Albert Barnes Commentary


Albert Barnes Commentary
"[commanding his accusers to come before thee.] from whom thou wilt be able, by examining him thyself, to take knowledge of all these things whereof we accuse him." — Acts 24:8 (ASV)
Commanding his accusers (Acts 23:30).
By examining of whom. That is, the Jews who were then present. Tertullus presented them as his witnesses of the truth of what he had said.
It is evident that we have here only the summary or outline of the speech which Tertullus made. It is incredible that a Roman rhetorician would have, on such an occasion, delivered an address so brief, so meager, and so destitute of display as this. But it is doubtless a correct summary of his address, and contains the leading points of the accusation.
It is customary for the sacred writers, as for other writers, to give only the outline of discourses and arguments. Such a course was inevitable, unless the New Testament had been swelled to wholly undue proportions.