Jian Pe 60 And he kneeled down, and cried with a loud voice, Jerusalem. tiad, 4747, Lord, lay not this sin to their charge! And when he had Æra, 4. said this, he fell asleep. 1 And Saul was consenting unto his death. 2 And devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him3. SECTION XXIV. (afterwards St. Paul,) particularly distinguishes him- ACTS viii. part of ver. 1. and ver. 3. It is well observed by Kuinocl, that if St. Stephen bad invok- (a) Horæ Hebraicæ, vol. 1. p. 442. (b) Horsley's Letters in reply to Dr. Priestley-Lett. xii. p. 232. 8vo. edit. (c) Kuinoel in lib. Hist. vol. iv. p. 290. See also Dr. Pye Smith's excellent criticism on this passage. 43 These chapters are most carelessly divided in our Bibles. (a) See Bishop Barrington, Beza, and Markland's observations, ap. * The apostles were protected by the especial providence of Julian Pe 3 Às for Saul, he made havoc of the church 5, entering Jerasal the Jews first the Gospel was to be preached. Lightfoot endea- That the Evangelist commences with the history of the 120, By instancing Philip, he shews what class of men is understood, when he says "They were scattered.” The term, evayyed ópevou, is never applied to any other than to preachers by function. Persecution would first look to the preachers. Many of the (a) Lightfoot's Works, vol. viii. p. 122. The word thus used, reminds me of a singular, but ingenious After proceeding on the usual plan of all inventors of new Vitringa first points out the typical resemblance between Samson, born out of the usual course of nature, and a Naza- Our Lord, the Son of Mary, filled from the womb with the Holy Ghost, loved the Gentiles, though they were despised and hated by his own people. Samsop acted under a divide influence. The love of Christ to his Gentile Church, was according to the divine counsel and foreknowledge of God. Samson displeased his father and mother, who would have dissuaded him from going to Timnath; being ignorant of the divine will. The Jewish Church, and its high priest and governors, strenuously opposed the design of preaching or appealing to the Gentiles, not believing it was the appointment of God. Idian Pe- into every house; and haling men and women, com- Jerusalem. Falgar Era, The parents of Samson, overcome by his perseverance, at length accompanied their son to Timnath. That portion of the Jewish Church which embraced Chris. tianity, and bad warmly objected to the admission of the Gentiles, yielded at length to the evidence of St. Peter's vision ; Samson went to Timnath, when the Philistines governed Our Lord appealed to the Gentiles at the time when the Ro- II. While the parents of Samson were going down with him to Timpatb, for the purpose of marrying the Philistine virgin to their son, a young lion met Samson in the way. During the interval which elapsed between the death of Stephen, who had pleaded the cause of Christ before the presidents of the Jewish nation, and declared the overthrow of their economy, and the calling of the Gentiles, and between the invitation of the Gentiles by Peter, to the spiritual marriage of Christ, at which time Christ was, as it were, in the way to accomplish his will towards the Gentiles-in this interval of time, I say, Christ was opposed or met by Saul, a young man, fiercely hostile to his religion ; armed against him by the power of the Sanhedrim, and eager to ravage and devour bis Church. With 1 Tim. i. 13. Vitringa particularly refers to this passage-Paulus vero έλυμαίνετο την Εκκλησίαν, ναstabat Ecclesiam, instar Ursi aut Leonis. It was a young lion which met Samson. Vitringa confirms his hypothesis by the peculiar description of this young lion, which is called not 72, a whelp, but nn789921, Leunculus Leonum aut Leænarum, p. 481, or, as he terms it in p. 488. Leo juvenis, St. Paul was a young man, highly distinguished among the persecutors of the Church, who were most attached to the Jewish discipline. The lion roared at him (as ready and intent to devour him,) pixup 2xv, roaring over against him, or opposite to bim. Saul is similarly described, as breathing out threatenings and Samson met the lion in the way to Timnath, a city of the Phi. This young lion, Samson, without any weapon, reut with his Saul, whom Christ met in the way, fierce and raging against him, was thrown down to the ground, and became dead both to his former self, and to the law of Moses, Acts ix. 4. Gal. ii. 19. -and as the lion met Samson, as if to prevent his nuptials at Timpath, so also did St. Paul'meet our Lord in the way, when he was endeavouring to prevent the predicted union between Christ and the Gentile Church. Although Samson's father and mother were not present, they The Sanhedrim of the Jewish Church, though present by mascus. Jalian Pe. Samaria. riod, 4747. Vulgar Æra, Philip the Deacon having left Jerusalem on account of the 34. supposed type, when he says, “tbe men who were with mo Samson, by his conquest over the lion, gave an earnest to the Christ, the Lord of the Church, by his victory over Saul, demonstrated his power to subdue and subject to himself the most implacable and powerful of his enemies. Vitringa then proceeds to consider the consequences of the death of the lion, and compares them with those that followed St. Paul's conversion. While Samson was engaged in completing the ceremonial of his nuptials, a hive of bees collect in the body of the lion, and there prepare honey. While Christ was upiting the Gentite Church to himself, by the preaching of St. Peter, and the conversion of Cornelius and his friends, the disciples of Christ collect at Damascus, with St. Paul, now dead to sin and the law, constantly exercised themselves in the study of the divine word, and by these labours brought forth sweet and wholesome food, which is the spiritual nourishment and consolation of the sinner. Honey is the sym. bol of those healthful and useful truths which are obtained by the studies of diligent men from the word of God, to feed others, that is, to instruct and console them: this emblem is common in Scripture. (Prov. xxiv. 19. and xxv. 16. Can. v. I. Ps. xix. 11.) While bees represent those industrious men who gather truths from their own labour and exertions. Saul was with the disciples at Damascus for many days (Acts ix. 11.); tbey were soon united with him, as a hive of bees, per modum examinis apum, Titus, Timothy, Silas, Epaphroditus, Tychicus, Onesimus, Aristarchus, Mark, Jesus surnamed Justus, and many others, producing honey as it were in the carcase of Saul, who being now dead to sin and the law, took an opportunity of explaining by his conversion the doctrine of grace in Christ Jesus to the advantage and consolation of himself and others. Samson tasted of the honey, and was refreshed. The labours, the devotedness, the energy of St. Paul, may bo said to have produced that honey of which the bridegroom (Cant. v. 1.) ate, and in which he is there represented to delight; and our Lord indeed really and typically ate after his resurrection. The father and mother of Samson ate of this honey, though The doctrines of Christianity, which the companions of St. Samson, at the nuptial feast, proposed an enigma to his com- The conversion of St. Paul was a circumstance so paradoxical and enigmatical, that it was considered by the Jews as an incredible and unaccountable event, (Gal. i. 23.) neither did the disciples believe it, nor receive Paul till after the lapse of tho three years which he passed in Arabia. Jalian Pe Persecution, goes to Samaria, and preaches there, and Samaria. Acts viï. 5-13. Samson himself, at the intreaties of his wise, explained the enigma. Barnabas, a Jew, an apostle of the Gentiles, related the epigma of the conversion of St. Paul, and how the Lord had appeared to bim in the way to Damascus. It ought not to excite surprize, that there should be an appearance of fancifulness in this parallel : the wonder rather is, that the learned Writer's ingenuity should have discovered so many coincidences. I am unwilling to come to his conclusions, as I find no allusion in the New Testament to this supposed type. The analogy, bowever, is curious. Vitringa is not the only writer who has discovered some allu. sion to St. Paul in the Old Testament. Witsius (a) bas quoted Cocceius, who has followed with some variations the authority of Tertullian, Ambrose, Jerome, and St. Augustin, in applying to St. Paul (Gen. xlix. 27.) Benjamin shall raven as a wolf: in the morning he shall devour the prey, and at night be shall divide the spoil. The Fathers would thus explain this prophecy-Paul, in the morning of his life, like a wolf devoured the Church, and in the evening, or the decline or latter division of his life, divided the spoils of the Gentiles, delivered from the dominion of Satan, with Christ and his Church. The interpretation of Cocccius is more elegant-He observes that the Israelites, as a nation, had their rising and their setting ; and on each occasion Benjamin was conspicuous. Saul was the first king of the nation, and defeated their enemies ; another Saul, in the decline of the Gentiles. Witsius, however, rejects both these interpretations ; Though Witsius rejects these supposed meanings of the pas- (a) See Vitringæ Observ. Sacræ, vol. ï. p. 479_492. Witsius devita Pauli Meletem. Leidens. cap. i. sect. viii. p. 5. 46 The apostles (Acts viii. 1.) had not yet left Jerusalem. This Philip, therefore, must not be confounded with the apostle. It was the Deacon, who after his mission to Samaria, went to his own house at Cesarea, where St. Paul was afterwards receiva, ed. (Acts xxi. 8.) The first effect of the Gospel of Christ was the removal of |