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ACTS xii. 25 18

25 And Barnabas and Saul returned from Jerusalem, when they had fulfilled their ministry, and took with them John, whose surname was Mark.

years after his conversion, and he altered it then from a Jewish
to a Roman name. He is always placed after Barnabas, till a
short time after his second journey to Jerusalem, and the con-
trary from this period. Lastly, it is not probable that Christ
gave him his commission at the time of his first journey to Je-
rusalem, for he says himself, "When I was come again to Jeru-
salem," Acts xxii. 17.; and this may be better seen by compar-
ing Acts ix. 26. Gal. i. 18. with Acts xi. 29, 30. and xii. 25.

He

At Paul's second journey to Jerusalem, he received from Christ an apostolic commission. Lord Barrington says, we may be sure this was the first time Paul saw the Saviour, from the particular emphasis he lays on the vision, Acts xxii. 18. speaks of this revelation to the Corinthians, in his second Epistle to them, which was written about the year 58, as having taken place fourteen years preceding, and seems to point out that he then received his commission as apostle of the Gentiles, (2 Cor. xii.) which account agrees well with the prediction of Ananias. He speaks of it as an "high vision and revelation," something whereof he might boast and glory-a mystery now to be made manifest-a revelation of importance-(Colos. i. 27. Eph. iii.) where it appears St. Paul thinks it the greatest of all his revelations.

Lord Barrington supposes that he had some view of the glory of heaven, for his encouragement in the difficulties he had to encounter, and makes a singular conjecture concerning the "thorn in the flesh," of which St. Paul speaks in his relation of bis vision to the Corinthians, which he supposes to have been some bodily infirmity caused by the heavenly glory, which was too great for him to bear; as stammering, or a convulsive motion in the muscles of his face, which made him fear the Gentiles, who paid great regard to eloquence and outward appearances, would despise him, as Moses was afraid of appearing before Pharaoh for the same reason. He therefore besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from him; but after he was assured that Christ's strength should be made perfect in his infirmities, he gloried in his weakness.

There were none of the apostles at Jerusalem at Paul's second journey there, probably that it might be manifest that he received his mission from no man; and of this circumstance he often particularly informs us, that he received his message from Christ alone (a).

(a) See Hales's Analysis, vol. ii. part ii. p. 1211-Miscellanea Sacra, Essay iii.-Doddridge's Family Expositor, notes on Acts xxii. and Dr.

Lardner.

18 Mr. Fleming would place this passage after the account of the death of James, and in the interval between the committal and the deliverance of Peter from prison. Dr. Lardner, whose authority I follow, adheres to the present order of the sacred text, and argues that the commission of Barnabas and Saul was not given till after the death of Herod (a).

(a) Flem. Christology. vol. ii. p. 230. and Lardner's Credibility, book i. chap. ii. sect. ii. vol. i.-Ap. Doddridge's Family Expositor, vol. iii. P. 88.

Jerusalem.

Julian Pe

riod, 4756.

CHAPTER XI.

Vulgar Era, Period for preaching the Gospel to the idolatrous Gentiles, and St. Paul's first Apostolical Journey.

45.

SECTION I.

The Apostles having been absent from Jerusalem, when
Saul saw his Vision in the Temple, he and Barnabas are
separated to the Apostolic Office by the Heads of the
Church at Antioch.

ACTS xiii. 1-3.

1 Now there were in the church that was at Antioch, Antioch. certain prophets and teachers; as Barnabas, and Simeon that was called Niger, and Lucius of Cyrene, and Manaen, which had been brought up with Herod the tetrarch, and Saul.

2 As they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Ghost said, Separate me Barnabas and Saul, for the work whereunto I have called them.

3 And when they had fasted and prayed, and laid their hands on them, they sent them away'.

1 The learned and judicious Hooker (a) has conjectured that Barnabas and Saul were now set apart for their apostleship, to supply the vacancies in the original number, one having been killed by Herod, the other appointed Bishop of Jerusalem. Dr. Hales (b) approves this opinion. It is much to be regretted that the seventh book of the Ecclesiastical Polity is one of those which we cannot be certain, received the last corrections of their author, or indeed were certainly written by him. The conjecture, however, is that of one who had carefully studied the Scripture narrative, and is by no means improbable.

As St. Paul and Barnabas had been already peculiarly set apart to their high office, we cannot attribute their authority to the prophets and teachers in the Church at Antioch, who here officiated by an especial command of God, through the Holy Spirit. St. Paul expressly declares that he was not an apostle by man. We are assured, too, in another passage of Scripture, that without all doubt the less is blessed of the greater: if St. Paul, therefore, had derived his commission as the apostle of the Gentiles from the Church at Antioch, the prophets who set him apart must have been either superior or equal to him. They were not superior, for the apostles are always ranked above any other class of ministers in the Christian Church-if they were equal, they must have been elevated themselves to the rank of apostle, as a learned divine has attempted to prove (c).

The apostles were in one sense of the word, each of them apostles to the whole world: but insomuch as each took his peculiar department, he might be called the apostle of that district or division of their Lord's vineyard. Thus we are assured that the twelve took each of them his province, and ecclesiastical history gives us the name of their several districts. It is not improbable that when the Holy Spirit had separated them for the apostolic office in general, that St. Paul and Barnabas con

Julian Period, 4756. Vulgar Æra,

45.

SECTION II.

Saul, in company with Barnabas, commences his first Apos-
tolical Journey, by going from Antioch to Seleucia.

sented to become the apostles of the Church at Antioch in par-
ticular. That Church had lately bestowed an honourable title
upon the followers of Christ. It was the principal society,
which did not consist of merely Jewish converts, and as St. Pauĺ
was set apart as the apostle of the Gentiles, it does not appear
unreasonable to suppose that he would be willing to add to his
influence the sanction of this venerable Church. The Church
of Christ was at this time truly Catholic. It formed, as it ought
ever to have done, and as it will again, at the coming period of
its promised prosperity, one great society. It was united
through all its congregations under the authority of its superior
pastors, who assembled in council to decide upon any matter in
which all were interested. There was no supremacy either of
St. Peter, or any other of the apostles, and no schism or heresy
among its people. The condescending of St. Paul to become the
apostle of the Church at Antioch, so far as it might be useful to
the Catholic Church to act with their sanction, does not imply
that their authority was superior to his. His object may have
been to obtain in those places which were under the influence
of Antioch, a better or an easier introduction, than he would
have otherwise experienced. This consideration appears to
solve that great difficulty which many have experienced, in re-
conciling the apostolic commission of St. Paul, by the Holy
Spirit, with his being set apart by ecclesiastical officers of an in-
ferior description.

Among the prophets who were now in the Church at Antioch,
we read of one Manaen.

There is an account in Josephus of one Manaen (says Dr. Biscoe) an Essene, who foretold concerning Herod the Great, that he should be a king, whilst he was yet a boy at school: and when it actually came to pass that he was king, being sent for by Herod, and asked how long he should reign, whether ten years? he answered, Yes.-Twenty years? Yes; thirty years. Upon which Herod gave him his right hand, and from that time held in great esteem such who were of the sect of Essenes. Mr. Zachutus, a Jewish writer, says, that this Manaen was vice-president of the Sanhedrim under Hillel, and that Shammai succeeded him; that he went off into Herod's family and service with fourscore eminent men; that he uttered many prophecies, foretold to Herod when he was yet very young, that he should come to reign; and when he did reign, being sent for, foretold that he should reign above thirty years. The Talmudists also say, "That Manaen went out, and Shammai succeeded him. But whither went Manaen? Abai says, he went into the service of the king, and with him went fourscore pair of disciples, clothed all in silk." It is very probable that a son of this Manaen, or some nephew, or other kinsman to whom he gave his name, was educated in the family of Herod the Great. The young. Manaen might be of the same age, and have the samo preceptors and tutors as had Herod Antipas, one of the sons of Herod the Great, and for that reason be said to be brought up with him in particular. This Herod Antipas was, after his father's death, tetrarch of Galilee, and is the person who put John the Baptist to death. Josephus says, of the first named Manaen, that he was reputed a man of an excellent life. The Talmudists tell us, that when he left the vice-presidentship of

Seleucia.

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ACTS xiii. part of verse 4.

4 So they, being sent forth by the Holy Ghost, de- Seleucia. parted unto Seleucia.

SECTION III.

From Seleucia, to Salamis and Paphos, in Cyprus, where
Sergius Paulus (whose name was assumed by Saul) is con-
verted. Being the first known or recorded Convert of the
idolatrous Gentiles.

ACTS xiii. part of ver. 4-13.

4 And from thence they sailed to Cyprus.

Salamis,

5 And when they were at Salamis, they preached the Paphos. word of God in the synagogues of the Jews: and they had also John to their minister.

6 And when they had gone through the isle unto Paphos, they found a certain sorceror, a false prophet, a Jew, whose name was Bar-jesus :

7 Which was with the deputy' of the country, Sergius

the Sanhedrim to go into Herod's service, he went into all man-
ner of wickedness. May they not have fixed this infamy upon
him from his having shewn some mark of esteem for Christ and
his followers? or from the younger Manaen's becoming a Chris-
tian?

(a) Hooker's Eccles. Polity, lib. vii. sec. 4. p. 337. (b) Hales's Anal.
of Chronol. vol. ii. pt. 2. p. 1083. (c) Scott's Christian Life, pt. 2.
ch. vii. p. 491. folio edit. Joseph. Antiq. lib. 15. c. 10. sec. 5. Light-
foot, vol. ii. p. 685, and vol. i. 288-2008. ap. Biscoe on the Acts.

Sergius Paulus was the first convert of the idolatrous Gentiles. He was a magistrate: and, by his conversion and influence, the preaching of St. Paul would probably excite still greater attention. The conversion of a magistrate, as the firstfruits of the idolatrous world, may be intended to shew to us that the Divine Author of Christianity appeals in a more especial manner to those who are vested with authority and power, to embrace his religion, and to sanction and protect it to the utmost.

It is observable here, says Bishop Marsh, that the Evangelist Luke, relating these transactions of Paul in Cyprus, gives to Sergius Paulus, the Roman governor of that island, the Greek title of Avvаrog, which was applied only to those governors of provinces who were invested with proconsular dignity. And on the supposition that Cyprus was not a province of this description, it has been inferred, that the title given to Sergius Paulus in the Acts of the Apostles, was a title that did not properly belong to him.

A passage, indeed, has been quoted from Dion Cassius, who, speaking of the governors of Cyprus, and some other Roman provinces, applies to them the same title which is applied to Sergius Paulus. But as Dion Cassius is speaking of several Roman provinces at the same time, one of which was certainly governed by a proconsul, it has been supposed that, for the sake of brevity, he used one term for all of them, whether it applied to all of them or not. That Cyprus, however, ought

Julian Pe- Paulus, a prudent man; who called for Barnabas and Salamis, riod, 4756. Saul, and desired to hear the word of God. Vulgar Era,

45.

8 But Elymas the sorceror (for so is his name by interpretation) withstood them, seeking to turn away the deputy from the faith.

9 Then Saul (who also is called Paul), filled with the Holy Ghost, set his eyes on him,

10 And said, O full of all subtilty and all mischief, thou child of the devil, thou enemy of all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord? 11 And now, behold, the hand of the Lord is upon thee, and thou shalt be blind, not seeing the sun for a And immediately there fell on him a mist and a

season.

not to be excepted, and that the title which he employed, as
well as St. Luke, really did belong to the Roman governors of
Cyprus, appears from the inscription on a coin belonging to
Cyprus itself, and struck in the very age in which Sergius Pau-
lus was governor of that island. It was struck in the reign of
Claudius Cæsar, whose head and name are on the face of it:
and in the reign of Claudius Cæsar St. Paul visited Cyprus. It
was a coin belonging to the people of that island, as appears
from the word KYIIPION on the reverse; and, though not
struck while Sergius Paulus himself was governor, it was struck,
as appears from the inscription on the reverse, in the time of
Proclus, who was next to Sergius Paulus in the government of
that island. And on this coin the same title, AÑOYПIATOΣ, is
given to Proclus, which is given by St. Luke to Sergius Pau-
lus (a). That Cyprus was a proconsulate, is also evident from
an ancient inscription of Caligula's reign, (the predecessor of
Claudius), in which Aquius Scaura is called the proconsul of
Cyprus (b).

(a) Bishop Marsh's Lectures, part V. pp. 85, 86. An engraving of
the above noticed coin may be seen in Havercamp's edition of the The-
saurus Morellianus, in the plate belonging to p. 106. (b) Gruteri
Corpus Inscriptionum, tom. 1. pars. ii. p. 360. no. 3. edit. Grævii.
Amst. 1707.

2 The word Elymas is derived, by Pfeiffer, from the Arabic by, sciens, sapiens. See his Dubia vexata, p. 943. Loesneri observ. ad Nov. Testam. e Philone Alexand. p. 204, and Kuinoel.

3 It is uncertain on what account the name of Paul is used by
St. Luke through the remainder of his narrative, instead of
Saul(a). Some have supposed that Paul was the Roman name,
given him from his birth, with his Jewish patronymic, Saul.
Others, that it was a token of his humility; the word "Saul"
meaning beloved, or desirable; and "Paul" denoting "weak,
or little." Others, and it is the most general opinion, that the
name Paul was assumed by the apostle in memory of the con-
version of the proconsul Sergius Paulus: A primo ecclesiæ
spolio proconsule Sergio Paulo victoriæ suæ trophæa retulit,
erexitque vexillum ut Paulo, ex Saulo vocaretur (b). Others,
that it was assumed as a name more pleasing to the ears of his
audiences among the Gentiles.

(a) See on this point Witsii Melet. Leidens, p. 47. (b) Jerome, lib. i.
ap. Kuinoel in lib. Hist. N. T. comment. vol. iv. p. 457. 9. v.
M

VOL. II.

Paphos.

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