Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 24:25 - 24:25

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Acts 24:25 - 24:25


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

And as he reasoned of righteousness - with reference to the public character of Felix.

temperance - with reference to his immoral life.

and judgment to come - when he would be called to an awful account for both.

Felix trembled - and no wonder. For, on the testimony of Tacitus, the Roman Annalist [Annals, 9; 12.54], he ruled with a mixture of cruelty, lust, and servility, and relying on the influence of his brother Pallas at court, he thought himself at liberty to commit every sort of crime with impunity. How noble the fidelity and courage which dared to treat of such topics in such a presence, and what withering power must have been in those appeals which made even a Felix to tremble!

Go thy way for this time; and when I have a convenient season I will call for thee - Alas for Felix! This was his golden opportunity, but - like multitudes still - he missed it. Convenient seasons in abundance he found to call for Paul, but never again to “hear him concerning the faith in Christ,” and writhe under the terrors of the wrath to come. Even in those moments of terror he had no thought of submission to the Cross or a change of life. The Word discerned the thoughts and intents of his heart, but that heart even then clung to its idols; even as Herod, who “did many things and heard John gladly,” but in his best moments was enslaved to his lusts. How many Felixes have appeared from age to age!