Matthew Henry
Here is,
Actorand
Reus) should be brought face to face before the judges, that the controversy may be determined.
Thou shalt justify the righteous,” that is, “him that appears to the court to be so.” If the accusation be proved, then the conviction of the accused is a justification of the accuser, as righteous in the prosecution.
condemn the wicked;” for to justify the wicked is as much an abomination to the Lord as it is to condemn the righteous, Prov 17:15.
But he, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity. Thus it was made a sort of religious act, and so much the more likely to reform the offender himself and to be a warning to others.
according to his fault, that some crimes might appear, as they are, more heinous than others, the criminal being
beaten with many stripes, to which perhaps there is an allusion, Luke 12:47, Luke 12:48.
forty, Deut 25:3. Forty
save onewas the common usage, as appears, 2Cor 11:24. It seems, they always gave Paul as many stripes as ever they gave to any malefactor whatsoever. They abated one for fear of having miscounted (though one of the judges was appointed to number the stripes), or because they would never go to the utmost rigour, or because the execution was usually done with a whip of three lashes, so that thirteen stripes (each one being counted for three) made up thirty-nine, but one more by that reckoning would have been forty-two. The reason given for this is,
lest thy brother should seem vile unto thee. He must still be looked upon as
a brother(2Thess 3:15), and his reputation as such was preserved by this merciful limitation of his punishment. It saves him from seeming vile to his brethren, when God himself by his law takes this care of him. Men must not be treated as dogs; nor must those seem vile in our sight to whom, for aught we know, God may yet give grace to make them precious in his sight.