This, or
something like this, St. Paul would have said to Felix. He did not,
as far as we know, rebuke him for his sins. He left him to rebuke
himself. He told him what ought to be, what he ought to do, and left
the rest to his conscience. Poor Felix, brought up a heathen slave
in that profligate court of Rome, had probably never heard of
righteousness and temperance, had never had what was good and noble
set before him. Now St. Paul set the good before him, and showed him
a higher life than any he had ever dreamed of--higher than all his
viceregal power and pomp--and bade him see how noble and divine it
was to be good.
But it is written St. Paul reasoned with Felix about judgment to
come.
We must not too hastily suppose that this means that he told Felix
that he was in danger of hell-fire. For that is an argument which
St. Paul never uses anywhere in his writings or speeches, as far as
we know them. He never tries, as too many do now-a-days, to frighten
sinners into repentance, by telling them of the flames of hell; and
therefore we have no right to fancy that he did so by Felix. He told
him of judgment to come; and we can guess from his writings what he
would have said. That there was a living God who judged the earth
always by his Son Jesus Christ, and that he was coming then,
immediately, to punish all the horrible wickedness which was then
going on in those parts of the world which St.
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