Chapter 14:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 John Romans
Acts 14
Complete Concise
We have, in this chapter, a further account of the progress of
the gospel, by the ministry of Paul and Barnabas among the Gentiles; it goes on
conquering and to conquer, yet meeting with opposition, as before, among the
unbelieving Jews. Here is, I. Their successful preaching of the gospel for some
time at Iconium, and their being driven thence by the violence of their
persecutors, both Jews and Gentiles, and forced into the neighbouring countries
(v. 1-7). II. Their healing a lame man at Lystra, and the profound veneration
which the people conceived of them thereupon, which they had much ado to keep
from running into an extreme (v. 8-18). III. The outrage of the people against
Paul, at the instigation of the Jews, the effect of which was that they stoned
him, as they thought, to death; but he was wonderfully restored to life (v. 19,
20). IV. The visit which Paul and Barnabas made to the churches which they had
planted, to confirm them, and put them into order (v. 21-23). V. They return
to Antioch, whence they were sent forth; the good they did by the way, and the
report they made to the church of Antioch of their expedition, and, if I may so
say, of the campaign they had made (v. 24-28).
Verses 1-7
In these verses we have,
I. The preaching of the gospel in Iconium, whither the apostles
were forced to retire from Antioch. As the blood of the martyrs has been the
seed of the church, so the banishment of the confessors has helped to scatter
that seed. Observe, 1. How they made the first offer of the gospel
to the
Jews in their synagogues; thither they went, not only as to a place of
meeting, but as to a place of meeting with them, to whom, wherever they came,
they were to apply themselves in the first place. Though the Jews at Antioch had
used them barbarously, yet they did not therefore decline preaching the gospel
to the Jews at Iconium, who perhaps might be better disposed. Let not those of
any denomination be condemned in the gross, nor some suffer for others'
faults; but let us do good to those who have done evil to us. Though
the
blood-thirsty hate the upright, yet the just seek their soul (Prov. 29:10),
seek the salvation of it. 2. How the apostles concurred herein. Notice is taken
of this, that
they went both together into the synagogue, to testify
their unanimity and mutual affection, that people might say,
See how they
love one another, and might think the better of Christianity, and that they
might strengthen one another's hands and confirm one another's testimony,
and
out of the mouth of two witnesses every word might be established.
They did not go one one day and another another, nor one go at the beginning and
the other some time after; but they went in both together.
II. The success of their preaching there:
They so spoke that
a great multitude, some hundreds perhaps, if not thousands,
both of the
Jews and also of the Greeks, that is the Gentiles,
believed. Observe
here, 1. That the gospel was now preached to Jews and Gentiles together, and
those of each denomination that believed came together into the church. In the
close of the foregoing chapter it was preached first to the Jews, and some of
them believed, and then to the Gentiles, and some of them believed; but here
they are put together, being put upon the same level. The Jews have not so lost
their preference as to be thrown behind, only the Gentiles are brought to stand
upon even terms with them;
both are reconciled to God in one body (Ephes.
2:16), and both together admitted into the church without distinction. 2. There
seems to have been something remarkable in the manner of the apostles'
preaching here, which contributed to their success:
They so spoke that a
great multitude believedso plainly, so convincingly, with such an
evidence and
demonstration of the Spirit, and
with such power;
they so spoke, so warmly, so affectionately, and with such a manifest concern
for the souls of men, that one might perceive they were not only convinced, but
filled, with the things they spoke of, and that what they spoke came from the
heart and therefore was likely to reach to the heart; they so spoke, so
earnestly and so seriously, so boldly and courageously, that those who heard
them could not but say that
God was with them of a truth. Yet the success
was not to be attributed to the manner of their preaching, but to the Spirit of
God, who made use of that means.
III. The opposition that their preaching met with there, and the
trouble that was created them; lest they should be puffed up with the multitude
of their converts, there was given them this thorn in the flesh. 1. Unbelieving
Jews were the first spring of their trouble here, as elsewhere (v. 2): they
stirred
up the Gentiles. The influence which the gospel had upon many of the
Gentiles, and their embracing it, as it provoked some of the Jews to a holy
jealousy and stirred them up to receive the gospel too (Rom. 11:14), so it
provoked others of them to a wicked jealousy, and exasperated them against the
gospel. Thus as good instructions, so good examples, which to some are a savour
of life unto life, to others are a savour of death unto death. See 2 Co. 2:15,
16. 2. Disaffected Gentiles, irritated by the unbelieving Jews, were likely to
be the instruments of their trouble. The Jews, by false suggestions, which they
were continually buzzing in the ears of the Gentiles, made
their minds evil
affected against the brethren, whom of themselves they were inclined to
think favourably of. They not only took occasion in all companies, as it came in
their way, but made it their business to go purposely to such as they had any
acquaintance with, and said all that their wit or malice could invent to beget
in them not only a mean but an ill opinion of Christianity, telling them how
destructive it would certainly be to their pagan theology and worship; and, for
their parts, they would rather be Gentiles than Christians. Thus they soured and
embittered their spirits against both the converters and the converted.
The
old serpent did, by their poisonous tongues, infuse his venom against
the
seed of the woman into the minds of these Gentiles, and this was a
root
of bitterness in them, bearing gall and wormwood. It is no wonder if those
who are ill affected towards good people wish ill to them, speak ill of them,
and contrive ill against them; it is all owing to ill will.
Ekakoµsan,
they molested and vexed the minds of the Gentiles (so some of the critics
take it); they were continually teasing them with their impertinent
solicitations. The tools of persecutors have a dog's life, set on continually.
IV. Their continuance in their work there, notwithstanding this
opposition, and God's owning them in it, v. 3. We have here, 1. The apostles
working for Christ, faithfully and diligently, according to the trust committed
to them. Because the minds of
the Gentiles were evil affected against them,
one would think that therefore they should have withdrawn, and hastened out of
the way, or, if they had preached, should have preached cautiously, for fear of
giving further provocation to those who were already enough enraged. No; on the
contrary, therefore
they abode there a long time, speaking boldly in the
Lord. The more they perceived the spite and rancour of the town against the
new converts, the more they were animated to go on in their work, and the more
needful they saw it to continue among them,
to confirm them in the faith, and
to comfort them. They spoke boldly, and were not afraid of giving offence to
the unbelieving Jews. What God said to the prophet, with reference to the
unbelieving Jews in his day, was now made good to the apostles:
I have made
thy face strong against their faces, Eze. 3:7-9. But observe what it was
that animated them:
They spoke boldly in the Lord, in his strength, and
trusting in him to bear them out; not depending upon any thing in themselves.
They
were strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might. 2. Christ working
with the apostles, according to his promise,
Lo, I am with you always.
When they went on in his name and strength, he failed not to give testimony to
the word of his grace. Note, (1.) The gospel is a word of grace, the assurance
of God's good will to us and the means of his good work in us. It is the word
of Christ's grace, for it is in him alone that we find favour with God. (2.)
Christ himself has attested this word of grace, who is
the Amen, the faithful
witness; he has assured us that it is the word of God, and that we may
venture our souls upon it. As it was said in general concerning the first
preachers of the gospel that they had
the Lord working with them, and
confirming the word by signs following (Mk. 16:20), so it is said
particularly concerning the apostles here
that the Lord confirmed their
testimony, in granting signs and wonders to be done by their handsin the
miracles they wrought in the kingdom of nature-as well as the wonders done by
their word, in the greater miracles wrought on men's minds by the power of
divine grace. The Lord was with them, while they were with him, and abundance of
good was done.
V. The division which this occasioned in the city (v. 4):
The
multitude of the city was divided into two parties, and both active and
vigorous. Among the rulers and persons of rank, and among the common people,
there were some that held with the unbelieving Jews, and others that held with
the apostles. Barnabas is here reckoned an apostle, though not one of the
twelve, nor called in the extra-ordinary manner that Paul was, because set apart
by special designation of
the Holy Ghost to the service of the Gentiles.
It seems, this business of the preaching of the gospel was so universally taken
notice of with concern that every person, even of
the multitude of the city,
was either for it or against it; none stood neuter. "Either for us or for
our adversaries, for God or Baal, for Christ or Beelzebub." 1. We may here
see the meaning of Christ's prediction that he
came not to send peace upon
earth, but rather division, Lu. 12:51-53. If all would have given in
unanimously into his measures, there would have been universal concord; and,
could men have agreed in this, there would have been no dangerous discord nor
disagreement in other things; but, disagreeing here, the breach was wide as the
sea. Yet the apostles must not be blamed for coming to Iconium, although before
they came the city was united, and now it was divided; for it is better that
part of the city go to heaven than all to hell. 2. We may here take the measures
of our expectations; let us not think it strange if the preaching of the gospel
occasion division, nor be offended at it; it is better to be reproached and
persecuted as dividers for swimming against the stream than yield ourselves to
be carried down the stream that leads to destruction. Let us hold with the
apostles, and not fear those that hold with the Jews.
VI. The attempt made upon the apostles by their enemies. Their
evil affection against them broke out at length into violent outrages, v. 5.
Observe, 1. Who the plotters were:
Both the Gentiles and the Jews, with their
rulers. The Gentiles and Jews were at enmity with one another, and yet
united against Christians, like Herod and Pilate, Sadducees and Pharisees,
against Christ; and like
Gebal and Ammon and Amalek, of old, against
Israel. If the church's enemies can thus unite for its destruction, shall not
its friends, laying aside all personal feuds, unite for its preservation? 2.
What the plot was. Having now got
the rulers on their side, they doubted
not but to carry their point, and their design was
to use the apostles
despitefully, to expose them to disgrace, and then
to stone them, to
put them to death; and thus they hoped to sink their cause. They aimed to take
away both their reputation and their life, and this was all they had to lose
which men could take from them, for they had neither lands nor goods.
VII. The deliverance of the apostles out of the hands of those
wicked
and unreasonable men, v. 6, 7. They got away, upon notice given them of the
design against them, or the beginning of the attempt upon them, of which they
were soon aware, and they made an honourable retreat (for it was not an
inglorious flight) to
Lystra and Derbe; and there, 1. They found safety.
Their persecutors in Iconium were for the present satisfied that they were
thrust out of their borders, and pursued them no further. God has shelters for
his people in a storm; nay, he is, and will be, himself their hiding place. 2.
They found work, and this was what they went for. When the door of opportunity
was shut against them at Iconium, it was opened at
Lystra and
Derbe.
To these cities they went, and there, and
in the region that lieth round
about, they preached the gospel. In times of persecution ministers may see
cause to quit the spot, when yet they do not quit the work.
Verses 8-18
In these verses we have,
I. A miraculous cure wrought by Paul at Lystra upon a cripple
that had been lame from his birth, such a one as was miraculously cured by Peter
and John, ch. 3:2. That introduced the gospel among the Jews, this among the
Gentiles; both that and this were designed to represent the impotency of all the
children of men in spiritual things: they are lame from their birth, till the
grace of God puts strength into them; for it was when we were yet
without
strength that
Christ died for the ungodly, Rom. 5:6. Observe here, 1.
The deplorable case of the poor cripple (v. 8): He was
impotent in his feet,
disabled (so the word is) to such a degree that it was impossible he should
set his foot to the ground, to lay any stress upon it. It was well known that he
had been so
from his mother's womb, and that he
never had walked,
nor could
stand up. We should take occasion hence to thank God for the
use of our limbs; and those who are deprived of it may observe that their case
is not singular. 2. The expectation that was raised in him of a cure (v. 9): He
heard Paul preach, and, it is likely, was much affected with what he heard,
believed that the messengers, having their commission thence, had a divine power
going along with them, and were therefore able to cure him of his lameness. This
Paul was aware of, by the spirit of discerning that he had, and perhaps the
aspect of his countenance did in part witness for him:
Paul perceived that he
had faith to be healed; desired it, hoped for it, had such a thing in his
thoughts, which it does not appear that the lame man Peter healed had, for he
expected no more than an
alms. There
was not found such great faith in
Israel as was among the Gentiles, Mt. 8:10. 3. The cure wrought:
Paul,
perceiving that he had faith to be healed, brought
the word and healed
him, Ps. 107:20. Note, God will not disappoint the desires that are of his
own kindling, nor the hopes of his own raising. Paul spoke to him
with a loud
voice, either because he was at some distance, or to show that the true
miracles, wrought by the power of Christ, were far unlike the lying wonders
wrought by deceivers,
that peeped, and muttered, and whispered, Isa.
8:19. God saith,
I have not spoken in secret, in a dark place of the earth,
Isa. 45:19. Paul spoke to him with a loud voice, that the people about might
take notice, and have their expectations raised of the effect. It does not
appear that this cripple was a beggar; it is said (v. 8)
that he sat, not
that he sat begging. But we may imagine how melancholy it was to him to see
other people walking about him, and himself disabled; and therefore how welcome
Paul's word was to him,
"Stand upright on thy feet; help thyself,
and God shall help thee; try whether thou hast strength, and thou shalt find
that thou hast." Some copies read it,
I say unto thee, in the name of
the Lord Jesus Christ, Stand upright on thy feet. It is certain that this is
implied, and very probably was expressed, by Paul, and
power went along with
this word; for presently
he leaped and walked, leaped up from the
place where he sat, and not only
stood upright, but to show that he was
perfectly cured, and that immediately, he walked to and fro before them all.
Herein the scripture was fulfilled, that when
the wilderness of the Gentile
world is made to blossom as the rose then shall the lame man leap as a hart,
Isa. 35:1, 6. Those that by the grace of God are cured of their spiritual
lameness must show it by leaping with a holy exultation and walking in a holy
conversation.
II. The impression which this cure made upon the people: they
were amazed at it, had never seen nor heard the like, and fell into an ecstacy
of wonder. Paul and Barnabas were strangers, exiles, refugees, in their country;
every thing concurred to make them mean and despicable: yet the working of this
one miracle was enough to make them in the eyes of this people truly great and
honourable, though the multitude of Christ's miracles could not screen him
from the utmost contempt among the Jews. We find here, 1. The people take them
for gods (v. 11):
They lifted up their voices with an air of triumph,
saying in their own language (for it was the common people that said it),
in
the speech of Lycaonia, which was a dialect of the Greek,
The gods are
come down to us in the likeness of men. They imagined that Paul and Barnabas
had dropped down to them out of the clouds, and that they were some divine
powers, no less than gods, though in the likeness of men. This notion of the
thing agreed well enough with the pagan theology, and the fabulous account they
had of the visits which their gods made to this lower world; and proud enough
they were to think that they should have a visit made to them. They carried this
notion so far here that they pretended to tell which of their gods they were,
according to the ideas their poets had given them of the gods (v. 12):
They
called Barnabas Jupiter; for, if they will have him to be a god, it is as
easy to make him the prince of their gods as not. It is probable that he was the
senior, and the more portly comely man, that had something of majesty in his
countenance. And
Paul they called Mercury, who was the messenger of the
gods, that was sent on their errands; for Paul, though he had not the appearance
that Barnabas had, was
the chief speaker, and had a greater command of
language, and perhaps appeared to have something mercurial in his temper and
genius.
Jupiter used to take
Mercury along with him, they said,
and, if he make a visit to their city, they will suppose he does so now. 2. The
priest thereupon prepares
to do sacrifice to them, v. 13. The temple of
Jupiter was, it seems, before the gate of their city, as its protector and
guardian; and the priest of that idol and temple, hearing the people cry out
thus, took the hint presently, and thought it was time for him to bestir himself
to do his duty: many a costly sacrifice he had offered to the image of Jupiter,
but if Jupiter be among them
himselfin propria persona, it concerns
him to do him the utmost honours imaginable; and the people are ready to join
with him in it. See how easily vain minds are carried away with a popular
outcry. If the crowd give a shout, Here is Jupiter, the priest of Jupiter takes
the first hint, and offers his service immediately. When Christ, the Son of God,
came down, and appeared in the likeness of men, and did many, very many
miracles, yet they were so far from doing sacrifice to him that they made him a
sacrifice to their pride and malice:
He was in the world, and the world knew
him not; he came to his own, and his own received him not; but Paul and
Barnabas, upon the working of one miracle, are immediately deified. The same
power of the god of this world which prejudices the carnal mind against truth
makes errors and mistakes to find easy admission; and both ways his turn is
served. They
brought oxen, to be sacrificed
to them, and garlands,
with which to crown the sacrifices. These garlands were made up of flowers and
ribbons; and they gilded the horns of the oxen they sacrificed.
Victimae ad supplicium saginantur,
hostiae ad poenam corenantur.
So beasts for sacrifice do feed,
First to be crown'd, and then to bleed.
So Octavius in Minutius Felix.
III. Paul and Barnabas protest against this undue respect paid
them, and with much ado prevent it. Many of the heathen emperors called
themselves
gods, and took a pride in having divine honours paid them: but
Christ's ministers, though real benefactors to mankind, while these tyrants
only pretended to be so, refused those honours when they were so tendered. Whose
successor therefore he is who
sits in the temple of God, and shows
that
he is god (2 Th. 2:4), and who is adored as
our lord god, the pope,
it is easy to say. Observe,
1. The holy indignation which Paul and Barnabas conceived at
this:
When they heard this, they rent their clothes. We do not find that
they rent their clothes when the people vilified them, and spoke of stoning
them; they could bear this without disturbance: but when they deified them, and
spoke of worshipping them, they could not bear it, but rent their clothes, as
being more concerned for God's honour than their own.
2. The pains they took to prevent it. They did not connive at
it, nor say, "If people will be deceived, let them be deceived," much
less suggest to themselves and one another that it might contribute both to the
safety of their persons and the success of their ministry if they suffered the
people to continue in this mistake, and so they might make a good hand of an ill
thing. No, God's truth needs not the service of man's lie. Christ had put
honour enough upon them in making them apostles, they needed not assume either
the honour of princes or the honour of gods; they appeared with much more
magnificent titles when they were called
the ambassadors of Christ, and
the
stewards of the mysteries of God, than when they were called Jupiter and
Mercury. Let us see how they prevented it.
(1.)
They ran in among the people, as soon as they heard
of it, and would not so much as stay awhile to see what the people would do.
Their running in, like servants, among the people, showed that they were far
from looking upon themselves as gods, or taking state upon them; they did not
stand still, expecting honours to be done them, but plainly declined them by
thrusting themselves into the crowd. They ran in, as men in earnest, with as
much concern as Aaron
ran in between the living and the dead, when the
plague was begun.
(2.) They reasoned with them,
crying out, that all might
hear,
"Sirs, why do you these things?" Why do you go about to
make gods of us? It is the most absurd thing you can do; for,
[1.] "Our nature will not admit it:
We also are men of
like passions with you" homoiopatheis:
it is the same word that is used concerning Elias, Jam. 5:18, where we render
it,
subject to like passions as we are. "We are men, and therefore
you wrong yourselves if you expect that from us which is to be had in God only;
and you wrong God if you give that honour to us, or to any other man, which is
to be given to God only. We not only have such bodies as you see, but
are of
like passions with you, have
hearts fashioned like as other men (Ps.
33:15); for,
as in water face answers to face, so doth the heart of man to
man, Prov. 27:19. We are naturally subject to the same infirmities of the
human nature, and liable to the same calamities of the human life; not only men,
but sinful men and suffering men, and therefore will not be deified."
[2.] "Our doctrine is directly against it. Must we be added
to the number of your gods whose business it is to abolish the gods you have?
We
preach unto you that you should turn from these vanities unto the living God.
If we should suffer this, we should confirm you in that which it is our business
to convert you from:" and so they take this occasion to show them how just
and necessary it was that they should
turn to God from idols, 1 Th. 1:9.
When they preached to the Jews, who hated idolatry, they had nothing to do but
to preach the grace of God in Christ, and needed not, as the prophets in dealing
with their fathers, to preach against idolatry: but, when they had to do with
the Gentiles, they must rectify their mistakes in natural religion, and bring
them off from the gross corruptions of that. See here what they preached to the
Gentiles.
First, That the gods which they and their fathers
worshipped, and all the ceremonies of their worship of them were
vanities,
idle things, unreasonable, unprofitable, which no rational account could be
given of, nor any real advantage gained from. Idols are often called vanities in
the Old Testament, Deu. 32:21; 1 Ki. 10:13; Jer. 14:22.
An idol is nothing in
the world (1 Co. 8:4): it is not at all what it is pretended to be, it is a
cheat, it is a counterfeit; it deceives those that trust to it and expect relief
from it. Therefore
turn from these vanities, turn from them with
abhorrence and detestation, as Ephraim did (Hos. 14:8):
"What have I to
do any more with idols? I will never again be thus imposed upon."
Secondly, That the God to whom they would have them
turn
is
the living God. They had hitherto worshipped dead images, that were
utterly unable to help them (Isa. 64:9), or (as they now attempted) dying men,
that would soon be disabled to help them; but now they are persuaded to worship
a living God, who has life in himself, and life for us, and lives for evermore.
Thirdly, That this God is the creator of the world, the
fountain of all being and power: "He
made heaven and earth, and the sea,
and all things therein, even those things which you worship as gods, so that
he
is the God of your gods. You worship gods which you made, the
creatures of your own fancy, and the work of your own hands. We call you to
worship the true God, and cheat not yourselves with pretenders; worship the
Sovereign Lord of all, and disparage not yourselves in bowing down to his
creatures and subjects."
Fourthly, That the world owed it to his patience that he had
not destroyed them long ere this for their idolatry (v. 16):
In times past,
for many ages, unto this day, he
suffered all nations to walk in their own
ways. These idolaters, that were called from the service of other gods,
might think, "Have we not served these gods hitherto, and our fathers
before us, time out of mind; and why may we not as well go on to serve them
still?"No, your serving them was a trial of God's patience, and it was
a miracle of mercy that you were not cut off for it. But, though he did not
destroy you for it while you were in ignorance, and knew no better (ch. 17:30)
yet now that he has sent his gospel into the world, and by it has made a clear
discovery of himself and his will to
all nations, and not to the Jews
only, if you still continue in your idolatry he will not bear with you as he has
done. All the nations that had not the benefit of divine revelation, that is,
all but the Jews,
he suffered to walk in their own ways, for they had
nothing to check them, or control them, but their own consciences, their own
thoughts (Rom. 2:15), no scriptures, no prophets; and then they were the more
excusable if they mistook their way: but now that God has sent a revelation into
the world which is to be published to
all nations the case is altered. We
may under-stand it as a judgment upon all nations that
God suffered them to
walk in their own ways, gave them up to their own hearts' lusts; but now
the time is come when
the veil of the covering spread over all nations should
be taken off (Isa. 25:7), and now you will no longer be excused in these
vanities, but must turn from them. Note, 1. God's patience with us hitherto
should
lead us to repentance, and not encourage us to presume upon the
continuance of it, while we continue to provoke him. 2. Our having done ill
while we were in ignorance will not bear us out in doing ill when we are better
taught.
Fifthly, That even when they were not under the direction
and correction of the word of God, yet they might have known, and should have
known, to do better by the works of God, v. 17. Though the Gentiles had not the
statutes
and judgments that the Jews had to witness for God against all pretenders,
no tables of testimony or tabernacle of testimony, yet
he left not himself
without witness; besides
the witness for God within them (the
dictates of natural conscience), they had
witnesses for God round about
them-the bounty of common providence. Their having no scriptures did in part
excuse them, and therefore God did not destroy them for their idolatry, as he
did the Jewish nation. This however did not wholly excuse them, but that
notwithstanding this they were highly criminal and deeply guilty before God; for
there were other
witnesses for God, sufficient to inform them that he and
he only is to be worshipped, and that to him they owed all their services from
whom they received all their comforts, and therefore that they were guilty of
the highest injustice and ingratitude imaginable, in alienating them from him.
God, having
not left himself without witness, has not left us without a
guide, and so has left us without excuse; for whatever is a witness for God is a
witness against us, if we give that glory to any other which is due to him only.
1. The bounties of common providence witness to us that there is a God, for they
are all dispensed wisely and with design. The
rain and fruitful seasons
could not come by chance, nor
are there any of the vanities of the heathen
that can give rain, neither
can the heavens of themselves
give
showers, Jer. 14:22. All the powers of nature witness to us a sovereign
power in the God of nature, from whom they are derived, and on whom they depend.
It is not the heaven that gives us rain, but God that gives us rain from heaven,
he is the Father of the rain, Job 38:28. 2. The benefits we have by these
bounties witness to us that we ought to make our acknowledgments not to the
creatures who are made serviceable to us, but to the Creator who makes them so.
He
left not himself without witness, in that he did good. God seems to reckon
the instances of his
goodness to be more pregnant, cogent proofs of his
title to our homage and adoration than the evidences of his
greatness;
for his goodness is his glory.
The earth is full of his goodness; his tender
mercies are over all his works; and therefore
they praise him, Ps.
145:9, 10. God does us good, in preserving to us his air to breathe in, his
ground to go upon, the light of his sun to see by; but, because the most
sensible instance of the goodness of Providence to each of us in particular is
that of the daily provision made by it of meat and drink for us, the apostle
chooses to insist upon that, and shows how God does us good, (1.) In preparing
it for us, and that by a long train of causes which depend upon him as the first
cause:
The heavens hear the earth; the earth hears the corn, and wine, and
oil; and they hear Jezreel. Hos. 2:21, 22. He does us good in giving us rain
from heavenrain for us to drink, for if there were no rain there would be no
springs of water and we should soon die for thirstrain for our land to drink,
for our meat as well as drink we have from the rain; in giving us this, he
gives
us fruitful seasons. If the heavens be as iron, the earth will soon
be as
brass, Lev. 26:19.
This is the river of God which
greatly enriches
the earth, and by
it God prepares us corn, Ps. 65:9-13. Of all the
common operations of providence, the heathen chose to form their notion of the
supreme God by that which bespeaks terror, and is proper to strike an awe of him
upon us, and this was
the thunder; and therefore they called Jupiter
the
thunderer, and represented him with a thunderbolt in his hand; and it
appears by Ps. 29:3 that this ought not to be overlooked; but the apostle here,
to engage us to worship God, sets before us his beneficence, that we may have
good thoughts of him in every thing wherein we have to do with him-may love him
and delight in him, as one that does good, does good to us, does good to all, in
giving
rain from heaven and fruitful seasons; and if at any time rain be
withheld, or the seasons be unfruitful, we may thank ourselves; it is our sin
that
turns away these good things from us which were coming to us, and stops the
current of God's favours. (2.) In giving us the comforts of it. It is he
that
fills our hearts with food and gladness. God
is rich in mercy to all
(Rom. 10:12):
he gives us richly all things to enjoy (1 Tim. 6:17), is
not only a benefactor, but a bountiful one, not only
gives us the things we
need, but
gives us to enjoy them (Eccl. 2:24):
He fills our hearts
with food, that is, he gives us food to our hearts' content, or according
to our hearts' desire; not merely for necessity, but plenty, dainty, and
variety. Even those nations that had lost the knowledge of him, and worshipped
other gods, yet he
filled their houses, filled their mouths, filled their
bellies (Job 22:18; Ps. 17:14)
with good things. The Gentiles that
lived
without God in the world, yet lived upon God, which Christ urges as a reason
why we should
do good to those that hate us, Mt. 5:44, 45. Those heathen
had
their hearts filled with food; this was their felicity and
satisfaction, they desired no more; but
these things will not fill the soul
(Eze. 7:19), nor will those that know how to value their own souls be satisfied
with them; but the apostles put themselves in as sharers in the divine
beneficence. We must all own that God fills our hearts with food and gladness;
not only
food, that we may live, but
gladness, that we may live
cheerfully; to him we owe it that we do not
all our days eat in sorrow.
Note, We must thank God, not only for our food, but for our gladness-that he
gives us leave to be cheerful, cause to be cheerful, and hearts to be cheerful.
And, if
our hearts be filled with food and gladness, they ought to be
filled with love and thankfulness, and enlarged in duty and obedience, Deu.
8:10; 28:47.
Lastly, The success of this prohibition which the apostles
gave to
the people (v. 18): By
these sayings, with much ado, they
restrained
the people from doing sacrifice to them, so strongly were these idolaters
set upon their idolatry. It was not enough for the apostles to refuse to be
deified (this would be construed only a pang of modesty), but they resented it,
they showed the people the evil of it, and all little enough, for they could
scarcely
restrain them from it, and some of them were ready to blame the priest, that he
did not go on with his business notwithstanding. We may see here what gave rise
to the pagan idolatry; it was terminating those regards in the instruments of
our comfort which should have passed through them to the Author. Paul and
Barnabas had cured a cripple, and therefore the people deified them, instead of
glorifying God for giving them such power, which should make us very cautious
that we do not give that honour to another, or take it to ourselves, which is
due to God only.
Verses 19-28
We have here a further account of the services and sufferings of
Paul and Barnabas.
I. How Paul was stoned and left for dead, but miraculously came
to himself again, v. 19, 20. They fell upon Paul rather than Barnabas, because
Paul, being the chief speaker, galled and vexed them more than Barnabas did. Now
observe here, 1. How the people were incensed against Paul; not by any injury
they pretended he had done them (if they took it for an affront that he would
not let them misplace divine honours upon him, when they considered themselves
they would easily forgive him that wrong), but
there came certain Jews from
Antioch, hearing, it is likely, and vexed to hear, what respect was shown to
Paul and Barnabas at Lystra; and they incensed the people against them, as
factious, seditious, dangerous persons, not fit to be harboured. See how
restless the rage of the Jews was against the gospel of Christ; they could not
bear that it should have footing any where. 2. To what degree they were incensed
by these barbarous Jews: they were irritated to such a degree that the mob rose
and
stoned Paul, not by a judicial sentence, but in a popular tumult;
they threw stones at him, with which they knocked him down, and then
drew him
out of the city, as one not fit to live in it, or drew him out upon a sledge
or in a cart, to bury him,
supposing he had been dead. So strong is the
bias of the corrupt and carnal heart to that which is evil, even in contrary
extremes, that, as it is with great difficulty that men are restrained from evil
on one side, so it is with great ease that they are persuaded to evil on the
other side. See how fickle and mutable the minds of carnal worldly people are,
that do not know and consider things. Those that but the other day would have
treated the apostles as more than men now treat them as worse than brutes, as
the worst of men, as the worst of male-factors. To-day
Hosanna, to-morrow
Crucify; to-day sacrificed to, to-morrow sacrificed. We have an instance
of a change the other way, ch. 28.
This man is a murderer, v. 4; no doubt
he is a god, v. 6. Popular breath turns like the wind. If Paul would have
been Mercury, he might have been enthroned, nay, he might have been enshrined;
but, if he will be a faithful minister of Christ, he shall be stoned, and thrown
out of the city. Thus those who easily submit to strong delusions hate to
receive the truth in the love of it. 3. How he was delivered by the power of
God: When he was
drawn out of the city, the disciples stood round about him,
v. 20. It seems there were some here at Lystra that became disciples, that found
the mean between deifying the apostles and rejecting them; and even these new
converts had courage to own Paul when he was thus run down, though they had
reason enough to fear that the same that stoned him would stone them for owning
him. They stood round about him, as a guard to him against the further outrage
of the people-stood about him to see whether he were alive or dead; and all of a
sudden
he rose up. Though he was not dead, yet he was ill crushed and
bruised, no doubt, and fainted away; he was in a
deliquium, so that it
was not without a miracle that he came so soon to himself, and was so well as to
be able to go into the city. Note, God's faithful servants, though they may be
brought within a step of death, and may be looked upon as dead both by friends
and enemies, shall not die as long as he has work for them to do. They
are
cast down, but not destroyed, 2 Co. 4:9.
II. How they went on with their work, notwithstanding the
opposition they met with. All the stones they threw at Paul could not beat him
off from his work: They
drew him out of the city (v. 19), but, as one
that set them at defiance, he
came into the city again, to show that he
did not fear them;
none even
of these things move him. However,
their being persecuted here is a known indication to them to seek for
opportunities of usefulness elsewhere, and therefore for the present they quit
Lystra.
1. They went to break up and sow fresh ground at
Derbe.
Thither the next day
Paul and Barnabas departed, a city not far off;
there they preached the gospel, there they
taught many, v. 21. And it
should seem that Timothy was of that city, and was one of the disciples that now
attended Paul, had met him at Antioch and accompanied him in all this circuit;
for, with reference to this story, Paul tells him how fully
he had known the
afflictions he endured at Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra, 2 Tim. 3:10, 11.
Nothing is recorded that happened at Derbe.
2. They returned, and went over their work again, watering what
they had sown; and, having staid as long as they thought fit at Derbe, they came
back to Lystra, to Iconium, and Antioch, the cities where they had preached, v.
21. Now, as we have had a very instructive account of the methods they took in
laying the foundation, and beginning the good work, so here we have the like of
their building upon that foundation, and carrying on that good work. Let us see
what they did,
(1.) They
confirmed the souls of the disciples; that is,
they inculcated that upon them which was proper to confirm them, v. 22. Young
converts are apt to waver, and a little thing shocks them. Their old
acquaintances beg they will not leave them. Those that they look upon to be
wiser than themselves set before them the absurdity, indecency, and danger, of a
change. They were allured, by the prospect of preferment, to stick to the
traditions of their fathers; they are frightened with the danger of swimming
against the stream. All this tempts them to think of making a retreat in time;
but the apostles come and tell them that
this is the true grace of God
wherein they stand, and therefore they must stand to it that there is no
danger like that of losing their part in Christ, no advantage like that of
keeping their hold of him; that, whatever their trials may be, they shall have
strength from Christ to pass through them; and, whatever their losses may be,
they shall be abundantly recompensed. And this
confirms the souls of the
disciples; it fortifies their pious resolutions, in the strength of Christ,
to adhere to Christ whatever it may cost them. Note, [1.] Those that are
converted need to be confirmed; those that are planted need to be rooted.
Ministers' work is to establish saints as well as to awaken sinners.
Non
minor est virtus quam quoerere parta tueriTo retain is sometimes as difficult
as to acquire. Those that were instructed in the truth must know the
certainty of the things in which they have been instructed; and those that are
resolved must be fixed in their resolutions. [2.] True confirmation is
confirmation of the soul; it is not binding the body by severe penalties on
apostates, but binding the soul. The best ministers can do this only by pressing
those things which are proper to bind the soul; it is the grace of God, and
nothing less, that can effectually
confirm the souls of the disciples,
and prevent their apostasy.
(2.)
They exhorted them to continue in the faith; or, as
it may be read,
they encouraged them. They told them it was both their
duty and interest to persevere; to abide in the belief of Christ's being the
Son of God, and the Saviour of the world. Note, Those that are in the faith are
concerned to
continue in the faith, notwithstanding all the temptations
they may be under to desert it, from the smiles or frowns of this world. And it
is requisite that they should often be exhorted to do so. Those that are
continually surrounded with temptations to apostasy have need to be continually
attended with pressing exhortations to perseverance.
(3.) That which they insisted most upon was
that we must
through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God. Not only
they
must, but
we must; it must be counted upon that all who will go to heaven
must expect tribulation and persecution in their way thither. But is this the
way to
confirm the souls of the disciples, and to engage them to
continue
in the faith? One would think it would rather shock them, and make them
weary. No, as the matter is fairly stated and taken entire, it will help to
confirm them, and fix them for Christ. It is true they will meet with
tribulation, with much tribulation; that is the worst of it: but then, [1.] It
is so appointed. They must undergo it, there is no remedy, the matter is already
fixed, and cannot be altered. He that has the sovereign disposal of us has
determined it to be our lot that all that
will live godly in Christ Jesus
should suffer persecution; and he that has the sovereign command over us has
determined this to be our duty, that all that will be Christ's disciples must
take
up their cross. When we gave up our names to Jesus Christ it was what we
agreed to; when we sat down and counted the cost, if we reckoned aright, it was
what we counted upon; so that if
tribulation and persecution arise because of
the word it is but what we had notice of before, it must be so:
he
performeth the thing that is appointed for us. The matter is fixed
unalterably; and
shall the rock be for us
removed out of its place?
[2.] It is the lot of the leaders in Christ's army, as well as of the
soldiers. It is not only
you, but
we, that (if it be thought a
hardship) are subject to it; therefore, as your own sufferings must not be a
stumbling-block to you, so neither must ours; see 1 Th. 3:3.
Let none be
moved by our afflictions, for you yourselves know that we are appointed
thereunto. As Christ did not put the apostles upon any harder service than
what he underwent before them, so neither did the apostles put the ordinary
Christians. [3.] It is true we must count upon
much tribulation, but this
is encouraging, that we shall get through it; we shall not be lost and perish in
it. It is a Red Sea, but the Lord has opened a way through it, for
the
redeemed of the Lord to pass over. We must go down to trouble, but we shall
come up again. [4.] We shall not only get through it, but get through it
into
the kingdom of God; and the joy and glory of the end will make abundant
amends for all the difficulties and hardships we may meet with in the way. It is
true
we must go by the cross, but it is as true that if we keep in the
way, and do not turn aside nor turn back, we shall
go to the crown, and
the believing prospect of this will make the tribulation easy and pleasant.
(4.)
They ordained them elders, or presbyters,
in
every church. Now at this second visit they settled them in some order,
formed them into religious societies under the guidance of a settled ministry,
and settled that distinction between those that are taught in the word and those
that teach. [1.] Every church had its governors or presidents, whose office it
was to pray with the members of the church, and to preach to them in their
solemn assemblies, to administer all gospel ordinances to them, and to take the
oversight of them,
to instruct the ignorant, warn the unruly, comfort the
feeble-minded, and convince gainsayers. It is requisite that every
particular church should have one or more such to preside in it. [2.] Those
governors were then elders, that had in their qualification the wisdom and
gravity of seniors, and had in their commission the authority and command of
seniors: not to make new laws (this is the prerogative of the Prince, the great
Lawgiver; the government of the church is an absolute monarchy, and the
legislative power entirely in Christ), but to see to the observance and
execution of the laws Christ has made; and so far they are to be obeyed and
submitted to. [3.] These elders were
ordained. The qualifications of such
as were proposed or proposed themselves (whether the apostles or the people put
them up) were judged of by the apostles, as most fit to judge; and they, having
devoted
themselves, were solemnly set
apart to the work of the ministry, and
bound to it. [4.] These elders were ordained to them, to the disciples, to their
service, for their good. Those that are in the faith have need to be built up in
it, and have need of the elders' help thereinthe
pastors and teachers,
who are
to edify the body of Christ.
(5.)
By prayer joined with
fasting they
commended
them to the Lord, to the Lord Jesus,
on whom they believed. Note,
[1.] Even when persons are brought to believe, and that sincerely, yet ministers'
care concerning them is not over; there is need of watching over them still,
instructing and admonishing them still; there is still that lacking in their
faith which needs to be perfected. [2.] The ministers that take most care of
those that believe must after all commend them to the Lord, and put them under
the protection and guidance of his grace:
Lord, keep them through thine own
name. To his custody they must commit themselves, and their ministers must
commit them. [3.] It is by prayer that they must be commended to the Lord.
Christ, in his prayer (Jn. 17), commended his disciples to his Father:
Thine
they were, and thou gavest them to me. Father, keep them. [4.] It is a great
encouragement to us, in commending the disciples to the Lord, that we can say,
"It is he in whom they believed; we commit to him those who have committed
themselves to him, and who know they have
believed in one who is able to keep
what they and we have
committed to him against that day," 2 Tim.
1:12. [5.] It is good to join fasting with prayer, in token of our humiliation
for sin, and in order to add vigour to our prayers. [6.] When we are parting
with our friends, the best farewell is to commend them to the Lord, and to leave
them with him.
3. They went on preaching the gospel in other places where they
had been, but, as it should seem had not made so many converts as that now at
their return they could form them into churches; therefore thither they came to
pursue and carry on conversion-work. From Antioch they
passed through Pisidia,
the province in which that Antioch stood; thence they came into the province of
Pamphylia,
the head-city of which was
Perga, where they had been before (ch. 13:13),
and came thither again to
preach the word (v. 25), making a second offer,
to see if they were now better disposed than they were before to receive the
gospel. What success they had there we are not told, but that thence they
went
down to Attalia, a city of Pamphylia, on the sea-coast. They staid not long
at a place, but wherever they came endeavoured to lay a foundation which might
afterwards be built upon, and to sow the seeds which would in time produce a
great increase. Now Christ's parables were explained, in which he compared the
kingdom of heaven to a little leaven, which in time leavened the whole lumpto
a grain of mustard-seed, which, though very inconsiderable at first, grew to a
great treeand to the seed which a man sowed in his ground, and it sprung up
he knew not how.
III. How they at length came back to Antioch in Syria, whence
they had been sent forth upon this expedition. From Attalia they came by sea to
Antioch, v. 26. And we are here told,
1. Why they came thither: because
thence they had been
recommended to the grace of God, and such a value did they put upon a solemn
recommendation to the grace of God, though they had themselves a great interest
in heaven, that they never thought they could show respect enough to those who
had so recommended them. The brethren having recommended them to the grace of
God, for the work
which they fulfilled, now that they had fulfilled it
they thought they owed them an account of it, that they might help them by their
praises, as they had been helped by their prayers.
2. What account they gave them of their negociation (v. 27):
They
gathered the church together. It is probable that there were more
Christians at Antioch than ordinarily met, or could meet, in one place, but on
this occasion they called together the
leading men of them; as the heads
of the tribes are often called the
congregation of Israel, so the
ministers and principal members of the church at Antioch are called the
church.
Or perhaps as many of the people as the place would hold came together on this
occasion. Or some met at one time, or in one place, and others at another. But
when they had called them together, they gave them an account of two things(1.)
Of the tokens they had had of the divine presence with them in their labours:
They
rehearsed all that God had done with them. They did not tell what
they
had done (this would have savoured of vain-glory), but what God had done with
them and by them. Note, The praise of all the little good we do at any time must
be ascribed to God; for it is he that not only worketh in us both to will and to
do, but then worketh with us to make what we do successful. God's grace can do
any thing without ministers' preaching; but ministers' preaching, even Paul's,
can do nothing without God's grace; and the operations of that grace must be
acknowledged in the efficacy of the word. (2.) Of the fruit of their labours
among the heathen. They told how
God had opened the door of faith unto the
Gentiles; had not only ordered them to be invited to the gospel feast, but
had inclined the hearts of many of them to accept the invitation. Note, [1.]
There is no entering into the kingdom of Christ but by the door of faith; we
must firmly believe in Christ, or we have no part in him. [2.] It is God that
opens the door of faith, that opens to us the truths we are to believe, opens
our hearts to receive them, and makes this a wide door, and an effectual, into
the church of Christ. [3.] We have reason to be thankful that God has
opened
the door of faith to the Gentiles, has both sent them his gospel, which is
made
known to all nations for the obedience of faith (Rom. 16:26), and has also
given them hearts to entertain the gospel. Thus the gospel was spread, and it
shone more and more, and none was able to shut this door which God had opened;
not all the powers of hell and earth.
3. How they disposed of themselves for the present:
There
they abode a long time with the disciples (v. 28), longer than perhaps at
first they intended, not because they
feared their enemies, but because
they
loved their friends, and were loth to part from them.
Chapter 14:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| McGarvey Pendleton
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 John Romans
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
