ST. PAUL A PRISONER AT ROME
1. They.. they] RV 'we.. we.' MELITA] RM 'Melitene.' Melita is
certainly Malta, and not (as has been erroneously supposed) Meleda off
the Illyrian coast. Tradition correctly locates the shipwreck in St.
Paul's Bay, about 8 m. NW. of Valetta.... [ Continue Reading ]
ST. PAUL IN JERUSALEM (CHS 21:17-28:16)
17-40. Disturbances in the Temple. St Paul arrested.... [ Continue Reading ]
THE BARBAROUS PEOPLE] RV 'the barbarians.' The Gk. word does not imply
that they were uncivilised, but only that they were neither Greeks nor
Romans.... [ Continue Reading ]
Cp. Mark 16:18. As St. Paul was arranging the faggot on the fire, the
viper, feeling the heat, glided out of the faggot and bit the
Apostle's hand. There are now no vipers in Malta, but the clearing of
the ancient forests, and the great density of the population, are
sufficient to account for their... [ Continue Reading ]
VENGEANCE] rather, 'Justice' (personified as a goddess). A GOD] cp.
the events at Lystra (Acts 14:11), which also illustrate the popular
levity of judgment.... [ Continue Reading ]
THE CHIEF MAN] lit. 'the first man.' Inscriptions show that this title
is technically correct. Malta was part of the province of Sicily, and
Publius was a subordinate of the praetor of Sicily. Tradition places
his house at Città-Vecchia.... [ Continue Reading ]
BLOODY FLUX] RV 'dysentery.' Observe in this v. the technical medical
language.... [ Continue Reading ]
OTHERS] We have here the firsthand evidence of a competent medical
witness to the reality of St. Paul's miraculous cures.... [ Continue Reading ]
AFTER THREE MONTHS] i.e. probably somewhat early in February, before
the usual time of navigation. CASTOR AND POLLUX] (lit. 'the
Dioscuri'), the twin sons of Jupiter, and tutelary deities of sailors.... [ Continue Reading ]
LANDING] RV 'touching.' SYRACUSE] 100 m. N. of Malta, the capital of
Sicily, and a Roman colony.... [ Continue Reading ]
FETCHED A COMPASS] i.e. made a circuit. RHEGIUM] an ancient Gk. colony
situated on the Italian side of the Straits of Messina, near the
dreaded rock of Scylla, and the whirlpool of Charybdis. PUTEOLI] also
called Dicæarchia, was (with Ostia) the great corn mart of Italy,
where the Alexandrian cornsh... [ Continue Reading ]
APPII FORUM] RV 'the Market of Appius,' was 43 Roman m. S. of Rome on
the great Appian Road, the main line of communication between Rome and
the East. THE THREE TAVERNS] 10 Roman miles from the capital.... [ Continue Reading ]
ST. PAUL IN ROME (28:16-31)
16. The captain of the guard] either the captain of the prætorian
guard (_proefectus proetorio_), or, more probably, the captain of the
troops called _frumentarii_, whose camp was on the Coelian hill: see
on Acts 27:1. TO DWELL BY HIMSELF] This exceptional treatment was... [ Continue Reading ]
CALLED THE CHIEF OF THE JEWS TOGETHER] or, 'called together the Jewish
community first,' in accordance with his usual plan of preaching to
the Jews before he preached to the Gentiles.... [ Continue Reading ]
JAMES] The Lord's 'brother,' the acknowledged head of the Church of
Jerusalem: cp. Acts 15:13, etc.... [ Continue Reading ]
PARTICULARLY] i.e. in minute detail.... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LORD (i.e. Jesus)] RV 'God.'
23, 24. The four men were Nazirites (see Numbers 6), and St. Paul was
advised to pay for their sacrifices, and to associate himself with
their Nazirite vow during the week that it had still to run (see Acts
21:27). By thus becoming a Nazirite, and defraying the sacr... [ Continue Reading ]
It is somewhat strange that the chief priests did not write. Perhaps
they did, but the letter was delayed, or miscarried.... [ Continue Reading ]
The Jews profess no first-hand knowledge of the Christians, hence it
is evident that at Rome the Church and the Synagogue were already
definitely separated. The expulsion of the Jews from Rome by Claudius
is probably the cause of this. There being no Jewish community, the
infant Church started as a... [ Continue Reading ]
See Isaiah 6:9. OUR FATHERS] RV 'your fathers.' St. Paul renounces
fellowship with the unbelieving Jews.
See Acts 15.... [ Continue Reading ]
ENTERED, etc.] We may freely translate this difficult passage thus:
'He entered into the Temple, informing the priests that within seven
days (see Acts 21:27) the days of their purification would be
accomplished; and he purposed to remain with them in the Temple for a
whole week, until the legal sac... [ Continue Reading ]
TROPHIMUS] see on Acts 20:4.
30. They drew him and all his companions 'out of the Temple,' i.e. out
of the Court of Israel, and closed the doors of this court, ostensibly
to prevent any more Gentiles from entering.
This v. is omitted by important ancient authorities, but much is to be
said for its... [ Continue Reading ]
TWO WHOLE YEARS] Such delays of justice were not unusual. In this case
the delay was apparently caused, (1) by the loss of the official
papers in the wreck, (2) by the non-appearance of the accusers, (3) by
the difficulty of getting together the witnesses. During this
imprisonment St. Paul wrote the... [ Continue Reading ]
WENT ABOUT TO] i.e. were seeking to. The chief captain of the band]
rather, 'the tribune of the Roman cohort,' which was stationed in the
fortress Antonia, adjoining the Temple.... [ Continue Reading ]
CASTLE] lit. 'encampment.' The fortress Antonia is meant.... [ Continue Reading ]
AWAY WITH HIM] i.e. Slay him.... [ Continue Reading ]
ART NOT THOU] rather, 'Thou art not then the Egyptian,' etc. FOUR
THOUSAND MEN] rather, the four thousand men of the Sicarii. The
Sicarii (i.e. assassins) were the extreme members of the 'zealot'
party. They carried out their 'national' policy by openly
assassinating influential Jews supposed to be... [ Continue Reading ]
St. Paul was not without civic pride. Tarsus was the seat of a famous
university, and had produced several of the most eminent Stoic
philosophers. On its coins it proudly boasted itself 'Self-Governing
Metropolis.' Citizenship of Tarsus was confined to a select few of the
inhabitants, so that its po... [ Continue Reading ]