24, 25. God that made the world and all . . . therein--The most
profound philosophers of Greece were unable to conceive any real
distinction between God and the universe. Thick darkness, therefore,
behooved to rest on all their religious conceptions. To dissipate this,
the apostle sets out with a sharp statement of the fact of creation
as the central principle of all true religion--not less needed now,
against the transcendental idealism of our day.
seeing he is Lord--or Sovereign.
of heaven and earth--holding in free and absolute subjection all the
works of His hands; presiding in august royalty over them, as well as
pervading them all as the principle of their being. How different this
from the blind Force or Fate to which all creatures were regarded as in
bondage!
dwelleth not in temples made with hands--This thought, so familiar to
Jewish ears
(1Ki 8:27;
Isa 66:1, 2;
Ac 7:48),
and so elementary to Christians, would serve only more sharply to
define to his heathen audience the spirituality of that living,
personal God, whom he "announced" to them.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible