
Ga 1:15, 16). (2) As a consequence of this, that
faith. Thither the Gospel had penetrated; and Saul, flushed with past successes, undertakes to
crush it out.
that if he found any of this way, whether men or women
--Thrice are
women
specified as
objects of his cruelty, as an aggravated feature of it (Ac 8:3; 22:4; and here).
3. he came near Damascus
--so Ac 22:6. Tradition points to a bridge near the city as the
spot referred to. Events which are the turning points in one's history so imprint themselves upon
the memory that circumstances the most trifling in themselves acquire by connection with them
something of their importance, and are recalled with inexpressible interest.
suddenly
--At what time of day, it is not said; for artless simplicity reigns here. But he
himself emphatically states, in one of his narratives, that it was "about noon" (Ac 22:6), and in
the other, "
at midday
" (Ac 26:13), when there could be no deception.
there shined round about him a light from heaven
--"a great light (he himself says) above
the brightness of the sun," then shining in its full strength.
4-6. he fell to the earth
--and his companions with him (Ac 26:14), who "saw the light" (Ac
22:9).
and heard a voice saying unto him
--"in the Hebrew tongue" (Ac 26:14).
Saul, Saul
--a reduplication full of tenderness [D
E
W
ETTE
]. Though his name was soon
changed into "Paul," we find him, in both his own narratives of the scene, after the lapse of so
many years, retaining the original form, as not daring to alter, in the smallest detail, the
overpowering words addressed to him.
why persecutest thou me?
--No language can express the affecting character of this
question, addressed from the right hand of the Majesty on high to an infuriated, persecuting
mortal. (See Mt 25:45, and that whole judgment scene).
5. Who art thou, Lord?
--"Jesus knew Saul ere Saul knew Jesus" [B
ENGEL
]. The term
"Lord" here is an indefinite term of respect for some unknown but august speaker. That Saul
saw as well as
heard
this glorious Speaker, is expressly said by Ananias (Ac 9:17; 22:14), by
Barnabas (Ac 9:27), and by himself (Ac 26:16); and in claiming apostleship, he explicitly states
that he had "
seen
the Lord" (1Co 9:1; 15:8), which can refer only to this scene.
I am Jesus whom thou persecutest
--The "I" and "thou" here are touchingly emphatic in the
original; while the term "J
ESUS
" is purposely chosen, to convey to him the thrilling information
that the hated name which he sought to hunt down--"
the Nazarene,
" as it is in Ac 22:8 --was
now speaking to him from the skies, "crowned with glory and honor" (see Ac 26:9).
It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks
--The metaphor of an ox, only driving the
goad deeper by kicking against it, is a classic one, and here forcibly expresses, not only the
vanity of all his measures for crushing the Gospel, but the deeper wound which every such effort
inflicted upon himself.
6. And he, trembling and astonished, said, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? And
the Lord said
--(The most ancient manuscripts and versions of the New Testament lack all these
words
here
[including the last clause of Ac 9:5]; but they occur in Ac 26:14 and Ac 22:10, from
which they appear to have been inserted here). The question, "What shall I do, Lord?" or, "Lord,
what wilt Thou have me to do?" indicates a state of mind singularly interesting (see on
Its elements seem to be these: (1) Resistless conviction that "Jesus whom he persecuted," now
speaking to him, was "Christ the Lord." (See on
not only all his religious views, but his whole religious character, had been an entire mistake;
that he was up to that moment fundamentally and wholly wrong. (3) That though his whole