Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Paul having been sent bound from Judea to Rome, made his Defense, and was acquitted of every Charge. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXII.—Paul having been sent bound from
Judea to Rome, made his Defense, and was acquitted of every
Charge.
1. Festus469
469 The
exact year of the accession of Festus is not known, but it is known
that his death occurred before the summer of 62 a.d.; for at that time his successor, Albinus, was already
procurator, as we can see from Josephus, B. J. VI. 5. 3. But
from the events recorded by Josephus as happening during his term of
office, we know he must have been procurator at least a year; his
accession, therefore, took place certainly as early as 61 a.d., and probably at least a year earlier, i.e. in 60
a.d., the date fixed by Wieseler. The widest
possible margin for his accession is from 59–61. Upon this whole
question, see Wieseler, p. 66 sqq. Festus died while in office. He
seems to have been a just and capable governor,—in this quite a
contrast to his predecessor. | was sent by Nero to be
Felix’s successor. Under him Paul, having made his defense, was
sent bound to Rome.470
470 Acts xxv. sqq. The
determination of the year in which Paul was sent as a prisoner to Rome
depends in part upon the determination of the year of Festus’
accession. He was in Rome (which he reached in the spring) at least two
years before the Neronic persecution (June, 64 a.d.), therefore as early as 62 a.d. He was sent from Cæsarea the previous autumn,
therefore as early as the autumn of 61. If Festus became procurator in
61, this must have been the date. But if, as is probable, Festus became
procurator in 60, then Paul was sent to Rome in the autumn of the same
year, and reached Rome in the spring of 61. This is now the commonly
accepted date; but the year 62 cannot be shut out (cf. Wieseler,
ibid.). Wieseler shows conclusively that Festus cannot have
become procurator before 60 a.d., and hence
Paul cannot have been taken to Rome before the fall of that
year. | Aristarchus was
with him, whom he also somewhere in his epistles quite naturally calls
his fellow-prisoner.471 And Luke, who wrote the
Acts of the Apostles,472
472 See
below, Bk. III. chap. 4. | brought his
history to a close at this point, after stating that Paul spent two
whole years at Rome as a prisoner at large, and preached the word of
God without restraint.473
2. Thus after he had made his
defense it is said that the apostle was sent again upon the ministry of
preaching,474
474 Eusebius is the first writer to record the release of Paul from a
first, and his martyrdom during a second Roman imprisonment. He
introduces the statement with the formula λόγος
žχει, which indicates
probably that he has only an oral tradition as his authority, and his
efforts to establish the fact by exegetical arguments show how weak the
tradition was. Many maintain that Eusebius follows no tradition here,
but records simply his own conclusion formed from a study of the
Pastoral Epistles, which apparently necessitate a second imprisonment.
But were this the case, he would hardly have used the formula
λόγος
žχει. The report may have
arisen solely upon exegetical grounds, but it can hardly have
originated with Eusebius himself. In accordance with this tradition,
Eusebius, in his Chron., gives the date of Paul’s death as
67 a.d. Jerome (de vir. ill. 5) and
other later writers follow Eusebius (though Jerome gives the date as 68
instead of 67), and the tradition soon became firmly established (see
below, chap. 25, note 5). Scholars are greatly divided as to the fact
of a second imprisonment. Nearly all that defend the genuineness of the
Pastoral Epistles assume a second imprisonment, though some (e.g.
Wieseler, Ebrard, Reuss and others) defend the epistles while assuming
only one imprisonment; but this is very difficult. On the other hand,
most opponents of the epistles (e.g. the Tübingen critics and the
majority of the new critical school) deny the second imprisonment. As
to the place where Paul spent the interval—supposing him to have
been released—there is again a difference of opinion. The
Pastoral Epistles, if assumed to be genuine, seem to necessitate
another visit to the Orient. But for such a visit there is no ancient
tradition, although Paul himself, in the Epistle to the Philippians,
expresses his expectation of making such a visit. On the other hand,
there is an old tradition that he visited Spain (which must of course
have been during this interval, as he did not reach it before the first
imprisonment). The Muratorian Fragment (from the end of the second
century) records this tradition in a way to imply that it was
universally known. Clement of Rome (Epistle to the Corinthians,
c. 5.) is also claimed as a witness for such a visit, but the
interpretation of his words is doubtful, so that little weight can be
laid upon his statement. In later times the tradition of this visit to
Spain dropped out of the Church. The strongest argument against the
visit is the absence of any trace of it in Spain itself. If any church
there could have claimed the great apostle to the Gentiles as its
founder, it seems that it must have asserted its claim and the
tradition have been preserved at least in that church. This appears to
the writer a fatal argument against a journey to Spain. On the other
hand, the absence of all tradition of another journey to the Orient
does not militate against such a visit, for tradition at any place
might easily preserve the fact of a visit of the apostle, without
preserving an accurate account of the number of his visits if more than
one were made. Of the defenders of the Pastoral Epistles, that accept a
second imprisonment, some assume simply a journey to the Orient, others
assume also the journey to Spain. Between the spring of 63 a.d., the time when he was probably released, if released,
and the date of his death (at the earliest the summer of 64), there is
time enough, but barely so, for both journeys. If the date of
Paul’s death be put later with Eusebius and Jerome (as many
modern critics put it), the time is of course quite sufficient. Compare
the various Lives of Paul, Commentaries, etc., and especially, among
recent works, Schaff’s Church Hist. I. p. 231 sqq.;
Weiss’ Einleitung in das N. T. p. 283 sqq.;
Holtzmann’s Einleitung, p. 295 sqq.; and
Weizsäcker’s Apostolisches Zeitalter, p. 453
sqq. | and that upon coming to the same
city a second time he suffered martyrdom.475
475 See
below, chap. 25, note 6. | In
this imprisonment he wrote his second epistle to Timothy,476
476 Eusebius looked upon the Pastoral Epistles as undoubtedly genuine,
and placed them among the Homologumena, or undisputed writings
(compare Bk. III. chaps. 3 and 25). The external testimony for them is
very strong, but their genuineness has, during the present century,
been quite widely denied upon internal grounds. The advanced critical
scholars of Germany treat their non-Pauline authorship as completely
established, and many otherwise conservative scholars follow their
lead. It is impossible here to give the various arguments for or
against their genuineness; we may refer the reader particularly to
Holtzmann’s Die Pastoralbriefe, kritisch und exegetisch
behandelt (1880), and to his Einleitung (1886), for the most
complete presentation of the case against the genuineness; and to
Weiss’ Einleitung in das N. T. (1886), p. 286 sqq., and to
his Commentary on the Pastoral Epistles, in the fifth edition of the
Meyer Series, for a defense of their genuineness, and also to
Woodruff’s article in the Andover Review, October, 1886,
for a brief and somewhat popular discussion of the subject. The second
epistle must have been written latest of all Paul’s epistles,
just before his death,—at the termination of his second
captivity, or of his first, if his second be denied. | in which he mentions his first defense
and his impending death.
3. But hear his testimony on
these matters: “At my first answer,” he says, “no man
stood with me, but all men forsook me: I pray God that it may not be
laid to their charge. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me, and
strengthened me; that by me the preaching might be fully known, and
that all the Gentiles might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth
of the lion.”477
4. He plainly indicates in these
words that on the former occasion, in order that the preaching might be
fulfilled by him, he was rescued from the mouth of the lion, referring,
in this expression, to Nero, as is probable on account of the
latter’s cruelty. He did not therefore afterward add the similar
statement, “He will rescue me from the mouth of the lion”;
for he saw in the spirit that his end would not be long
delayed.
5. Wherefore he adds to the
words, “And he delivered me from the mouth of the lion,”
this sentence: “The Lord shall deliver me from every evil work,
and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom,”478 indicating his speedy martyrdom; which
he also foretells still more clearly in the same epistle, when he
writes, “For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my
departure is at hand.”479
6. In his second epistle to
Timothy, moreover, he indicates that Luke was with him when he wrote,480 but at his first defense not even he.481 Whence it is probable that Luke wrote the
Acts of the Apostles at that time, continuing his history down to the
period when he was with Paul.482
482 This is a very commonly accepted opinion among conservative
commentators, who thus explain the lack of mention of the persecution
of Nero and of the death of Paul. On the other hand, some who accept
Luke’s authorship of the Acts, put the composition into the
latter part of the century and explain the omission of the persecution
and the death of Paul from the object of the work, e.g. Weiss, who
dates the Gospel of Luke between 70 and 80, and thus brings the Acts
down to a still later date (see his Einleitung, p. 585 sqq.). It
is now becoming quite generally admitted that Luke’s Gospel was
written after the destruction of Jerusalem, and if this be so, the Acts
must have been written still later. There is in fact no reason for
supposing the book to have been written at the point of time at which
its account of Paul ceases. The design of the book (its text is found
in the eighth verse of the first chapter) was to give an account of the
progress of the Church from Jerusalem to Rome, not to write the life of
Paul. The record of Paul’s death at the close of the book would
have been quite out of harmony with this design, and would have formed
a decided anti-climax, as the author was wise enough to understand. He
was writing, not a life of Paul, nor of any apostle or group of
apostles, but a history of the planting of the Church of Christ. The
advanced critics, who deny that the Acts were written by a pupil of
Paul, of course put its composition much later,—some into the
time of Domitian, most into the second century. But even such critics
admit the genuineness of certain portions of the book (the celebrated
“We” passages), and the old Tübingen theory of
intentional misrepresentation on the part of the author is finding less
favor even among the most radical critics. |
7. But these things have been
adduced by us to show that Paul’s martyrdom did not take place at
the time of that Roman sojourn which Luke records.
8. It is probable indeed that as
Nero was more disposed to mildness in the beginning, Paul’s
defense of his doctrine was more easily received; but that when he had
advanced to the commission of lawless deeds of daring, he made the
apostles as well as others the subjects of his attacks.483
483 Whether Eusebius’ conclusion be correct or not, it is a fact
that Nero became much more cruel and tyrannical in the latter part of
his reign. The famous “first five years,” however
exaggerated the reports about them, must at least have been of a very
different character from the remainder of his reign. But those five
years of clemency and justice were past before Paul reached
Rome. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|