Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Reflections on Acts 17


    Acts 17 (Contemporary English Version)

  1. After Paul and his friends had traveled through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they went on to Thessalonica. A Jewish meeting place was in that city.
  2. So as usual, Paul went there to worship, and on three Sabbaths he spoke to the people. He used the Scriptures
  3. to show them that the Messiah had to suffer, but that he would rise from death. Paul also told them that Jesus is the Messiah he was preaching about.
  4. Some of them believed what Paul had said, and they became followers with Paul and Silas. Some Gentiles and many important women also believed the message.
  5. The Jewish leaders were jealous and got some worthless bums who hung around the marketplace to start a riot in the city. They wanted to drag Paul and Silas out to the mob, and so they went straight to Jason's home.
  6. But when they did not find them there, they dragged out Jason and some of the Lord's followers. They took them to the city authorities and shouted, "Paul and Silas have been upsetting things everywhere. Now they have come here,
  7. and Jason has welcomed them into his home. All of them break the laws of the Roman Emperor by claiming that someone named Jesus is king."
  8. The officials and the people were upset when they heard this.
  9. So they made Jason and the other followers pay bail before letting them go.
  10. That same night the Lord's followers sent Paul and Silas on to Berea, and after they arrived, they went to the Jewish meeting place.
  11. The people in Berea were much nicer than those in Thessalonica, and they gladly accepted the message. Day after day they studied the Scriptures to see if these things were true.
  12. Many of them put their faith in the Lord, including some important Greek women and several men.
  13. When the Jewish leaders in Thessalonica heard that Paul had been preaching God's message in Berea, they went there and caused trouble by turning the crowds against Paul.
  14. Right away the followers sent Paul down to the coast, but Silas and Timothy stayed in Berea.
  15. Some men went with Paul as far as Athens, and then returned with instructions for Silas and Timothy to join him as soon as possible.
  16. While Paul was waiting in Athens, he was upset to see all the idols in the city.
  17. He went to the Jewish meeting place to speak to the Jews and to anyone who worshiped with them. Day after day he also spoke to everyone he met in the market.
  18. Some of them were Epicureans and some were Stoics, and they started arguing with him. People were asking, "What is this know-it-all trying to say?" Some even said, "Paul must be preaching about foreign gods! That's what he means when he talks about Jesus and about people rising from death."
  19. They brought Paul before a council called the Areopagus, and said, "Tell us what your new teaching is all about.
  20. We have heard you say some strange things, and we want to know what you mean."
  21. More than anything else the people of Athens and the foreigners living there loved to hear and to talk about anything new.
  22. So Paul stood up in front of the council and said: People of Athens, I see that you are very religious.
  23. As I was going through your city and looking at the things you worship, I found an altar with the words, "To an Unknown God." You worship this God, but you don't really know him. So I want to tell you about him.
  24. This God made the world and everything in it. He is Lord of heaven and earth, and he doesn't live in temples built by human hands.
  25. He doesn't need help from anyone. He gives life, breath, and everything else to all people.
  26. From one person God made all nations who live on earth, and he decided when and where every nation would be.
  27. God has done all this, so that we will look for him and reach out and find him. He isn't far from any of us,
  28. and he gives us the power to live, to move, and to be who we are. "We are his children," just as some of your poets have said.
  29. Since we are God's children, we must not think that he is like an idol made out of gold or silver or stone. He isn't like anything that humans have thought up and made.
  30. In the past, God forgave all this because people did not know what they were doing. But now he says that everyone everywhere must turn to him.
  31. He has set a day when he will judge the world's people with fairness. And he has chosen the man Jesus to do the judging for him. God has given proof of this to all of us by raising Jesus from death.
  32. As soon as the people heard Paul say that a man had been raised from death, some of them started laughing. Others said, "We will hear you talk about this some other time."
  33. When Paul left the council meeting,
  34. some of the men put their faith in the Lord and went with Paul. One of them was a council member named Dionysius. A woman named Damaris and several others also put their faith in the Lord.


Following an overnight jail stay in Philippi, Paul and his team, which included Silas and Timothy, made their next Macedonian stop in Thessalonica. It is of interest to note that although their primary mission was to take the gospel to the Gentiles, they evidently did not stop in towns without a synagogue. From Philippi to Thessalonica they passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, but they stopped in Thessalonica "where there was a Jewish synagogue." Though their mission was to the Gentiles, they still gave the Jews first opportunity to receive the gospel. With few exceptions, such as in Philippi, their trouble came from the Jews, which was the case in Thessalonica. And the motivation behind their trouble from the Jews was jealousy. When jealousy drives our actions other reasons must be found for attacking the focus of our jealousy. In Thessalonica the Jews stirred up the Gentiles against Paul and Silas by saying that they were declaring another king over Caesar. A king named Jesus. They were successful in stirring up a crowd resulting in Paul and Silas' departure from Philippi under cover of night.

Their next stop was Berea where there was also a synagogue. We are told the people there were more open-minded which was evidenced by the fact that they both welcomed their message and examined its truth in Scriptures. An excellent practice! If one will regularly examine Scripture on a daily basis they can recognize upon first hearing whether a message is worthy of further examination. Those who do not examine Scripture will be less apt to recognize truth or error and more prone to respond volatilly to what they don't understand. Because of this openness to both receive and examine Paul's message, many believed. But the closed-minded Jews from Thessalonica heard that Paul and his team were in Berea, and they went there "agitating and disturbing the crowds." Because of the disturbance that was raised, the new believers sent Paul away, although Silas and Timothy remained in Berea a while longer.

The brothers from Berea escorted Paul to Athens where he stayed waiting for Silas and Timothy to join him. Paul was never idle in terms of sharing the gospel. He went regularly to the synagogue and to the marketplace, reasoning with those he found in both places. The Athenian philosophers who heard him thought he was just babbling when he told the "good news about Jesus and the resurrection." But they were curious and brought him into the Areopagus to hear more of his teaching. However, when he told of the resurrection of Jesus, some began to ridicule him, although others said, "We will hear you about this again." Some ended up joining him and believing. There is no record of a church being founded in Athens. Did the seed planted there ever take root? Intellectual centers, such as Athens was at that time, seem more open to strange religious thought than to the gospel.

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