Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 3:4
And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us.
4. And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him, &c.] And doubtless, like Paul at Lystra (Act 14:9), “perceiving that he had faith to be healed.” For the man’s first act after his cure “he entered into the temple” ( Act 3:8) may be taken as an indication of his devout frame of mind.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Fastening his eyes – The word used here denotes to look intently, or with fixed attention. It is one of the special words which Luke uses (Luk 4:20; Luk 22:56; Act 1:10; Act 3:12; Act 6:15; Act 7:55; Act 10:4; etc.) 12 times in all. It is used by no other writer in the New Testament, except twice by Paul, 2Co 3:7, 2Co 3:13.
Look on us – All this Was done to fix the attention. He wished to call the attention of the man distinctly to himself, and to what he was about to do. It was also done that the man might be fully apprised that his restoration to health came from him.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Act 3:4
And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us.
The reciprocal gaze
The gaze was one which read character in the expression of the mans face, and discerned that he had faith to be healed (verse 16). And he, in his turn, was to look on them that he might read in their pitying looks, not only the wish to heal, but the consciousness of power to carry the wish into effect. (Dean Plumptre.)
The proper effects of the sight of misery
When thou seest misery in thy brothers face, let him see mercy in thine eye; the more the oil of mercy is:poured on him by thy pity, the more the oil in thy cruse shall be increased by thy piety. (F. Quarles.)
Magnetic influence over our fellow-creatures
You may take a lily and draw it through the sand, and it comes out clean. Nothing holds to it. You may take a magnet and draw it through, and out come the iron filings with it. The magnet knows and catches that which is germane to it–that which is susceptible to its attraction. There are some natures that are like magnets, and that touch lust in you. You do not know what it is that affects you. You feel unwashed after they are gone. There has been nothing said, and there has been nothing exactly done. It is that subtle magnetic power which feeling has on feeling. If on one instrument in the room you sound a given chord, every other instrument in that room has a tendency to sound its octave. If you go among men of strong natures there is a certain vibration in them of a feeling which is strong in you. When you have been with some persons you feel finer, you feel lifted up. And yet they have not exhorted you. There has been no magisterial instruction whatever given to you. You have drunk the wine of being, and by it you are lifted up and strengthened. (H. W. Beecher.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 4. Look on us.] He wished to excite and engage his attention that he might see what was done to produce his miraculous cure, and, it is likely, took this occasion to direct his faith to Jesus Christ. See Clarke on Ac 3:16. Peter and John probably felt themselves suddenly drawn by the Holy Spirit to pronounce the healing name in behalf of this poor man.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The eye affects the heart, and speaks the compassion he had of this poor man, whom he did not disdain thoroughly and seriously to behold: he excites the lame mans expectation, and requires his attention, that he might the more mind the manner and means of his cure, and be the better prepared to give God the glory of it.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
4, 5. Peter fastening his eyes onhim with John, said, Look on us. And he gave heedthat, throughthe eye, faith might be aided in its birth.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And Peter fastening his eyes upon him,…. Or looking very wistly and intently at him, being, no doubt, under some uncommon impulse of the Spirit of God to take notice of him, and cure him of his disease:
with John; who was also under a like impulse at the same time; and who was equally concerned in this cure, as appears by the notice the man, when healed, took of the one, as well as the other; and by Peter’s declaration, Ac 3:11 as also by the following words:
said, look on us; which was said to raise his attention to them, to put him upon observing what manner of men they were, and how unlikely to perform the following cure, and to take notice of the manner in which it would be done. The Jews speak of a supernatural cure effected in such a manner, using such words; and which perhaps is told, with a view to lessen the glory of this z.
“Elias appeared to one in the likeness of R. Chiyah Rabbah; he said to him, how does my Lord do? he replied to him, a certain tooth distresses me; he said to him, , “look on me”; and he looked on him, and put his finger on it, and he was well.”
z T. Hieros. Cetubot, fol. 35. 1.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Fastening his eyes (). First aorist (ingressive) active participle of . For this verb see on Luke 4:20; Acts 1:10. Peter fixed his eyes on the beggar and invited him to look () on them.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Fastening his eyes [] . See on Luk 4:20; and compare Act 1:10.
Look [] . Attentively. See on Mt 7:3.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him,” (atenisas de Petros eis auton) “Then Peter, looking directly at him,” looking, gazingly into his eyes, to determine that he had a genuine need, a desire for an aim from him and John.
2) “With John,” (sun to losnnen) “in colleague, close company or affinity with John,” in the church and in the apostolic ministry; Both Peter and John were going up to the temple with right, dedicated motives, to pray, teach, and preach, the word, when they encountered this needy crippled beggar who had repeatedly been in need for forty years, Act 4:22.
3) “Said, Look on us,” (epien blepson eis hemas) “Said, look up, take a glance at us,” give us your attention for a moment, For the cripple to be healed he must look to the physician. Peter and John could not heal, but they had credentials from God to heal for Him, to convince men that they were His real witnesses, genuine from God, even as Nicodemus and the Sanhedrin were convinced that Jesus was from God, by the miracles that He did, Joh 3:2; Heb 2:4. For the one who wills to do God’s will shall know it, Joh 7:17.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
4. Look upon us. Peter doth not thus speak before he be certain of the purpose and intent of God. And surely in these words he commandeth him to hope for some singular and unwonted benefit; yet here may a question be moved, whether they had power to work miracles so often as they would? I answer, that they were ministers of God’s power in such sort, that they did attempt nothing of their own will or proper motion, but the Lord wrought by them, when he knew that it was expedient it should be so. Hereby it came to pass that they healed one and not all. Therefore, as in other things, they had the Spirit of God to be their guide and director, so also in this point. Therefore, before such time as Peter commandeth the lame man to arise, he did east and fasten his eyes upon him; this steadfast looking upon him was not without some peculiar motion of the Spirit. Hereby it cometh to pass that he speaketh so surely (and safely, without all fear) of the miracle. Furthermore, he meant by this word to provoke the lame man to receive the grace of God; yet doth he look for nothing but for an alms.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(4) Peter, fastening his eyes upon him . . .See Notes on Luk. 4:20, Act. 1:10, where the same characteristic word is used. The gaze was one which read character in the expression of the mans face, and discerned that he had faith to be healed (Act. 3:16). And he, in his turn, was to look on them that he might read in their pitying looks, not only the wish to heal, but the consciousness of power to carry the wish into effect.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
4. Peter The junior apostle is reverently silent, (John, indeed, never speaks in the book of Acts,) while his senior alone speaks and performs. How graceful is reverence for honored age even in most honored youth!
Fastening his eyes As if conscious of being prompted, perhaps even impelled, by the Spirit, with a power to perform a miracle upon this perfectly hopeless lame-born.
Look on us Requiring, at least, a slight conditional response from the lame-born. And this whole solemn process served to mark and demonstrate the proceeding of cause and effect, showing that there was no mere accident, but the intended result of an intentional putting forth of power. (See note on Mar 8:22.) This gaze may, however, be but the glance of the spirit of discerning whether or not the man had faith to be healed. Every scientific physician knows that faith predisposes the patient’s system toward health. “It is,” says the celebrated physiologist, Dr. Carpenter, “to a state of fixed expectation with implicit confidence that we may fairly attribute most, if not all, the cures which have been worked through what has been popularly termed the ‘imagination.’ A couple of bread pills will produce copious purgation, and a dose of red poppy syrup will serve as a powerful narcotic, if the patient have entertained a sufficiently confident expectation of such a result.” This fact, no doubt, accounts completely for a large amount of the miracles of healing in the later Christian Church, especially in nervous cases. The preternatural is the avenue through which the supernatural may reach us. And we may even say that our Lord and his apostles often used the preternatural receptivity of the patient, arising from faith, to pour in upon the patient the supernatural force that worked the miracle. And thus was shadowed the healing of the soul through a similar, yet higher, willing, and expecting spiritual faith.
Paul, at Lystra, selected the cripple for a miracle, “beholding him and perceiving he had faith to be healed,” and, reciprocally, that he himself possessed the miraculous power. So with the elders of the Church, “the prayer of faith,” faith both of the elders and the patient, “shall save the sick.” This gift was a preternaturalism, but hardly, perhaps, a miracle. (See note on Act 8:24.) That power, we doubt not, still exists in the Church, were it faithfully exerted. The profoundly pious physician often possesses, perhaps, a means of health-giving of which he is unaware. Yet nothing less than true, full miracle could be supposed to restore sight to the blind-born, as did Jesus, or walking to the lame-born, as Peter here, or the cripple-born as Paul at Lystra. It is for this reason that the congenital character of the ailment is carefully stated.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘And Peter, fastening his eyes on him, with John, said, “Look on us.” And he turned his attention to them, expecting to receive something from them.’
Immediately, moved in their hearts, Peter and John responded. They turned their eyes and looked at him. At this he waited expectantly, assuming that they would give him something. But Peter’s words had been in order to turn his eyes on the two Apostles because they alone could bring him the message of hope. It was a quiet call to faith.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
The miracle of healing:
v. 4. And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us.
v. 5. And he gave heed unto them, expecting to receive something of them.
v. 6. Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk.
v. 7. And he took him by the right hand and lifted him up; and immediately his feet and ankle-bones received strength.
v. 8. And he, leaping up, stood, and walked, and entered with them into the Temple, walking, and leaping, and praising God.
v. 9. And all the people saw him walking and praising God.
v. 10. And they knew that it was he which sat for alms at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple; and they were filled with wonder and amazement at that which had happened unto him.
v. 11. And as the lame man which was healed held Peter and John, all the people ran together unto them in the porch that is called Solomon’s, greatly wondering. The attention of the apostles having thus been directed to the beggar, whom they otherwise might have passed, as they probably had done scores of times, Peter looked at him very intently. His heart was deeply moved at the helpless and pitiable condition of the cripple, and his earnest gaze may have held something of that wonderful sympathy which had so often shone forth from his Master’s face. Then he asked the beggar to look at him and John, with the intention of exciting his curiosity and attention, in order that the man might at once be conscious of the source of the miraculous cure. And as the cripple concentrated his attention upon the two apostles, expecting, of course, to receive some gift from them, Peter simply, but impressively, said to him: Silver and gold have I none; these he did not number among his possessions, thus sharing the condition of his Lord and of many servants of the Lord since his time. Worldly belongings were not included in his treasures; but what he did have was sure and lasting. And this Peter was willing to give, to share with the poor man. The power to perform miracles for the sake of establishing the Gospel had been given to the apostles, and Peter proposed to use this power for the healing of this unfortunate cripple. And so his command rang out: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth get up and walk. Peter’s power to perform miracles was not absolute, he held it only by the command, in the power, and in the interest of his Lord and Master Jesus, and could use it only in His name. And then Peter took hold of the man’s hand, grasping him firmly to give him confidence, and lifted him up, drew him upright. The miracle was performed at once. The man’s feet became solid under his weight and his ankles firm; both bones and muscles received not only the strength, but also the ability to use this strength properly. Even while Peter still had hold of his hand, he jumped up; he stood upright first, as if to test the weight on his feet, or to feel the sensation of maintaining an upright position. And then he freely walked about, with no trace of lameness; he even went with Peter and John into the Temple, into the Court of Israel, the place where the men worshiped. And again and again, in the fullness of his joy, he walked about and even leaped, as though he felt constrained to convince himself that he was not dreaming, but that the miracle was a fact. His worshiping on that afternoon was done from the depth of a heart overflowing with thankfulness, wherefore he also praised God, giving all glory and honor to Him, to whom Peter had referred in his command of healing. All this, of course, was not done without attracting notice. Great numbers of people were at this time entering the Temple for the evening sacrifice, and they recognized the man that was walking about and leaping in the joy of his heart as the beggar whom they had often seen at the gate of the Temple. The conclusion in the matter was evident. A miracle had been performed which agitated and shocked them, filled them with wonder and amazement. Their astonishment was mixed with admiration and awe verging almost upon stupor. But there could be no doubt as to the actuality of the happening. For there was the man clinging to the apostles as his benefactors; there were the expressions of his joy and gratitude; there was the fact that he could walk and leap. It was not long, therefore, before all the people that had come into the Temple, forgetting the evening sacrifice and the time of incense, crowded about Peter and John, who had now come out into the beautiful portico or hall known as Solomon’s Porch. Note: Every one that has experienced the help of the Lord should give all due praise and thanks to Him and confess His blessings before men. Mark also: Though the gifts of miracles and extraordinary performances of miracles were a special distinction of the apostolic Church, yet the Lord’s hand is not shortened for the performing of miracles in the Church. The miracles of His grace, above all, are of such a nature as to provoke the admiration of even the children of the world at times.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
4 And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us.
Ver. 4. Look on us ] Together with this word there went forth a power, as Luk 5:17 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
4. ] Calvin’s note is important: ‘Non ita loquitur Petrus quin de consilio Dei certus sit: et certe his verbis singulare aliquod et insolitum beneficium sperare jubet. Quri tamen potest, an facultatem habuerint edendi miracula quoties liberet. Respondeo, sic ministros fuisse divin virtutis, ut nihil suo arbitrio vel proprio motu tentarint, sed Dominus per ipsos egerit quum ita expedire noverat. Hinc factum est ut unum sanarint, non autem promiscue omnes. Ergo, quemadmodum in aliis rebus ducem et directorem habebant Dei Spiritum, ita etiam in hac parte. Ideo priusquam claudum surgere jubeat Petrus, conjecit in eum et defixit oculos. Talis intuitus non carebat peculiari Spiritus motu. Hinc fit ut tam secure de miraculo pronuntiet. Porro, excitare hoc verbo claudum voluit ad recipiendam Dei gratiam: ille tamen nihil quam eleemosynam exspectat.’
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Act 3:4 . , cf. Act 1:10 . : it has sometimes been thought that the command was given to see whether the man was a worthless beggar or not (Nsgen), or whether he was spiritually disposed for the reception of the benefit, and would show his faith (as in our Lord’s miracles of healing), or it might mean that the man’s whole attention was to be directed towards the Apostles, as he evidently only expects an alms, Act 3:5 . At the same time, as Feine remarks, the fact that the narrative does not mention that faith was demanded of the man, forms an essential contrast to the narrative often compared with it in Act 14:9 .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
And = But.
fastening his eyes. Greek. atenizo. App-133.
Look. Greek. blepo. App-133.
on. Same as “upon”.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
4. ] Calvins note is important: Non ita loquitur Petrus quin de consilio Dei certus sit: et certe his verbis singulare aliquod et insolitum beneficium sperare jubet. Quri tamen potest, an facultatem habuerint edendi miracula quoties liberet. Respondeo, sic ministros fuisse divin virtutis, ut nihil suo arbitrio vel proprio motu tentarint, sed Dominus per ipsos egerit quum ita expedire noverat. Hinc factum est ut unum sanarint, non autem promiscue omnes. Ergo, quemadmodum in aliis rebus ducem et directorem habebant Dei Spiritum, ita etiam in hac parte. Ideo priusquam claudum surgere jubeat Petrus, conjecit in eum et defixit oculos. Talis intuitus non carebat peculiari Spiritus motu. Hinc fit ut tam secure de miraculo pronuntiet. Porro, excitare hoc verbo claudum voluit ad recipiendam Dei gratiam: ille tamen nihil quam eleemosynam exspectat.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Act 3:4. -, fastening his eyes upon him-Look at) Great is the power of a stedfast gaze: ch. Act 13:9, Saul set his eyes on Elymas.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
fastening: Act 11:6, Act 14:9, Act 14:10, Luk 4:20
Look: Act 3:12, Joh 5:6, Joh 11:40
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
4
Act 3:4. When Peter told the lame man to look on us, he should have concluded that some kind of favor was in store for him other than a gift of money, for such an action would not have required that he look at them.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Act 3:4. And Peter, fastening his eyes on him with John, said, Look on us. Calvin, commenting on this miracle about to be worked by Peter and John, asks whether they had the power of working such miracles when they pleased, and replies they were so exclusively ministers of the Divine power that they attempted nothing of their own will, and the Lord worked through them whenever it was expedient. Hence it happened they healed one sufferernot all sufferers promiscuously, for the Holy Spirit guided them here just as in other matters. So Peter, in answer to the poor cripples prayer for alms, moved by the Holy Ghost, fixes his earnest gaze on him, to discover if he were worthy of the glorious gift of health he had to bestow.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
See notes on verse 1