Acts by Scott Risley (2017)

From Antioch to Antioch

Photo of Scott Risley
Scott Risley

Acts 11:19-13:38

Summary

As a result of persecution, many believers in Christ are scattered outside Jerusalem. The Holy Spirit leads Barnabas to seek out the apostle Paul and bring him to Antioch. Early missionary work begins. God works through Paul to preach the Gospel in Antioch of Pisidia.

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Introduction

We are moving on into the second half of the book of Acts. First have of this book has been primarily focused on Peter and some of the action that was taking place in and around the city of Jerusalem. Remember Jesus told his guys that they were going to the ends of the earth. The second half of the book of Acts, the action focuses on the apostle Paul and on his travels all over the Roman empire. We are going to have so many maps over the next several weeks of this study, you are not going to believe it. Tonight, we are going to start the action in a very influential city, the third largest in the Roman empire, a city called Antioch which was located right on the major east-west road that cut through the Roman empire. We are going to see our characters travel several hundred miles before ending up in another city, also called, Antioch, located on that same road. So, let’s read, Acts 11:19,

The Church at Antioch

Meanwhile, the believers who had been scattered during the persecution after Stephen’s death traveled as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Antioch of Syria.

Luke takes us back, we are actually picking back up at the end of the story we skipped last week, this is right after the conversion of Cornelius. Luke actually rewinds to Acts 8, recalling when Stephen was killed, and the believers were scattered out of Jerusalem. He says that some of these believers went as far as Phoenicia (which is up the coast), Antioch of Syria (further up the coast, where our story starts tonight) and also Cyprus (which is an island west of the Israel, Jerusalem, Palestine area). Unfortunately, they continued this racist practice.

They preached the word of God, but only to Jews.

We saw they had a problem with this, going to non-Jews and telling them about Jesus too.

However, some of the believers who went to Antioch from Cyprus and Cyrene

Cyrene is down in Northern Africa, Cyprus an island in the Mediterranean, some of them go to Antioch and,

began preaching to the Gentiles about the Lord Jesus.

I don’t know if they heard about the whole Peter that happened with Cornelius and God opening this door to the Gentiles, apparently, they didn’t know they weren’t supposed to tell non-Jews about Jesus, they just started doing it. Syrian Antioch (as referred to in our bibles to distinguish it from other Antiochs). Some estimates put this at about 600,000 inhabitants, the third largest after Rome and Alexandria. This was on a river almost 20 miles from where the river dumped into the Mediterranean. There was a sizable Jewish population as well (20,000 to 60,000 Jews). This was the largest of sixteen Antiochs in this part of the Roman empire. There were a bunch of rulers named Antiochus. They kept naming cities after themselves, so it gets a little confusing. That is how we are going to end in Antioch tonight as well. You can see on our map (Jerusalem way down at the bottom) comes all the way up the eastern coast of the Mediterranean up into what is modern-day Turkey to this city of Antioch. This is actually part of Turkey today, right up against Syria.

Who were the believers who took the bold step of faith to tell the Gentiles in Antioch about Jesus? Who were the believers who basically planted this church, this very influential church, the best sending church in the New Testament, the church that would launch the apostle Paul, the greatest missionary of all time, who are the believers who started this church? The answer is: we don’t know. Just some people that went there, some no-name Christians. A lot of the best work that has been done in the history of Christianity has been done by no-name Christians. This is why it is important that we be faithful to God and try to please him alone, let him decide how much honor we get in this life, knowing that he will tell us who these people were and all the other no name Christians, he will tell us who they are when we stand before him and are rewarded. They start telling Gentiles and things really start to roll in Antioch,

The power of the Lord was with them, and a large number of these Gentiles believed and turned to the Lord.

People are becoming Christians, they are putting their faith in Jesus, they are being forgiven, they are being indwelt by the Holy Spirit, their lives are being filled with joy and peace and all of the fruits of the Spirit. People start to hear that there are Gentiles up in Antioch,

When the church at Jerusalem heard what had happened, they sent Barnabas to Antioch.

His real name was Joseph and he was from the island of Cyprus, a place we are going to go later. They called him Bar- (which means son of) and Nabas- (which I guess means encouragement), they called him Barnabas, the son of encouragement. He is an important player in the book of Acts and rest of the New Testament. He is known as a super encouraging guy, trusted, respected, generous, just a good dude. They decide to send him up there, and it is a good thing that they did. He was such a good Christian worker.

When he arrived and saw this evidence of God’s blessing, he was filled with joy,

He wasn’t so proud that he saw God working in someone else’s ministry that he felt competitive ad critical. Good encouragers are pretty easy to please. He saw that good, there were probably bad things too, but he was just so happy to see God working that he was full of joy.

and he encouraged the believers to stay true to the Lord.

He knew as well as anyone that it is one thing to become a Christian, it is another thing to persevere without wavering. He is encouraging these people to stick it out, not to give up, things get hard. Opposition will even arise. He tells them to hang in there. Maybe that is the message that some of us need tonight who are wavering. Hand in there, stay true to the Lord, I tell you with Barnabas.

Barnabas was a good man, full of the Holy Spirit and strong in faith. And many people were brought to the Lord.

A lot people were coming to Christ. This movement is growing. In fact, so many people, that Barnabas decides that he needs to bring in reinforcements. And he goes, not back to Jerusalem, but somewhere else.

Saul’s Early Ministry

It says,

Then Barnabas went on to Tarsus to look for Saul.

Remember Saul? We have Antioch here, and Tarsus is another 100 miles up around the corner on this major road up into what they called Asia, what we call Turkey today. Barnabas, he had played an influential role in Saul’s life. When Saul came to Jerusalem, no one trusted him. He was a former persecutor of the church. And yet, Barnabas believes Saul is genuine, he got him and introduced him to the other guys, he gained his acceptance. He saw something there, in Saul. The last we saw of Saul, it was 37 AD, we are now in about 44-45 AD, so it has been almost a decade since we have heard anything from this guy. What was Saul doing for the past 7-9 years up in Tarsus. One thing he has been doing is serving God. He hasn’t been just sitting there, wasting away, wondering when someone is going to give him some kind of leadership position, wondering when is going to get some recognition. No, he tells us in Galatians 1,

I went north into the provinces of Syria and Cilicia.

Syria is where Antioch was, around the corner you can see Cilicia (you can see it on the map to the left of Tarsus) was the south-eastern part of Turkey. He says,

And still the churches in Christ that are in Judea [around Jerusalem] didn’t know me personally. All they knew was that people were saying, “The one who used to persecute us is now preaching the very faith he tried to destroy!” And they praised God… (Gal 1:21-24)

He’s going around telling people about Jesus. There is evidence here and later in Acts that he was leading people to Christ, that he was planting churches that are still there at the beginning of the second missionary journey. He is up there, he is not waiting around, but he jumps right in, just like we saw at every other point in his life thus far.

He is also suffering. You have got to wonder what Saul’s family thought after he got back from Jerusalem after being gone for several years. The great Pharisee, the respected Sanhedrin member of the finest education (this family paid a lot money for) and here he comes back, he’s thrown it all away to chase after some crucified Messiah, this criminal? You can imagine his family wasn’t too happy about the direction of his life or his career. What about his wife? There is no way he could have gotten that far in Judaism without getting married. They were married by the time they were 20, he was in his 30s by the time he became a Christian. Yet, in 1 Corinthians 7, by the second missionary journey it says he didn’t have a wife. Did she pass away or did she reject him when she saw his ‘apostacy’ from the ‘true faith’ that they had been raised in, in her opinion? Did she reject him and leave him? I don’t know. What about 2 Corinthians 11:24 where it says, ‘five times I got 39 lashes from the Jews.’ None of those are recorded in Acts. Is it possible that those happened here, during those lost years in and around Tarsus? I think there is a good chance they did. Paul says in Philippians 3:8, ‘I have lost all things for the sake of following Jesus.’ He says he doesn’t regret any of it, he traded garbage for treasure. He was suffering up there in obscurity. Maybe he thought he had been forgotten about by the other believers. Maybe he thought, this is how my life is going to end, he had no idea that along is going to come Barnabas when Saul is in his mid 40s and he’s just about to begin the great adventure of his life and become one of the most famous people of all time.

He was also growing. You can bet if you hang in there through suffering you are going to grow, if you don’t, you’re not. You can just imagine him growing in his relationship with God, God growing him in humility, bearing the fruits of the Spirit. In fact, in 2 Corinthians 12 he tells of one instance, something amazing that happened to him during these years in Tarsus. He says, ‘Fourteen years ago I was caught up into heaven. I don’t know if it was bodily or just a vision, but I was there, and I saw it and I am not even allowed to talk about it. That’s all I’ll say about it.’ And yet, you see the eternal perspective that he had. It would have been forged through his suffering but also through experiences like this with God.

Serving, suffering, and growing. Maybe some things that some of us in this room are doing right now.

Barnabas went up to look for him, I don’t know if he was out doing some Christian ministry or what, but eventually, he found him,

When he found him, he brought him back to Antioch.

Barnabas convinced Saul to come back with him because of the ways the Spirit was working there, there was work for them to do.

Both of them stayed there with the church for a full year, teaching large crowds of people.

This was sometime around 46 AD. This would have been kind of a strange experience for some of these Christians at Antioch. The last they had seen of Saul, he was standing there at the death of Stephen, making sure he was good and dead. They saw him going around persecuting and even killing, maybe some of their friends. Imagine that first week, they show up and Barnabas is like, ‘we’ve got a new teacher here, all the way from Tarsus, Saul!’ And yet, here he was, forgiven, serving God zealously, serving alongside Barnabas. Barnabas must have thought it was pretty important to get Saul to travel 100 miles to go get him and convince him to come back, he was a busy guy. Yet, he went for it because apparently, he felt like it was worth it, to get this leader up into a position where he felt like God had called him. Also, to go and get a guy where there was a decent chance that he was more gifted than him, and might even pass him up, which is exactly what was going to happen. A guy like Barnabas didn’t care, he just wanted to serve the Lord, he was a good man.

(It was at Antioch that the believers were first called Christians.)

They were called disciples, they talked about following the way, there was a sect, a cult, called The Way today, it’s not that. It’s just the name they had for themselves in Acts. The term Christian actually looks like it was kind of a derogatory term. You see it only on the lips of non-believers, you don’t see them call themselves that. You see first century historians use this term in a negative way. It just means, ‘the Christ people.’ It was like Jesus’s fan club, always talking about him, and I guess we still use it today. It isn’t until the second century that we see Christians use this about themselves.

During this time some prophets traveled from Jerusalem to Antioch. One of them named Agabus stood up in one of the meetings and predicted by the Spirit that a great famine was coming upon the entire Roman world. (This was fulfilled during the reign of Claudius.)

It’s not a like a drought was coming on the whole Roman world, but specifically Egypt, but Egypt was the breadbasket for the rest of the Roman empire. In 45 AD we learn that the Nile hit the highest level it had for 100 years, it was like a 100-year flood and wiped out most of the grain crop. Prices started shooting up. These things would have especially affected the poor. One of the many places where something Luke mentions fits right in with our Roman secular history.

Paul and Barnabas go to Jerusalem

So the believers in Antioch decided to send relief to the brothers and sisters in Judea, everyone giving as much as they could.

They give money knowing ahead of time this is happening, they save up and send it down to Jerusalem when the famine hits.

This they did, entrusting their gifts to Barnabas and Saul to take to the elders of the church in Jerusalem.

They gave their money to Barnabas and Saul and sent them on this long journey down to Jerusalem. Well Galatians 2 actually tells us about this visit. This is where we start to see some interlocking of the other writings in the New Testament, here is what Paul writes in Galatians 2,

Then after fourteen years, [after his conversion, 46/47 AD] I went up again to Jerusalem, this time with Barnabas. I took Titus along also. I went in response to a revelation [the prophecy from Agabus] and, meeting privately with those esteemed as leaders, I presented to them the gospel that I preach among the Gentiles…

Not like he was really worried about what other people thought, he got his gospel straight from Jesus, but he wanted to talk to them and let him know what he was talking about and compare notes.

As for those who were held in high esteem… they added nothing to my message…

In fact, he also says that even though Titus was a Greek, they didn’t make him get circumcised, they were fine with that.

James, Cephas [Peter] and John, those esteemed as pillars, gave me and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship when they recognized the grace given to me. 

A handshake or a, ‘yeah.’

They agreed that we should go to the Gentiles, and they to the circumcised.

The apostles would focus on the Jews, Paul and Barnabas would focus on the non-Jews.

All they asked was that we should continue to remember the poor, the very thing I had been eager to do all along. (Gal 2:1-10)

That’s why he was in Jerusalem, he had money for the poor. It’s cool to see this fitting in with the rest of the new letter as well.

The Church at Antioch Sends Saul and Barnabas

Acts 12 we studied last week, that was from the 40s AD. We’ll pick up where we left off in Acts 12:25,

When Barnabas and Saul had finished their mission to Jerusalem, they returned, taking John Mark with them.

John Mark is another guy who is going to show up in Acts and the rest of the New Testament. It says in Acts 13, he is going to give a list of five people who were leaders in the church,

Among the prophets and teachers of the church at Antioch of Syria were Barnabas,

We already know about Barnabas.

Simeon (called “the black man” [or “Niger”]),

Some of our bibles just take the Latin lone word that is in the New Testament, Niger, that’s what that means. He’s not the Simon from Cyrene who carried the cross for Jesus, he spelled his name differently. He is a leader here, though. What we see is a multicultural church at Antioch. 

Lucius (from Cyrene),

From Africa. Not the Luke who wrote this, there is no reason to think it is and there is good reason to think it’s not.

Manaen (the childhood companion of King Herod Antipas),

He was best buddies with Herod growing up! It’s funny, you hear all these inside accounts from the Herod household in the gospel of Luke, and even some here, we saw Herod last chapter. What a different path. Acts 12 ends with Herod dying after trying to persecute the church and then his buddy is a Christian leader up in Antioch. They were winning some big fish up here in Antioch. Some Christians try to find the weirdest person they can locate. Weird people need Jesus, but guys like Manaen do too.

 and Saul.

These five guys were the leadership team here in Antioch. It says,

One day as these men were serving the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, “Dedicate Barnabas and Saul for the special work to which I have called them.”

I don’t know if it was an audible voice, if it was an impression that the whole team. It looks like the whole church might have been present for this.

So after more fasting and prayer, the men laid their hands on them and sent them on their way. So Barnabas and Saul were sent out by the Holy Spirit.

They are going to leave Antioch of Syria. A couple of observations here.

God sent these guys. You see that throughout this with phrases like, ‘The Holy Spirit said,’ and ‘I have called them,’ and ‘Sent out by the Holy Spirit.’ It’s clear that this is a move from God just like all the other moves he has made in Acts to get his message out further, to tell people about Jesus, the good news, forgiveness, the gospel.

The church also sent them. The leaders there, after fasting and prayer sent them on their way. But then it says they were sent by the Spirit. So, which one was it? The church or the Spirit? It was both. They heard the call. A lot of modern missions sending is very autonomous, some person just feels called by God to go be a missionary and they just inform everybody else. This is the other way. God tells the church and the leaders confirmed it right there. They also released some of their best workers. I am sure there was a process where they didn’t just drop their ministry, and yet at the same time, these were big names and they sent them out anyways because this is what God wanted.

Paul and Barnabas were willing to go into the unknown. It isn’t clear what the special work is. He didn’t spell it out for them ahead of time, he just said, ‘Go.’ Kind of like when God called Abraham in the Old Testament, he explained more along the way. They were willing to go into the unknown with the goal of planting churches, just like in Antioch of Syria. They thought it would be nice to see more of those all over the place so people could hear about Jesus

Missions and Postmodernism

I would like to pause here and say a couple of words about this whole notion of church planting, of missionary sending. Missionaries have a pretty bad rap among post-modernists. Some of that is justified actually, there has been a lot of tragedies in the name of Christian missions. The way that the postmodern view this whole area is this.

You have one culture and they have their story of the way things are, they have their own religion, they have their own gods, they have their own version of things, and then you have other cultures and they have their own story. Every culture is just beautiful and pristine, and they’ve got their version and these different cultures. Culture A can’t go to culture B and tell them they are wrong. Who are you, you colonialist, to go in and squash out this people’s beautiful history with your missionaries?

 They view missions as one group saying, ‘this isn’t a story for us, this is THE story, for everybody. We have to make people adhere to our story.’ They go out and they mash down all these local cultures and they destroy them, and they drive tanks and bulldozers and they ruin their history and they make them be like us and dress like us, and talk like us. Colonizers. There has definitely been messed up stuff in the name of missions, and from this perspective, it would be wrong for this culture to just foist their person preference in that culture. It’s like you get the sword out and say, ‘You must like chocolate ice cream, or you will die because I like chocolate ice cream.’

Well, the bible presents this very differently. You have all of these different cultures, you see this from the beginning of the book of Genesis, scattered. You have all these nations. But scripture says that there is a God, and infinite personal God who speaks, who knows the way things are, who is truth. What if there is a God who actually reveals THE STORY the way things actually are? If that was the case, if one culture found out about it, and that God said, ‘Go tell the other cultures, the other people who haven’t heard, and even people within your culture who haven’t heard.’ Wouldn’t that make a lot more sense to go out and tell, especially if this is the way of salvation. In our bibles we have good, solid, objective evidence that this is actually from God. This is the biblical picture. It is very different than one culture putting their preferences on another. It is God having revealed himself in history, and he wants everybody to know. That is different. Who are we to disobey God?

Now some will object, and they will say, “there is no objective truth that applies to all people!” Which I would say, ‘Is that objectively true, what you just said? Are you apply that to all people? What if another culture says there is objective truth that applies to all? Are you going to tell them they’re wrong? If so, your worldview is contradicting itself. You say there is no objective truth, and yet that is an objective truth! So, it can’t be true. When your world view starts doing that, it main tenets rule out its main tenets, you need to rethink your world view.

Or, “you can’t tell another culture that they are wrong!” Really? What if another culture thinks they have revelation from the One True God, are you going to tell them they’re wrong? And if so, you are contradicting your one rule. Also, are you really saying we can’t look over at another culture practicing something savage and inhumane and say, ‘Well who am I to say that Nazi Germany was wrong, who am I to say that Stalin was wrong. That’s their culture, we can’t even communicate with each other.’ That same person will be the first to cry out that this is inhumane, and we need to do something about it. That is the problem with this post-modern worldview is that it just doesn’t hold together. They have assumptions that contradict their main tenets.

Properly understood, Christian missions is nothing more than sharing the good news about Jesus. Christian missions have also done a ton of good for the world. Hospitals, educations, even things that non-Christians would say are objectively good. Moving in, writing a bible in their language so their language is preserved, teaching people, there has been a lot of good that has come out of modern missions. Billions of dollars outpoured for the sake of spreading God’s love around the world. That is what is happening here at Antioch. God is sending them out to tell more people about Jesus.

The First Missionary Journey

They went down [16 miles] to the seaport of Seleucia

Where the Roman fleet was stationed, you can usually get a ride from there anywhere in the Mediterranean.

 and then sailed for the island of Cyprus. There, in the town of Salamis, [which is the inventor or Salami, that’s not true.] they went to the Jewish synagogues and preached the word of God. John Mark went with them as their assistant.

 John Mark tags along, Barnabas’s cousin. You can see Cyprus, that big island right there in the middle of the Mediterranean. They left Antioch and went west, they landed at the eastern port of Salamis, they preached there and moved through the island, it’s not clear what route they took, they made several stops along the way telling people about Jesus. They end up on the west coast in a place called Paphos.

Afterward they traveled from town to town across the entire island until finally they reached Paphos, where they met a Jewish sorcerer, a false prophet named Bar-Jesus.

 Bar-Jesus, son of salvation is what that means. And yet, he was some kind of blend of Judaism and sorcery.

 He had attached himself [like a parasite] to the governor, Sergius Paulus, who was an intelligent man.

 Again, we see Luke interfacing with Roman history. Luke was viewed as a laughingstock 100 years ago until Sir William Ramsey because his archeological quest around the Mediterranean, not to show that the bible was right, he was not a believer. He became one though, with what he found. He ended up concluding that Luke is a historian of the first rank. Here is what Clinton Arnold says about Sergius Paulus,

A Latin inscription discovered in Rome makes explicit mention of this man. His full name is given as “Lucius Sergius Paullus.” He is listed along with four other men as a director of water management for the Tiber river in Rome… The inscription explicitly mentions that he served in this capacity during the reign of Claudius… [because of the title is uses for Claudius] the inscription can be dated to the early period of Claudius’s reign, A.D. 41–47. [It is about 47 AD that Paul show up]. The dating suggests that Sergius Paulus served as proconsul of Cyprus either just before his position in Rome or just after.

He was an intelligent man, so he wasn’t an idiot. Seems like a pretty sharp, powerful dude. And it says,

The governor invited Barnabas and Saul to visit him, for he wanted to hear the word of God.

This guy is not a God fearer like Cornelius was, who spent his life going to synagogue. This is pure pagan, and he wants to hear what these guys have to say.

But Elymas, the sorcerer (as his name means in Greek), interfered and urged the governor to pay no attention to what Barnabas and Saul said.

He might have been worried about job security here.

He was trying to keep the governor from believing. Saul, also known as Paul,

And for the rest of the book he will be called Paul, that would have been his Roman name from birth. He would have grown up going by Paulos of Saul

He was filled with the Holy Spirit, and he looked the sorcerer in the eye.

Then he said, “You son of the devil,

You’re no son of salvation, you’re a son of Satan!

full of every sort of deceit and fraud, and enemy of all that is good! Will you never stop perverting the true ways of the Lord? Watch now, for the Lord has laid his hand of punishment upon you, and you will be struck blind. You will not see the sunlight for some time [in case you were wondering what blind meant].” Instantly mist and darkness came over the man’s eyes, and he began groping around begging for someone to take his hand and lead him.

It’s actually almost identical to what happened to Paul at his conversion. Paul has been through all of this and he is hoping it will have the same effect on Bar-Jesus.

When the governor saw what had happened, he became a believer, for he was astonished at the teaching about the Lord.

The miracle affirmed the teaching and that is what Luke really draws attention to here.

Paul and his companions then left Paphos by ship for Pamphylia, landing at the port town of Perga.

 From Paphos to Perga of Pamphylia. Why did they go there next? First of all, why did they go to Cyprus in the first place? Did they throw a dart on the map for the Holy Spirit to tell them where to go? Or was it because Barnabas grew up there and spend a lot of his life there, had contacts, knew the area, and they thought it would make sense for them to go there first. Perga is the port in southern Turkey. Paul had spent his life in southeast Turkey, had grown up in the area.

 Pisidian Antioch. Paul says in Galatians that it was because of an illness that he first came to them. Some people think he might have gotten malaria and he had to go way up high into the mountains to get better, I don’t know. But one thing that is pretty interesting from archeology is at Pisidian Antioch they found this inscription which refers to the son of Sergius Paulus, who was an important government official there. Luke, not only does he get Sergius Paulus right in Cyprus, he gets his son right too and it makes sense by they would go from there up north. Maybe Sergius Paulus even wrote some letters of recommendation for them, gave them some tips on where to go. They had an in with another place and they went there.

They land at Perga, when you look at photos of ancient Perga there are huge mountains in the distance, the Taurus mountains, and Paul says, ‘Alright guys, we’re going 100 miles that way.’ Straight up over the mountains. Have you ever hiked even one mile in a mountain? It’s hard. At this point we see that this is too much for John Mark and it says,

There John Mark left them and returned to Jerusalem.

It doesn’t say why. It comes up later in Acts, Paul viewed this as desertion. John Mark went half way, felt like he was done, that he didn’t sign up for that, and he went back home. But Paul and Barnabas kept on moving.

But Paul and Barnabas traveled inland to Antioch of Pisidia.

Notice here that it is “Paul and Barnabas” did you notice the previous, “Paul and his companions.” Paul is now first in this missionary duo. They make the 100-mile journey, it would have taken many days. If Paul was sick it would have taken even longer.

On the Sabbath they went to the synagogue for the services.

They always go to the synagogue first to talk to the Jews.

After the usual readings from the books of Moses and the prophets, those in charge of the service sent them this message: “Brothers, if you have any word of encouragement for the people, come and give it.”

Paul might have had a robe or distinction that wold have marked that he was a learned rabbi from Jerusalem. They thought they would give this learned travelling rabbi a chance to speak to them all. Paul says, ‘well if you insist…’

So Paul stood, lifted his hand to quiet them, and started speaking.

What we have here is a condensed version of this talk that he gave, the first lengthy talk we have from Paul, we will see many more of them. We can read it in 60 seconds, he would have spoken a lot longer than this. You will recognize this; it looks familiar to the speech of Stephen and the speech of Peter. This is how Paul preached the gospel to the Jew.

“Men of Israel,” he said, “and you God-fearing Gentiles,

Usually you ignore the Gentiles who are there, Paul explicitly reaches out to them in this speech

listen to me. The God of this nation of Israel chose our ancestors and made them multiply and grow strong during their stay in Egypt.

He is way back in 1800-1700 BC. He has jumped back to how God worked in the Old Testament. He has jumped back to really, the first books in the bible, Genesis and early Exodus.

Then with a powerful arm he led them out of their slavery. He put up with them through forty years of wandering in the wilderness. Then he destroyed seven nations in Canaan and gave their land to Israel as an inheritance. All this took about 450 years. [Taking us right up to about 1400 BC.]

After that, God gave them judges to rule until the time of Samuel the prophet. [1050BC]

Then the people begged for a king, and God gave them Saul son of Kish, a man of the tribe of Benjamin, who reigned for forty years. But God removed Saul and replaced him with David, a man about whom God said, ‘I have found David son of Jesse, a man after my own heart. He will do everything I want him to do.’ And it is one of King David’s descendants, Jesus, who is God’s promised Savior of Israel!

He starts to bring up the prophecies, the prophecies made to David that one of his sons would sit on the throne forever. The son of David, referred to later as the Messiah, the Anointed One, the Savior, the Christ. The prophets predicted it.

Before he [that savior] came, John the Baptist preached that all the people of Israel needed to repent of their sins and turn to God and be baptized.

John was so famous; he was like a rockstar. He was heard of all the way up here in Turkey. He says, ‘Remember John?’ John was sent from God to tell people about Jesus. If you believe John, believe in Jesus.

As John was finishing his ministry he asked, ‘Do you think I am the Messiah? No, I am not! But he is coming soon—and I’m not even worthy to be his slave and untie the sandals on his feet.’ Brothers—you sons of Abraham, and also you God-fearing Gentiles—this message of salvation has been sent to us!

We are the privileged ones!

The people in Jerusalem and their leaders did not recognize Jesus as the one the prophets had spoken about.

I wonder if he went into some of these prophecies right here, from the Old Testament

Instead, they condemned him, and in doing this they fulfilled the prophets’ words

I wonder if he read some more of those prophecies here.

that are read every Sabbath. They found no legal reason to execute him, but they asked Pilate to have him killed anyway. When they had done all that the prophecies said about him, they took him down from the cross and placed him in a tomb. But God raised him from the dead!

That’s the good news.

And over a period of many days he appeared to those who had gone with him from Galilee to Jerusalem. They are now his witnesses to the people of Israel. And now we are here to bring you this Good News. The promise was made to our ancestors, and God has now fulfilled it for us, their descendants, by raising Jesus. This is what the second psalm says about Jesus: ‘You are my Son. Today I have become your Father.’ [He is quoting the Old Testament}

For God had promised to raise him from the dead, not leaving him to rot in the grave. He said, ‘I will give you the sacred blessings I promised to David.’ [Quoting more Old Testament] Another psalm explains it more fully: ‘You will not allow your Holy One to rot in the grave.’ This is not a reference to David, for after David had done the will of God in his own generation, he died and was buried with his ancestors, and his body decayed. No, it was a reference to someone else—someone whom God raised and whose body did not decay. [Which can only be Jesus Christ]

Brothers, listen! We are here to proclaim that through this man Jesus

Jesus who, claimed to be the way, the truth, and the life. This is the heart of Paul’s gospel, the heart of the gospel, what we see over and over again in his letter. And it starts with Jesus and he says, it’s only through Jesus is that,

there is forgiveness for your sins.

That is the only way to get rid of that guilt you have before God. How do you get it? By good work? No!

Everyone who believes in him

It’s by faith alone! And that will get you what?

is declared right with God

Justified. Made right, just as if you have never even sinned because your sins are transferred onto Jesus and he suffers for you. And he says, finally,

something the law of Moses could never do.

It’s not by works, it’s not by obeying the Law, it’s only by trusting in Jesus. He says that he what they are there to proclaim to them. That’s why God sent them all over the Roman empire to tell people about. That’s why he sent those no-name Christians to Antioch to tell them about. And that, over the last 2000 years, through a lot of no-name Christians, that message has come right down here to this room tonight. And I stand here as a no-name Christian to tell you this; that it is through Jesus that you can have forgiveness for your sins. That’s available to everyone who believes in him. You can be declared right with God and that is something that being good and obeying the Law can never accomplish. Why not here tonight fall on your knees before Jesus, put your trust in him and receive this forgiveness?

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