Acts 22:22-29
The gospel’s inclusion of the nations provokes hostility, yet God uses lawful means to preserve His servant.
Scripture Text
22:22 They listened to Him until He said that; then they lifted up their voice and said, “Rid the earth of this fellow, for He isn’t fit to live!”
22:23 As they cried out, threw off their cloaks, and threw dust into the air,
22:24 The commanding officer commanded Him to be brought into the barracks, ordering Him to be examined by scourging, that He might know for what crime they shouted against Him like that.
22:25 When they had tied Him up with thongs, Paul asked the centurion who stood by, “Is it lawful for You to scourge a man who is a Roman, and not found guilty?”
22:26 When the centurion heard it, He went to the commanding officer and told Him, “Watch what You are about to do, for this man is a Roman!”
22:27 The commanding officer came and asked Him, “Tell me, are You a Roman?” He said, “Yes.”
22:28 The commanding officer answered, “I bought my citizenship for a great price.” Paul said, “But I was born a Roman.”
22:29 Immediately those who were about to examine Him departed from Him, and the commanding officer also was afraid when He realized that He was a Roman, because He had bound Him.
The gospel’s inclusion of the nations provokes hostility, yet God uses lawful means to preserve His servant.
When Paul mentions His mission to the Gentiles, the crowd erupts, leading to His impending flogging, which is halted by His assertion of Roman citizenship.
The church must learn to tell the truth about Christ with courage, resist distorted zeal, embrace God’s mission to the nations, and use providential protections for continued witness.
- Defense Through Shared Identity Paul begins by identifying with His Jewish audience, emphasizing His upbringing, law training, zeal, and former persecution of the Way.
- Conversion Through the Risen Christ Paul’s direction changes because Jesus appears to Him from heaven and identifies Paul’s persecution of believers as persecution of Himself.
- Commission Through Ananias Ananias restores Paul’s sight and declares that God appointed Him to see the Righteous One, hear His voice, and witness to all people.
- Gentile Mission Through Temple Vision Paul’s mission to the Gentiles is confirmed by the Lord in the temple, not chosen by Paul as a rejection of Israel.
- Rejection of Gentile Mission The crowd accepts Paul’s testimony until the Gentile commission becomes explicit, revealing the scandal of Gentile inclusion.
- Protection Through Roman Citizenship Paul is about to be unlawfully flogged, but His Roman citizenship forces the authorities to stop.
- Transition to Sanhedrin Hearing The commander moves from mob confusion to formal Jewish council inquiry.
Paul addresses the Jerusalem crowd, recounts His Jewish formation, persecution of the Way, encounter with the risen Jesus, baptism, temple vision, and commission to the Gentiles; the crowd rejects His Gentile mission, and Paul is protected from flogging by His Roman citizenship.
Acts 22 argues that Paul is not an enemy of Israel but a Jewish witness transformed and commissioned by Israel’s Messiah. His encounter with the risen Jesus, confirmation through Ananias, baptism, temple vision, and Gentile commission all show divine initiative. The crowd’s rage reveals that Gentile inclusion remains the scandal point. Roman citizenship then becomes God’s providential means to preserve Paul for further testimony.
Theological logic
- Paul begins respectfully, seeking to answer the crowd as fellow Jews rather than enemies.
- His use of Aramaic and account of Jewish formation establishes credibility with his audience.
- Paul’s former persecution of the Way proves he did not become a Christian through casual preference or ignorance of Jewish zeal.
- The risen Jesus appears to Paul and identifies himself with the persecuted church, showing union between Christ and his people.
- Paul’s conversion is initiated by Christ’s revelation, not human persuasion.
- Paul’s blindness displays the overwhelming glory of the risen Jesus and Paul’s helplessness before him.
- Ananias is presented as devout according to the law and respected by Jews, strengthening the legitimacy of Paul’s account before Jewish hearers.
- Ananias interprets Paul’s experience as divine appointment by the God of the ancestors.
- Paul is chosen to know God’s will, see the Righteous One, and hear his voice, grounding his apostolic witness in revelation.
- Paul’s baptism and calling on the Lord’s name show that conversion includes public identification and appeal to Christ.
- The temple vision is crucial: Paul’s Gentile mission is commanded in the temple by the Lord, not invented in Gentile territory.
- Paul’s appeal to his former persecution does not alter the Lord’s command because Jerusalem will not receive his testimony.
- The Lord’s words, 'Go; I will send you far away to the Gentiles,' reveal divine necessity behind the mission.
- The crowd’s violent reaction exposes opposition not merely to Paul personally but to the extension of salvation to Gentiles.
- The commander’s proposed flogging shows Roman misunderstanding of the theological conflict.
- Paul’s Roman citizenship functions providentially to prevent unlawful suffering at this moment.
- The chapter ends by moving Paul from mob violence toward official examination, preparing for further witness before Jewish and Roman authorities.
- Do not portray Gentile mission as innovation rather than fulfillment.
- Do not equate asserting legal rights with lack of faith.
- Do not overlook the narrative escalation toward formal trials.
- Do not detach hostility from theological resistance to grace.
- Do not assume civil authority is inherently hostile; it can serve providence.
- Do not portray Roman citizenship as ultimate refuge.
- Avoid equating Jewish rejection with universal Jewish hostility.
- Do not assume legal rights negate spiritual dependence.
- Guard against reading ethnic tension apart from covenant history.
- Do not detach this event from the larger mission narrative.
- Faithfulness to Gentile inclusion may provoke strong opposition.
- Wisdom includes using lawful protections without compromising witness.
- Ethnic pride can distort spiritual perception.
- God may use secular systems to advance gospel purposes.
- Composure under threat reflects confidence in God’s sovereignty.
- Frame testimony around Christ’s intervention and commission.
- Confess past sin honestly without making it the center.
- Show how the Lord redirected Your life for His purposes.
- Call people to respond to Jesus, not merely admire Your story.
- Guard against zeal that lacks submission to Christ.
- Welcome God’s grace to people beyond Your natural boundaries.
- Use legal protections wisely when they preserve faithful witness.
- Remain prepared to speak truth under pressure.
Humility, courage, truthful self-disclosure, obedience to Christ’s commission, freedom from exclusionary pride, wise use of rights, and steadiness under hostility.
- Paul’s Damascus road testimony : Acts 22 retells Paul’s conversion from Acts 9 with emphasis suited to the Jerusalem crowd.
- Persecuting Christ’s people as persecuting Christ : Jesus’ words to Paul reveal His union with the church.
- The Righteous One : Jesus is called the Righteous One, a title also used in earlier apostolic preaching.
- Calling on the name of the Lord : Paul’s baptismal instruction connects to the broader biblical promise of salvation through calling on the Lord.
- Gentile mission commanded by Christ : Paul’s commission fulfills the Lord’s earlier word that He would carry Christ’s name before Gentiles, kings, and Israel.
- Stephen and Paul : Paul recalls approving Stephen’s death, linking His former persecution with the earlier martyr-witness of Acts.
- Witness before authorities : Paul’s arrest and citizenship appeal continue the Lord’s plan for Him to testify before rulers.
The gospel confronts entrenched prejudice, yet Christ’s purposes advance through both suffering and lawful protection.