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C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS
VII
VII:
1. "Then said the high priest, Are these things
so?" Stephen responds in a long and powerful
discourse.
There is great diversity of opinion among commentators, as
to the logical bearing and connection of this discourse.
We would naturally expect to find in it--if we regard it
as properly a defense--a formal response to the charge
which had been preferred. But it contains no direct answer
to any of the specifications. He neither admits nor denies
what was charged in reference to the destruction of the
temple by Jesus and the changing of the customs delivered
by Moses; though his silence may be regarded as an
admission that the witnesses had spoken the truth on these
points. Neither does he formally answer to the charge of
blasphemy against Moses and against God, or against the
holy temple and the law. The only thing in the discourse
that has even an indirect bearing in this way, is his
frequent reference to facts contained in the writings of
Moses, which has been understood, by some commentators, as
intended to indicate a degree of respect for Moses
inconsistent with a disposition to speak blasphemy against
him. But if such was his purpose, it is unaccountable that
he should have pursued so indirect a course, instead of
distinctly avowing the sentiments he intended to indicate.
Again, this supposition can not account for the
introduction of so many facts connected with the
persecution of various individuals.
The best statement of the drift of the discourse, I think,
is this: The charge against him was hypocritically
preferred, and his judges had no intention to investigate
it, but were using it merely as an excuse for [81] his
predetermined condemnation to death. They were now giving
him somewhat the form for a trial, to keep up appearances
before the people. Under such circumstances, Stephen knew
that it would be useless to offer a formal defense; and,
therefore, he does not undertake it. He sees, however,
that his persecutors were identifying themselves, by their
proceedings, with the unbelieving and persecuting portion
of their forefathers, and he determines to make them stand
forth to the people in this their true position. In
prosecuting this purpose he selects his material from the
writings of Moses, and shows that his accusers are with
the persecuting party, while his Master and himself are
side by side with Moses and others whom they had
persecuted: Thus he hurls back upon them, and fastens on
them, effectually, the charge which they had falsely
preferred against him.
2-4. We will now take up the different sections of the
discourse, treating each separately, and showing their
connected bearing upon his main purpose. Before exhibiting
the manner in which Moses was treated by the ancestors of
his audience, he first shows that the mission on which
Moses came was a subject of prophesy: thus indicating, at
the outset, an analogy between it and that of Christ. To
do this, he must begin with Abraham, to whom this prophesy
was first given; but his reference to Abraham is only for
the historical introduction of his main theme. (2) "And
he said: Men, brethren, and fathers, hearken. The God of
glory appeared to our father Abraham, when he was in
Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Haran, (3) and
said to him, Get thee out from thy country, and from thy
kindred, and come into a land which I will show thee.
(4) Then he came out of the land of the Chaldeans, and
dwelt in Haran: and thence, after his father died, he
removed into this land in which you now dwell."
5-8. Having now introduced Abraham, and brought him into
the land of Canaan, Stephen quotes the prophesy, connected
with the fulfillment of which he is to find the chief
points of his argument. (5) "And he gave him no
inheritance in it, not a footprint: and he promised to
give it for a possession to him and to his seed after him,
when as yet he had no child. (6) But God spoke
thus: That his seed should sojourn in a strange land, and
they should bring them into bondage, and afflict them four
hundred years. (7) And the nation to whom they
shall be in bondage, I will judge, said God, and after
these things they shall come forth, and serve me in this
place. (8) And he gave him the covenant of
circumcision; and so he begot Isaac, and circumcised him
the eighth day; and Isaac, Jacob; and Jacob, the twelve
patriarchs."
The period of four hundred years is taken by Stephen from
@Genesis
xv: 13, where God expresses himself, in round terms,
of a period which was, more accurately, four hundred and
thirty years, as we find in @Exodus
xii: 40, 41. This was not the period of their actual
sojourn in Egypt; but, as we learn from Paul, (@Galatians
iii: 17,) and from the genealogical tables in Genesis
and Exodus, it extended from the call of Abraham to the
departure from Egypt.
9-16. The speaker next proceeds to recount the
circumstances which brought the people down into Egypt, in
order that the rejection of Joseph, and the final
salvation of the whole family through him, might stand out
before his hearers, and be made to bear upon his final
[82] conclusion. (9) "And
the patriarchs, moved with envy, sold Joseph into Egypt.
And God was with him, (10) and delivered him out
of all his afflictions, and gave him favor and wisdom in
the sight of Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and he made him
governor over Egypt and all his house. (11) Now,
there came a famine on all the land of Egypt and Canaan,
and great affliction; and our fathers found no sustenance.
(12) But Jacob, having heard that there was grain in
Egypt, sent out our fathers the first time. (13) And
at the second time Joseph was made known to his brothers,
and Joseph's kindred was made known to Pharaoh. (14) Then
Joseph sent and called to him his father Jacob and all his
kindred, seventy-five souls. (15) And Jacob went
down into Egypt, and died, he and our fathers, (16) and
were carried over into Sychem, and laid in the sepulcher
which Jacob bought for a sum of money from the sons of
Emmor, the father of Sychem."
There is a numerical discrepancy between moses and
Stephen, in reference to the number of Jacob's family when
they went into Egypt. Stephen makes then seventy-five,
while Moses states them at seventy, including Joseph's
family and himself.{1} The Septuagint
translation of Genesis agrees with Stephen. Various
methods of reconciling these statements are proposed, of
which the only satisfactory one is this. The number given
by Moses includes all "who came out of his loins,
besides Jacob's sons' wives."{2} The
number given by Stephen must, then, include five of
their wives, who were, probably, all that were then
living. The translators of the Septuagint, having some
historical evidence, now lost to us, that five of their
wives went with them, saw fit to fill up the number in
their translation, and Stephen followed their enumeration.
It was Jacob, and not Abraham, who purchased the sepulcher
from the sons of Emmor, as is certain from the history
given in @
Genesis xxxiii: 19, 20; yet it is attributed to
Abraham here in the common version, and most of the Greek
manuscripts. It is far more likely, however, that the
manuscripts should err, in a case of this kind, than that
the error should have been committed by Stephen or by
Luke. I have, therefore, not hesitated to insert the name
of Jacob, instead of Abraham, in the text. Dr.
Bloomfield says, "The best critics are of the opinion
that Abraham is spurious."
17-29. From this glance at the leading points in the
history of Joseph, Stephen advances to the case of Moses,
showing that his brethren rejected him in like manner, and
were also finally delivered by him. (17) "But
when the time of the promise of which God had sworn to
Abraham was drawing near, the people increased and were
multiplied in Egypt, (18) until another king
arose who knew not Joseph. (19) The same dealt
craftily with our kindred, and afflicted our fathers, so
that they cast out their young children, in order that
they might not live. (20) In which time Moses was
born, and was exceedingly beautiful. He was nourished in
his his father's house three months. (21) And
when he was cast out, Pharaoh's daughter took him up, and
nourished him for her own son. (22) And Moses was
educated in all the learning of the Egyptians, and was
powerful in words and in deeds. (23) And when he
was full forty years old, it came into his heart to look
after his brethren, the children of Israel. (24) And
seeing one of them suffer wrong, [83] he
defended and avenged him who was oppressed, smiting the
Egyptian. (25) Now he thought that his brethren
would understand that God would, by his hand, give them
salvation; but they did not understand. (26) The
next day he appeared to them as they were fighting, and
would have brought them to peace, saying, Men, you are
brethren; why do you wrong one another? (27) But
he who was wronging his neighbor thrust him away, saying,
Who made you a ruler and a judge over us? (28) Do
you wish to kill me as you killed that Egyptian yesterday?
(29) Then Moses fled at this word, and became a
sojourner in the land of Midian where he begot two sons."
In the rejection of Moses by his countrymen, when he was
seeking to deliver them from bondage, according to the
promise of God, Stephen has before the minds of the
Sanhedrim another case bearing upon his final conclusion.
It is true, that as yet they could not anticipate the use
he intended to make of it, but the obscurity of his design
awakened their curiosity, and rendered their mortification
the more intense when at last it was suddenly developed.
If they could have anticipated it, they would have stopped
his mouth at the beginning.
30-37. There were other incidents in the life of Moses
fully as much to his purpose as this; and to these he
proceeds to advert. (30) "And when forty years
were completed, there appeared to him, in the wilderness
of Mount Sinai, an angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in
a bush. (31) When Moses saw it, he wondered at
the sight, and as he drew near to observe it, the voice of
the Lord came to him. (32) I am the God of your
fathers, the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob. Then Moses trembled, and did not dare to
observe it. (33) And the Lord said to him, Put
off thy shoes from thy feet; for the place on which thou
standest is holy ground. (34) I have surely seen
the affliction of my people who are in Egypt, and have
heard their groaning, and have come down to deliver them;
and now, come, I will send thee into Egypt. (35) The
same Moses whom they rejected, saying, Who made thee a
ruler and a judge? the same did God send to be a ruler and
a deliverer, by the hand of the angel who appeared to him
at the bush. (36) He led them out, after doing
wonders and signs in the land of Egypt, and in the Red
Sea, and in the wilderness forty years. (37) This
is the same Moses who said to the children of Israel, A
prophet shall the Lord your God raise up to you from your
brethren like me; him shall ye hear." In this
passage, the speaker has not only presented, in a most
emphatic manner, the contrast between the rejection of
Moses by his brethren, and his appointment by God to the
very office of ruler and deliverer, which they refused
him, but has also made a further advance toward his final
purpose, by introducing the prophesy uttered by this same
Moses concerning the Messiah. This prophesy was still more
apposite, because it refuted the charge that he had spoken
blasphemy against Moses, in saying that Christ would
change the customs appointed by him. If Moses himself
foretold the coming of a successor who should supersede
him, he alone pays proper respect to Moses who submits to
his successor.
38-40. To keep prominent the ill treatment received by
Moses at the hands of the people, the speaker proceeds to
note their conduct in [84] the
wilderness. (38) "This is he that was in the
congregation in the wilderness, with the angel who spoke
to him at Mount Sinai, and with our fathers, who received
the living oracles to give to us. (39) Whom our
fathers were not willing to obey, but thrust him from
them, and in their hearts turned back into Egypt,
(40) saying to Aaron, Make us Gods who shall go before
us; for this Moses, who led us out of the land of Egypt,
we know not what is become of him." This
instance of their rejection of Moses was much more
flagrant than the first, seeing that it occurred
immediately after the most splendid manifestations of
God's presence with him; and that, in the very words which
they addressed to Aaron, they acknowledged that it was he
who had brought them out of Egypt. These circumstances
also render more striking the analogy which Stephen is
about to develop between him and Jesus; for he also had
been rejected, notwithstanding the admission, by his
enemies, that he had wrought miracles.
41-43. Stephen next shows that the same people who so
often rejected the servants of God, likewise rejected God
himself. (41) "They made a calf in those days,
and brought sacrifice to the idol, and rejoiced in the
works of their own hands. (42) And God turned,
and gave them up to serve the host of heaven, even as it
is written in the book of the prophets, O house of Israel,
have you offered to me slain beasts and sacrifices during
forty years in the wilderness? (43) You have even
taken up the tabernacle of Moloch, and the star of your
god Remphan, figures which you made, to worship them; and
I will carry you away beyond Babylon." With this
brief glance at the subsequent fate of the people who had
so often rejected their deliverers, covering a period of
many centuries, and terminating with their captivity in
Babylon, Stephen concludes his summary of facts; but,
previous to the final application, which he saw would
raise a storm in the Assembly, he has a few words in
reference to the temple.
44-50. Instead of either admitting or denying the charge
of blasphemy against the temple, he undertakes to show the
true religious value of that building. This he does, by
first alluding to the movable and perishable nature of the
tabernacle, which preceded the temple, and then, by
showing, from the prophets, that the presence of God is
not limited to temples made with hands. (44) "Our
fathers had the tabernacle of witness in the wilderness,
as he had appointed, saying to Moses that he should make
it according to the pattern which he had seen; (45) which
also, our fathers, having received, brought in with Joshua
within the possession of the Gentiles, whom God drove out
before the face of our fathers until the days of David,
(46) who found favor before God, and desired to find a
dwelling for the God of Jacob. (47) But Solomon
built him a house. (48) Yet the Most High dwells
not in temples made with hands, as says the prophet,
(49) Heaven is my throne, and the earth my footstool.
What house will you build for me? says the Lord; or what
is my place of rest? (50) Did not my hand make
all these things?" By this statement, the
speaker intrenches himself behind undisputed facts of
their own history, and the sentiments of their own
prophets, in reference to the temple, and is now ready to
spring upon them the whole concealed power of the
carefully arranged facts from the life of Moses and of
Joseph. [85]
51-53. As Joseph, the divinely-selected savior of his
brethren, had been sold by those brethren into slavery;
and as Moses, divinely selected to deliver Israel from
bondage, was at first rejected by them to become a
sojourner in Midian, and was then sent back by the God of
their fathers to be rejected by them again and again,
notwithstanding the most indisputable manifestations of
God's presence with him; and as all the prophets had met
with a similar fortune, so, now, the final prophet, of
whom Moses and all the prophets had spoken, had been
rejected and slain by the sons of these persecuting
fathers. The combined power of all these facts and
analogies is now concentrated in the closing paragraph of
the speech, and expressed in these terrific words: (51)
"Stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and
ears, you are always resisting the Holy Spirit. As your
fathers did, so do you. (52) Which of the
prophets did not your fathers persecute? They murdered
those who announced before concerning the coming of the
Just One, of whom now you have been the betrayers and
murderers; (53) who received the law through the
ranks of angels, and have not kept it."
The pent-up fires which had burned within the breast of
Stephen from the beginning of these unjust proceedings,
and had given an angelic glow to his features at the
beginning of his speech, had been carefully smothered and
controlled during the progress of his argument; but now
that the restraints of the argument were withdrawn, they
had burst forth in these scorching and blazing words.
54-60. The exasperation of the Sanhedrim was the more
intense, from the fact that the denunciation hurled upon
them was not a sudden burst of passion, but the deliberate
and sustained announcement of a just judgment. They had
not been able to resist, in debate, the wisdom and the
spirit by which he spoke, and now their efforts to convict
him of crime had recoiled terribly upon their own heads.
They had no course now left them, but the usual resort of
unprincipled partisans when totally discomfited, and to
this they rushed with fearful rapidity. (54) "When
they heard these things, they were exasperated, and
gnashed their teeth upon him. (55) But he, being
full of the Holy Spirit, looked steadfastly into heaven,
and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right
hand of God, (56) and said, Behold, I see the
heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing at the right
hand of God. (57) Then they cried out with a loud
voice, and stopped their ears, and rushed upon him with
one accord, (58) and cast him out of the city,
and stoned him. And the witnesses laid off their garments
at the feet of a young man called Saul. (59) And
they stoned Stephen, calling on the Lord, and saying, Lord
Jesus, receive my spirit. (60) And he kneeled
down, and cried with a loud voice, Lord, lay not this sin
to their charge. And when he had said this, he fell
asleep. And Saul was consenting to his death."
This was a strange way for a court to break up; the whole
body of seventy grave rabbis, whose official duty it was
to watch for the faithful and regular proceedings of law,
leaving their seats, and rushing with the wild mob, amid
hideous outcries and tumultuous rage, to the sudden
execution of a prisoner absolutely untried and uncondemned.
But the maddest pranks ever played upon this mad earth are
witnessed when wicked men set themselves in uncompromising
[86] opposition to God and his holy
truth. So uniformly has this been true in history, that,
at the present day, when such opposition is to be
sustained, whether on great or insignificant occasion, no
well-informed man expects aught else than disregard of all
the rules of justice and propriety. If the infuriated
scenes which have been enacted under such circumstances,
in the history of Christianity, could be dramatically
represented, the performance might be appropriately
styled, The Madman's Drama.
The vision witnessed by Stephen, while the Jews were
gnashing their teeth upon him, need not be understood as
the real opening of the heavens, so that the things within
them could be seen by the human eye, but only a
representation to his eyes, such as those granted to John
in the isle of Patmos. It was vouchsafed both for his own
encouragement in the hour of death, and that the
remembrance of the words in which he described it, and the
hue of countenance with which he gazed upon it, might
remain indelibly impressed upon the minds of those who
were present. There was at least one in the audience upon
whom, we have reason to believe, this impression was deep
and lasting. The young man Saul never forgot it; but, long
afterward, when bending under the weight of many years, he
makes sad mention of the part he took in these dreadful
proceedings.{3}
The death of Stephen was an event of most thrilling
interest to the young Church, and well deserves the large
space allotted to it by the historian. The disciples had
embarked, with all their interests, both temporal and
eternal, in the cause of one, who, though he proved
himself mighty to deliver, while present with them, had
now gone away beyond the reach of vision, and no longer
held personal converse with them. They had struggled on
faithfully thus far, and, amid many tears, some stripes,
and much affliction, they had still found a deep
satisfaction of soul in his service. It was demonstrated
that their faith could sustain them in life, even amid
very bitter trials; but it was not yet known how it would
sustain them in the hour of death. No one of their number
had yet tried the dread reality, and no man can now tell
how much their spirits may have wavered in the prospect,
and inclined backward toward the faith of their fathers,
distrustful of the new arm of salvation. How great the
strength, therefore, and how sweet the consolation
imparted to every heart, when the first who died was so
triumphant in the pangs of death! After witnessing the
scene, they could go onward in their tear-dimmed course of
suffering, without one fear or care for that within the
grace, or beyond it. At the late day in which we live,
which has been preceded by the happy death of millions of
Christians, and which is often yet made deeply glad by
their triumphs in the trying hour, we are not able to
appreciate the eagerness with which the first disciples
drank in the consolations of this glorious death. It was a
fortuitous and most fitting preparation for the fiery
ordeal through which the Church were immediately afterward
called to pass.
We omit any notice of the part taken by Saul in this
shocking tragedy till we come to comment on the ninth
chapter, where his career becomes the leading theme of the
historian. [87]
{1} See @Gen.
xlvi: 26, 27.
{2} @Gen.
xlvi: 26.
{3} @1
Tim. i: 12, 13.
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