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| Homily XXVIII on Acts xiii. 4, 5. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Homily XXVIII.
Acts XIII. 4, 5
“So they, being sent forth
by the Holy Ghost, departed unto Seleucia; and from thence they sailed
to Cyprus. And when they were at Salamis, they preached the word of God
in the synagogues of the Jews: and they had also John to their
minister.”
As soon
as they were ordained they went forth, and hasted to Cyprus, that being
a place where was no ill-design hatching against them, and where
moreover the Word had been sown already. In Antioch there were
(teachers) enough, and Phœnice too was near to Palestine; but
Cyprus not so. However, you are not to make a question of the why and
wherefore, when it is the Spirit that directs their movements: for they
were not only ordained by the Spirit, but sent forth by Him likewise.
“And when they were come to Salamis, they preached the word of
God in the synagogues of the Jews.” Do you mark how they make a
point of preaching the word to them first, not to make them more
contentious?651
651 That
Barnabas and Saul preached first to the Jews for the reason mentioned
by Chrysostom is wholly improbable. The mission to the Gentiles
entrusted to them never cancelled, in their minds, their obligation to
the Jews as having in the plan of God an economic precedence. Paul not
only maintained throughout his life an ardent love and longing for his
people (Rom. ix.) and a confident hope of their conversion (Rom. xi.), but regarded
them as still the people of privilege, on the principle: “To the
Jew first, and also to the Greek.” (Rom. i. 16.) This view,
together with the fact that they were Jews, constitutes a sufficient
explanation for their resort to the synagogues. Additional reasons may
be found in the fact that in the synagogues might be found those who
were religiously inclined—of both Jewish and Gentile
nationality—and who were therefore most susceptible to the
influence of Christian truth, and in the fact that the freedom of
speech in the synagogue-service offered the most favorable opportunity
to expound the Gospel.—G.B.S. | The persons mentioned before
“spake to none but to Jews only” (ch. xi. 19), and so here they
betook them to the synagogues. “And when they had gone through
the isle unto Paphos, they found a certain sorcerer, a false prophet, a
Jew, whose name was Bar-jesus: which was with the deputy of the
country, Sergius Paulus, a prudent man; who called for Barnabas and
Saul, and desired to hear the word of God. But Elymas the sorcerer (for
so is his name by interpretation) withstood them, seeking to turn away
the deputy from the faith.” (v. 6–8.) Again a Jew sorcerer,
as was Simon. And observe this man, how, while they preached to the
others, he did not take it much amiss, but only when they approached
the proconsul. And then in respect of the proconsul the wonder is, that
although prepossessed by the man’s sorcery, he was nevertheless
willing to hear the Apostles. So it was with the Samaritans: and from
the competition (συγκρίσεως) the victory appears, the sorcery being worsted.
Everywhere, vainglory and love of power are a (fruitful) source of
evils! “But Saul, who is also Paul,”—(v. 9) here his name is
changed at the same time that he is ordained, as it was in
Peter’s case,652
652 Chrysostom here hints at the most probable explanation of the
change of name in the Acts from Saul to Paul, although that change is
not strictly simultaneous with his ordination which occurred at Antioch
(v. 3), whereas the first use
of the name “Paul” is in connection with his labors at
Paphos, after he had preached for a time in Salamis. It seems probable
that, as in so many cases, Paul, a Hellenist, had two names, in Hebrew
Saul, and in Greek Paul, and that now when he enters distinctively upon
his mission to the Gentiles, his Gentile name comes into exclusive use.
(So, among recent critics, De Wette, Lechler, Alford, Neander, Gloag.)
Other opinions are: (1) that he took the name Paul—signifying
little—out of modesty (Augustin); (2) that he was named
Paul, either by himself (Jerome), by his fellow-Christians (Meyer) or
by the proconsul (Ewald), in honor of the conversion of Sergius
Paulus.—G.B.S. | —“filled
with the Holy Ghost, looked upon him, and said, O full of all guile and
all villany, thou child of the devil:” (v. 10) and observe, this is not abuse, but accusation: for so
ought forward, impudent people to be rebuked “thou enemy of all
righteousness;” here he lays bare what was in the thoughts of the
man, while under pretext of saving he was ruining the proconsul:
“wilt thou not cease,” he says, “to pervert the ways
of the Lord?” (He says it) both confidently (αξιοπίστως), It is not with us thou art warring, nor art thou
fighting (with us), but “the ways of the Lord” thou art
perverting, and with praise (of these, he adds) “the right”
ways. “And now, behold, the hand of the Lord is upon thee, and
thou shalt be blind.” (v.
11.)
It was the sign by which he was himself converted, and by this he would
fain convert this man. As also that expression, “for a
season,” puts it not as an act of punishing, but as meant for his
conversion: had it been for punishment, he would have made him
lastingly blind, but now it is not so, but “for a season”
(and this), that he may gain the proconsul. For, as he was prepossessed
by the sorcery, it was well to teach him a lesson by this infliction
(and the sorcerer also), in the same way as the magicians (in Egypt)
were taught by the boils.653
653 It
can hardly be meant that the smiting of Elymas with blindness was not a
judicial infliction to himself; but that the proconsul should
see it rather on its merciful side as being only ἄχρι
καιροῦ. The
Hebraistic use of Χεὶρ
Κυρίου clearly
implies a divine judgment upon Elymas as does the whole force of the
narrative.—G.B.S. | (Ex. ix. 11.)
“And immediately there fell on him a mist and a darkness: and he
went about seeking some to lead him by the hand. Then the deputy, when
he saw what was done, believed, being astonished at the doctrine of the
Lord.” (v. 12.) But observe, how they
do not linger there, as (they might have been tempted to do) now that
the proconsul was a believer, nor are enervated by being courted and
honored, but immediately keep on with their work, and set out for the
country on the opposite coast. “Now when Paul and his company
loosed from Paphos, they came to Perga in Pamphylia; and John departing
from them returned to Jerusalem. But when they departed from Perga,
they came to Antioch in Pisidia, and went into the synagogue on the
sabbath day, and sat down.” (v. 13, 14.) And here again they
entered the synagogues, in the character of Jews, that they might not
be treated as enemies, and be driven away: and in this way they carried
the whole matter successfully. “And after the reading of the Law
and the Prophets, the rulers of the synagogue sent unto them, saying,
Ye men and brethren, if ye have any word of exhortation for the people,
say on.” (v.
15.)
From this point, we learn the history of Paul’s doings, as in
what was said above we have learned not a little about Peter. But let
us review what has been said.
(Recapitulation.) “And
when they were come to Salamis,” the metropolis of Cyprus,
“they preached the word of God.” (v. 5.) They had spent a year in Antioch: it behooved that they
should go hither also (to Cyprus) and not sit permanently where they
were (the converts in Cyprus): needed greater teachers. See too how
they remain no time in Seleucia, knowing that (the people there) might
have reaped much benefit from the neighboring city (of Antioch): but
they hasten on to the more pressing duties. When they came to the
metropolis of the island, they were earnest to disabuse (διορθωσαι) the proconsul. But that it is no flattery that (the
writer) says, “he was with the proconsul, a prudent man”
(v. 7), you may learn from
the facts; for he needed not many discourses, and himself wished to
hear them. And654
654 Καὶ τὰ
ὀνόματα δὲ
λέγει·
ἐπειδὴ
προσφάτως
ἔγραφον· &
234·ρα κ. τ. λ.
A. B. C. N. Cat. It is not clear whether this relates to the two names,
Barjesus and Elymas, (if so we might, read ἔγραφεν,
“since he wrote just before, (whose name was Barjesus, but now
Elymas, for so is his name interpreted,”) or to the change of the
Apostle’s name “Then Saul, who is also called Paul,”
(and then perhaps the sense of the latter clause may be, Since the
change of name was recent: ἐπειδἡ
προσφάτως
μετεγράφη or the like.) The mod. text substitutes, “But he also
recites the names of the cities: showing that since they had but
recently received the word, there was need (for them) to be confirmed,
to continue in the faith: for which reason also they frequently visited
them.” | he mentions also the names. * * *
Observe, how he said nothing to the sorcerer, until he gave him an
occasion: but they only “preached the word of the Lord.”
Since (though Elymas) saw the rest attending to them, he looked only to
this one object, that the proconsul might not be won over. Why did not
(Paul) perform some other miracle? Because there was none equal to
this, the taking the enemy captive. And observe, he first impeaches,
and then punishes, him. He shows how justly the man deserved to suffer,
by his saying, “O full of all deceit” (v. 10): (“full of all,”) he says: nothing wanting to
the full measure: and he well says, of all “deceit,” for
the man was playing the part of a hypocrite.—“Child of the
devil,” because he was doing his work: “enemy of all
righteousness,” since this (which they preached) was the whole of
righteousness (though at the same time): I suppose in these words he
reproves his manner of life. His words were not prompted by anger, and
to show this, the writer premises, “filled with the Holy
Ghost,” that is, with His operation. “And now behold the
hand of the Lord is upon thee.” (v. 11.) It was not vengeance then, but healing: for it is as
though he said: “It is not I that do it, but the hand of
God.” Mark how unassuming! No “light,”655
655 Mod.
text omits this sentence. The connection is: Paul inflicts this
blindness upon him, not in vengeance, but in order to his conversion,
remembering how the Lord Himself had dealt with him on the way to
Damascus. But it was not here, as then—no “light shown
round about him from heaven.” | as in the case of Paul, “shone round
about him.” (ch. ix.
3.)
“Thou shalt be blind,” he says, “not seeing the sun
for a season,” that he may give him opportunity for repentance:
for we nowhere find them wishing to be made conspicuous by the more
stern (exercise of their authority), even though it was against enemies
that this was put forth: in respect of those of their own body (they
used severity), and with good reason, but in dealing with those
without, not so; that (the obedience of faith) might not seem to be
matter of compulsion and fear. It is a proof of his blindness, his
“seeking some to lead him by the hand.” (ch. v. 1. ff.) And656
656 Καὶ (Εἶτα mod.)
(ὁρᾷ C. N. Cat.) τὴν
πήρωσιν (Cat. πύρωσιν) ὁ ἀνθ. καὶ (om. Cat.) μόνος
ἐπίστευσεν
(mod. εὐθὺς
πιστεύει). The reading in Cat. is meant for emendation: “And mark
the fervor (or kindling, viz. of the proconsul’s mind): the proc.
alone believed” etc. | the proconsul sees the blindness inflicted,
“and when he saw what was done, he believed:” and both
alone believed not merely this, but, “being astonished at the
doctrine of the Lord” (v.
12):
he saw that these things were not mere words, nor trickery. Mark how he
loved to receive instruction from his teachers, though he was in a
station of so high authority. And (Paul) said not to the sorcerer,
“Wilt thou not cease to pervert” the proconsul?657
657 Mod.
text adds, “but, the ways of the Lord, which is more: that he may
not seem to pay court.” | What may be the reason of John’s
going back from them? For “John,” it says, “departing
from them returned to Jerusalem” (v. 13): (he does it) because they are undertaking a still longer
journey: and yet he was their attendant, and as for the danger, they
incurred it (not he).—Again, when they were come to Perga, they
hastily passed by the other cities, for they were in haste to the
metropolis, Antioch. And observe how concise the historian is.
“They sat down in the synagogue,” he says, and, “on
the sabbath day” (v. 14,
15):
that they might prepare the way beforehand for the Word. And they do
not speak first, but when invited: since as strangers, they called upon
them to do so. Had they not waited, there would have been no discourse.
Here for the first time we have Paul preaching. And observe his
prudence: where the word was already sown, he passes on: but where
there was none (to preach), he makes a stay: as he himself writes:
“Yea, so have I strived to preach the Gospel, not where Christ
was named.” (Rom. xv. 20.) Great courage
this also. Truly, from the very outset, a wonderful man! crucified,
ready for all encounters (παρατεταγμένος), he knew how great grace he had obtained, and he brought
to it zeal equivalent. He was not angry with John: for this was not for
him:658
658 οὐ γὰρ
τούτου ἦν. “Down. renders it non enim iræ deditus erat,
he was not the man for this (anger): or perhaps, For he (John) was not
his, not associated by him, but by Barnabas.” Ben. But the
meaning should rather be, “So great a work was not for him
(Mark); he was not equal to it.” The connection is of this kind:
“Paul knew how great grace had been bestowed on him, and on his
own part he brought corresponding zeal. When Mark withdrew, Paul was
not angry with him, knowing that the like grace was not bestowed on
him, therefore neither could there be the like σπουδὴ on his part.” | but he kept to the work, he quailed not,
he was unappalled, when shut up in the midst of a host. Observe how
wisely it is ordered that Paul should not preach at Jerusalem: the very
hearing that he is become a believer, this of itself is enough for
them; for him to preach, they never would have endured, such was their
hatred of him: so he departs far away, where he was not known. But659
659 In
mss. and Edd. this portion, to the end of the
paragraph, is placed after the part relating to Elymas, “He first
convicted,” etc. and immediately before the Morale, as if the
occasion of the invective against φιλαρχία and κενοδοξία
were furnished by the conduct of the rulers of the
synagogue: but see above, p. 178, in the expos. of v. 8, πανταχοῦ ἡ
κενοδοξία
καὶ ἡ
φιλαρχία
αἴτιαι τῶν
κακῶν, and below, the
allusion to the blindness of Elymas. | it is well done, that “they entered
the synagogue on the sabbath day” when all were collected
together. “And after the reading of the Law and the Prophets, the
rulers of the synagogue sent unto them, saying, Ye men and brethren, if
ye have any word or exhortation for the people, say on.”
(v. 15.) Behold how they do
this without grudging, but no longer after this. If ye did wish this
(really), there was more need to exhort.
He first convicted the sorcerer
(and showed), what he was; and that he was such, the sign showed:
“thou shalt be blind, not seeing the sun” this was a sign
of the blindness of his soul: “for a season” (v. 11): he says, to bring him
to repentance. But, oh that love of rule! oh, that lust of vainglory!
how it does overturn and ruin everything; makes people stand up against
their own, against each other’s salvation; renders them blind
indeed, and dark, insomuch that they have even to seek for some to lead
them by the hand! Oh that they did even this, oh that they did seek
were it but some to lead them by the hand! But no, they no longer
endure this, they take the whole matter into their own hands. (This
vice) will let no man see: like a mist and thick darkness it spreads
itself over them, not letting any see through it. What pleas shall we
have to offer, we who for one evil affection, overcome another evil
affection (supra p. 176), but not for the fear of God! For
example, many who are both lewd and covetous, have for their
niggardliness put a bridle upon their lust, while other such, on the
contrary, have for pleasure’s sake, despised riches. Again, those
who are both the one and the other, have by the lust of vainglory
overcome both, lavishing their money unsparingly, and practising
temperance to no (good) purpose; others again, who are exceedingly
vainglorious, have despised that evil affection, submitting to many
vile disgraces for the sake of their amours, or for the sake of their
money: others again, that they may satiate their anger, have chosen to
suffer losses without end, and care for none of them, provided only
they may work their own will. And yet, what passion can do with us, the
fear of God is impotent to effect! Why speak I of passion? What shame
before men can do with us, the fear of God has not the strength to
effect! Many are the things we do right and wrong, from a feeling of
shame before men; but God we fear not. How many have been shamed by
regard to the opinions of men into flinging away money! How many have
mistakenly made it a point of honor to give themselves up to the
service of their friends (only), to their hurt! How many from respect
for their friendships have been shamed into numberless wrong acts!
Since then both passion and regard for the opinion of men are able to
put us upon doing wrong things and right, it is idle to say, “we
cannot:” we can, if we have the mind: and we ought to have the
mind. Why canst not thou overcome the love of glory, when others do
overcome it, having the same soul as thou, and the same body; bearing
the same form, and living the same life? Think of God, think of the
glory that is from above: weigh against that the things present, and
thou wilt quickly recoil from this worldly glory. If at all events thou
covet glory, covet that which is glory, indeed. What kind of glory is
it, when it begets infamy? What kind of glory, when it compels one to
desire the honor of those who are inferior, and stands in need of that?
Real honor is the gaining the esteem of those who are greater than
one’s self. If at all events thou art enamoured of glory, be thou
rather enamoured of that which comes from God. If enamoured of that
glory thou despisest this world’s glory, thou shalt see how
ignoble this is: but so long as thou seest not that glory, neither wilt
thou be able to see this, how foul it is, how ridiculous. For as those
who are under the spell of some wicked, hideously ugly woman, so long
as they are in love with her, cannot see her ill-favoredness, because
their passion spreads a darkness over their judgment: so is it here
also: so long as we are possessed with the passion, we cannot perceive
what a thing it is. How then might we be rid of it? Think of those who
(for the sake of glory) have spent countless sums, and now are none the
better for it:660
660 καὶ οὐδὲν
ἀπ᾽ αὐτῆς
καρπουμένους, i.e. reaping no fruit from it (the glory which they
sought here) where they are now. Mod. text οὐδὲν ἀπ᾽
αὐτῶν
καρπωσαμένους: “reaped no
fruit while here, from their money which they
squandered”—mistaking the meaning of the passage, which is,
“They got what they sought, but where is it
now?” | think of the dead, what glory they
got, and (now) this glory is nowhere abiding, but all perished and come
to naught: bethink thee how it is only a name, and has nothing real in
it. For say, what is glory? give me some definition. “The being
admired by all,” you will say. With justice, or also not with
justice? For if it be not with justice, this is not admiration, but
crimination (κατηγορία), and flattery, and misrepresentation (διαβολή). But if you say, With justice, why that is impossible: for
in the populace there are no right judgments; those that minister to
their lusts, those are the persons they admire. And if you would (see
the proof of this), mark those who give away their substance to the
harlots, to the charioteers, to the dancers. But you will say, we do
not mean these, but those who are just and upright, and able to do
great and noble good acts. Would that they wished it, and they soon
would do good: but as things are, they do nothing of the kind. Who, I
ask you, now praises the just and upright man? Nay, it is just the
contrary. Could anything be more preposterous than for a just man, when
doing any such good act, to seek glory of the many—as if an
artist of consummate skill, employed upon an Emperor’s portrait,
should wish to have the praises of the ignorant! Moreover, a man who
looks for honor from men, will soon enough desist from the acts which
virtue enjoins. If he will needs be gaping for their praises, he will
do just what they wish, not what himself wishes. What then would I
advise you? You must look only to God, to the praise that is from Him,
perform all things which are pleasing to Him, and go after the good
things (that are with Him), not be gaping for anything that is of man:
for this mars both fasting and prayer and alms-giving, and makes all
our good deeds void. Which that it be not our case, let us flee this
passion. To one thing alone let us look, to the praise which is from
God, to the being accepted of Him, to the commendation from our common
Master; that, having passed through our present life virtuously, we may
obtain the promised blessings together with them that love Him, through
the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom to the Father,
together with the Holy Ghost, be glory, might, honor, now and ever,
world without end. Amen.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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