| |
C O M M E N T A R
Y
ACTS
VIII
VIII:
1-4. The enemies of the disciples had now tried and
exhausted all the ordinary methods of opposing the truth.
Under the leadership of the Sadducees they had tried,
first threatening, then imprisonment, and then stripes.
They were about to follow this with the death of the
twelve, when the milder counsels of the yet unexasperated
Pharisees had prevailed, and resort was had to discussion.
But the cause which had prospered under the imprisonment
and scourging of its chief advocates bounded forward with
astonishing rapidity when the strength of its plea was
brought before the people in open discussion. Its learned
opponents were completely discomfited. Foiled in their
efforts, the Pharisees were now ready to unite with the
Sadducees in a common persecution. They selected Stephen
as the first victim, because he had been their most
formidable opponent in the discussion. They had determined
to proceed in their bloody purpose with the forms of law;
but, in a moment of frenzy, they had broken loose from all
restraint, and dispatched their victim with the violence
of a mob. Once embarked in this mad career, nothing less
than the utter extermination of the Church could satisfy
them. Hence the historian proceeds to inform us that, (1)
"On that day there arose a great persecution
against the Church in Jerusalem, and they were all
scattered abroad through the regions of Judea and Samaria,
except the apostles. (2) Yet devout men carried
Stephen to burial, and made great lamentation over him.
(3) But Saul wasted the Church; entering into the
houses, and dragging forth both men and women, he
committed them to prison. (4) Nevertheless, they
who were scattered abroad went everywhere preaching the
word."
The grief of a community at the loss of a good man is more
intense when he falls in the performance of some part
characteristic of his life. But it is most intense when
death, at such a moment, is precipitated by injustice and
violence. It is not surprising, therefore, that the burial
of Stephen should have been attended with "great
lamentation." The perilous condition of the
congregation--some of whom were being hourly cast into
prison, and most of whom were contemplating flight--could
but deepen their grief. The funeral services were soon
followed by a general dispersion of the disciples. With
much bitterness of heart, they left behind them their
native city and their individual homes, to seek refuge
among strangers. But the bitterness of their temporal loss
must have been slight, to the truly devoted among them,
compared with the disappointment of their brightening
hopes concerning the speedy triumph of the gospel. How
bitter, too, must have been the disappointment of the
twelve, at suddenly finding themselves left alone in the
great city, the congregation of many thousand disciples
whom they had collected--all scattered and gone! While the
thought of the brethren and sisters fleeing for life, and
of the many already languishing in prison, they could have
but regarded their own lives as in imminent danger. But,
supposing that the time for which Jesus had limited their
stay in Jerusalem had not yet expired, they courageously
stood at their post, regardless of consequences.
The present distress and flight of the disciples had
resulted, not from the mere fact that they believed in
Jesus, but more especially from the zeal and persistency
with which they pushed his claims upon [88] the
attention of others. Seeing that they had now lost
everything, by this course, a worldly prudence would have
taught them to be, thenceforward, more quiet and
unobtrusive in the propagation of their faith. Even the
interests of the cause itself, which had been jeopardized
by the boldness with which Stephen had attacked the
prevailing iniquity, might have been urged in favor of a
change of policy. But this time-serving expediency was
reserved for the disgrace of a later age. It never took
large possession of the heroic hearts of the early
disciples. On the contrary, the scattered disciples "went
everywhere preaching the word." The result was
the rapid spread of the gospel into the cities of Judea,
and even into Samaria. Thus, the apparent ruin of the
single Church in Jerusalem resulted in the springing up of
many Churches throughout the province--proving, for the
thousandth time in the world's history, how impotent is
the hand of man when fighting against God. As the blows of
the blacksmith's hammer upon the heated iron scatter the
scintillations in every direction, so the effort of wicked
Jews to crush the Church of Christ only scattered its
light more widely abroad.
5. Among the many who now went everywhere preaching the
word, the historian chooses to relate here the labors of
only one. (5) "Then Philip went down into the
city of Samaria and preached Christ to them."
This Philip was one of the seven, and his name stands in
the list next to that of Stephen.{1} The reason
why Luke selects his labors for this place in the history,
is because he was the first to preach the gospel in
Samaria. Jesus had commanded them to testify first in
Jerusalem; then in Judea; then in Samaria; and then to the
uttermost part of the earth. Luke follows them in the
regular prosecution of this programme.
6-11. When Philip first entered the city of Samaria, the
public mind was in a condition most unfavorable to the
reception of the gospel. The practice of magical arts was
quite common among the Jews and Samaritans of that age;
and the masses of the people of all nations were very
superstitious in reference to them. At the time now
referred to, the people of Samaria were so completely
under the influence of a magician, that one less bold than
Philip would have had no hope of success in preaching the
gospel to them. But he had confidence in the power of the
gospel, and commenced his labors with a firm purpose. His
success was far beyond what could have been anticipated.
(6) "And the multitudes, with one accord,
attended to the things spoken by Philip, in hearing and
seeing the miracles which he wrought. (7) For
unclean spirits, crying with a loud voice, came out of
many who had them, and many, paralyzed and lame, were
healed. (8) And there was great joy in that city.
(9) But a certain man named Simon was in that city
before, practicing magic and astonishing the people of
Samaria, saying that he himself was some great one:
(10) to whom they all gave attention, from the least
to the greatest, saying, This man is the great power of
God. (11) And they gave attention to him because
he had astonished them with magic arts for a long time."
We are here introduced to another case of conversion, with
a very brief account of the means and influences by which
it was effected. [89] These demand
careful consideration. It is in order that the perfect
adaptation of the gospel means employed by Philip may the
more strikingly appear, that Luke is particular to state
the previous mental condition of the people. They had been
so much astonished by the magic arts of Simon, that the
prevailing conviction was, "This man is the great
power of God." The dreamy genius of Neander has
caught up some vague tradition of the fathers concerning a
supposed theosophy involved in this expression; and, by a
common sympathy in mysticism, rather than by the force of
his reasoning, has transmitted it to many recent
commentators. But the sober judgment, content with more
natural conclusions, finds in it only the impression which
such arts as Simon practiced usually make upon a
superstitious multitude. The tricks of his legerdemain
they supposed to be exhibitions of divine power. The first
work for Philip to do was to prostrate the influence of
Simon by undeceiving the people.
To accomplish this object, he has recourse to the power of
the Holy Spirit. This power, addressed to the eye in the
healing of lameness and paralysis, and the casting out of
demons; and to the ear, in preaching Christ to them, soon
arrested the attention of the multitude. There was a
prompt and universal decision in the public mind in favor
of the miracles wrought by Philip, and against the
pretensions of Simon. What the distinction between these
miracles and Simon's astonishing tricks, which led to so
prompt a decision, we are not able to say, because we know
not what these tricks were. Suffice it to say, that this
single incident should put to silence forever that species
of skepticism which resolves all the miracles of Christ
and the apostles into occult art and optical illusions;
for here are these arts, in their most delusive form,
brought into direct conflict with apostolic miracles; and
so palpable is the distinction, that it is at once
discovered and acknowledged by the whole multitude.
12. The unmistakable reality of the miracles wrought by
Philip convinced the people that he was attended by the power
of God; and that was enough to make them acknowledge the authority
of God in what he communicated to them. In order that men
may believe the Gospel, it is only necessary that they
believe it to be, in reality, the word of God. But the
Holy Spirit convinced them that what they heard was the
word of God, by attending it with a sensible demonstration
of the power of God. That they believed was but the
natural result of what they saw and heard. (12) "But
when they believed Philip preaching the things concerning
the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were
immersed, both men and women." Being convinced
that they heard the word of God, they believed it because
it was the word; and, for the same reason, they yielded to
its authority. Their obedience was not the result of any
inherent power in the word, apart from its authorship; for
if it were believed to be the word of man, it would have
no authority and no power. All the authority and power
which are in it, therefore, result from the belief that
God is its author. This belief was effected, in the
present instance, by the Holy Spirit, through miraculous
attestations; hence, the whole change wrought in the
parties may be styled the work of the Holy Spirit. The
simple facts of the kingdom over which Christ was
reigning, thus [90] attested, were
set forth before the people, and, upon belief of these,
attended by a willingness to comply with their
requirements, they were immersed without delay. This was
but a faithful execution of the commission, which says,
"He that believeth and is immersed shall be
saved."
13. The most signal triumph achieved on this occasion was
that over Simon himself. Luke gives it the prominence of a
separate statement, in these words: (13) "And
Simon himself also believed, and when he was immersed he
continued with Philip, and beholding the signs and great
miracles which were done, he was astonished."
The commentators nearly all agree that Simon's faith was
not real, but feigned; and that the statement that he
believed is made according to the appearance, and not
according to the reality. They urge that subsequent
developments prove the insincerity of his professions, and
compel us to adopt this conclusion. It must be confessed,
that at the time Philip might have been deceived by him;
but this could not be said of Luke, who wrote subsequent
to all the developments in the case. If his object was to
describe the events as it appeared to Philip, he might
retain, in the first instance, the mistake of Philip; but
we would expect, on this supposition, a subsequent
correction. No such correction, however, is given; neither
is there any evidence that Luke intended to represent the
case as it appeared to Philip. On the contrary, he speaks
from his own stand-point, and had all the facts before him
which we have before us. His statement, therefore, should
control our judgment, and he says, not that Simon feigned
belief, but that he believed. We conclude, then,
that he did, in the true and proper sense of the word, believe.
Some commentators, disposed to admit the statement that
Simon believed, still deny the sufficiency of his faith,
and urge that it was deficient in its object.{2}
But the historian makes no distinction between what Simon
believed, and what was believed by the Samaritans. They
"believed Philip preaching the things concerning the
kingdom of God, and the name of Jesus Christ;" and
Luke adds, without qualification, that "Simon himself
also believed." He believed, then, what Philip
preached; be believed the gospel. This conclusion is based
upon statements too positive and unambiguous to be set
aside because of any difficulty in reconciling them with
facts subsequently developed.
14-17. Before recording the sequel of Simon's case, Luke
introduces an incident, which, on account of its
singularity in New Testament history, demands very careful
consideration. (14) "Now when the apostles, who
were in Jerusalem, heard that Samaria had received the
word of God, they sent to them Peter and John; (15) who,
when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might
receive the Holy Spirit. (16) For as yet he had
fallen upon none of them, only they were immersed into the
name of the Lord Jesus. (17) Then they laid hands
on them, and they received the Holy Spirit."
It would be useless to incumber these pages with the many
unsatisfactory explanations of this procedure with which
commentaries abound. We will be content with a simple
effort to learn what it [91] teaches,
by a careful consideration of the facts. We notice, then, first,
That the Samaritans had believed the gospel, and been
immersed. They were, then, according to the commission,
and according to Peter's answer on Pentecost, pardoned,
and in possession of that "gift of the Holy
Spirit," which was promised on condition of
repentance and immersion.{3} Second,
After they had been in possession of this gift, for a
period sufficient for the news to reach Jerusalem, the
whole body of the apostles united in sending to them Peter
and John. Third, Previous to the arrival of Peter
and John, none of them had received the miraculous
gift of the Spirit. Fourth, Upon the imposition of
hands by the two apostles, accompanied with prayers, the
Holy Spirit fell upon them, conferring miraculous gifts.
From these facts we may draw several conclusions. 1st.
Whatever other objects may have been contemplated in the
mission of the two apostles, such as confirming the faith
of the disciples, and assisting Philip in his labors, it
is quite certain that the chief object was the impartation
of the Holy Spirit. What they did when they arrived in
Samaria was certainly the object for which they went. But
the chief thing which they did was to confer the Holy
Spirit; hence, this was the chief object of their visit.
If, however, Philip could have conferred this gift,
the mission, so far as the chief object of it is
concerned, would have been useless. This affords
strong evidence that the miraculous gift of the Spirit was
bestowed by no human hands except those of the apostles.
That such was the conclusion of Simon, who was an
interested witness of this proceeding, is evident from the
proposition he made to Peter, to purchase from him this
power. If all who had the Spirit could impart it to
others, he need only to have sought the gift himself,
knowing that this would include the power to impart it.
But his offer to buy this power, and that from an apostle,
shows that the apostles alone possessed the power of
imparting the Spirit. This conclusion is confirmed by the
fact that in the only other instance of the kind recorded
in Acts, that of the twelve disciples in Ephesus, the same
gift was bestowed by the hands of an apostle.{4}
The case of Timothy is no exception, as has been supposed,
to this conclusion; for, although Paul states that the
gift which was in him was given him through prophesy and
"the laying on of the hands of the eldership;"{5}
yet he exhorts him, in the second epistle, "Stir up
the gift of God, which is in thee, by the putting on of my
hands."{6} These two statements can be
reconciled either by supposing that Paul refers to the
gift of office in the former, and the gift of the Spirit
in the latter; or, that the eldership united with Paul in
laying on hands, while it was the apostolic part of the
service which imparted the Spirit, the eldership
participating, because at the same time he was ordained to
the work of an evangelist.
2d. From the fact that these disciples enjoyed pardon and
membership in the Church before receiving the miraculous
gift, it is evident that this gift was not necessary to
the enjoyment of either of these blessings. Yet, strange
to say, the mystic power of an ultra spiritualism has
thrown these plain facts into the utmost confusion in the
minds of some great men. Witness the following from
Neander, in reference to [92] the
condition of the Samaritans previous to the visit of Peter
and John. "They had not yet attained the
consciousness of a vital communion with the Christ whom
Philip preached, nor yet to the consciousness of a personal
divine life. The indwelling of the Spirit was
as yet something foreign to them, known only by the
wonderful operation which they saw taking place around
them."{7} This assertion is evidently in
direct conflict with the commission, and with the promise
of Peter, that those who would repent and be immersed
should receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. Paul
also teaches that the indwelling of the Spirit is
characteristic of all who are Christ's;{8} and
certainly all are Christ's who have been immersed into the
name of Christ,{9} as had been these
Samaritans.
3d. The statement that "as yet he had fallen on none
of them, only they were immersed into the name of the Lord
Jesus," thrown in parenthetically in explanation of
the mission of Peter and John, necessarily implies that
there was no such connection between immersion into Christ
and the miraculous gift of the Spirit, as that the latter
might be inferred from the former. This gift, then, was
not common to the disciples, but was enjoyed only by those
to whom it was specifically imparted.
Seeing that this extraordinary gift of the Spirit was not
necessary to the conversion and pardon of these parties,
nor to the indwelling of the Spirit, it is proper to
inquire for what purpose it was bestowed. We have already
observed, in commenting on Acts i: 8, that the design of
bestowing it upon the apostles was to endow them,
intellectually, with power to establish the kingdom, and
to furnish miraculous attestation of their mission. In
general, miracles were designed to indicate the divine
sanction of the procedure with which they were connected;
but when the miracle assumed a mental form, it was
designed to qualify the party for some mental labor. The
young Church in Samaria had hitherto been guided by the
infallible teaching of Philip, and more recently, by that
of Peter and John. But these brethren must, in executing
their high commission, soon depart to other fields of
labor. If, in doing so, they should leave the Church in
the condition in which Peter and John found it, there
would be no means left them of increasing their knowledge
of the new institution, and none but their uncertain
memories of retaining with accuracy what they had already
learned. To supply this defect, chiefly, and secondarily,
to leave among them the means of convincing unbelievers,
the gift of inspiration was bestowed--not upon all the
disciples, for this is not necessarily implied in the
text, but upon a sufficient number of chosen individuals.
For further information upon the design of such gifts, I
refer the reader to the @twelfth
and fourteenth chapters of First Corinthians. A
complete discussion of the subject would belong to a
commentary on that epistle, rather than to one on Acts.
Suffice it here to add, that these gifts, served as a
temporary provision, until the facts, doctrine,
commandments, and promises of the new covenant were
committed to writing by inspired men, when the prophesies,
tongues, and miraculous knowledge of individual teachers
gave place to the written record.{10} [93]
18, 19. In the above remarks upon the incident before us,
we have assumed that the gift imparted was miraculous.
This assumption is justified by the fact that it was a
matter of observation by those who were not recipients of
it, as is evident from the next statement of the text.
(18) "And when Simon saw, that through the laying
on of the apostles' hands the Holy Spirit was given, he
offered them money, (19) saying, Give me also
this authority, that on whomsoever I lay hands he may
receive the Holy Spirit." The form of this
proposition shows that the Holy Spirit did not come upon
these persons directly from heaven, as upon the apostles
on the day of Pentecost, but that it was imparted through
imposition of hands. This marks the difference between the
immersion in the Holy Spirit, to which the event on
Pentecost belongs, and the impartation of the Holy
Spirit, to which we refer the present case. The latter was
effected through human agency; the former without it.
In order to account for the impious proposition of Simon,
we must remember his former mode of life, and consider the
mental habits which must have been cultivated. Having been
accustomed to the performance of astonishing tricks as a
means of making money, and to the increase of his stock in
trade by purchasing the secret of every new trick which he
met with among his brother magicians, he had acquired the
habit of looking upon every thing of an astonishing
character with reference to the money which might
be in it. When, now he saw that by imposition of the
apostles' hands the miraculous power of the Spirit was
imparted, and remembered that there were many even among
the disciples, who had not yet received the coveted gift,
he at once perceived that the power to impart it could be
made a source of great profit. His overruling avarice,
mingled with intense fondness for popular influence,
prompted him to seek this power. The blinding influence of
these passions prevented him from seeing the impropriety
either of offering to buy it, or of intending to sell it;
for certainly, if he had realized the light in which his
proposition should be regarded, he would not have
ventured to make it.
20-23. Nothing could be more abhorrent to the feelings of
an apostle than such a proposition. It was well calculated
to arouse the impulsive spirit of Peter, and his response
is marked by his characteristic vehemence. (20) "But
Peter said to him, Your silver go with you to perdition,
because you have thought to purchase the gift of God with
money. (21) You have no part nor lot in this
matter, for your heart is not right in the sight of God.
(22) Repent, therefore, of this your wickedness, and
pray God, if, perhaps, the purpose of your heart may be
forgiven you. (23) For I perceive that you are in
the gall of bitterness, and the bond of iniquity."
This description of Simon's spiritual condition shows
clearly that he was not, at that time, in a state of mind
acceptable to God. "The gall of bitterness" is a
forcible expression of the wretchedness of his condition;
and "the bond of iniquity," of the dominion
which sin exercised over him. His heart was not right in
the sight of God, and he was in the way to perdition. The
declaration that he had "no part nor lot in this
matter" depends, for its interpretation, upon the
meaning of the expression "this matter." Whether
it refers to the gospel, or to the impartation of the
Spirit, is [94] not altogether
certain. In either case, the declaration is true; for it
is certain that he had no part in the impartation of the
Spirit; and equally certain that he was then under the
condemnation of God.
Whether we are to suppose that Simon's destitute and
miserable condition was the result of having forfeited the
favor of God by falling into sin after his immersion, or
that his confession and immersion had been insincere, so
that he had never been pardoned, is not to be determined,
as many suppose, by the grossness of his present
conception concerning the Holy Spirit. The question
resolves itself into this: whether the discovery that a
man is under the control of some wicked passion soon after
his immersion is proof that he had not been a proper
subject for immersion. If conversion involves so complete
a renovation, that old mental habits are entirely
eradicated, never to exert their influence again, then
Simon was not a genuine convert. But if, as both Scripture
and experience teach, the turning of a sinner to God is
simply the triumph of conscience and the better feelings
over the passions, while the latter still exist in a
latent state, ready to spring into activity on the
approach of temptation, we must admit that Simon may
have been a penitent believer at the time of his
immersion. That he was a believer is asserted by Luke; but
whether he was to such a degree penitent as to receive
pardon when he was immersed, is not certainly determined
by the text. For aught that is affirmed of him, he may
either have been influence by sinister motives in
confessing his faith, or have been truly penitent at the
time, and afterward, under the spur of temptation which
the splendid gifts bestowed by Peter were the occasion of,
have yielded to the sudden impulse of his ruling passion.
Whichever of these hypotheses we adopt, the case affords
no objection to the immediate immersion of all who confess
faith in Christ, and indicate a desire to obey him, no
evidence of their insincerity being apparent. The inspired
example of Philip is an authoritative guide for us, and if
it appear that he occasionally immersed an unprepared
subject, modern evangelists can not be censured for
following his example, though they should occasionally
meet with the same misfortune.
The supposition that Philip and Peter both, by the power
of discerning spirits, knew from the beginning that
Simon's heart was not right, but, for wise reasons,
withheld the announcement until his wickedness was
developed before the people is entirely gratuitous. The
gift of "discerning spirit," mentioned in @1
Cor. xii: 10, was the power of testing the claims of
those who professed to be inspired. There is no evidence
that it was ever used by the apostles or others to detect
the concealed thoughts and emotions of the soul. The
detection of Ananias and Sapphira is not a case in point,
for it was effected not by discerning their thoughts, but
by a direct revelation to Peter that the story which they
told was a lie.
24. The conclusion of the conversation between Peter and
Simon leaves us in doubt as to the final fate of the
latter. Peter had exhorted him to repent, and pray to God
for pardon. (24) "Then Simon answered and said,
Pray ye to the Lord for me, that none of these things
which ye have spoken come upon me." This
response indicates very [95] clearly
that the scathing speech of Peter had a good effect. It
doubtless awoke Simon to a clearer perception of his own
character, filled him with more becoming awe of the Holy
Spirit, and aroused some fear of the terrible consequences
of his sin. As the curtain of history here falls upon him,
he disappears in a more promising state of feeling, but
without leaving us fully assured that he recovered from
the dominion of his unholy passions. Many things are said
of his subsequent career, in ancient and modern
commentaries, but nothing that is sufficiently
authenticated to deserve our serious attention.
25. In connection with the prime object of their visit to
Samaria, Peter and John also furthered the efforts of
Philip in preaching and teaching. This we learn from an
incidental remark in connection with the statement of
their departure for Jerusalem. (25) "Now they,
having testified and spoken the word of the Lord, returned
into Jerusalem and preached the gospel in many villages of
the Samaritans." This labor in the Samaritan
villages was performed on their journey toward Jerusalem,
which may have been somewhat circuitous, according to the
situation of the villages which they desired to visit.
Thus these primitive preachers of the gospel made all the
stations of their journeys through the country successive
points for disseminating the truth.
26. When the congregation in Samaria had been supplied with
spiritual gifts, and sufficiently instructed to
justify leaving them to their own resources for
edification, Philip was called away to other fields of
labor.
We are now introduced to another of those minutely
detailed cases of conversion which are recorded for the
purpose of instruction in reference to the means of
turning men to God, and inducing them into the kingdom.
The purpose of bringing him to a knowledge of salvation
was formed in the divine mind, and specific means of
accomplishing it put into operation, ere the man himself
was aware of it. The narrative traces the steps by which
this purpose of God was accomplished, and enables us to
know, when God determines upon the conversion of an
individual, how he proceeds to effect it.
The first step taken in the case was to send an angel from
heaven. But where does the angel make his appearance? To
the man for whose benefit he came? So it must be, if he is
to hold any direct communication with him. But, strange to
say, while the man was south of Jerusalem, traveling
toward Gaza, the angel descends into Samaria, to the north
of Jerusalem, and appears to Philip. (26) "And an
angel of the Lord spoke to Philip, saying, Arise and go
toward the south, into the road which goes down from
Jerusalem to Gaza. This is a desert." This is
all that the angel has to say; and now his part of the
work, which was simply to start the evangelist in the
direction of the person to be converted, is accomplished.
He retires from the scene.
The statement "this is a desert" is correctly
supposed, by the best commentators, to be no part of the
angel's speech to Philip, but to have been added by Luke
to note the singularity of a preacher being thus
peremptorily sent away from a populous country into a
desert. The term desert is not here to be
understood in its stricter sense of a barren waste, but in
its more general acceptation, of a place thinly [96] inhabited.
Such an interpretation is required by the geography of the
country, and by the fact that water was found for the
immersion of the eunuch. The only road from Jerusalem to
Gaza, which passed through a level district suitable for
wheeled vehicles, was that by Bethlehem to Hebron, and
thence across a plain to Gaza. According to Dr. Hackett,
this is "the desert" of @Luke
i: 80, in which John the Immerser grew up. Dr. S. T.
Barclay, who traversed this entire route in May, 1853,
says that he traveled, after leaving "the immediate
vicinity of Hebron, over one of the very best roads (with
slight exceptions) and one of the most fertile countries
that I ever beheld."{11}
27, 28. Philip promptly obeyed the command of the angel,
and was soon in close proximity to the intended convert,
though, as yet, he knew nothing of him. (27) "He
arose and went; and behold a man of Ethiopia, an eunuch of
great authority under Candace, queen of the Ethiopians,
who had charge of all her treasure, and had come to
Jerusalem to worship, (28) was returning, and
sitting in his chariot, was reading the Prophet Isaiah."
29. Just as Philip entered the road to which he had been
directed by the angel, and saw the chariot before him, the
Holy Spirit began to work for the conversion of the
treasurer. And where does he begin his work? In the heart
of the sinner, by direct communication? No. Like the
angel, he begins with the preacher. (29) "Then
the Spirit said to Philip, Go near, and join yourself to
this chariot." This was a miraculous
communication from the Spirit, such as frequently directed
the labors of inspired men. The object of it was the same
as that of the angel's visit, to bring the preacher and
the subject for conversion face to face.
30. The purpose of the angel's visit and the Spirit's
miraculous communication was now accomplished. (30) "Then
Philip ran to him, and heard him reading the Prophet
Isaiah, and said, Do you understand what you are reading?"
Considering the relative position of the parties, one an
humble footman, and the other a chief officer of a
powerful kingdom, sitting in his chariot, this question
appears rather an abrupt and inappropriate introduction to
the conversation. But it was, in reality, the most natural
and appropriate question that Philip could ask. Hearing
the man reading aloud, in what we call the fifty-third
chapter of Isaiah, that touching description of the
sufferings of Christ, he knew that it was unintelligible
to him if he was not acquainted with the gospel; whereas,
if he had learned the story of the cross, he could not
fail to understand it. The question, "Do you
understand what you are reading?" was, then, the very
question to determine where he stood, and how to approach
him.
31-35. The man's response was definite and satisfactory.
(31) "And he said, How can I, except some man
should guide me? And he invited Philip to come up and sit
with him. (32) Now the place of the Scripture
which he was reading was this: He was led as a sheep to
slaughter, and as a lamb silent before his shearer, so he
opens not his mouth. (33) In his humiliation, his
condemnation was extorted, and who shall fully describe
his generation? For his life is violently taken from the
earth. (34) And the eunuch answered Philip, and
said, I pray you, of whom [97] does
the prophet speak this? Of himself, or of some other man?
(35) Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning at
the same Scripture, preached to him Jesus."
We have now before us all the influences and agencies
employed in this man's conversion, and may restate them,
as follows: He was reading a remarkable prophesy
concerning Christ, and had paused upon it, with the
inquiry, Of whom is this written? He could recollect
nothing in the history of the prophet himself, or of any
other man, to which it would apply. He was, therefore,
unable to understand it; and if he learned to pray as
David did, the prompt impulse of his heart was, "Open
thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of
thy law." In this frame of mind he was best prepared
for the influences which God, who knows the secrets of all
hearts, was preparing for him. If his eyes can be made to
penetrate the darkness of that prophesy, and his heart to
feel the power of the truth which lies there hid from his
gaze, all will be well. But there is no human being being
present to teach him, nor does any friend of Jesus know
even of his existence. What, then, will be done? God
employs his Spirit to open the eyes and touch the hearts
of men; will he not, then, immediately distill a heavenly
influence upon man's soul, to enlighten him and save him?
He does not do it. And if not in this case, where no human
agent is at hand, who shall say that he does in any other?
The word of God is silent in reference to any such
abstract influence, and he who assumes its existence gets
behind the curtain of revelation.
But God employs angels in ministering to those who shall
be heirs of salvation. In the absence of human agency,
will not some angel be dispatched to the aid of this
waiting subject for salvation? An angel is truly sent; but
his mission is, to start a man in the direction of
the chariot. When the man gets within sight of the
chariot, the Holy Spirit begins to work; but he works by
first bringing the man to the side of the chariot, and
next, through his lips, speaking to the man in the
chariot. Thus we see, that, though an angel from heaven
has appeared, and the Holy Spirit has operated
miraculously for the conversion of the sinner, there is
still an insuperable necessity for the co-operation of a man,
Unless that man does his part of the work, all that
has been done by both the angel and the Spirit will prove
unavailing. Not the slightest influence from either of the
heavenly messengers reaches the sinner's mind or heart,
until the preacher begins to speak, and then it reaches
him through the words which are spoken.
The further process is easily traced. As Philip opens up
item after item of the prophesy, and shows its fulfillment
in Jesus, the eyes of the eunuch begin to penetrate the
Scripture, until, at last, he sees a flood of heavenly
light where all was darkness before. His eyes are opened,
and he sees the wondrous glory of the suffering Savior
beaming from the inspired page which lies before him. This
is effected, not by an abstract influence of the Spirit,
enabling him to understand what was before obscure, but by
the aid of a fellow-man providentially sent to him for the
purpose.
The treasurer may have heard of Jesus, in Jerusalem; but,
if so, [98] he heard of him through
those with whom he had been up to worship, the bitter
enemies of the cross; and knew him only as an impostor who
had been deservedly crucified, though now worshiped by a
few deluded Jews as their Messiah. But now, with a
prophesy before him which he had tried in vain to find
fulfilled in the history of any other man, but which finds
its complement in the life and death of Jesus; and
informed, by a man whose astonishing knowledge of the word
of God is a guarantee of his honesty, that Jesus is risen
from the dead, his honest heart interposes no wicked
obstacles to his faith, and he believes. The demonstration
strikes him with the greater force, because it is so
unexpected. The Jews could not explain that prophesy, for
they could not find its facts in the life of any of their
great heroes; and though the reference to the Messiah was
so palpable as to at once suggest itself to every reader,
they would not apply it to him, because their conception
of his earthly glory conflicted with the humiliation and
suffering described by the prophet. Until now, this very
difficulty had been puzzling the mind of the treasurer.
But he now sees the prophesy fulfilled; and while the
demonstration compels him to believe, the true conception
of a bleeding Messiah touches his heart. And this is
effected by the Holy Spirit in Philip, through
the words which Philip spoke.
36. "And as they went along the road, they came
to certain water. And the eunuch said, What hinders me to
be immersed?" The appearance of the water to
which they had come suggested this question, but it could
not have been done so unless the eunuch had been taught
something concerning immersion as a religious ordinance.
But he had enjoyed no opportunity for instruction on this
subject, except through the teaching of Philip. Had
Philip, then, preached him a sermon on immersion? No. Luke
says Philip "preached to him Jesus." How, then,
had he, while hearing Jesus preached, obtained instruction
in reference to immersion? There is only one answer to
this question. It is, that to preach Jesus, after
the apostolic method, involves full instruction upon the
subject of immersion. The prejudice, therefore, which
exists at the present day against frequent introduction of
this subject in discourses addressed to sinners, is
altogether unscriptural; and those only preach Jesus
correctly who give to it the same prominence which belongs
to it in apostolic discourses. It was a part of Peter's
sermon on Pentecost, of Philip's preaching to the
Samaritans, and of his present discourse to the Ethiopian;
and we will yet see, in the course of this commentary,
that it always occupied a place in the preaching of
inspired men on such occasions. Indeed, it would be
impossible to preach Jesus fully without it. For the
beginning of the gospel, historically, according to Mark,{12}
is the immersion of John, to which Jesus submitted, and
near the conclusion of it is the commission given in the
last words of Jesus on earth, commanding every believer to
be immersed.{13} Thus he who preaches Jesus has
immersion in the beginning and in the end of his sermon.
37. By almost universal consent of recent critics, the
whole of this verse is excluded from the original text,
and should be from all versions. For the reasons on which
this decision is based, we refer [99] the
reader to "Bloomfield's Commentary" on the
passage, "Tregelles' History of the Printed
Text," and other critical works.
This verse has been used chiefly for the purpose of
determining the confession which was made originally by
candidates for immersion. The fact that this is an
interpolation must modify the argument on this subject,
but does not invalidate it. The fact that such a
confession as is here put in the mouth of the eunuch was
uniformly required by the apostles, is evident from other
passages of Scripture. It is quite certain that it was
confessed by Timothy. Paul says to him: "Fight the
good fight of faith; lay hold on eternal life, into which
you were called, and did confess the good confession
before many witnesses."{14} This
confession was made at the beginning of his religious
career; for it is connected with his call to eternal life.
It is the same confession which is attributed to the
eunuch; for Paul immediately adds: "I charge thee
before God, who gives life to all things, and Jesus
Christ, who bore testimony under Pontius Pilate, to the
good confession," etc. Now, what is here called
"the good confession" is certainly the
confession that he was the Christ, made before the
Sanhedrim, under Pontius Pilate. But this is identified,
by the terms employed, with the confession which Timothy
had made, which is also "the good confession."
Timothy, then, made the confession that Jesus is the
Christ, the same attributed to the eunuch. Moreover, this
confession was so conspicuous, at the time of Paul's
writing, that it was known as the confession, and
so highly esteemed as to be styled the good
confession.
That Timothy was not alone in making this confession is
evident from the following statement of Paul: "The
word is nigh thee, in thy mouth and in thy heart; that is,
the word of faith which we preach, That if thou wilt
confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in thy
heart that God has raised him from the dead, thou shalt be
saved."{15} From this it appears that one
item in "the word of faith" which the apostles
preached, was the confession of the Lord Jesus with the
mouth. Paul assumes that this word was in the mouths
and hearts of the brethren in Rome, whom he had never
seen, and with whose conversion he had nothing,
personally, to do. This assumption can be justified only
on the ground that it belonged to "the word of
faith" everywhere preached. He argued, from the
universal practice of the apostles, to a particular
conclusion in reference to their converts in Rome. We
have, therefore, both his premises and his conclusion, to
sustain us in deciding that this confession was universal
in the primitive Church, as a part of the apostolic
ritual.
We here have use for the interpolated verse now under
consideration. The fact that it is interpolated does not
prove that the eunuch did not make the confession. On the
contrary, when rightly considered, it establishes the
presumption that the passage, as it now reads, is a
faithful account of the event. The interpolation is easily
accounted for. The text read: "The eunuch said, See,
here is water; what hinders me to be immersed? And he
commanded the chariot to stand still, and they went down
both into the water." Now, the object of the
interpolator was to fill up what appeared to be a historic
blank, [100] so that Philip should
not appear to have led the man into the water too
abruptly. In doing so, he, of course, inserted what he
supposed to be the apostolic custom; and the fact that he
inserted this confession shows that he believed that the
apostles required candidates for immersion to make the
confession. Furthermore, the interpolator would naturally
be guided by the prevailing custom of his own day, so that
his amendment might be received by his cotemporaries. In
whatever age, therefore, the interpolation was made, it
indicates both the custom of that age and the opinion then
prevalent as to the apostolic custom. Whether these
considerations have any force or not, depends upon the
proximity of the age in question to the apostolic period.
But this interpolation was known to Irenæus, A. D.
170,{16} and this proves that the confession
which the Scriptures show to have been universal in the
days of the apostles was perpetuated into the latter part
of the second century.
Both the custom of confessing Christ, and the formula
employed, originated in the most natural way, and without
any positive precept. Jesus appeared in Galilee and Judea,
proclaiming himself the Christ and the Son of God. As men
became convinced of his claims, they would say, "I
believe that he is the Christ." Others would
say, "I believe that he is a prophet, but I deny
that he is the Christ." Thus the confession or denial
of this proposition was the first mark of distinction
between believers and unbelievers. The Pharisees,
therefore, "agreed that if any man did confess
that he was the Christ, he should be put out of the
synagogue."{17} The confession was, then,
all that was necessary to identify one as a disciple of
Jesus. Hence, with special reference to this state of
things, Jesus said, "He that confesses me
before men, him will I confess before my Father in heaven;
but he that denies me before men, him will I deny
before my Father in heaven." After the commission was
given, enjoining the immersion of all believers, the
confession was still perpetuated, and immersion naturally
took position immediately after it.
A confession thus necessarily originating from the grand
issue that Jesus presented to the world, and involving the
earliest distinction between his friends and his foes,
could not fail to have an important position in the
formation of those friends into a great organization. The
Church of Christ, like every other useful organization, is
created and sustained by the obligations of some truth.
This truth may be properly styled the foundation of the
organization, because it is that from which it springs,
and without which it could not exist. The truth declared
in the confession, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of
God, is beyond controversy, the foundation of the Church
of Christ, and is so declared by Jesus himself.{18}
Without it no Church of Christ could possibly exist. It
had to exist as a truth, and be demonstrated to men as
such, before the Church would begin to be. The truth
itself, however, and the confession of it, are two things
entirely distinct. The former is the foundation; the
latter, a means of building on it. There is no way to
build an organization of men and women on a truth, except
by a mutual confession of it, and an agreement to live
together according to its obligations. When individuals,
believing that Jesus [101] is the
Christ, mutually confess it, and agree to unite in the
observance of its obligations, the immediate and necessary
result is a Church. In this way the confession became an
organic element in the ecclesiastical constitution.
Inasmuch as some have conceived that Jesus in person is
the foundation of the Church, it may be well to observe
here that there is no way in which an organization can be
built on a person, except by believing something in
reference to him. It is not the fact that there is such a person
as Jesus, but that that person is the Christ which
gave existence to the Church.
Inasmuch as members of the Church are built upon the true
foundation, in part, by a mutual confession of its truth,
the confession, formally made, is both an acknowledgment
of the obligations which the truth imposes, and a pledge
to all the duties of a member in the Church. It is true,
that the confession, like immersion, and eating bread and
wine, may occur amid the careless scenes of a wicked life,
without any religious import. But this is only to say that
the specific acts which God calls upon us to perform in
religious ordinances may be performed by wicked men
without religious intent. And this, again, is only to say,
that, in adapting his institutions to us, instead of
inventing new and unheard-of performances, he has lifted
up certain actions and words already familiar, into
association with religious truth and obligation. This
arrangement is a proof of his wisdom; for by it the mind
is averted from the mere physical act, which might
otherwise have usurped too much consideration, and is
compelled to associate the value of the deed with the
thoughts which surround it. Such is pre-eminently the case
with the confession, which, though a very simple
declaration of faith, is a formal assumption of all the
obligations of a Christian life.
The kingdom of Christ is not limited to earth, but was
designed to bind together, in one harmonious whole, God,
angels, and men. God himself was the first to present
himself for this great union. Over the bank of the Jordan
he made the same confession which is required of us, and
thereby not only bore testimony to the fact that Jesus was
his Son, but, also, voluntarily placed himself before the
universe in the attitude which the incipient mediatorship
required him to occupy. By this formal confession he
pledged himself to accept the mediation of Christ, just as
we, by the same confession, pledge ourselves to accept the
blessings which that mediation procures for us. If God had
never confessed Jesus, in this or some equivalent manner,
we would have no direct assurance from him that he was in
Christ reconciling the world to himself.
Like men on earth, the angels in heaven passed into the
privileges of the kingdom of God, by making this same
confession. When Jesus ascended up on high, the Father
said to him, "Sit on my right hand, till I make thine
enemies thy footstool."{19} Then he
"sat down at the right hand of the throne of
God,"{20} and God said, "Let all the
angels of God worship him."{21} Then were
fulfilled the words of Paul, "God hath highly exalted
him, and given him a name that is above every name, that
at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in
[102] heaven, and things on earth,
and things under the earth, and that every tongue should confess
that Jesus is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father." The angels all confessed the good
confession, receiving Jesus as their Lord, and rendering
thus their first act of worship to the Son of Mary. The
one identical confession, therefore, has brought together,
in one harmonious whole, God, angels, and men; the latter
being pledged by it to eternal worship, and the former
pledged forever to accept their grateful homage through
Christ.
That this confession was the only one required of
candidates for immersion by the apostles, is universally
admitted by those who are competent to judge. It is
likewise admitted that they regarded it as a sufficient
confession. This fact alone should teach men to be
satisfied with it now. He, indeed, who is guided by the
Bible alone, can not require of men any other confession
than such as he finds authorized by Bible precedents.
Neither is it possible that he who implicitly follows the
apostolic precedent can be misled, unless the apostles,
the Holy Spirit, the New Testament, can mislead them.
Fidelity to the word of God, therefore, binds us to this
confession alone, and, in clinging to it, we have every
assurance which inspiration can give that we are right.
Departure from apostolic precedent is never justifiable,
except when the precedent itself was the result of
circumstances peculiar to the apostolic age. The primitive
practice of washing the feet of brethren who came into the
house from the highway, was an accidental, and not a
necessary result of the law of hospitality. Growing out of
the peculiar habit of wearing sandals, it ceased to be a
matter of duty as soon as the circumstances which gave
rise to it disappeared. If a similar change of
circumstances has taken place in reference to the
confession, rendering it insufficient for our times, then
we are no longer bound by the precedent. That such is the
case is affirmed by many of our cotemporaries, and we must
extend these remarks sufficiently to consider the reasons
offered in support of this opinion.
It is often argued that, in the days of the apostles, the
moment men became convinced that Jesus was the Christ they
were ready to submit to his service; but now, every Church
is surrounded with men and women who are convinced of this
fact, but still persist in wickedness; hence some more
effectual test should now be applied. This argument is
based upon a false assumption in reference to results of
primitive preaching; for we read of many rulers of
synagogues who believed in Jesus, but would not confess
him for hear of the Pharisees;{22} of Joseph of
Arimathea, who, though a disciples kept it secret;{23}
of Felix, who trembled under the preaching of Paul, but
said, Go thy way for the present; and of Agrippa, who was almost,
though not altogether, persuaded to be a Christian. If
these men in high stations were deterred by fear, or by
worldly lusts, from making the confession, how much more
the common people, who had much more to fear! Witness the
parents of the blind man who had been healed by Jesus, who
gave evasive answers in the synagogue for this very
reason.{24} There is no evidence that men were
more prompt to yield to their convictions then than they
are now.
Sometimes it is argued, quite inconsistently with the
above, that the [103] danger of
being known as a Christian in those days rendered the
simple confession a sufficient test of a man's devotion;
but now, when Christianity is popular, it is entirely
insufficient. It must be granted, that sometimes it was
dangerous to property and life to become a Christian, yet
it was true then, as it is now, that many insincere
persons found their way into the Churches. Jude complains
that "ungodly men, turning the favor of God into
lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our
Lord Jesus Christ," had "crept in
unawares."{25} Paul echoes the same
sentiment in reference to "false brethren, unawares
brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty
which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us
into bondage."{26} There are those
"who went out from us because they were not of
us," and there was Demas, who forsook Paul in the
hour of danger, "having loved this present
world." And what more shall I say? For time would
fail me to tell of Simon the sorcerer, of Alexander the
coppersmith, of Phygellus and Hermogenes, of Hymeneus and
Alexander whom Paul delivered over to Satan that they
might learn not to blaspheme, and of many others who
proved insincere in their confession, or false to its
obligations. Surely, if a test of sincerity which could
let into the fold such wolves as these was sufficient for
the inspired apostles, we may be content with the same,
unless we affect a wisdom and a zeal superior to theirs.
But the most popular argument against the present
sufficiency of the good confession is this: that the
immense multiplicity of doctrinal errors now prevalent
requires a severer test of soundness in the faith than was
used by the apostles before these errors had an existence.
Unfortunately, however, its historic assumption is as
baseless as that of the two we have just considered. For
not only were the Churches surrounded with most pernicious
errors in doctrine, but were sickened by the poison of
those errors within their own bosoms. Pharisees in
Jerusalem crept in to spy out the liberty of the new
covenant, and bring the brethren back into bondage to the
law;{27} and there were Sadducees in the Church
at Corinth who denied the resurrection.{28}
There were philosophers, such as "Hymeneus and
Philetus, who concerning the faith have erred, saying that
the resurrection is already past, and overthrow the faith
of some,"{29} and there were
transcendentalists, who denied that "Jesus Christ had
come in the flesh,"{30} having speculated
his bodily existence into the essence of moonshine, or
something equally unreal. James had to warn some against
being deceived into worship of the heavenly bodies, by
assuring them that "every good gift comes down from
the Father of lights," and not from the lights
themselves; while Paul fights many a hard battle against
brethren who were disposed to openly countenance
fornication, incest, and the sacrificial banquets of
heathen worship. Under the pressure of all this influx of
falsehood and iniquity, why did not these inspired men see
their mistake, and, discarding the simple confession, draw
up a masterly catechism, which would shut out every error,
and guard the purity of the Church? How sad the
reflection, that men so ingenious in other respects, were
so stupid in this! And how fortunate for [104] us,
that the wiser heads of Rome, Geneva, Augsburg, and
Westminster have supplied this deficiency in the work of
the apostles!
We have thus far argued upon the broadest assumption in
reference to the inefficiency of the good confession in
guarding the purity of the Church. We might retort upon
the advocates of creeds and catechisms, by showing that
these devices can not be, and have not been, any more
efficient; but we prefer to show the real exclusiveness of
the good confession. It is certainly exclusive enough to
keep out the pagan, the Jew, the Mohammedan, the atheist,
and the infidel; for none of these can honestly make the
confession. It will exclude the Unitarian and the
Universalist; for while they are willing to confess that
Jesus is the Christ, in the next breath they deny him, by
contradicting some of his most emphatic declarations. It
will also exclude the wicked and impenitent; for it is
offered only to penitent believers. If this is not
considered sufficient, we may advance still further, and
say that it will exclude the Roman Catholic, who persists
in having other intercessors in heaven, besides "the
high priest of our confession."{31}
It will exclude the devotee of the mourning bench, who
waits for an operation of the Spirit before he comes to
Christ. It will exclude the pedobaptist, who is satisfied
with his sprinkling; for it requires an immediate
immersion. None of these characters can scripturally make
the good confession without some specific change in views
or in character. Lest the tune of the objector should now
be changed, and he should cry, "Your confession is
too exclusive," we add, that it receives all whom the
apostles would receive, and excludes all whom they would
exclude.
38, 39. When Philip ascertained that the eunuch believed
in the Lord Jesus, and desired to obey him, there was no
delay, but his desire to be immersed was immediately
gratified. (38) "And he commanded the chariot to
stand still, and they went down into the water, both
Philip and the eunuch, and he immersed him. (39) And
when they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the
Lord caught away Philip; and the eunuch saw him no more,
for he went on his way rejoicing."
This is one of the passages which the conflict of
contending parties has rendered familiar to every reader
of the New Testament. The questions in controversy are: First,
Whether Philip and the eunuch went into the water,
or only to it; Second, Whether the facts in
the case afford any evidence that the eunuch was immersed.
The determination of the first question depends upon the
exact force of the antithetical expression, katebesan
eis to udor, and anebesan ek tou udatos.
If the latter means, "they went up out of the
water," then the former necessarily means, "they
went down into the water;" and vice versâ.
There are two methods of inquiry, therefore, by which to
determine whether they went into the water: First,
The direct method, which depends upon the meaning of the
words supposed to declare this fact; Second, The
indirect method, which determines whether they went into
the water, by determining whether they went out of
it.
In dealing with this question, Dr. Moses Stuart, one of
the most learned and candid of the disputants on the
pedobaptist side, does great injustice to his own
reputation. He says: "That eis, with
the verb [105] katabaino,
often means going down to a place, is quite
certain; e. g., 'Jesus went down to
Capernaum;' 'Jacob went down to Egypt;' 'They went
down to Attalia;' 'They went down to Troas;'
'He went down to Antioch;' 'Going down to Cæsarea.'"{32}
How strange it is that the learned author did not perceive
that in every one of these examples the meaning is
necessarily into! If he had paused to ask himself
whether Jesus went into Capernaum, and Jacob into
Egypt, and so of the others, or merely went to the
boundary line of those places, he would have spared his
reputation by erasing this paragraph. He would also have
saved himself the utterance of another unfortunate
sentence on the same page: "I find but one passage in
the New Testament where it seems to mean into when
used with katabaino. This is in @Romans
x: 7, Who shall go down, eis abusson, into
the abyss?" Besides the examples mentioned above,
he must have searched with very little industry not to
have discovered the following: "Let him that is on
the housetop not go down into, katabato eis,
the house."{33} "Now that he
ascended, what is it but that he also first descended
into, katebe eis, the lower parts of the
earth?"{34} "This man went down
into, katebe eis, his house, justified
rather than the other."{35} "A
certain man was going down, katabainen,
from Jerusalem into, eis,
Jericho."{36} "The road that goes
down, katabainousan, from Jerusalem into,
eis, Gaza."{37}
These are all the instances in the New Testament in which
these two words occur together; and the reader can but
see, that in every single instance the controverted
expression means to go down into. By our first
method of inquiry, therefore, it is settled that Philip
and the eunuch went down into the water.
It is not logically necessary to pursue this discussion
any further; but, let it might be imagined that the
conclusion we have already reached should be modified by
the force of the other member of the antithesis, we must
give some attention to the meaning of anebesan ek
tou udatos. And here I must take exception to
another sweeping declaration of Dr. Stuart's. He says:
"anabaino is never employed in the
sense of emerging from a liquid substance. The
preposition ek, here, would agree with this
idea--although it, by no means, of necessity implies it;
but anabaino forbids us to thus construe
it." Why is this apparently broad assertion so
cautiously limited to the single case of "emerging
from a liquid substance?" Is it possible that
Dr. Stuart knew that the expression meant to go up out
of, but, thinking that it did not occur in any other
passage in connection with a liquid, framed his
proposition to suit such an accident? It is
humiliating in the extreme to see so great a mind descend
to such special pleading on so grave a subject. If anabaiein
ek means to go up out of, nothing but the
most determined obduracy can preclude the admission that
it means the same when referring to liquids as to other
substances. Now, it is a fact, and it must have been known
to Dr. Stuart, if he examined into the ground of his own
statements, that, in every single occurrence of these two
words in connection, in the New Testament, they men to
go up out of.{38} Moreover, in one of these
occurrences they are "employed [106] in
the sense of emerging from a liquid substance. In @Revelations
xiii: 1, John says: "I stood upon the sand of the
sea, and saw a beast, ek tes thalasses anabainon,
rising up out of the sea." Notwithstanding
this broad assertion of Dr. Stuart's, therefore, the
expression in question does, without a single exception,
invariably mean to go up out of. Philip and the
eunuch, then, went up out of the water; hence, they
must first have gone down into it. By both methods
of inquiry, the conclusion is established.
The most astonishing display of partisan blindness on this
passage is yet to be noticed. It is an argument employed
by Moses Stuart, in which he is followed by Dr. Alexander.
He says: "If katebesan eis to udor is
meant to designate the action of plunging, or being
immersed into the water, as a part of the rite of
baptism, then was Philip baptized as well as the eunuch:
for the sacred writer says they both went into the water.
Here, then, must have been a rebaptism of Philip; and,
what is at least singular, he must have baptized himself
as well as the eunuch." This argument proceeds upon
the assumption that immersionists regard the act of going
down into water as the act of immersion, than which there
could not be a grosser perversion of their meaning. When a
strong mind descends to arguments so weak and childish as
this, we have the clearest evidence that the cause in
which it is employed is felt to be weak and untenable.
We must now address ourselves to the inquiry, whether this
passage affords any evidence in favor of immersion. This
much-controverted question may be discussed either as a
philological question, or as a question of fact. In the
former method, the controversy turns upon the meaning of
the Greek word baptizo. In the latter, upon
the action performed by the apostles when they baptized
men. Questions of fact are much more tangible than those
in philology, especially when the philological inquiry
runs into a foreign language. We prefer, therefore, to
discuss this question as a simple matter of fact; and this
method is the more appropriate in this work, which treats
of acts performed by apostles. It can be most
easily determined what act was performed when men were
baptized, without any discussion as to the meaning of the
word baptizo.
If the passage before us contains any evidence that the
eunuch was immersed, outside of the meaning of the word,
it must be circumstantial evidence, and not direct
testimony. In ordinary jurisprudence, the former is often
more conclusive than the latter; for living witnesses may
be bribed, or voluntarily bear false testimony; but facts,
however grossly they may be misinterpreted, can never give
real utterance to falsehood. Circumstantial evidence is
that derived from facts which transpired in such
connection with the main fact assumed as to indicate its
existence or character. There are two conditions necessary
to its conclusiveness: First, That the facts which
constitute the circumstances be fully authenticated; Second,
That they shall be such as can not be accounted for
without the admission of the main fact at issue. The first
condition is always satisfied in scriptural inquiries,
because the facts are asserted by infallible witnesses.
Every thing depends, therefore, upon compliance with the
second condition. This compliance may be so various in
degree, as to admit of every [107] possible
degree of conclusiveness, from the slightest presumption
up to absolute certainty. When the circumstances are as
easily accounted for without the fact assumed as with it,
they afford no evidence at all. When they can be better
accounted for with the fact than without it, the evidence
is probable. When they can not possibly be accounted for
without the fact, and are fully accounted for by the fact,
the evidence is irresistible.
When the facts constituting the circumstances are actions
performed by men, this introduces an additional element
into the argument. In this case, if the agent is a
rational man, he must be supposed to act for a reason, and
his actions, as circumstances, may be regarded with
reference to the reasons for which they were performed. We
further observe, that the question, What act was performed
by the apostles under the name of baptism? has not
reference to an indefinite number of actions, but is
confined, by the nature of the controversy, to two. It was
either immersion or affusion; the latter term embracing
both the specific acts of sprinkling and pouring. This is
admitted by all parties; for, although some contend that
either act will serve the purpose of a valid baptism, no
one, at the present day, contends that the apostles
practiced both. Those who contend for affusion deny
that the apostles or John the harbinger practiced
immersion; while those who contend for immersion deny that
they practiced affusion. It is as if A and B were brought
into court for trial in reference to the murder of C. It
is admitted by both the parties, and known to the counsel,
the jurors, the judge, the sheriff, and the spectators,
that the murder was committed by one of these two parties.
Now, whatever evidence might be presented to exculpate A,
would have precisely the same tendency to the conviction
of B. And if the demonstration of A's innocence were
complete, the jury would render a verdict against B,
though not a witness had testified directly to his guilt.
Just so in the present case. Whatever evidence can be fund
against the affusion of the eunuch and others, is good to
the same extent in favor of their immersion, and vice
versâ.
The circumstances by which this question is to be decided
are divided into two distinct classes, which we may style,
respectively, circumstances of fact, and circumstances of
allusion. We will consider them in the order in which they
are here named.
There are some circumstances of fact which afford no
evidence upon this question whatever. For instance, three
thousand persons were baptized in Jerusalem on the day of
Pentecost, in one afternoon. Now, if it were impossible
for the agents employed to immerse so many in so short a
time, or if sufficient water for that purpose could not
have been found in Jerusalem, the two circumstances of
place and time would furnish evidence against immersion.
But as the facts on which this evidence would depend did
not exist,{39} no such evidence is here found.
All the circumstances involved in the transaction can be
accounted for by the supposition of either affusion or
immersion; hence they furnish no evidence in favor of
either as against the other. In like manner, the command
of Ananias to Saul, to "Arise and be
baptized," though it supplies the fact that previous
to being baptized [108] he must arise
from his prostrate or recumbent position, furnishes no
evidence bearing upon our question, because it is
consistent with either immersion or affusion. If it were
proved that C was murdered with a club, this in itself
would be no evidence again A, or in favor of B, seeing
that either of them could have used a club.
But there are other circumstances of fact which afford
unmistakable evidence upon this question. The agent about
to perform the act in dispute selected for the purpose a river,
as the Jordan,{40} or a place where there was
"much water," as in "Ænon near to
Salim."{41} When the parties about to
perform the act were in an ordinary dwelling, they went
out of doors for the purpose, though it were the hour of
midnight, as in the case of the Philippian jailer.{42}
When they came down to the water selected, both the
administrator and the subject went down into it, as
in the case of the eunuch, and the baptism was performed
while they were in it. These are all unquestionable
facts, for they are declared in unambiguous terms by
infallible witnesses. They are also actions performed by
rational men, and, therefore, each of them must have been
performed for some reason. Moreover, the reason for each
was furnished by the nature of the main act, for the
purpose of accomplishing which each of these subordinate
actions was performed. But the supposition of affusion
furnishes no conceivable reason for any one of these
actions. It can not, therefore, be the main act in
question.
Again: If the main act could have been as well and as
conveniently performed without these subordinate actions
as with them, then all these agents acted without a
reason. But certain affusion, even of the multitudes
baptized by John, could have been performed as
conveniently to himself and the people, at some well or
fountain centrally located, as at the Jordan, or in Ænon.
Paul could have sprinkled the jailer as conveniently in
the house at midnight, as out of doors; and Philip could
have sprinkled or poured water on the eunuch as well at
the brink of the water, as by going down into it. Each of
these subordinate actions, therefore, was an irrational
one, if affusion was the main act performed.
But, still further, there are good and valid reasons against
such a line of action as we are considering, such as have
sufficed, in every age and country, and among all ranks of
society, to cause those who perform affusion to pursue a
course the reverse of this in every particular. To save
time and labor, and to avoid personal discomfort, instead
of going to rivers and places of much water, they
administer the rite at home or at church. Instead of going
out of doors at night, if they happen to be out of doors
at night, they prefer to go into the house. And, instead
of going down into the water, they dip into it
merely the tips of their fingers, or, avoiding all contact
with the water themselves, they pour it from a vessel upon
the subject. To suppose, in the face of all these reasons,
which are controlling with rational men, that the apostles
performed the various actions which we know they did, for
the purpose of affusion, is to suppose them to act not
only irrationally, but contrary to all the
reasons which govern rational men. But they were rational
men; therefore, he who reasons thus concerning them is
convicted, beyond question, of drawing an irrational
conclusion. [109]
So far as the circumstances of fact are concerned, we
might logically rest the case here; for, having sustained
the negative proposition that affusion was not the act in
question, we have no alternative but to conclude that it
was immersion. But the same circumstantial evidence which
brings us to so solid a conclusion by this indirect
method, serves the purpose equally well when applied to
the direct proof of immersion. The supposition of
immersion furnishes the desired reason for each one of the
subordinate actions we have been considering. It accounts
for the selection of a river or a place of much water; for
leaving the house at midnight, and for going down into
the water. It is the only supposition which can
account for them; and, therefore, their existence demands
the existence of immersion. We must either deny these
facts, which would be infidelity; deny that the apostles
acted rationally, which would be the height of folly and
impiety; or admit that immersion, and not affusion, was
the apostolic practice.
The circumstances of allusion are equally conclusive with
those already considered. Their force may be stated thus:
When parties who are certainly acquainted with the facts
in dispute let drop incidental remarks indicative of the
nature of the facts, such remarks afford evidence, by
indicating the knowledge possessed by the speaker. If, in
the case of trial for murder above supposed, it were known
that D was cognizant of all the facts, any incidental
statement of his, inconsistent with the supposition that
he knew A to be the murderer, would afford circumstantial
evidence in favor of A, and against B. Now, Jesus and the
apostles were cognizant of all the facts in reference to
baptism, and they have made certain allusions to it,
which, so far as the nature of the act is concerned, are
incidental, but which indicate what they knew the act to
be. If, upon a collation of these allusions, we find them
inconsistent with the knowledge, on their part, that
baptism was affusion, but just such as imply the knowledge
that it was immersion, the evidence from this source will
be conclusive.
Of the many allusions at hand, we will select, for our
present purpose, only a few, the bearing of which appears
least liable to dispute. First, in the words of our
Savior, "Except a man be born of water and the
Spirit, he can not enter into the kingdom of God."
That the expression, "born of water," is an
allusion to baptism, is admitted by all standard
commentators and critics known to the writer, and is
disputed by none but those who are incapable of being
candid upon this subject. The term is used metaphorically,
and, therefore, indicates some connection with water,
which is analogous to a birth. But there is no conceivable
analogy between a birth and an application of water by
affusion; hence it is impossible that Jesus could have
known the act alluded to to be affusion. The expression
forces the mind to something like a birth, which can be
found only in the act of drawing the body out of water,
which takes place in immersion. This, alone, could have
suggested the metaphor to the mind of Jesus, and to this
our minds intuitively run when we hear the words
pronounced. It is intuitively certain, therefore, that
Jesus alluded to immersion, and not to sprinkling.
The next allusion to which we invite attention is that in
which [110] Jesus calls the
unspeakable sufferings which were to terminate his life,
"The baptism with which I am to be baptized."{43}
Here the term baptism is used metaphorically for
his sufferings, which could not be unless there is, in
literal baptism, something analogous to the overwhelming
agonies of Gethsemane and Calvary |