Albert Barnes Commentary Acts 8:24

Albert Barnes Commentary

Acts 8:24

1798–1870
Presbyterian
Albert Barnes
Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes Commentary

Acts 8:24

1798–1870
Presbyterian
SCRIPTURE

"And Simon answered and said, Pray ye for me to the Lord, that none of the things which ye have spoken come upon me." — Acts 8:24 (ASV)

Pray ye, etc. Here we remark:

  1. That Simon was directed to pray for himself (Acts 8:22), but he had no disposition to do that. Sinners will often ask others to pray for them when they are too proud, or too much in love with sin, to pray for themselves.
  2. The main thing that Peter wished to impress on him was a sense of his sin. Simon did not regard this but looked only to the punishment. He was terrified and alarmed, and he sought to avoid future punishment, but he had no alarm about his sins. So it is often with sinners.

So it was with Pharaoh (Exodus 8:28, 32) and with Jeroboam (1 Kings 13:6). And so sinners often quiet their own consciences by asking ministers and Christian friends to pray for them, while they still purpose to persevere in iniquity. If people expect to be saved, they must pray for themselves; and pray, not chiefly to be freed from punishment, but from the sin which deserves hell.

This is all that we hear of Simon in the New Testament; and the probability is, that, like many other sinners, he did not pray for himself but continued to live in the gall of bitterness and died in the bond of iniquity. The testimony of antiquity is decided on that point. See the notes on Acts 8:9.