Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Acts 18:12-23

12 While Gallio was proconsul of Achaia, the Jews made a united attack against Paul and brought him to the judge's bench. 13 "This man," they said, "persuades people to worship God contrary to the law!"

14 And as Paul was about to open his mouth, Gallio said to the Jews, "If it were a matter of a crime or of moral evil, it would be reasonable for me to put up with you Jews. 15 But if these are questions about words, names, and your own law, see to it yourselves. I don't want to be a judge of such things." 16 So he drove them from the judge's bench. 17 Then they all [f] seized Sosthenes, the leader of the synagogue, and beat him in front of the judge's bench. But none of these things concerned Gallio.



The Return Trip to Antioch
18 So Paul, having stayed on for many days, said good-bye to the brothers and sailed away to Syria. Priscilla and Aquila were with him. He shaved his head at Cenchreae, because he had taken a vow. 19 When they reached Ephesus he left them there, but he himself entered the synagogue and engaged in discussion with [g] the Jews. 20 And though they asked him to stay for a longer time, he declined, 21 but said good-bye and stated, [h] "I'll come back to you again, if God wills." Then he set sail from Ephesus.
22 On landing at Caesarea, he went up and greeted the church, [i] and went down to Antioch. 23 He set out, traveling through one place after another in the Galatian territory and Phrygia, strengthening all the disciples.



Dig Deeper
Last year an American football player made a vow at the beginning of the season that he was not going to shave his face until his team made it to the Super Bowl, the championship game of the National Football League. The attention that he received for this little stunt grew by the week both as a result of his team being very good and having a legitimate chance to make the Super Bowl and the fact that his beard was growing quite burly over the course of a long season. By the time the playoffs came around, his beard was in the realm of a fine Grizzly Adams-like beard. He continued to vow that he would not shave his beard off until he made it to the Super Bowl, which would have been interesting if his team had not made it, but they did win each round of the playoffs and made their way to the Super Bowl. In the week leading up to the Super Bowl, his beard got a great deal of attention. He had vowed to grow it until he played in a Super Bowl and he had made it. Eventually his team lost in the Super Bowl but shortly after the game, with his vow fulfilled, he shaved his beard and came out publicly a few days later clean-shaven and ready to take on the challenge of the next season.

As Paul continued on with his journey of spreading the gospel throughout the world, he faced many challenges of different kinds. As he was beginning the journey back home to Antioch, Luke briefly mentions that Paul shaved his head because of a vow but doesn’t give us any more information than that. Commentators have long puzzled over what type of vow Paul was taking and what it meant. We can state with absolute certainty that he had not taken a vow to play in the Super Bowl. Some have suggested that he took a strict Nazarite vow which often involved not cutting one’s hair but strict vows of that nature were not taken outside of the land of Israel and always ended in Jerusalem so it is unlikely that it was a vow of that type. What is more likely is that Paul engaged in a typical but not formal Jewish custom of making vows that reminded them of a special circumstance or time period that they were offering to God. It is quite reasonable that Paul had chosen to undertake such a vow when God guided him to stay in Corinth to build up the ministry there for a time much longer than he had originally planned. It is quite possible, if this speculation is correct, that Paul was growing his hair as a sign of trust in God’s provision and protection through a long time in Corinth. Now as he left the region, he would shave his head to signify that God had indeed come through and that specific time was over.

But before he left the region of Achaia, Paul would be dragged before the authorities for one more important encounter, this time with the proconsul, Gallio. The charge against Paul was a familiar one that was lodged against the apostles and the early church most often. They were persuading people to worship God contrary to the Law of Moses. The church was constantly facing dual charges on either end of the spectrum. The Jews charged that the Christian belief followed in the blasphemous footsteps of their so-called Messiah, Jesus. They truly believed, as Paul once had, that the Christians were encouraging Jews to abandon their faith, disregard the Law, disrespect Moses, and therefore they stood as no better than the pagans.

On the other hand, the Romans were quite wary of the early Christians, especially as it became more and more clear that this was not just an offshoot of Judaism but was something entirely different. It might seem odd that Rome would have a problem with Christianity being that it was an empire that was quite tolerant of other religions as long as they didn’t pose a threat to the Empire itself. So how could a group that was built on the teachings of love and non-violence of their Messiah pose a threat? It was because they were not a typical religion. Rome would have been quite happy to allow just another group that held their private religious beliefs within the confines of their own community. But the Christians, although not political or militaristic, truly believed that Jesus was the true King of the world and this meant that Caesar was not. They were determined to live that way and live by the values of the kingdom to which they belonged in heart and loyalty. Rome may not have completely understood that but they saw the potential threat and were determined to stop it. This meant that the Christians typically found themselves squeezed between the religious zeal of the Jews and the political wariness of the Romans.

But as Paul stepped before Gallio, it was still early in the Christian development and Christianity had not yet fully gained the attention of the non-Jewish world and certainly the Christian community was not fully understood by the Romans. Gallio, like many in the pagan world at this time, still saw the Christian and Jewish conflict as an in-house squabble that they did not want to deal with. Gallio did not want to get involved what what he understood as arguments over things that the Romans didn’t believe, didn’t understand, and didn’t care about.

This might seem like a negative decision for Paul and the disciples but it was actually a great victory for them. It basically gave the Christian community a new freedom, at least in the region of southern and central Greece. Gallio’s decision meant that Christianity was still being viewed as a part of Judaism which meant that they would be afforded the same freedom that was allowed to the Jewish faith. In addition, he was clearly telling the Jewish leadership that he didn’t want to hear about any more complaints that they had with the Christians. For now, Rome would not do their dirty work.

Luke does not make it clear as to why Sosthenes was beaten and by who but he does make clear that Gallio was no saint. His decision was favorable for Paul but was not based in godliness or justice but convenience for him and Rome. Now he turns a blind eye to a crowd grabbing and beating a man. It may have been that the Greeks grabbed Sosthenes and beat him but it is more likely that the Jews beat their own synagogue leader either for losing the case before Gallio and losing the honor of the community or because he had somehow demonstrated Christian sympathies during the trial. Bolstering this last possibility is that Paul mentions someone named Sosthenes in 1 Corinthians 1:1 as his co-author (possibly the same man as the one in this passage, but not necessarily).

As Paul’s journey was coming to an end he left and headed towards Ephesus. God had prompted him to stay in the region of Corinth for longer than he had planned but now it was time to move on. It would make sense that if his vow was a remembrance and thanksgiving vow to God for his provision during his time in that region that as he left the region and headed toward Jerusalem that it was a good time to end the vow and give final thanks to God.

Paul finally arrived in Ephesus, in the province of Asia. He had earlier been kept by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in the province of Asia. Now in Ephesus, things seem to go well and Paul is asked to stay more and continue to preach the gospel, but Paul seemed to discern that the time was still not right for a full-scale ministry in Ephesus, at least it was not the time for Paul. But he did leave Aquila and Priscilla behind to build up the church. Paul was clearly a man who was constantly in touch with the guidance of the Spirit as he revealed God’s will to him and did not feel that he had to do everything himself. He would later urge Timothy to teach the ministry and gospel to faithful men who would be equipped to pass it on to others (2 Timothy 2:2) and that is precisely what he was doing here.

Verse 22 is a bit cryptic but it is likely that when Luke says that Paul “went up and greeted the church,” he is referring to Paul going to visit the church in Jerusalem (although he could simply be referring to the church in Caesarea, but it would be worded oddly if that were the case). What Luke was most likely telling us was that Paul was always accountable in his ministry to the church family at large. He was not a lone-gun but kept in contact with the historic center of the church and gave them occasional updates of his activities. Paul then traveled on to his “home” church in Antioch for a short time.

But even on arriving back at “home,” Paul would not stay put for long. He had established churches in Galatia and Phrygia and would now return to them to with a fatherly heart to love and strengthen them. Paul was always deeply committed to spreading the influence of God’s kingdom one heart at at time through active evangelism and church building but he never reduced those churches and converts to a numbers game. They weren’t just conquests or numbers for Paul. He cared deeply for each church, each community, and each person. Paul was truly an evangelist and a shepherd.


Devotional Thought
Paul was constantly working towards being sensitive to the guidance of the Holy Spirit whether he led Paul towards the expected or the unexpected and uncomfortable. Paul’s loyalty was to the Spirit, not himself or his own desires. Are you equally committed to following the guidance of the Spirit? Have you trained yourself to even discern the Spirit’s guidance and do you listen when he does guide you? To what is he calling you right now?

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