Paul and the Nazarite Vow
Acts 21:23-26
Do therefore this that we say to you: We have four men which have a vow on them;…


Hardly had Paul's glowing words of passionate love to Christ — his plea for a flee pulpit, as it were, a common Christianity — ceased when James cuts in severely and dryly enough with what he has heard. And then — as every word fell like an ice drop on Paul's fervent spirit, and he was wondering whether humiliation could go any further — he had to listen to the crowning proposal, that he should take four beggars who had a vow, pay for them himself, and see to their head shaving, etc., before all the people! Paul, who had taught throughout Asia that such usages were foolish or indifferent, was to go nigh eating his own words to allay the fears and gratify the narrow minds of those who called themselves Christ's disciples! The burning question, in fact, in Jerusalem, seemed to be not the love of Christ, or the conversion of the heathen, or fellowship between Christian teachers, but how to keep in with the orthodox laity, how stand firm by the old organisation. As Paul listened and read acutely, as he so well could, between the lines, a bitter, terrible, choking feeling must have come over him. There he stood, having toiled for years to get them money, amongst other things, for their poor, yearning above all for their sympathy, if only a friendly word, for him and his converts — first fruits of the new world he was conquering for them — and they met him with a stare and a rebuke. He was wretchedly disappointed, almost personally insulted; his offerings slighted — his sentiments ignored — his opinions and arguments misunderstood or disregarded. Last indignity; he was to be heavily fined, to be forced to eat his own words, and undergo openly a test of suspicion in the temple. It was an awful moment, the fate of his Gentile Churches seemed hanging in the balance. But the grandeur of Paul's mission prevailed. At all costs this rupture between him and the apostles must not take place — and of all places in the world not at Jerusalem; the party of the Church must be saved somehow — the aegis of those who had seen the Lord must be spread over the Gentiles. Paul rose to the occasion. Statesman, diplomatist, man of ideas, man of action, man of heart; where shall we find such qualities combined? They met in Paul. Concession and consistency for one moment seemed at war within him. But with a flash of true spiritual genius, he harmonised them, by appeal to a principle higher than either, Charity. That Divine formula enabled him now, not for the first and not for the last time, to stoop to conquer. Paul accepts. He appears in the temple; he is "at charges" with four beggars; he keeps the law of Moses.

(H. R. Haweis, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Do therefore this that we say to thee: We have four men which have a vow on them;

WEB: Therefore do what we tell you. We have four men who have taken a vow.




Paul Among the Nazarites
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