Monday, July 25, 2011

Acts 16:1-10

Timothy Joins Paul and Silas
1 Paul came to Derbe and then to Lystra, where a disciple named Timothy lived, whose mother was Jewish and a believer but whose father was a Greek. 2 The believers at Lystra and Iconium spoke well of him. 3 Paul wanted to take him along on the journey, so he circumcised him because of the Jews who lived in that area, for they all knew that his father was a Greek. 4 As they traveled from town to town, they delivered the decisions reached by the apostles and elders in Jerusalem for the people to obey. 5 So the churches were strengthened in the faith and grew daily in numbers.

Paul’s Vision of the Man of Macedonia
6 Paul and his companions traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been kept by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in the province of Asia. 7 When they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to enter Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus would not allow them to. 8 So they passed by Mysia and went down to Troas. 9 During the night Paul had a vision of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” 10 After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave for Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to them.



Dig Deeper
Coming out of college I was quite decidedly not a Christian and I wanted to be a teacher and historian for the rest of my life. Then my life changed fairly radically when I became a true disciple of Jesus Christ. I continued to be a teacher and coach for awhile but my priorities had changed and God’s kingdom had become the most important thing in my life with my roles as a teacher and coach simply becoming the context for me being a Christian and expanding the kingdom of God. My vocation as a teacher was no longer the most important thing in my life. Then I began to feel the call to go full-time into the work of the ministry and to leave teaching as my profession. This was a subtle calling, though, based on the input and advice of other people. Based on their opinions, I began to seek out God’s will through prayer and reflection and that seemed to also be guiding me towards going into the ministry. Yet at no time was it absolutely clear. It was a big decision to make, to leave what I thought I was going to do for my entire life to go a completely different direction. It would have been easy if the choice was obvious but it wasn’t. In fact, I had people tell me that they thought I should pursue God’s calling but wanted me to know that there were little to no actual ministry opportunities in our fellowship of churches where I was at and wouldn’t be in the foreseeable future. It’s one thing to walk across a bridge but it’s another thing to step out over a canyon on faith, hoping that a bridge will appear by the time your weight has shifted and your foot has stepped out into what looks like nothing but air.

Following the Spirit’s guidance and finding God’s will is a tricky thing. It’s not nearly as obvious as we would like. The reality is that the Spirit often leads us into blind alleys and demands a great deal of faith on our part. That’s what makes it so difficult to follow the leading of the Spirit. It’s generally not obvious. It can be, quite frankly, agonizing. We want to follow the Spirit or it wouldn’t be an issue at all, but how do we know this is the Spirit’s will and not ours? How do we know that this is not just us convincing ourselves to do something that we just really want to do? How do we know that we aren’t about to do something wildly foolish that wasn’t what God wanted at all? The questions to those answers don’t come easy but we can rest assured that our brothers and sisters in the book of Acts struggled with the same issues. They were constantly on the edge being led by a Spirit who seems far more dangerous than we would care to experience.

Luke doesn’t say specifically whether the decision to bring Timothy along with them on Paul’s missionary journey was a difficult one or not but it doesn’t take much speculation to know that it probably was a difficult decision. Paul had taken the young man John Mark with him before on a missionary journey and been burned badly when things got too difficult for Mark and he turned around went home. On top of that Paul had just went through a difficult disagreement and parting of the ways with his long-time friend and supporter Barnabas. Now he had chosen Silas, a man with whom he must have clearly connected on their trip from Jerusalem to Antioch and through the time that Silas stayed and ministered to Paul’s church in Antioch. Silas was a shortened term for his full name “Silvanus.” and he was almost assuredly the same man who co-authored 1 & 2 Thessalonians and was the scribe for 1 Peter (1 Pet. 5:12).

It seems that Silas would take the role left by the departure of Barnabas and now they were presumably taking Timothy to fill a similar role that Mark had filled on the previous journey. But it is unlikely that this decision was easy or obvious. Would Timothy do well on this demanding and difficult trek? Was he really the Spirit’s choice? Certainly Paul labored over his decision in prayer and sought the guidance of the Spirit. Then came that time when you have to step out in faith and act on the assurance that you have done your very best to seek the input of the Spirit and other believers.

There certainly would have been a fair amount of evidence for Paul to consider that Timothy was a reliable man of God, albeit very young, and that he was indeed the Spirit’s choice. Timothy had apparently been converted on Paul’s previous trip to this area (cf. 1 Cor. 4:17). His mother Eunice and grandmother Lois were both beloved Christians (2 Timothy 1:5) but his father was a Greek man who was not a Christian and was, it seems, dead by this time. Timothy, though a young man, was already being spoken well of by the Christians in his home area as he was already probably displaying the type of character that Paul described when he said of Timothy that “I have no one else like him, who will show genuine concern for your welfare. For everyone looks out for their own interests, not those of Jesus Christ” (Phil. 2:20).

But once Paul had decided to take Timothy with him, there was one problem. He would have been considered an apostate Jew by other Jews because he was not circumcised. This could have proved to be a severe obstacle in his ministry trip with Paul so Paul encouraged him to go through the painful step of circumcision. Some see this, at least on the surface, as a contradiction for Paul who was so adamant that circumcision was not necessary for people to be part of God’s family. Paul was dead set against a Gentile like Titus having circumcision forced upon him (Gal. 2:3-5) and was crystal clear that it could not be required for believers who needed nothing more than the faith of being baptized in the life of Christ (Gal. 5:6; cf. Gal. 3:26-29). Ultimately, though, Paul was rather ambivalent about circumcision itself (Gal. 6:15; 1 Cor. 7:19). Paul was not against circumcision. He was against it as a requirement to be recognized as part of God’s family. But Paul was never one to hold blindly to simplistic consistency when a more sophisticated and mature line of thinking was required. He knew that general salvation and ministry have different requirements. There was no thought that Timothy needed circumcision to be in Christ but it was essential in order for him to be heard and accepted by the Jews in the places where they were going to share the gospel. What is not required for salvation can often be necessary for the spreading of the gospel (just as a degree in some sort of biblical studies program is not required to be a Christian but I have met many people who will not go to a church if the minister doesn’t have exactly that sort of training). This was one of those times.

Paul’s new missionary team began to travel around telling the other Gentile churches of the decision that had been made in Jerusalem, something that must have been a source of great joy for the believers everywhere, especially the Gentile believers. They evidently intended on continuing on into Asia to preach the gospel but, says Luke, the Holy Spirit not only kept them from going there but also deterred them from entering into Mysia to share the gospel as well although he doesn’t say why. Nor does Luke tell us what the nature of the Spirit’s guidance was here. It may have come through the means of prophecy, the inward guidance and resolve of the Spirit through prayer, or through external circumstances.

Paul’s journeys were a constant exercise in learning to follow the subtle guidance of the Holy Spirit and trust that they were doing the right thing. But is must have been very confusing and a great struggle to have plans to go into certain areas, only to become convinced that the Spirit was guiding them in another direction. Following the Spirit is easy when it’s obvious but it rarely ever is obvious, and we must assume that it was no easier for Paul and his companions than for us. So they prayed constantly and sought the Spirit’s guidance at every turn no matter how difficult and challenging his leading and prompting might be.

Just when they must have been wondering where in the world the Spirit did want them to go, Paul had a dream of a Macedonian man calling to him to come over to Macedonia and help. This would be a whole new area for the gospel to spread but it still must have been a difficult and challenging call for Paul. Was this dream the genuine prompting of the Spirit or was it just a dream? But these people needed help and Paul and his companions had the exact cure for that problem.

One other important thing apparently happened for Paul and his missionary team during their brief stay in Troas in addition to the dream. For the first time in the book of Acts the narrator switches from using the third person and begins to employ the term “we.” There several possibilities for this switch but the most likely and logical one is that Luke, the physician (Col. 4:14), joined the team in Troas. Although Luke is subtle and does not seek to bring any attention to himself, the team is now complete. Like an action movie that slowly assembles all of the pieces together before they move into the main part of the plot, Paul’s team is now set for the next part of their journey.


Devotional Thought
Do you ever find it difficult to find and follow the Spirit’s will in your life? What do you do in those times? How do you determine what the Spirit’s will is for you? Take some time to reflect and pray about that and ensure that your methods are biblical ones.

No comments: