1.
The blessed Paul, writing to the Romans, says, "Inasmuch then as I am the Apostle of the Gentiles, I magnify mine office: if by any means I may provoke to emulation them that are my flesh": 1 and again, in another place, "For He that wrought effectually in Peter to the apostleship of the circumcision, the same was mighty in me toward the Gentiles." 2 If therefore he were the Apostle of the Gentiles, (for also in the Acts, God said to him, "Depart; for I will send thee far hence unto the Gentiles," 3 ) what had he to do with the Hebrews? and why did he also write an Epistle to them?
And especially as besides, they were ill-disposed towards him, and this is to be seen from many places. For hear what James says to him, "Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are which believe...and these all have been informed of thee that thou teachest men to forsake the law." 4 And oftentimes he had many disputings concerning this.
Why therefore, one might ask, as he was so learned in the law (for he was instructed in the law at the feet of Gamaliel, 5 and had great zeal in the matter, and was especially able to confound them in this respect)--why did not God send him to the Jews? Because on this very account they were more vehement in their enmity against him. "For they will not endure thee," 6 God says unto him; "But depart far hence to the Gentiles, for they will not receive thy testimony concerning me." 7 Whereupon he says, "Yea, Lord, they know that I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them that believed on thee; and when the blood of thy martyr Stephen was shed, I also was standing by and consenting unto his death, and kept the raiment of them that slew him." 8
And this he says 9 is a sign and proof of their not believing him. For thus it is: when a man goes away from any people, 10 if he be one of the least and of those who are nothing worth, he does not much vex those from whom he went; but if he be among the distinguished and earnest partisans and those who care for these things, he exceedingly grieves and vexes them beyond measure, in that 11 he especially overthrows their system with the multitude.
And besides this, there was something else. 12 What now might this be? That they who were about Peter were also with Christ, and saw signs and wonders; but he [Paul] having had the benefit of none of these, but being with Jews, suddenly deserted and became one of them. This especially promoted our cause. For while they indeed, seemed to testify even from gratitude, and one might have said that they bore witness to those things in love for their Master; he, on the other hand, who testifies to the resurrection, this man was rather one who heard a voice only. For this cause thou seest them waging war passionately with him, and doing all things for this purpose, that they might slay him, and raising seditions. 13
The unbelievers, then, were hostile to him for this reason; but why were the believers? Because in preaching to the Gentiles he was constrained to preach Christianity purely; and if haply even in Judaea he were found [doing so], he cared not. For Peter and they that were with him, because they preached in Jerusalem, when there was great fierceness, of necessity enjoined the observance of the law; but this man was quite at liberty. The [converts] too from the Gentiles were more than the Jews because they were without. 14 And this 15 enfeebled the law, and they had no such great reverence for it, although 16 he preached all things purely. Doubtless in this matter they think to shame him by numbers, saying, "Thou seest, brother, how many ten thousands of Jews there are which 17 are come together." 18 On this account they hated him and turned away from him, because "They are informed of thee, he says, that thou teachest men to forsake the law." 19
Rom. xi. 13, 14 ↩
Gal. ii. 8 ↩
Acts xxii. 21 ↩
Acts xxi. 20, 21 ↩
Acts xxii. 3 ↩
"Wherefore God foreseeing this, that they would not receive Him," Ben. K. Sav. ↩
Acts xxii. 21, 18 ↩
Acts xxii. 19, 20 ↩
"they show," K. Ben. ↩
e thnous ↩
"Departing from them, going to others," K. Ben. Sav. ↩
Add: "Which should make them incredulous," Bened. K. Sav. ↩
"For this purpose, and raising seditions that they might slay him," Bened. A. K. ↩
"The chosen people being fewer than all people, encircled on all sides by the heathen" ; see Mic. v. 7, 8 ↩
"By this he enfeebled," Ben. ↩
"Because," Ben. Sav. K. Q. R. ↩
Acts xxi. 20 ↩
"which believe," Ben. Sav. K. Q. ↩
Acts xxi. 21 ↩