Acts by Scott Risley (2017)

Galatian Tribulations

Photo of Scott Risley
Scott Risley

Acts 13:38-14:28

Summary

After watching Paul and Barnabas heal a crippled man, the crowds attempt to worship them as gods. Paul responds by telling them about the one true God and how He has given us evidence of Himself in His creation. Additional evidence for God in creation is discussed, as well as evidence from our minds: we can think, we have a sense of right and wrong, we can make choices and we long for meaning, purpose, and love. Historical evidence is also presented for Paul and Barnabus's travels to Lystra, Lycaonia, and Derbe.

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Introduction

There is a lot of geography in the book of Acts, a lot of dates. It’s a coverage of a thirty-year period from the death of Christ in about 33 AD lasting through the first thirty years of the Christian church. I promised a timeline, here it is. I have referred to a lot of these dates as we have gone through this book, but I think it is helpful to have it all in one place as we move into this next section of the book. One hard date we have is the death of Christ in 33 AD. That is a pretty firm, accepted date for the crucifixion and resurrection and ascension of Christ.

Now, to fit the events that Paul talks about from his life, both from Acts as well as biographical statements that he makes in Galatians 1-2. There is a lot going on. Really, the conversion of Paul has to happen sometime within a year or so of the death and resurrection of Christ. Probably late 33 or sometime in early 34. We also read that he spent his first years of his Christian life in and around the area of Damascus from around 33-36 AD or so. We saw that in Acts 9. Finally, in 36 he goes down to Jerusalem. He meets the apostles. There is a threat on his life and so he has to get out of Jerusalem, and he goes back to his hometown in the area of Tarsus. This is what we talked about last week, the lost years of Saul’s life. What was he doing during this time? Christian work, learning how to serve God under the New Covenant. 46 AD or so, we said last week, that is about when he arrived in the city of Antioch. Barnabas went and got him, and they served the Lord together, leading for about a year in the city of Syrian Antioch. Galatians says it’s about fourteen years from his conversion to when he went to Antioch. Counting part of a year as a full year (as they often did) we land right around 46 AD. They spent a year at Antioch before going over to Jerusalem with that money for the famine before heading back. The event we are going to study in Acts 15 has to happen around 49 AD because of some events and some historical figures that we learn about on the second missionary journey.

Part of the way we do chronology, sometimes the bible will mention secular figures that we know about from other historical sources. For example, when it mentions Gallio at Corinth, we know Gallio, we know who he was, and we know when he was at Corinth and we know that it was a very short time. We date backward from there and forward from the date we know of the death and resurrection of Christ and we have to fit all of those events in the meantime there. What that leaves us with is a window of maybe less than a year, maybe a year and a half or so for this first missionary journey that we started studying last week and that we are going to finish up with this week.  The events of tonight are going to take place somewhere around 47-48AD and they are going to end up where they started back in the city of Syrian Antioch.

Just to remind you of our geography; they started last week as well, they went down through Cyprus and up through another city, Pisidian Antioch. Last week we saw them go from Antioch to Antioch. And they ended up there, in Antioch, preaching the gospel at the synagogue and that is where we left our adventurers last week and we will pick up where we left off at the end of their speech. They entered the Jewish synagogue, he was invited forward to speak, and he gave a long speech recounting the prophecies, the Old Testament, leading right up to Jesus Christ and called on them to do this,

“Brothers, listen! We are here to proclaim that through this man Jesus there is forgiveness for your sins.

That’s the heart of the Christian good news; because of what Jesus has done, because he died on the cross, we don’t have to pay the penalty for our sins because he paid it for us. And he offers you forgiveness.

Everyone who believes in him is declared right with God—

That’s not something you can earn, but you have to put your trust in him, it’s by faith alone that we are forgiven, and God declares you to be right. And he says that’s,

something the law of Moses could never do.

There’s no amount of good works, like religious says to do good works to be right with God. Christianity says, ‘No! The law could never do this.’ It’s faith alone. And that is what he calls his audience to do, he is talking both to the Jews and to the God-fearing Gentiles who had shown up at the synagogue. And then he ends his sermon on kind of a downer. He says,

Be careful! Don’t let the prophets’ words apply to you. For they said, ‘Look, you mockers, be amazed and die!

He says, ‘you mock this message? There are two things that will happen to you: you will be amazed and then you are going to die. God says,

For I am doing something in your own day, something you wouldn’t believe even if someone told you about it.’”

The prophet Habakkuk 1:5, if you want to mock this message you are going to regret it. Instead, you should receive this message and put your faith in him. If you are sitting here tonight the same thing applies to you, receive this message, this good news, place your faith in Jesus.

As Paul and Barnabas left the synagogue that day, the people begged them to speak about these things again the next week.

They were loving it, they couldn’t get enough of this good news that Paul and Barnabas were preaching. Imagine someone getting gup and giving a long sharing during the teaching and people want them to come back and talk next week, and then you go home, and you tell all your friends. It says in the meantime,

Many Jews and devout converts to Judaism followed Paul and Barnabas,

They had a number of people receive Christ right there, during that week, and what did Paul and Barnabas tell them to do?

and the two men urged them to continue to rely on the grace of God.

They told them not to turn back to works, they need to put their full weight behind the grace of God. That’s going to be an issue in the Galatian churches. If you read the letter to the Galatians, you see that this is exactly what Paul is arguing in our New Testament.

The following week almost the entire city turned out to hear them preach the word of the Lord.

Imagine how I would feel if someone shares at CT and they thought that guy was awesome, and the next week I show up and there are 20,000 people at CT. I think I might feel a little jealous. I think that is how they felt as well.

But when some of the Jews saw the crowds, they were jealous;

This guy talks once and now everyone wants to come to synagogue to hear them? They felt threatened by what Paul and Barnabas were saying.

so they slandered Paul and argued against whatever he said.

He can’t talk because he keeps getting interrupted with slander and arguments. Finally, they have had enough of this,

Then Paul and Barnabas spoke out boldly and declared, “It was necessary that we first preach the word of God to you Jews.

That was their strategy, they went to the Jews who knew the scriptures and were expecting the Messiah,

But since you have rejected it and judged yourselves unworthy of eternal life, we will offer it to the Gentiles.

God has got good news for anyone that wants it. Notice what he says, how do you become worthy of eternal life? By being a good person? No. But by accepting the message. How can you be declared unworthy of eternal life? By rejecting the good news, by rejecting Christ and his offer of forgiveness. That’s the only unforgiveable sin.

For the Lord gave us this command when he said, [in the prophet Isaiah] ‘I have made you a light to the Gentiles, to bring salvation to the farthest corners of the earth.’”

Even Isaiah said that we were going to go out to the far corners and tell the non-Jews about the light of God, turns out to be Jesus Christ.

When the Gentiles heard this, they were very glad and thanked the Lord for his message;

They’re happy to receive Christ, they can’t believe it, they can’t believe that this is such good news.

and all who were chosen for eternal life became believers.

You see statements like this in the New Testament. This is the doctrine of election, the doctrine of chosenness, the doctrine of predestination. You also have to look at the other statements about pre-destination in the New Testament which say that God chooses people from before the foundations of the world, but it says that he chooses them according to his foreknowledge. I guess when you’re God, you have foreknowledge. You know the end from the beginning, he can see your whole life before you have even lived it, before you were even created, before he created anything. Somehow based on his foreknowledge of you, he will either choose you or not choose you. I imagine it is because he knows how you are going to respond freely to the offer of forgiveness. If you’re a Christian here tonight, if you have received Christ then that’s how you know that God chose you from before the beginning of the world. Think about it. Some of us has never really been chosen for anything, and now we have the creator God choosing us before the foundation of the world, it feels pretty good.

So the Lord’s message spread throughout that region.

Not only did they reach this city, and this implies they spent some time here. They reach the city but then it begins to trickle out into the whole surrounding region. We will see this from Paul later in his ministry. They will reach a city and that will become their base for reaching the cities and villages in the countryside. You can see Paul’s missionary strategy forming here.

Then the Jews stirred up the influential religious women and the leaders of the city, and they incited a mob against Paul and Barnabas and ran them out of town.

One thing we can learn from Paul is, sometimes when they get a mob together against you, that’s how you know it’s time to leave. He didn’t always stay and fight. Sometimes wisdom says get out of there, and that’s what they did.

So they shook the dust from their feet as a sign of rejection

That’s exactly what Jesus told them to do. They told them the message, they didn’t want it, so they left it all there with them and they can do what they want with it. Paul and Barnabas did their job.

and went to the town of Iconium. And the believers were filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit.

Even though they had to leave, they had been there long enough to leave behind a healthy Christian community, full of joy, full of the Holy Spirit.

Iconium

Here’s Iconium. You can see they were at Antioch and then they walk another 90 miles down to Iconium, down the main east-west road through there, the emperor’s road. They end up, it would have been a several days journey, in the city of Iconium, which was also a major cultural center, much like Pisidian Antioch.

At Iconium Paul and Barnabas went as usual into the Jewish synagogue.

There they spoke so effectively that a great number of Jews and Greeks believed.

They are reaching not just Jews, but Gentiles again!

But the Jews who refused to believe stirred up the other Gentiles and poisoned their minds against the brothers.

You’ve got real receptiveness and serious opposition and so, it says,

So Paul and Barnabas spent considerable time there, speaking boldly for the Lord,

Good harvest, big opposition, that means that they are going to stay there for a while. God then,

confirmed the message of his grace by enabling them to perform signs and wonders.

Again, like we see in Acts, the miracles are giving credibility to the message. They are not just miracles for the sake, or miracles, but they are miracles to confirm the truth of what they were speaking. Well again,

The people of the city were divided; some sided with the Jews, others with the apostles.

You’ve got this polarizing message, we see this today when you tell people about Jesus (even Jesus had this, he would go teach and some people would think it was amazing and other people would call him and idiot). Same message, very different responses. It depends on the person. I don’t know what kind of person you are, are you going to stand with the message of Christ or are you going to reject it? Well they found out,

There was a plot afoot among both Gentiles and Jews, together with their leaders, to mistreat them and stone them.

Stoning. Typically, fatal. They would drag you outside of town to a high place, they tossed you off, and the hope was that you would fall and break your neck and die right there, but if not, you need at least two witnesses, they would both toss a heavy stone on top of you, and everyone else would throw heavy stuff on you until you were dead. Paul and Barnabas heard that plans were being hatched to do that very thing to them. What do they do? Stay and fight? Nope.

Lycaonia

But they found out about it and fled to the cities of Lycaonia, Lystra and Derbe, and to the surrounding country, where they continued to preach the gospel.

At this point we come to an important historical note. This used to be thought as one of the many inaccuracies of the book of Acts. That it was some sort of fiction made up about the early church by someone in 150/200 AD. Ajith Fernando talks about Sir William Ramsey. He was one of the pioneers of modern archeology who spent many decades in the early 1900s exploring Turkey and the ancient Mediterranean area trying to learn about the history of that area. Here is what Fernando says about William Ramsey,

When Ramsay came to Acts 14:6, he thought he had found a predictable error by the author. It read, “They … fled [from Iconium] to the Lycaonian cities of Lystra and Derbe and to the surrounding country.” The common view among scholars at the time, based on material by Cicero and Pliny the Elder from about a century before the New Testament era, was that Iconium was a city in Lycaonia.

So how can you leave Iconium, to go to Iconium, when Iconium is in Lycaonia]

Ramsay thought that the author of Acts had used Xenophon [4th c. BC] … Ramsay assumed that Luke, not knowing about the region, took this information and transposed it to the first century, by which time the boundaries had shifted so that it was no longer true. It was, says Ramsay, like “speaking of going from Richmond to Virginia or from London to England…”

They left London and went to England, only an idiot would write that.

But as Ramsay investigated the matter further, he found out that Acts was entirely correct. In the first century Iconium was indeed a city in Phrygia, not Lycaonia.

For only about 35 years, from 36-72 AD, but that is when this narrative takes place.

He notes too that the author of Acts mentioned that the people of Lystra spoke “in the Lycaonian language” (14:11)…Inscriptions demonstrated that Phyrygian was spoken in Iconium until the end of the second century…Ramsay goes on to note the description of the gods of the people of Lystra as Zeus and Hermes (14:12), and through his research realized that “Zeus and Hermes were commonly regarded in that region as associated gods.”

Fernando, Acts: The NIV Application Commentary (Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1998), p. 24-25

He even got their gods right. Witherington elaborates on this Zeus and Hermes point.

An inscription has been found near Lystra with a dedication to Zeus of a statue of Hermes, another inscription speaks of priests of Zeus, and even more telling is a stone altar found near Lystra dedicated to the hearer of prayer (i.e., surely Zeus) and to Hermes.

Witherington, Ben, The Acts of the Apostles (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1998), 422.

Keep that in mind. Lycaonian language. Zeus and Hermes. Keep this in mind too; Ovid’s Metamorphoses, a collection of short stories written in 8 AD talks about an incident in the Phrygian hill country, right in the area of Lystra, where Zeus and Hermes pretended to be this old couple and they went around going from door to door asking for somewhere to stay. People rejected them. Finally, someone took them in, and they revealed themselves and then they destroyed all the people that turned them away and rewarded the guy who let them stay there. Remember that when we read this story. Anyway, Fernando writes,

Ramsay was impressed! He began to realize that Acts might be a valuable source of historical information. He titles the chapter describing what happened to him through this study of Acts 14, “The First Change of Judgment.” …

 He starts unearthing these finds and looks at the book of Acts and starts thinking that it might be actual history.

Ramsay writes: The more I have studied the narrative of Acts and the more I have learned …, the more I admire and the better I understand. I set out to look for truth in the borderland where Greece and Asia meet, and found it here [in Acts]. You may press the words of Luke in a degree beyond any other historian’s, and they stand the keenest scrutiny and the hardest treatment”

Fernando, Acts: The NIV Application Commentary (Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1998), p. 24-25

That is what we are reading here, actual history. Woe to those that come across a passage and say, ‘this is why the bible is wrong about everything.’ No, people have said that and then it turns out they were wrong, and the bible was right. When I come across what seems to be a contradiction, I research it, if I really can’t find a good answer, I come back to it later, but the bible has been right too many times for me to doubt it.

Lystra

They travel another 20 miles southwest to Lystra. This was off the main road that went through that area. This was a little more of a backroad that he took. Some people wonder why he chose Lystra. Why did he run there from the group that was trying to kill him? Well, Darryl Bock writes that ‘the area of Lystra had the reputation for being somewhat rustic and the people not very learned.’ So, they go from these cultural centers of Antioch and Iconium to Lystra. It was like Paul went from Cincinnati, to Columbus, to Circleville. It’s a different kind of town. Why Lystra? Well, God obviously had a message for the people of Lystra. There were probably a lot of reasons, but one of the things he is doing here that we won’t find about until later, when we come to Acts 16 on the second missionary journey, 

Acts 16:1 – Paul went … to Lystra, where there was a young disciple named Timothy.

Isn’t that interesting. In this backwater town was a very not influential Jewish population, these were pagan, very little knowledge of the scriptures. There was a young man in his early teens with a Greek dad and a Jewish mom and grandma who was learning his word. Paul came along and led him to Christ. It says in 2 Timothy, ‘my true son in the faith.’ He led him to Christ on his first missionary journey. His lifelong best friend, ministry partner, co-author of 9 or 10 of the 13 letters Paul wrote in the New Testament. Look what he writes to him,

2 Tim 3:11 – You know … all about how I was persecuted in Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra.

Timothy saw Paul suffering that he is going to undergo here at Lystra, and he is going to hear about the other places as well. This is why our ministries need to be led by the Holy Spirit.

In Lystra there sat a man who was lame. He had been that way from birth and had never walked. He listened to Paul as he was speaking. Paul looked directly at him, saw that he had faith to be healed

He gets some kind of word from the Lord. I don’t know how he knew this.

and called out, “Stand up on your feet!”

This guy who had never walked, this is a lot like what Peter did in Acts 3. And like the guy in Acts 3,

At that, the man jumped up and began to walk.

So this dudes legs work now.

When the crowd saw what Paul had done, they shouted in the Lycaonian language,

Which Paul and Barnabas couldn’t speak, which explains why they didn’t know what was happening. All of a sudden, the people are so excited, they break out into a language that Paul and Barnabas don’t know.

The gods have come down to us in human form!

Remember the story from Ovid’s Metamorphoses? They see Paul and Barnabas and they’re like, “They’re back!”

Barnabas they called Zeus, and Paul they called Hermes because he was the chief speaker.

It’s even the same two gods. Barnabas may have been a little older than Paul and Paul did all the talking.

The priest of Zeus, whose temple was just outside the city, brought bulls and wreaths to the city gates because he and the crowd wanted to offer sacrifices to them.

Paul and Barnabas don’t know what’s happening because they don’t speak the language but at a certain point, they start to figure it out.

But when the apostles Barnabas and Paul heard of this, they tore their clothes and rushed out into the crowd,

These primitive people think the gods are here, it’s like that scene in Return of the Jedi where the Ewoks start worshiping C3PO. Instead of taking advantage of the local natives and taking some advantage for themselves, here Paul and Barnabas deny the deity attributed to them. They started tearing their clothes, which would have gotten their attention, it was a sign of grief. 

shouting: Friends, why are you doing this?

What we are going to see here is a summary of Paul’s first speech to a non-Jewish audience. Very different from the speech in the synagogue. In this one, he doesn’t mention the scriptures, he doesn’t even mention Jesus. He needs a different starting point because they had a different starting point. And he starts with their shared humanity, there is a difference between us and what they call the gods, 

We too are only human, like you. We are bringing you good news, telling you to turn from these worthless things to the living God,

There is no ‘gods, there is God. And your religion and these sacrifices, what does he call it? These worthless things. Not very politically correct. And that’s exactly what they are. They thought Zeus was the one who hurled lightning bolts down, hardly anyone believes that today. That is not where lightning comes from. He tells them they’re wrong. There’s no Zeus, no Hermes, offering sacrifices to them is offering sacrifices to a figment of your imagination. And, you’re putting your eternal destiny in their hands. Why don’t you put your hope in the Living God? The God who does something, who has acted in history?

who made the heavens and the earth and the sea and everything in them.

He goes back to creation. He says,

In the past, he let all nations go their own way.

This is the best explanation I know for the problem of evil. God created people to follow him, but he has given us choice. He says we don’t have to follow him. He won’t force us into the relationship against our will. He has given us choice. And that is the explanation for evil in this world. God is going to make things right at some point, but it says,

Yet he has not left himself without testimony:

God’s Testimony: External Evidence

Even though you guys didn’t have the Old Testament, God has still left a witness on the stand to testify to his existence, his presence, and you can even learn some things about him through this witness that he has left. This witness is what is referred to as General Revelation. We have Special Revelation from God in the scriptures. But we also have General Revelation that is available to anyone who has ears to hear, who looks at the created order.

He has shown kindness by giving you rain from heaven and crops in their seasons; he provides you with plenty of food and fills your hearts with joy.”

Where do you think all that rain came from? Why do you think there is such an orderliness to the seasons? Where do you think the heavens and the earth and all that is in them came from? That’s God and you know it. He has not left himself without a witness.

What is this testimony that God has left? He has not left himself without testimony. He really points in two directions. One direction that he points to is out at the creation. Scripture teaches this in other places as well. We can look out and see that God is there. We can learn not just that he is there but that he is powerful, personal, and moral (Because we have a sense of right and wrong). We look out at creation and we can see that God is there.

I wish I had several weeks’ worth of CT to elaborate on this. We are in the middle of a class right now where we just spent five three-hour classes going into detail on evidence for God. 15 hours. I am not even going to have 15 minutes to spend on this. I am just going to give you a little something to whet your appetite, an argument that I really like and also that is short. One of the most recent advances in the argument from design.

[Three-minute video on the fine-tuning argument]

These numbers are kind of mind-boggling that they throw around, that our minds cannot fathom. Roger Penrose talks about the last number they talked about there. Here is what he says,

[Explaining “1 part in 10 to the power 10123”] a number which would be impossible to write out in the usual decimal way, because even if you were able to put a zero on every particle in the universe there would not even be enough particles to do the job

Penrose, Roger, The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989), p. 203, cited in Lennox, God’s Undertaker (Oxford: Lion Books, 2009), p. 71

Particles are smaller than atoms, atoms are made up of subatomic particles. If could take every one of those and put them in a giant hopper, turn the crank to randomize them all, pull out a single particle, and you just happen to pick the right on. That is what we are talking about with just one of the constants. The likelihood that it would be just what it needed to be for God to exists, and there are dozens of these constants. Some people say that evolution explains this, but it can’t because what we are talking about are factors that had to be present at the point of the big bang, at the beginning. This is not survival of the fittest and species reproducing and the fittest one survived and adapted, no. This is from the very beginning unless somehow you have universe mating with one another having baby universes, which would also be a finely tuned process, I would think. Even if you say there are trillions of universes and one just happened to be right, where would we get a universe generating mechanism? The chances are so low here, and what I like about this argument, I think there are a lot of arguments from science and the creative order that are creative, but I like this one because it is new, persuasive and because some of the typical arguments around this and judgment calls related to evolution are not in play here.

God’s Testimony: Internal Evidence

Let’s take another one. He not only points to creation but Paul also says that God is the one ‘that fills your heart with joy.’ I imagine he probably talked a little more about this point as well. Scripture says we don’t just look out at creation, but we can look into our own hearts and mind and see evidence of a creator. There is internal evidence. When we look into our own minds, we realize some things.

We realize that we are conscious of someone called, ‘me.’ In a world that is just physical and chemical reactions, there would be no such thing as ‘you.’ Your brain is just a complex, evolved, series of reactions, physical reactions.

I can think, I know that there is such a thing as right and wrong, that is something we all know, that I am having thoughts, thoughts that correspond to reality. Our conscience, that we might have different definitions of what is right and wrong, but everyone has some sort of a concept for right and wrong. God says, ‘where do you think that came from? I am a moral God. I defined right and wrong and I gave you a deep-down sense that there is a such thing as right and wrong and guilt.’

God says there is something special about humans, this is why we believe in human rights and equality. This is why we afford privileges and rights to humans that we would not extend to mosquitos or rocks. Humans says humans are made in the image of God.

My choices are real. In a purely physical world, there is no such thing as choosing this or that in any sense that we think of that. Just like if I dropped this pack of gum, it falls to the ground, there was no choice on the gums part as to whether it was going to do that. I had a choice about whether to drop it, but the gum was just responding to the laws of physics. A lot of thought by atheist naturalists, people that believe the material world is all that there is, a lot of thought has gone into this whole concept of free choice and the basic conclusion is, there is no such things as free choice. It is all an illusion, in spite of what everything inside of us tells us. Check out Nancy Pearcey on this, 

Even the great Albert Einstein was caught in the same dilemma. On one hand, he writes, “human beings in their thinking, feeling, and acting, are not free but are as causally bound as the stars in their motions.”

They are just responding to physical laws, and we are just the same way, we are not really choosing, and yet what does he say?

Yet on the other hand, he said, “I am compelled to act as if free will existed because if I want to live in a civilized society I must act responsibly.”

He’s got his theory of how he has explained away all evidence God has left within him, and then he has the reality of how he is actually living his life.

Consider Marvin Minsky of MIT. He is best known for his pithy phrase that the human brain is nothing but “a three-pound computer made of meat.” Obviously, computers do not have the power of choice; the implication is that neither do humans. Surprisingly, however, Minsky then asks, “Does that mean we must embrace the modern scientific view and put aside the ancient myth of voluntary choice? No. We can’t do that.” Why not? Minsky goes on: “No matter that the physical world provides no room for freedom of will; that concept is essential to our models of the mental realm.” We cannot “ever give it up. We’re virtually forced to maintain that belief, even though we know it’s false.”

He has explained away the evidence that God has left within him, and then you have the way he actually has to live in the real world.

False, that is, according to Minsky’s materialist worldview.

Nancy Pearcey, Finding God: 5 Principles for Unmasking Atheism, Secularism, and Other God Substitutes (David C. Cook, 2015), 153.

There is one other thing we see when we look into our own minds, we realize that we long for meaning, purpose, and love. That is another thing that God has left for us, the so-called God shaped hole. Again, a few quotes from Pearcey,

[Quoting from Flesh and Machines by Rodney Brooks, professor emeritus at MIT] Brooks writes that a human being is nothing but a machine—a “big bag of skin full of biomolecules” interacting by the laws of physics and chemistry. In ordinary life, of course, it is difficult to actually see people that way. But, he says, “when I look at my children, I can, when I force myself, … see that they are machines.” Is that how he treats them, though? Of course not: “That is not how I treat them.… I interact with them on an entirely different level.  They have my unconditional love, the furthest one might be able to get from rational analysis.” … How does he reconcile such a heart-wrenching cognitive dissonance?  He doesn’t. Brooks ends by saying, “I maintain two sets of inconsistent beliefs.”

Let that sink in. I appreciate his honesty, but what he is really describing is hypocrisy. He is an honest hypocrite, as are so many of us. In his mind he has his theory, which declares that we are big bags of skin full of biomolecules, and if he forces himself, he can look at his kids that way, but at the end of the day he is maintaining two sets of inconsistent beliefs. The one he has come up with to explain away with God, and the one has to have to live in the real world, because God has made him that way.

He has given up on any attempt to reconcile his theory with his experience. He has abandoned all hope for a unified, logically consistent worldview. He has no defense. This is the tragedy of the postmodern age. The things that matter most in life, that are necessary for a humane society—ideals like moral freedom, human dignity, even loving our own children—have been reduced to nothing but useful fictions.

Nancy Pearcey, Finding God: 5 Principles for Unmasking Atheism, Secularism, and Other God Substitutes (David C. Cook, 2015), 164-165.

I think if Paul was going to re-give this talk today, he might update it a little bit. He might say something like this,

‘Yet he has not left himself without testimony: He has given you the gravitational constant, the cosmological constant, and he has perfectly distributed the initial mass and energy of the universe, not to mention the couple dozen other finely tuned constants. He’s put the earth the perfect distance from the sun and caused it to spin and rotate at just the right speed.’

‘Yet he has not left himself without testimony: He’s shown you that you are really “you”,
that you really have the power to choose, that there is such a thing as right and wrong, that there’s something special about humans made in the image of God, and that love isn’t just a chemical reaction in your brain. And he’s given you a longing for your Creator, such that you won’t be satisfied until you come back home to Him.’

Our telescopes and microscopes are declaring the glory of God. Our super computers are declaring the glory of God, and your own soul. Look inside yourself and there is plenty there to see the truth that God has revealed. He has not left Himself without a witness.

Even with these words, they had difficulty keeping the crowd from sacrificing to them. Then some Jews came from Antioch and Iconium and won the crowd over.

Some of these guys had travelled over 100 miles to find Paul and Barnabas. That’s how threatened they felt and how upset they were about the impact they were having in their communities. What did they do?

They stoned Paul

Paul says in 2 Corinthians that ‘one time he was stoned.’ This is the bad kind of stoning, the kind I referred to earlier. For Luke to write this so abruptly is terrifying.

and dragged him outside the city, thinking he was dead.

He must have been really messed up, unconscious. I don’t know where Barnabas was during this but imagine how the believers felt when they thought they saw him get killed. He looked dead enough for the guys who walked 110 miles to kill him.

But after the disciples had gathered around him, he got up

I guess he wasn’t dead yet. And what does he do next?

and went back into the city.

That’s what you call tough, not backing down. It also might have been too late in the day to leave. He did leave the next day.

The next day he and Barnabas left for Derbe.

After setting things in order in Lystra.

They preached the gospel in that city and won a large number of disciples.

They head the 35 miles east to Derbe, an unpaved road. At Derbe, they have come to the end of their journey, it’s time to go home. Do they take the nice road on the way back? No, instead, they went back to the places they had been before.

Conclusions

Then they returned to Lystra, Iconium and Antioch

Where they stoned him, wanted to stone him, and ran him out of town. It was an extra 170 miles on their journey just to hit those cities on foot. Why would they do that? Because they wanted to take care of their people.

strengthening the disciples and encouraging them to remain true to the faith.

Paul would write to the Galatians, ‘I bear on my body the brand marks of Jesus.’ They saw him suffer. And they said, 

“We must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God,” they said.

Let’s not forget the suffering that Jesus promised to his people. ‘You saw it in us, not go and do likewise.’

Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for them in each church

Paul never left a church without knowing who was in charge. He recognized spiritual leaders, charged them with the care of the flock.

and, with prayer and fasting, committed them to the Lord, in whom they had put their trust.

There is a certain point where you have to pray and leave things in God’s hands.

After going through Pisidia, they came into Pamphylia, and when they had preached the word in Perga, they went down to Attalia.

They preached the word there, and then they caught a boat back to where they started.

From Attalia they sailed back to Antioch, where they had been committed to the grace of God for the work they had now completed.

Over 1400 miles on this first missionary journey. That is a long way. That’s a lot for a year and a half’s worth of work.

On arriving there, they gathered the church together and reported all that God had done through them and how he had opened a door of faith to the Gentiles.

And they stayed there a long time with the disciples.

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