THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES - Chapter 16 - Verse 27
Verse 27. Would have killed himself. This was all done in the midst
of agitation and alarm. He supposed that the prisoners had fled. He
presumed that their escape would be charged on him. It was customary to
hold a jailer responsible for the safe keeping of prisoners, and to
subject him to the punishment due to them, if he suffered them to escape.
See Ac 12:19. It should be added, that it was common, and approved
among the Greeks and Romans, for a man to commit suicide when he was
encompassed with dangers from which he could not escape. Thus Cato was
guilty of self-murder in Utica; and thus, at this very place at
Philippi—Brutus and Cassius, and many of their friends, fell on their
own swords, and ended their lives by suicide. The custom was thus
sanctioned by the authority and example of the great; and we are not to
wonder that the jailer, in a moment of alarm, should also attempt to
destroy his own life. It is not one of the least benefits of
Christianity, that it has proclaimed the evil of self-murder, and that it
has done so much to drive it from the world.