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C
O M M E N T A R Y
ACTS
III
III. 1-10. Thus far,
the labors of the apostles had met with uninterrupted and
most astonishing success. Luke is now about to introduce
us to a series of conflicts, in which success and
temporary defeat alternate in the history of the Jerusalem
church.
(1) "Now Peter and John
were going up together into the temple at the hour of
prayer, the ninth hour. (2) And a certain man,
lame from his birth, was carried thither, whom they laid
daily at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful,
to ask alms of those entering into the temple: (3) who,
seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple, asked
alms. (4) And Peter, earnestly looking on him,
with John, said, Look on us. (5) And he gave heed
to them, expecting to receive something from them.
(6) But Peter said, Silver and gold I have not; but
[50] what I have, this I give
you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise up and
walk. (7) And seizing him by the right hand, he
lifted him up, and immediately his feet and ankles
received strength; (8) and leaping forth, he
stood and walked, and entered with them into the temple,
walking, and leaping, and praising God. (9) And
all the people saw him walking and praising God, (10)
and recognized him, that it was he who had sat for
alms at the Beautiful gate of the temple. And they were
filled with wonder and amazement at that which had
happened unto him."
This is by no means the first miracle which had been
wrought by the apostles since the day of Pentecost; for we
have seen, in @chapter
ii: 43, that many signs and wonders had been wrought,
by which the people were filled with awe. But the
circumstances attending this miracle were calculated to
awaken, as it did, an unusual excitement. The Beautiful
gate of the temple, so called because of its magnificent
folding doors, fifty feet high and forty feet wide,
covered with gold and Corinthian brass, was the favorite
pass-way into the temple. The subject of this cure, being
laid every day at this gate to beg, was well known to all
who frequented the temple. From the natural curiosity of
the benevolent in reference to the afflictions of those to
whom they minister, it was probably known to all that he
had been a cripple from his birth. Besides this, the time
of the cure was when a multitude of pious people were
entering the temple for evening prayer; and their
attention was unexpectedly arrested by the leaping and
shouting of the man who was healed. As they witnessed his
ecstasy and saw him clinging to Peter and John, no one
asked the meaning of the scene, for all saw at once that
the cripple had been healed by the apostles, and they
stood gazing in amazement upon Peter and John.
11-15. The apostles took a position in one of the open
colonnades which faced the inner side of the temple wall,
called Solomon's Portico. (11) "And while the
lame man who was healed was holding fast Peter and John,
all the people ran together to them on the portico called
Solomon's, greatly wondering." The admiration of
the multitude was directed toward Peter and John; and was
understood by Peter to indicate that they attributed the
cure rather to the singular holiness of himself and John,
than to the power of their master. He determined to take
advantage of the circumstances, by turning their excited
thoughts into the proper channel. (12) "Then
Peter, seeing this, answered to the people, Men of Israel,
why do you wonder at this, or why do you look earnestly on
us, as though by our own power or piety we have caused
this man to walk? (13) The God of Abraham, and of
Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, has glorified
his son Jesus, whom ye delivered up, and rejected in the
presence of Pilate, when he had determined to let him go.
(14) But you rejected the holy and just, and desired a
murderer to be granted to you; (15) and you
killed the author of life, whom God has raised from the
dead, of which we are witnesses."
In this passage the apostle makes the same statement, in
substance, with which he introduced the main theme of his
former discourse. The antithetical style adopted on this
occasion gave to it a force [51] scarcely
excelled by his former discourse, while it was even more
penetrating to the consciences of his hearers. The fact
that the God of their fathers had glorified Jesus,
is contrasted with the fact that they had delivered him up
to die; their refusal to let him be released, with the
cruel Pilate's determination to let him go; their
rejection of one holy and just, with their demand that a
murder should be released to them; and their murder of
him, with his authorship of all life. These four points of
antithesis form the four steps of a grand climax. Whom the
God of our fathers glorified, you have delivered up to
die. Your criminality is heightened by the fact, that when
even a heathen judge declared him innocent, and desired to
release him to you, you rejected him. Even this does not
express the enormity of your guilt, for you yourselves
knew him whom you rejected to be holy and just, and
preferred the release of one whom you knew to be a
murderer. But above all, in murdering him, you put to
death the author of life, who has arisen from
the dead. We might challenge the pages of all the classics
for a climax more thrilling in its effect upon the
audience, or for a happier combination of climax and
antithesis. The effect upon the multitude was
overwhelming.{1} The facts declared were
undeniable, except the resurrection, and of this the men
who had just healed the cripple were the witnesses.
16. But Peter does not stop short with this climax,
terminating in the resurrection from the dead. He proceeds
to prove his present power and glory by the facts which
were then filling them with amazement. (16) "And
his name, through faith in his name, has made this man
strong, whom ye see and know. Even the faith which is
through him, has given him this perfect soundness in the
presence of you all." In this verse, there is
one of those repetitions common with extemporaneous
speakers, and designed to express more guardedly a thought
already uttered. Perhaps the formula employed by Peter in
the act of healing, "In the name of Jesus of
Nazareth, rise up and walk," suggested to him the
phraseology, "his name, through faith in his
name, has made this man strong." But lest the
superstitious audience might imagine that there was some charm
in the mere name of Jesus, a mistake which was
afterwards made by certain Jews in Ephesus,{2}
he adds, "The faith which is through
him has given him this perfect soundness." The faith
was not that of the cripple; for it is clear, from the
description, that he had no faith. When Peter said to him,
"Look on us," the man looked up, expecting to
receive alms. And even when Peter told him, in the name of
Jesus, to rise up and walk, he did not attempt to move
till Peter "took him by the right hand, and lifted
him up." He exhibited no faith, either in Jesus, or
in Peter's healing power, till after he found himself able
to stand and walk. We must locate the faith, therefore, in
the apostles; and in this we are sustained by the fact
that the exercise of miraculous power, by those in
possession of spiritual gifts, was always dependent upon
their faith; Peter was empowered to walk upon water; but,
when his faith wavered, he began to sink, and Jesus said,
"O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou
doubt?" Nine of the apostles, once, having failed to
cast out a demon, asked Jesus, "Why could [52] we
not cast him out?" He replied, "Because of your
unbelief."{3} In answer to their prayers,
also, many miracles were wrought, but it was only
"the prayer of faith" which could heal
the sick.{4}
It must be here observed that faith was necessary to the exercise
of spiritual gifts, already imparted, and that no
faith, however strong, ever enabled the uninspired
to work miracles. The notion, therefore, which has existed
in some minds, from time to time, ever since the apostolic
period, that if our faith were strong enough, we, too,
could work miracles, has as little foundation in scripture
as it has in experiment.
17, 18. At this point in the discourse there is a marked
change in Peter's tone and manner, which we can attribute
to nothing else than some visible indication of the
intense pain produced by what he had already said. He had
made a most terrific onslaught upon them, and exposed
their criminality in unsparing terms; but now, induced by
some perceptible change in their countenances, he softens
his style, and extenuates their fault. (17) "And
now, brethren, I know that you did it in ignorance, as did
also your rulers. (18) But those things which God
had before announced through the mouth of all his
prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath thus
fulfilled." That they acted in ignorance of the
real character of Jesus was an extenuation of their crime,
but it did not render them innocent; for the preceding
remarks were intended to convict them of crime, and in his
preceding discourse he charged that with wicked hands
they had crucified and slain him. Peter assumes, what none
of them could honestly deny, that it was by wicked
motives they were impelled to the fatal deed.
In connection, with this assertion of their criminality,
he states another fact hard to be reconciled with it in
the philosophy of man, that, in the commission of this
crime, God was fulfilling what he had declared through his
prophets should be done. Once before, in speaking of this
same event, Peter had brought these two apparently
conflicting facts, the sovereignty of God, and the free
agency of man, into juxtaposition, when he said,
"Him, being delivered by the determined purpose
and foreknowledge of God, you have taken, and with wicked
hands have crucified and slain." That God had
predetermined the death of Jesus can not be denied without
contradicting both the prophets and the apostles; and that
they acted wickedly in doing what God had determined
should be done, Peter affirms, and three thousand of them
on Pentecost, with many more on this occasion, admitted
it. If any man can frame a theory by which to
philosophically reconcile these two facts, we will assent
to it, if we can understand it; but unless both facts,
unaltered have a place in the theory, we must reject it.
We reject every man who denies either of the facts; but
while he admits them both, we will not dispute with him
about the theory upon which he attempts to reconcile them.
This much, fidelity to the word of God on the one hand,
and brotherly kindness on the other hand, demand of us. In
the mean time, it is better to follow Peter's example. He
lays the two facts side by side, appealing to the prophets
for the proof of one, and to the consciences [53] of
men for the proof of the other, and there he leaves them,
seeming not to realize that he had involved himself in the
slightest difficulty. It is folly to attempt to climb
where we are certain of a fall.
19-21. Having now fully demonstrated the Messiahship of
Jesus, and exposed the criminality of those of who had
condemned him, the apostle next presents to his hearers
the conditions of pardon. (19) "Repent,
therefore, and turn, that your sins may be blotted out,
and that seasons of refreshing may come from the presence
of the Lord, (20) and he may send Jesus Christ,
who has before preached to you, (21) whom heaven
must retain{5} until the time of the
restoration of all things which God has spoken, through
the mouth of all his holy prophets, since the world began."
Here, as in his former statement of the conditions of
pardon, the apostle makes no mention of faith. But, having
labored, from the beginning of his discourse, to convince
his hearers, they necessarily understood that his command,
based as it was, upon what he had said, implied the
assumption that they believed it. A command based upon an
argument, or upon testimony, always implies the
sufficiency of the proof, and assume that the hearer is
convinced. Moreover, Peter knew very well that none would
repent at his command who did not believe what he had
said; hence, in every view of the case, he proceeded,
naturally and safely, in omitting mention of faith.
In the command, "Repent and turn," the word
"turn" expresses something to be done subsequent
to repentance. There is no way to avoid this conclusion,
unless we suppose that turn is equivalent to
repent; but this is inadmissible, because there could
be no propriety in adding the command turn, if what
it means had been already expressed in the command repent.
We may observe, that the term reform, which some
critics would employ instead of repent, would
involve the passage in a repetition not less
objectionable. To reform and to turn to the Lord
are equivalent expressions, hence it would be a useless
repetition to command men, Reform, and turn.
In order to a proper understanding of this passage, it is
necessary to determine the exact scriptural import of the
term repent. The most popular conception of its
meaning is "godly sorrow for sin." But,
according to Paul, "godly sorrow works
repentance in order to salvation."{6}
Instead of being identical with repentance, therefore, it
is the immediate case which leads to repentance.
Paul says to the Corinthians, in the same connection,
"Now I rejoice, not that you were made sorry, but
that you sorrowed to repentance." This remark
shows that it is sorrow which brings men to repentance, is
also implies that there may be sorrow for sin without
repentance. That there is a distinction between these two
states of mind, and that sorrow for sin may exist without
repentance, is also implied in commanding those on
Pentecost who were already pierced to the heart, to
repent. It is also evident from the case of Judas,
who experienced the most intense sorrow for sin, but was
not brought to repentance. His feeling is expressed by a
different term in the original, which is [54] never
used to express the change which the gospel requires, and
is equivalent to regret, though sometimes, as in
his case, it expresses the idea of remorse.
In thus tracing the distinction between "godly
sorrow" and "repentance," we have
ascertained the fact that repentance is produced by sorrow
for sin, and this must constitute one element in the
definition of the term. Whatever it is, it is produced by
sorrow for sin. Is it not, then, reformation? Reformation
is certainly produced by sorrow for sin; but, as we have
already observed, turning, which is equivalent to reforming,
is distinguished, in the text before us, from repenting.
The same distinction is elsewhere apparent. John the
Immerser, in requiring the people to "bring forth fruits
meet for repentance," clearly distinguishes
between repentance and those deeds of a reformed life
which he styles fruits meet for repentance. With
him, reformation is the fruit of repentance, not
its equivalent. The distinction is that between fruit and
the tree which bears it. When Jesus speaks of repenting seven
times a day,{7} he certainly means
something different from reformation; for that would
require more time. Likewise, when Peter required those on
Pentecost to repent and be immersed, if by the term
repent he had meant reform, he would
certainly have given them time to reform before they were
immersed, instead of immersing them immediately. Finally,
the original term is sometimes used in connection with
such prepositions as are not suitable to the idea of
reformation. As a general rule it is followed by apo,
or ek, which are suitable to either idea;
but in @2
Cor. xii: 21, it is followed by epi with
the dative: "Many have not repented, epi,
of the uncleanness, and fornication, and
lasciviousness which they have committed." Now men do
not reform of their evil deeds, neither will the
preposition, in this case, bear a rendering which would
suit the term reform.{8} Reform,
then, does not express the same idea as repent, but, as we
have seen above, reformation is the fruit or result
of repentance.
Seeing now that repentance is produced by sorrow for sin,
and results in reformation, we can have no further
difficulty in ascertaining exactly what it is; for the
only result of sorrow for sin which leads to reformation,
is a change of the will in reference to sin. The
etymological meaning of metanoia is a change
of mind; but the particular element of the mind which
undergoes this change is the will. Strictly
defined, therefore, repentance is a change of the will,
produced by sorrow for sin, and leading to reformation.
If the change of will is not produced by sorrow for sin,
it is not repentance, in the religious sense,
though it may be metanoia, in the classic
sense. Thus, Esau "found no place for metanoias,
a change of mind, though he sought it carefully
with tears."{9} Here the word designates a
change in the mind of Isaac in reference to the blessing
which he had already given to Jacob; but this change did
not depend upon sorrow for sin, hence it was not
repentance, and should not be so translated. Again, if the
change of will, though produced by sorrow for sin, is one
which does not lead to reformation, it is not repentance;
for there was a change [55] in the
will of Judas, produced by sorrow for sin, yet Judas did
not repent. The change in his case led to suicide,
not to reformation; it is, therefore, not expressed
by metanoeo, but by metamelomai.
Our definition, therefore, is complete, without
redundancy.{10}
We can now perceive, still more clearly than before, that
in the command, "Repent and turn," the terms repent,
and turn, express two distinct changes, which take
place in the order of the words. Their relative meaning is
well expressed by Dr. Bloomfield, who says that the former
denotes "a change of mind," the latter
"a change of conduct." Mr. Barnes also
well and truly remarks: "This expression ('be
converted,') conveys an idea not at all to be found in
the original. It conveys the idea of passivity--BE converted,
as if they were to yield to some foreign influence that
they were now resisting. But the idea of being passive
in this is not conveyed by the original word. The word
properly means to turn--to return to a path from
which one has gone astray; and then to turn away from
sins, or to forsake them." That turn, rather
than be converted, is the correct rendering of the
term, is not disputed by any competent authority; we shall
assume, therefore, that it is correct, and proceed to
inquire what Peter intended to designate by this term.
As already observed, it designates a change in the
conduct. A change of conduct, however, must, from the very
necessity of the case, have a beginning; and that
beginning consists in the first act of the better life.
The command to turn is obeyed when this first act
is performed. Previous to that, the man has not turned;
subsequent to it he has turned; and the act itself
is the turning act. If, in turning to the Lord, any
one of a number of actions might be the first that the
penitent performed, the command to turn would not
specially designate any of these, but might be obeyed by
the performance of either. But the fact is that one single
act was uniformly enjoined upon the penitent, as the first
overt act of obedience to Christ, and that was to be
immersed. This Peter's present hearers understood.
They had heard him say to parties like themselves,
"Repent and be immersed;" and the first act they
saw performed by those who signified their repentance, was
to be immersed. When, now, he commands them to repent and turn,
they could but understand that they were to turn as their
predecessors had done, by being immersed. The
commands turn, and be immersed, are
equivalent, not because the words have the same meaning,
but because the command, "Turn to the Lord" was
uniformly obeyed by the specific act of being immersed.
Previous to immersion, men repented, but did not turn;
after immersion, they had turned, and immersion was
the turning act.
We may reach the same conclusion by another course of
reasoning. The command Turn occupies the same
position between repentance and the remission of sins, in
this discourse, that the command Be immersed had
occupied in Peter's former discourse. He then said,
"Repent and be immersed for the remission of
sins;" now he says, "Repent and turn that
your sins may be blotted out." Now, when his present
hearers heard him command them to turn in order to
the [56] same blessing for which he
had formerly commanded them to be immersed, they could but
understand that the generic word turn was used with
specific reference to immersion, and the the substitution
is founded on the fact that a penitent sinner turns
to God by being immersed.
This interpretation was first advanced, in modern times,
by Alexander Campbell, about thirty years ago, and it
excited against him then an opposition which still rages.
The real ground of this opposition is not the
interpretation itself, but a perversion of it. The word conversion
being used in popular terminology in the sense of a change
of heart, when Mr. Campbell announced that the word
incorrectly rendered in this passage, be converted,
means to turn to the Lord by immersion, the
conclusion was seized by his opponents that he rejected
all change of heart, and substituted immersion in its
stead. He has reiterated, again and again, the sense in
which he employed the term convert, and that the
heart must be changed by faith and repentance previous
to the conversion or turning here commanded
by Peter; yet those who are determined upon doing him
injustice still keep up the wicked and senseless clamor of
thirty years ago. The odium theologicum, like the
scent of musk, is not soon nor easily dissipated. There
are always those to whose nostrils the odor is grateful.
There are several facts connected with the use of the
original term, epistrepho, in the New
Testament, worthy of notice. It occurs thirty-nine
times, in eighteen of which it is used for the mere
physical act of turning or returning.
Nineteen times it expresses a change from evil to good,
and twice{11} from good to evil. The
term convert, therefore, were retained as the
rendering, a man could, in the scriptural sense, be
converted to Satan as well as to God. But be
converted can never truly represent the original,
though it is so rendered six times in the common version.
The original is invariably in the active voice, and it is
making a false and pernicious impression on the English
reader to render it by the passive voice. If we render it
truthfully by the term convert, we would have such
readings as these: "Repent and convert;"
"lest they should see with their eyes, and hear with
their ears, and understand with their hearts, and should convert,
and I should heal them," &c. In a correct version
of the New Testament, the expression be converted
could not possibly occur; for there is nothing in the
original to justify it.
Not less worthy of observation is the fact, that while the
change called conversion is popularly attributed to
a divine power, as the only power capable of effecting it,
and it is considered scarcely less than blasphemy to speak
of a man converting another, or converting himself, yet
the original word never does refer either to God, or
Christ, or the Holy Spirit, as its agent. On the contrary,
in five of its nineteen occurrences in the sense of
a change from evil to good, it is employed of a human
agent, as of John the Immerser, Paul, or some brother in
the Church;{12} and in the remaining fourteen
instances, the agent is the person who is the subject
of the change. Thus, men may be properly said to turn
their fellows, yet the subjects of this act are [57] never
said to be turned, but to turn to the Lord.
The term invariably expresses something that the sinner is
to do. These observations show how immeasurably the
term convert has departed, in popular usage, from
the sense of the original which it so falsely represents,
and how imperious the necessity for displacing it from our
English Bibles. The word turn corresponds to the
original in meaning, in usage, in inflections, and
translates it unambiguously in every instance.{13}
Peter commands his hearers to repent and turn, in order to
three distinct objects: first, "That your sins
may be blotted out;" second, "That
seasons of refreshing may come from the presence of the
Lord;" third, "That he may send Jesus
Christ who was before preached to you." It is
supposed, by the commentators generally, that the last two
events are contemplated by Peter as cotemporaneous, so
that the "seasons of refreshing" spoken of are
those which will take place at the second coming of
Christ. That there will be seasons of refreshing then, is
true; but there are others more immediately dependent upon
the obedience here enjoined by Peter, to which the
reference is more natural. The pardon of sins and the gift
of the Holy Spirit, which were immediately consequent upon
repentance and immersion, certainly bring "seasons of
refreshing," which might well be made the subject of
promise to hearers supposed to be trembling with guilty
apprehension. The reference of these words is, doubtless,
to the gift of the Spirit; for they occupy the same place
here that the gift of the Spirit did in the former
discourse. Then, after repentance, immersion, and the
remission of sins, came the promise of the Holy Spirit;
now, after the same three, somewhat differently
expressed--i. e., repentance, turning to the
Lord, and blotting out of sins--comes the promise of
"seasons of refreshing from the presence of the
Lord." They are, then, the fresh and cheering
enjoyments of him whose sins are forgiven, and who is
taught to believe that the presence of the approving
Spirit of God is with him.
The third promise, that God would send Jesus Christ, who
was before preached to them, was dependent upon their
obedience, only in so far as they would thus contribute to
the object for which he will come, to raise from the dead,
and receive into glory, all who are his. It is qualified
by the remark, "whom heaven must retain until the
times of the restoration of all things of which God has
spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the
world began." It is difficult to determine the exact
force of the term restoration in this connection.
It is commonly referred to a state of primeval order,
purity, and happiness, which, it is supposed, will exist
just previous to the second coming of Christ.{14}
But the apostle speaks of a restoration of all things of
which God has spoken by the mouth of all his holy
prophets. Now, there are many things spoken of by the
prophets beside those which refer to the final triumphs of
the truth, and all these are included in the
expression. Some of these things will not consist,
individually considered, in restoration, but in destruction.
Still, the prevailing object of all the things of which
the prophets [58] have spoken, even
the destruction of wicked nations and apostate Churches,
is to finally restore that moral saw which God
originally exercised over the whole earth. It is doubtless
this thought which suggested the term restoration,
though reference is had to the fulfillment of all the
prophesies which are to be fulfilled on earth. Not till
all are fulfilled will Christ come again.
22, 23. For the twofold purpose of giving confirmation to
the claims of Jesus, and warning his hearers as to the
consequences of rejecting him, the apostle next introduces
a well-known prophesy of Moses.{15} (22) "For
Moses, indeed, said to the fathers, A prophet shall the
Lord your God raise up for you, from among your brethren,
like me: him shall ye hear in all things, whatever he
shall say to you. (23) And it shall come to pass
that every soul who will not hear that prophet shall be
destroyed from among the people." Whether Peter
was right in applying this prophesy to Christ depends upon
the likeness between him and Moses. This likeness may be
traced in many subordinate incidents of his history, but
lies chiefly in that which distinguishes both Moses and
Christ from all other prophets. Moses as a deliverer of
his people, and an original lawgiver. No prophet had been
like him in these two particulars. The chief mission of
the other prophets, so far as their cotemporaries were
concerned, was to enforce the law of Moses. But Christ had
now come, speaking by his our authority, offering a more
glorious deliverance to the people than that from Egypt,
and issuing new laws for the government of men. This
proved that he, and he alone, was the prophet spoken of by
Moses, and Peter's hearers now perceive that the authority
of Moses himself binds them to the authority of Jesus, and
that they must hear him, on the penalty of destruction if
they refuse.
24. Not content with bringing to bear the testimony of
Moses, Peter adds to it the combined voices of all the
prophets: (24) "And, indeed, all the prophets,
from Samuel, and those following in order, as many as have
spoken, have also foretold these days." This
declaration is to be understood only of those prophets
whose predictions are recorded in the Old Testament, for
to those alone could Peter appeal in proof of his
proposition. It was conceded by the Jews, that all the
prophets had spoken of the days of the Messiah, and it was
already proved, by Peter's preceding remarks, that Jesus
was the Messiah; hence the argument is now complete.
25, 26. Having completed his argument, in which the
Messiahship of Jesus was demonstrated by the miraculous
cure they had witnessed, and by the testimony of all the
prophets, from Moses and Samuel down to Malachi, Peter
next makes a powerful appeal to his hearers, based upon
their veneration for the fathers of their nation, and for
the covenant which God had made with them. (25) "You
are the sons of the prophets, and of the covenant which
God made with our fathers, saying to Abraham, And in thy
seed shall all the kingdoms of the earth be blessed.
(26) Unto you first, God, having raised up his son
Jesus, has sent him to bless you, in turning away each one
of you from his iniquities." This was a tender
appeal to their national sympathies, made more effective
by the statement that to them first because of
their [59] relation to the prophets
and to Abraham, God had sent his risen Son to bless them,
before visiting the rest of the world.
The use here made of the promise to Abraham shows the true
interpretation of it. It is to be fulfilled, according to
Peter, in turning living men away from their iniquities.
Those only, therefore, who, under the influence of the
gospel, turn away from their iniquities, can lay claim to
the blessings contemplated in this promise. That all the
kindreds of the earth were to be blessed does not affect
this conclusion, except to extend its application to those
of all nations who should, at any period of time, turn
from their iniquities. The Universalian view of this
promise is contradicted by all the apostolic comments upon
it; for they all unite in denying the blessing to any but
those who in this life believe and turn to the Lord.{16}
{1} See below, on verse 17.
{2} @Acts
xix: 13.
{3} @Matt.
xvii: 19, 20.
{4} @James
v: 15.
{5} Receive
(common version) is the literal meaning of the original dekasthai,
but it is certainly used here in the sense of retain.
Heaven had already received him; it was yet to retain
him.
{6} @2
Cor. vii: 10.
{7} @Luke
xvii: 4.
{8} For
the suggestion of this criticism, I am indebted to my
friend and brother, H. T. Anderson.
{9} @Heb.
xii: 17.
{10} In
perfecting this definition, I am indebted to Prof. W. K.
Pendleton, of Bethany College, for valuable suggestions.
{11} @Gal.
iv: 9; 2 Peter ii: 21.
{12} @Luke
i: 16, 17; Acts xxvi: 18; James v: 19, 20.
{13} It
is gratifying to observe that the incipient version of the
American Bible Union corresponds to the views here
expressed.
{14}
Hackett.
{15} @Deut.
xviii: 15-19.
{16} See
@Gal.
iii: 7-9, et al.)
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