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Translation
King James Version
That they should seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after him, and find him, though he be not far from every one of us:
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KJV (with Strong's)
That they should seek G2212 the Lord G2962, if G1487 haply G686 they might feel G5584 after him G846, and G2532 find him G2147, though G2544 he be G5225 not G3756 far G3112 from G575 every G1538 one G1520 of us G2257:
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Complete Jewish Bible
God did this so that people would look for him and perhaps reach out and find him although in fact, he is not far from each one of us,
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Berean Standard Bible
God intended that they would seek Him and perhaps reach out for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us.
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American Standard Version
that they should seek God, if haply they might feel after him and find him, though he is not far from each one of us:
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World English Bible Messianic
that they should seek the Lord, if perhaps they might reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from each one of us.
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Geneva Bible (1599)
That they shoulde seeke the Lord, if so be they might haue groped after him, and founde him though doubtlesse he be not farre from euery one of vs.
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Young's Literal Translation
to seek the Lord, if perhaps they did feel after Him and find, --though, indeed, He is not far from each one of us,
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In the KJVVerse 27,551 of 31,102

Study This Verse

SUMMARY

Acts 17:27 encapsulates a core aspect of God's providential design for humanity, articulated by the Apostle Paul on the Areopagus. It reveals that God, the sovereign Creator and Sustainer, has ordered the times and dwelling places of all nations with a singular, redemptive purpose: that humanity might actively seek Him, even if by a groping, intuitive search, and ultimately discover Him. This divine intention is grounded in the profound truth that God is not a distant or inaccessible deity, but is intimately near to every individual.

CONTEXT

  • Literary Context: Acts 17:27 is a pivotal statement within Paul's renowned sermon delivered to the Athenian philosophers on the Areopagus. Having arrived in Athens, Paul's spirit was deeply provoked by the city's pervasive idolatry, leading him to engage in daily discussions in the synagogue and the marketplace (Acts 17:16-17). His intellectual and spiritual fervor caught the attention of Stoic and Epicurean philosophers, who, curious about his "new teaching," invited him to speak at the Areopagus, the ancient judicial and intellectual center (Acts 17:18-20). Paul masterfully begins his address by acknowledging their altar "To the Unknown God," using it as a strategic bridge to introduce the one true God—the Creator of the universe, who does not dwell in temples made by human hands and is not served by human needs (Acts 17:22-25). Verse 27, therefore, logically follows, explaining God's ultimate purpose in creating and sustaining humanity: to enable and encourage their search for Him.
  • Historical & Cultural Context: Athens in the first century AD was the intellectual and philosophical capital of the Roman world, a city steeped in polytheism, philosophical discourse, and artistic expression. The Areopagus (Mars Hill) was a prominent rock outcropping near the Acropolis, serving historically as a high court and, by Paul's time, a place for philosophical debate and public discourse. The Stoics, who emphasized reason, virtue, and living in harmony with nature, and the Epicureans, who sought pleasure (often interpreted as tranquility and freedom from disturbance) as the highest good, represented the dominant philosophical schools Paul encountered. Their worldviews often posited a distant or impersonal deity, or a pantheon of gods indifferent to human affairs. Paul's assertion of a personal, immanent God who actively seeks relationship with humanity directly challenged these prevailing notions, presenting a radical alternative to their deeply ingrained religious and philosophical systems.
  • Key Themes: This verse contributes significantly to several overarching themes in Acts and the broader biblical narrative. Firstly, it underscores God's Universal Sovereignty and Providence, demonstrating that His divine plan extends to the very existence, habitation, and historical trajectory of all nations (Acts 17:26). Secondly, it highlights Humanity's Innate Spiritual Longing, suggesting a divinely implanted desire or capacity within all people to seek and find their Creator, even if imperfectly or ignorantly. This longing is not accidental but part of God's design. Thirdly, the verse powerfully conveys God's Immanence and Accessibility, countering the idea of a remote or uncaring deity. The declaration that God is "not far from every one of us" emphasizes His constant presence and readiness to be found, making the human search for Him a tangible and hopeful endeavor, as is further expounded in passages like Jeremiah 29:13.

EXPOSITION AND ANALYSIS

Key Word Analysis

  • seek (Greek, zētéō, G2212): This verb implies an active, intentional, and often diligent pursuit. It is not a passive waiting but an earnest endeavor to discover or obtain something. In this context, it speaks to humanity's responsibility to engage in a spiritual quest, to inquire after God, and to strive for knowledge of Him. It can encompass both a genuine spiritual hunger and, in other contexts, a malevolent plotting. Here, it is clearly the former, a divinely intended pursuit.
  • feel after (Greek, psēlapháō, G5584): This word literally means "to grope, to touch, to handle," often used in the context of feeling one's way in the dark or by touch. It conveys a sense of searching that might be uncertain, perhaps even desperate, lacking clear sight or full understanding. It suggests an experiential, tactile, and intuitive reaching out for God, even when intellectual clarity or direct revelation is absent. It implies that humanity, even in its ignorance, possesses an innate, if sometimes clumsy, capacity to perceive God's presence.
  • find (Greek, heurískō, G2147): This verb means "to discover, to obtain, to perceive." It signifies the successful outcome of the search implied by zētéō and psēlapháō. It suggests that the seeking is not futile, but that God can indeed be found. The act of finding implies a revelation or an encounter, moving from a state of searching to a state of knowing or experiencing.

Verse Breakdown

  • "That they should seek the Lord": This clause reveals God's ultimate purpose in orchestrating human history and habitation. It is a teleological statement, indicating that the entire arrangement of human life, including the establishment of nations and their boundaries, is designed to prompt humanity to actively pursue a relationship with their Creator. This seeking is not merely intellectual but involves a deep, existential quest for meaning and connection with the divine.
  • "if haply they might feel after him, and find him": This phrase describes the manner of seeking and the potential outcome. The "if haply" (Greek, ei ára) suggests a conditional possibility, perhaps acknowledging the difficulty or uncertainty of the human search without direct revelation, or perhaps a rhetorical flourish to emphasize the divine initiative. The imagery of "feeling after him" (psēlapháō) vividly portrays a tactile, groping search, like someone blind or in darkness trying to discern an object by touch. This suggests that even an imperfect, intuitive, or desperate search can lead to discovery. The conjunction "and find him" indicates that the purpose of this groping search is ultimately successful, implying that God is indeed discoverable by those who genuinely seek.
  • "though he be not far from every one of us": This concluding clause provides the profound theological basis for the possibility of finding God. It asserts God's immanence and accessibility. Despite humanity's often fumbling search, God is not remote, distant, or indifferent. He is intimately present and near to all people, making the search for Him a viable and hopeful endeavor rather than a futile quest for an absent deity. This truth underscores God's active presence within His creation and His desire to be known.

Literary Devices

Paul's address in Acts 17:27 employs several powerful literary devices. The phrase "feel after him" is a striking Metaphor, comparing the spiritual search for God to a physical act of groping in the dark. This vivid imagery conveys the often uncertain, yet persistent, nature of humanity's intuitive quest for the divine, acknowledging that people may not always know exactly what they are looking for or how to find it, but they are nonetheless reaching out. There is also an element of Paradox in the verse: humanity is urged to "seek" and "feel after" a God who is simultaneously "not far." This highlights the tension between humanity's need to actively pursue God and God's inherent omnipresence and accessibility. Paul's entire sermon, including this verse, functions as a powerful example of Didacticism, serving to instruct and teach his audience about the true nature of God and humanity's relationship to Him, moving them from ignorance to understanding.

THEOLOGICAL AND THEMATIC CONNECTIONS

Acts 17:27 resonates deeply with the biblical concept of general revelation, asserting that God has made Himself knowable to all humanity through creation, conscience, and the ordering of history. This verse posits that God's providential arrangement of human existence—including the timing and location of nations—is fundamentally designed to prompt a spiritual yearning and search for Him. It challenges the notion of a remote, deistic God, instead presenting a personal, immanent Creator who desires to be found by His creation. This divine accessibility means that the human search for meaning and purpose, often expressed through diverse religious and philosophical systems, is not a random evolutionary byproduct but a divinely implanted impulse, a longing for the One who is truly near.

REFLECTION AND APPLICATION

Acts 17:27 offers profound encouragement and a clear call to action for both seekers and believers. For those who feel a spiritual void, a sense of longing, or are grappling with life's ultimate questions, this verse affirms that such an internal search is not futile but divinely orchestrated. It assures us that God is not a distant, unconcerned deity, but is intimately present and desires to be found. This truth validates the innate human impulse to seek something beyond the material, confirming that the "unknown God" many ignorantly worship or vaguely sense is, in fact, the living God who is "not far from every one of us." For believers, this verse serves as a powerful reminder of God's universal presence and His active involvement in human affairs, even in cultures seemingly far from Him. It provides a foundational truth for evangelism, underscoring that people are inherently seeking God, whether they realize it or not, and that our mission is to point them to the One who is truly near and fully revealed in Jesus Christ. It encourages us to engage with the spiritual hunger in the world, recognizing that God has already prepared hearts to "feel after" Him.

Questions for Reflection

  • In what ways have you personally experienced a "feeling after" God, even before you fully knew Him?
  • How does the truth that God is "not far from every one of us" impact your understanding of His character and His relationship with humanity?
  • How can this verse inform your approach to sharing the Gospel with those who are searching for meaning or purpose?
  • What practical steps can you take to more intentionally "seek the Lord" in your daily life?

FAQ

What does "feel after him" imply about humanity's search for God?

Answer: The phrase "feel after him" (Greek, psēlapháō) implies a search that is tactile, groping, and perhaps uncertain, much like someone feeling their way in the dark. It suggests that even without perfect knowledge or clear sight, humanity has an innate, intuitive capacity to reach out for God. It speaks to an experiential seeking, not just intellectual assent, acknowledging that people may be searching for God even when they don't fully understand what or whom they are seeking. It highlights God's accessibility even to those whose understanding is limited, demonstrating that He can be perceived through a less defined, yet genuine, spiritual longing. This aligns with the idea that God has placed eternity in the human heart (Ecclesiastes 3:11).

Does this verse suggest that everyone will find God, regardless of their beliefs?

Answer: Acts 17:27 states God's purpose in ordering human existence—"that they should seek the Lord... and find him"—and affirms His accessibility ("though he be not far from every one of us"). It speaks to God's universal desire for humanity to know Him and His active presence that makes finding Him possible. However, it does not guarantee that everyone will find Him, as human free will and response are still involved. The "if haply" (Greek, ei ára) suggests a condition or possibility, implying that while God is near and desires to be found, humanity must still respond to that divine prompting. The Bible consistently teaches that finding God requires a responsive heart, repentance, and faith, ultimately through the revelation of Jesus Christ (John 14:6).

How does this verse relate to the concept of general revelation?

Answer: Acts 17:27 is a cornerstone passage for understanding general revelation. Paul argues that God has not left Himself without witness, but has made Himself known to all humanity through His creation and His providential ordering of history and human habitation. The very existence of nations, their boundaries, and their historical development are all part of God's design to prompt humanity to seek Him. This means that everyone, regardless of their access to special revelation (like the Bible or the Gospel), has some innate knowledge or sense of God's existence and power, leading them to "feel after him." This aligns with other biblical texts like Psalm 19:1-4 and Romans 1:19-20, which assert that God's attributes are clearly perceived through what has been made, leaving humanity without excuse.

CHRIST-CENTERED FULFILLMENT

While Acts 17:27 speaks of a universal human search for God, and God's immanent presence making that search possible, the New Testament reveals that this seeking ultimately finds its definitive and complete fulfillment in Jesus Christ. The "Lord" whom humanity is to seek and find is fully embodied in the person of Jesus. He is not merely a guide to God, but the very "image of the invisible God" (Colossians 1:15), the one through whom the Father is perfectly revealed. The "feeling after" God, which may be a groping in the dark for many, becomes a clear vision in Christ, who declared, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through me" (John 14:6). The God who is "not far from every one of us" drew supremely near in the Incarnation, dwelling among us as Emmanuel, "God with us" (Matthew 1:23). Therefore, the universal human longing for God, highlighted by Paul, is ultimately satisfied not by an abstract philosophical search, but by a personal encounter with the risen Christ, through whom we are reconciled to the very God whom we were created to seek and find (2 Corinthians 5:18-19).

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Commentary on Acts 17 verses 22–31

I. II. Main points1. 2. Sub-points(1.) (2.) Details

We have here St. Paul's sermon at Athens. Divers sermons we have had, which the apostles preached to the Jews, or such Gentiles as had an acquaintance with and veneration for the Old Testament, and were worshippers of the true and living God; and all they had to do with them was to open and allege that Jesus is the Christ; but here we have a sermon to heathens, that worshipped false gods, and were without the true God in the world, and to them the scope of their discourse was quite different from what it was to the other. In the former case their business was to lead their hearers by prophecies and miracles to the knowledge of the Redeemer, and faith in him; in the latter it was to lead them by the common works of providence to the knowledge of the Creator, and the worship of him. One discourse of this kind we had before to the rude idolaters of Lystra that deified the apostles (Act 14:15); this recorded here is to the more polite and refined idolaters at Athens, and an admirable discourse it is, and every way suited to his auditory and the design he had upon them.

I. He lays down this, as the scope of his discourse, that he aimed to bring them to the knowledge of the only living and true God, as the sole and proper object of their adoration. He is here obliged to lay the foundation, and to instruct them in the first principle of all religion, that there is a God, and that God is but one. When he preached against the gods they worshipped, he had no design to draw them to atheism, but to the service of the true Deity. Socrates, who had exposed the pagan idolatry, was indicted in this very court, and condemned, not only because he did not esteem those to be gods whom the city esteemed to be so, but because he introduced new demons; and this was the charge against Paul. Now he tacitly owns the former part of the charge, but guards against the latter, by declaring that he does not introduce any new gods, but reduce them to the knowledge of one God, the Ancient of days. Now,

1.He shows them that they needed to be instructed herein; for they had lost the knowledge of the true God that made them, in the worship of false gods that they had made (Deos qui rogat ille facit - He who worships the gods makes them): I perceive that in all things you are too superstitious. The crime he charges upon them is giving that glory to others which is due to God only, that they feared and worshipped demons, spirits that they supposed inhabited the images to which they directed their worship. "It is time for you to be told that there is but one God who are multiplying deities above any of your neighbours, and mingle your idolatries with all your affairs. You are in all things too superstitious - deisidaimonesteroî you easily admit every thing that comes under a show of religion, but it is that which corrupts it more and more; I bring you that which will reform it." Their neighbours praised them for this as a pious people, but Paul condemns them for it. Yet it is observable how he mollifies the charge, does not aggravate it, to provoke them. He uses a word which among them was taken in a good sense: You are every way more than ordinarily religious, so some read it; you are very devout in your way. Or, if it be taken in a bad sense, it is mitigated: "You are as it were (hōs) more superstitious than you need be;" and he says no more than what he himself perceived; theōrō - I see it, I observe it. They charged Paul with setting forth new demons: "Nay," says he, "you have demons enough already; I will not add to the number of them."

2.He shows them that they themselves had given a fair occasion for the declaring of this one true God to them, by setting up an altar, To the unknown God, which intimated an acknowledgment that there was a God who was yet to them an unknown God; and it is sad to think that at Athens, a place which was supposed to have the monopoly of wisdom, the true God was an unknown God, the only God that was unknown. "Now you ought to bed Paul welcome, for this is the God whom he comes to make known to you, the God whom you tacitly complain that you are ignorant of." There, where we are sensible we are defective and come short, just there, the gospel takes us up, and carries us on.

(1.)Various conjectures the learned have concerning this altar dedicated to the unknown God. [1.] Some think the meaning is, To the God whose honour it is to be unknown, and that they intended the God of the Jews, whose name is ineffable, and whose nature is unsearchable. It is probable they had heard from the Jews, and from the writings of the Old Testament, of the God of Israel, who had proved himself to be above all gods, but was a God hiding himself, Isa 45:15. The heathen called the Jews' God, Deus incertus, incertum Mosis Numen - an uncertain God, the uncertain Deity of Moses, and the God without name. Now this God, says Paul, this God, who cannot by searching be found out to perfection, I now declare unto you. [2.] Others think the meaning is, To the God whom it is our unhappiness not to know, which intimates that they would think it their happiness to know him. Some tell us that upon occasion of a plague that raged at Athens, when they had sacrificed to all their gods one after another for the staying of the plague, they were advised to let some sheep go where they pleased, and, where they lay down, to build an altar, tō prosēkonti Theō - to the proper God, or the God to whom that affair of staying the pestilence did belong; and, because they knew not how to call him, they inscribed it, To the unknown God. Others, from some of the best historians of Athens, tell us they had many altars inscribed, To the gods of Asia, Europe, and Africa - To the unknown God: and some of the neighbouring countries used to swear by the God that was unknown at Athens; so Lucian.

(2.)Observe, how modestly Paul mentions this. That he might not be thought a spy, nor one that had intruded himself more than became a stranger into the knowledge of their mysteries, he tells them that he observed it as he passed by, and saw their devotions, or their sacred things. It was public, and he could not forbear seeing it, and it was proper enough to make his remarks upon the religion of the place; and observe how prudently and ingeniously he takes occasion from this to bring in his discourse of the true God. [1.] He tells them that the God he preached to them was one that they did already worship, and therefore he was not a setter forth of new or strange gods: "As you have a dependence upon him, so he has had some kind of homage from you." [2.] He was one whom they ignorantly worshipped, which was a reproach to them, who were famous all the world over for their knowledge. "Now," says he, "I come to take away that reproach, that you may worship him understandingly whom how you worship ignorantly; and it cannot but be acceptable to have your blind devotion turned into a reasonable service, that you may not worship you know not what."

II. He confirms his doctrine of one living and true God, by his works of creation and providence: "The God whom I declare unto you to be the sole object of your devotion, and call you to the worship of, is the God that made the world and governs it; and, by the visible proofs of these, you may be led to this invisible Being, and be convinced of his eternal power and Godhead." The Gentiles in general, and the Athenians particularly, in their devotions were governed, not by their philosophers, many of whom spoke clearly and excellently well of one supreme Numen, of his infinite perfections and universal agency and dominion (witness the writings of Plato, and long after of Cicero); but by their poets, and their idle fictions. Homer's works were the Bible of the pagan theology, or demonology rather, not Plato's; and the philosophers tamely submitted to this, rested in their speculations, disputed them among themselves, and taught them to their scholars, but never made the use they ought to have made of them in opposition to idolatry; so little certainty were they at concerning them, and so little impression did these things make upon them! Nay, they ran themselves into the superstition of their country, and thought they ought to do so. Eamus ad communem errorem - Let us embrace the common error. Now Paul here sets himself, in the first place, to reform the philosophy of the Athenians (he corrects the mistakes of that), and to give them right notions of the one only living and true God, and then to carry the matter further than they ever attempted for the reforming of their worship, and the bringing them off from their polytheism and idolatry. Observe what glorious things Paul here says of that God whom he served, and would have them to serve.

1.He is the God that made the world, and all things therein; the Father almighty, the Creator of heaven and earth. This was admitted by many of the philosophers; but those of Aristotle's school denied it, and maintained "that the world was from eternity, and every thing always was from eternity, and every thing always was what now it is." Those of the school of Epicurus fancied "that the world was made by a fortuitous concourse of atoms, which, having been in perpetual motion, at length accidentally jumped into this frame." Against both these Paul here maintains that God by the operations of an infinite power, according to the contrivance of an infinite wisdom, in the beginning of time made the world and all things therein, the origin of which was owing, not as they fancied to an eternal matter, but to an eternal mind.

2.He is therefore Lord of heaven and earth, that is, he is the rightful owner, proprietor, and possessor, of all the beings, powers, and riches of the upper and lower world, material and immaterial, visible and invisible. This follows from his making heaven and earth. If he created all, without doubt he has the disposing of all: and, where he gives being, he has an indisputable right to give law.

3.He is, in a particular manner, the Creator of men, of all men (Act 17:26): He made of one blood all nations of men. He made the first man, he makes every man, is the former of every man's body and the Father of every man's spirit. He has made the nations of men, not only all men in the nations, but as nations in their political capacity; he is their founder, and disposed them into communities for their mutual preservation and benefit. He made them all of one blood, of one and the same nature; he fashions their heart alike. Descended from one and the same common ancestor, in Adam they are all akin, so they are in Noah, that hereby they might be engaged in mutual affection and assistance, as fellow-creatures and brethren. Have we not all one Father? Hath not one God created us? Mal 2:10. He hath made them to dwell on all the face of the earth, which, as a bountiful benefactor, he has given, with all its fulness, to the children of men. He made them not to live in one place, but to be dispersed over all the earth; one nation therefore ought not to look with contempt upon another, as the Greeks did upon all other nations; for those on all the face of the earth are of the same blood. The Athenians boasted that they sprung out of their own earth, were aborigines, and nothing akin by blood to any other nation, which proud conceit of themselves the apostle here takes down.

4.That he is the great benefactor of the whole creation (Act 17:25): He giveth to all life, and breath, and all things. He not only breathed into the first man the breath of life, but still breathes it into every man. He gave us these souls he formed the spirit of man within him. He not only gave us our life and breath, when he brought us into being, but he is continually giving them to us; his providence is a continued creation; he holds our souls in life; every moment our breath goes forth, but he graciously gives it us again the next moment; it is no only his air that we breathe in, but it is in his hand that our breath is, Dan 5:23. He gives to all the children of men their life and breath; for as the meanest of the children of men live upon him, and receive from him, so the greatest, the wisest philosophers and mightiest potentates, cannot live without him. He gives to all, not only to all the children of men, but to the inferior creatures, to all animals, every thing wherein is the breath of life (Gen 6:17); they have their life and breath from him, and where he gives life and breath he gives all things, all other things needful for the support of life. The earth is full of his goodness, Psa 104:24, Psa 104:27.

5.That he is the sovereign disposer of all the affairs of the children of men, according to the counsel of his will (Act 17:26): He hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation. See here, (1.) The sovereignty of God's disposal concerning us: he hath determined every event, horisas, the matter is fixed; the disposals of Providence are incontestable and must not be disputed, unchangeable and cannot be altered. (2.) The wisdom of his disposals; he hath determined what was before appointed. The determinations of the Eternal Mind are not sudden resolves, but the counterparts of an eternal counsel, the copies of divine decrees. He performeth the thing that is appointed for me, Job 23:14. Whatever comes forth from God was before all worlds hid in God. (3.) The things about which his providence is conversant; these are time and place: the times and places of our living in this world are determined and appointed by the God that made us. [1.] He has determined the times that are concerning us. Times to us seem changeable, but God has fixed them. Our times are in his hand, to lengthen or shorten, embitter or sweeten, as he pleases. He has appointed and determined the time of our coming into the world, and the time of our continuance in the world; our time to be born, and our time to die (Ecc 3:1, Ecc 3:2), and all that little that lies between them - the time of all our concernments in this world. Whether they be prosperous times or calamitous times, it is he that has determined them; and on him we must depend, with reference to the times that are yet before us. [2.] He has also determined and appointed the bounds of our habitation. He that appointed the earth to be a habitation for the children of men has appointed to the children of men a distinction of habitations upon the earth, has instituted such a thing as property, to which he has set bounds to keep us from trespassing one upon another. The particular habitations in which our lot is cast, the place of our nativity and of our settlement, are of God's determining and appointing, which is a reason why we should accommodate ourselves to the habitations we are in, and make the best of that which is.

6.That he is not far from every one of us, Act 17:27. He is every where present, not only is at our right hand, but has possessed our reins (Psa 139:13), has his eye upon us at all times, and knows us better than we know ourselves. Idolaters made images of God, that they might have him with them in those images, the absurdity of which the apostle here shows; for he in an infinite Spirit, that is not far from any of us, and never the nearer, but in one sense the further off from us, for our pretending to realize or presentiate him to ourselves by any image. He is nigh unto us, both to receive the homage we render him and to give the mercies we ask of him, wherever we are, though near no altar, image, or temple. The Lord of all, as he is rich (Rom 10:12), so he is nigh (Deu 4:7), to all that call upon him. He that wills us to pray every where, assures us that he is no where far from us; whatever country, nation, or profession we are of, whatever our rank and condition in the world are, be we in a palace or in a cottage, in a crowd or in a corner, in a city or in a desert, in the depths of the sea or afar off upon the sea, this is certain, God is not far from every one of us.

7.That in him we live, and move, and have our being, Act 17:28. We have a necessary and constant dependence upon his providence, as the streams have upon the spring, and the beams upon the sun. (1.) In him we live; that is, the continuance of our lives is owing to him and the constant influence of his providence; he is our life, and the length of our days. It is not only owing to his patience and pity that our forfeited lives are not cut off, but it is owing to his power, and goodness, and fatherly care, that our frail lives are prolonged. There needs not a positive act of his wrath to destroy us; if he suspend the positive acts of his goodness, we die of ourselves. (2.) In him we move; it is by the uninterrupted concourse of his providence that our souls move in their outgoings and operations, that our thoughts run to and fro about a thousand subjects, and our affections run out towards their proper objects. It is likewise by him that our souls move our bodies; we cannot stir a hand, or foot, or a tongue, but by him, who, as he is the first cause, so he is the first mover. (3.) In him we have our being; not only from him we had it at first, but in him we have it still; to his continued care and goodness we owe it, not only that we have a being and are not sunk into nonentity, but that we have our being, have this being, were and still are of such a noble rank of beings, capable of knowing and enjoying God; and are not thrust into the meanness of brutes, nor the misery of devils.

8.That upon the whole matter we are God's offspring; he is our Father that begat us (Deu 32:6, Deu 32:18), and he hath nourished and brought us up as children, Isa 1:2. The confession of an adversary in such a case is always looked upon to be of use as argumentum ad hominem - an argument to the man, and therefore the apostle here quotes a saying of one of the Greek poets, Aratus, a native of Cilicia, Paul's countryman, who, in his Phenomena, in the beginning of his book, speaking of the heathen Jupiter, that is, in the poetical dialect, the supreme God, says this of him, tou gar kai genos esmen - for we are also his offspring. And he might have quoted other poets to the purpose of what he was speaking, that in God we live and move: -

Spiritus intus alit, totamque infusa per artus

Mens agitat molem.

This active mind, infus'd through all the space,

Unites and mingles with the mighty mass.

- Virgil, Aeneid 6

Est Deus in nobis, agitante calescimus illo.

'Tis the Divinity that warms our hearts.

- Ovid, Fast. 6

Jupiter est quodeunque vides,

Quocunque moveris.

Where'er you look, where'er you rove

'The spacious scene is full of Jove.

- Lucan, lib. 2

But he chooses this of Aratus, as having much in a little. By this it appears not only that Paul was himself a scholar, but that human learning is both ornamental and serviceable to a gospel minister, especially for the convincing of those that are without; for it enables him to beat them at their own weapons, and to cut off Goliath's head with his own sword. How can the adversaries of truth be beaten out of their strong-holds by those that do not know them? It may likewise shame God's professing people, who forget their relation to God, and walk contrary to it, that a heathen poet could say of God, We are his offspring, formed by him, formed for him, more the care of his providence than ever any children were the care of their parents; and therefore are obliged to obey his commands, and acquiesce in his disposals, and to be unto him for a name and a praise. Since in him and upon him we live, we ought to live to him; since in him we move, we ought to move towards him; and since in him we have our being, and from him we receive all the supports and comforts of our being, we ought to consecrate our being to him, and to apply to him for a new being, a better being, an eternal well-being.

III. From all these great truths concerning God, he infers the absurdity of their idolatry, as the prophets of old had done. If this be so, 1. Then God cannot be represented by an image. If we are the offspring of God, as we are spirits in flesh, then certainly he who is the Father of our spirits (and they are the principal part of us, and that part of us by which we are denominated God's offspring) is himself a Spirit, and we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man's device, Act 17:29. We wrong God, and put an affront upon him, if we think so. God honoured man in making his soul after his own likeness; but man dishonours God if he makes him after the likeness of his body. The Godhead is spiritual, infinite, immaterial, incomprehensible, and therefore it is a very false and unjust conception which an image gives us of God, be the matter ever so rich, fold or silver; be the shape ever so curious, and be it ever so well graven by art or man's device, its countenance, posture, or dress, ever so significant, it is a teacher of lies. 2. Then he dwells not in temples made with hands, Act 17:24. He is not invited to any temple men can build for him, nor confined to any. A temple brings him never the nearer to us, nor keeps him ever the longer among us. A temple is convenient for us to come together in to worship God; but God needs not any place of rest or residence, nor the magnificence and splendour of any structure, to add to the glory of his appearance. A pious, upright heart, a temple not made with hands, but by the Spirit of God, is that which he dwells in, and delights to dwell in. See Kg1 8:27; Isa 66:1, Isa 66:2. 3. Then he is not worshipped, therapeuetai, he is not served, or ministered unto, with men's hands, as though he needed any thing, Act 17:25. He that made all, and maintains all, cannot be benefited by any of our services, nor needs them. If we receive and derive all from him, he is all-sufficient, and therefore cannot but be self-sufficient, and independent. What need can God have of our services, or what benefit can he have by them, when he has all perfection in himself, and we have nothing that is good but what we have from him? The philosophers, indeed, were sensible of this truth, that God has no need of us or our services; but the vulgar heathen built temples and offered sacrifices to their gods, with an opinion that they needed houses and food. See Job 35:5-8; Psa 50:8, etc. 4. Then it concerns us all to enquire after God (Act 17:27): That they should seek the Lord, that is, fear and worship him in a right manner. Therefore God has kept the children of men in a constant dependence upon him for life and all the comforts of life, that he might keep them under constant obligations to him. We have plain indications of God's presence among us, his presidency over us, the care of his providence concerning us, and his bounty to us, that we might be put upon enquiring, Where is God our Maker, who giveth songs in the night, who teacheth us more than the beasts of the earth, and maketh us wiser than the fowls of heaven? Job 35:10, Job 35:11. Nothing, one would think, should be more powerful with us to convince us that there is a God, and to engage us to seek his honour and glory in our services, and to seek our happiness in his favour and love, than the consideration of our own nature, especially the noble powers and faculties of our own souls. If we reflect upon these, and contemplate these, we may perceive both our relation and obligation to a God above us. Yet so dark is this discovery, in comparison with that by divine revelation, and so unapt are we to receive it, that those who have no other could but haply feel after God and find him. (1.) It was very uncertain whether they could by this searching find out God; it is but a peradventure: if haply they might. (2.) If they did find out something of God, yet it was but some confused notions of him; they did but feel after him, as men in the dark, or blind men, who lay hold on a thing that comes in their way, but know not whether it be that which they are in quest of or no. It is a very confused notion which this poet of theirs has of the relation between God and man, and very general, that we are his offspring: as was also that of their philosophers. Pythagoras said, Theion genos esti brotoios - Men have a sort of a divine nature. And Heraclitus (apud Lucian) being asked, What are men? answered, Theoi thnētoi - Mortal gods; and, What are the gods? answered, athanatoi anthrōpoi - Immortal men. And Pindar saith (Nemean, Ode 6), En andrōn hen theōn genos - God and man are near a-kin. It is true that by the knowledge of ourselves we may be led to the knowledge of God, but it is a very confused knowledge. This is but feeling after him. We have therefore reason to be thankful that by the gospel of Christ we have notices given us of God much clearer than we could have by the light of nature; we do not now feel after him, but with open face behold, as in a glass, the glory of God.

IV. He proceeds to call them all to repent of their idolatries, and to turn from them, Act 17:30, Act 17:31. This is the practical part of Paul's sermon before the university; having declared God to them (Act 17:23), he properly presses upon them repentance towards God, and would also have taught them faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ, if they had had the patience to hear him. Having shown them the absurdity of their worshipping other gods, he persuades them to go on no longer in that foolish way of worship, but to return from it to the living and true God. Observe,

1.The conduct of God towards the Gentile world before the gospel came among them: The times of this ignorance God winked at. (1.) They were times of great ignorance. Human learning flourished more than ever in the Gentile world just before Christ's time; but in the things of God they were grossly ignorant. Those are ignorant indeed who either know not God or worship him ignorantly; idolatry was owing to ignorance. (2.) These times of ignorance God winked at. Understand it, [1.] As an act of divine justice. God despised or neglected these times of ignorance, and did not send them his gospel, as now he does. It was very provoking to him to see his glory thus given to another; and he detested and hated these times. So some take it. Or rather, [2.] As an act of divine patience and forbearance. He winked at these times; he did not restrain them from these idolatries by sending prophets to them, as he did to Israel; he did not punish them in their idolatries, as he did Israel; but gave them the gifts of his providence, Act 14:16, Act 14:17. These things thou hast done, and I kept silence, Psa 50:21. He did not give them such calls and motives to repentance as he does now. He let them alone. Because they did not improve the light they had, but were willingly ignorant, he did not send them greater lights. Or, he was not quick and severe with them, but was long-suffering towards them, because they did it ignorantly, Ti1 1:13.

2.The charge God gave to the Gentile world by the gospel, which he now sent among them: He now commandeth all men every where to repent - to change their mind and their way, to be ashamed of their folly and to act more wisely, to break off the worship of idols and bind themselves to the worship of the true God. Nay, it is to turn with sorrow and shame from every sin, and with cheerfulness and resolution to every duty. (1.) This is God's command. It had been a great favour if he had only told us that there was room left for repentance, and we might be admitted to it; but he goes further, he interposes his own authority for our good, and has made that our duty which is our privilege. (2.) It is his command to all men, every where, - to men, and not to angels, that need it not, - to men, and not to devils, that are excluded the benefit of it, - to all men in all places; all men have made work for repentance, and have cause enough to repent, and all men are invited to repent, and shall have the benefit of it. The apostles are commissioned to preach this every where. The prophets were sent to command the Jews to repent; but the apostles were sent to preach repentance and remission of sins to all nations. (3.) Now in gospel times it is more earnestly commanded, because more encouraged than it had been formerly. Now the way of remission is more opened than it had been, and the promise more fully confirmed; and therefore now he expects we should all repent. "Now repent; now at length, now in time, repent; for you have too long gone on in sin. Now in time repent, for it will be too late shortly."

3.The great reason to enforce this command, taken from the judgment to come. God commands us to repent, because he hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world in righteousness (Act 17:31), and has now under the gospel made a clearer discovery of a state of retribution in the other world than ever before. Observe, (1.) The God that made the world will judge it; he that gave the children of men their being and faculties will call them to an account for the use they have made of them, and recompense them accordingly, whether the body served the soul in serving God or the soul was a drudge to the body in making provision for the flesh; and every man shall receive according to the things done in the body, Co2 5:10. The God that now governs the world will judge it, will reward the faithful friends of his government and punish the rebels. (2.) There is a day appointed for this general review of all that men have done in time, and a final determination of their state for eternity. The day is fixed in the counsel of God, and cannot be altered; but it is his there, and cannot be known. A day of decision, a day of recompence, a day that will put a final period to all the days of time. (3.) The world will be judged in righteousness; for God is not unrighteous, who taketh vengeance; far be it from him that he should do iniquity. His knowledge of all men's characters and actions is infallibly true, and therefore his sentence upon them incontestably just. And, as there will be no appeal from it, so there will be no exception against it. (4.) God will judge the world by that man whom he hath ordained, who can be no other than the Lord Jesus, to whom all judgment is committed. By him God made the world, by him he redeemed it, by him he governs it, and by him he will judge it. (5.) God's raising Christ from the dead is the great proof of his being appointed and ordained the Judge of quick and dead. His doing him that honour evidenced his designing him this honour. His raising him from the dead was the beginning of his exaltation, his judging the world will be the perfection of it; and he that begins will make an end. God hath given assurance unto all men, sufficient ground for their faith to build upon, both that there is a judgment to come and that Christ will be their judge; the matter is not left doubtful, but is of unquestionable certainty. Let all his enemies be assured of it, and tremble before him; let all his friends be assured of it, and triumph in him. (6.) The consideration of the judgment to come, and of the great hand Christ will have in that judgment, should engage us all to repent of our sins and turn from them to God. This is the only way to make the Judge our friend in that day, which will be a terrible day to all who live and die impenitent; but true penitents will then lift up their heads with joy, knowing that their redemption draws nigh.

Matthew Henry (1662–1714) — Commentary on the Whole Bible. This section covers verses 22–31. Public domain.
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Clement of AlexandriaAD 215
The Stromata Book 1
Paul, in the Acts of the Apostles, is recorded to have said to the Areopagites, "I perceive that ye are more than ordinarily religious. For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with the inscription, To The Unknown God. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you. God, that made the world and all things therein, seeing that He is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in temples made with hands; neither is worshipped with men's hands, as though He needed anything, seeing He giveth to all life, and breath, and all things; and hath made of one blood all nations of men to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation; that they should seek God, if haply they might feel after Him, and find Him; though He be not far from every one of us: for in Him we live, and move, and have our being; as certain also of your own poets have said, For we also are His offspring." Whence it is evident that the apostle, by availing himself of poetical examples from the Phenomena of Aratus, approves of what had been well spoken by the Greeks; and intimates that, by the unknown God, God the Creator was in a roundabout way worshipped by the Greeks; but that it was necessary by positive knowledge to apprehend and learn Him by the Son.
Origen of AlexandriaAD 253
PALESTINIAN CATENA ON PSALM 118.151
“You are near, Lord, and all your commandments are truth.” God says elsewhere, “I am a God who is near and not a God who is far away, says the Lord.” For the power of God is everywhere according to the word of creation and providence. Knowing this, Paul, addressing the Greeks as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, says, “We do not seek God far from us, for in him we live and move and are,” and “the Spirit of the Lord has filled the earth.” He is thus, for his part, close, but if we ourselves make no effort, though he be close, to draw near to him, we will not enjoy his nearness. For this reason, sinners are far from God: “Behold, those who distance themselves from you perish.” But the just ones strive to approach God, for he is not present to them just as a creator, but he even shares himself with them: “And Moses alone draws near to God, but the rest do not draw near.” According to the degree of will and perfection, the one who approaches God is that one about whom Paul says, “The one joined to the Lord is one spirit.”
John ChrysostomAD 407
Homily on Acts 38
"And hath determined the times appointed, and the bounds of their habitation, that they should seek God, if haply they might feel after Him and find Him." It means either this, that He did not compel them to go about and seek God, but according to the bounds of their habitation: or this, that He determined their seeking God, yet not determined this to be done continually, but determined certain appointed times when they should do so: showing now, that not having sought they had found: for since, having sought, they had not found, he shows that God was now as manifest as though He were in the midst of them palpably. "Though He be not far," he saith, "from every one of us," but is near to all. See again the power of God. What saith he? Not only He gave "life and breath and all things," but, as the sum and substance of all, He brought us to the knowledge of Himself, by giving us these things by which we are able to find and to apprehend Him. But we did not wish to find Him, albeit close at hand. "Though He be not far from every one of us." Why look now, He is near to all, to every one all the world over! What can be greater than this? See how he makes clear riddance of the parcel deities!
John ChrysostomAD 407
Homily on Acts 38
"That they should seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after Him, and find Him, though He be not far from every one of us: for in Him we live, and move, and have our being." This is said by Aratus the poet. Observe how he draws his arguments from things done by themselves, and from sayings of their own.
Augustine of HippoAD 430
ON THE TRINITY 16
If this were spoken in a material sense, it could be understood of our material world: for in it too, so far as our body is concerned, we lie and move and are. We must take the text, then, as spoken of the mind, which is made in his image, and of a manner of being more excellent, not visible but spiritual. What is there indeed that is not “in him,” of whom holy Scripture says, “for from him and through him and in him are all things”? If in him are all things, in whom, save in him in whom they are, can the living live or the moving move? Yet all people are not with him after the manner of the saying “I am always with you.” Nor is he with all after the manner of our own saying, “the Lord be with you.” It is a person’s great misery not to be with him without whom people cannot be. Certainly, people are never without him, in whom he is; yet if a person does not remember him, does not understand him or love him, he is not with him.
CS LewisAD 1963
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ON CHRISTIANITY, from God in the Dock
I can't say for certain which bits came into Christianity from earlier religions. An enormous amount did. I should find it hard to believe Christianity if that were not so. I couldn't believe that nine hundred and ninety-nine religions were completely false and the remaining one true. In reality, Christianity is primarily the fulfillment of the Jewish religion, but also the fulfillment of what was vaguely hinted in all the religions at their best. What was vaguely seen in them all comes into focus in Christianity—just as God Himself comes into focus by becoming a man.
Source: Quotations drawn from early Church Fathers and historical Christian theologians (AD 100–1500). Some quotes address the surrounding passage context rather than this verse alone.
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