Apostelgeschichte 25:8

8 indem Paulus sich verantwortete: Weder gegen das Gesetz der Juden, noch gegen den Tempel, noch gegen den Kaiser habe ich etwas gesündigt.

Apostelgeschichte 25:8 Meaning and Commentary

Acts 25:8

While he answered for himself
As he was allowed by the Roman laws to do, he pleaded his own cause, and showed the falsehood of the charges exhibited against him; by observing, that as the crimes alleged against him were reducible to three heads, neither of them were just and true:

neither against the law of the Jews;
the law of Moses, whether moral, ceremonial, or judicial; not the moral law, that he was a strict observer of, both before and since his conversion; nor the ceremonial law, for though it was abolished, and he knew it was, yet for peace sake, and in condescension to the weakness of some, and in order to gain others, he submitted to it, and was performing a branch of it, when he was seized in the temple; nor the judicial law, which concerned the Jews as Jews, and their civil affairs: neither against the temple; at Jerusalem, the profanation of which he was charged with, by bringing a Gentile into it; which was a falsehood, at least a mistake:

nor yet against Caesar, have I offended at all;
for he was charged with sedition, ( Acts 24:5 ) . Caesar was a common name to the Roman emperors, as Pharaoh was to the kings of Egypt; and which they took from Julius Caesar the first of them, who was succeeded by Augustus Caesar, under whom Christ was born; and he by Tiberius, under whom he suffered; the fourth was Caius Caligula; the fifth was Claudius, mentioned in ( Acts 11:28 ) ( 18:2 ) and the present Caesar, to whom Paul now appealed, was Nero; and though succeeding emperors bore this name, it was also given to the second in the empire, or the presumptive heir to it: authors are divided about the original of Caesar, the surname of Julius; some say he had it from the colour of his eyes, which were "Caesii", grey; others from "Caesaries", his fine head of hair; others from his killing of an elephant, which, in the language of the Moors, is called "Caesar": the more common opinion is, that he took his name from his mother's womb, being "Caeso", cut up at his birth, to make way for his passage into the world; in which manner also our King Edward the Sixth came into the world.

Apostelgeschichte 25:8 In-Context

6 Nachdem er aber nicht mehr als acht oder zehn Tage unter ihnen verweilt hatte, ging er nach Cäsarea hinab; und des folgenden Tages setzte er sich auf den Richterstuhl und befahl, Paulus vorzuführen.
7 Als er aber angekommen war, stellten sich die von Jerusalem herabgekommenen Juden um ihn her und brachten viele und schwere Beschuldigungen vor, die sie nicht zu beweisen vermochten,
8 indem Paulus sich verantwortete: Weder gegen das Gesetz der Juden, noch gegen den Tempel, noch gegen den Kaiser habe ich etwas gesündigt.
9 Festus aber, der sich bei den Juden in Gunst setzen wollte, antwortete dem Paulus und sagte: Willst du nach Jerusalem hinaufgehen und dort dieserhalb vor mir gerichtet werden?
10 Paulus aber sprach: Ich stehe vor dem Richterstuhl des Kaisers, wo ich gerichtet werden muß; den Juden habe ich kein Unrecht getan, wie auch du sehr wohl weißt.
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