Friday, August 05, 2011

Acts 17:1-9

In Thessalonica
1 When Paul and his companions had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a Jewish synagogue. 2 As was his custom, Paul went into the synagogue, and on three Sabbath days he reasoned with them from the Scriptures, 3 explaining and proving that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead. “This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Messiah,” he said. 4 Some of the Jews were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas, as did a large number of God-fearing Greeks and quite a few prominent women.

5 But other Jews were jealous; so they rounded up some bad characters from the marketplace, formed a mob and started a riot in the city. They rushed to Jason’s house in search of Paul and Silas in order to bring them out to the crowd.[a] 6 But when they did not find them, they dragged Jason and some other believers before the city officials, shouting: “These men who have caused trouble all over the world have now come here, 7 and Jason has welcomed them into his house. They are all defying Caesar’s decrees, saying that there is another king, one called Jesus.” 8 When they heard this, the crowd and the city officials were thrown into turmoil. 9 Then they made Jason and the others post bond and let them go.




Dig Deeper
When I was about 17 years old I wanted to get a job. I tried out a few places here and there but I didn’t last long at any of them, mostly because I was lazy and didn’t want to work hard. Then my older sister started to tell me about the place where she was working. It sounded like a blast. Nearly everyday she would come home and tell me of all of the funny things that happened at work and the funny and cool people that she worked with there. I got to thinking after a while that this sounded just like my kind of place. I wanted to “work” someplace where I could have fun and laugh a lot and enjoy the people and not really have to actually work very much. The job was doing data entry on computers so it was basically typing on a computer and I figured how hard could that be. So I went and took a job there. But once I got there I found that my sister had left out some vital details. Some of the people there were fun but she had only talked about a handful of people out of dozens and dozens. There were a few funny moments but those were actually usually a few seconds or minutes scattered throughout an eight-hour day. Most of the time the work was grueling and monotonous. You couldn’t play around that much because each person was required to get a certain amount of data entered each hour. That meant hour after hour of quiet work. I had so totally misunderstood the nature of that job that, although in retrospect, it wasn’t a bad job for someone my age, I hated every minute I was there.

Throughout the book of Acts we have seen something that is highlighted in this passage. There are times of comfort and blessing that come with our life in Christ but if someone were to tell you only about those things or stress them as the main experience and point of being a Christian, then you would get a completely wrong view of what it truly means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ. Jesus was and is the true king of the world and the Messiah. But that is only half of the story. Jesus was the kind of king that had to suffer in order to fulfill his true purpose. In the same way, Christians will find blessing and comfort in Christ, that much is true. But that is only half of the story.

As they continued through the region of Macedonia, reaching Thessalonica, Paul continued his normal pattern of using the local synagogue as his first stop. He would preach the gospel to the Jews and God-fearing Gentiles at the synagogue in hopes of forming a core group of disciples that would carry on the work of preaching the gospel and expanding God’s family in that region long after Paul left. When Paul first arrived in Thessalonica he specifically preached at the local synagogue for three Sabbaths before apparently moving on within the city itself. Surely Paul stayed there longer than just three weeks, though, as the book of Thessalonians makes clear that Paul worked in Thessolonica to support himself (1 Thess. 2:9; 2 Thess. 3:8) and also received aid several times from the church in Philippi while he was there (Phil. 4:16). That certainly implies a stay of longer than three weeks.

There is no doubt that Paul’s gospel announcement contained the same elements of preaching that he typically used wherever he went, but at this stop Luke emphasized the role and nature of the Messiah. Amongst Jews the early Christians tended to center on Jesus as the Messiah while they focused on Jesus as king among the Gentiles but both aspects of Jesus found a common problem in the suffering and death on the cross of Jesus Christ. A suffering ruler who died at the hands of his enemy didn’t sound like a very impressive Messiah or king. How could it be claimed that this man who came to suffer and die was now the king of the world? It was through the act of his resurrection from the dead. Paul declared in Romans 1:4 that through the resurrection Jesus was declared to the world to be the true son of God thereby making him both Messiah (Christ) and King (Lord).

In this role of suffering, though, was the real challenge of the gospel. It is what made it a stumbling block for the Jews and sheer foolishness for the Gentiles (1 Corinthians 1:23). Those who insisted upon a Messiah or king that lived up to the worldly expectations of power and might would never be able to embrace the truth of the Messiah. It wasn’t just that he unexpectedly suffered but pulled it out in the end by resurrecting. A careful look at the Old Testament Scriptures would demonstrate that Jesus had to suffer because that was always the kind of Messiah that God promised (see passages such as Ps. 2; 16; 22; 110; Isa. 53). It is not only vital that this aspect of Jesus is understood so that we will know him as he truly is but if we don’t understand Jesus’ role as the suffering servant then we will easily mistake ours.

Our world today is full of religious teachers (as was Paul’s) who are more than happy to tell you that God wants nothing but good things for your life because you’re one of his kids. All you have to do, we are told, is to have faith and the blessings will start rolling in. In fact, they’re already prepared for you even if you haven’t received them yet, you just to have to have faith. The problem is that this is so far from the full story and so incomplete that it can only rightly be called a false picture of Christianity. Christians are called to be God’s people that live by the values of the age to come, a time of completeness, sufficiency, and love for others. But to do that in an age of sin, darkness, and fallenness requires sacrifice. We live in an age where the people of the world live for their own best interests which creates large pockets of both surplus and lack, of both comfort and suffering.

The only way for God’s people to bring his economy of sufficiency into such a fallen world is to confront the selfishness and sacrifice for the poor and rejected. Thus, we are called to be people who, like our Messiah, willingly suffer for the benefit of others. We live by the values of the coming age and hope for that age and sacrifice for those that are suffering until that time comes. These are the thoughts echoed by Peter when he declared “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God’s power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that the proven genuineness of your faith—of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire—may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed.”

Paul and Silas willingly suffered so that the gospel of the suffering Messiah might be brought to others and when they accepted it and believed, entering into his life, they were willingly taking on that road of purposeful hardship themselves. They were immediately immersed into this life as the Jews riled up some of the local riffraff to stir up trouble and persecute this young church. The young church was getting hammered from both sides. On one side, the Jews didn’t like their claims of Jesus as the Messiah and the fact that the Christians were quite successful in evangelizing the God-fearing Gentiles that had been worshipping at their synagogues (certainly it was appealing to hear that they could be full members of God’s family through faith in his life alone without all of the rigors of keeping the law and becoming Jewish through circumcision). On their other side, the Gentiles did not care for the claims of Jesus as the true king of the world. That sounded like a challenge to Caesar and would be dealt with harshly.

The mobs came to get rid of Paul and Silas but when they could not find them, they turned their wrath onto Jason, a new convert at who’s house Paul and Silas had evidently spent much of their time. It appears that Jason and the others were eventually let go under the condition that Paul and his companions had to move on. This is likely what Paul referred to when he wrote (most likely just a few weeks or months after leaving Thessalonica) “we were orphaned by being separated from you for a short time (in person, not in thought), out of our intense longing we made every effort to see you. For we wanted to come to you—certainly I, Paul, did, again and again—but Satan blocked our way” (1 Thess. 2:17-18). Paul’s sufferings, you see, weren’t just from persecution of non-believers. His sacrifice for the benefit of others didn’t end when he left that town. As Paul described in 2 Corinthians 11:28-29: “I face daily the pressure of my concern for all the churches. Who is weak, and I do not feel weak? Who is led into sin, and I do not inwardly burn?”

Paul would face the agony of leaving a young church on their own under the care and provision of the Holy Spirit. He trusted the Spirit certainly, but still felt a strong parental bond towards them and cared deeply for them. Paul knew, and he demonstrated in every area of his life and ministry, that being a Christian is not about getting your share of the blessings all of the time but putting the interests of Christ and others ahead of his own (Phil. 2:3-5; 20-21).


Devotional Thought
Do you truly live each day for the benefit of others, being fully willingly to suffer and sacrifice in small ways or larger ways for the interests of Christ and others? What will it take for you to get to a point in your heart where you are fully prepared to do that?

No comments: