Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 26:24

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 26:24

And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.

24 32. Interruption by Festus. Appeal to Agrippa. Consultation and decision

24 Festus said with a loud voice ] Probably what had last fallen from Paul seemed to him little better than lunatic ravings. The Gospel of the Cross did appear as “foolishness” to the Gentile world. And this Gospel he had just heard in all its fulness: that the Christ by suffering of death and rising to life again should be the source of true enlightenment both to Jews and Gentiles.

Paul, thou art beside thyself [ R. V. mad]. As the same word is taken up in the following verse, it is better that it should be rendered alike in both places.

much learning doth make thee mad ] Lit. (with R. V.) “doth turn thee to madness.” But there is nothing gained by construing thus, and much is lost in English vigour. “Much learning” is literally “the many writings.” As in Joh 7:15, where the same word is rendered “letters,” it may mean study and learning generally. But it seems better to take it of those writings (viz. the Old Testament) to which Paul had been appealing. For as a religious literature no nation, not even the polished Greeks, had anything to place in comparison with the Sacred Books of the Jews.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Festus said with a loud voice – Amazed at the zeal of Paul. Paul doubtless evinced deep interest in the subject, and great earnestness in the delivery of his defense.

Thou art beside thyself – Thou art deranged; thou art insane. The reasons why Festus thought Paul mad were, probably:

(1) His great earnestness and excitement on the subject.

(2) His laying such stress on the gospel of the despised Jesus of Nazareth, as if it were a matter of infinite moment. Festus despised it; and he regarded it as proof of derangement that so much importance was attached to it.

(3) Festus regarded, probably, the whole story of the vision that Paul said had appeared to him as the effect of an inflamed and excited imagination, and as a proof of delirium. This is not an uncommon charge against those who are Christians, and especially when they evince unusual zeal. Sinners regard them as under the influence of delirium and fanaticism; as terrified by imaginary and superstitious fears; or as misguided by fanatical leaders. Husbands often thus think their wives to be deranged, and parents perceive their children that, and wicked people assume the ministers of the gospel to be crazy. The frivolous think it proof of derangement that others are serious, anxious, and prayerful; the rich, that others are willing to part with their property to do good; the ambitious and worldly, that others are willing to leave their country and home to go among the Gentiles to spend their lives in making known the unsearchable riches of Christ. The really sober and rational part of the world they who fear God and keep his commandments; they who believe that eternity is before them, and who strive to live for it – are thus charged with insanity by those who are really deluded, and who are thus living lives of madness and folly. The tenants of a madhouse often think all others deranged but themselves; but there is no madness so great, no delirium so awful, as to neglect the eternal interest of the soul for the sake of the pleasures and honors which this life can give.

Much learning – It is probable that Festus was acquainted with the fact that Paul was a learned man. Paul had not, while before him, manifested particularly his learning. But Festus, acquainted in some way with the fact that he was well-educated, supposed that his brain had been turned, and that the effect of it was seen by devotion to a fanatical form of religion. The tendency of long-continued and intense application to produce mental derangement is everywhere known.

Doth make thee mad – Impels, drives, or excites thee peritrepei to madness.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Act 26:24-25

And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself.

The effects of Pauls defence on Festus


I.
The charge of Festus. He did not denounce Paul as a hypocrite or a knave, but rather as a brainless fanatic. This impression, though false, might have been sincere. The charge of madness against the earnest advocates of Christianity is very–

1. Easy. It requires no thought. Nothing is less difficult than to dispose of great questions in this way.

2. Common. It is what the careless and the profligate are constantly alleging against earnest teachers.

3. Foolish. Because no class of men are influenced by higher reason than the genuine advocates of religion. Posterity has long since decided who was the madman, Paul or Festus.


II.
The reply of Paul.

1. He respectfully denies the charge.

2. He describes the true character of his teaching. Truth here stands opposed to falsehood, and soberness to mental derangement. I speak, as if Paul had said, the words of reality and the words of reason.

3. He obliquely rebukes Festus. He turns from him as if he would ignore his existence, and addresses himself to the king. As if Paul had said to Festus, It is not surprising that you cannot understand me; you are not a Jew. You have already misunderstood me. I am not speaking to you, but to the king; for the king knoweth of these things, etc. In thus acknowledging the kings acquaintance with the subject, Pauls aim was not to flatter the monarch, but to humble Festus. (D. Thomas, D. D.)

Paul and Festus–a contrast

1. It was no even-handed contest in which the apostle found himself engaged. It was the occasion of a great state ceremonial, a Dhurbar, when the Imperial Viceroy received the welcome and the homage of the most powerful native prince. Just at this time he had a quarrel with the Jews and was anxious to secure the support of Festus. He had recently added to the palace of the Herods a lofty dining hall from which his guests could look down upon the inner temple. The priests and guardians of the sacred precincts resented this act, and therefore built up a high wall, and shut out the kings view. Agrippa resented this indignity, and endeavoured to get the restriction removed. He applied to Festus for aid; and Festus warmly espoused his cause. All this we have on the authority of Josephus. I mention the fact here for two reasons. It illustrates–

(1) The historical accuracy of the sacred narrative. The narrative of St. Luke and that of Josephus fit together as separate pieces of an historical whole.

(2) The relative proportions of events which men inevitably take who are mixed up in them. The aggressive insolence of Agrippa was the one topic of general interest at the time. But this interview with Paul, who cared for it? Yet time has wholly reversed the verdict of contemporary history. Of the magnificent palace of the Herods, or the goodly buildings of the temple, not one stone is left standing upon another. The aggressiveness of Agrippa and the policy of Festus have alike passed away, but the words of St. Paul are living and germinating and fructifying still. The quarrel of Agrippa has vanished out of sight, the pleading of Paul is the inheritance of all ages.

2. The attitude of Festus towards St. Paul more especially demands our attention. Festus was not a man whose opinion could be lightly disregarded. We have not here to do with the sceptical, worldly, cynical Pilate, or a cruel, reckless profligate like Felix; but with a just, sincere, outspoken, prompt and vigorous ruler, the very man to whom in the common affairs of life we should entrust our case with confidence. Nothing could be more upright than his treatment of the prisoner from first to last. But he has no ideas and no aspirations beyond. When the future and the unseen are mentioned he is lost in confusion; he is as helpless in dealing with such topics of thought as one who is blind in discriminating the hues of the rainbow. He is blunt, even to contempt, when he refers to one Jesus which was dead whom Paul yet affirmed to be alive. This was decisive to his mind. Could any sane man maintain an absurdity like this! He listens for a time with patience while Paul pleads his cause, but at length he can no longer restrain himself. He is confirmed now in his first surmise. He rudely interrupts the prisoner, shouting rather than speaking, Thou art mad, Paul! All this talk about sin and repentance, and forgiveness and salvation, what is this but the very phantom of a diseased brain? This story of the apparition on the way to Damascus with the light and the loud voice has nothing in common with the solid experiences, the stern matter-of-fact duties of the Roman magistrate, and, in short, with the acknowledged realities of human life.

3. Yes, it was sheer madness–

(1) To commit social suicide as this Paul had done. He had given up a high and honourable position among his fellow countrymen; he was on the high road to preferment, and yet he suddenly gave up all–for what? To become an outcast; to be hated by the Jews and scorned by the Greeks; to drag out a miserable career of penury, of suffering, of toil and of danger; to be spurned by all men as the very filth and offscouring of society. Who has put the case more strongly than himself? Aye! he knew, no one could know better, that he was irretrievably mad as the world counts madness. We are fools, he says of himself, we are fools for Christs sake.

(2) To profess such a creed as Paul did. Whoever heard before of one claiming the allegiance and the worship of the whole world for a crucified malefactor? There was no difference of opinion here between Jew and Greek. On most questions affecting religion the one spoke a language quite unintelligible to the other; but here there was absolute unanimity of sentiment–Festus, Agrippa, Roman soldier, and Hebrew priest, alike must join in condemning these rovings. Here again no one knew better than the apostle himself how his teaching was regarded by the learning and the sagacity of his age. He knew it, he gloried in it, he invited all men to become mad as he was mad. This very madness, he maintained, was the indispensable condition of all higher knowledge. If any man thinketh to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise.

4. So, then, two wholly irreconcilable views of life confronted each other in Festus and Paul. Paul was sincere. Festus was also sincere. And yet between the two there is a yawning and impassable gulf. If Festus is right, Paul is mad. If Paul is right, Festus is blind.

5. From an evidential point of view this scene would suggest not a few important reflections.

(1) I may point, e.g., to the calmness and sobriety of the apostles statement, to the perfect assurance with which he details the history of his conversion and the grounds of his belief, to the manly and courteous simplicity with which he replies to the rebuke of Festus, and the sarcasm of Agrippa. Certainly nothing is more unlike the raving of the maniac.

(2) I might turn away from the scene itself to its results. The civilised world, after long wavering and much halting, did ultimately prefer the madness of Paul to the sanity of Festus. Reflect how enormous has been the gain to mankind from this preference, and how irretrievable would have been the loss if it had taken Festus instead of Paul. Christianity rescued a helpless world which was hastening to its ruin, endowed society with fresh vigour and youth by infusing into it new aspirations and hopes; and this reinvigorating influence contained in itself the potentiality of all that is noblest and best in modern civilisation and life.

6. But it is a practical and not an intellectual conviction which I would wish to enforce upon you–the magnitude of the alternative. No ingenuity or indifference can bridge over the gulf which separates the view of human life, taken by Festus, from the view of it by St. Paul–the view taken by the upright and reasonable man of the world, who lives only in the present, and the view taken by the Christian, whose whole soul is dominated with the presence of God, with the consciousness of sin, and with the conviction of eternity. God forbid that we should speak meanly of honesty, truth, uprightness, whatever in human life is lovely and of good report. But still the fact remains. Here are two antagonistic views of human life and human destiny. Men may strive to patch up a hollow compromise between them, but no truce can be real because no meeting point is visible. It is the alternative of sanity and madness, of light and darkness, of life and death. If you have decided that the Christian view is sanity, is light, is life, then it must not, it cannot be inoperative in you. It will pervade your whole life, and breathe the breath of heaven into the work of earth. All this stands to reason. It cannot be a matter of indifference whether you are responsible in your actions only to the judgments of human society or to an all-seeing Eye, who overlooks, misinterprets misjudges nothing. It cannot be a matter of indifference whether wrong-doing is simply a violation of order, attended with inconvenient consequences, or whether it is sin, that is, a rebellious defiance of an all-righteous, all-holy, Father in heaven; whether He who walked upon our earth eighteen centuries ago was a lunatic; or whether He was indeed the only begotten Son of God; whether this life is our entire life, or whether there is an eternal hereafter before which the triumphs of the present are just nothing at all. This, then, I say, this is the tremendous alternative. There is no halting between two opinions here; the chasm is broad and fathomless. Accept, therefore, the alternative which you have chosen; accept it with all its consequences, think over it, master it, live it. Men will taunt you with your inconsistency; but be not discouraged by this. Let the taunt nerve you to greater efforts. The inconsistency must necessarily be greater as the ideal is higher. Festus, no doubt, was a much more consistent man than St. Paul. The standard of Festus was the ordinary standard of honourable men, and it would seem he did not fall far short of it. The standard of St. Paul was absolute self-negation, and he is constantly bewailing his shortcomings. The mere voluptuary is far more consistent than either. His aim is sensual pleasure, and he devotes himself to it heart and soul. Endure to be called madman when you stand before the judgment seat of Festus. That is inevitable; only remember meanwhile that you are the sons of God, heirs of eternity. (Bp. Lightfoot.)

Illustrious fools and madmen

In one of his works the late Charles Kingsley makes the suggestive and vigorous remark that there never was anyone who spoke out the truth yet on the earth, who was not called a howling idiot for his pains at first. And to anyone who is at all acquainted with the general facts and teachings of history, the remark will appear by no means too sweeping. It may not perhaps be very difficult to get at the root and reason of this ascription of folly and madness to men of strong religious earnestness and devotion. The madman, for instance, is very frequently a man of one idea. Some one oppressive thought has burnt itself into his brain, absorbs his attention by day, and colours his dreams by night, and he seems to know and care for nothing beside. And it is not therefore much to be wondered at that men of the world, to whom money, power, pleasure, luxury, are the sole ends of existence, should transfer this aspect of a disordered mind to those who have lived and laboured under the impulsion of strong religious enthusiasm, and brand them as monomaniacs. Heretic! Fool! Fanatic! Madman! Antichrist! those and many more such-like epithets of choice, ecclesiastical Billingsgate were shot at Luther from the catapults of the Pope and the priests of Rome. John Wesley, the great religious reformer of the last century, did not escape being placed in shames high pillory; while the great leaders and pioneers of the modern missionary movement, as we know, took very high rank in the category of reputed fools and madmen. The mission of William Carey to India was publicly characterised in the British House of Commons by one of its aristocratic members, as the mission of a madman; and even such a man as Sydney Smith, the witty canon of St. Pauls, found in the first batch of missionaries that went out for the evangelisation of the heathen, what he thought fit targets for the arrows of his caustic wit and satire. Little detachments of maniacs! was the only sentence which his Christian charity could find wherewith to label them. In the domain of science we have the case of Robert Bacon, of whom it has been said by Dr. Friend that he was the miracle of his age, and possessed perhaps the greatest genius for mechanical science that has been known since the days of Archimedes. And how was this brilliant experimental philosopher of the thirteenth century treated when he had made known those wonderful discoveries in chemistry, astronomy, and mechanics, which were all anticipations of the inventions and findings of modern science? Why, as all readers of English history are well aware, he was accused by the ignorant monks of his order of being possessed with the devil. It was affirmed that he was a practiser of the black art, and was aided in his search for the philosophers stone by infernal spirits. These accusations, together with eleven or twelve years close confinement in a cell, were the rewards which his bigoted and fanatical contemporaries meted out to the early star preceding dawn of experimental science and philosophy. And the same rule we shall find holding good in relation to others who were conspicuous pioneers and factors in the social and material progress of the people. Especially was this the case with regard to the discoverers and propounders of the propelling power of steam, and to its practical application in the form of locomotive steam engines, steam vessels, and the like, for the promotion of more expeditious modes of travelling. The germ idea of the steam engine is doubtless to be traced to the machines, diagrams, and writings of Solomon de Caus; although the Marquis of Worcester is generally acknowledged to be the inventor. And yet both these men were accounted lunatics by their contemporaries, because of their doctrine concerning the moving power of steam. The former, we are told, travelled from Normandy to Paris to present a treatise to Louis XIII on the subject. His minister, Cardinal Richelieu, dismissed the applicant, and on account of his importunity imprisoned him as a dangerous madman. And the latter, the Marquis of Worcester, was accounted not only a quack, but an impostor, and had to suffer the most bitter reverses on account of his advocacy of the brilliant discovery which his observing genius had made. Those who followed in the footsteps of these men, and who carried out their theories and principles to such glorious issues, may not have had to encounter quite such bitter persecution; nevertheless they had to run the gauntlet of the mockery and opposition of those whose ignorance prevented them from perceiving, or whose interests precluded them from entertaining, such so-called mad and impracticable projects. When Fulton proposed to navigate the river Hudson in a steamboat he was met with rude jokes, incredulous smiles, and contemptuous sneers by the wiseacres of his day, who charitably denounced his idea as the silliest that ever entered a silly brain. And when George Stephenson, the Father of English Railways, proposed to run a train from Woolwich to London at the amazing rate of fourteen miles an hour, he was not only regarded by many as an impracticable dreamer, but by some as betraying premonitory symptoms of fitness for Bedlam and a straitjacket. It was the old trick of calling a man mad who is in advance of his fellows, until the madness becomes contagious and the tables turn; then, like the good boy in the fairy tale, on whose head the fools cap, placed there by his scoffing brothers, turned into a crown, the jeers of opponents become transmuted into praise, and the very nicknames of such madmen become glorious. Additional and similar illustrations of the point we are seeking to set out lie ready to hand for gleaning in other field s of human thought and activity, but which can only be indicated. It is, for instance, a well-known fact that Mesmer, the discoverer of animal magnetism, was thought to be possessed of Satanic agency when he propounded his theory and made known his wonderful discovery; and had he lived at one time in England he would in all probability have been burnt to death at the stake as a wizard. As it was he was bitterly persecuted, his life threatened, and for a time he suffered imprisonment. The annals of political reform would also supply striking examples of the same thing, as the cases of Cobden, Bright, and Villiers would abundantly testify, who were branded as fools and fanatics for the part they played in the abolition of the Corn Laws, by which the death-knell of protective monopolies was rung, and the cheap loaf placed upon the poor mans table. So, too, with the records of the great Temperance reform. The pioneers of that great social movement had to pay the penalty of men in advance of their time, of being looked upon and labelled as fools and madmen. (J. Cuttell.)

The worlds estimate of Christianity


I.
The worlds opinion.

1. What it is. That earnest Christians are beside themselves. The world has no objection to act upon the principle live and let live. If Christians will only quietly go their own way they are welcome to it–to all their strange worship, doctrines, mode of living, hopes, etc. But when all this is pressed upon the devotees of business, pleasure, politics, etc., and declared to be the one thing needful, it evidences insanity and must be called by its proper name. What have practical common-sense men of the world to do with such dreams?

2. By whom it is entertained–

(1) By too many of the worlds magnates in the State, science, literature, commerce. Men who are wholly occupied with interests, in their view of vastly greater moment.

(2) By men who ought to know better. Agrippa probably held the same view as Festus, although he professedly held many of Pauls primary beliefs. So there are many like Festus in our congregations. As long as the preacher is content with expounding in a quiet manner and in polished sentences the commonly accepted principles of morality, they can bear with him; but as soon as he presses home with earnestness upon the conscience the awful realities of time and destiny it is set aside as vulgar madness.

3. Upon what it is founded.

(1) With Festus some attribute it to learning–over-taxation of the brain. The mind has been so overwhelmed with contemplation that it has lost its balance.

(2) Others put it down to narrowness or superficiality. The man does not think deeply enough, or his reading has not been sufficiently extensive, or he would know that the subjects which he declaims are open questions, and he would submit as hypotheses what he now insists on as dogmas.

(3) Others say it is the result of an unbalanced system in which passion is allowed to usurp the place of reason.


II.
The Christian answer.

1. A strange thing is not necessarily the sign of madness nor the setter forth of them a madman. Otherwise Festuss charge would hold good in regard to some of the greatest men who have ever lived. What great discoverer, scientist, inventor, philanthropist, has not at first been thought mad–e.g., Colombus, Galileo, Stephenson, Howard, Wilberforce, etc.

2. Were it otherwise with the Christian the charge might well be substantiated. Knowing what Paul did, would he not have been beside himself if he had not acted as he did. To feel the greatness of the gospel facts and issues, and to suppress them or be indifferent to them–that is madness.

3. Who would not rather be mad with Paul than sane with Festus when we compare the character of each, and the service each rendered to the world?

4. Whether Christianity is insanity or truth and soberness can be tested by its effects. Does it drive men mad, or does it make them truthful and sober? Let Christian lives, institutions, literature, furnish the reply. (J. W. Burn.)

Christian enthusiasm, its reasonableness

Once, at Wotton, Rowland Hill was carried away by the impetuous rush of his feelings, and exclaimed, Because I am in earnest men call me an enthusiast, but I am not; mine are the words of truth and soberness. I once saw a gravel pit fall in, and bury three human beings alive. I shouted so loud for help that I was heard at the distance of a mile; help came, and rescued two of the poor sufferers. No one called me an enthusiast then; and when I see eternal destruction ready to fall on poor sinners, and about to entomb them irrecoverably in an eternal mass of woe, and call aloud on them to escape, shall I be called an enthusiast now?

A preachers sanity questioned

When Dr. Chalmers was converted, the change in his ministry was quickly apparent to all. The rationalists, to whose class he had belonged, commonly said: Tom Chalmers is mad. Some years after, when he was settled in Glasgow, a lady and gentleman on their way to hear him met a friend, who asked where they were going. On being told, he said, What! to hear that madman? They persuaded him to go for once and do the same, promising never to dispute with him about that title again, if he were inclined to apply it to the preacher after his sermon. To the surprise of all three, when Dr. Chalmers gave out his text, it was, I am not mad, most noble Felix, but speak forth the words of truth and soberness. The sceptical hearer was not only convinced of the preachers sanity, but he was likewise converted to faith in Evangelical truth.

Who is the madman

Lieutenant Watson, a godly officer, in the Peninsular War, had to halt with his regiment for some minutes in the presence of the French, and in the prospect of immediate battle. While so circumstanced, he said, several wounded men were carried by, the blood streaming through the stretchers on which they were borne. I was standing near several young officers who had often made me a subject of ridicule. I thought it a good opportunity to speak a word which might prove in season, and began by remarking, You have often called me a fool and a madman, but a few moments may decide the question, with whom is madness and folly, in the presence of Him who is the Dispenser of life and death. A solemn awe seemed to impress them for the moment, and I went on to speak of Him who had deprived death of its sting, by receiving it in His own body on the accursed tree. They begged and entreated of me to stop, and said at such a time it was cruel to torture their minds with such things.

Who is mad Paul or Festus

Who is mad?


I.
The Christian who–

1. Founds his faith on the sure revelation of God and the experience of the heart;

2. Regulates his life according to the commands of God, and makes sure steps on the narrow path of holiness;

3. Places his hopes on an eternity, which, amid all the changes of time, is ever before his eyes?


II.
Or he who is not a Christian who–

1. Blindly derides what he cannot comprehend with his senses;

2. Staggers, the sport of his passions, helplessly on the broad road that leads to destruction;

3. Seeks his happiness in the present, which vanishes like a dream, and leaves nothing behind but a terrible awaking? (K. Gerok.)

Evangelistic madness

As soon as Berridge, of Everton, began to preach in a different strain from the neighbouring clergy they felt hurt at the emptiness of their own churches and the fulness of his. The squire, too, was much offended; he did not like to see so many strangers, and be so incommoded, and endeavoured to turn Mr. Berridge out of his living by a complaint to his bishop. Berridge being sent for by his lordship, was accosted thus: Well, Berridge, they tell me you go about preaching out of your own parish; did I institute you to any other than Everton? No, my lord. Well, then, you preach where you have no right to. It is true, my lord; I remember seeing five or six clergyman out of their own parishes playing at bowls. Pho, if you do not desist, you will very likely be sent to Huntingdon jail. As to that, my lord, I have no greater liking to a jail than other people; but I had rather go there with a good conscience, than be at liberty with a bad one. Here his lordship, looking hard at Berridge, gravely assured him, he was beside himself, and that in a few months he would be better or worse. Then, said he, my lord, you may make yourself easy in this business; for if I am better, you must suppose I shall desist of my own accord; and if worse, you need not send me to jail, as I shaft be provided with an accommodation in Bedlam.

But he said, I am not mad.

Earnest Christianity vindicated from the charge of madness


I.
The charge. Thou art beside thyself.

1. It is urged by the avowed infidel against the professor of Christianity. The idea of regenerating society by means of the gospel is looked upon as being an insane dream.

2. It is urged by the nominal Christian against the earnest practiser and propagator of Christianity. Religion is quite right in its place, but let it keep there, else it will become a bore. Do not bring it into social life. Be religious quietly and respectably.


II.
The vindication. I am not mad, most noble Festus. The vindication is polite.

1. The earnest Christian proves his superior wisdom by the end at which he aims–the regeneration of the heart, and the perfect development of the whole man.

2. The earnest Christian proves his superior wisdom by the means which he employs. These means are two fold.

(1) Faith in Christianity as a system.

(2) Devotion to Christ as a person.

(a) Personal surrender. Ye are Christs.

(b) Enthusiastic service – advocacy, giving, and working.

Admitting, then, the aim to be flight and wise, art not the means exclusively suitable? What but Christianity can regenerate and perfect man? Cold consent to a creed cannot do it. Enthusiasm has done every good thing that has been done in this world. Formalism hinders.

3. The earnest Christian proves his superior wisdom by the success which he achieves.

Conclusion: Who is the madman, the accused or the accuser? The accuser assuredly.

1. The avowed infidel is a fool. He is not sure that Christianity is a delusion or an imposition. He is resting upon a most improbable supposition.

2. The nominal Christian is a greater fool. He says he believes in the existence of God, in the Divinity of the Bible, in the claims of Christ, in the realities of eternity; yet he lives as though he believed them not. His practice belies his profession. (Thomas Baron.)

A moral duel

Concerning the two duellists in the text, notice–

1. Both were signally able men. The speech of Festus (see Act 25:27) shows this, and the high position to which his abilities had raised him. Paul was not less able, but even more so.

2. Both were well known.

3. Both had distinguished spectators. There were present Agrippa, the king, the chief captains, and the principal men of the city.


I.
As secularism represented in the attack of the one. Festus was a man of the world, a worldling, a strong, enlightened, talented secularist. Two remarks concerning this attack.

1. It was dealt out by a man of distinguished power.

2. It was prompted by motives that seemed reasonable.


II.
As Christianity represented in the defence of the other. Two remarks are suggested.

1. The defence was direct. Paul says, I am not mad.

2. The defence was rational. He says, I speak forth the words of truth and soberness.

3. The defence was respectful. Paul addresses his accuser as most noble [R.V., excellent] Festus. (Homilist.)

The sanity of Paul

Proved by–


I.
His manner all through this trying time. He had endured enough to turn the strongest brain. The violence of the mob; the narrow escapes from scourging and assassination, with all the tremendous anxieties connected therewith, and with his trials before the various tribunals; the hope deferred by the policy of Felix; the strain involved by the appeal to Caesar, and now his arraignment before a crowded and distinguished court. Who else could have endured all this without mental derangement? Yet we see Paul uniformly calm, courteous, courageous, conciliatory, quick to see and prompt to seize every favouring opportunity, and adapting himself with an ease amounting to genius to every circumstance in which he was placed. If this is madness, who then is sane?


II.
The matter of his defence. Two or three years had passed since his defence on the stairs, and nearly a quarter of a century since the event he describes. The slightest touch of insanity would be easy to detect in the inevitable variation of some important details. Yet all these accounts are consistent. No lapse of memory, no mental indistinctness or weakness is observable. No man ever gave the same account of an hallucination twice, and no man ever suffered for one as Paul did for his vision of Christ, or ever utilised it for the benefit of the race.


III.
The effects of his conduct on the world. What madman has turned the course of history, which was running in a wrong direction, into the right? To morally revolutionise the world, to secure for his Master a following which no man can number of the very elect of the race, and to secure a place in the affections of untold millions, are hardly effects which we should attribute to the work of a madman.


IV.
The common consent of the wisest and best of the past eighteen centuries who have found in Pauls words salvation from sin, comfort in sorrow, stimulus to high endeavour and hope in death. (J. W. Burn.)

The wise answer

Does a man speak foolishly?–suffer him gladly, for you are wise. Does he speak erroneously?–stop such a mans mouth with sound words which cannot be gainsaid. Does he speak truly?–rejoice in the truth. (Oliver Cromwell.)

Most noble Festus.–

The upper classes

1. Years ago an attached domestic, presuming on the privilege accorded to his class, roundly reproved his master for the sin of swearing, and gave a broad hint about the judgment to come. The laird, feeling that he had not a leg to stand on, cut the matter short by the remark, It has pleased Providence to place our family in a superior position in this world, and I trust He will do the same in the next. This is a real case, but in our day a rare one. On the other side there are everywhere many who wear coronets and pray. But between the two extremes of good and evil in the upper ten thousand how many diversities there are in character and circumstances.

2. Paul could appreciate another mans difficulties, and sympathise with those whose position magnified the offence of the Cross. There was strength in him, but there was sensibility also. He can neither be weak nor rude. He knew that it was harder for the Roman governor than for a meaner man to obey the gospel. He will not flatter him, nor suggest that there is a private door to admit him to heaven; yet in his polite address lies a principle permanent, precious, practical.

3. We speak of aristocracy in no narrow or technical sense, but of the uppermost state of society, whether birth, wealth, energy, intellect or learning may have been the immediate cause of their elevation. Now, while it is true that such need and get the offer of salvation on the same terms as those who stand on a lower platform, it is also true that some temptations peculiar to themselves increase their difficulty of accepting the gospel.

4. One of our Lords sayings in reference to the aristocracy of wealth throws light on our theme (Mat 19:23-24). Assuming that the needles eye represents the low, narrow door through the wall of a fortified city for use by night or time of war, when the great entrance must be shut–you have here a passage from danger into safety, not impracticable in its own nature, but impracticable to a camel because of its huge bulk. Thus the elevation of the highest class makes their entrance into Christs kingdom more difficult. Of this difficulty Jesus speaks with tenderness, and Paul follows His steps. Most noble Festus, he said, observing that the dignity of the governor was holding high the head of a sinful creature, and hindering him from bowing before the Cross of Christ, and he said it to gratify the great mans feelings, and so to get the lost man saved.

5. From the style of the apostles address a lesson shines, sending out its light beams, teaching two opposite classes of men.


I.
For ardent Christians of every rank and especially Christians of humble station. If you are true disciples, none will dispute your nobility. If you are born again, you are high born, how low soever your place in the registers of earth. But beware of presuming upon your place and privilege. Be conscious of your defects, and meek in your deportment; be all things to all men that by all means you may save some. In particular, beware of throwing a stumbling block in the way of the noble, the rich, or the refined, by any species of rudeness. Take care lest you mistake vulgarity for faithfulness, and your ignorance for the simplicity that is in Christ. There are some near you who have not yet submitted to the gospel; their elevation makes it harder for them to bow down and go in by the strait gate. Had you stood on an equal height, perhaps you would not have been within the gate today. Be careful; what if they should turn away from Christ because of some rudeness they saw in you. Think of their peculiar difficulties; do not make them greater; take some out of the way if you can. He that winneth souls is wise.


II.
For the most noble of every class there lies a lesson here. We frankly own that there are nobles among men. We address our chiefs, as Paul addressed Festus, and give the title of respect which is due. Sirs, you cherish a high sense of honour, you have a refined taste, you have exercised your understanding, and cannot pay any deference to mere assertion. Well, what follows? Great and good though these attainments be, what are you profited if you lose your soul? Strive to enter by the strait gate, for your attainments may be so worn as to imperil your salvation. Finally, beware of allowing the rudeness and other defects of those who profess to be Christians to scare you away from Christ. It will be no consolation to you if you are not saved, if you are able to convict Christians of faults. You are not asked to believe in Christians but in Christ. (W. Arnot, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 24. Paul, thou art beside thyself] “Thou art mad, Paul!” “Thy great learning hath turned thee into a madman.” As we sometimes say, thou art cracked, and thy brain is turned. By the it is likely that Festus meant no more than this, that Paul had got such a vast variety of knowledge, that his brain was overcharged with it: for, in this speech, Paul makes no particular show of what we call learning; for he quotes none of their celebrated authors, as he did on other occasions; see Ac 17:28. But he here spoke of spiritual things, of which Festus, as a Roman heathen, could have no conception; and this would lead him to conclude that Paul was actually deranged. This is not an uncommon case with many professing Christianity; who, when a man speaks on experimental religion, on the life of God in the soul of man-of the knowledge of salvation, by the remission of sins-of the witness of the Spirit, c., c., things essential to that Christianity by which the soul is saved, are ready to cry out, Thou art mad: he is an enthusiast: that is, a religious madman one who is not worthy to be regarded and yet, strange to tell, these very persons who thus cry out are surprised that Festus should have supposed that Paul was beside himself!

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Thou art beside thyself; this was the opinion of Festus concerning Paul, and such is the opinion of carnal and worldly men concerning such as are truly godly; as the prophet who came to Jehu was counted a mad fellow, 2Ki 9:11, and the friends of our Saviour thought him to be

beside himself, Mar 3:21. And it cannot be otherwise; for good men and bad men have quite different apprehensions concerning most things; and what one calls good, the other accounts evil; and what is wisdom to the one, is madness to the other.

Much learning doth make thee mad; much study many times increasing melancholy, which a sedentary and thoughtful life is most exposed unto. Paul is reckoned to have been skilful in the Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, and Latin tongues; to have been well read in the poets; and certainly he was an excellent orator, as appears all along in his defence he made for his doctrine, and his life: but there was yet somewhat more than all this; Festus might feel a more than ordinary effect from Pauls words, and not knowing of the Spirit by which he spake did attribute it to his learning, or madness, or to any thing but the true cause of it.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

24. Festus said with a loudvoicesurprised and bewildered.

Paul, thou art besidethyself, much learning doth make thee mad“is turning thyhead.” The union of flowing Greek, deep acquaintance withthe sacred writings of his nation, reference to a resurrection andother doctrines to a Roman utterly unintelligible, and, above all,lofty religious earnestness, so strange to the cultivated,cold-hearted skeptics of that daymay account for this suddenexclamation.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And as he thus spake for himself,…. Asserting the integrity and innocence of his past life and conversation, in proof of which he appealed to the Jews themselves; setting forth the prejudices to the Christian religion he had been under; declaring the heavenly vision that had appeared to him, and the divine orders he had received; alleging, that in his ministry there was an entire harmony between him, and the writings of Moses, and the prophets, for which the Jews professed a veneration; as he was thus vindicating himself, ere he had well finished his apology,

Festus said with a loud voice; that all might hear, and being moved with resentment at what he had heard; and it may be, he was displeased with Paul that he took so much notice of Agrippa, and so often addressed him, and appealed to him, when he scarce ever turned to, or looked at him:

Paul, thou art beside thyself; not in thy senses, or right mind, to talk of such an appearance and vision, and especially of the resurrection of a person from the dead. This is no unusual thing for the ministers of the Gospel to be reckoned madmen, and the doctrines they preach madness and folly: our Lord himself was said to be beside himself, and to have a devil, and be mad; and so were his apostles, Mr 3:21 and it is not to be wondered at that natural men should entertain such an opinion of them, since what they deliver is quite out of their sphere and reach: Festus added,

much learning doth make thee mad; the apostle was a man of much learning, both Jewish, Greek, and Roman; and Festus perceived him to be of great reading by his making mention of Moses, and the prophets, writings which he knew nothing at all of. And as this sometimes is the case, that much reading, and hard study, do cause men to be beside themselves, he thought it was Paul’s case: so the philosopher f suggests, that men of great wit and learning, and who are closely engaged in study, whether in philosophy, or politics, or poetry, or in technical affairs, are inclined to be melancholy, and phrenetic.

f Aristotel. Problem. sect. 30.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Paul’s Fifth Defence.



      24 And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.   25 But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus; but speak forth the words of truth and soberness.   26 For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak freely: for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a corner.   27 King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know that thou believest.   28 Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.   29 And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.   30 And when he had thus spoken, the king rose up, and the governor, and Bernice, and they that sat with them:   31 And when they were gone aside, they talked between themselves, saying, This man doeth nothing worthy of death or of bonds.   32 Then said Agrippa unto Festus, This man might have been set at liberty, if he had not appealed unto Csar.

      We have reason to think that Paul had a great deal more to say in defence of the gospel he preached, and for the honour of it, and to recommend it to the good opinion of this noble audience; he had just fallen upon that which was the life of the cause–the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, and here he is in his element; now he warms more than before, his mouth is opened towards them, his heart is enlarged. Lead him but to this subject, and let him have leave to go on, and he will never know when to conclude; for the power of Christ’s death, and the fellowship of his sufferings, are with him inexhaustible subjects. It was a thousand pities then that he should be interrupted, as he is here, and that, being permitted to speak for himself (v. 1), he should not be permitted to say all he designed. But it was a hardship often put upon him, and is a disappointment to us too, who read his discourse with so much pleasure. But there is no remedy, the court thinks it is time to proceed to give in their judgment upon his case.

      I. Festus, the Roman governor, is of opinion that the poor man is crazed, and that Bedlam is the fittest place for him. He is convinced that he is no criminal, no bad man, that should be punished, but he takes him to be a lunatic, a distracted man, that should be pitied, but at the same time should not be heeded, nor a word he says regarded; and thus he thinks he has found out an expedient to excuse himself both from condemning Paul as a prisoner and from believing him as a preacher; for, if he be not compos mentis–in his senses, he is not to be either condemned or credited. Now here observe,

      1. What it was that Festus said of him (v. 24): He said with a loud voice, did not whisper it to those that sat next him; if so, it had been the more excusable, but (without consulting Agrippa, to whose judgment he had seemed to pay profound deference, ch. xxv. 26), said aloud, that he might oblige Paul to break off his discourse, and might divert the auditors from attending to it “Paul, thou art beside thyself, thou talkest like a madman, like one with a heated brain, that knowest not what thou sayest;” yet he does not suppose that a guilty conscience had disturbed his reason, nor that his sufferings, and the rage of his enemies against him, had given any shock to it; but he puts the most candid construction that could be upon his delirium: Much learning hath made thee mad, thou hast cracked thy brains with studying. This he speaks, not so much in anger, as in scorn and contempt. He did not understand what Paul said; it was above his capacity, it was all a riddle to him, and therefore he imputes it all to a heated imagination. Si non vis intelligi, debes negligi–If thou art not willing to be understood, thou oughtest to be neglected. (1.) He owns Paul to be a scholar, and a man of learning, because he could so readily refer to what Moses and the prophets wrote, books that he was a stranger to; and even this is turned to his reproach. The apostles, who were fishermen, were despised because they had no learning; Paul, who was a university-man, and bred a Pharisee, is despised as having too much learning, more than did him good. Thus the enemies of Christ’s ministers will always have something or other to upbraid them with. (2.) He reproaches him as a madman. The prophets of the Old Testament were thus stigmatized, to prejudice people against them by putting them into an ill-name: Wherefore came this mad fellow unto thee? said the captains of the prophet, 2Ki 9:11; Hos 9:7. John Baptist and Christ were represented as having a devil, as being crazed. It is probable that Paul now spoke with more life and earnestness than he did in the beginning of his discourse, and used more gestures that were expressive of his zeal, and therefore Festus put this invidious character upon him, which perhaps never a one in the company but himself thought of. It is not so harmless a suggestion as some make it to say concerning those that are zealous in religion above others that they are crazed.

      2. How Paul cleared himself from this invidious imputation, which whether he had ever lain under before is not certain; it should seem, it had been said of him by the false apostles, for he ways (2 Cor. v. 13), If we be beside ourselves, as they say we are, it is to God; but he was never charged with this before the Roman governor, and therefore he must say something to this. (1.) He denies the charge, with due respect indeed to the governor, but with justice to himself, protesting that there was neither ground nor colour for it (v. 25): “I am not mad, most noble Festus, nor ever was, nor any thing like it; the use of my reason, thanks be to God, has been all my days continued to me, and at this time I do not ramble, but speak the words of truth and soberness, and know what I say.” Observe, Though Festus gave Paul this base and contemptuous usage, not becoming a gentlemen, much less a judge, yet Paul is so far from resenting it, and being provoked by it, that he gives him all possible respect, compliments him with his title of honour, most noble Festus, to teach us not to render railing for railing, nor one invidious character for another, but to speak civilly to those who speak slightly of us. It becomes us, upon all occasions, to speak the words of truth and soberness, and then we may despise the unjust censures of men. (2.) He appeals to Agrippa concerning what he spoke (v. 26): For the king knows of these things, concerning Christ, and his death and resurrection, and the prophecies of the Old Testament, which had their accomplishment therein. He therefore spoke freely before him, who knew these were no fancies, but matters of fact, knew something of them, and therefore would be willing to know more: For I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; no, not that which he had related concerning his own conversion, and the commission he had received to preach the gospel. Agrippa could not but have heard of it, having been so long conversant among the Jews. This thing was not done in a corner; all the country rang of it; and any of the Jews present might have witnessed for him that they had heard it many a time from others, and therefore it was unreasonable to censure him as a distracted man for relating it, much more for speaking of the death and resurrection of Christ, which was so universally spoken of. Peter tells Cornelius and his friends (ch. x. 37), That word you know which was published throughout all Judea concerning Christ; and therefore Agrippa could not be ignorant of it, and it was a shame for Festus that he was so.

      II. Agrippa is so far from thinking him a madman that he thinks he never heard a man argue more strongly, nor talk more to the purpose.

      1. Paul applies himself closely to Agrippa’s conscience. Some think Festus was displeased at Paul because he kept his eye upon Agrippa, and directed his discourse to him all along, and that therefore he gave him that interruption, v. 24. But, if that was the thing that affronted him, Paul regards it not: he will speak to those who understand him, and whom he is likely to fasten something upon, and therefore still addresses Agrippa; and, because he had mentioned Moses and the prophets as confirming the gospel he preached, he refers Agrippa to them (v. 27): “King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? Dost thou receive the scriptures of the Old Testament as a divine revelation, and admit them as foretelling good things to come?” He does not stay for an answer, but, in compliment to Agrippa, takes it for granted: I know that thou believest; for every one knew that Agrippa professed the Jews’ religion, as his fathers had done, and therefore both knew the writings of the prophets and gave credit to them. Note, It is good dealing with those who have acquaintance with the scriptures and believe them; for such one has some hold of.

      2. Agrippa owns there was a great deal of reason in what Paul said (v. 28): Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian. Some understand this as spoken ironically, and read it thus, Wouldst thou in so little a time persuade me to be a Christian? But, taking it so, it is an acknowledgement that Paul spoke very much to the purpose, and that, whatever others thought of it, to his mind there came a convincing power along with what he said: “Paul, thou art too hasty, thou canst not think to make a convert of me all of a sudden.” Others take it as spoken seriously, and as a confession that he was in a manner, or within a little, convinced that Christ was the Messiah; for he could not but own, and had many a time thought so within himself, that the prophecies of the Old Testament had had their accomplishment in him; and now that it is urged thus solemnly upon him he is ready to yield to the conviction, he begins to sound a parley, and to think of rendering. He is as near being persuaded to believe in Christ as Felix, when he trembled, was to leave his sins: he sees a great deal of reason for Christianity; the proofs of it, he owns, are strong, and such as he cannot answer; the objections against it trifling, and such as he cannot for shame insist upon; so that if it were not for his obligations to the ceremonial law, and his respect to the religion of his fathers and of his country, or his regard to his dignity as a king and to his secular interests, he would turn Christian immediately. Note, Many are almost persuaded to be religious who are not quite persuaded; they are under strong convictions of their duty, and of the excellency of the ways of God, but yet are overruled by some external inducements, and do not pursue their convictions.

      3. Paul, not being allowed time to pursue his argument, concludes with a compliment, or rather a pious wish that all his hearers were Christians, and this wish turned into a prayer: euxaimen an to TheoI pray to God for it (v. 29); it was his heart’s desire and prayer to God for them all that they might be saved, Rom. x. 1. That not only thou but all that hear me this day (for he has the same kind design upon them all) were both almost, and altogether, such as I am, except these bonds. Hereby, (1.) He professes his resolution to cleave to his religion, as that which he was entirely satisfied in, and determined to live and die by. In wishing that they were all as he was, he does in effect declare against ever being as they were, whether Jews or Gentiles, how much soever it might be to his worldly advantage. He adheres to the instruction God gave to the prophet (Jer. xv. 19), Let them return unto thee, but return not thou unto them. (2.) He intimates his satisfaction not only in the truth, but in the benefit and advantage of Christianity; he had so much comfort in it for the present, and was so sure it would end in his eternal happiness, that he could not wish better to the best friend he had in the world than to wish him such a one as he was, a faithful zealous disciple of Jesus Christ. Let my enemy be as the wicked, says Job, ch. xxvii. 7. Let my friend be as the Christian, says Paul. (3.) He intimates his trouble and concern that Agrippa went no further than being almost such a one as he was, almost a Christian, and not altogether one; for he wishes that he and the rest of them might be not only almost (what good would that do?) but altogether such as he was, sincere thorough-paced Christians. (4.) He intimates that it was the concern, and would be the unspeakable happiness, of every one of them to become true Christians–that there is grace enough in Christ for all, be they ever so many–enough for each, be they ever so craving. (5.) He intimates the hearty good-will he bore to them all; he wishes them, [1.] As well as he wished his own soul, that they might be as happy in Christ as he was. [2.] Better than he now was as to his outward condition, for he excepts these bonds; he wishes they might all be comforted Christians as he was, but not persecuted Christians as he was–that they might taste as much as he did of the advantages that attended religion, but not so much of its crosses. They had made light of his imprisonment, and were in no concern for him. Felix detained him in bonds to gratify the Jews. Now this would have tempted many a one to wish them all in his bonds, that they might know what it was to be confined as he was, and then they would know the better how to pity him; but he was so far from this that, when he wished them in bonds to Christ, he desired they might never be in bonds for Christ. Nothing could be said more tenderly nor with a better grace.

      III. They all agree that Paul is an innocent man, and is wronged in his prosecution. 1. The court broke up with some precipitation (v. 30): When he had spoken that obliging word (v. 29), which moved them all, the king was afraid, if he were permitted to go on, he would say something yet more moving, which might work upon some of them to appear more in his favour than was convenient, and perhaps might prevail with them to turn Christians. The king himself found his own heart begin to yield, and durst not trust himself to hear more, but, like Felix, dismissed Paul for this time. They ought in justice to have asked the prisoner whether he had any more to say for himself; but they thought he had said enough, and therefore the king rose up, and the governor, and Bernice, and those that sat with them, concluding the case was plain, and with this they contented themselves, when Paul had more to say which would have made it plainer. 2. They all concurred in an opinion of Paul’s innocency, v. 31. The court withdrew to consult of the matter, to know one another’s minds upon it, and they talked among themselves, all to the same purport, that this man does nothing worthy of bonds–he is not a dangerous man, whom it is prudent to confine. After this, Nero made a law for the putting of those to death who professed the Christian religion, but as yet there was no law of that kind among the Romans, and therefore no transgression; and this judgment of theirs is a testimony against that wicked law which Nero made not long after this, that Paul, the most active zealous Christian that ever was, was adjudged, even by those that were no friends to his way, to have done nothing worthy of death, or of bonds. Thus was he made manifest in the conscience of those who yet would not receive his doctrine; and the clamours of the hot-headed Jews, who cried out, Away with him, it is not fit he should live, were shamed by the moderate counsels of this court. 3. Agrippa gave his judgment that he might have been set at liberty, if he had not himself appealed to Csar (v. 32), but by that appeal he had put a bar in his own door. Some think that by the Roman law this was true, that, when a prisoner had appealed to the supreme court, the inferior courts could no more discharge him than they could condemn him; and we suppose the law was so, if the prosecutors joined issue upon the appeal, and consented to it. But it does not appear that in Paul’s case the prosecutors did so; he was forced to do it, to screen himself from their fury, when he saw the governor did not take the care he ought to have done for his protection. And therefore others think that Agrippa and Festus, being unwilling to disoblige the Jews by setting him at liberty, made this serve for an excuse of their continuing him in custody, when they themselves knew they might have justified the discharging of him. Agrippa, who was but almost persuaded to be a Christian, proves no better than if he had not been at all persuaded. And now I cannot tell, (1.) Whether Paul repented of his having appealed to Csar, and wished he had not done it, blaming himself for it as a rash thing, now he saw that was the only thing that hindered his discharge. He had reason perhaps to reflect upon it with regret, and to charge himself with imprudence and impatience in it, and some distrust of the divine protection. He had better have appealed to God than to Csar. It confirms what Solomon says (Eccl. vi. 12), Who knows what is good for man in this life? What we think is for our welfare often proves to be a trap; such short-sighted creatures are we, and so ill-advised in leaning, as we do, to our own understanding. Or, (2.) Whether, notwithstanding this, he was satisfied in what he had done, and was easy in his reflections upon it. His appealing to Csar was lawful, and what became a Roman citizen, and would help to make his cause considerable; and forasmuch as when he did it it appeared to him, as the case then stood, to be for the best, though afterwards it appeared otherwise, he did not vex himself with any self-reproach in the matter, but believed there was a providence in it, and it would issue well at last. And besides, he was told in a vision that he must bear witness to Christ at Rome, ch. xxiii. 11. And it is all one to him whether he goes thither a prisoner or at his liberty; he knows the counsel of the Lord shall stand, and says, Let it stand. The will of the Lord be done.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

As he thus made his defence ( ). Genitive absolute again with present middle participle. Paul was still speaking when Festus interrupted him in great excitement.

With a loud voice ( ). Associative instrumental case showing manner (Robertson, Grammar, p. 530) and the predicate use of the adjective, “with the voice loud” (elevated).

Thou art mad (). Old verb for raving. See also John 10:20; Acts 12:15; 1Cor 14:23. The enthusiasm of Paul was too much for Festus and then he had spoken of visions and resurrection from the dead (verse 8). “Thou art going mad” (linear present), Festus means.

Thy much learning doth turn thee to madness ( ). “Is turning thee round.” Old verb , but only here in N.T. Festus thought that Paul’s “much learning” (=”many letters,” cf. Joh 7:15 of Jesus) of the Hebrew Scriptures to which he had referred was turning his head to madness (wheels in his head) and he was going mad right before them all. The old word (our mania, frenzy, cf. maniac) occurs here only in N.T. Note unusual position of between and (Robertson, Grammar, pp. 418, 420)

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Much learning doth make thee mad [ ] . The A. V. omits the article with much learning : “the much knowledge” with which thou art busied. Rev., “thy much learning.” Doth make thee mad : literally, is turning thee to madness.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “And as he thus spake for himself,” (tauta de autou apologournenou) “Then as he defended himself of these things,” in a substantive and definitive manner, making his own defence before the huge audience of dignitaries and the common people of Israel.

2) “Festus said with a loud voice,” (ho phestos megale te phone phesin) “Festus spoke up (interrupted) vociferously, with a megaphone-like voice, charging,” in a frustrated, disconcerted, bewildered manner- To the Athenians a resurrection seemed impossible.

3) “Paul, thou art beside thyself; (maine Paule) “Paul, you are just raving,” bewildered and confused. No, Paul was glorifying in the fulfillment of the Scriptures concerning Jesus Christ, a thing that rather appeared to be confusing to Festus, a Roman, not to Paul or Agrippa. Even Jesus was accused of such, Mar 3:21; Joh 7:5; Joh 10:20; 1Co 1:23-24; 2Co 4:3-4.

4) “Much learning doth make thee mad.” (ta polla se grammata eis manian peritrepei) “The much learning you have turns you into a raving maniac,” makes you incoherent in what you are saying; you have too much writing or literature knowledge. Even the Greeks had no literature to compare in nature and content with the Sacred Old Testament Scriptures, upon which Paul had definitively been documenting his defence against the charges of Sedition (treason), heresy, and desecration or pollution of the holy Jewish temple.

A speech of Scripture content, delivered in sincerity and with emotional fervency, may still well be considered madness or derangement by those who do not know God, thru faith in Jesus Christ and the new birth experience, you see, 1Co 2:11; 1Co 2:14.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

24. Festus said with a loud voice. This outcry which Festus doth make doth show how much the truth of God prevaileth with the reprobate; to wit, though it be never so plain and evident, yet is it trodden under foot by their pride. For though those things which Paul had alleged out of the law and prophets had nothing in them which was anything like to madness, but were grounded in good reason, yet he doth attribute the same to madness, not because he seeth any absurdity, but because he refuseth those things which he doth not understand. Nothing was more foolish or more unsavory than the superstitions of the Gentiles, so that their high priests were for good causes ashamed to utter their mysteries, whose folly was more than ridiculous. −

Festus doth grant that there was learning packed − (625) in Paul’s speech; nevertheless, because the gospel is hidden from the unbelievers, whose minds Satan hath blinded, ( 2Co 4:3) he thinketh that he is a brain-sick fellow which handleth matters intricately. So that though he cannot mock and openly contemn him, yet he is so far from being moved or inwardly touched, that he counteth him a man which is frenzy [frenzied] and of mad curiosity. And this is the cause that he cannot away to mark what he saith, lest he make him mad also; as many at this day fly from the word of God, lest they drown themselves in a labyrinth. And they think that we be mad because we move questions concerning hidden matters, and so become troublesome both to ourselves and also to others. Wherefore, being admonished by this example, let us beg of God that he will show us the light of his doctrine, and that he will therewithal give us a taste thereof, lest through obscurity and hardness it become unsavory, and at length proud loathsomeness break out into blasphemy. −

(625) −

Reconditam eruditionem,” recondite erudition.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

CRITICAL REMARKS

Act. 26:24. As he thus spake for himself.Lit., he speaking these things in his defence, these things, being the words just uttered about the resurrection, rather than the entire speech. The notion of a resurrection appeared as absurd to Festus as it had done to the Athenians (Act. 17:32), and caused him to think Paul beside himself, raving, or mad, and to say so, not in jest (Olshausen), but in earnest, at the same time ascribing his insanity to his much learning , which, among the Jews, meant much theology (Joh. 7:15; 2Ti. 3:15).

Act. 26:25. Most noble.Powerful, or excellent (), as in Act. 23:26, Act. 24:3; Luk. 1:3.

Act. 26:26. Before.Better, unto whom. Paul, with fearless confidence, appealed to Agrippa, who knew perfectly that the doctrines just referred to, of a crucified and risen Christ, on which his, Pauls, gospel was founded, were not fancies, illusions, the ravings of a madman, but words of truth and soberness, because relating to facts which had been done and events which had taken place, not in a corner, but in the metropolis of Palestine, and therefore publicly.

Act. 26:28. Almost ( = propemodum, a meaning of which no other example can be given) thou persuadest me to be or become () a Christian (Chrysostom, Luther, Grotius, Bengel, Stier, Spence); or, with but little persuasion thou persuadest me to become, or, according to a different reading, thou believest (thyself able) to make of me a Christian; i.e., thou wouldest fain make me a Christion (R.V., Tischendorf, Meyer, Alford, Plumptre, Holtzmann, and others); or, in a little time (i.e., if you go on speaking thus) you will persuade me to become a Christian (Calvin, Olshausen, Neander, De Wette, Robinson, Hackett, and others). The third is admissible, but does not so well suit the apostles answer (see below). The second fits best if the alternative reading, for be adopted. The first, though perhaps grammatically doubtful, harmonises best with the seriousness which Pauls oration was calculated to inspire. The second and third are more or less ironical.

Act. 26:29. Both almost and altogether. (the best texts have ), in little and in much. It must be admitted that this reply does not fit in well with the first of the above renderings, while it suits admirably the second and third, as thus: either, I would to God that whether with little or with much, or whether in a little time or in a great time, not thou only, etc. In spite, therefore, of the seemingly ironical character of the second and third, one or other of these should be preferred. These bonds.(See Act. 24:23; Act. 24:27.)

Act. 26:30.Unwilling to hear more, the auditors rose up in order, according to their rank.

Act. 26:31.After conferring with one another Festus and Agrippa came to the same conclusion as had already three times been reached concerning Paulfirst by the Pharisees (Act. 23:9), next by Lysias (Act. 23:29), and lastly by Festus (Act. 25:25).

Act. 26:32.Agrippa adds that but for his appeal to Csar the apostle might have been set at liberty.

Note.The authenticity of this and the two preceding chapters relating to Pauls imprisonment at Csarea has been questioned on the following grounds:

1. That the two trialsbefore Felix and before Festushave been artificially constructed by the author, and manifestly on the same plan, according to which in each the same incidents recurthe same motives for the accusation, the same murder-proposal of the Jews, the same appearing of Pauls enemies before the Roman tribunal with their complaints, the same hearing before a regularly constituted court, the same failure in the evidence offered, the same protection and recognition of his innocence at the hands of the Roman procurator, and the same style of defenceviz., that Paul was an orthodox Jew, and indeed a Pharisee, who had been constrained by a irresistible Divine impulse to enter on his Gentile mission (Baur, Zeller, Holtzmann).
2. That the position adopted by Paul was more in accordance with that taken by the second-century apologists (Holtzmann).
3. That everything appears directed to show how Paul, who was persecuted by the fanaticism of the Jews, was protected through the righteousness of the Romans (Pfleiderer); and
4. That so completely is his innocence established, over against both Roman policy and Jewish hate, that his continued imprisonment (Weizscker) and deportation to Rome (Holtzmann) are simply inconceivable. But to all this it suffices to reply
1. That similarity between two judicial processes does not necessarily establish the unreality of both or of eitherand all the more if the processes were conducted by the same parties, against the same individual, about the same charge, and with the same evidence.
2. That second-century apologists may well have learnt how to defend themselves, by a careful studying of Pauls defences.
3. That the favour shown by the Roman Governors to Paul accords with what is known of the Roman policy towards Christianity in the first century, and not with what is known of her policy in the second century (Ramsay, The Church in the Roman Empire, p. 194); and

4. That Pauls continued imprisonment requires no explanation different from that given in the textviz., the unwillingness of the Roman governors either to please the Jews by punishing Paul or to displease them by setting him free; while after his appeal to Csar had been allowed, it would probably not have been safe for either Festus or Agrippa to have disregarded it. But, even if they did, that would only show they had failed in their duty, not that the narrative in the Acts was unhistorical.

HOMILETICAL ANALYSIS.Act. 26:24-32

Pauls Two Distinguished Listeners, Festus and Agrippa; or, Two Souls Struggling against the Truth

I. Paul and Festus; or, the apostle and the governor.

1. The exclamation of the governor. Paul, thou art beside thyself, or, thou art mad!much learning doth make thee mad, or, doth turn thee to madness. So far as Festus was concerned, Paul, by his lofty oration, had effected this only, that Festus esteemed him a lunatic. Strange perversity of the world! When Paul of Tarsus raved against God, blasphemed Christ, and breathed out threatenings and slaughter against the Christians, his contemporaries counted him both wise and prudent; now that, as Paul the aged, he talks in sublime strains of a crucified and risen Saviour, the world, as represented by the Judan procurator, sets him down for a madman, or, at least, for one whose brain had been touched by overmuch study. Paul! much learning doth turn thee to madness. To the governor it seemed incomprehensible that one should not only rave about such transcendental delusions, but should actually risk his life in preaching them. Doubtless at the present day many hold with the governor that earnest and enthusiastic Christians, who base their prospects of present happiness and future felicity on such (as the world thinks) imaginary facts as the incarnation, propitiation, and resurrection, of Jesus Christ, are idle dreamers, foolish visionaries, crack-brained enthusiasts, half-mad fanatics who simply mistake the vague and shadowy creations of a disordered or diseased fancy for solid and substantial truths, and who accordingly sacrifice themselves for whims and crotchets. But for all that numbers of those who affect to regard Christians in this light have their secret misgivings that the Christians are right. That Festus felt uncomfortable beneath the glowing utterances of Paul is a plausible deduction from the fact that he rather shouted at than calmly expostulated with the apostle. Had he really believed the apostle to be beside himself, he would not have flamed forth into a rage against him, but would have pitied him, and perhaps spoken gently to him, or at least would have not troubled himself about his utterances. And so the circumstance that men of the world habitually become vehement and angry when denouncing the faith of Christians is a proof they are not inwardly convinced of its error.

2. The reply of the apostle. I am not mad, most noble Festus, but speak forth the words of truth and soberness. In repudiating the charge of the governor, Paul fell back upon two defences.

(1) The testimony of his own consciousness, which enabled him to assure Festus that he was neither beside nor beneath nor outside of himself, as insinuated, but in full possession of his facultiesnot at all the victim of an ill-balanced judgment, an exuberant fancy, or an unbridled imagination, but the master of a calm, clear intellect and a sober, regulated reason, which understood well the thoughts it was thinking and the words it was uttering.
(2) The unchallengeable truthfulness of his assertions, in support of which he confidently appealed to the wide publicity which had been gained by the main facts of gospel history, the death and resurrection of Christ, which had not taken place in some remote corner of the country, but had occurred in its very centre and heart, the Metropolis itself, Jerusalem, and which therefore could not be unknown to the king, to whom accordingly he next directed his address. The apostle meant that if the story of Christs death and resurrection had not been true, it could easily have been demonstrated false, as the people of Jerusalem were well aware of all that had transpired. But so far from being exposed as an idle fiction, the report of the resurrectionof the crucifixion denial was impossiblehad kept on spreading and gaining adherents during the last quarter of a century, which it could hardly have done had it been false.

II. Paul and Agrippa; or, the apostle and the king.

1. The fervent appeal of the apostle. King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know that thou believest. Whether the apostle, who had studied psychology in the school of the Holy Ghost (Leonhard and Spiegel) discerned in the kings heart a secret inclination to yield to the truth as set forth in the apostles oration, must be left undecided.

(1) The ground on which Pauls appeal rested appears to have been the assumption that Agrippa II., as a Jew, must have been perfectly cognisant of the fact that the Hebrew Scriptures predicted the coming of a suffering, dying, and rising Messiah. That they did so has been frequently pointed out.
(2) The force of Pauls appeal lay in this, that Agrippa, having been possessed of such knowledge, ought to have had no difficulty in recognising the reasonableness of Pauls words, which simply declared that such predictions as were contained in the prophets had been fulfilled by the death and resurrection of Jesus. Pauls interpretation of the connection between these events and the Scripture prophecies might be at faultnay, Pauls assertion about the resurrection might be incorrect; but in the statements themselves no impartial judge could find evidence of unreason or folly.
2. The ambiguous answer of the king. Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian; or, with but little persuasion thou wouldest fain make me a Christian (R.V.); or, in a little time (at this rate) you will persuade me to become (or, you believe you can make of me) a Christian (see Critical Remarks). According to the first of these renderings, Agrippa was supposed to admit that Paul had almost carried the citadel of his judgment, and that only a little more was wanting to gain him altogether for the Christian cause. According to the second, his meaning ran that Paul must not imagine he could convert a Jewish sovereign like him with so little show of argument, or so inconsiderable effort. According to the third, that if Paul went on as he was doing he would soon make of him, Agrippa II., a Christian. The first had its source in incipient seriousness, the second in supercilious contempt, the third in superficial levity. Those who wish to think the best of Agrippa naturally prefer the first interpretation of his words, notwithstanding the grammatical difficulty attaching to them; those who adhere to the best text select the second or third interpretation of Agrippas words, though these charge him with feelingseither of irony or of jestwhich certainly look incompatible with a situation so grave and solemn as that in which they were spoken.

3. The sublime ejaculation of the apostle. I would to God that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost and altogether such as I am, except these bonds; or, I would to God that whether with little or with much (R.V.); or, whether in a little time or in much time; or, adopting another reading, whether with a little effort or with a great effort, not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, etc. (see Critical Remarks). Taken either way, the sense of the apostles utterance practically amounted to this:

(1) that he wished, not only Agrippa, but all who listened to him that day, to be, like himself, Christians;
(2) that, could he only hope to see that wish fulfilled, he would willingly spend a long time or a short, and put forth a great effort or a small, as the case might be; and
(3) that the sole point in which he did not ask God that they might resemble him was these bonds, which he held up before them. The magnanimity of this reply has evoked never-failing admiration from all hearts capable of understanding and appreciating true heroism.
4. The response of the king. Obviously Agrippas was not a heart of the order just depicted. No sooner had the apostles words died away in the hushed atmosphere of the marble hall than Agrippa II. rose from his seat, followed by the governor, Bernice, and all that sat with them. Having withdrawn from the audience-chamber and talked amongst themselves, they came to the conclusion that Paul had committed no offence worthy of death. Most likely all concurred in pronouncing him a harmless fanatic. What they said to one another about his last words is not recorded. Possibly all were silent, each afraid to reveal to his neighbour the thoughts that had been stirred within his bosom. Only one more item of the conversation has been preserved. Agrippa II. expressed his mind to the governor, that, had Paul not appealed to Csar, he might forthwith have been set at liberty. The result of this may have been that Festus modified his report and commended the apostle to the clemency of the court at Rome (Hackett).

Learn

1. The outrageous slanders that are sometimes propagated against Christians.
2. The certainty that truth and soberness lie rather with the Christian than with the worldling.
3. The fearlessness with which Christianity can make appeal to the court of enlightened reason.
4. The unwisdom of those who decline to allow themselves to be persuaded to become Christians.
5. The fervent desire true Christians possess that others should share the salvation of which they are conscious.

HINTS AND SUGGESTIONS

Act. 26:24-29. Paul and His Princely Hearers; or, the different attitudes of men toward the gospel.

I. Festus, who turns entirely aside from itPaul, thou ravest!

II. Agrippa, who is half turned towards itAlmost thou persuadest me!

III. Paul, who entirely lives in itI would to God that all who hear me were such as I am.Gerok, in Lange.

Act. 26:24. Which is the Madman?Paul or Festus? the Christian or the non-Christian?

I. The Christian who believes in a personal Goda God of power, who has made the universe, and a God of love, who has devised a way of salvation for man? Or the non-Christian who, if he acknowledges a God at all, conceives of Him as either hostile to, or indifferent about, man?

II. The Christian who believes that God has made known His mind and will to man for his salvation in the sacred Scriptures? Or the non-Christian who holds that God has never placed Himself in communication with the human race at all?

III. The Christian who believes that man, even in his sin, is a child of God, and a possible heir of immortality? Or the non-Christian whose creed is that man is nothing more than an animated clod which will in course of years mingle with the other (unanimated) clods of the valley, and be never more heard of, in this or any other world?

IV. The Christian who believes that Jesus of Nazareth was Gods Son incarnate, who died and rose again, bringing life and immortality to light? Or, the non-Christian whose faith is that Jesus was a common and therefore a sinful man, who never rose from the dead, and that the grave will never open to restore a single form that goes down into its gloomy chambers!

V. The Christian who believes in a hereafter and lives for it? Or, the non-Christian who knows of no world but this, and lives and dies as if there were none?

Act. 26:25. Words of Truth and Soberness.

I. Such were Pauls words to all who heard his gospel.

1. Proved from the past history of the Church. For the words of Paul remain to this day, whereas the wit of Festus has long since died away.

2. Confirmed by Christian experience. Since honest hearts in all ages have found in Pauls words (written) their clearest light, best strength, and sweetest comfort.

3. They will likewise be placed in the light at the great day of eternity. Inasmuch as heaven and earth will pass away, but the word of God endureth for ever.

II. Such should be the words of preachers still to all who listen to their teaching.And such they will be

1. If they discourse upon Pauls theme,a crucified and risen Saviour.

2. If they speak with Pauls earnestnesswhich all can imitate, though all cannot equal. What is wanted in preaching is not sound and fury, signifying nothing, but deep-toned and full-hearted fervour.

3. If they seek Pauls aims,the glory of Christ and the salvation of souls. None but words of truth and soberness will accomplish these.

Act. 26:27. Believest thou the prophets?

I. A great question.For modern readers of the Bible no less than for Agrippa.

1. Believest thou the Hebrew prophets were inspired? This question lies at the foundation of Christianity. If the Hebrew prophets were only statesmen, somewhat more far-seeing than their contemporaries, but in no sense channels of Divine communication for their age and generation, then it is vain to attempt to derive from their utterances any evidence in support of the Messiahship of Jesus. It was clearly in the faith that Old-Testament Scripture prophesied beforehand of the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow that Paul appealed to them so confidently in support of his gospel; and those who think the foundations of the Christian system will remain undisturbed if the credibility of Old-Testament literature is impaired, have not reflected deeply enough on this momentous problem. As the New-Testament Scriptures are the flower and fruit, the crown and apex, of the Old, so are the Old-Testament Scriptures the root and support of the New.

2. Believest thou what the Hebrew prophets teach? Men might, and many do, believe the Hebrew prophets to have been inspired, who nevertheless disregard the testimony they furnish concerning the person and work of Christ. But the Christological argument derived from the Messianic prophecies was, in Pauls judgment, and is in the estimation of many Bible scholars of to-day, one of the most powerful factors in demonstrating the truth of the New-Testament declarations with reference to Christs divinity, atoning work, and resurrection.

3. Believest thou that what the Hebrew prophets taught concerning Christ has been fulfilled? This practically means, Believest thou that Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah of Israel and Saviour of the world? Believest thou that He was Gods Son incarnate, that He died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that He was buried, and that He rose again according to the Scriptures? (1Co. 15:1-4).

4. Believest thou for thyself, individually, in the Christ of whom the prophets spoke? All believing that stops short of this is worthless for saving.

II. A powerful argument.Of which the following are the several steps:

1. He who believes in the prophets of the Old Testament should also believe in the apostles of the New. The authors of the New-Testament writings can produce as good claims to be inspired as could the prophets of the Old.

2. He who believes in the Messiah, foreshadowed by the prophets, should likewise believe in the Christ preached by the apostles. The first was the type of the second; the second is the antitype of the first. If the prophets spoke the truth when they said Christ should suffer and rise again, so did the apostles teach no falsehood when they affirmed that Jesus was the Christ, since they alleged that He both suffered and rose.

3. He who believes that Jesus is the Christ should likewise for himself believe in Him for salvation. This, after all, is the great question: Dost thou believe on the Son of God? (Joh. 9:35). The man who accepts the testimony of both prophets and apostles should feel himself shut up to the acceptance of Christ as his personal Saviour.

Act. 26:28. Almost Persuaded.A condition of soul

I. Frequently attained.The heart touched, the mind enlightened, the will moved, the spirit trembling on the verge of a decision for Christ; nothing wanting butthe decision. Many reach this position as well as Agrippa.

II. Highly responsible.Seeing that only a little is lacking to carry the spirit over into faith, the obligation to supply that little is the greater. What guilt will they incur who refuse or omit to take the final step that is necessary for salvation.

III. Extremely perilous.Besides being in itself an unsafe condition, it is also an unstable one. No soul can remain permanently in the position these words describe. Either it will move on and become fully persuaded, or it will drift back and become less persuaded.

Almost a Christian.A position

I. Of gracious privilege.Implying that one has been brought near the kingdom, and enabled to understand somewhat of its nature, of its terms of membership, of its duties, and of its blessings.

II. Of hopeful promise.That the almost shall, before long, be converted into an altogether. That the one step wanting to make one a Christian shall be taken.

III. Of solemn responsibility.That the one almost shall become altogether a Christian. That he shall not remain on the borders of the kingdom, but cross the boundary and enter in.

IV. Of great danger.Lest one should be satisfied with being almost without becoming altogether a Christian.

Act. 26:28-29. The Shortcomings of Agrippa.

I. What they were.

1. He only says almost, not yet altogether, and thus at once recalls what he appears to allow. He remains standing without the doors of salvation, and will not enter in.

2. He only says, Thou persuadest me; but a persuasion is much less than faith or conviction, and may, as in this case, come to an end with the words which called it forth.

3. He only says, to be a Christian, meaning, to join thy party, in an external way, instead of saying, I believingly accept thy testimony about Jesus.

II. How they were answered.

1. By suggesting that much more than he thought was still deficient in him. Every almost, like Agrippas, implies that much is still wanting.

2. By expressing a desire that, whether much or little was lacking, all might be fully persuaded. At whatever stage of nearness or distance they stood from the kingdom, he longed for the salvation of all.

3. By reminding him, and all who listened, that becoming a Christian meant more than joining the party of the Nazarenes, meant becoming like him, Paul, in everything except his bonds, meant becoming a lowly and devoted follower of Christ.Compiled from Stier.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(24) Festus said with a loud voice.The description may be noted as one of the touches of vividness indicating that the writer relates what he had actually heard. The Roman governor forgot the usual dignity of his office, and burst, apparently, into a loud laugh of scorn.

Much learning doth make thee mad.The Greek gives a neuter plural: Thy many writings are turning thee to madness. The word was one which was used by the Jews for the collected body of their sacred writings and traditions, as in the letters of Joh. 7:15 and the holy Scriptures of 2Ti. 3:15. Festus had probably heard the Law and the Prophets of Israel so described, and knew that St. Paul had with him books and parchments (2Ti. 4:13), which he was continually studying. That one who had been crucified should rise from the dead and give light to the Gentiles seemed to him the very hallucination of insanity. So have men at all times thought of those who lived after a higher law than their own, whether their faith rested, as in St. Pauls case, on an outward objective fact, or, as in Wis. 5:4, on a true faith in the Unseen.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

24. Loud voice Filling the audience room with its imperious tones.

Mad Become a monomaniac by poring over old manuscripts. The words for much learning are many writings, and often, by implication, much erudition. Plainly what suggests to Festus the idea of Paul’s half-crazed condition was his having a vision of a man who had risen from the dead, and thence having asserted a resurrection. And what suggested to Festus the cause of this monomania, namely, many manuscripts, was the fact that Paul drew the authority for both his vision and his doctrines from the Old Testament records. To say, as some do, that he saw Paul reading old parchments is not proved, yet may have been additionally true. To say with Dr. Hackett that Festus had heard that Paul was a scholar is to go still farther for a hypothetical solution when we have a clear one on the face of the record before us. Festus could not but know, at least, that Moses was held the lawgiver of the Jews, not only more ancient than Solon or Romulus, but a thousand years earlier than Homer himself. He knew that the prophets were the body of old Jewish literature. He saw that Paul had deeply read these musty records, and was deducing the risen Jesus from their pages. What, then, did he infer but that Paul had pored over the old archives until their conceptions had shaped themselves in his brain to a monomaniac day-dream about a dead man’s living and appearing in celestial splendour before his eyes? It was a most natural thought to a secular military Roman after the model of Pilate and Festus.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘And as he thus made his defence, Festus says with a loud voice, “Paul, you are mad. Your great learning is turning you mad.” ’

This reaction of Festus was probably a reaction to the suggestion that Jesus had been raised from the dead in order to proclaim light to both Jews and Gentiles. Resurrection from the dead in the body was very much a Jewish idea. He could probably have accepted as reasonable the idea that the soul should live on. What he found difficult to stomach was a man coming back from the grave capable of activity through His body. To the Greek the body was evil, a cage to be released from. Thus the idea was madness. It just did not happen. He accepted that Paul was a man knowledgeable in the Scriptures, but argued that that learning was making him mad. The reaction is not so unusual. It has been known for modern Christians to be accused of being ‘touched in the head’, in other words of not thinking as the world thinks.

But the reaction also reveals how carefully Festus had been listening. It is only someone deeply involved with what is being said who reacts like this. His heart had been involved. Unfortunately there is no evidence that it ever went beyond this. Felix had been terrified when he heard Paul. Festus was moved to cry out. Neither could say that they had not had their opportunity.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Paul Is Declared To Have Done Nothing Worthy Of Death and Thus To Have Conformed to the Law, but King Herod Agrippa II Closes His Heart Against His Words (26:24-32).

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Paul’s foremost wish:

v. 24. And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thy self; much learning doth make thee mad.

v. 25. But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus, but speak forth the words of truth and soberness.

v. 26. For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak freely; for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a corner.

v. 27. King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know that thou believest.

v. 28. Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.

v. 29. And Paul said, I would to God that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day were both almost and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.

Paul had spoken in all simplicity and truthfulness, without attempt at oratorical effect, only one of his sentences having the force of a rhetorical period. But his seriousness, and the conviction with which he presented his case, could not remain without influence upon his hearers. And almost involuntarily Festus, carried away with the force of the argumentation, interrupted Paul with the exclamation: Thou art beside thyself. The astounding announcements which Paul had made concerning the resurrection of Jesus and of the power of His Word caused the heathen governor to surmise that he must be insane, that he could not be conscious of what he was saying. Festus believed that much wisdom, great learning, had carried the prisoner away to temporary insanity. He may have referred only to the great learning which Paul had just exhibited, or he may have inferred as much from the great number of books which Paul had with him. All this, he believed, had driven the prisoner to madness. But Paul, addressing him as the honorable Festus, Your Excellency, calmly told him that he was not mad, but was uttering words of truth and sobriety. In the judgment of the blind children of this world to this day the faith of the Christians and their calm cheerfulness is considered madness and evidence that they cannot possibly be in their right mind. But they that talk thus have not the faintest idea of what Christianity is, nor of its calm, convincing truth. For the confirmation of this fact Paul called upon King Agrippa, stating that the latter had the proper understanding regarding these things, to whom therefore also Paul had spoken with such cheerful openness. Agrippa knew that Paul’s words were sober and sound statements, and that they were based upon facts. A Christian the king was not, but for the truth of history he would surely vouch, and the apostle was fully persuaded that none of these matters were hidden from him, for the entire movement, the establishment of the Christian religion, had not been done in a corner, hidden away from the eyes of the world, but it was a movement of which everyone in the entire country might have known and must have heard. Paul argued here as Jesus had done before him, Joh 18:21, referring to the fact that the Gospel-message had been proclaimed without the slightest attempt at secrecy. And Paul’s boldness: which he had exhibited throughout his address, now also causes him to turn frankly and address himself to Ring Agrippa with the direct question: Believest thou. King Agrippa: the prophets? I know that thou believest. This question was intended further to substantiate the words of Paul; for even if Festus could not consider his words as statements of truth and soberness. Agrippa could not be indifferent to them, since they were based upon the prophets, and Agrippa, as a Jew, at least nominally accepted the Old Testament books and based his belief upon them. It was a forcible appeal, and one which should have had its effect upon the heart and mind of the king. However, Agrippa would not permit himself to yield, but retorted: With but little persuasion thou wouldst fain make me a Christian? He wanted to indicate whether in irony or in cold indifference, that he could not be made a Christian so easily as all that. He wanted a stronger argument than a mere appeal to his faith to induce him to become a Christian. The sarcastic tone of the answer, however, did not intimidate Paul. With the same cheerful boldness as before he states his honest wish: that he hoped to God, whether by little or by much, not only Agrippa, but all those that heard him that day, might become Christians like himself, without, however, being obliged to wear the disgraceful marks of imprisonment, the fetters which confined him. So the apostle, who preached of love in such touching terms, 1Co 13:1-13, could not easily be provoked, and took no account of evil. in the same way all servants of the Lord must be careful to be neither dismayed nor provoked by the veiled and open taunts of the unbelievers, but continue to testify of Christ and issue invitations to all men to accept the message of the Gospel and become Christians.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Act 26:24. Paul, thou art beside thyself; Thou art distracted, much study drives thee to madness. Perhaps Festus might know that St. Paul, in his present confinement, spent a great deal of time in reading; and this was the most discreet turn which could have been given to such a charge. Besides, it would appear quite absurd to Festus to hear St. Paul talk of a resurrection from the dead accomplished in Jesus as the first-fruits; or pretend that a person should come from the Jews, whom he looked upon as a barbarous nation, who should enlighten not only his own nation, but even the Gentiles too, and, among the rest, the polite and learned Romans and Greeks. This, in conjunction with what St. Paul had said of the manner in which it was revealed to him, would naturally lead such a half-thinker as Festus appears to have been, to conclude roundly thathe was a visionary enthusiast. Besides, religious topics to men of rank and fortune among the Heathens, were what they ever avoided; and thus it happened, that when St. Paul pleaded his cause before Festus, as well as before Felix, thoughhis discourse was altogether to the purpose, yet because it turned upon religious subjects, it presently tired the judges, and they would hear no more of it.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Act 26:24 . While he was thus speaking in his defence, Festus said with a loud voice ( . , see on Act 14:10 ), Thou art mad, Paul! is to be referred to the whole defence (as to . , see on Luk 12:11 ), now interrupted by Festus (observe the present participle), but in which certainly the words spoken last ( . . .) were most unpalatable to the cold-hearted statesman, and at length raised his impatience to the point of breaking out aloud. His profane mind remained unaffected by the holy inspiration of the strange speaker, and took his utterances as the whims of a mind perverted by much study from the equilibrium of a sound understanding. His ! was indignant earnestness; with all the more earnestness and bitterness he expressed the idea of eccentricity by this hyperbolical , the more he now saw his hope of being enlightened as to the true state of matters grievously disappointed. Comp. Soph. O. R. 1300: , , ! That solicitude of the procurator (Act 25:26 ), which naturally governed his tone of mind, was much too anxious and serious for a jest , such as Olshausen takes it to be. Nor does suit this, on which Chrysostom already correctly remarks: . . The explanation, thou art an enthusiast ! is nothing but a mistaken softening of the expression. So Kuhn (in Wolf), Majus ( Obss . IV. p. 11 ff.), Loesner, Schleusner, Dindorf. However the furor propheticus may be nourished by plunging into , the in this sense is far less suited to the indignation of the annoyed Roman; and that Paul regarded himself as declared by him to be a madman , is evident from Act 26:25 ( . .).

)] multae literae (Vulgate), the much knowledge, learning , with which thou busiest thyself. See on Joh 7:15 . Not: the many books , which thou readest (Heinrichs, Kuinoel, Hildebrand), for, if so, we cannot see why the most naturally occurring word, or , should not have been used.

The separation of from . by the interposition of puts the emphasis on . Bengel correctly adds: “Videbat Festus, naturam non agere in Paulo; gratiam non vidit.”

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

DISCOURSE: 1813
PAULS VINDICATION OF HIS OWN MINISTRY

Act 26:24-25. And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus; but speak forth the words of truth and soberness.

AMONGST the duties of a Judge, there is not any one of greater importance than that of giving a patient and candid attention to a prisoners vindication of himself. But this is not always to be found, when religion forms the ground of accusation against a man. Prejudice and passion are too easily called into action on those occasions, and too often usurp the place of reason and reflection. St. Paul had very abundant cause to complain of this. He made many apologies before judges and governors, but could scarcely ever obtain a patient hearing. In the passage before us, he was standing before Festus and Agrippa; but long before he had completed his statement, he was interrupted by Festus, who cried with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.
It will be profitable to notice,

I.

What was the subject of Pauls ministry

This he himself had briefly, but comprehensively, stated [Note: ver. 22, 23.]

[He preached Christ as a dying and risen Saviour and declared to all, Jews and Gentiles, small and great, that if they would believe on Jesus, he would bring them into the full knowledge of the truth, and fill their souls with unutterable peace and joy Nor did he introduce these doctrines as new; for they were none other than Moses and the Prophets had declared before; Moses, in the types and shadows of the ceremonial law [Note: Lev 14:4-7; Lev 16:8-10.]; and the prophets, in plain and express predictions [Note: Isaiah 53.] ]

And this is the one subject of our ministry also
[We set before you, from time to time, the great work of redemption, through the sacrifice of the Son of God: and declare to you, that there is no other atonement, no other means of reconciliation, with an offended God. We direct your eyes to Christ also as risen from the dead to a new and endless life; and as not only making intercession for you, but possessing in himself all fulness of spiritual blessings, that you may receive from him whatsoever you stand in need of We declare also, that no tongue can express, no imagination conceive, what light, and peace, and joy, shall flow into your souls, if only you will believe on him, and give yourselves up unreservedly to him.
In these things we are sometimes supposed to bring new things to your ears; but we speak nothing but what Moses and the prophets most explicitly foretold.]
Unexceptionable as this was, we shall be grieved to see,

II.

In what light it was viewed by his enemies

Festus considered Pauls testimony as an indication of mental derangement
[Festus, seeing that Paul was a man of erudition, concluded, that he had lost his senses by an over-attention to study; and that, consequently, all further attention to him would only be an unprofitable waste of time. Hence he said aloud, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.]
And it is scarcely a more favourable judgment that is sometimes formed of us
[Persons are very ready to pronounce, that those who preach and profess the Gospel, are mad. But whence arises such a judgment as this? Is there any thing in the Gospel itself that affords ground for it? or do the foregoing sentiments deserve so severe a censure? True it is, that the prophets were uniformly reviled for the declarations they made: but one would have hoped, that the accomplishment of their prophecies should have secured for us a more equitable judgment: this however is not to be expected: as long as there remains a carnal mind in existence, so long must it be enmity against God [Note: Rom 8:7.]; and whilst there is a natural man unconverted to God, so long will there be one to whom the things of the Spirit are foolishness [Note: 1Co 1:18; 1Co 2:14.]. We have only the fate of the prophets of old, who in their day were accounted mad also [Note: 2Ki 9:11. Jer 29:26.]: and, if judged as they were, we must say with Paul, If we be beside ourselves, it is to God [Note: 2Co 5:13.].

But whence arises this? It arises, first, from their want of candour: they will not give us an attentive hearing; but will run away with any detached expressions, put on them a construction that they were never designed to bear, and draw conclusions from them that we should utterly disavow; and then impute to us all the folly which they themselves have invented

Another source of this harsh judgment is, their ignorance of the Scriptures. They will not study the Scriptures for themselves, nor take the trouble to compare our sentiments with the sacred records. What wonder then if they say, We are beside ourselves, when they will not listen even to the voice of God himself?
The hope of vindicating themselves is a further source of the censures they cast on us: for, if they allow us to be right, they must of necessity condemn themselves; but, if they can persuade themselves that we are mad, then they may be considered as wise, and may rest satisfied with their own ungodly ways
These, together with the rooted enmity of the carnal mind against God, are some of the chief sources of that uncharitable judgment, which is passed at this day, no less than in the apostolic age, on the preachers and professors of the Gospel of Christ.]
If the Gospel deserves not such treatment, let us inquire,

III.

In what light it ought to be considered

We cannot but admire the calm and respectful, yet firm and manly, answer which St. Paul returns to the insulting language of his Judge.
He maintained that he spoke only the words of truth and soberness
[He was not afraid of his assertions being brought to any test: he knew that they were the very truth of God, and that unbiassed reason must approve of all that he had taught.]
And, as far as our doctrine agrees with his, we also are ready to make our appeal both to reason and Scripture
[Let our words be tried, and see whether they be not words of truth and soberness. Refer to Moses and the prophets, and see whether they do not set forth Christ as the All in all in the salvation of man. See whether they do not characterize a life of faith on the Son of God, as the true, the sure, the only source of happiness, both in this world and the next. They uniformly declare, that, if we awake from our sleep, and arise from the dead, Christ will give us light [Note: Eph 5:14. These words, though quoted by St. Paul, are not contained in any particular passage of the Old Testament; but they are the substance of the whole.].

Reason also is no less on our side than Revelation. If there be a God, should we not serve him? If he have provided a Saviour for us, should we not seek an interest in him? If that Saviour be empowered to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him, should we not cleave to him with full purpose of heart? Men may call this madness, if they will; but they are the dictates of sound reason: and to contradict them is as irrational as it is impious and profane ]

Improvement
1.

Be not alarmed at the aspersions cast upon religion

[Ungodly men will revile religion, and endeavour to deter others from embracing it, by calling it madness. But the truth is, that they themselves are mad. Try them by the standard of reason and revelation, and see whether they can stand the test? No: they are beside themselves; madness is in their hearts while they live: a deceitful heart hath turned them aside, so that they cannot deliver their souls, or say, Have I not a lie in my right hand? If then they cry out against religion, know whence their clamour proceeds. The Jews said of Christ himself, He hath a devil, and is mad: Why hear ye him? Wonder not therefore if similar advice be given in reference to his faithful servants, and similar reasons be assigned for it: and if the service of God must be accounted madness, then take up your cross boldly, and say with David, I will yet be more vile for the Lord.]

2.

Be careful to give no just occasion for them

[There certainly is such a thing as enthusiasm, and under the influence of it many are led to act so as to excite strong prejudices against religion. But these have much to answer for before God. Religion, in its most exalted state, is a reasonable, and I may add also, a rational, service: The fear of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to depart from evil is understanding. Endeavour then to shew, that God hath given you, not a spirit of fear, but of love, and of power, and of a sound mind [Note: 2Ti 1:7.]. Endeavour to walk in wisdom toward them that are without, yea, and to walk wisely also before God in a perfect way. Ever remember, that truth and soberness must go together, and the justness of your sentiments must always be marked in the blamelessness of your conduct. The first thing certainly is to embrace the truth with the simplicity of a little child, not exalting some favourite doctrines, and overlooking others, but giving to every doctrine precisely that degree of importance which it appears to bear in the Holy Scriptures [Note: Some are always dwelling on predestination and election, others on faith, and others on good works: some on the sufferings of Christ, others on the light within. To give every truth its due weight and proper place, should be the endeavour of a wise and sober-minded Christian.] The next thing is, to carry your principles into effect, by regulating the whole of your conversation according to them, and fulfilling the duties of your own particular situation, whatever it may be, with care and diligence This will cut off occasion from them that seek occasion against you; nor is there any better way of putting to silence the ignorance of foolish men, than by well-doing.]


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. (25) But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus; but I speak forth the words of truth and soberness. (26) For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak freely: for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a corner. (27) King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know that thou believest.

It is well worth the Reader’s notice, that the interruption Festus made to Paul’s discourse, and the idea he had conceived that the Apostle was mad, is the very same conduct still pursued by all carnal men in their opposition to the Gospel, and the preachers of free grace in Christ. To the Lord Jesus himself the same was said, Mar 3:21 . Yea, some went further, Joh 10:21 . And his Apostles fell under similar reproach, 2Co 5:13 . But, alas! the insanity is all on the other side. And the Holy Ghost hath given the cause, 1Co 2:14-15 .

Let the Reader notice also the boldness of Paul, when he said, that Agrippa could not be ignorant of what the whole Roman empire had sounded with; namely, the Person, death, and resurrection of the Lord Jesus! Agrippa himself had professed his belief in the Jews religion, as history records of him. And, consequently, he could not be ignorant what the Prophets had said of the Messiah. And, as the coming of Christ, his miracles, and ministry, his death on the cross, and the prodigies which attended that death, and his resurrection which followed, were not done in a corner, but as fully known and attested, as the light of the sun at noonday, in confirmation that He was the Messiah; Paul assumed it for a fact, that Agrippa must acknowledge their truth. And, under these impressions, he boldly put the question to the King, and as instantly answered it himself: Believest thou the Prophets? I know that thou believest.

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

24 And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.

Ver. 24. Much learning hath made thee mad ] Core diminuit harem, the seed is lessened, let it grow, as Ennius hath it. Paul was indeed a man of much learning; for besides the Bible, and the Jewish records, he had read the poets (whom also he citeth), and Plato, from whom he borrowed that excellent word , 2Ti 1:6 ; “Stir up thy gift,” &c. But if Paul were so great a scholar, why did not Festus show him more favour, or at least do him better justice? Aeneas Sylvius was wont to say of learning, that popular men should esteem it as silver, noblemen as gold, princes prize it as pearls. Festus might possibly have heard or read of Antony the Triumvir, that when Varro (his very enemy, and of a contrary faction) was proscribed for death, he thus gallantly superscribed his name, Vivat Varro vir doctissimus: Let Varro have his life for his learning’ sake. And if Antipater (saith Sir Walter Raleigh, Hist. of the World) upon his conquest had carried all other actions never so mildly, yet for killing Demosthenes, all that read his eloquent orations do condemn him for a bloody tyrant to this day.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

24. ] The words must refer, on account of the present part., to the Iast words spoken by Paul: but it is not necessary to suppose that these only produced the effect described on Festus. Mr. Humphry remarks, “Festus was probably not so well acquainted as his predecessor (ch. Act 24:10 ) with the character of the nation over which he had recently been called to preside. Hence he avails himself of Agrippa’s assistance ( Act 25:26 ). Hence also he is unable to comprehend the earnestness of St. Paul, so unlike the indifference with which religious and moral subjects were regarded by the upper classes at Rome. His self-love suggests to him, that one who presents such a contrast to his own apathy, must be mad: the convenient hypothesis that much learning had produced this result, may have occurred to him on hearing Paul quote prophecies in proof of his assertions.”

] Thou art mad , not merely, ‘ thou ravest ,’ nor ‘ thou art an enthusiast :’ nor are the words spoken in jest (Olsh.), but in earnest ( . , Chrys.). Festus finds himself by this speech of Paul yet more bewildered than before (De W.).

.] Meyer understands Festus to allude to the many rolls which Paul had with him in his imprisonment (we might compare , of 2Ti 4:13 ) and studied (so also Heinrichs and Kuinoel), but the ordinary interpretation, thy much learning , seems more natural, and so De W.

. ] Is turning thy brain .

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

Act 26:24 . .: the present participle, indicating that Festus broke in upon the speech, cf. Act 4:1 . . .: raising his voice, because interrupting in surprise and astonishment, and no doubt with something of impatience if not of anger (Chrysostom). : a hyperbolic, but not a jesting expression; the mention not only of a resurrection, but the expressed belief that this Christ Whom Festus could only describe as “one who was dead,” Act 25:19 , should bring light not only to Jews but even to Gentiles, to Romans like himself, was too much such a belief could only result from a disturbed brain, cf. Act 17:32 for the effect of the announcement of a resurrection and a judgment on the polished Athenians, cf. St.Joh 10:20 , where our Lord’s words provoked a similar pronouncement by the Jews, the learned Jews of the capital. : “qui ita loquitur ut videatur mentis non compos esse,” Grimm, cf. Act 12:15 , 1Co 14:23 , opposite to . (see also Page’s note); cf. the passage in Wis 5:3-4 , and Luckock, Footsteps of the Apostles , etc., ii., p. 263. : “thy much learning,” R.V., giving the force of the article perhaps even more correctly, “that great learning of thine”. It is possible that the words may refer simply to the learning which Paul had just shown in his speech, of which we may have only a summary, and . may be used of the sacred writings from which he had been quoting, and to which in his utterances he may have applied the actual word, and so Festus refers to them by the same term, cf. 2Ti 3:15 . Others refer the word to the many rolls which St. Paul had with him, and which he was so intent in studying. It is possible that the word may be used here as in Joh 7:15 , of sacred learning in general, of learning in the Rabbinical schools, and perhaps, as it is employed by a Roman, of learning in a more general sense still, although here including sacred learning = , cf. Plat., Apol. , 26 D. If books alone had been meant or would have been the word used. : “doth turn thee to madness,” R.V., cf. our English phrase “his head is turned,” literally “turn thee round” (Humphry), cf. Jos., Ant. , ix., 4, 4, ii., 4, 1. It is possible that Festus used the expression with a certain delicacy, since in using it he recognises how much wisdom Paul had previously shown (Weiss, Bethge). After such an expression of opinion by Festus, and owing to the deference of Agrippa to the Romans, Knabenbauer thinks that the king could not have expressed himself seriously in the words which follow in Act 26:28 .

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Act 26:24-29

24While Paul was saying this in his defense, Festus said in a loud voice, “Paul, you are out of your mind! Your great learning is driving you mad.” 25But Paul said, “I am not out of my mind, most excellent Festus, but I utter words of sober truth. 26For the king knows about these matters, and I speak to him also with confidence, since I am persuaded that none of these things escape his notice; for this has not been done in a corner. 27King Agrippa, do you believe the Prophets? I know that you do.” 28Agrippa replied to Paul, “In a short time you will persuade me to become a Christian.” 29And Paul said, “I would wish to God, that whether in a short or long time, not only you, but also all who hear me this day, might become such as I am, except for these chains.”

Act 26:24 “Festus said in a loud voice” Paul’s message was unbelievable to him. His world-view and culture, education, and position biased his ability to understand.

“Your great learning is driving you mad” In a roundabout way this shows the depth, clarity, and persuasiveness of Paul’s defense.

Act 26:25 “of sober truth” The Greek term sphrosun comes from two Greek words, “sound” and “mind.” They mean a balanced approach to life and thinking. It is the antonym of “out of your mind” and “mad” (cf. Act 26:24).

“the truth” See Special Topic below.

SPECIAL TOPIC: “TRUTH” IN PAUL’S WRITINGS

Act 26:26-28 “the king knows about these matters” There has been much discussion about these verses. Apparently Paul wanted to use Agrippa II to confirm his testimony and if possible bring him to acceptance of its truth. Act 26:28 could be translated, “Do you want me to be a Christian witness?”

Act 26:26 “I speak to him also with confidence” Luke often uses this term in Acts, it is always connected with Paul (cf. Act 9:27-28; Act 13:46; Act 14:3; Act 18:26; Act 19:8). It is usually translated “speaking with boldness” (cf. 1Th 2:2). This is one of the manifestations of being Spirit-filled. It was the object of Paul’s prayer request in Eph 6:20. Gospel proclamation with boldness is the Spirit’s goal for every believer.

“for this has not been done in a corner” Peter made this same assertion again and again to his first hearers in Jerusalem (cf. Act 2:22; Act 2:33). The facts of the gospel were verifiable and historical.

Act 26:27 Paul knew that Agrippa was knowledgeable of the OT. Paul is claiming that his gospel message was clearly discernable from OT Scriptures. It was not a “new” or “innovative” message! It was fulfilled prophecy.

Act 26:28

NASB”In a short time you will persuade me to become a Christian”

NKJV”You almost persuade me to become a Christian”

NRSV”Are you so quickly persuading me to become a Christian”

TEV”In this short time do you think you will make me a Christian”

NJB”A little more, and your arguments would make a Christian of me”

There is a lexical option about how to understand olig (meaning small or little), “in a short time” (NASB, NRSV, TEV), or “with little effort” (NKJV, NJB). This same confusion is also present in Act 26:29.

There is also a textual variant related to this phrase: “to do” or “to make” (poie) in the manuscripts P74, , A (UBS4 gives it an “A” rating), or “to become” in MS E and the Vulgate and Peshitta translations.

The meaning in the larger context is obvious. Paul wanted to present the gospel in such a way that those who knew and affirmed the OT (Agrippa) would be brought under conviction or at the least, affirm the relevance of these OT prophecies.

“Christian” The people of “the Way” (followers of Christ) were first called Christians at Antioch of Syria (cf. Act 11:26). The only other place this name appears in Acts is on the lips of Agrippa II, which means the name had become widely known.

Act 26:29 “I would wish to God” Act 26:29 is a partial Fourth class conditional sentence (an with the optative mood), which expresses a desire that might remotely come to reality. It is usually a prayer or wish. Paul wished all of his hearers, Roman and Jewish, would come to faith in Christ like himself.

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

spake for himself. Same as “answer for himself”, verses: Act 26:1, Act 26:2.

Festus, &c. To Festus the resurrection of dead persons was as much beyond the range of possibility as it is to myriads to-day. “Modern views” have relegated the resurrection, as the hope of the believer, to the the background.

beside thyself = mad. Greek. mainomai. See Act 12:15.

learning. Literally letters (Greek. gramma). As we say “a man of letters”. Compare Joh 7:15.

make = turn or pervert. Greek. peritrepo. Only here. A medical word.

mad = to (Greek. eis) madness. Greek. mania. Only here.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

24.] The words must refer, on account of the present part., to the Iast words spoken by Paul: but it is not necessary to suppose that these only produced the effect described on Festus. Mr. Humphry remarks, Festus was probably not so well acquainted as his predecessor (ch. Act 24:10) with the character of the nation over which he had recently been called to preside. Hence he avails himself of Agrippas assistance (Act 25:26). Hence also he is unable to comprehend the earnestness of St. Paul, so unlike the indifference with which religious and moral subjects were regarded by the upper classes at Rome. His self-love suggests to him, that one who presents such a contrast to his own apathy, must be mad: the convenient hypothesis that much learning had produced this result, may have occurred to him on hearing Paul quote prophecies in proof of his assertions.

] Thou art mad, not merely, thou ravest, nor thou art an enthusiast: nor are the words spoken in jest (Olsh.),-but in earnest ( . , Chrys.). Festus finds himself by this speech of Paul yet more bewildered than before (De W.).

.] Meyer understands Festus to allude to the many rolls which Paul had with him in his imprisonment (we might compare , of 2Ti 4:13) and studied (so also Heinrichs and Kuinoel),-but the ordinary interpretation, thy much learning, seems more natural, and so De W.

. ] Is turning thy brain.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

Act 26:24. , thou art mad, Paul) It is thou, Festus, who art mad. Festus saw that it is not nature which acts in Paul: he was not capable of seeing grace: wherefore he supposes that it was a Jewish kind of enthusiastic phrensy, of the same kind as was that among the Gentiles, according to their own fables. He does not ascribe to Paul habitual madness, but a particular act and feeling of madness then: comp. ch. Act 12:15.-, learning) Festus accounts the apostles ardour as the effect of overmuch learning [Pedantry].

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

75. ALMOST PERSUADED, BUT ALTOGETHER LOST

Act 26:24-32

Agrippa was a mighty man of wealth, power, and respectability. He was king over Judea. Unlike his predecessors or his peers, Aprippa was a thoughtful, religious man. He had embraced the tenets of the Jews’ religion, avowed his faith in the Old Testament Scriptures, and enjoyed a rare privilege and opportunity. Agrippa heard the man of God deliver a message from God in the power of God! He not only heard Paul preach, he was fully convinced of the truthfulness of Paul’s message. The way of life and salvation was set before him. Before his very eyes, Jesus Christ crucified was evidently set forth. The door of mercy was opened to him. He had opportunity to enter it. But this man willfully disobeyed the command of the gospel. In the hour of opportunity, he trifled. When God spoke, he stopped his ears. He was, according to his own words, “almost persuaded” to be a Christian, but was altogether lost. In these verses, the Holy Spirit holds Agrippa before the eyes of eternity bound souls as a beacon to warn them that God will not trifle with those who trifle with the gospel!

Are you, like the Jews of Elijah’s day, halting between two opinions, convinced that the gospel of God’s free, saving grace in Christ is true, yet continuing in the path of unbelief and rebellion? You may compliment yourself that you are “almost persuaded”. You may think it is a commendable thing to be like the rich young ruler who was near the kingdom of God (Mar 12:34). Other people may compliment you for your apparent interest in the things of God. Be warned: To be near the kingdom is to be altogether outside the kingdom! To be almost persuaded is to be altogether lost! If you continue halting between two opinions, you will soon be confirmed in reprobate unbelief. If you continue to trifle with God, you will soon be destroyed by God (Pro 1:23-33; Pro 29:1). You must enter the door of mercy while it is open. God’s ambassador warns you, “Receive not the grace of God in vain…Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation” (1Co 6:1-2).

WHAT IS A CHRISTIAN? A Christian is one who is anointed of God, a follower of Christ, one who is like Christ. That is what the word “Christian” means. Nothing in this world can properly be called “Christian” except the church and people of our God. Paul tells us what a Christian is in Act 26:18. A Christian is a person who is taught of God, one whose eyes God has opened to see and know the truth (Joh 6:44-45). Being taught of God, all true believers “have the mind of Christ” (1Co 2:16) to understand spiritual things. A Christian is a person who has been taught of God to acknowledge and confess his sin (1Jn 1:9), trust the God-man, Jesus Christ, as his only sin-atoning Substitute and Savior (1Co 1:30), and to gratefully confess, “By the grace of God I am what I am” (1Co 15:10). Christians are sinners who have been transformed by the grace and power of God, turned “from darkness to light, and from the power of satan to God” (2Co 5:17). Christians have received the forgiveness of sins by the blood of Christ (Eph 1:7). All sins, past, present, and future, are forgiven us through our Savior’s blood. Blessed they are to whom God will not impute sin (Psa 32:1-2; Rom 4:8). A Christian is a person whose treasure is in heaven. We have an inheritance among the saints to which we were predestinated in eternity (Eph 1:11), which was earned, purchased, and claimed for us by Christ our forerunner (Eph 1:11; Heb 6:20), and which we shall fully possess at last (Joh 14:1-3). All true Christians are sanctified by the grace of God. That is to say, God has made them holy by his grace in Christ, so that all who are Christians are saints, being made holy by the imputed righteousness of Christ in justification (Rom 3:24-26; Rom 5:19) and the imparted righteousness of Christ in regeneration (1Jn 3:9). In short, a Christian is a person who trusts the Lord Jesus Christ. We are saved by “faith that is in” him. We have been effectually taught of God to trust the Lord Jesus Christ. Briefly stated, that is what a Christian is. Those who have not experienced and do not possess these graces are not Christians.

HOW DID PAUL PERSUADE AGRIPPA TO TRUST CHRIST AND BE A CHRISTIAN? He was not indifferent to this man’s soul. Knowing the terror of the Lord, he persuaded him to come to Christ (1Co 5:11) with four strong arguments. First, he appealed to the Word of God (Act 26:22). His only argument was, “Thus saith the Lord.” This is the only weapon of our warfare. We do not appeal to science, history, or logic as a buttress for faith. Rather, we demand that all men bow to the Word of God. Believing God’s Word as a revelation from him is the only way anyone can be saved (1Jn 4:10-14). Second, Paul testified to Agrippa of what he had personally experienced of the grace of God (Act 26:6-19). He told the king what the Lord had done for him. That is good witnessing! Everyone can tell what he has experienced; and there is not better way to persuade sinners than telling them what God has done for you as a sinner. Third, the apostle gave Agrippa a clear statement of the historic facts of the gospel (Act 26:23). God became incarnate (Joh 1:14). The incarnate Christ bore the sins of his people upon the cross as the sinner’s Substitute, satisfying Divine justice for all his people by his vicarious death (I Cor. 5:21; Heb 9:26; 1Pe 3:18). He arose from the dead on the third day (Rom 4:25), ascended into heaven, and makes intercession there as an Advocate and High Priest for his people (1Jn 2:1-2). This risen, exalted Christ is able to save to the uttermost all who trust him (Heb 7:25; Joh 17:2). Then, Paul laid the axe to the root of the tree, demanding that his captor openly acknowledge the claims of Christ in the gospel (Act 26:27-29). Though he was wearing Agrippa’s chains, Paul was still the servant of Christ, and he boldly behaved as the servant of Christ, even to the point of laying his life on the line! Agrippa must have been shocked! Yet, he could not deny the truthfulness of Paul’s message. So the question must be raised – If he was convinced of the message Paul preached…

WHY WAS THIS MAN ONLY “ALMOST PERSUADED?” Why will men and women who know that the gospel is true persist in wilful rebellion to its claims? For the same reasons Agrippa did. There was one sitting by his side he was unwilling to give up. Bernice was his sister, a beautiful, but shameless woman. She and Agrippa were living together in an incestuous relationship. If he had laid hold on Christ, he must let Bernice go; but he would not do so. This was his point of rebellion. That is where God always meets a sinner. There was another setting beside Agrippa, whose disapproval he did not want. Festus was lower in rank than Agrippa, but if he desired, he could cause the king much trouble with Caesar. It was, at least in part, the fear of man that kept Agrippa from Christ, Paul was probably an obstacle to his faith as well. He saw the bonds, imprisonment, shame, sorrow, and reproach that Paul had to endure for Christ, and was unwilling to pay that price. He counted the cost (Mat 13:44-46; Luk 14:28) and said, “Christ is not worth that to me!” But, primarily, the problem was in his own heart. Agrippa loved the world, the pomp, the pleasures, the fame, the riches, the sin, the power, and the comfort of the world. He was almost persuaded, but he could not and would not forsake the world and follow Christ. Will you?

A plane once took off from Chicago bound for Mexico with a bad ring in the engine. One of the passengers was almost persuaded by his wife not to board the plane; but he did. The plane crashed; and he died. A man saw a penny-stock rising on the market. He was almost persuaded not to invest his money. But he decided to risk everything; and he lost everything. A man had a sharp pain in his chest and a numbness in his arms. He was a little fearful. His wife almost persuaded him to go the emergency room. But the pain subsided; and he died of a heart attack. The warning the Holy Spirit gives us by this man Agrippa is written in clear letters: TO BE ALMOST PERSUADED IS TO BE ALTOGETHER LOST! IF YOU MEET GOD ALMOST PERSUADED, YOU WILL BE ALTOGETHER LOST FOREVER!

Fuente: Discovering Christ In Selected Books of the Bible

spake: Act 22:1

Festus: Act 17:32, Act 24:25, Act 25:19, Act 25:20

Paul: Act 26:11, 2Ki 9:11, Jer 29:26, Hos 9:7, Mar 3:21, Joh 8:48, Joh 8:52, Joh 10:20, Joh 10:21, 1Co 1:23, 1Co 2:13, 1Co 2:14, 1Co 4:10, 2Co 5:13

Reciprocal: Psa 119:46 – speak Psa 123:4 – with the scorning Ecc 9:3 – and madness Isa 59:15 – maketh himself a prey Mat 11:18 – He Joh 7:20 – Thou Act 12:15 – Thou Act 24:27 – Porcius Festus 1Co 14:23 – will Phi 1:17 – that 2Pe 2:16 – the madness

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

4

Act 26:24. Learning is from GRAMMA which Thayer defines, “Any writing, a document or record.” Paul had made such wide reference to the writings of ancient scribes that Festus thought such knowledge had thrown him into a state of frenzy, to the extent -that he had lost control of himself.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

The Procurator Festus interrupts PaulThe Apostles Reply to Festus, and Appeal to AgrippaThe Dialogue between Agrippa and PaulThe King and Governor decide that, had not the Prisoner appealed to Csar, he might have been set at liberty, 24-32.

Act 26:24. And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. Paul apparently had, at this point of his address, completed the main argument, which he wished to put before Agrippa, on the real identity of his belief with that held by all orthodox Jews, and had pointed out where the Christian and the Jew were at issue; and had shown that the groundwork of the Christian beliefnot only in those points which they held in common with the Pharisee, but also in the points in which they were at variancewas the sacred law and the prophets. The Jews would find foretold in their Holy Scriptures every detail in the articles of the Christian faith which Paul taught. We, of course, possess no clue to suggest to us what would have been the conclusion of the apology. So far Festus had listened with respectful attention while the accused Hebrew spoke before his royal guest; but when the eloquent and impassioned apostle came to this part of his defence, and dwelt at length with intense fervour on the resurrection of a Man whom Festus predecessor Pilate had crucified,and the Roman heard him discourse with marvellous and winning eloquenceas without doubt Paul did hereon the wondrous results which this stupendous fact, the resurrection of a crucified malefactor, would surely accomplish in all parts of the great world known or unknown to the Romans, he could contain himself no longer, but interrupted him; crying out loudly, Paul, thou art beside thyself!

Mr. Humphry, commenting on Festus interruption here, writes: He (Festus) was unable to comprehend the earnestness of St. Paul, so unlike the indifference with which religious and moral subjects were regarded by the upper classes at Rome. His self-love suggested to him that one who presented such a contrast to his own apathy must be mad. The convenient hypothesis that much learning had produced this result, may have occurred to him on hearing Paul quote prophecies in proof of his assertions.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Hitherto Festus had heard the apostle with great patience, but now he interrupts him, and tells him, he talks like a man that was crazed.

Carnal minds pass very uncharitable censures upon spiritual persons and spiritual things. Christ’s kindred said, he was beside himself, Mar 3:21. Festus here judged Paul to be mad, thinking that he had over-studied himself: by meddling with matters too high for his capacity, and too deep for his understanding, he had brought himself into a deep melancholy; Paul, thou art beside thyself, much learning hath made thee mad.

But observe with what meekness and due terms of respect the apostle replied to this reviling governor, I am not mad, most noble Festus. Titles of respect and honour, given to persons in place and power, are agreeable to the mind of God, and countenanced by Christianity.

Observe, 2. What an happy victory and conquest the apostle had over his own passions; he waives the reflections Festus had made upon him; and had learned of his master, who, when he was reviled, reviled not again. It is an happy attainment for a man to be master of himself under a provocation, to be regulated by right reason, and not hurried by blind passion.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

Agrippa’s Response

Festus interrupted with a loud declaration that Paul had gone crazy from too much learning. It seems Paul’s failure to defend himself, instead focussing on converting his judges, was incomprehensible to the governor. Paul responded with proper respect for Festus’ position, simply saying he was not crazy but spoke the truth. The apostle went on to note that the events surrounding and following Jesus’ life were done in the open for all to see and had to be well known to King Agrippa. The apostle then asked Agrippa if he believed the prophets. Paul answered for him, perhaps sensing, or through the Spirit knowing, what the King was thinking. Of course he believed the prophets.

Agrippa recognized that Paul was using a concise argument intended to persuade him to follow Jesus as the Christ. Paul expressed his true desire that Agrippa, along with everyone else who heard his voice, would be converted to the point of zealously following the Lord just as he did. Agrippa, Festus and Bernice then rose and left the room. Their judgment was clear, Paul had done nothing worthy of death or chains. King Agrippa stated that Paul could have been released had it not have been for his appeal for the case to be heard by Caesar ( Act 26:24-32 ).

Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books

Act 26:24. And as he thus spake for himself And was making his defence; Festus Astonished, it seems, to hear him represent this despised gospel of Jesus of Nazareth as a matter of such high and universal concern, and designed to be the means of illuminating both Jews and Gentiles, and thinking the vision he had related, as introductory to that assertion, quite an incredible story; said, with a loud voice Which reached the whole auditory; Paul, thou art beside thyself To talk of mens rising from the dead! and of a Jews enlightening, not only his own nation, but the polite and learned Greeks and Romans! Nay, Festus, it is thou that art beside thyself; that strikest quite wide of the mark. And no wonder: he saw that nature did not act in Paul; but the grace that acted in him he did not see. And therefore he took all this ardour, which animated the apostle, for a mere start of learned phrensy. Much learning doth make thee mad , much study drives thee to madness. Perhaps he might know that Paul, in his present confinement, spent a great deal of time in reading; and this was the most decent turn that could be given to such a mad charge. Doubtless, Paul had a great deal more to say in defence of the gospel which he preached, and for the honour of it, and to recommend it to the good opinion of his noble audience. He had just fallen upon a subject that was the life of the cause in which he was engaged, the death and resurrection of Jesus: and here he was in his element, his soul was animated, his mouth was opened toward them, and his heart enlarged: and it is a thousand pities that he should have been interrupted, as he now was, and not permitted to say all he designed.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

24. At this point in his speech, Paul was interrupted by Festus. It was a very strange speech in the ears of that dissolute heathen. It presented to him a man who from his youth had lived in strict devotion to a religion whose chief characteristic was the hope of a resurrection from the dead; who had once persecuted to death his present friends, but had been induced to change his course by a vision from heaven; and who, from that moment, had been enduring stripes, imprisonment, and constant exposure to death, in his efforts to inspire men with his own hope of a resurrection. Such a career he could not reconcile with those maxims of ease or of ambition which he regarded as the highest rule of life. Moreover, he saw this strange man, when called to answer to accusations of crime, appear to forget himself, and attempt to convert his judges rather than to defend himself. There was a magnanimity of soul displayed in both the past and the present of his career, which was above the comprehension of the sensuous politician, and which he could not reconcile with sound reason. He seems to have forgotten where he was, and the decorum of the occasion, so deeply was he absorbed in listening to and thinking of Paul. (24) “And as he offered these things in his defense, Festus cried, with a loud voice, Paul, you are beside yourself. Much learning has made you mad.”

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

24. But shouts uproariously, Paul, thou art beside thyself; many writings have turned thee into insanity, seeing that Paul is a man of greatest learning, a real expert not only in the rabbinical lore of all bygone ages, but thoroughly posted in all the learning of the Gentiles. Such is the power of his oratory, the irresistible logic of his arguments and the irrefutable force of his burning pathos, that Festus leaps to the conclusion that immense study has overwrought his brain and turned him into insanity, thus finding a nigh way to account for all the troubles in the case.

Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament

Act 26:24-29. Challenges and Rejoinders.That Paul was out of his senses was said of him at Corinth (2Co 5:13); there is nothing in what he is reported to have said on this occasion that would suggest it even to a heathen, who must have seen various forms of religious enthusiasm. Paul answers that he is in his sober senses, but he turns to Agrippa, in whom he is interested; he is acquainted with the facts about Christ which are notorious; he believes the prophets and must concede that they spoke of Christ. The speech of Agrippa in Act 26:28 is given in a text which has many variants and which WH (ii. App. 100) despair of restoring.[102] With the reading of Ephraim, given below, Agrippa puts Pauls question aside as a trifling one; of course he believes the prophets, but what then? Paul, on the other hand (Act 26:29), plays with Agrippas phrase, and declares his desire that whether in a small matter or a great (or, his words may be taken, whether for a little time or a long time), his hearers might stand where he does, though with better fortune.

[102] The reading underlying AV. to become a Christian, is a correction to escape the difficulty of the older text you are lightly persuaded to make me a Christian (RV), which is unsatisfactory. The use of the term Christian by Agrippa is strange; it originated at Antioch (Act 11:26); the Palestinian name for the new sect was Nazoraios (Act 24:5, cf. Act 2:22*). In the Armenian Catena the Syrian Father Ephraim omits this term, and reads simply, You are persuading me to a small thing.

Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible

Verse 24

With a loud voice; in order that the whole assembly might hear the taunt.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

26:24 {8} And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad.

(8) The wisdom of God is madness to fools, yet nonetheless we must boldly confirm the truth.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Paul’s appeal to Agrippa 26:24-29

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

Paul’s knowledge of the Hebrew Scriptures impressed Festus, added confirmation that Paul probably said more than Luke chose to record here. The Greek words ta polla . . . grammata, translated "great learning" (lit. the many writings), indicate that it was Paul’s knowledge of the Scriptures that impressed Festus, not his general knowledge. However the governor did not understand the significance of Paul’s beliefs. To him they seemed incomprehensible. He concluded that Paul was a zealous obscurantist and a bit crazy to risk his life defending such foolish ideas. The Romans did not believe in the resurrection of the body, just the immortality of the soul (cf. Act 17:32; Act 25:19). [Note: Bock, Acts, p. 722.] So belief in resurrection would have seemed like insanity to Festus.

"Festus’ comment sounds like an interruption while Paul is still in full spate, but in fact the speech has reached its conclusion." [Note: Marshall, The Acts . . ., p. 398.]

 

"Down through the ages Festus’s response has been echoed by men and women too trapped by the natural to be open to the supernatural, too confined by the ’practical’ to care about life everlasting." [Note: Longenecker, "The Acts . . .," p. 554.]

Some of Jesus’ accusers also thought that He was mad. People sometimes think that we are mad when we explain the gospel to them and urge them to believe in the Lord.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)