Acts by Scott Risley (2017)

The Second Journey - Part 3: Corinth

Photo of Chris Risley
Chris Risley

Acts 18:1-17; 1 Corinthians 1:26-29

Summary

Paul continues to spread the Gospel in Corinth and meets Priscilla and Aquila. He meets resistance in the synagogue and leaves the Jews to preach to the Gentiles. Paul gets a vision from God encouraging him to be bold. We learn about continuing in evangelism with stubborn people.

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Introduction

Let’s start with a reminder of the second missionary journey. Think of this as the movie montage where they go through all the very brief scenes. Paul started in Antioch, he ended up there after his first missionary journey, that was his home base. He and his buddy Barnabas split up and he gets a new traveling companion, Silas. During the first part, he is heading through the regions of Galatia where he had already planted churches. He wanted to take the good news from the Jerusalem Council (that the Christians didn’t have to become Jews, aka circumcised). He picked up Timothy along the way because Timothy is from the Lystra/Derbe area. Paul, Silas and Timothy head up to Troas at which point they pick up Dr. Luke. They are probably trying to get to Ephesus, but the Spirit says no. Instead, they head over the Philippi. While they are in Philippi things go really well, they start a church there, but wherever Paul goes, trouble seems to follow. A crowd gets upset, they beat Paul and Silas within an inch of their lives, put them in jail, and then run out of town the next day. They head over to Thessalonica, things are going pretty well there too, they start a church there as well. The Jews there get jealous of Paul’s success, so they get a big mob going, Paul and Silas get run out of there too. They head over to Berea. They get better reception while they are there. The Jews and the Gentile there are willing to hear what they have to say, but it turns out that the Jews from Thessalonica don’t just want Paul out of their town, they want him out of Macedonia entirely. They get together some thugs and head to Berea. Paul has to leave so suddenly that he actually leaves Silas and Timothy behind. The Bereans take Paul to Athens. He is there by himself for a little while until Silas and Timothy join him. He can’t even get a church going there. He gets some converts, but the response is so poor that he actually gets laughed out of the city. That is where we pick up in Acts 18.

Acts 18:1 – Then Paul left Athens and went to Corinth

Ancient Corinth

Corinth is about 50 miles away from Athens. If you look at a current Google Earth shot, this is Greece, southern Greece. The part to the north, cut out of the picture is mainland Greece. This big island looking thing down at the bottom, that is the Peloponnese. Corinth is at the tiny isthmus. It’s a strip of land that is only about 3 miles across. It was a booming commercial center because of the ports that it had in either sea on either side of it. Athens was the intellectual center and Corinth was the commercial center. For ships to make it over into Italy, they could sail all the way around the bottom which was really dangerous. It was really hazardous water; storms could come at any time. What they could do is sail right across Corinth which would save them 200 miles and a lot of danger. Corinth today has a really cool canal cut across that three-mile strip. But there were multiple attempts to build that canal in ancient times, they recognized that it was a tiny area of land and that it would be a good idea, but it turns out that rock is really hard. They didn’t have modern equipment to get through the rock and it was too expensive and dangerous, so they abandoned canal attempts three different times. The most recent ancient one was under Nero and it just got to expensive. After he died, they cancelled it. Instead, what they used was a road across the isthmus. It was sometimes stone and sometimes logs. It’s still there today. What would happen is, they would pull the ships up to the port on either the east or the west side and it was actually cheaper and faster to drag the ships by hand over land than it was to sail around the southern tip. The sailors would pull up, if it was a small ship, they would drag the entire ship up to land and they would hook it up to oxen or slaves and they would drag the whole thing across the land. If it was a large ship, they would unload the cargo, transport the ship and the cargo over land, and they would load it up on the other side and head off over to Italy.

Corinth at the time was a pretty massive city. At its zenith it was about 750,000 people. To give you context, metro Columbus is about 800,000 people. There was an ancient city about the size of Columbus and populations were much smaller back then. It wasn’t that size when Paul went there because Corinth joined a rebellion against Rome in 146BC and Rome doesn’t like it when you rebel, the razed the city to the ground, they totally destroyed it. In 46BC Julius Caesar realized that it was a pretty strategic area and decreed the city to be rebuilt. By the time Paul got there in about 50AD, the city was starting to grow and up to about 200,000 people. There was a large outcropping in the city called the Acrocorinth. On top of there was a fortress, but there was also a temple to Aphrodite, the goddess of love. If you consider this city, you had a lot of people who were in and out all the time, it was a pretty transient population. You also had sailors coming into town who had been out to sea for a long time, so they could go up and “worship” with the temple priestesses who were up at the temple. Are you guys picking up what I am laying down? The sad part is that the temple priestesses were actually young girls who were sold into slavery to the temple, so it was pretty raw, what was going on up there. There were about 1000 of them. At night those girls would come down into the city and serve as prostitutes. Corinth was a city that was known for its pretty raw living. The Romans had a term, “to Corinthianize” which meant to just get drunk and sleep around. The Romans were not known for their pure living, they weren’t prudes or anything so if the Romans are looking at the Corinthians and thinking that their city is messed up… it has to be bad. Sailors would show up with a pocket full of money, leave town a few days later when their ship made it to the other side with no money but a t-shirt that said, ‘what happens in Corinth, stays in Corinth.’ What we have in this city is a combination of downtown New York with Las Vegas with Daytona beach on spring break. If they had girls gone wild it would probably have been shot right here in downtown Corinth.

It was quite the city. It was really sometime to behold, and Paul shows up in Corinth in kind of a rough state. He tells us in 1 Corinthians 2 that,

I was with you in weakness and in fear and in much trembling… (1 Corinthians 2:3)

If you consider his missionary journey, there were some highs, he was really excited about the church in Philippi, he got a really good reception there, people were really supportive and when he left he felt like he was leaving them in a pretty good position with some political support. But then in city after city he had to leave Thessalonica, he had to leave Berea, before he had the chance to get those churches established and then he gets laughed out of Athens. When he shows up in Corinth, he is probably by himself. Not only is he lonely and not sure what is going to happen with his ministry, but he is also really concerned about the groups that he left behind. He admits in 1 Thessalonians 3,

[W]hen I could bear it no longer, I sent [Timothy] to find out about your faith, for fear that the tempter somehow tempted you or our labors might have been in vain. (1 Thessalonians 3:5)

As he heads into the city of Corinth, he is thinking, ‘I am not sure why I am here, I am not sure what is going on with the churches that I have left behind, and I am hoping that my buddies will be back pretty soon.’ The city of Corinth, he walked into that, and it’s like being in downtown Vegas by yourself. Paul is standing in downtown Corinth, if it were modern day, the neon lights will be everywhere, and so what does he do? He tries to find some companions.

Tentmaking

There he became acquainted with a Jew named Aquila, born in Pontus, who had recently arrived from Italy with his wife, Priscilla. They had left Italy when Claudius Caesar deported all Jews from Rome.

Aquila, from Pontus, it was up on the Black Sea in northern Turkey. He ended up in Italy somehow, we don’t know where he met his wife, but they were Jewish Christians from Italy.

Paul lived and worked with them, for they were tentmakers just as he was.

When Paul gets into town, the first thing he does is he tries to find some people who were of a similar trade that he practiced. He goes and finds a shop where Priscilla and Aquila had set up their business. It’s cool to think that Paul, lonely, sad, a little overwhelmed, the very first people he meets are Priscilla and Aquila. Because he was a tentmaker, he asked to join up with them. This was a pretty normal practice if you had a trade to go into a city to find what were basically local guilds, almost like trade unions. This is a point that I think is actually relatively important for us. At the time, it was very normal for rabbis to also learn a trade. Paul was a rabbi and when he would have been studying his rabbi would have taught him to learn the word to understand it and to spend time studying but he also needed to learn a skill that would enable him to support himself and put food on the table. We find that is the normal state for most Christians today. When we talk about people who have jobs, not working for the church, we often refer to them as tentmakers.

There is a small subset of people who have given up careers to work for the church full time, but that is not the norm. Most people in our fellowship have 8-5 jobs that they are working to support themselves and I want to propose that is what most of us should plan on doing. For a couple of reasons. One because a church needs money in order to be able to run, who is going to make the money if not the people in the community working at jobs and offices around the city. The people who work those jobs are the ones that are paying the bills in order for a church to be able to accomplish is work. Also, the people we are trying to reach are going to be people in normal life situations. We call people to follow God, they ask how we do it and if we say, ‘well I don’t have a job, I just follow God all the time’ they are going to say, ‘that doesn’t really work for me.’ Instead, we have a certain credibility when we go out there and say, ‘I work a full time job, and it’s hard, but I work hard, I am a good employee, but my primary love is the ministry that God has given me, and I do that with my free time and that’s an awesome life.’ And you think, there were people in the bible who were tentmakers, they worked normal jobs and did incredible ministry on the side, including Nehemiah and Daniel. Thank God for the ability for some of us to be able to leave our careers to work for the church, but even before my husband and I started to work for the church (I guess I didn’t get hired by the church, I quit my job when we had kids) but my husband and I both had careers before he left his job to work for the church and we would have stayed at those careers if God had called us otherwise. It was hard, but it was worth it. Paul didn’t consider it beneath his dignity to work really hard.

Priscilla and Aquila

Priscilla and Aquila; let’s talk about this couple. They were Jewish Christians, kicked out of Rome by Claudius Caesar. There is an actual edict that we know about.

Suetonius referred to this in his Life of Claudius (25:4): ‘as the Jews were making constant disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus (impulsore Chresto), he banished them from Rome’. The people expelled he called ‘Jews’, but ‘Chrestus’ seems to mean Christ (the pronunciation of ‘Christus’ and ‘Chrestus’ will have been very similar), in which case the Jews were Christians and the disturbances in the Jewish community had been caused by the gospel.

John R. W. Stott, The Message of Acts: The Spirit, the Church & the World, The Bible Speaks Today (Leicester, England; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1994), 296.

This was a pretty normal occurrence when some Jews were coming to Christ, the Christians Jews and the non-Christian Jews would get in a lot of conflict. The Romans didn’t have a very high opinion of the Jews, if they say and fighting, apparently Claudius said, ‘all of you, get out.’ This happened in AD50 and it appears that Priscilla and Aquila were in Rome and the time and left and went to Corinth, which would make sense as it was a big commercial center.

They were most likely already Christians when they got to Corinth because Paul never mentions their conversion. One distinct possibility is that we know that there were Jews from Rome who were in Jerusalem for Pentecost and they head Peter’s speech and came to Christ. We also don’t know who started the church in Rome, the founders are never listed. It’s possible that Priscilla and Aquila were part of the group that was in Pentecost, heard Peter’s speech, and went back to Rome and helped found the church in Rome. We aren’t really sure. They become lifelong friends of Paul. We don’t know if Paul specifically sought them out because he had heard of them, or if God just hooked them up but in Romans 16:4 he talked about Priscilla and Aquila and how they risked their lives for him. They are going to be there together in Corinth and next week we will see that they go with Paul to Ephesus and eventually they go back to Rome. When he writes the letter to the Romans he says, ‘say hi to Priscilla and Aquila, they have a home church and their place and are lifelong friends of mind.’ Paul, at a time when he really needed some friends, he was given Priscilla and Aquila.

Priscilla is usually mentioned first. Some commentators say it was because she was of a higher class than he was, and that sounds lame because Paul doesn’t care about that stuff. When people are usually mentioned in the bible they are listed in an order of prominence. They are one of the first power couples in the bible and the fact that she is mentioned first means that she might have been the more dynamic of the two. Whoever thinks that the bible is against women leaders has not read the bible. You see a lot of mention of women being used in really powerful ways and you see too that strong men are not intimidated by strong women, they encourage them, they are excited about the role they have to play. Apparently with the couple, when someone would meet Aquila, they would be like, ‘Oh are you Priscilla’s husband?’ and he would be like, ‘I sure am.’ Both Paul and Aquila were obviously really proud of Priscilla’s contribution to the kingdom and encouraged her role.

There they are, in Corinth and it says,

Each Sabbath found Paul at the synagogue, trying to convince the Jews and Greeks alike.

This was his normal pattern, to go first to the people who had been exposed to the word of God.

And after Silas and Timothy came down from Macedonia, Paul spent all his time preaching the word.

This is another example of the Philippians generosity. They apparently sent so much money that Paul was able to quit his day job so that he could spend all his time telling people about Jesus.

He testified to the Jews that Jesus was the Messiah.

I find this so interesting to think about, that today, if you meet someone and start talking to someone, everyone has heard of Jesus. What we are trying to tell people is that Jesus was more than just a good person or a good teaching, that Jesus is the Messiah, the savior that every person needs. Back then, when Paul was talking to the Jews, he was trying to convince them that the Messiah they had been waiting for was Jesus. He didn’t come to save them from the political oppression they were living under, he didn’t come to set up a new nation for the Jews, he came to offer an even greater freedom than that, and that is freedom from your sins. He would have used the scriptures to convince them that every person, even the Jews, are born separate from God and because of their sins, actually stand under God’s judgment, but that when Christ came it was in full knowledge that his whole purpose in life was to die and the purpose of his death was to pay for our sins because he was sinless. He would have been showing them from the scriptures that what they actually needed was salvation for their sins if they were willing to admit it. He was able to do that most days of the week, again, because of the financial generosity of the Philippians. But of course, the message that people need saved from their sins, was not a very popular message.

Moving on

But when they opposed and insulted him, Paul shook the dust from his clothes and said, “Your blood is upon your own heads—I am innocent. From now on I will go preach to the Gentiles.”

This term opposed and insulted him; it is possible that they actually flogged him. The Jews had the authority to do that, but whatever happened, they not only rejected his message, they rejected him and in really uncertain terms, too. Paul said, ‘Fine, I fulfilled my responsibility of explaining this to you guys, you have made it clear that you are not interested, that is your problem, I’m going somewhere else.’ I want to spend just a moment thinking about this idea of moving on. When it comes to bringing the message of Christ to people, it is a hard message for people to hear. There will be some people who, even though it is hard for them to hear, they are still excited about it, they see a need for it eventually, not everyone responds immediately, but there will be some people who decide that they are not interested. It’s easy to think, ‘If I love them, if I hang in there with them, I’m not going to give up on them.’ I would like to argue that could actually be the wrong thing to do for a couple of reasons. One is because moving on actually respects people’s free will. God wants people to make a decision for him that involved their will. He doesn’t want to force anything on anybody, God is a gentleman, he offers a relationship with himself, he is the one who paid for it, and yet he is not going to force anyone to accept that. If you have a guy who keeps asking a girl out and she keeps saying no, at a certain point he becomes a stalker. And God is not a stalker. At a certain point, when people say no, ‘that’s cool, that’s up to you, I can’t force anything on you.’ And so, we want to communicate that same message to people. Also, staying with someone and presenting them with the gospel over and over and over again might actually inoculate them against it. Every time they say no to God, they have to harden their heart just a little bit more. If you keep forcing your way in there, it might actually be doing spiritual harm to them because they night need some time to think about, and who know what will have to happen in their lives. Finally, we will miss finding the willing people. If you keep focusing on the same three people who aren’t interested, there might be 15 people over here who would be interested, they don’t know until they hear it. We need to be wise about this, and that is not to say that we aren’t patient with people, that is not to say that we don’t try to overcome some of their obstacles and barriers, (that is what people did for me) but to keep hammering on people over and over again, really the point is that we need to trust God’s sovereignty. We need to believe that if we back off, it gives him room of accomplishing things in their lives that we are not capable of doing. They might need to go through several different experiences for their need level to rise and before they are willing to admit that they need God in their lives. That is what Paul did.

Then he left and went to the home of Titius Justus, a Gentile who worshiped God

and lived next door to the synagogue.

Paul’s like, ‘you want some shade? I’ll thrown some shade, I’ll set up shop right here.’ That’s like leaving a Mexican restaurant and setting up a taco truck in the parking lot. Justus apparently had a nice big house.

Crispus, the leader of the synagogue, and everyone in his household believed in the Lord.

That’s not looking too good for the synagogue, not only does he set up shop right next door, but he gets the leader of the synagogue and his whole family converted. You can tell Paul is proud of this one, remember when I lead the leader of the synagogue to Christ?

…I baptized none of you except Crispus and Gaius… (1 Corinthians 1:14)

Moving out into the Community

Many others in Corinth also heard Paul, became believers, and were baptized.

God blessed this move away from the synagogue to go straight out into the community. This seems really cool, but then you start to think about it and you realize that most Christians would be like, ‘wait, he left the religious people, the people who were listening to the word, and he headed out into the community, to the people who were living these raw, sinful lives? I don’t know… it just seems like there are some people who are too far from God and who would not be interested in hearing what the bible has to say, especially about sin, that is not what they are interested in hearing.’ Sometimes this is true, but that attitude could indicate a couple of possible underlying thoughts. One might actually be self-righteousness on the part of Christians. To say that they are sinners and they would never be interested in the claims of Christ because they are so sinful, (unlike me) could be part of it. Some of it could be intimidation. To look out at people who are living really sinful, messed up lives, who seem far from God, it’s just easy to look at that think that we couldn’t relate to that, and what do I have to offer them? But we find, time and again, that the people who are farthest from God, might be the closest to admitting their need for him. The people who are out there, who are not even trying to live according to God’s standard in any way, they are just chasing experience after experience, drug after drug, sexual episode after sexual episode because there is a deep void in their life, and they know that nothing is meeting it. Maybe this next experience or thing, and then it doesn’t.

Chris’s Story

That was my experience. I grew up in a religious household, I even went to a religious school all through high school. I was taught that good people go to heaven and that it is by going to church that you are a good person. And yet, I knew, deep down, even as a little kid that I was not a good person and I worried about that. But, thought that was what I was supposed to do and that was what good people do. Except, the shame and the guilt were there and then just got worse when I became sexually active in high school. I started dating a guy and was with him for seven year and so we started having sex in high school, it was shortly before my senior year that I got pregnant with him and got an abortion, which made the shame and the guilt even worse. And yet, I determined that I would stay with this guy. In the back of my mind I thought that would make up for the decision that I had made. I stumbled through my senior year, miserable and depressed. I grew up in upstate New York and we ended up at two separate colleges.

I ended up at Penn State for my first two years of college. I got in with a crowd of girls who were a year older than I was. They were already into the party scene and knew where all the frats were. I went out to all the frat parties with them. I had not been a drinker in high school but it’s not that hard to become a drinker in college. I started going to those parties, looking back on it now, I think it was God’s provision that I was still dating that guy because that kept me from getting into a lot crazier experience than what I went through. My first two years it was drinking more and more, but there were certain bounds on that. At a certain point, halfway through my sophomore year, my boyfriend who was at the different college said that I should transfer and live with him. The only good part of the story is that the college that he chose was Ohio State. The reason I am in Columbus is because I followed a guy here.

We moved in together, lived together for a year. Of course, halfway through that year he decided that he was going to start seeing other people. The other unfortunate thing was that he was really into pornography, so his computer was sitting in our computer and the screensaver was about 50 different pictures that just cycled through, so I had to let that be in my living room. About ¾ of the way through my junior year he said he didn’t want to live together anymore. I didn’t know what to do and didn’t have anywhere to go so I joined a sorority. At this point we were basically broken up, but we were still kind of together, if you know what I mean.

But heading back into the fraternity lifestyle was back in drinking, started messing around with other guys, and so it was two full years of that. To the point where I am looking around and I’m like, I don’t think I have any friends left. My drinking had expanded such that, it started our Friday/Saturday, and then it becomes Thursday/Friday/Saturday and then it becomes Thursday/Friday/Saturday/Tuesday which was also gobbling up a large part of my income. When you go to the frat parties, the beer is free for the girls, but not when you go to the bars. So, I was spending more and more of my income on alcohol to go out and get drunk almost every single night of the week. It was to the point where Wednesday was the only night that I wasn’t going out because there was no one to go out with.

It was at that point that for some reason I drove back out to upstate New York and I was hanging out with a friend of mine whose husband had just started medical school and she was saying she was really lonely. I don’t even know why these words came out of my mouth, but I said, ‘you should find a bible study or something.’ And I’m driving back to Columbus and I’m like, ‘I should find a bible study.’ I had a friend who worked at the coffee shop down on campus who I knew was in a bible study and I walked up to her and was like, ‘Can I go to your bible study?’ and she was like, ‘Yeah.’ So, I went. I am going to date myself a little bit here, my first college home church was a harvest meeting in fall of 1997 when the college group planted their third home church. I am sitting there, this was in the basement at 16th, that was where we used to meet for CT and there were guys who lived in the basement. It was a very strange place. But I remember sitting there at that harvest meeting and I was like, there’s something different. I started coming out to home church, I started coming to central teaching, I went to almost every single meeting for 6 months and I was sitting under the word and I had this weird combination of the religious background and the sinful background and so on one hand I felt really bad about myself but on the other hand I felt like a good person.

So, the grace of God took a while to sink into my thick skull, but I had actually gone to church service at my old church down on campus. I was sitting there one night, and I looked up and what was illuminated in that building was a stained-glass cross. I was sitting there after 6 months of sitting under the word and was like, ‘that’s what God did for me.’ The grace of God says that he knows everything that I have ever done, he knows everything I ever will do, and he endured the cross so that he could pay for my sins. So that he could bring me into a relationship with him, and all I need to do is admit it and ask for it, and I did. I opened my heart that night and the love of God poured into my heart. I remember sitting in that church service and the love of God rose up off of those pages in a third dimension that I had never seen before.  To think that there are people who are far from God, God looked out and he saw me, and he was like, ‘yes she is far, but she is mine.’ God didn’t take that attitude with me; Paul certainly didn’t take that attitude with anyone in Corinth. He spent his time in Corinth trying to convince that they had been saved.

For consider your calling, brethren, that there were not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble; but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are, so that no man may boast before God. (1 Corinthians 1:26-29)

These Corinthians, they were like, ‘I’m so messed up, I have made so many wrong decisions,’ and Paul’s like, ‘Yeah, that is the point. Then the emphasis is on God’s grace.’ And praise God for that. How’s Paul feeling at this point? Excited about how his church is going, it is growing by leaps and bounds, God has really blessed his ministry. Well, apparently, not because it says,

Paul’s Vision

One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a vision and told him, “Don’t be afraid! Speak out! Don’t be silent! For I am with you, and no one will attack and harm you, for many people in this city belong to me.”

I like the wording better, ‘I have many people in this city.’ Paul, ironically, at the time when his ministry was going the best, was maybe feeling the worst. Some of it may have been that God has an enemy and when he sees that things are going well, Satan comes in and just comes after us and makes us think, ‘are you sure this is going to work? Are you sure that this is going to come to anything?’ Paul was very realistic about all the troubles that he had run into. It’s possible that part of what he feared was another beating. Paul was not a sadist; I am sure he wasn’t looking forward to that in any way. I think, though, that Paul is looking at all these Corinthians coming into relationships with Christ and he is afraid that he is going to get run out of town before they have a chance for a foundation to be built. He knows that they didn’t’ grow up knowing anything about what it means to follow God. What if I have to leave these little baby Christians behind who have never even seen the word until they walked into the house that I am in. What is going to happen? And what does Jesus say? He says, ‘It’s okay. You don’t have to be afraid.’

This is not the only vision that Paul gets. Jesus confronts him once to be like, ‘Stop persecuting me, follow me.’ And then there are multiple other visions where he comes and he encourages Paul, which I find encouraging. He is so tough, he is the guy that at Lystra they stoned him and left him for dead and after everybody leaves, he stands up and walks back into the city, that is tough. I look at that and I’m like, I don’t even understand what that is like, and yet here is Paul in Corinth and he is apparently so discouraged, so afraid that Jesus himself visits Paul to say, “Don’t be afraid.” Fear not is the most often recorded command in the bible, which means fear must be a pretty normal thing to struggle with. I know that I get afraid of a lot of things. To read something like this, I think, that’s encouraging. He is telling Paul, ‘The only thing that I need you to do right now is to not quit. I need you to hang in there.’ I like this quote from the book 1776, I love reading biographies of leaders because you see that they are actually pretty normal people. This one is about George Washington.

[Washington] was not a brilliant strategist, not a gifted orator, not an intellectual. At several crucial moments he had shown marked indecisiveness. He had made serious mistakes in judgment…[But] above all, Washington never forgot what was at stake and he never gave up.

David McCullough, 1776 (NY, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2005), 294.

We look now and we talk about George Washington and what an amazing leader he was, well the two main things that made him a really good leader were that he learned from his mistakes and he never quit. That was a war of independence that, on the one hand, as an American I am glad we won, but on the other hand, a million years from now are we going to be talking about the war of independence? But a million years from now are we going to be meeting the Corinthians that are in heaven because Paul didn’t give up? Are we going to be meeting people who know God because you didn’t give up? Because you hung in there, because you trusted that God still had a plan.

So Paul stayed there for the next year and a half, teaching the word of God.

The Church at Corinth

If I am not supposed to go anywhere, I won’t go anywhere, and I will stay right here. Thank God he had a year and half because consider the church at Corinth. If you have ever read the book of 1 Corinthians, you know that this church was insane. Chapters 1-4 is all about division in the church and competition, he has to spend a long time talking about it not mattering what leader you follow because we are all following Christ, which is interesting because if you think about it, on the one hand, it was a lot of people from really raw backgrounds, slaves and who knows how many of those temple priestesses and sailors, but it wasn’t just the lowest of the low who were being won, you see in Romans 16,

Erastus, the city treasurer greets you…(Romans 16:23)

They were apparently winning people also from high socio-economic status. They won the leader of the synagogue; they won that guy Justus and he had a large enough house for Paul to meet in. In fact, if you go to Corinth today, you can see a stone out in the middle of the field, it says, “Erastus” and then it says underneath there, ‘this stone paid for because he donated the money.’ You know how when you go to parks and they have the bricks with people’s names on them because they have donated money? That is apparently what Erastus had to do. The collectors were coming around trying to collect money to build the road in Corinth and Erastus being the city treasurer was like, ‘Alright,’ it’s like when your friend has the girl scout cookies and you have to buy a box just to be nice. And, true story, this is out in the middle of a field, it isn’t marked in anyways, and it turns out if you just walk through and archeological dig like you know what you’re doing and walk and stumble around in the field and you look down and take a picture and then the people at the dig are like, “hey you aren’t supposed to be here!” But it’s there! It’s clear evidence that a guy named Erastus really was a city official just like Paul said he was, just like Luke said he was.

Chapter 1-4 is division and competition and chapters 5-6, sexual immorality including, ‘can you tell the one guy not to sleep with his stepmom?’ Because even the Corinthians think that is gross. And, Christians bringing lawsuits against one another. Chapter 10 you have the Corinthians unbridled arrogance, they were not that far from Athens, plus they were really wealthy, plus they felt like they ‘we are rich and have travelling philosophers all the time, so we are really smart.’ And Paul has to tell them that they aren’t that cool, compared to God’s wisdom you aren’t even that wise. You also have chapter 11 where he has to tell them to quit getting drunk at communion. This is after he left and spent almost two years in Corinth explaining how to follow God and the he is following up later to be like, ‘yes wine at communion is fine but not for that much drinking’ plus the rich people were eating in front of the poor people. It was complete chaos in this city. He invested a lot of time and energy into laying the right foundation but then he had to do a lot of follow up. Which is another cool thing about Paul. He liked moving on to the next city, he liked bringing the message out to as many people as possible about God’s grace, but he was willing to stay with people as well, for as long as necessary in order to get those churches established.

So Paul stayed there for the next year and a half, teaching the word of God. But when Gallio became governor of Achaia,

Who is Gallio? It turns out he was a really well-known government official. He was sent to Achaia to be the governor of that province. There is an actual stone that talks about Gallio, exactly when he was in Achaia. One of the reasons that this is important is that it is one of the most precisely dated points in all of Acts so we can date everything else out from that because Gallio arrived in Corinth in about July/August of AD 51 and proconsuls only stayed for about a year, plus he got sick, so he had to leave by about 52. So, we know exactly when it is that he was brought before Gallio, it was fall of 51. Probably what had happened was that the Jews saw that there was a new governor in town, so maybe they could work some stuff in order to get Paul run out.

some Jews rose up together against Paul and brought him before the governor for judgment.

This word judgement is the word Bema, so they brought him before the Bema seat. That was a platform that was in front of Gallio’s house. If anyone had any problems, they could bring the case to the house and Gallio would come out on the platform so that he could hear the case and make a ruling. They brought Paul before the Bema Seat.

They accused Paul of “persuading people to worship God in ways that are contrary to our law.”

Notice that they left it a little ambiguous because is it contrary to Jewish Law? Is it contrary to Roman Law? They know it isn’t contrary to Roman Law, but maybe if they just say Law, they will think Paul is breaking the law in some way and Romans were not kind of people who broke the law.

But just as Paul started to make his defense, Gallio turned to Paul’s accusers and said, “Listen, you Jews, if this were a case involving some wrongdoing or a serious crime, I would have a reason to accept your case.

Gallio, he was the younger brother of the stoic philosopher Seneca and Seneca was like, ‘there is not a nicer guy than Gallio,’ but the Romans were really anti-Semitic. He had no interest in helping the Jews in anyway, but he was also very discerning, so he saw right through what the Jews were doing, and he was like, ‘Yeah, I don’t think that Paul is actually doing anything wrong, so whatever.’

But since it is merely a question of words and names and your Jewish law, take care of it yourselves. I refuse to judge such matters.”

It wasn’t exactly a ruling for Paul, because before he even got the chance to get a word out of his mouth, the case was dismissed, he wasn’t interested. But it was also not a ruling against Paul, and this is a really important point because if we think that Acts was actually a legal brief written by Luke for Paul’s defense in Rome, part of what he is showing is legal precedent here. Gallio was a very well-known Roman official, he was headed back to Rome after he got sick and left Achaia, and so the whole point of this is that Romans officials never had a problem with Paul and Christianity, it was only the Jews that had a problem with Paul. It is Gallio saying that Paul hadn’t broken any Roman law and so Luke wrote that down. This is actually a really helpful ruling both for Paul and Christianity.

And he threw them out of the courtroom. The crowd then grabbed Sosthenes, the leader of the synagogue, and beat him right there in the courtroom.

This is the guy who must have replaced Crispus. Sosthenes was apparently part of the crowd who thought it was a good idea to bring him before Gallio, and not only were they dismissed but they were completely humiliated. So, what does the crowd do? They turn on Sosthenes.

But Gallio paid no attention.

Again, he was really anti-Semitic and not helpful. It’s possible that they even flogged Sosthenes right there too. But check this out. This is so cool. This is the start of his first letter to the Corinthians.

This letter is from Paul, chosen by the will of God to be an apostle of Christ Jesus, and from our brother Sosthenes. (1 Corinthians 1:1)

It’s not a very common name back then. We don’t know exactly how it happened, but what I picture is Sosthenes lying there, beaten, abandoned by his fellow synagogue members who are really pissed at him and Paul walks over. ‘I’ve got a house right next door to the synagogue. You want to hang there?’ And Sosthenes apparently went with him. It would have been really easy for Paul to be bitter at this guy but instead he reached out to him and apparently actually won him to Christ.

Conclusions

That’s Paul’s time in Corinth.

It’s always too soon to quit. Paul was dejected when he got to Corinth, he was apparently pretty depressed halfway through his time there, and yet he decided that he was going to hang in there. The best leaders, but especially the best leaders for God are not always the most gifted (although Paul was really gifted) they are not always the toughest (although Paul was really tough) they are the people that refuse to quit, they are the people who hang in there no matter what. There will be so many times when you will be tempted to quit. Either when things are not going well and so it is easy to just jump ship at that point, and sometimes when things are going well and it’s overwhelming and Satan is moving against you in ways that make you feel so bad about everything. It is a victory just to hang in there sometimes.

God encourages his servants. He finds ways to move into our lives, you are probably not going to get a vision like Paul, that would be cool but that isn’t the way that it works. It wasn’t just the vision from Jesus he also had his friendships with Priscilla and Aquila, Silas and Timothy showed up, it turns out that they actually had good news from the Thessalonians, and he got to see people’s lives transform. There were many sources of encouragement that God provided for him and you’ll find the same for you as you try to serve God. The more you serve God, the more encouragement he will provide for you.

You might be surprised about who responds to the gospel. Paul did not decide ahead of time who would be receptive, he just took the gospel to as many people as he could, and he let them be the ones to decide. That church in Corinth apparently continued on. It had its problems, but there were really good things going on there after Paul left that city. 

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