Verses 1-3
Acts 7:1-3. Then said the
high-priest — Who was president
of the council, and, as such,
the mouth of the court; Are
these things so? — Are they as
these witnesses have deposed?
for thou art permitted to speak
for thyself, and make thy
defence. And he said — Stephen
had been accused of blasphemy
against Moses, and even against
God; and of speaking against the
temple and the law, threatening
that Jesus would destroy the one
and change the other. In answer
to this accusation, rehearsing,
as it were, the articles of his
historical creed, he speaks of
God with high reverence, and a
grateful sense of a long series
of acts of goodness to the
Israelites; and of Moses with
great respect, on account of his
important and honourable
employments under God; of the
temple with regard, as being
built to the honour of God; yet
not with such superstition as
the Jews; putting them in mind,
that no temple could comprehend
God. And he was going on, no
doubt, when he was interrupted
by their clamour, to speak to
the last point, the destruction
of the temple, and the change of
the law by Christ. The sum of
his discourse is this: I
acknowledge the glory of God
revealed to the fathers, Acts
7:2; the calling of Moses, Acts
7:34, &c.; the dignity of the
law, Acts 7:8; Acts 7:38; Acts
7:44; the holiness of this
place, Acts 7:7; Acts 7:45; Acts
7:47. And, indeed, the law is
more ancient than the temple;
the promise more ancient than
the law. For God showed himself
the God of Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, and their children,
freely, Acts 7:2, &c., 9, &c.,
17, &c., 32, 34, 45; and they
showed faith and obedience to
God, Acts 7:4; Acts 7:20, &c.,
23; particularly by their regard
for the law, Acts 7:8, and the
promised land, Acts 7:16.
Meantime God never confined his
presence to this one place, or
to the observers of the law. For
he hath been acceptably
worshipped, before the law was
given, or the temple built, and
out of this land, Acts 7:2; Acts
7:9; Acts 7:33; Acts 7:44. And
that our fathers and their
posterity were not tied down to
this land, their various
sojournings, Acts 7:4, &c., 14,
29, 44, and exile, Acts 7:43,
show. But you and your fathers
have always been evil, Acts 7:9;
have withstood Moses, Acts 7:25,
&c., 39, &c.; have despised the
land, Acts 7:39; forsaken God,
Acts 7:40, &c.; superstitiously
honoured the temple, Acts 7:48;
resisted God and his Spirit,
Acts 7:50; killed the prophets,
and the Messiah himself, Acts
7:51; and kept not the law, for
which ye contend, Acts 7:53.
therefore God is not bound to
you, much less to you alone.
And, truly, this solemn
testimony of Stephen is most
worthy of his character, as a
man full of the Holy Ghost, and
of faith, and power: in which,
though he does not advance so
many regular propositions,
contradictory to those of his
adversaries, yet he closely and
nervously answers them all. Nor
can we doubt but he would, from
these premises, have drawn
inferences touching the
destruction of the temple, the
abrogation of the Mosaic law,
the punishment of that
rebellious people, and, above
all, touching Jesus of Nazareth,
the true Messiah, had not his
discourse been interrupted by
the clamours of the multitude,
stopping their ears and rushing
upon him. Men, brethren, and
fathers — All who are here
present, whether ye are my
equals in years, or of more
advanced age. The word which, in
this and many other places, is
rendered men, is a mere
expletive. The God of glory —
The glorious God; appeared to
Abraham before he dwelt in
Charran — Therefore Abraham knew
God long before he was in this
land. And he said, Get thee out
of thy country — Depart from
this thy native country, which
is become idolatrous; and from
thy kindred — Who are now
alienated from my worship; and
come into the land — A remote
land; which I shall show thee —
And to which, by my
extraordinary interposition, I
will guide thee; though at
present thou dost not know even
its situation, much less the way
leading to it. See note on
Genesis 12:2.
Verse 4-5
Acts 7:4-5. Then came he out of
the land of the Chaldeans —
Strange as the command which was
given him might seem, he, with
all submission, readily obeyed
it; and dwelt in Charran —
Namely, for several years,
having been led thither by the
divine conduct, and not
immediately receiving a signal
to proceed any further. And from
thence — After his father died,
by another call; he (God)
removed him into this land — The
land of Canaan. And yet, upon
his coming into it, he gave him
none inheritance — But he was a
stranger and sojourner in it;
no, not so much as to set his
foot on — Or a piece of land
which he might cover with the
sole of his foot: for the field
mentioned, Acts 7:16, he did not
receive by a divine donation,
but bought it; yet he promised —
At sundry times; that he would
give it to him for a possession
— Which promise Abraham firmly
believed that God would fulfil;
and to his seed after him, when
as yet he had no child — And,
humanly speaking, it was not
likely he ever should have one:
but his faith triumphed over all
these seeming difficulties, and
he confidently trusted in the
power, and love, and
faithfulness of God to make his
word good.
Verses 6-8
Acts 7:6-8. And God spake, that
his seed should sojourn in a
strange land — When God had
brought Abraham into this
country, he did not keep him and
his posterity here till the time
when they were to enter upon the
possession of it, in consequence
of this divine grant; but, on
the contrary, God informed him
in a vision that his seed should
be strangers in a foreign land,
and that they among whom they
sojourned should bring them into
bondage — Should make them
slaves; and entreat them evil —
Use them with great cruelty; and
that these events, with the
circumstances preparatory to
them, should extend themselves
to the full period of four
hundred years. See note on
Genesis 15:13. And the nation to
whom they shall be in bondage —
By which they shall be enslaved;
will I judge, said God — I will
assuredly punish with righteous
and tremendous severity; and
after that shall they come forth
— Namely, out of that land; and
serve me in this place — In this
land, erecting a temple for the
performance of my worship here.
He gave him the covenant of
circumcision — See notes on
Genesis 17:10-14. And so Abraham
begat Isaac — After the covenant
was given, of which circumcision
was the seal.
Verse 9-10
Acts 7:9-10. And the patriarchs,
moved with envy — The rest of
the twelve sons of Jacob, though
their relation to such holy
ancestors might have taught them
a much better lesson; yet,
influenced by envy at the
superior regard which Jacob
showed to his favourite son,
most inhumanly sold Joseph —
Their brother; into Egypt —
Where he became a slave, and
suffered a great variety of
calamities; but God was with him
— In the midst of them,
supporting him, though he was
not in this land, and rendering
that country a scene of very
glorious providences toward him:
for by these things God was
working, in a mysterious and
surprising manner, for the
accomplishment of the prediction
before mentioned. From what
Stephen relates of the story of
Joseph, it was obvious for the
members of the council to infer
that the greatest favourites of
Heaven might suffer by the envy
of those who were called the
Israel of God; and might be
exalted by him after having been
rejected by them: a thought
worthy of their consideration
with respect to Jesus; but
prudence would not allow
Stephen, in the beginning of his
defence, to say expressly what
they could not have borne to
hear; for that they could not,
appears by the manner in which
they resented his application of
these premises, when, he was
drawing toward a conclusion. And
delivered him out of all his
afflictions — To which he was
exposed in consequence of his
integrity and piety; and gave
him favour and wisdom — That is,
favour on account of his
distinguished wisdom; in the
sight of Pharaoh, who made him
governor over Egypt — Committing
all things in the palace, as
well as elsewhere, to his
direction and management. Thus
did God, in the course of his
providence, wonderfully exalt
this despised Joseph, whom his
brethren (then the whole house
of Israel) had most outrageously
insulted and abused, and even
sold for a slave. And thus,
Stephen insinuated, hath God
exalted Jesus, whom ye treated
as a slave, insulted, and
abused, scourged, and hanged on
a tree.
Verse 11
Acts 7:11. Now there came a
dearth — According to the
prediction of Joseph, when the
seven preceding years of
extraordinary plenty were past,
which he had also predicted;
over all the land of Egypt and
Chanaan — A calamity which
reduced the latter country to
such distress, that, fruitful as
it had generally been, our
fathers found no sustenance —
Or, not what was sufficient to
support themselves and their
families. But Jacob, hearing
that there was corn in Egypt —
Ordered his sons to go and fetch
a supply from thence; and sent
our fathers first — Namely, the
ten without Benjamin. And at the
second time — That they went,
when Benjamin accompanied them;
Joseph was made known to his
brethren — Of which see on
Genesis 44:1-15. And, as the
matter was immediately made
public, Joseph’s kindred —
Greek, το γενος, his descent, or
race, was discovered to Pharaoh,
of which he had not been
informed before. Then sent
Joseph, and called his father —
With Pharaoh’s full consent; and
all his kindred — Now become
numerous, amounting in the whole
even to threescore and fifteen
souls — So the Seventy
interpreters, whom Stephen
follows: one son and a grandson
of Manasseh, and three children
of Ephraim, being added to the
seventy persons, mentioned
Genesis 46:27. So Bengelius.
Verse 15-16
Acts 7:15-16. Jacob went down
into Egypt, and died — After
having been supported there
about seventeen years, by the
filial gratitude and tenderness
of his son Joseph; and our
fathers — The patriarch’s
children also ended their lives
in the same country; and were
carried over into Sychem — That
is, as Jacob was immediately
carried, with solemn funeral
pomp and procession, to be
buried in the cave of Machpelah,
with Abraham and Isaac, (Genesis
50:13,) so the patriarchs also,
having been embalmed, and put
into coffins, in Egypt, (Genesis
50:26,) were, at the return of
Israel from thence, carried over
to Sychem, and laid in the
sepulchre — Made in that field
which Jacob bequeathed to
Joseph, as a peculiar legacy; he
having first, as Abraham had
done in a like case, bought it
for a sum of money, (that is,
for one hundred pieces of
silver,) of the sons of Emmor,
the father of Sychem — From
whom, in particular, the place
was named; and the Amorites
having afterward seized it,
Jacob had by force recovered it
out of their hands. See notes on
Genesis 48:22; Joshua 24:32. It
seems that St. Stephen, rapidly
running over so many
circumstances of history, had
not leisure (nor was it needful,
where they were so well known)
to recite them all distinctly.
Therefore he here contracts into
one two different sepulchres,
places, and purchases, so as, in
the former history, to name the
buyer, omitting the seller; in
the latter, to name the seller,
omitting the buyer. Abraham
bought a burying-place of the
children of Heth, Genesis 23.
There Jacob was buried. Jacob
bought a field of the children
of Hamor. There Joseph was
buried. You see here how St.
Stephen contracts these two
purchases into one. This concise
manner of speaking, strange as
it seems to us, was common among
the Hebrews: particularly when,
in a case notoriously known, the
speaker mentioned but part of
the story, and left the rest,
which would have interrupted the
current of his discourse, to be
supplied in the mind of the
hearer. And laid in the
sepulchre that Abraham bought —
The first land which these
strangers bought was for a
sepulchre. They sought for a
country in heaven. Perhaps the
whole sentence might be rendered
thus: So Jacob went down into
Egypt and died, he and our
fathers, and were carried over
into Shechem, and laid by the
sons [that is, descendants] of
Hamor, the father of Shechem, in
the sepulchre that Abraham
bought for a sum of money. So
Bengelius and Wesley.
Verses 17-21
Acts 7:17-21. When the time of
the promise drew nigh — That is,
the time for the accomplishment
of the promise; which God had
sworn to Abraham — Concerning
the multiplication of his seed;
see note on Genesis 22:16-17;
the people grew, &c. — Became
very numerous in Egypt,
notwithstanding that they were
under great oppression there;
till another king arose —
Probably of another family;
which knew not Joseph — And had
no regard to his memory. The
same dealt subtly with our
kindred — Formed crafty and
treacherous designs against
them; and evil-entreated our
fathers — Used them in a most
injurious and barbarous way,
lest in time they should become
too powerful; so that — In
obedience to a most inhuman
order, which he published; they
cast out their young children —
Exposed them to perish by hunger
or wild beasts; or cast them
into the river Nile; to the end
they might not live — That they
might be cut off from being a
people, and their very race
become quite extinct. In which
afflictive and persecuting, but
seasonable time — When our
fathers were reduced to this
miserable state; Moses was born
— The person intended by God to
be the instrument of his
people’s deliverance; and was
exceeding fair — Greek, αστειος
τω θεω, fair to God, as the
margin reads it. The words,
being a Hebraism, are only an
emphatical expression, to denote
Moses’s extraordinary beauty,
and might be not unfitly
rendered divinely beautiful, the
name of God being often
introduced to express such
things as were extraordinary in
their kind. So in the Hebrew,
what we translate great
wrestlings, (Genesis 30:8,) is
wrestlings of God; goodly
cedars, (Psalms 80:10,) are
cedars of God; great mountains,
(Psalms 36:6,) are mountains of
God. This then agrees with what
is said of Moses, (Exodus 2:2,)
that he was a goodly child; and
with the account which Josephus
gives of him, who says, “that
when he was but three years old,
his extraordinary beauty was
such, that it struck every one
that saw him; and as they
carried him about, persons would
leave their work to look at
him.” See Grotius and Whitby.
And when he was cast out — Was
thus exposed to perish, the
providence of God so ordered it,
that Pharaoh’s daughter took him
up — Being moved with pity at
the sight of him; and nourished
him — With a purpose of adopting
him; for her own son — By which
means, being designed for a
kingdom, he had all those
advantages of education, which
he could not have had if he had
not been exposed. “All these
extraordinary circumstances,
relating to the birth,
preservation, education, genius,
and character of Moses, serve to
aggravate the crime of Israel in
rejecting him, when he offered
himself to them as a deliverer
under so many advantages, and
when Providence had so
wonderfully interested itself in
his favour.” — Doddridge.
Verse 22
Acts 7:22. Moses was learned in
all the wisdom of the Egyptians
— Which was then celebrated in
all the world, and for many ages
after. Geography, geometry,
arithmetic, astronomy, natural
history, physic, and
hieroglyphics, are all mentioned
by ancient writers as branches
of Egyptian literature. Several
ancient testimonies to the
extraordinary learning of Moses
may be seen in Philo, Justin
Martyr, Origen, and Clemens
Alexandrinus. And was mighty in
words — Deep, solid, weighty,
though not of a ready utterance.
“It expresses,” says Doddridge,
“such a weight and solidity in
his counsels and speeches, as
may be very consistent with the
want of a flowing elocution;”
and in deeds — Referring to the
astonishing miracles which God
wrought by him. We may observe
here, that it must have been a
great piece of self-denial, such
as none but a lover of learning,
and one who has made some
progress in it, can understand,
for a person of such a genius
and education as Moses, in the
prime of life, to leave the
polite court of Egypt, and live
as a retired shepherd in the
Arabian desert.
Verses 23-25
Acts 7:23-25. When he was forty
years old — So long he continued
in Pharaoh’s court; it came into
his heart — Probably by an
impulse from God; to visit his
brethren — He having been
instructed, it appears, in the
knowledge of his real descent,
and in the principles of the
Jewish religion; and it is
likely his spirit was so
impressed with a concern for
their welfare, that all the
pleasure and grandeur at the
court of Egypt could not make
him easy, without going in
person to take a view of their
state. And seeing one of them
suffer wrong — Probably by one
of the task-masters; he defended
him — And smiting the Egyptian
with a mortal wound, he at once
rescued and avenged him that was
oppressed — See note on Exodus
2:11-12. For he supposed his
brethren would have understood,
&c. — The manner in which
Stephen expresses himself, seems
to imply, that he considered
Moses as doing this action in
consequence of a special
impression from God on his mind,
intimating to him the important
work for which he was intended,
that God by his hands would
deliver them — Two things are
here proper to be inquired into,
namely, 1st, By what authority
or right Moses slew the
Egyptian. 2d, What reason he had
to expect the people should
understand that God designed him
for their deliverer? “The Jewish
historians,” says Whitby, “give
us a very easy solution of these
difficulties; for, according to
Clemens Alexandrinus, their
priests declare that Moses slew
the Egyptian with a word, and so
gave them a miracle to prove his
mission: and Josephus assures
us, that ‘God appeared to Amram,
the father of Moses, as he was
praying to him for the afflicted
Jews, and said to him, Thy son,
now in the womb of thy wife,
shall escape the hand of the
Egyptians, and shall deliver the
Hebrews from the afflictions of
Egypt; and that, to confirm this
vision, his wife brought him
forth without any pain.’ The
Jerusalem Talmud likewise
declares that Moses slew the
Egyptian by the spirit of
prophecy, or by an extraordinary
impulse from God; and Maimonides
makes this action one degree of
prophecy. And thus, as Stephen
here says: it came into his
heart, namely, from God, to
visit his brethren: and indeed
otherwise he could not have
justified this fact to God and
his own conscience. Now Moses,
knowing what had been declared
of him to his father, and by
this action working deliverance
to one of them, might justly
hope they would look upon him as
one appointed by God to be their
deliverer.” Dr. Benson, however,
not crediting these stories,
thinks “it does not appear that
Moses had as yet any prophecy to
assure him that he was the
person who should deliver
Israel; but, knowing there was a
divine promise of deliverance
made to, and retained in the
house of Israel; that he himself
had been extraordinarily
preserved and educated, and that
the time of their deliverance
was approaching, he showed
himself willing to run all
hazards and dangers with the
people of God, rather than
continue in the splendour of the
Egyptian court; and that when
the time should be fully come,
he would cheerfully join and
head them, in order to rescue
them from their bondage and
cruel slavery.” But it seems
there is more than this implied
in the verse; and though we may
have no certain information of
any prophecy that Moses had yet
received, it does not follow but
he might have received some
private revelation from God,
that he was the person appointed
by him to deliver the
Israelites. But they understood
not — Such was their stupidity
and sloth, which made him
afterward unwilling to go to
them.
Verses 26-29
Acts 7:26-29. The next day he
showed himself unto them — Of
his own accord, unexpectedly; as
they strove — As they were
quarrelling with each other; and
would have set them at one —
That is, by interposing between
them, he would have put an end
to their quarrel, and have
persuaded them to live in peace
and friendship; saying, Sirs, ye
are brethren — Descended from
Jacob, our common ancestor, and
now also joined in affliction as
well as in religion; which
things ought doubly to cement
your affections to each other;
why then do you injure one
another? But he that did his
neighbour wrong — Unable to bear
with his plain and faithful
reproof; insolently thrust him
away — As a person that had
nothing to do in their
controversy; saying, Who made
thee a ruler, &c., over us? —
Thus, under the pretence of the
want of a call by man, the
instruments of God are often
rejected. The speech of this
single person is represented
(Acts 7:35) as expressing the
sentiments of the whole body of
the people, as their slowness
afterward to believe the mission
of Moses, when attested by
miracle, (Exodus 5:20-21,) seems
evidently to show that it was.
Wilt thou kill me, as thou didst
the Egyptian, &c. — His blood
may cost thee dear enough,
without adding mine to it. Then
fled Moses — Finding the matter
was discovered, and being
apprehensive that, in
consequence of it, the Egyptian
power would soon be armed
against him, while the
Israelites were not inclined to
use any efforts for his
protection, nor to put
themselves under his guidance.
See the note on Exodus 2:15. And
was a stranger in the land of
Madian — Where he became
shepherd to Jethro, the prince
of the country, and marrying
Zipporah his daughter, he begat
two sons, Gershom and Eliezer.
Verses 30-34
Acts 7:30-34. When forty years
were expired — That is, forty
after his leaving Egypt; during
which time Israel had continued
under this bondage, and Moses,
inured to hardships and poverty,
and to contemplation and
devotion, had been trained up
and prepared, in the humble and
retired life of a shepherd, for
the great work for which God
designed him; see on Exodus
2:22; there appeared to him in
the wilderness of mount Sina —
Which lay in the confines of the
Midianite country, not far from
the Red sea; an angel of the
Lord — The Son of God, as
appears from his styling himself
Jehovah; (see on Exodus 3:2;) a
name which cannot, without the
highest presumption, be assumed
by any created angel, since he
whose name alone is Jehovah, is
the Most High over all the
earth, Psalm lxxxiii, 18. It was
therefore the Angel of the
covenant: Malachi 3:1, the Angel
of God’s presence, Isaiah 63:9,
who delivered the law to Moses,
and was with the church in the
wilderness, and gave them
possession of Canaan as the
Captain of the Lord’s host,
Joshua 5:14. In a flame of fire
in a bush — Which, though of
combustible matter, was not
consumed; representing the state
of Israel in Egypt, where,
though they were in the fire of
affliction, yet they were not
consumed by it, but miraculously
preserved as a people, and even
increased. When Moses saw it, he
wondered at the sight — Wondered
why the bush, which burned, was
not consumed: it was a
phenomenon, with the solution of
which all his Egyptian learning
could not furnish him. And as he
drew near to behold, the voice
of the Lord came unto him,
saying, I am the God of thy
fathers, &c. — Expressions
sufficiently showing that the
person speaking was not a mere
angel, but possessed of true
Deity, and therefore, as being
also styled an angel, or
messenger, was the Son of God,
the Father’s Messenger to men.
Then Moses trembled — Moses,
upon this, perceiving that God
himself was there present, and
spake to him, trembled at this
appearance of his majesty, and
durst not behold with a curious
regard, as he had intended. Then
said the Lord, Put off thy shoes
— An ancient token of reverence;
for the place is holy ground —
The holiness of places depends
on the peculiar presence of God
there. See the note on Exodus
2:5. “It was formerly in the
eastern nations, and is now in
the southern, esteemed a
ceremony of respect, to put off
the shoes when approaching a
superior, lest any of the dirt
or dust cleaving to the shoes
should be brought near him, and
that the person approaching
barefoot might tread more
cautiously. This, which perhaps
was introduced at first in court
apartments, where rich carpets
might be used, the King of kings
requires to be done in a desert,
as a token of the infinitely
greater reverence due to him.
See Joshua 5:15, and
Ecclesiastes 5:1. On the same
principle, it seems, the priests
ministered thus in the
tabernacle and temple, no
direction being given for shoes
or sandals as a part of their
dress, though all the rest of it
was so particularly prescribed.”
I have seen, I have seen the
affliction — See note on Exodus
2:7-8.
Verse 35-36
Acts 7:35-36. This Moses, whom
they refused — Namely, forty
years before: probably not they,
but their fathers did it, and
God imputes it to them. So God
frequently imputes the sins of
parents to those of their
children who are of the same
spirit. The same did God send to
be a ruler and deliverer — Which
is much more than a judge. By
the hand — That is, by the
means; of the angel — See on
Acts 7:30. He brought them out —
Though for a while he hesitated,
he afterward complied, and at
length led them forth in
triumph, a willing people listed
under his banner; after he had
showed wonders and signs in the
land of Egypt — Which were
afterward continued for the
completing their deliverance,
according as the case called for
it; in the Red sea, and in the
wilderness, forty years — During
which space they were every day
miraculously fed with manna from
heaven, and conducted by a
pillar of fire and cloud, and
had a variety of other
astonishing miracles wrought in
their behalf continually. Thus
Stephen is so far from
blaspheming Moses, that he
extols him as a glorious
instrument in the hand of God in
the forming of the Old Testament
Church. But it does not at all
derogate from his just honour,
to say that he was but an
instrument, and was excelled by
Jesus, whom he encourages these
Jews yet to receive and obey;
not fearing, if they did so, but
that they should be accepted,
and obtain salvation by him, as
the people of Israel were
delivered by Moses, though they
had once refused him.
Verse 37-38
Acts 7:37-38. This is that Moses
which said, A prophet, &c. —
Here Stephen shows that there is
no opposition between Moses and
Christ. And it is mentioned as
one of the greatest honours God
put upon Moses; nay, as that
which exceeded all the rest,
that by him God gave notice to
the Israelites of the great
prophet that should come into
the world, raised their
expectation of him, and required
them to receive him on pain of
utter destruction. Now this was
very full to Stephen’s purpose,
supposing him to have intimated,
as his accusers affirmed, that
Jesus should change the customs
of the ceremonial law. And he is
so far from blaspheming Moses,
that he really does him the
greatest honour imaginable, by
showing how one of the most
important of his prophecies was
fulfilled. This is he (Moses)
that was in the church in the
wilderness — Presiding in all
the affairs of it for forty
years, and being king as well as
prophet: in Jeshurun,
Deuteronomy 33:5. Here we see
the camp of Israel is called the
church in the wilderness; and
with good reason, for it was a
sacred society, incorporated by
a divine charter, under a divine
government, and blessed with a
divine revelation. It was a
church, though not yet so
perfectly formed as it was to be
when they should come to Canaan.
It was the honour of Moses that
he was in that church; and many
a time it would have been
destroyed, if Moses had not been
in it to intercede for it. But
Christ is the president and
guide of a more excellent and
glorious church than that in the
wilderness; and is more in it
than Moses could be in that, as
being the life and soul of it.
With the angel that spake to him
— The Angel of the covenant,
even of the old as well as of
the new. The angel that went
before him and was a guide to
him, otherwise he could not have
been a guide to Israel. Of this
God speaks, (Exodus 23:20,) I
send an angel before thee to
keep thee in the way, &c.,
beware of him, and obey his
voice, for my name is in him. He
was in the church with the
angel, without whom he could
have done no service to the
church: but Christ is himself
that angel which was with the
church in the wilderness, and
therefore has an authority above
Moses. Who (Moses) received the
lively oracles — Not only the
ten commandments, but the other
instructions, which the Lord
spake unto Moses, saying, Speak
them to the children of Israel.
Observe, reader, 1st, The words
of God are oracles, certain and
infallible, and of
unquestionable authority and
obligation: they are to be
consulted as oracles, and by
them all controversies must be
determined. 2d, They are lively
oracles, for they are the
oracles of the living God, not
of the dumb and dead idols of
the heathen. They are full of
divine life and energy; quick
and powerful, (Hebrews 4:12,)
enlightening the eyes, rejoicing
the heart, converting the soul,
raising the dead: for the word
that God speaks is spirit and
life: they were delivered in an
awakening and impressive manner,
and instruct us in the way to
life and happiness. Not that the
law of Moses could give life of
itself, but it showed the way to
life, especially as exhibiting,
in types and shadows, good
things to come. 3d, It was the
principal privilege of the Jews
that unto them were committed
these oracles, and it was by the
hand of Moses that they were
committed. Moses was not the
author of them, nor of the law
contained in them: he was merely
the medium, or instrument, of
their communication. And he that
gave those customs by his
servant Moses, might, no doubt,
when he pleased, change them by
his Son Jesus, who has received
more lively oracles to give unto
us than Moses gave.
Verses 39-41
Acts 7:39-41. Whom our fathers
would not obey — Even after all
the proofs of his miraculous
powers given in Egypt, and at
the Red sea; but thrust him from
them — Acting a part more stupid
and ungrateful than that before
mentioned, Acts 7:27; rejecting
him a second time, as in
contempt of all these wonderful
appearances of God by him; and
in their hearts — In their
affections and intentions;
turning back again into Egypt —
Preferring their garlick and
onions there, before the manna
they daily received under the
conduct of Moses, and the milk
and honey they hoped for in
Canaan. They murmured at him,
mutinied against him, refused to
obey his orders, and sometimes
were ready to stone him. Saying
unto Aaron — At the very foot of
that mountain upon which God had
visibly manifested himself to
them, while the sound of his
voice was, as it were, yet in
their ears, and though, but a
few days before, they had seen
their great leader ascending up
to him, by an intimacy of
approach allowed to no other
mortal: make us gods to go
before us — Back into Egypt, or
forward to the promised land,
and to conduct us in the way
thither: for as for this Moses,
who, indeed, brought us out of
Egypt, we wot not what is become
of him — And have not patience
to wait for him any longer:
therefore make us gods of gold —
As if gods of Aaron’s making,
though of gold, would be
sufficient to supply the place
of Moses, or rather, of Jehovah!
And they made a calf — In
imitation of the Egyptian Apis,
to be their saviour and their
guide; in those days — Those
very days in which they
continued encamped in that
remarkable situation; and
offered sacrifice unto the
senseless and dead idol — Which
could neither see nor hear, nor
take any notice of the worship
offered to it; and rejoiced in
the work of their own hands — In
the god they had made, as if,
instead of being a reproach and
abomination, it had been an
ornament and defence to them.
Nay, so proud were they of their
new god, that, after they had
sat down to eat and drink, they
rose up to play (Exodus 32:6)
before it, and in honour of it.
Verse 42-43
Acts 7:42-43. Then God turned —
Upon this, God, being most
righteously provoked, turned
away from them in anger, and, as
in many other instances,
punished one sin by letting them
fall into another; and at length
gave them up, in succeeding
ages, to the most abandoned,
public, and general idolatry,
even to worship all the host of
heaven — The stars and other
heavenly bodies, and that with
as little reserve, and as little
shame, as the most stupid of the
heathen nations. As it is
written in the book of the
prophets — Namely, of the twelve
minor prophets, which the Jews
always connected together in one
book. What is here quoted is
taken from the Prophet Amos
5:25; where see the note. The
passage consists of two parts;
of which the former confirms
Acts 7:41, concerning the sin of
the people; the latter, the
beginning of Acts 7:42,
respecting their punishment: O
house of Israel, have ye offered
to me — To me alone; slain
beasts, &c., forty years in the
wilderness? — You know that even
then you began to revolt, and
provoke me to jealousy with your
abominations. They had offered
many sacrifices, but did not
offer them to God alone, but
sacrificed to idols also; and
God did not accept even those
that they offered to him,
because they did not offer them
with an upright heart. And in
succeeding ages you were
continually renewing and
aggravating your rebellions and
treasons against me. Yea, ye
took up the tabernacle of Moloch
— Instead of confining
yourselves to my tabernacle; and
the star of your god Remphan —
Or Chium, as it is called in
Amos. Moloch probably meant the
sun, and Remphan, or Chium, the
moon; or some other star. Aben
Ezra thinks Saturn; figures
which ye made — Images, or
emblematical representations, of
these supposed deities; to
worship them — Both the images,
and the supposed deities which
they were intended to represent.
See note on Amos 5:26. I will
carry you away beyond Babylon —
Into countries more distant. So
Dr. Prideaux reconciles
Stephen’s quotation with the
original passages in Amos, where
we read, beyond Damascus. This
was fulfilled by the king of
Assyria, 2 Kings 17:6.
Verses 44-47
Acts 7:44-47. Our fathers had
the tabernacle of witness —
Greek, του μαρτυριου, of the
testimony. The two tables of
stone, on which the ten
commandments were written, were
most properly the testimony, as
being a constant testimony of
the relation between God and
Israel: hence the ark, which
contained them, is frequently
called the ark of the testimony;
and the whole tabernacle in this
place, the tabernacle of the
testimony. This, says Stephen,
was with our fathers in the
wilderness, a tabernacle made in
all respects as God had
appointed, who, speaking unto
Moses, commanded him to make it
according to the fashion, or
model, that he had seen —
Namely, in the mount, Exodus
25:40. “As Stephen had been
accused of blaspheming the
temple, he, with great
propriety, takes occasion to
speak of their sacred places
with due reverence, as raised by
special direction from God; and
yet corrects that extravagant
regard for them, and confidence
in them, which the Jews
entertained.” — Doddridge. Which
our fathers, that came after —
Or rather, as διαδεξαμενοι more
properly signifies, having
received; brought in with Jesus
— That is, with Joshua, when he
led them over Jordan; into the
possession of the Gentiles —
Into the land which the Gentiles
possessed before. So that God’s
favour is not a necessary
consequence of inhabiting this
land. All along Stephen
intimates two things: 1st, That
God always loved good men in
every land. 2d, That he never
loved bad men even in this. Unto
the days of David — That is, the
tabernacle continued for many
ages, even unto David’s time, to
be the resort of the pious
worshippers in Israel; above
four hundred years before there
was any thought of building a
temple. David indeed having
found favour before God, desired
— Greek, ητησατο, petitioned,
this further blessing, on which
his heart was set; even to have
the honour to find a tabernacle
— Or a dwelling more stable and
splendid; for the God of Jacob —
But he did not obtain his
petition. For, as he had been a
man of war, and had shed much
blood, God would not permit him
to build the temple. He laid a
plan for it, however, and
consecrated a considerable part
of the spoils which he had taken
from the enemy toward erecting
it. But God remained without any
temple till Solomon built him a
house — Which, till the reign of
that prince, he never had
commanded or permitted to be
done. Observe how wisely the
word house is used here, rather
than the word temple, with
respect to what follows.
Verses 48-50
Acts 7:48-50. Howbeit — αλλα,
but, or yet; we are not to
imagine that God permitted a
temple to be built even then for
his own sake: for it was
acknowledged, at the same time,
by Solomon himself, that the
Most High dwelleth not in
temples made with hands — Be
they ever so rich, splendid, and
majestic. As saith the prophet —
Namely, Isaiah, chap. Isaiah
66:1, where, speaking in the
name of God, he says, Heaven is
my throne, and earth my
footstool; and how then should
my presence be confined to any
particular place? What house
will ye build me — Suitable for
me; saith the Lord: or, what is
the place of my rest? — Have I
need of rest? What need have I
of a house? either to rest in,
or wherein to show my glory?
Hath not my hand made all these
things? — Whatever splendour any
temples may have, did not I form
the materials with which they
are built, and endow the
workmen, that fashioned them,
with all their art and genius?
Do not imagine, then, that you
can confer any obligation upon
me by such structures as these,
or any act of homage which you
can render to me in them, nor
think that you can charm me to
continue my abode there, or to
be a constant guard to you,
merely because you have such
edifices among you.
Verses 51-53
Acts 7:51-53. Ye stiff-necked,
&c. — Stephen, finding by a
confused murmur in the place
that they understood whither his
discourse tended, and perceiving
by the eagerness of their
countenances that they would
soon interrupt him, applied
himself more closely to his
persecutors in these remarkable
words, which he boldly addressed
to them under the influence of
the Holy Spirit, by whose
direction he spoke; Ye
stiff-necked — Inflexible and
obstinate sinners, not bowing
your necks to God’s yoke; and
uncircumcised in heart and ears
— So that you will not hearken
to instruction, or be seriously
affected with it. This they
immediately showed. See Acts
7:54; Acts 7:57. So far were
they from receiving the word of
God with their hearts, that they
would not hear it even with
their ears. Ye — And your
fathers; ye, as a people, in all
ages; resist the Holy Ghost: as
your fathers did — In former
ages; so do ye now. This is the
sum of what he had shown at
large. Which of the prophets
have not your fathers
persecuted? — Some have inferred
from this, that many writings,
containing the history of these
persecutions, have been
destroyed by the Jews; but it
seems more natural to understand
the words in a limited sense, as
only intimating that most of the
prophets had suffered such
unworthy usage. Attempts,
however, were sometimes made to
cut off all the prophets of the
Lord at once. See 1 Kings 19:10;
1 Kings 19:14; 2 Chronicles
36:16. They have slain them
which showed before of the
coming of the Just or righteous
One — That is, Christ; so called
by way of eminence, as being
alone perfectly righteous: of
whom — When you ought to have
heard of him with delight, and
to have received him with the
most humble reverence and joyful
gratitude; you have been now the
perfidious betrayers, and cruel
murderers. Who have received the
law — Delivered from Sinai with
astonishing circumstances of
solemnity, majesty, and terror,
by the disposition, or
administration of angels, and
have not kept, but continually
violated it — When the Son of
God gave the law on mount Sinai,
he was attended with thousands
of angels, Galatians 3:19;
Psalms 68:17. Dr. Doddridge
renders the original expression,
εις διαταγας αγγελων, through
ranks of angels, “marshalled in
solemn array upon that grand
occasion:” and he thinks it is
evident, from Hebrews 2:2, that
God made use of the
instrumentality of angels to
form the voice heard at that
awful time.
Verses 54-56
Acts 7:54-56. When they heard
these things — These plain, and
undeniable, and alarming truths;
they were cut to the heart — Or
sawn asunder, the original word
being the same that is used
chap. Acts 5:33. And not
permitting him to proceed any
further, in a transport of rage,
they gnashed on him with their
teeth — As if they would have
devoured him alive. But he,
being full of the Holy Ghost —
And therefore no way terrified
with the foresight of the evil
which appeared to be determined
against him; looked up
steadfastly into heaven — From
whence alone he could expect
help or mercy; and saw the glory
of God — Prepared for him; and
Jesus standing on the right hand
of God — Risen up from the
throne of his glory, (for he is
generally represented as
sitting,) to afford help to his
distressed servant, and ready to
receive him. Doubtless many
other martyrs, as Mr. Addison
has observed, when called to
suffer the last extremities, had
extraordinary assistances of a
similar kind; otherwise frail
mortality could not have endured
the torments under which they
rejoiced, and sometimes preached
Christ, to the conversion of
spectators, and, in some
instances, of their guards and
tormentors.
Verses 57-59
Acts 7:57-59. Then they cried
out with a loud voice — Being
provoked to such a degree that
they could not contain
themselves, and meaning to drown
the voice of Stephen; and
stopped their ears — As if they
could not bear to hear such
blasphemy as they wished to have
it thought he had spoken. And
ran upon him — Greek, ωρμησαν,
rushed on him with one accord,
before any sentence was
regularly passed; and cast —
Greek, εκβαλοντες εξω της
πολεως, casting him out of the
city — It seems by a gate near
the place where the sanhedrim
sat; and as soon as they had got
without the boundaries of that
sacred place, of which they
judged it would be a profanation
to stain it with human blood,
they stoned him — This, like the
stoning of Paul at Lystra, seems
to have been an act of popular
fury, exceeding the power which
the Jews regularly had; which,
though it might have extended to
passing a capital sentence, was
certainly not sufficient for
carrying it into execution,
without the consent of the
Romans. The Jews were more than
once ready to stone Christ, not
only when by their own
confession they had not power to
put any one to death, (John
18:31,) but when nothing had
passed which had the shadow of a
legal trial. How far they now
might have formed those express
notions of what the rabbis call
the judgment of zeal, is not
easy to say; but it is certain
they acted on that principle,
and as if they had thought every
private Israelite had, like
Phinehas, who is pleaded as an
example of it, a right to put
another to death on the spot, if
he found him in a capital breach
of the divine law; a notion, by
the way, directly contrary to
Deuteronomy 17:6, which required
at least two witnesses in
capital cases, where there was a
legal process. And the two
witnesses — Whose hands were
first upon him to put him to
death; laid down their clothes,
&c. — In executions of this
kind, it was usual for those who
had borne witness against the
criminal to cast the first
stones at him; and for this
purpose they were wont to put
off their upper garments, and
gave them to be kept by persons
equally hearty in the
prosecution with themselves; and
on this occasion the witnesses
laid their clothes at the feet
of Saul, afterward called Paul,
who, it seems, willingly took
charge of them, to show how
heartily he concurred with them
in the execution. O Saul!
wouldst thou have believed, if
one had told thee, while thou
wast urging on the cruel
multitude, that the time would
come when thou thyself shouldst
be twice stoned in the same
cause, and shouldst triumph in
committing thy soul likewise to
that Jesus whom thou wast now
blaspheming? His dying prayer
reached thee, as well as many
others. And the martyr Stephen,
and Saul the persecutor,
(afterward his brother, both in
faith and martyrdom,) are now
joined in everlasting
friendship, and dwell together
in the happy company of those
who have washed their robes, and
made them white in the blood of
the Lamb.
Verse 59-60
Acts 7:59-60. And thus they
stoned Stephen — Who, during
this furious assault, continued
with his eyes fixed on the
heavenly glory, of which he had
so bright a vision, calling upon
God — The word God is not in the
original, which is literally,
invoking; and saying, Lord
Jesus, receive my spirit — For
Christ was the person to whom he
prayed: and surely such a solemn
prayer addressed to him, in
which a departing soul was thus
committed into his hands, was
such an act of worship as no
good man could have paid to a
mere creature; Stephen here
worshipping Christ in the very
same manner in which Christ
worshipped the Father on the
cross. And he kneeled down, &c.
— Having nothing further
relating to himself which could
give him any solicitude, all his
remaining thoughts were occupied
in compassion to these inhuman
wretches, who were employed in
effecting his destruction.
Having, therefore, as we have
reason to suppose, received many
violent blows, rising as well as
he could upon his knees, he
cried, though with an expiring,
yet with a loud voice, Lord, lay
not this sin to their charge —
With severity proportionable to
the weight of the offence, but
graciously forgive them, as
indeed I do from my heart. The
original expression, μη στησης
αυτοις την αμαρτιαν, has a
peculiar emphasis, and is not
easy to be exactly translated,
without multiplying words to an
improper degree. It is literally
weigh not out to them this sin;
that is, a punishment
proportionable to it; alluding,
it seems, to passages of
Scripture where God is
represented as weighing men’s
characters and actions in the
dispensations of his justice and
providence. This prayer of
Stephen was heard, and
remarkably answered, in the
conversion of Saul, of whose
history we shall shortly hear
more. When he had said this —
Calmly resigning his soul into
the Saviour’s hand, with a
sacred serenity, in the midst of
this furious assault, he sweetly
fell asleep — Leaving the traces
of a gentle composure, rather
than a horror, upon his
breathless corpse. |