Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Acts 8:3
As for Saul, he made havoc of the church, entering into every house, and haling men and women committed [them] to prison.
3. As for [But] Saul, he made havock of the church ] His own words will best describe his action (Act 22:4), “I persecuted this way unto the death, binding and delivering into prisons both men and women.” The same word is used by the LXX. (Psa 80:13) of the ravages of wild beasts.
entering into every house ] i.e. making his search everywhere that none should escape.
and haling men and women ] i.e. dragging them forth. We have the word still in the form “to haul,” and the hal yards of a ship.
committed them to prison ] Because the number of arrests made it impossible that they should all be brought to trial at once.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
As for Saul – But Saul. He took no interest or part in the pious attentions shown to Stephen, but engaged with zeal in the work of persecution.
He made havoc – elumaineto. This word is commonly applied to wild beasts, to lions, wolves, etc., and denotes the devastations which they commit. Saul raged against the church like a wild beast – a strong expression, denoting the zeal and fury with which he engaged in persecution.
Entering into every house – To search for those who were suspected of being Christians.
Haling – Dragging, or compelling them.
Committed them to prison – The Sanhedrin had no power to put them to death, Joh 18:31. But they had power to imprison; and they resolved, it seems, to exercise this power to the utmost. Paul frequently refers to his zeal in persecuting the church, Act 26:10-11; Gal 1:13. It may be remarked here that there never was a persecution commenced with more flattering prospects to the persecutors. Saul, the principal agent, was young, zealous, learned, and clothed with power. He showed afterward that he had talents suited for any station, and zeal that tired with no exertion, and that was appalled by no obstacle. With this talent and this zeal he entered on his work. The Christians were few and feeble. They were scattered and unarmed. They were unprotected by any civil power, and exposed, therefore, to the full blaze and rage of persecution. That the church was not destroyed was owing to the protection of God a protection which not only secured its existence, but which extended its influence and power by means of this very persecution far abroad on the earth.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Act 8:3
As for Saul, he made havoc of the Church.
The smiter smitten
Read and compare the following passages, the text and Act 14:19; Act 9:1; Act 23:12; Gal 1:13 and 2Co 11:23; Act 26:10; Act 16:23; Eze 18:25 and Gal 6:7. All these experiences were undergone by the same man–the persecutor was persecuted; he who breathed out threatenings and slaughter against the saints was himself pursued by the vengeance of furious men. Note, then–
I. That a mans life comes back upon him (Gal 6:7). One feels in reading such experience that the sense of justice is satisfied. Had Saul after his conversion settled down into a state of Christian enjoyment there would have been a want of moral completeness. Paul himself would have been injured. He must reap what he had sown. Such is the severe but beneficent law which keeps all things equal. If any man could mingle bitter cups for others and never be compelled to drink them himself, he would soon become a devil. God shows him that his turn is coming. All history has shown this–e.g., Adonibezek, Agag, etc. The testimony of Holy Writ is consistent and emphatic. He shall have judgment without mercy that showeth no mercy. See how literally and terribly this was fulfilled in the case of Paul. God forgot not one of his misdemeanours, and the most terrible of persecutors received the measure of his own fury.
II. That a mans Christian experience must be affected by the unchristian life he has lived. One would suppose that after conversion all the former life would be done away. But physically it is not so, and why should it be so spiritually? Look at the reasonableness of the doctrine. A man has lived a self-indulgent life, been careless of the rights of others, etc. After all this he is converted; is he then to complain of the trials of the Christian way as if some strange thing had happened to him? Is there not a cause? Old neglects have to be made up; old wrongs have to be avenged. Is not the way of the Lord equal? We complain of the arduousness of the Christian way, but was the devils way easy? What about the cost and consequences of vicious luxuries? We were selfish, tyrannical, inconsiderate, and is it likely that all this can have passed away without leaving deep effects on our life? Across our very prayers there will be blown the bitter wind of the land we have lived in so long; and through our tenderest charities there may be breathed somewhat of the old selfishness which once enclosed us in its prison. Let us, in honesty, trace many of our trials to the life we have lived in the flesh rather than to any arbitrariness of Divine grace. Conclusion: In reviewing these statements in the light of history and revelation we see–
1. That the distribution of penalties is Gods work and not mans. Vengeance is Mine, etc.
2. That under all the apparent confusion of life there is a principle of justice.
3. That the greatest sufferings may be borne with patience and hopefulness. When did Paul complain of his lot? When did he say that he had suffered more than his share? From him let us learn how good a thing it is to suffer and be strong. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Different kinds of martyrdom
They say that martyrdoms are ended. It is true that the stake is abandoned; Bloody Mary is dead; Smithfield is a commonplace sheep-market, with only an inscription on one side of it to record the fidelity of John Rogers. And perhaps it is not necessary to force the rhetoric which calls Abraham Lincoln the martyr president, or to assert beyond strict accuracy that an assassin could make President Garfield a martyr by shooting him. We need not plant ourselves upon a plane so high or so tragic as this. There are small martyrdoms for Christs sake which in ordinary life are quite within the reach of our attainment. It is a very plain truth that we find in the line of the German poet, Heinrich Heine: Wheresoever a great thought is born, there always has been a Golgotha. When any genuine man is called into conspicuousness, and forced to take a stand for an unpopular or advanced principle against obloquy and opposition, there will be persecution as common as the common prison into which the apostles were hurried after they preached the resurrection. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
Thoughts under persecution
When I am driven from the city, I care nothing for it; but I say to myself, If the empress wishes to banish me, the earth is the Lords, and the fulness thereof. If she would saw me in sunder, let her do it; I have Isaiah for a pattern. If she would plunge me into the sea, I remember Jonah. If she would thrust me into the fiery furnace, I see the three Hebrew children enduring that. If she would cast me to the wild beasts, I call to mind Daniel in the den of lions. If she would take my head from me, I think of John the Baptist. If she would deprive me of worldly goods, let her do it; naked came I into the world, and naked I shall go out of it. (Chrysostom.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 3. Saul made havoc of the Church] The word , from , to destroy, devastate, ravage, signifies the act of ferocious animals, such as bears, wolves, and the like, in seeking and devouring their prey. This shows with what persevering rancour this man pursued the harmless Christians; and thus we see in him what bigotry and false zeal are capable of performing.
Entering into every house] For, however it might be to others, a Christian man’s house was not his castle.
Haling men and women] Neither sparing age nor sex in the professors of Christianity. The word signifies dragging them before the magistrates, or dragging them to justice.
Committed them to prison.] For, as the Romans alone had the power of life and death, the Sanhedrin, by whom Saul was employed, Ac 26:10, could do no more than arrest and imprison, in order to inflict any punishment short of death. It is true, St. Paul himself says that some of them were put to death, see Ac 26:10; but this was either done by Roman authority, or by what was called the judgment of zeal, i.e. when the mob took the execution of the laws into their own hands, and massacred those whom they pretended to be blasphemers of God: for these sanctified their murderous outrage under the specious name of zeal for God’s glory, and quoted the ensample of Phineas as a precedent. Such persons as these formed a sect among the Jews; and are known in ecclesiastical history by the appellation of Zealots or Sicarii.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
He made havoc of the church; Saul was a degree beyond the ordinary sort of persecutors, and was, as he does acknowledge himself, eminently injurious, 1Ti 1:13.
Entering into every house; house after house, sparing none.
Haling men and women; as by the hair of their heads.
Committed them to prison; this to be sure the Jews had yet retained power from the Romans to do. All this is but as a foil, to illustrate more the riches of Gods mercy towards Saul.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
3. Saul . . . entering into everyhouselike as inquisitor [BENGEL].
haling men and women,c.See his own affecting confessions afterwards (Act 22:4Act 26:9; Act 26:10;1Co 15:9; Gal 1:13;Phi 3:6; 1Ti 1:13).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
As for Saul, he made havoc of the church,…. Did evil to the saints, destroyed them that called upon the name of Christ, Ac 9:13 and persecuted and wasted the church of God, as he himself says, Gal 1:13 and now did Benjamin, of which tribe Saul was, ravine as a wolf, Ge 49:27
Entering into every house; where the saints dwelt:
and haling men and women: in a violent manner, without any regard to age or sex:
committed them to prison; delivered them up into the hands of the chief priests and magistrates, in order to be committed and sent to prison; this he himself confesses, Ac 22:4.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Laid waste (). Imperfect middle of , old verb (from , injury), to dishonour, defile, devastate, ruin. Only here in the N.T. Like the laying waste of a vineyard by a wild boar (Ps 79:13). Picturesque description of the havoc carried on by Saul now the leader in the persecution. He is victor over Stephen now who had probably worsted him in debate in the Cilician synagogue in Jerusalem.
Into every house ( ). But Luke terms it “the church” ( ). Plainly not just an “assembly,” but an organized body that was still “the church” when scattered in their own homes, “an unassembled assembly” according to the etymology. Words do not remain by the etymology, but travel on with usage.
Haling (). Literally, dragging forcibly (=hauling). Present active participle of , old verb.
Men and women ( ). A new feature of the persecution that includes the women. They met it bravely as through all the ages since (cf. Acts 9:2; Acts 22:4). This fact will be a bitter memory for Paul always.
Committed (). Imperfect active of , old verb, kept on handing them over to prison.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Made havoc [] . Only here in New Testament. In Septuagint, Psa 79:13, it is used of the laying waste of a vineyard by the wild boar. Compare Act 9:21, where the A. V. has destroyed, but where the Greek is porqhsav, devastated. Canon Farrar observes : “The part which he played at this time in the horrid work of persecution has, I fear, been always underrated. It is only when we collect the separate passages – they are no less than eight in number – in which allusion is made to this sad period, 16 it is only when we weigh the terrible significance of the expressions used that we feel the load of remorse which must have lain upon him, and the taunts to which he was liable from malignant enemies” (” Life and Work of St. Paul “). Note the imperfect, of continued action.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “As for Saul, he made havock of the church,” (Saulos de elumaineta ten eklesian) “Then, or atthat point in time, Saul ravaged the church,” or demeaned the dignity of the church, by his indignities against her members. The term “made havock” refers to scourging and torturing with personal outrage, like am army in hand to hand combat with an enemy at war, as foretold by our Lord, Joh 15:20; Mat 5:11-12.
2) “Entering into every house (kata tous oikous eisporeuomenos) “Entering, house by house, from door to door,” where Christians lived or met to worship of his own will, accord, or zeal in the city of Jerusalem. He later recounted his wicked actions, with regret, before King Agrippa, Act 26:10.
3) “And hailing men and women,” (suron te andras kai gunaikas) “Repeatedly or continually dragging both responsible Christian men and women,” hauling or dragging them from their homes and places of assembly worship, where they chose to obey and worship God, rather than men, Act 5:29; Act 9:1-2; Act 26:10-11; Gal 1:13; 1Ti 1:13.
4) “Committed them to prison,” (paredidou eis phulakin) “He delivered them into prison,” secured their committal into prison, into bonds and stocks; All who live Godly in Christ Jesus must therefore suffer persecution, even if all do not find themselves in prisons, 2Ti 3:12; Joh 15:20; Mat 5:10-12.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
3. But Saul. We must note two things in this place, how great the cruelty of the adversaries was, and how wonderful the goodness of God was, who vouchsafed to make Paul a pastor of so cruel a wolf. For that desire to lay waste the Church wherewith he was incensed did seem to cut away all hope. Therefore his conversion was so much the more excellent afterward. And it is not to be doubted but that this punishment was laid upon him by God, after that he had conspired to put Stephen to death, together with the other wicked men, that he should be the ringleader of cruelty. For God doth oftentimes punish sins more sharply in the elect than in the reprobate.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(3) As for Saul, he made havock of the church.The tense in the Greek implies continuous action, and so indicates the severity of the persecution. Further details are given by St. Paul himself. He persecuted this way unto the death (Act. 22:4). It does not follow, however, that this points to more than the death of Stephen. Both men and women were imprisoned (ibid). The fact that the latter class were included among the sufferers, implies that they had been more or less prominent in the activity of the new society. Such may have been the devout women of Luk. 8:2-3. The victims were punished in every synagogue, most probably with the forty stripes save one (2Co. 11:24) which was the common penalty for minor offences against religious order. They were compelled to blaspheme the worthy name of the Master whom they owned as the Christ (Act. 26:11; Jas. Ii. 7). They were subject to wanton outrages in addition to judicial severity (1Ti. 1:13). There was, as the persecutor himself afterwards confessed (Act. 26:11), a kind of insane ferocity in his violence. Even the very word haling implies a brutality which might well have been spared.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
‘But Saul laid waste the church, entering into every house, and, dragging men and women, committed them to prison.’
There is a deliberate contrast here. While ‘devout men’ were burying the fiery Stephen, Saul, the equally fiery disciple of Gamaliel, was determined to bury the whole church. Not one to wait around he had followed up his actions at the stoning by seeking authority from the High Priest to act against the new church (Act 26:10; compare Act 9:2 which confirms that he also later obtained the sanction of the High Priest to go to Damascus). Then taking with him a band of men, possibly temple police, he began to enter the houses of the new people of God and drag men and women to prison. He also arranged for many of them to be examined and beaten in synagogues (Act 22:19) and sought to get them to blaspheme, possibly by cleverly making the simpler Christians say things which they did not understand, but which were seen as blasphemy, or possibly by making them renounce Christ (Act 26:11). It appears that at this stage a number were put to death for blasphemy (Act 26:10). He was a man driven by an awareness that,, with all that he was, it was not good enough for God. He had not done enough to deserve His favour. He must do more.
‘Laid waste, treated shamefully.’ A strong word used of savaging by wild beasts. He was behaving like a wild beast himself. Here was religious zeal in its most twisted form. And yet it was the same zeal that would shortly make him the church’s champion. His behaviour may well have denoted the wrestlings of his own conscience. Men often fight their own doubts by trying violently to prove to themselves that they are right.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Act 8:3. He made havock of the church He ravaged it, like some furious beast of prey. This is the proper signification of the word , which is often applied to the ravages of the desert.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
3 As for Saul, he made havock of the church, entering into every house, and haling men and women committed them to prison.
Ver. 3. Made havoc of the church ] Being (as some think) that ravening wolf of the tribe of Benjamin, prophesied of by Jacob, Gen 49:27 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
3. ] Properly used of wild beasts, or of hostile armies, devastating and ravaging. (See examples in Kuin.)
, entering (the houses) from house to house , a pregnant construction.
] So Philo, in Flacc. 9, vol. ii. p. 526, . .
] viz. to the gaolers so , ch. Act 22:4 .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Act 8:3 . : deponent verb, used in classical Greek of personal outrage ( ), of scourging and torturing, of outraging the dead, of the ruin and devastation caused by an army (Wetstein). In the LXX it is found several times, cf. especially Psa 79 (80):13, of a wild boar ravaging a vineyard, and cf. also Sir 28:23 . As the word is used only by St. Luke it is possible that it may have been suggested by its frequent employment in medical language, where it is employed not only of injury by wrong treatment, but also of the ravages of disease, Hobart, Medical Language , pp. 211, 212. R.V. renders “laid waste,” A.V. (so Tyndale) “made havoc of,” but the revisers have rendered by the latter, cf. Act 9:21 , Gal 1:3 . St. Paul’s description of himself as , 1Ti 1:13 , may well refer to the infliction of personal insults and injuries, as expressed here by ( cf. Paley, Hor Paulin , xi., 5). , i.e. , the Church just mentioned at Jerusalem Saul’s further persecution, even to Damascus, probably came later (Hort, Ecclesia , p. 53). .: the expression may denote “entering into every house,” R. and A.V., or perhaps, more specifically, the houses known as places of Christian assembly, the , see on Act 2:46 . In any case the words, as also those which follow, show the thoroughness and relentlessness of Saul’s persecuting zeal. : haling, i.e. , hauling, dragging ( schlappend ), cf. Jas 2:6 . The word is used by St. Luke three times in Acts (only twice elsewhere in N.T.), and he alone uses , Luk 12:58 , in the same sense as the single verb (where St. Matthew has ). For its employment in the Comic Poets see Kennedy, Sources of N. T. Greek , p. 76, and also Arrian, Epict. , i. 29, 22, and other instances in Wetstein; cf. LXX, 2Sa 17:13 , 4Ma 6:1 , . : repeated also in Act 9:2 , and Act 22:4 , as indicating the relentless nature of the persecution. Some of the devout and ministering women may well have been included, Luk 8:2-3 , Act 1:14 .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
As for = But.
made havock of. Greek. lumainoimai. Only here
every house. Greek. kata App-104tous oikous = house by house
haling = dragging Gr. suro. See note on Joh 21:8.
women. Compare Act 1:14; Act 5:14.
prison. Greek. phulake. See Act 5:19
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
3. ] Properly used of wild beasts, or of hostile armies, devastating and ravaging. (See examples in Kuin.)
, entering (the houses) from house to house,-a pregnant construction.
] So Philo, in Flacc. 9, vol. ii. p. 526, . .
] viz. to the gaolers-so , ch. Act 22:4.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Act 8:3. [ , the church) at Jerusalem; as many as remained there.-V. g.] , entering) as if an Inquisitor.- , and women) who ordinarily are more readily spared than men.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Act 8:3-4
DISCIPLES SCATTERED
Act 8:3-4
3 But Saul laid waste the church,-The first seven chapters of Acts give a history of the origin or beginning of the church and its development in Jerusalem; so far all of the events narrated about the church occurred in the city of Jerusalem. It seems that for the first three to five years the church was confined to Jerusalem, but after the martyrdom of Stephen, the persecuting spirit, which had already so often attempted to silence the apostles, became more decided and even unrelenting. It prevailed to such an extent that the Christians were induced in large numbers to leave the city, and go abroad even beyond their own country. (Act 11:19.) The persecution which was designed to crush the rising cause of the gospel was overruled by God into an occasion of its rapid advancement. The followers of Christ, wherever they went, made known the gospel, and multitudes were converted to Christ. The history from now on takes us to regions beyond Jerusalem. Saul was a leader in the persecution. He not only persecuted Christians publicly, but visited homes, and dragging men and women out of their homes, committed them to prison. He was empowered, as he himself said (Act 26:10), by the chief priests to persecute Christians.
4 They therefore that were scattered abroad-It is probable that the events took place in A.D. 37; this was the year in which Tiberius died and Caligula succeeded him. There was a time when there was no Roman governor in Judea, and the Jewish factions reigned supreme. Hence, the opponents of Christianity visited Christian homes and thrust Christian men and women into vile prisons, and then brought them before the elders in the synagogue, who tried to force them to deny Jesus; on their refusal some of them were put to death (Act 22:4 Act 26:10), others were beaten (`), and all suffered many outrages (1Ti 1:13). They that were scattered abroad went about preaching the word. They traveled far and wide through various regions; they did not confine themselves to the Jewish territory, but some of them went as far as Phoenicia, the island of Cyprus, and Antioch in Syria. (Act 11:19.) By going beyond the Jewish territory they would be in less danger of being pursued by the hostility of the chief priests, and might hope to enjoy comparative security. It is probable that some went as far as Rome, for Andronicus and Junias were disciples before Pauls conversion. (Rom 16:7.) Preaching the word is from the Greek euaggelizomenoi ton logon, and means evangelizing or gospelizing the word. All of those scattered were emergency preachers; they were men stirred to activity by zeal for the Lord. They visited the country, towns, and villages, and even went into the homes of those who would permit them, and told them about Jesus, the Savior of the world. We see here another illustration of the providential law, which appears to be an irretrievable calamity and it is not only overruled, but designed from the beginning to promote the very cause which it seems to threaten with disaster and defeat.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Act 7:58, Act 9:1-13, Act 9:21, Act 22:3, Act 22:4, Act 26:9-11, 1Co 15:9, Gal 1:13, Phi 3:6, 1Ti 1:13
Reciprocal: Gen 49:27 – a wolf Luk 11:49 – and some Luk 21:12 – before Act 4:3 – laid Act 5:14 – multitudes Act 5:18 – General Act 9:13 – how Act 12:4 – he put Act 16:23 – they cast Act 22:19 – know Act 26:10 – I also 1Co 9:15 – I have 1Th 2:14 – even Heb 11:36 – bonds
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
3
Act 8:3. The church as an established organization cannot be overthrown, for it was destined to “stand for ever” (Dan 2:44). But it can be hindered in its work, and its individual members can be persecuted and even put to death in certain instances. That is what Saul did, for havoc means to “treat shamefully or with injury.” It states he was entering into every house, which shows he was not attacking the church as an assembled unit. Haling is defined “to draw, drag,” and denotes that disciples were used roughly while being taken to prison.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Act 8:3. As for Saul, he made havock of the church. We gather some notion respecting the extreme severity of this first persecution, from casual expressions in the Acts, and from the epistles of him who, during these terrible days, acted as chief inquisitor: Thinking that he ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth … in Jerusalem … he shut up many of the saints in prison (Act 26:9-10). And not only did men thus suffer at his hands, but women also, a fact three times repeated as great aggravation of his cruelty (Act 8:3; Act 9:2; Act 22:4). These persecuted people were scourgedoften scourgedin many synagogues (Act 26:10). Nor was Stephen the only one who suffered death, as we may learn from the Apostle Pauls own confession (Act 22:4; Act 26:10). Every possible effort he used to make them blaspheme that holy Name whereby they were called (Act 26:11; Gal 1:23). His fame as an inquisitor was notorious far and wide; even in Damascus, Ananias had heard how much evil he had done to the saints of Christ at Jerusalem. He was known there as he that destroyed them which called on this name in Jerusalem (Act 9:13-21. See, too, Gal 1:13; Php 3:6; 1Ti 1:13; 1Co 15:9).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
“Bloody Saul! was it not enough for thee to see a single saint destroyed, but wilt thou seek to destroy the whole fraternity and communion of saints?” Behold the fiery zeal of this furious persecutor: he spares neither age nor sex, neither men nor women, neither young nor old, but without respect he hales them to prison.
O fury! worse than inhuman, not only to drag men spitefully, but to hale women shamefully to prison. Women in all ages have been exempted from the insults of tyranny, but not always freed from the persecutor’s fury. And blessed be God for that masculine courage and constancy which the feebler sex have shewn, when they have been called forth to bear their testimony for Christ; out of weakness they have been made strong. With what wisdom and courage have they answered their examiners, convicted their accusers, confuted their opposers, kissing the stake, hugging the faggots, embracing the flame! Thus can God help the weak things of the world to confound the strong: and teach the foolish to confute the wise.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Act 8:3. As for Saul Who was one of the main instruments in this persecution; he made havoc of the church Like some furious beast of prey. So the Greek word properly signifies. He did his utmost to ruin it, not caring what mischief he did to the disciples of Christ, and setting no bounds to his rage and cruelty: entering into every house Where the Christians used to assemble for the worship of God; or every house that had, or was thought to have, any Christians in it; haling men and women Dragging them along the streets, without any regard to age or sex; committed them to prison For no crime, real or pretended, but that of having believed in Jesus, and embraced the gospel. Therefore they that were Greek, , they, therefore, being scattered abroad, went everywhere Went through Judea and Samaria, (Act 8:1,) preaching the word Wherever they came; scattering the knowledge of Christ and his gospel wherever they were scattered: they went, , evangelizing, or, declaring the glad tidings of the word Those of them that had ability to preach, in their preaching, and others in their common converse. And in many places they were remarkably successful. So that God overruled the cruelty and rage of his peoples enemies to subserve his own wise and gracious purposes. There is no room to inquire where these poor refugees had their orders. Some of them were endowed with miraculous gifts: and, if none of them had been so, the extraordinary call they had to spread the knowledge of Christ wherever they came, among those who were ignorant of him, abundantly justified them in what they did. They were now in a country where many of them were no strangers, for Christ and his disciples had conversed much in the regions of Judea and Samaria, so that a foundation had been laid for them to build upon, and it was requisite to let the people in those parts know what had been the issue of the preaching Christs doctrine, and that it was not now left neglected and forgotten, as perhaps they had been made to believe.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
See notes on verse 1
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
PERSECUTIONS
3. Saul of Tarsus, flooded with native talents, literary culture, ecclesiastical prominence and unparalleled aspirations to reach the very acme of his transcendent and ambitious aspiration, arriving from the north too late to see any of the miracles wrought by Jesus during His ministry, and the Holy Ghost during the Pentecostal revival, obdurately incredulous to the testimony of the poor, despised Nazarene, at once comes to the front with the gigantic grip of his iron will, takes into hand the already complicated problem of rescuing the church from the Nazarene heresy which, in his candid judgment, is striking at the very vitals of the Mosaic institutions. Hence, as a true son of Abraham, loyal to God and Moses, he takes the bit in his teeth, determined to make a summary settlement of all difficulties. When ecclesiastical autocrats once taste the blood of persecution they invariably become insatiable. The martyrdom of Stephen lifted the flood- gate for the bloody tide which had been accumulating since the baptism of John, and had received a wonderful impetus during the revivals of Pentecost. The Roman civil arm is still willing to purchase Jewish favor at the expense of the Nazarene faction. Therefore, Saul, utilizing his wonderful sagacity as an organizer, diligently rendezvouses the orthodox magnates and the loyal element of the fallen church, sparing neither age nor sex, but running like the inquisitorial bands of St. Dominique into every house; arresting both men and women, he continued to commit them to prison, thus determined to make summary work and exterminate the heresy with all possible expedition, relieving the country of the nuisance and the church of the miasma already infecting her to the heart.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 3
Haling; seizing. He acted under authority from the chief priests, as he states in his defence before Agrippa. (Acts 26:10.)
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
8:3 {3} As for Saul, he made havock of the church, entering into every house, and haling men and women committed [them] to prison.
(3) The dispersion or scattering abroad of the faithful is the gathering together of churches.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The Greek word translated "ravaging" (lumainomai) occurs only here in the New Testament. The Septuagint translators used it in Psa 80:13 to describe wild boars destroying a vineyard. In English we use "ravaging" as a synonym for raping. This is how Saul began behaving. The verb is evidently an inceptive imperfect indicating the beginning of the action. Saul was a leader of the persecution in Jerusalem (Act 9:1-2; Act 9:29; Act 22:4-5; Act 26:11). Evidently Stephen’s execution fueled Saul’s hatred for the Christians and resulted in his increasing antagonism toward them. He not only went from house to house arresting Christians (cf. Act 2:46; Act 5:42) but also carried his purges into the synagogues (cf. Act 6:9) and tried to force believers to blaspheme there (Act 22:19; Act 26:11).
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
Chapter 2
THE CONVERSION OF THE PERSECUTOR.
Act 8:3; Act 9:1-6
WE have in the last chapter traced the course of St. Pauls life as we know it from his own reminiscences, from hints in Holy Scripture, and from Jewish history and customs. The Jewish nation is exactly like all the nations of the East, in one respect at least. They are all intensely conservative, and though time has necessarily introduced some modifications, yet the course of education, and the force of prejudice, and the power of custom have in the mare remained unchanged down to the present time. We now proceed to view St. Paul, not as we imagine his course of life and education to have been, but as we follow him in the exhibition of his active powers, in the full play and swing of that intellectual energy, of those religious aims and objects for which he had been so long training.
St. Paul at his first appearance upon the stage of Christian history, upon the occasion of St. Stephens martyrdom, had arrived at the full stature of manhood both in body and in mind. He was then the young man Saul; an expression which enables us to fix with some approach to accuracy the time of his birth. St. Pauls contemporary Philo in one of his works divides mans life into seven periods, the fourth of which is young manhood, which he assigns to the years between twenty-one and twenty-eight. Roughly speaking, and without attempting any fine-drawn distinctions for which we have not sufficient material, we may say that at the martyrdom of St. Stephen St. Paul was about thirty years of age, or some ten years or thereabouts junior to our Lord, as His years would have been numbered according to those of the sons of men. One circumstance, indeed, would seem to indicate that St. Paul must have been then over and above the exact line of thirty. It is urged, and that upon the ground of St. Pauls own language, that he was a member of the Sanhedrim In the twenty-sixth chapter, defending himself before King Agrippa, St. Paul described his own course of action prior to his conversion as one of bitterest hostility to the Christian cause: “I both shut up many of the saints in prisons, having received authority from the chief priests, and when they were put to death, I gave my vote against them”; an expression which clearly indicates that he was a member of a body and possessed a vote in an assembly which determined questions of life and death, and that could have been nothing else than the Sanhedrin, into which no one was admitted before he had completed thirty years. St. Paul, then, when he is first introduced to our notice, comes before us as a full-grown man, and a well-trained, carefully educated, thoroughly disciplined rabbinical scholar, whose prejudices were naturally excited against the new Galilean sect, and who had given public expression to his feelings by taking decided steps in opposition to its progress. The sacred narrative now sets before us
(1) the Conduct of St. Paul in his unconverted state,
(2) his Mission,
(3) his Journey, and
(4) his Conversion.
Let us take the many details and circumstances connected with this passage under these four divisions.
I. The Conduct of Saul. Here we have a picture of St. Paul in his unconverted state: “Saul, yet breathing threatening and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord.” This description is amply borne out by St. Paul himself, in which he even enlarges and gives us additional touches of the intensity of his antichristian hate. His ignorant zeal at this period seems to have printed itself deep upon memorys record. There are no less than at least seven different notices in the Acts or scattered through the Epistles, due to his own tongue or pen, and dealing directly with his conduct as a persecutor. No matter how he rejoiced in the fulness and blessedness of Christs pardon, no matter how he experienced the power and working of Gods Holy Spirit, St. Paul never could forget the intense hatred with which he had originally followed the disciples of the Master. Let us note them, for they all bear out, expand, and explain the statement of the passage we are now considering.
In his address to the Jews of Jerusalem as recorded in Act 22:1-30. he appeals to his former conduct as an evidence of his sincerity. In verses 4 and 5 {Act 22:4-5} he says, “I persecuted this Way unto the death, binding and delivering into prisons both men and women. As also the high priest doth bear me witness, and all the estate of the elders: from whom also I received letters unto the brethren, and journeyed to Damascus, to bring them also which were there unto Jerusalem in bonds, for to be punished.” In the same discourse he recurs a second time to this topic; for, telling his audience of the vision granted to him in the temple, he says, verse 19 {Act 22:19}, “And I said, Lord, they themselves know that I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them that believed on Thee: and when the blood of Stephen Thy witness was shed, I also was standing by, and consenting, and keeping the garments of them that slew him.” St. Paul dwells upon the same topic in the twenty-sixth chapter, when addressing King Agrippa in verses 9-11 {Act 26:9-11}, a passage already quoted in part: “I verily thought with myself, that I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth. And this I also did in Jerusalem: and I both shut up many of the saints in prisons, having received authority from the chief priests, and when they were put to death, I gave my vote against them. And punishing them oftentimes in all the synagogues, I strove to make them blaspheme; and being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted them even unto foreign cities.” It is the same in his Epistles. In four different places does he refer to his conduct as a persecutor-in 1Co 15:9, Gal 1:13, Php 3:6, 1Ti 1:13; while again in the chapter now under consideration, the ninth of Acts, we find that the Jews of the synagogue in Damascus, who were listening to St. Pauls earliest outburst of Christian zeal, asked, “Is not this he that in Jerusalem made havock of them which called on this name? and he had come hither for this intent, that he might bring them bound before the chief priests”; using the very same word “making havoc” as Paul himself uses in the first of Galatians, which in Greek is very strong, expressing a course of action accompanied with fire and blood and murder, such as occurs when a city is taken by storm.
Now these passages have been thus set forth at length because they add many details to the bare statement of Act 9:1-43, giving us a glimpse into those four or five dark and bloody years, the thought of which henceforth weighed so heavily upon the Apostles mind and memory. Just let us notice these additional touches. He shut up in prison many of the saints, both men and women, and that in Jerusalem before he went to Damascus at all. He scourged the disciples in every synagogue, meaning doubtless that he superintended the punishment, as it was the duty of the Chazan, the minister or attendant of the synagogue, to scourge the condemned, and thus strove to make them blaspheme Christ. He voted for the execution of the disciples when he acted as a member of the Sanhedrin. And lastly he followed the disciples and persecuted them in foreign cities. We gain in this way & much fuller idea of the young enthusiasts persecuting zeal than usually is formed from the words, “Saul yet breathing threatening and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord,” which seem to set forth Saul as roused to wild and savage excitement by St. Stephens death, and then continuing that course in the city of Jerusalem, for a very brief period. Whereas, on the contrary, St. Pauls fuller statements, when combined, represent him as pursuing a course of steady, systematic, and cruel repression, which St. Paul largely helped to inaugurate, but which continued to exist as long as the Jews had the power to inflict corporal punishments and death on the members of their own nation. He visited all the synagogues in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine, scourging and imprisoning. He strove-and this is, again, another lifelike touch, -to compel the disciples to blaspheme the name of Christ in the same manner as the Romans were subsequently wont to test Christians by calling upon them to cry anathema to the name of their Master. He even extended his activity beyond the bounds of the Holy Land, and that in various directions. The visit to Damascus may not by any means. have been his first journey to a foreign town with thoughts bent on the work of persecution. He expressly says to Agrippa, “I persecuted them even unto foreign cities.” He may have: visited Tarsus, or Lystra, or the cities of Cyprus or Alexandria itself, urged on by the consuming fire of his blind, restless zeal, before he entered upon the journey to Damascus, destined to be the last undertaken in opposition to Jesus Christ. When we thus strive to realise the facts of the case, we shall see that the scenes of blood and torture and death, the ruined homes, the tears, the heartbreaking separations which the young man Saul had caused in his blind zeal for the law, and which are briefly summed up in the words “he made havoc of the Church,” were quite sufficient to account for that profound impression of his own unworthiness and of Gods great mercy towards him which he ever cherished to his dying day.
II. The Mission of Saul. Again, we notice in this passage that Saul, having shown his activity in other directions, now turned his attention to Damascus. There were political circumstances which may have hitherto hindered him from exercising the same supervision over the synagogue of Damascus which he had already extended to other foreign cities. The political history and circumstances of Damascus at this period are indeed rather obscure. The city seems to have been somewhat of a bone of contention between Herod Antipas, Aretas the king of Petra, and the Romans. About the time of St. Pauls conversion, which may be fixed at A.D. 37 or 38, there was a period of great disturbance in Palestine and Southern Syria. Pontius Pilate was deposed from his office and sent to Rome for judgment. Vitellius, the president of the whole Province of Syria, came into Palestine, changing the high priests, conciliating the Jews, and intervening in the war which raged between Herod Antipas and Aretas, his father-in-law. In the course of this last struggle Damascus seems to have changed its masters, and, while a Roman city till the year 37, it henceforth became an Arabian city, the property of King Aretas, till the reign of Nero, when it again returned beneath the Roman sway. Some one or other, or perhaps all these political circumstances combined may have hitherto prevented the Sanhedrin from taking active measures against the disciples at Damascus. But now things became settled. Caiaphas was deposed from the office of high priest upon the departure of Pontius Pilate. He had been a great friend and ally of Pilate; Vitellius therefore deprived Caiaphas of his sacred office, appointing in his stead Jonathan, son of Annas, the high priest. This Jonathan did not, however, long continue to occupy the position, as he was deposed by the same Roman magistrate, Vitellius, at the feast of Pentecost in the very same year, his brother Theophilus being appointed high priest in his room; so completely was the whole Levitical hierarchy, the entire Jewish establishment, ruled by the political officers of the Roman state. This Theophilus continued to hold the office for five or six years, and it must have been to Theophilus that Saul applied for letters unto Damascus authorising him to arrest the adherents of the new religion.
And now a question here arises, How is it that the high priest could exercise such powers and arrest his co-religionists in a foreign town? The answer to this sheds a flood of light upon the state of the Jews of the Dispersion, as they were called. I have already said a little on this point, but it demands fuller discussion. The high priest at Jerusalem was regarded as a kind of head of the whole nation. He was viewed by the Romans as the Prince of the Jews, with whom they could formally treat, and by whom they could manage a nation which, differing from all-others in its manners and customs, was scattered all over the world, and often gave much trouble. Julius Caesar laid down the lines on which Jewish privileges and Roman policy were based, and that half a century before the Christian era. Julius Caesar had been greatly assisted in his Alexandrian war by the Jewish high priest Hyrcanus, so he issued an edict in the year 47 B.C., which, after reciting the services of Hyrcanus, proceeds thus, “I command that Hyrcanus and his children do retain all the rights of the high priest, whether established by law or accorded by courtesy; and if hereafter any question arise touching the Jewish polity, I desire that the determination thereof be referred to him”; an edict which, confirmed as it was again and again, not only by Julius Caesar, but by several subsequent emperors, gave the high priest the fullest jurisdiction over the Jews, wherever they dwelt, in things pertaining to their own religion. It was therefore in strictest accord with Roman law and custom that, when Saul wished to arrest members of the synagogue at Damascus, he should make application to the high priest Theophilus for a warrant enabling him to effect his purpose.
The description, too, given of the disciples in this passage is very noteworthy and a striking evidence of the truthfulness of the narrative. The disciples were the men of “the Way.” Saul desired to bring any of “the Way” found at Damascus to be judged at Jerusalem, because the Sanhedrin alone possessed the right to pass capital sentences in matters of religion. The synagogues at Damascus or anywhere else could flog culprits, and a Jew could get no redress for any such ill-treatment even if he sought it, which would have not been at all likely; but if the final sentence of death were to be passed, the Jerusalem Sanhedrin was the only tribunal competent to entertain such questions. And the persons he desired to hale before this awful tribunal were the men of the Way. This was the name by which, in its earliest and purest day, the Church called itself. In the nineteenth chapter and ninth verse we read of St. Pauls labours at Ephesus and the opposition he endured: “But when some were hardened and disobedient, speaking evil of the Way before the multitude”; while again, in his defence before Felix, {Act 24:14} we read, “But this I confess unto thee, that after the Way which they call a sect, so serve I the God of our fathers.” The Revised translation of the New Testament has well brought out the force of the original in a manner that was utterly missed in the Authorised Version, and has emphasised for us a great truth concerning the early Christians. There was a certain holy intolerance even about the very name they imposed upon the earliest Church. It was the Way, the only Way, the Way of Life. The earliest Christians had a lively recollection of what the Apostles had heard from the mouth of the Master Himself, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life; no one cometh unto the Father but by Me”; and so, realising the identity of Christ and His people, realising the continued presence of Christ in His Church, they designated that Church by a term which expressed their belief that in it alone was the road to peace, the sole path of access to God. This name, “the Way,” expressed their sense of the importance of the truth. Theirs was no easy-going religion which thought that it made not the slightest matter what form of belief a man professed. They were awfully in earnest, because they knew of only one way to God, and that was the religion and Church of Jesus Christ. Therefore it was that they were willing to suffer all things rather than that they should lose this Way, or that others should miss it through their default. The marvellous, the intense missionary efforts of the primitive Church find their explanation in this expression, the Way. God had revealed the Way and had called themselves into it, and their great duty in life was to make others know the greatness of this salvation; or, as St. Paul puts it, “Necessity is laid upon me; woe is unto me if I preach not the gospel.”
The exclusive claims of Christianity are thus early set forth; and it was these same exclusive claims which caused Christianity to be so hated and persecuted by the pagans. The Roman Empire would not have so bitterly resented the preaching of Christ, if His followers would have accepted the position with which other religions were contented. The Roman Empire was not intolerant of new ideas in matters of religion. Previous to the coming of our Lord the pagans had welcomed the strange, mystic rites and teaching of Egypt. They accepted from Persia the curious system and worship of Mithras within the first century after Christs crucifixion. And tradition tells that at least two of the emperors were willing to admit the image of Christ into the Pantheon, which they had consecrated to the memory of the great and good. But the Christians would have nothing to say or do with such partial honours for their Master. Religion for them was Christ alone or else it was nothing, and that because He alone was the Way. As there was but one God for them, so there was but one Mediator, Christ Jesus.
III. Sauls Journey. “As he journeyed, it came to pass that he drew nigh unto Damascus.” This is the simple record left us in Holy Writ of this momentous event. A comparison of the sacred record with any of the numerous lives of St. Paul which have been published will show us how very different their points of view. The mere human narratives dwell upon the external features of the scene, enlarge upon the light which modern discoveries have thrown upon the lines of road which connected Jerusalem with Southern Syria, become enthusiastic over the beauty of Damascus as seen by the traveller from Jerusalem, over the eternal green of the groves and gardens which are still, as of old, made glad by the waters of Abana and of Pharpar; while the sacred narrative passes over all external details and marches straight to the great central fact of the persecutors conversion. And we find no fault with this. It is well that the human narratives should enlarge as they do upon the outward features and circumstances of the journey, because they thus help us to realise the Acts as a veritable history that was lived and acted. We are too apt to idealise the Bible, to think of it as dealing with an unreal world, and to regard the men and women thereof as beings of another type from ourselves. Books like Farrars and Lewins and Conybeare and Howsons “Lives of St. Paul” correct this tendency, and make the Acts of the Apostles infinitely more interesting by rendering St. Pauls career human and lifelike and clothing it with the charm of local detail. It is thus that we can guess at the very road by which the enthusiastic Saul travelled. The caravans from Egypt to Damascus are intensely conservative in their routes. In fact, even m our own revolutionary West trade and commerce preserve in large measure the same routes to-day as they used two thousand years ago. The great railways of England, and much more the great main roads, preserve in a large degree the same directions which the ancient Roman roads observed. In Ireland, with which I am still better acquainted, I know that the great roads starting from Dublin preserve in the main the same lines as in the days of St. Patrick. And so it is, but only to a much greater degree, in Palestine and throughout the East. The road from Jerusalem to Jericho preserved in St. Jeromes time, four centuries later, the same direction and the same character an in our Lords day, so that it was then called the Bloody Road, from the frequent robberies; and thus it is still, for the pilgrims who now go to visit the Jordan are furnished with a guard of Turkish soldiers to protect them from the Arab bandits. And to-day, as in the first century, the caravans from Egypt and Jerusalem, to Damascus follow either of two roads: one which proceeds through Gaza and Ramleh, along the coast, and then, turning eastward about the borders of Samaria and Galilee, crosses the Jordan and proceeds through the desert to Damascus-that is the Egyptian road; while the other, which serves for travellers from Jerusalem, runs due north from that city and joins the other road at the entrance to Galilee. This latter was probably the road which St. Paul took. The distance which he had to traverse is not very great. One hundred and thirty-six miles separate Jerusalem from Damascus, a journey which is performed in five or six days by such a company as Saul had with him. We get a hint, too, of the manner in which he travelled. He rode probably on a horse or a mule, like modern travellers on the same road, as we gather from Act 9:4 compared with Act 22:7, passages which represent Saul and his companions as falling to the earth when the supernatural light flashed upon their astonished vision.
The exact spot where Saul was arrested in his mad career is a matter of some debate; some fix it close to the city of Damascus, half a mile or so from the south gate on the high road to Jerusalem. Dr. Porter, whose long residence at Damascus made him an authority on the locality, places the scene of the conversion at the village of Caucabe, ten miles away, where the traveller from Jerusalem gets his first glimpse of the towers and groves of Damascus. We are not anxious to determine this point. The great spiritual truth which is the centre and core of the whole matter remains, and that central truth is this, that it was-when he drew near to Damascus and the crowning act of violence seemed at hand, then the Lord put forth His power-as He so often still does just when men are about to commit some dire offence-arrested the persecutor, and then, amid the darkness of that abounding light, there rose upon the vision of the astonished Saul at Caucabe, “the place of the star,” that true Star of Bethlehem which never ceased its clear shining for him till he came unto the perfect day.
IV. Lastly we have the actual conversion of the Apostle and the circumstances of it. We have mention made in this connection of the light, the voice, and the conversation. These leading circumstances are described in exactly the same way in the three great accounts in the ninth, in the twenty-second, and in the twenty-sixth chapters. There are minute differences between them, but only such differences as are natural between the verbal descriptions given at different times by a truthful and vigorous speaker, who, conscious of honest purpose, did not stop to weigh his every word. All three accounts tell of the light; they all agree on that. St. Paul in his speeches at Jerusalem unhesitatingly declares that the light which he beheld was a supernatural one, above the brightness, the fierce, intolerable brightness of a Syrian sun at midday; and boldly asserts that the attendants and escort who were with him saw the light. Those who disbelieve in the supernatural reject, of course, this assertion, and resolve the light into a fainting fit brought upon Saul by the burning heat, or into a passing sirocco blast from the Arabian desert. But the sincere and humble believer may fairly ask, Could a fainting fit or a breath of hot wind change a man who had stood out against Stephens eloquence and Stephens death and the witnessed sufferings and patience displayed by the multitudes of men and women whom he had pursued unto the death? But it is not our purpose to discuss these questions in any controversial spirit. Time and space would fail to treat of them aright, specially as they have been fully discussed already in works like Lord Lyttelton on the conversion of St. Paul, wholly devoted to such aspects of these events. But, looking at them from a believers point of view, we can see good reasons why the supernatural light should have been granted. Next to the life and death and resurrection of our Lord, the conversion of St. Paul was the most important event the world, ever saw. Our Lord made to the fiery persecutor a special revelation of Himself in the mode of His existence in the unseen world, in the reality, truth, and fulness of His humanity, such as He never made to any other human being. The special character of the revelation shows the importance that Christ attached to the person and the personal character of him who was the object of that revelation. Just, then, as we maintain that there was a fitness when there was an Incarnation of God that miracles should attend it; so, too, when the greatest instrument and agent in propagating a knowledge of that Incarnation was to be converted, it was natural that a supernatural agency should have been employed. And then, when the devout mind surveys the records of Scripture, how similar we see St. Pauls conversion to have been to other great conversions. Moses is converted from mere worldly thoughts and pastoral labours on which his soul is bent, and sent back to tasks which he had abandoned for forty years, to the great work of freeing the people of God and leading them to the Land of Promise; and then a vision is granted, where light, a supernatural light, the light of the burning bush, is manifested. Isaiah and Daniel had visions granted to them when a great work was to be done and a great witness had to be borne, and supernatural light and glory played a great part in their cases. {See Exo 3:1-22, Isa 6:1-13, and Dan 10:1-21}
When the Lord was born in Bethlehem, and the revelation of the Incarnate God had to be made to humble faith and lowly piety, then the glory of the Lord, a light from out Gods secret temple, shone forth to lead the worshippers to Bethlehem. And so, too, in St. Pauls case; a worlds spiritual welfare was at stake, a crisis in the worlds spiritual history, a great turning-point in the Divine plan of salvation had arrived, and it was most fitting that the veil which shrouds the unseen from mortal gaze should be drawn back for a moment, and that not Saul alone but his attendants should stand astonished at the glory of the light above the brightness of the sun which accompanied Christs manifestation.
Then, again, we have the voice that was heard. Difficulties have been also raised in this direction. In the ninth chapter St. Luke states that the attendant escort “heard a voice”; in the twenty-second chapter St. Paul states “they that were with me beheld indeed the light, but they beard not the voice of Him that spake to me.” This inconsistency is, however, a mere surface one. Just as it was in the case of our Lord Himself reported in Joh 12:28-29, where the multitude heard a voice but understood not its meaning, some saying that it thundered, others that an angel had spoken, while Christ alone understood and interpreted it; so it was in St. Pauls case; the escort heard a noise, but the Apostle alone understood the sounds, and for him alone they formed articulate words, by him alone was heard the voice of Him that spake, And the cause of this is explained by St. Paul himself in Act 26:14, where he tells King Agrippa that the voice spake to him in the Hebrew tongue, the ancient Hebrew that is, which St. Paul as a learned rabbinical scholar could understand, but which conveyed no meaning to the members of the temple-police, the servants, and constables of the Sanhedrin who accompanied him. Many other questions have here been raised and difficulties without end propounded, because we are dealing with a region of mans nature and of Gods domain, wherewith we have but little acquaintance and to which the laws of ordinary philosophy do not apply. Was the voice which Paul heard, was the vision of Christ granted to him, subjective or objective? is, for instance, one of such idle queries. We know, indeed, that these terms, subjective and objective, have a meaning for ordinary life. Subjective in such a connection means that which has its origin, its rise, its existence wholly within mans soul; objective that which comes from without and has its origin outside mans nature. Objective, doubtless, St. Pauls revelation was in this sense. His revelation must have come from outside, or else how do we account for the conversion of the persecuting Sanhedrist, and that in a moment? He had withstood every other influence, and now he yields himself in a moment the lifelong willing captive of Christ when no human voice or argument or presence is near. But then, if asked, how did he gee Christ when he was blinded with the heavenly glory? how did he speak to Christ when even the escort stood speechless? we confess then that we are landed in a region of which we are totally ignorant and are merely striving to intrude into the things unseen. But who is there that will now assert that the human eye is the only organ by which man can see? that the human tongue is the only organ by which the spirit can converse? The investigations of modern psychology have taught men to be somewhat more modest than they were a generation or two ago, when man in his conceit thought that he had gained the very utmost limits of science and of knowledge. These investigations have led men to realise that there are vast tracts of an unknown country, mans spiritual and mental nature, yet to be explored, and even then there must always remain regions where no human student can ever venture and whence no traveller can ever return to tell the tale. But all these regions are subject to Gods absolute sway, and vain will be our efforts to determine the methods of His actions in a sphere of which we are well-nigh completely ignorant. For the Christian it will be sufficient to accept on the testimony of St. Paul, confirmed by Ananias, his earliest Christian teacher, that Jesus Christ was seen by him, and that a voice was heard for the first time in the silence Of his soul which never ceased to speak until the things of time and sense were exchanged for the full fruition of Christs glorious presence.
And then, lastly, we have the conversation held with the trembling penitent. St. Lukes account of it in the ninth chapter is much briefer than St. Pauls own fuller statement in the twenty-sixth chapter, and much of it will most naturally come under our notice at a subsequent period. Here, however, we note the expressive fact that the very name by which the future apostle was addressed by the Lord was Hebrew: “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me.” It is a point that our English translation cannot bring out, no matter how accurate. In the narrative, hitherto the name used has been the Greek form, and he has been regularly called . But now the Lord appeals to the very foundations of his religious life, and throws him back upon the thought and manifestation of God as revealed of old time to His greatest leader and champion under the old covenant, to Moses in the bush; and so Christ uses not his Greek name but the Hebrew, , . Then we have St. Pauls query, “Who art Thou, Lord?” coupled with our Lords reply, “I am Jesus whom thou persecutest,” or, as St. Paul himself puts it in Act 22:8, “I am Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou persecutest.” Ancient expositors have Well noted the import of this language. Saul asks who is speaking to him, and the answer is not, The Eternal Word who is from everlasting, the Son of the Infinite One who ruleth in the heavens. Saul would have acknowledged at once that his efforts were not aimed at Him. But the speaker cuts right across the line of Sauls prejudices and feelings, for He says, “I am Jesus of Nazareth,” whom you hate so intensely and against whom all your efforts are aimed, emphasising those points against which his Pharisaic prejudices must have most of all revolted. As an ancient English commentator who lived more than a thousand years ago, treating of this passage, remarks with profound spiritual insight, Saul is called in these words to view the depths of Christs humiliation that he may lay aside the scales of his own spiritual pride. And then finally we have Christ identifying Himself with His people, and echoing for us from heaven the language and teaching He had used upon earth. “I am Jesus of Nazareth whom thou persecutest are words embodying exactly the same teaching as the solemn language in the parable of the Judgment scene contained in Mat 25:31-46 : “Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of these My brethren, ye did it unto Me.” Christ and His people are evermore one; their trials are His trials, their sorrows are His sorrows, their strength is His strength. What marvellous power to sustain the soul, to confirm the weakness, to support and quicken the fainting courage of Christs people, we find in this expression, “I am Jesus whom thou persecutest”! They enable us to understand the undaunted spirit which henceforth animated the new convert, and declare the secret spring of those triumphant expressions, “In all these things we are more than conquerors,” “Thanks be to God which giveth, us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. If Christ in the supra-sensuous world and we in the world of time are eternally one, what matter the changes arid chances of earth, the persecutions and trials of time? They may inflict upon us a little temporary inconvenience, but they are all shared by One whose love makes them His own and whose grace amply sustains us beneath their burden. Christs people faint not therefore, for they are looking not at the things seen, which are temporal, but at the things unseen, which are eternal.