Acts Chapter 22 | |
Translation by William E. Paul |
by Charles Dailey (Black underlined words match words in the Bible text.) |
1) "Brothers and fathers, listen to the defense I want to make to you." | � Paul's opening statement is strikingly similar to the words that He heard Stephen use many years before. Acts 7:2. - He addressed the crowd respectfully even though he had been roughed up by them. |
2) And when they heard him speaking in the Hebrew language, they listened all the more quietly. So, he continued, | � Listeners were impressed by his command of their Hebrew (Aramaic) language. |
3) "I am a Jew, born in Tarsus, in Cilicia, but raised [here] in this city [i.e., Jerusalem]. [I was] instructed by Gamaliel [i.e., a renowned Jewish rabbi of the time] according to the strictest methods of observing the law of our forefathers. [I was very] eager to serve God, just as all of you are here today. | � Paul advances three credentials they should accept: 1. He was a Jew from Jerusalem 2. He had studied under their finest teacher 3. He, too, had seriously opposed the message of Jesus of Nazareth. - While foreign born, he was raised locally. - Gamaliel had died six years before. We heard from him last in Acts 5:34. - Paul had very, very orthodox training. - Eager here is: "boiling over." |
4) And I persecuted this 'Way' [even to the point of] putting people to death. [I had] both men and women bound [in chains] and locked up in prisons. | � He could not have opposed Jesus of Nazareth more! - Way seems to be a designation the group understood. - Notice that women were included. Think of the entire families that were disrupted. |
5) The head priest can also verify all this, and so can the body of [Jewish] elders. They furnished me with letters to our fellow-Jews in Damascus, to which I also traveled to bring people back here to Jerusalem, bound in chains to be punished. | � The new high priest is Ananias, son of Nebedaeus. He is a newcomer to our story. - fellow-Jews - He makes a strong identification with the religion of his listeners. - Paul was even more anxious than his listeners to have God worshiped "properly." |
6) "And then it suddenly happened, about noon, as I was traveling and got close to Damascus, that this brilliant light from the sky flashed all around me. | � The event that changed his life is described. - That it was noon is new information not included in Luke's narration of chapter 9. |
7) I fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to me, 'Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?' | � He persecuted Christ's body. - Jesus is closely identified with His Body, the church. |
8) I answered, 'Who are you, sir?' And the voice answered me, 'I am Jesus from Nazareth, the One you are persecuting.' | � The from Nazareth information is new. |
9) Those who accompanied me saw the light clearly, but did not hear [i.e., understand] the voice of the one speaking to me. | � Others were not blinded by the light. They did not understand the words that were spoken. - This is new information. |
10) Then I asked, 'What am I to do, Lord?' And the Lord replied to me, 'Get up, go into Damascus and there you will be told everything [I have] appointed for you to do.' | � Paul begins to submit to Jesus. There are many steps ahead. - This question showing submission is new information. - Suspense! Paul had been picked - but what for? |
11) And since I could not see [anything] because of the brilliance of the light, I had to be led by the hand of those with me into Damascus. | � The leader is now being led. - Our guess is they were on foot, not on animals. - This must have been very hard on the ego of such an angry man. |
12) "[Then] Ananias, a man who was devoted to [observing] the law of Moses and who had a good reputation among all the Jews who lived there, | � Ananias was not a marginal Jew. He was a keeper of the law of Moses and had a good reputation in the Jewish community in Damascus. |
13) came and stood beside me and said, 'Brother Saul, regain your sight.' And at that very moment I looked at him [fully able to see again]. | � Paul was a brother in Moses. Cp. Luke 6:42. |
14) And he said [to me], 'The God of our forefathers has appointed you to know His will and to see the Righteous One [i.e., Jesus], and to hear His voice [speaking to you]. | � Paul had been chosen by God from birth. Galatians 1:15 - Paul had both seen and heard Jesus of Nazareth. |
15) For you will be His witness to all people of what you have seen and heard. | � He is to witness like the 12. Acts 1:8. - all people certainly implies the Gentiles. |
16) So now, what are you waiting for? Get up and be immersed [into Christ], and have your sins washed away as you appeal to His name [i.e., to Christ's authority].' | � The point of removing sin is immersion into Christ. He had encountered Christ and believed what He said, but Paul still needed to take action. - Most of the information of this verse is new. - His name = Jesus' authority. Paul has just told his listeners (by quoting Ananias) that their sins could be washed away by obeying Jesus. They were reminded of sins by their Jewish practices. Heb. 10:3. |
17) "And it happened that when I returned to Jerusalem and was praying in the Temple, I fell into a trance [i.e., a semi-conscious vision-like state]. | � Paul had not abandoned this Temple. He came here to pray after his encounter with Christ. |
18) And I saw [and heard] the Lord saying to me, 'Hurry up, get out of Jerusalem quickly, because the people [here] will reject your testimony about me.' | � Like so many new believers, Paul thought his colleagues would accept the truth as he had. |
19) And I replied, 'Lord, they know very well that I am [the one] who imprisoned and beat the believers [who assembled] in every synagogue, | � Jerusalem had numerous synagogues. - Christians still attended the synagogue. |
20) and when your witness Stephen was killed, I stood there, approving [of it] and [even] guarding the clothing of those who stoned him to death.' | � Paul remembered Stephen's death and took the blame. |
21) Then the Lord said to me, 'Go, for I will send you far away from here to the Gentiles.'" | � The implication is that Gentiles will accept what the Jews rejected. |
22) The people had listened to Paul speaking up to this point [i.e., until he said the word "Gentiles"], then they raised their voices and shouted, "Do away with such a person from the earth; it is not right for him to live." | � 22.) We must remember that Luke is a Gentile writing primarily to another Gentile, Theophilus. The prejudice against Gentiles is extreme. - Their sense of right was badly skewed. |
23) And while the people shouted, waved around [torn] clothing and threw dust into the air, | � We can feel the emotion across 19 centuries. |
24) the commander ordered Paul to be brought to headquarters and requested that he be interrogated by means of a flogging, in order to learn the reason why people were shouting against him. | � Paul's right to speak was revoked for his own safety. - Flogging was terrible; worse than any previous beating. - The commander assumed the people had a case. He may not have been able to understand Paul's defense in Hebrew. |
25) Just as they were tying him up [in preparation] for the flogging, Paul said to the officer nearby, "Is it lawful for you to whip a Roman [citizen] before he has been [legally] condemned?" | � This was illegal twice over. It is illegal to tie up a Roman citizen before he has been found guilty and it is worse to flog one. |
26) When the officer heard this, he [immediately] went and told the commander, saying, "What are you going to do? For this man is a Roman citizen." | � This would mean the person responsible would be treated the same way. |
27) Then the commander came and said to him, "Tell me, are you [really] a Roman citizen?" Paul said, "Yes." | � The punishment for a false claim to Roman citizenship was death. |
28) The commander answered, "It cost me a large sum of money to obtain this [right of] citizenship." Paul replied, "But I am a Roman citizen by birth." | � Citizenship was sold by Claudius' wife Messalina as an example of what he is talking about. Claudius Lysias may have been a Greek. - Paul came from a family that had legal Roman citizenship. |
29) Then those who were about to interrogate Paul [with whips] immediately left him, and the commander also became fearful when he realized that he had chained a Roman citizen [illegally]. | � "We're out of here." They were fearful of what might happen if Paul filed charges against them. - In chains in preparation for flogging. - Claudius Lysias continued to hold Paul to preserve the life of this Roman citizen. |
30) But the next day the commander released Paul[from the chains] because he wanted to know what specific charges the Jews had against him. So, he ordered the leading priests and the entire [Jewish] Council to assemble, then brought Paul down and placed him in front of them. | � 30.) Luke generally presents government officials as intelligent and conscientious men that can't figure out Paul's message. - Claudius Lysias wanted to understand the charges against Paul. - down from the Roman Tower of Antonia. |
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