they believe what Peter has preached to them; and
Luke's declaration that they were pierced to the heart
shows that they felt intensely the power of the facts
which they now believed. Since Peter began to speak,
therefore, a change has taken place both in their
convictions and their feelings. They are convinced that
Jesus is the Christ, and they are pierced to the heart
with anguish at the thought of having murdered him. In the
mean time, not a word is said of any influence at work
upon them, except that of the words spoken by Peter; hence
we conclude that the change in their minds and hearts has
been effected through those words. This conclusion
was also drawn by Luke himself; for in saying, "when
they heard this, they were pierced to the heart,
and cried out," he evidently attributes their emotion
and their outcry to what they heard, as the cause
of both.
If Luke had regarded the change effected as one which
could be produced only by the direct agency of the Holy
Spirit, he could not have expressed himself in these
words, for his language not only entirely ignores such an
influence, but attributes the effect to a different
instrumentality. We understand him, therefore, to teach
that the whole change thus far effected in these men was
produced through the word of truth which they heard from
Peter.
Let it be observed, however, that what they had heard
concerning Christ, they had heard not as the words of the
mere man Peter; for, previous to introducing the name of
Jesus, he had clearly demonstrated the inspiration
of himself and the other apostles. This being established
beyond the possibility of rational doubt, from the moment
that he began to speak of Jesus they were listening to him
as an inspired man. But the Jews had long since learned to
ascribe to the words of inspired men all the authority of
the Spirit who spoke through them; hence this audience
realized that all the power to convince and to move, that
the authority of God himself could impart to words,
belonged to the words of Peter. If they could believe God,
they must believe the oracles of God which find utterance
through Peter's lips. They do believe, and they believe
because the words they hear are recognized as the words of
God. Faith, then, comes by hearing the word of God; and he
who hears the admitted word of God, must believe, or deny
that God speaks the truth. This is true, whether the word
is heard from the lips of the inspired men who originally
gave it utterance, or is received through other authentic
channels. The power by which the word of God produces
faith is all derived from the fact that it is the
word of God.
No words, whether of men or of God, can effect moral
changes in the feelings of the hearer, unless they are
believed; nor can they when [38] believed,
unless they announce truths or facts calculated to produce
such change. In the present instance, the facts announced
placed the hearers in the awful attitude of the murderers
of the Son of God, who was now not only alive again, but
seated on the throne of God, with all power in his hands,
both on earth and in heaven. The belief of these facts
necessarily filled them with the most intense realization
of guilt, and the most fearful anticipation of punishment.
The former of these emotions is expressed by the words of
Luke, "They were pierced to the heart;"
the latter, in their own words, "Brethren, what
shall we do?" They had just heard Peter, in the
language of Joel, speak of a possible salvation; and the
question, What shall we do? unquestionably means, What
shall we do to be saved?
38. This is the first time, under the reign of Jesus
Christ, that this most important of all questions was ever
propounded; and the first time, of course, that it was
every answered. Whatever may have been the true answer
under any previous dispensation, or on any previous day in
the world's history, the answer given by Peter on this day
of Pentecost, in which the reign of Christ on earth began,
is the true and infallible answer for all the subjects of
his authority in all subsequent time. It deserves our most
profound attention; for it announces the conditions of
pardon for all men who may be found in the same state of
mind with these inquiries. It is expressed as follows:
(38) "Then Peter said to them, 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."
That the offer of pardon, made to the world through Jesus
Christ, is conditional, is denied only by the fatalist. We
will not argue this point, expect as it is involved in the
inquiry as to what the conditions of pardon are. When we
ascertain the prescribed conditions of pardon, both
questions will be settled in settling one.
Pardon is the chief want of the human soul, in its most
favorable earthly circumstances. The rebel against God's
government, though he lay down his arms and becomes a
loyal subject, can have no hope of happiness without
pardon for the past; while the pardoned penitent, humbly
struggling in the service of God, knows himself still
guilty of shortcomings, by which he must fail of the final
reward, unless pardoned again and again. The question as
to what are the conditions of pardon, therefore,
necessarily divides itself into two; one having reference
to the hitherto-unpardoned sinner, the other to the saint
who may have fallen into sin. It is the former class who
propounded the question to Peter, and it is to them alone
that the answer under consideration was given. We will
confine ourselves, in our present remarks, to this branch
of the subject, and discuss it only in the light of the
passage before us.
If we regard the question of the multitude, What shall we
do? as simply a question of duty under their peculiar
circumstances, without special reference to final results,
we learn from the answer that there were two things for
them to do--Repent, and be immersed. If
Peter had stopped with these two words, his answer would
have been satisfactory, in this view of the subject, and
it would have been the [39] conclusion
of the world, that the duty of a sinner, "pierced to
the heart" by a sense of guilt, is to repent
and be immersed.
But if we regard their question as having definite
reference to the salvation of which Peter had
already spoken, (@verse
21,) and their meaning, What shall we do to be saved?
then the answer is equally definite: it teaches that what
a sinner thus affected is to do to be saved, is to repent
and be immersed.
From these two observations, the reader perceives, that so
far as the conditions of salvation from past sins are
concerned, the duty of the sinner is most definitely
taught by the first two words of the answer, taken in
connection with their question, without entering upon the
controversy concerning the remainder of the answer. If it
had been Peter's design merely to give an answer in
concise terms, without explanation, no doubt he would have
confined it to these two words, for they contain the only
commands which he gives.
But he saw fit to accompany the two commands with suitable
explanations. He qualifies the command to be immersed by
the clause, "in the name of Jesus Christ," to
show that it is under his authority that they were to be
immersed, and not merely under that of the Father, whose
authority alone was recognized in John's immersion. That
we are right in referring to this limiting clause,
"in the name of Jesus Christ," to the command to
be immersed, and not to the command repent,
is evident from the fact that it would be incongruous to
say, "Repent in the name of Jesus
Christ."
Peter further explains the two commands, by stating their
specific design; by which term we mean the specific
blessing which was to be expected as the consequence of
obedience. It is "for the remission of sins."
To convince an unbiased mind that this clause depends upon
both the preceding commands, and express their design, it
would only be necessary to repeat the words, "Repent
and be immersed in the name of Jesus Christ for the
remission of sins." But, inasmuch as it has suited
the purpose of some controversialists to dispute this
proposition, we here give the opinions of two recent
representative commentators, who can not be suspected of
undue bias in its favor.
Dr. Alexander (Presbyterian) says, "The whole phrase,
to (or toward) remission of sins, describes
this as the end to which the multitude had reference, and
which, therefore, must be contemplated in the
answer." Again: "The beneficial end to which all
this led was the remission of sins."
Dr. Hackett (Baptist) expresses himself still more
satisfactorily: "eis aphesin hamartion,
in order to the forgiveness of sins, (@Matt.
26:28 Luke iii: 3,) we connect, naturally, with the
both the preceding verbs. This clause states the motive or
object which should induce them to repent and be baptized.
It enforces the entire exhortation, not one part of it to
the exclusion of the other."
The connection contended for can not be made more apparent
by argument; it needs only that attention be called to it,
in order to be perceived by every unbiased mind. It is
possible that some doubt might arise in reference to the
connection of the clause with the term [40] repent,
but one would imagine that its connection with the command
be immersed could not be doubted, but for the fact
that it has been disputed. Indeed, some controversialists
have felt so great necessity for denying the last-named
connection, as to assume that the clause, "for the
remission of sins" depends largely upon the term repent,
and that the connection of thought is this: "Repent
for the remission of sins, and be immersed in the name of
Jesus Christ." It is a sufficient refutation of this
assumption to remark, that, if Peter had intended to say
this, he would most certainly have done so; but he has
said something entirely different; and this shows that he
meant something entirely different. If men are permitted,
after this style, to entirely reconstruct the sentences of
inspired apostles, then there is no statement in the Word
of God which may not be perverted. We dismiss this
baseless assumption with the remark, that it has not been
dignified by the indorsement of any writer of respectable
attainments, known to the author, and it would not be
noticed here, but for the frequency of its appearance in
the pulpit, in the columns of denominational newspapers,
and on the pages of partisan tracts.
The dependence of the clause, "for the remission of
sins," upon both the verbs repent and be
immersed, being established, it would seem undeniable
that remission of sins is the blessing in order to the
enjoyment of which they were commanded to repent and be
immersed. This is universally admitted so far as the term repent
is concerned, but by many denied in reference to the
command be immersed; hence the proposition that
immersion is for the remission of sins is rejected by the
Protestant sects in general. Assuming that remission of
sins precedes immersion, and that, so far as adults
are concerned, the only proper subjects for this ordinance
are those whose sins are already pardoned, it is urged
that for in this clause means "on account
of" or "because of." Hence,
Peter is understood to command, "Repent and be
immersed on account of remission of sins already
enjoyed." But this interpretation is subject to
two insuperable objections. 1st. To command men to repent
and be immersed because their sins were already remitted,
is to require them not only to be immersed on this
account, but to repent because they were already
pardoned. There is no possibility of extricating the
interpretation from this absurdity. 2d. It contradicts an
obvious fact of the case. It makes Peter command the
inquirers to be immersed because their sins were already
remitted, whereas it is an indisputable fact that their
sins were not yet remitted. On the contrary, they
were still pierced to the heart with a sense of guilt, and
by the question they propounded were seeking how they
might obtain the very pardon which this interpretation
assumes that they already enjoyed. Certainly no sane man
would assume a position involving such absurdity, and so
contradictory to an obvious fact, were he not driven to it
by the inexorable demands of a theory which could not be
otherwise sustained.
We observe, further, in reference to this interpretation,
that even if we admit the propriety of supplanting the
preposition for by the phrase on account of,
the substitute will not answer the purpose for [41] which
it is employed. The meaning of this phrase varies,
according as its object is past or future.
"On account of" some past event may mean because
it has taken place; but on account of an event
yet in the future, would, in the same connection, mean in
order that it might take place. The same is
true of the equivalent phrase, "because of." If,
then, the parties addressed by Peter were already
pardoned, "on account of the remission of
sins" would mean, because their sins had been
remitted. But as this is an indisputable fact that the
parties addressed were yet unpardoned, what they are
commanded to do on account of remission of sins
must mean, in order that their sins may be remitted.
Such a rendering, therefore, would not even render the
obvious meaning of the passage less perspicuous than it
already is.
It will be found that any other substitute for the
preposition for, designed to force upon the passage
a meaning different from that which it obviously bears,
will as signally fail to suit the purpose of its author.
If, with Dr. Alexander, we render, Repent and be immersed
"to (or toward) remission of
sins," we still have remission both beyond repentance
and immersion, and depending upon them as preparatory
conditions. Indeed, this rendering would leave it
uncertain whether repentance and immersion would bring
them to remission of sins, or only toward
it, leaving an indefinite space yet to pass before
obtaining it.
If, with others still--for every effort that ingenuity
could suggest has been made to find another meaning for
this passage--we render it, Repent and be immersed unto
or into remission of sins, the attempt is
fruitless; for remission of sins is still the blessing unto
which or into which repentance and immersion are to
lead the inquirers.
Sometimes the advocates of these various renderings, when
disheartened by the failure of their attempts at argument
and criticism, resort to raillery, and assert that the
whole doctrine of immersion for the remission of sins
depends upon the one little word for in the
command, "be immersed for the remission of
sins." If this were true, it would be no humiliation;
for a doctrine based upon a word of God, however
small, has an eternal and immutable foundation. But it is
not true. On the contrary, you may draw a pencil-mark over
the whole clause, "for the remission of sins,"
erasing it, with all the remainder of Peter's answer, and
still the meaning will remain unchanged. The connection
would then read thus: "Brethren, what shall we do?
Then Peter said to them, Repent, and be immersed every one
of you in the name of the Lord Jesus." Remembering
now that these parties were pierced to the heart with a
sense of guilt, and that their question means, What shall
we do to be saved from out sins? the answer must be
understood as the answer to that question. But the answer
is, Repent and be immersed; therefore, to repent
and to be immersed are the two things which they
must do in order to be saved from their sins.
The reader now perceives, that, in this first announcement
to sinners of the terms of pardon, so guardedly has Peter
expressed himself, and so skillfully has Luke interwoven
with his words the historic facts, that whatever rendering
men have forced upon the leading [42] term,
the meaning of the whole remains unchanged; and even when
you strike this term and its dependent words out of the
text, that same meaning still stares you in the face. The
fact is suggestive of more than human wisdom. It reminds
us that Peter spoke, and Luke wrote, as they were moved by
the Holy Spirit. That infinite wisdom which was dictating
a record for all time to come is displayed here, providing
for future controversies which no human being could
anticipate. Like the sun in the heavens, which may be
temporarily obscured by clouds, but will still break forth
again, and shine upon all but those who hide from his
beams, the light of truth which God has suspended in this
passage may be dimmed for a moment by the mists of
partisan criticism, but to those who are willing to see
it, it will still send out its beams, and guide the
trembling sinner unerringly to pardon and peace.
If there were any real ground for doubt as to the proper
translation and real meaning of the words eis
aphesin hamartion, for the remission of sins,
when connected with the term immersion, a candid
inquirer would resort to its usage when disconnected from
this term, and seek thus to determine its exact import. It
happens to occur only once in connection suitable to this
purpose, but no number of occurrences could more
definitely fix its meaning. When instituting the supper,
Jesus says, "This is my blood of the new covenant,
shed for many for the remission of sins," eis
aphesin hamartion. It is impossible to doubt that
the clause here means in order to the remission of
sins. In this case it expresses the object for which
something is to be done; in the passage we are discussing,
it expresses the object for which something is commanded
to be done: the grammatical and logical construction is
the same in both cases, and, therefore, the meaning is the
same. Men are to repent and be immersed in order to the
attainment of the same blessing for which the blood of
Jesus was shed. The propitiation through his blood was in
order to the offer of pardon, while repentance and
immersion are enjoined by Peter upon his hearers, in order
to the attainment of pardon.
The careful reader will have observed that in stating the
conditions of remission of sins to the multitude, Peter
says nothing about the necessity of faith. This omission
is not sufficiently accounted for by the fact that faith
is implied in the command to repent and be immersed; for
the parties now addressed were listening to the terms for
the first time, and might fail to perceive this
implication. But the fact is, that they did already
believe, and it was a result of their faith, that they
were pierced to the heart, and made to cry out, What shall
we do? This Peter perceived, and therefore it would have
been but little less than mockery to command them to
believe. It will be observed, throughout the course of
apostolic preaching, that they never commanded men to do
what they had already done, but took them as they found
them, and enjoined upon them only that which they yet
lacked of complete obedience. In the case before us, Peter
was not laying down a complete formula for the conditions
of pardon; but was simply informing the parties before him
what they must do in order to the remission of their
sins. Being [43] believers already,
they must add to their faith repentance and immersion.
Before dismissing this topic, we must remark that the
doctrine of immersion for the remission of sins does not
assume that immersion is the only condition of remission,
but simply that, it is one among three
conditions, and the last of the three. Administered
previous to faith and repentance, as in the case of
infants, it is not only absolutely worthless, but
intensely sinful.
The exact meaning of the term repent will be
considered below, under iii:
19.
After commanding the inquirers to repent and be immersed
for the remission of sins, Peter adds the promise,
"and you shall receive the gift of the Holy
Spirit." The gift of the Holy Spirit should
not be confounded with the Holy Spirit's gifts, nor
with the fruits of the Spirit. The fruits of
the Holy Spirit are religious traits of character, and
they result from the gift of the Holy Spirit. The
latter expression means, the Holy Spirit as a gift.
It is analogous to the expression, "promise of the
Holy Spirit" in @verse
33, above, where Peter says, "having received
from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he
has shed forth this which you now see and hear." The gifts
of the Holy Spirit were various miraculous powers,
intellectual and physical. These were conferred only upon
a few individuals, while the gift of the Spirit is
promised to all who repent and are immersed.
39. Peter does not limit the promise of the Holy Spirit to
his present audience; but adds, (39) "For the
promise is to you and to your children, and to all that
are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call."
That we are right in referring the word promise, in
this sentence, to the promise of the Holy Spirit just made
by Peter, is evident from the fact that this is the only
promise made in the immediate context.
Some pedobaptist commentators have affected to find in the
words, "The promise is to you and your children,"
a show of authority for infant membership in the Church of
Christ.{30}
But Mr. Barnes, though of that school himself, has the
candor to say of this expression, "It does not refer
to children as children, and should not be adduced
to establish the propriety of infant baptism, or as
applicable particularly to infants. It is a promise,
indeed, to parents, that the blessings of salvation shall
not be confined to parents, but shall be extended also to
their posterity." That this is the true conception of
the apostle's meaning is demonstrated by the fact that the
promise in question is based upon the conditions of
repentance and immersion, with which infants could not
possibly comply.
The extension of this promise "to all who are afar
off," is not to be limited to all the Jews who
were afar off; but it is properly qualified by the
additional words, "even as many as the Lord our God
shall call." It included, therefore, every individual
who should, at any future time, be a subject of the gospel
call, and guarantees to us, of the present generation, the
gift of the Holy Spirit upon the same terms on which it
was offered to Peter's hearers on the day of Pentecost.
[44]
40. The historian had now concluded his report of Peter's
discourse, but informs us that he has given only an
epitome of it. (40) "And with many other words
did he testify and exhort, saying, Save yourselves from
this untoward generation." The term testify
refers to the argumentative portion of his discourse; and
the term exhort to the horatory portion. The latter
naturally and logically followed his statement of the
conditions of pardon, and the substance of it is
compressed by Luke into the words, "Save
yourselves from this untoward generation." The
command to save themselves must sound quite strange
in the ears of such modern theorists as affirm that men
have no ability to do, or say, or think any thing tending
to their own salvation. But this only shows how far they
have departed from apostolic speech and thought. Peter had
proposed conditions of pardon which they could comply
with, and now their salvation depended upon their
compliance with these conditions. When they complied with
them, they saved themselves. To be saved from that
untoward generation was not, as the conceit of
Universalists would have it, to escape the siege of
Jerusalem; for the great mass of them escaped that, by
dying a natural death before it took place. It was to
escape the fate which the mass of that generation were
destined to meet in eternity, on account of their sins. We
will more fully discuss the exact import of their term saved
in this and similar connections under verse
47, below.
41. The multitude, who had been so pierced to the heart by
Peter's discourse, as to cry out, "Brethren, what
shall we do?" were happily surprised to find the
terms of pardon so easy. (41) "Then they gladly
received his word, and were immersed; and the same day
there were added about three thousand souls."
The pronoun they identifies the parties immersed
with those who had cried out, What shall we do? It shows
that they promptly complied with the command which Peter
had given them. The word which they gladly received can
not be the main part of Peter's speech, for this had
pierced them to the heart; but it is the word of his
answer, which gave their feelings great relief by opening
to them so easy a method of escape from the doom which
they dreaded, and which they so richly deserved.
Times without number the objection has been urged, and as
often refuted, that three thousand men could not have been
immersed in so short a time, and with the inadequate
supply of water afforded in Jerusalem. As to the quantity
of available water, Dr. J. T. Barclay, in his work
entitled "The City of the Great King," written
during a residence of three years and a half in Jerusalem,
as a missionary, shows that Jerusalem was anciently better
supplied with water than any other city known to history
not permeated by living streams. Even to the present day,
though most of the public reservoirs are now dry, such as
the supposed pool of Bethesda, 365 feet long by 131 in
breadth, and the lower pool of Gihon, 600 long by 260 in
breadth, there are still in existence bodies of water,
such as the pool of Siloam, and the pool of Hezekiah,
affording most ample facilities for immersing any number
of persons.
As to the want of time for the immersion of so
many, any one who will make the mathematical calculation,
without which it is folly to [45] offer
the objection, will find that there was the greatest
abundance of time. Allowing that Peter's speech commenced
at nine o'clock, as he himself states in @verse
15, and that the exercises at the temple closed at
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