_AFTER THAT ANANIAS AND SAPPHIRA HIS WIFE, FOR THEIR HYPOCRISY, AT
PETER'S REBUKE, HAD FALLEN DOWN DEAD, AND THAT THE REST OF THE
APOSTLES HAD WROUGHT MANY MIRACLES, TO THE INCREASE OF THE FAITH; THE
APOSTLES WERE AGAIN IMPRISONED, BUT DELIVERED BY AN ANGEL; BIDDING
THEM TO PREACH OPENLY TO ALL: WHE... [ Continue Reading ]
BUT A CERTAIN MAN, &C.— In Psalms 110 where our Saviour is
prophetically described in the person of a king advanced to the throne
of divine majesty, glorious and triumphant, it is said, that _his
people, in the day of his power, should offer him
free-will-offerings;_ which alludes to the Eastern cus... [ Continue Reading ]
WHY HATH SATAN FILLED THINE HEART, &C.— The phrase rendered _filled
thine heart,_ signifies _emboldened,_ as appears from the Septuagint
version of Esther 7:5 and Ecclesiastes 8:11. _To lie to the Holy
Ghost,_ is expressed, Acts 5:4 by lying _unto God,_ a plain proof that
the Holy Ghost is God. The... [ Continue Reading ]
WHILES IT REMAINED, WAS IT NOT THINE OWN, &C.?— That is, "Before it
was sold, was it not thine? and being sold, was not the money paid
thee, and in thine own power?—Thou hast therefore no excuse for what
thou hast done;"—for there were two cases, which might have been
pleaded by Ananias, in excusefo... [ Continue Reading ]
AND ANANIAS HEARING THESE WORDS, &C.— This severity was not only
righteous, considering that complication of vain glory and
covetousness, of fraud and impiety, which the action contained; but
was wise and gracious, both as it served to vindicate the honour of
the blessed Spirit, so notoriously affro... [ Continue Reading ]
AND THE YOUNG MEN AROSE, &C.— They were persons of an inferior rank,
who were usually employed in this office. They stripped, swathed
him,— συνεστειλαν,— and afterwards carried him to his
grave. The Jews now inter their dead within twenty-four hours at
farthest from the time of their death, and gene... [ Continue Reading ]
AND GREAT FEAR CAME UPON ALL, &C.— In the striking narrative before
us, we have an example of the severest temporal punishment inflicted
throughout the New Testament; a punishment inflicted by the apostle,
not out of a spirit of passion, cruelty, or revenge, but by a
prophetic spirit; not by the swo... [ Continue Reading ]
AND OF THE REST, &C.— That is, the people held them in distant
admiration, and presumed not, on any false pretence, to join them, if
not truly converted; which yet it appears by the next verse many were,
who readily came into a full and solemn profession of the gospel; as
indeed the late miracle was... [ Continue Reading ]
THAT AT LEAST THE SHADOW, &C.— The efficacy of St. Peter's shadow in
curing distempers, is so far from being natural, or likely to enter
into the minds of any, that nothing but the force of truth could have
rendered it credible; and it must have been experience which first
gave the idea of it. For t... [ Continue Reading ]
THE SECT OF THE SADDUCEES,— The Sadducees, as they denied the
resurrection from the dead, and a future state of rewards and
punishments, were the most constant and implacable enemies to
Christianity. Grotius and other commentators have concluded from this
text, that the high-priest and his kindred w... [ Continue Reading ]
ALL THE WORDS OF THIS LIFE.— _The whole doctrine of life._
Heylin—"that glorious gospel with which you are "charged, on which
the eternal life of man so evidently depends, and by which alone their
final happiness can be secured." See 2 Timothy 1:10.... [ Continue Reading ]
CALLED THE COUNCIL—AND, ALL THE SENATE, &C.— _The whole Sanhedrim,
and all the elders of Israel,_ πασαν την γερουσιαν.
Some render it _the Sanhedrim, even,_ or _that is to say, the whole
senate of the children of Israel._... [ Continue Reading ]
THEY DOUBTED OF THEM, &C.— _They were in great perplexity about the
apostles, and what this matter might come to._ Heylin. It might be
rendered more literally, _They were in great doubt concerning them,_
(namely, τους λογους, _these words,_ or _this report,_)
_what this could be_—that is, whether th... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR THEY FEARED THE PEOPLE, &C.— This may seem a surprizing change
in the people, considering the eagerness with which they demanded that
Christ should be crucified: but if we consider that the common people,
in many cases, judge without the fixed and inveterate prejudices which
entangle the minds o... [ Continue Reading ]
THIS MAN'S BLOOD UPON US,— That is, the odium and the guilt of it.
See Matthew 27:25.... [ Continue Reading ]
WHOM YE SLEW AND HANGED ON A TREE,— _Whom ye crucified._ Heylin.
Literally, _Whom ye slew, hanging him on a tree._ See Deuteronomy
21:23. Instead of raised up, some read _hath raised up._... [ Continue Reading ]
HIM HATH GOD EXALTED, &C.— "Even him has God not only raised to
life, but likewise, by a glorious operation of his almighty power, has
exalted to the greatest dignity, honour, and universaldominion in
heaven and earth, that he may live and reign on high, with all
authority and grace, as a prince ent... [ Continue Reading ]
AND SO IS—THE HOLY GHOST,— The testimony arising from this
miraculous communication of the Spirit to Christians at that time,
entirely removes the objection from Christ's not appearing in public
after his resurrection; for had there been any imposture, it certainly
would have been easier of the two... [ Continue Reading ]
THEY WERE CUT TO THE HEART,— The word Διεπριοντο expresses
the action of those, who, through rage, grate with their teeth, as it
were with a saw; from the word πριω, which signifies _to cut with
a saw._ See Acts 7:54.... [ Continue Reading ]
A PHARISEE, NAMED GAMALIEL,— He is said to have been the son of good
old Simeon, mentioned Luke 2:25 and was the person at whose feet St.
Paul was brought up. He was a man in so great esteem among the Jews,
that Onkelos, the author of the Targum, is said to have burned seventy
pounds weight of perfu... [ Continue Reading ]
ROSE UP THEUDAS, BOASTING HIMSELF, &C.— _Pretending to somewhat
extraordinary._ Heylin. _Theudas_ was a very common name among the
Jews; the person therefore here mentioned most probably was one among
the many leaders who, as Josephus informs us, took up arms in defence
of the public liberties, when... [ Continue Reading ]
AND ALL—AS MANY AS OBEYED HIM,— Dr. Lardner has justly observed,
that the word rendered _dispersed,_ by no means implies that these
men, were _destroyed._ Gamaliel's reason will for ever hold good
against all persecution and intolerance. See the note on Luke 13:1. We
may just observe, for the classi... [ Continue Reading ]
REJOICING, &C.— The punishment ordered by the Sanhedrim, some
suppose, was inflicted in some open market-place, whereby the
sufferers were exposed; and therefore it is said, says Dr. Lardner,
that _they rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer shame._
But in Acts 5:40 the apostles are repres... [ Continue Reading ]
AND IN EVERY HOUSE,— Κατ οικον, in the house where their
upper-room was. See on ch. Acts 2:46.
_INFERENCES.—_Who can behold, without humble reverence, the aweful
instance of the divine severity recorded in this chapter, so well
calculated to impress the minds of these new converts, and to prevent
an... [ Continue Reading ]