Charles Ellicott Commentary Acts 20:24

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Acts 20:24

1819–1905
Anglican
Charles Ellicott
Charles Ellicott

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Acts 20:24

1819–1905
Anglican
SCRIPTURE

"But I hold not my life of any account as dear unto myself, so that I may accomplish my course, and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel of the grace of God." — Acts 20:24 (ASV)

But none of these things move me...—Literally, But I take account of nothing, nor do I hold my life... We note the parallelism with Luther’s famous declaration, when warned by his friends not to go to Worms, “I will go there, though there should be devils on every house-top.”

So that I might finish my course with joy.—The two last words are missing in many of the best manuscripts and were probably inserted as a rhetorical improvement. The passage is grander without them. What St. Paul desired was to finish his course—whether “with joy” or not mattered little. The dominance of the same ruling thought finds utterance once again in his last Epistle (2 Timothy 4:7).

The ministry, which I have received of the Lord Jesus.—We have again to note the parallelism with St. Paul’s language elsewhere (2 Corinthians 4:1; 2 Corinthians 5:18; 1 Timothy 1:12); the words that follow are in apposition with the “ministry” and explain what it consisted in. It consisted in this: to bear witness—especially as a living example of its power (1 Timothy 1:12–16)—of the good tidings that God was not a harsh Judge, but a gracious Father, willing all men to be saved (1 Timothy 2:4). That was the truth to the proclamation of which his life was to be devoted. In this there was the central truth of the kingdom of God, of which the next verse speaks.