35. But in every nation--not (observe), in every religion; according to a common distortion of these words.
he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness--This being the
well-known phraseology of the Old Testament in describing the truly
godly man, within the pale of revealed religion, it cannot be alleged
that Peter meant it to denote a merely virtuous character, in the
heathen sense; and as Peter had learned enough, from the messengers of
Cornelius and from his own lips, to convince him that the whole
religious character of this Roman officer had been moulded in the Jewish
faith, there can be no doubt that the apostle intended to describe
exactly such saintship--in its internal spirituality and external
fruitfulness--as God had already pronounced to be genuine and approved.
And since to such "He giveth more grace," according to the law of His
Kingdom
(Jas 4:6;
Mt 25:29),
He sends Peter, not to be the instrument of his conversion, as
this is very frequently called, but simply to "show him the way of God
more perfectly," as before to the devout Ethiopian eunuch.
JFB.
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