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The Almost Christian!
From Timeless Grace Gems
William Bacon Stevens
From Timeless Grace Gems
William Bacon Stevens
"Then Agrippa said to Paul: You almost persuade me to become a Christian!"
There was in the character of Paul, a moral sublimity far excelling the loftiest of mere earthly heroes. In both phases of his life, as a persecuting Pharisee, and as a Christian apostle he was a noted man, remarkable for great qualities and peculiar developments eminently fitting him to become on the one hand a bitter persecutor, and on the other a noble preacher of the Cross of Christ. A bolder advocate of the truth, a more triumphant defender of the faith there never has been in the whole history of Christianity. It mattered not where he was, or before whom he spoke his one theme was Jesus Christ, and Him crucified; and in every station he magnified his office. On several occasions, however, his zeal and eloquence were peculiarly displayed, one of which is referred to in the text.
Having been apprehended in Jerusalem under false charges, Paul was first taken before the Sanhedrin, or Council of the Jews; and thence he was sent by Claudius Lysias to Caesarea, until Felix, the governor of Judea, could hear his case; and by this cruel and servile man, he was kept in confinement two years. When Porcius Festus succeeded to the governorship, he proposed to send Paul back to Jerusalem; but Paul conscious that he had done no wrong, and aware of the implacable hatred of the chief priest and scribes, preferred to throw himself for justice, on a heathen tribunal rather than trust the prejudiced decisions of the Hebrew council. And hence when Festus put to him the question, will you go up to Jerusalem, and there be judged of these things? Paul replied, "I stand at Caesar's judgment-seat," and adds, "I appeal unto Caesar!" For it was the privilege of all Roman citizens by law, to choose whether they would be tried before a provincial or the imperial court. This exercise of Paul's right as a Roman citizen stopped all proceedings against him in Caesarea and baffled the malice of the Jews. While Festus waited for an opportunity to send Paul to Rome, he was visited by the young king Agrippa and his sister Bernice. To these royal visitors, Festus related the case of Paul, and Agrippa expressed a desire to see and hear the strange prisoner. The desire was granted, and the next day was set for the hearing.
When it came, Agrippa and Bernice and Festus with royal parade entered the audience-room. As soon as the governor had explained to the king the facts of Paul's arrest in Jerusalem and his appeal to Rome, Agrippa said to him, "You are permitted to speak for yourself." Then Paul, stretching forth his hand to arrest attention, answered for himself. What a trying moment was this for the apostle! Before him sat Agrippa, the son of that Herod who had slain James and arrested and imprisoned Peter. On the one side, his princely sister Bernice, brazen with incestuous crime; and on the other, Festus, whom the emperor Nero had appointed Procurator of Judea. In attendance upon these were the Chilliarchs the great officers of state, the nobility of the province, filling up the audience-room with the insignia of royalty and rank, of military and municipal power. In their midst stood Paul, small of stature, clad in simplest toga, and attended by the sentinel to whom he was chained as a prisoner.
Was not Paul dazzled by this display of royalty and power those flashing helmets those gleaming swords those polished spears? Was he not daunted by the looks of the king and his wicked sister by the stern gaze of the stern Festus by the frown of the courtiers by the dark scowl of the soldiers? Did not his tongue falter, and his knees tremble, as he stood before so prestigious an assemblage?
Behold the scene! The king the prisoner; the crown on the head of the one the chain on the wrist of the other. Royalty, power, wealth, in their concentrated form, seated before him; and he, a solitary disciple of the despised and crucified Nazarene, bound, guarded, standing alone in the midst of this display of pomp and power, stretching forth his hand to speak for himself and for Jesus!
Would he be dazzled? The eyes that had been made blind for three days, by the vision of Damascus, when Jesus revealed himself to him in a glory above the brightness of the sun at mid-day were not to be dazzled by any mortal splendor.
Would he tremble? The man who counted all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ had not a muscle in him to quiver at any human presence.
Would he falter? The tongue which had been commissioned by Jesus to witness for Him before kings and rulers had been so taught by the Holy Spirit that it knew no faltering accent before the great ones of the earth.
But hark! the apostle begins to speak for himself all sounds are hushed in that vast audience. His opening allusions to Agrippa arrest attention by their courtesy and truth. He proceeds, gathering strength and energy with each sentence his burning thoughts, his nervous words, his impassioned utterance, his glowing eye, his whole form swelling and rocking with intense earnestness as he relates the scene of his wondrous conversion outside the gates of Damascus together with the subduing effect of his speech upon the hushed and soul-thrilled audience alarms the Pagan governor, and he cries out with a loud voice, "You are out of your mind, Paul! Your great learning is driving you insane!"
Thus checked in the torrent of his eloquence, the prisoner meekly answered, "I am not insane, most excellent Festus. What I am saying is true and reasonable. The king is familiar with these things, and I can speak freely to him. I am convinced that none of this has escaped his notice, because it was not done in a corner." And then, by a bold stroke of oratory, he turns to Agrippa and says, "King Agrippa do you believe you the prophets?" Perceiving, perhaps, the embarrassment of the king at this unexpected question, he delicately answers it himself by saying, "I know that you do!"
The earnestness of his words, and the pungency of his appeal to Agrippa's personal knowledge of many of the facts of Christ's life and teaching; roused into action the torpid conscience of the young monarch, and hardly aware, perhaps, of the full force of his own words, uttered, it may be, half in jest, half in earnest, or wrung from him by the power of Paul's speech; he says, in the words of my text, "You almost persuade me to become a Christian!"
Such a tribute to his eloquence was met by the apostle with kindest courtesy; and, lifting up his chained hand, he replied to the half-convicted monarch, "Short time or long I pray God that not only you but all who are listening to me today may become what I am!" And then, as if suddenly remembering that he was a prisoner in chains, he touchingly adds, "Except for these chains!"
As he thus finished this master-piece of holy eloquence, we can imagine how the long pent-up feelings of the audience relieved themselves in almost murmurs of applause at the oratory; while yet they condemned the cause for which he so boldly plead. The result was that they mutually agreed that Paul had done "nothing worthy of death or of imprisonment." Thus, as Chrysostom says, "the Jews who thus persecuted Paul and sought to slay him, were condemned by Lysias were condemned by Felix were condemned by Festus were condemned by Agrippa, and ultimately God condemned them and destroyed their temple and their city for their hostility to the Gospel which Paul was commissioned to preach!"
Truly this whole scene stands before us as a grand Scriptural masterpiece, painted by Luke with that simple majesty of words; which is at once art's highest seal and glory only he does what other painters cannot do he makes us hear words, as well as see persons he unfolds to us the inner thoughts, as well as outward aspects, of the actors in this assembly.
Such were the circumstances under which the words of the text were uttered. They express, however, not merely the feelings of King Agrippa but of a large class of men, who may be termed the almost Christians men who occupy this semi-religious, yet most fragile and dangerous state.
This class, however, has several divisions, a few of which I propose to notice. There are:
1. Those who are intellectually convinced of the truth of religion, and are consequently theoretical believers. The larger part of those who are intelligently acquainted with the Bible, assent to its truth.
It is so fortified with proofs of its divinity, within and without;
it is so wonderful in its manifold prophecies;
it is so elevating in its teachings;
it so meets the moral necessities of our race;
it so unfolds the past and reveals the future;
it so explains God's dealings with man and man's relations to God;
it so provides for human peace and joy here and for eternal bliss hereafter
that there are only a few willfully deluded men who reject or disbelieve the Bible.
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