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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS
XXII
XXII: 1, 2. (1) "Men, brethren, and fathers, hear
my defense, which I now make to you. (2) And when
they heard that he spoke to them in the Hebrew dialect,
they kept the greater quiet." It is happily
remarked by Mr. Howson, that, had he spoken in Greek, the
majority of his hearers would have understood him; but,
"the sound of the holy tongue in that holy place fell
like a calm upon the troubled waters." It was a mark
of respect for Jewish nationality which they were not
prepared to expect from Paul; and the result was, that the
silence, which was only general at the waving of his hand,
became universal at the utterance of his first sentence.
3-16. (3) "And he said, I myself am a Jew; born
in Tarsus of Cilicia, yet brought up in this city at the
feet of Gamaliel, educated according to the strictest
doctrine of the law of our fathers, and was zealous toward
God as you all are this day. (4) I persecuted
this way, even to death; binding and delivering into
prisons both men and women; (5) as the high
priest and the whole body of the elders are my witnesses:
from whom, also, I received letters to the brethren, and
went to Damascus, to bring those who were there bound to
Jerusalem, that they might be punished. (6) But
it came to pass, as I journeyed and was drawing near to
Damascus, about noon, a great light from heaven suddenly
flashed around me. (7) I fell to the ground, and
heard a voice saying to me, Saul, Saul, why do you
persecute me? (8) And I answered, Who art thou,
Lord? He said to me, I am Jesus the Nazarene, whom you
persecute. (9) Now, they who were with me saw the
light, and were afraid; but they heard not the voice of
him who spoke to me. (10) And I said, Lord, what
shall I do? And the Lord said to me, Arise, and go into
Damascus, and there it shall be told thee concerning all
things which are appointed for thee to do. (11) And,
as I could not see for the glory of that light, I was led
by the hand by those who were with me, and went into
Damascus. (12) And one Ananias, a pious man
according to the law, well spoken of by all the Jews who
dwelt there, (13) came to me, and stood, and said
to me, Brother Saul, look up. And that moment I looked up
upon him. (14) And he said, The God of our
fathers has chosen you to know his will, and to see the
Just One, and to hear the voice of his mouth. (15) For
you shall be a witness for him to all men, of what you
have seen and heard. (16) And now, why do you
tarry? Arise, and be immersed, and wash away your sins,
calling [263] on the name
of the Lord." Such portions of this speech as
are necessary to the full understanding of Paul's
conversion, we have considered in commenting on the ninth
chapter. The words of Ananias, "Arise and be
immersed," probably demand a moment's additional
notice, on account of the use which has been made of them
by many pedobaptist writers and speakers of an inferior
grade. It is urged that the words should be rendered,
"Standing up, be baptized;" and that they
indicate that Paul was baptized on the spot, without
leaving the house. We might admit the rendering without
granting the conclusion; for the command to be baptized
required him to do whatever was necessary to that act. If
the act was immersion, it required him to go where it
could be performed, however great the distance, and the
words are entirely consistent with that idea. If he was to
be immersed, he must, of necessity, arise from his
prostrate or sitting position for that purpose. If he was
to be sprinkled, he might as well have remained, as
candidates for that ceremony now commonly do, upon his
knees.
17-21. After this brief account of his course of
persecution and his conversion, he advances to the events
which occurred upon his return to Jerusalem, and which led
to that peculiar ministry that had excited the hatred of
his hearers. (17) "And it came to pass, when I
returned to Jerusalem, and was praying in the temple, that
I was in a trance, (18) and saw him saying to me,
Make haste, and depart quickly out of Jerusalem, for they
will not receive your testimony concerning me. (19) And
I said, Lord, they know that I was imprisoning and beating
in every synagogue those who believe on thee, (20) and
when the blood of thy witness, Stephen, was shed, I myself
was standing by, and consenting to his death, and guarding
the raiment of those who slew him. (21) And he
said to me, Depart, for I will send you far hence to the
Gentiles."
By allowing Paul to speak, Lysias expected to learn
something about the charges against him, supposing that he
would address himself immediately and strictly to a
defense. What must have been his surprise, then, to hear
him, after asking the people to hear his defense, proceed
with a narrative, the bearing of which upon the case was
so obscure? It must be confessed that the speech afforded
very little of the light that he was seeking; and even to
men who are better prepared to understand it than he, it
is still a source of astonishment. Here is a man in the
hands of a heathen soldiery, with a prison-door opening
behind him, and before him a mob thirsting for his blood,
whom to appease would save him from prison, and, perhaps,
from death, yet appearing to be utterly oblivious to the
danger which surrounded him, and though permitted to
speak, making not the slightest effort to obtain release.
He could most truthfully have denied bringing Greeks into
the temple, or speaking improperly of the people, the law,
or that holy place; but he was so far elevated above all
selfish considerations, that he desired no vindication of
himself not involving a vindication of the cause he was
pleading. He saw before him a deluded multitude rushing
blindly to destruction, and though they were thirsting for
his own blood, he pitied them, and resolved to give them
light. Under the smart of the bruises they had inflicted
on him, and amid their wild outcries, he remembered [264] when
he once took part in similar mobs, and the blood of
Stephen rose up before his vision. This enabled him to
excuse their rage, and, as the vision of Christ glorified,
which he had witnessed on the road to Damascus, had
changed him from a persecutor to a disciple, he resolved
to try its effect upon them. He did not altogether
miscalculate its power; for they listened to the whole
account of his conversion with profound attention. The
narrative demonstrated the divine authority of Jesus, and
enabled Paul to assume, as a basis for his further
argument, that it was proper to do whatever he might
command. He then proceeds to account for his going to the
Gentiles. It was not my own choice, for I desired to stay
in Jerusalem. But the Lord commanded me in a vision to
leave the city. I even remonstrated against his decision,
when he peremptorily commanded, "Depart, for I will
send you far hence to the Gentiles."
22-24. When he reached this point in his discourse, he
appeared to the mob about to vindicate the course
which they condemned as criminal, instead of apologizing
for it, and their rage was renewed. (22) "Now
they heard him up to this word, then raised their voices
and said, Away with such a fellow from the earth! For it
is not fit that he should live. (23) And as they
were shouting, and tossing up their garments, and casting
dust into the air, (24) the chiliarch commanded
him to be led into the castle, saying that he should be
examined by scourging, in order that he might know on what
account they cried out so against him." The idea
of scourging a man who is assailed by a mob, to make him
confess the cause for which he is assailed, is most
abhorrent to all proper sense of justice, yet it prevailed
in the most enlightened heathen nations of antiquity.
Rome, it is true, exempted from its effects all who
enjoyed the rights of citizenship; but the existence of
such a distinction in a matter in which all human beings
should have equal rights, is a further proof of their
ignorance of the true principles of public justice. To the
enlightening and rectifying influence of Christianity,
modern nations are indebted for many happy changes in
jurisprudence.
25-29. When Paul was led within the castle, the
executioner made immediate preparation for his cruel work.
(25) "And as he was bending him forward with the
straps{1}
Paul said to the centurion, who was standing by, Is it
lawful for you to scourge a man who is a Roman, and
uncondemned? (26) When the centurion heard this,
he went and told the chiliarch, saying, Take heed what you
are about to do, for this man is a Roman. (27) Then
the chiliarch came and said to him, Tell me, are you a
Roman? And he said, Yes. (28) And the chiliarch
answered, With a great sum I obtained this citizenship.
And Paul said, But I was born so. (29) Then they
who were about to examine him immediately departed from
him; and the chiliarch was alarmed, when he knew that he
was a Roman, and that he had bound him."
Previous to applying the scourge, the victim was bent
forward upon a reclining post, to which he was bound by
straps. It was this binding which caused the alarm of the
chiliarch, and not the binding of his arms with chains.
The latter was legal, and hence Paul remained so bound,{2}
but the former was illegal. It was just at the critical
moment, [265] when he was bent
forward upon the post, and the straps were being adjusted,
that the quiet assertion of citizenship caused his
release, and struck terror into the heart of the officer.
Notwithstanding this exemption was extended only to a
favored few, we can but admire the majesty of a law, which
in a remote province, and within the walls of a prison,
suddenly released a prisoner from the whipping-post, by
the simple declaration, "I am a Roman citizen."
30. Lysias was disposed to do his duty, but he experienced
great difficulty in deciding what is was. He had first
inquired of the mob; had then heard a speech from Paul;
and had now gone as far as he dared toward the trial by
scourging; yet he knew nothing more about the charges
against his prisoner than he did at first. He determined
to make one more effort. (30) "On the next day,
desiring to know the certainty as to what he was accused
of by the Jews, he released him from his bonds, and
commanded the high priests and the whole Sanhedrim to come
together, and brought Paul down, and placed him before
them."
{1} For the correctness of this reading,
see Bloomfield, in loco.
{2} @Acts
xxii: 30; xxvi: 29.
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