Monday, September 10, 2018

Acts 26 "Your Testimony will not change anyone. Only God can! "


REVIEW:  This is the third time Paul is giving his defense– before Felix (Acts 24),  before Festus (Acts 25), two years later  and now before King Agrippa II (Acts 26).  In Acts 25  we saw  that  King Herod Agrippa II and his sister  Bernice  (rumour had it that they had an incestuous relationship) were  making a visit to Caesarea to meet the new governor, Festus.  King Herod Agrippa  is a Jew, but  he is  loyal to the Roman empire. Festus  the new governor  of the territory in which  Herd Agrippa  is king tells him about Paul  who  had been  imprisoned by  the previous governor, Felix.  Agrippa  expresses a desire to hear  from Paul himself.  This happens  in  Acts 26, the chapter which we shall now  review.

ACTS 26

v. 1  The  hearing begins with real pomp and ceremony (26:23).  Paul is brought before the court in chains (26:29).  Agrippa  summons Paul to speak for himself.  “Paul stretched out his hand and made his defense.” This was a usual gesture on the part of the speakers  who  addressed public assemblies. Orators and those that addressed  public meetings  stretched their the right hand out while the  left hand  remained under the cloak. Here the effect must have been impressive, for we remember that  he was  chained.  What a picture Paul must have presented here. By the way, we only have one description of the Apostle Paul in an apocryphal writing,entitled, The Acts of Paul and Thecla[1],“A man of small stature, with a bald head and crooked legs, in a good state of body, with eyebrows meeting…and a nose somewhat hooked; full of friendliness, for now he appeared like a man, and now he appeared as an angel.”

Note the detail with which Luke records Paul’s defense before King Agrippa and keep in mind that it is more than Paul which is on trial here.  Christianity is on trial here.  

We can learn much from Paul, and the general way in which he defends and presents himself in the public eye. Apart of the customary  displays of  acknowledgement  and  respect  in vv. 2,3  to the governing authorities, we learn  something  important about  Paul’s way of presenting himself before  a watching world.
In vv.4,5 he says, “My manner of life from my youth, spent from the beginning  among my own nation and in Jerusalem, is known by all the Jews. They have known for a long time, if they are willing to testify, that according to the strictest party of our religion I have lived as a Pharisee”. 
Paul  must have been a familiar figure in Jerusalem, when as a young man, he sat at the feet of Rabbi Gamaliel (22:3). Under Gamaliel he gained a reputation for scholarship, righteousness and religious zeal. Many Jews knew how he had lived as a child, first in Tarsus, then in Jerusalem. Paul’s opening defense therefore has to do with his own integrity, character and demeanour. In essence he is saying, “I have nothing to hide. My life is an open book. Everybody knows where I have come from and how I have lived.  You can check out the facts for yourself. I am not lying. I am not trying to deceive you. You know me better!
It is a wonderful thing to have a strong moral and ethical basis. And it does carry some weight. Many people at the coast knew my father. He was a hardworking, honest business man, who treated his work force fair and well, and he was well respected in the community in Walvis Bay. Over many years I have come across many people that have affirmed this. He was not a believer, but he was strongly shaped by a Christian work ethic. He kept his word and made good his promises. I know!

And so, Paul has a strong basis in proceeding to give his testimony. He will not deceive. He will tell the truth, because this is how he has grown up. He   can be listened to. And so, in this very intimidating setting Paul is called to   give an account of his faith in Jesus, and in particular he addresses again the matter of his hope in the resurrection - based upon a clear promise made by God to the Jewish fathers. Paul’s hope in the resurrection was obviously hugely strengthened when he did meet, in person the resurrected Lord Jesus (whom the Jews had handed over   to the Romans to be killed) on the Road to Damascus.  

In vv. 9 –18 Paul shares his personal testimony in terms of how Christ first encountered him on the road to Damascus, when he  was in the process of persecuting Christians. Here   he was made to understand that in persecuting Christians, he was in fact persecuting Jesus (note the organic union between Christ and his people).  
Paul testifies   how he was changed radically by this encounter.  He now knew that this Jesus whom he had persecuted was truly alive. The resurrection of Jesus  (which the Jews said was a  hoax)  was true after all!  It confirmed  the promise of God to the Jewish fathers.  In vv. 22,23 he ends by saying that this what  Moses and the prophets  (the Scripture)  had prophesied…”that the Christ (i.e. the Messiah) must suffer and that, by being the first to rise from the dead, he would proclaim light both to our people and to the gentiles.”  Isaiah 53 would be a classic text reference   

I remind you that this history tends to repeat itself. Martin Luther,  at the time of the Reformation wrote in his Commentary on the letter to the Galatians (Gal. 1:4),   “We teach no new thing, but we repeat and establish old things which the apostle and all godly teachers have taught before us."  Remember the context!  The Catholic Church said that the Reformation was a new thing, and that the doctrine of the Reformers was a new doctrine. But it wasn’t. Luther and the Reformers merely repeated what the Bible and her apostles had said, particularly with respect to the  doctrine of salvation. Salvation is by grace through faith in Jesus alone. Salvation is not (as the RC church teaches … through  faith in the acts of  the church  e.g. in baptism, eucharist, extreme unction etc). Paul merely said  that which the Bible had previously said, but which  the  present Jews chose to ignore at their own peril. Again, please note that they ought to have believed Paul,  simply on the basis of Paul’s own  credible life  and  testimony, for his life had been an open book to them. I almost imagine that  Paul  would be repeating is statement in his letter to the Romans  in 9:1:  “I am speaking the truth in Christ- I am not lying; my conscience bears me witness in the Holy Spirit.”  
At this point  Paul is interrupted (v.24).  
Festus interrupts Paul. He  is probably  getting uncomfortable or convicted,  and he  says: ”Paul,  you are  out of your mind; your great learning is driving you out of your mind.” You are becoming a crazy professor!  And Paul in turn denies  that he is crazy and affirms, “No, … I am  speaking true and rational words” (v. 25)
And now  Paul  does  something which he has done before. He plays the two parties off against each other.  From Festus he turns to  king Agrippa (a Jew), and he says to him, “King Agrippa, do you believe the prophets? I know that you believe” (v.27). Agrippa knows that  he  can’t deny the fact, but  he is working quick and hard  to get out of this sticky corner. “Do you think that  you can persuade me in  such a short moment  to become a Christian?” (v.28). The Gospel  about Jesus  as presented through the truth and facts  of the  Old Testament prophets  is  forcing Agrippa’s hand. And he doesn’t like being in a corner, because he knows more than he is  willing to confess–  something which is true of every natural man. He does not like facing his conscience.  ‘Do you think you can persuade me in such a short  moment? He is clearly planning to get this conversation  over and done with.  That is what people always do  when they  do not want to face ultimate truth. Truth demands an honest response, and it can hurt. Even if your record before them is impeccable, they will  cut you off, because they do not like change  or hurt! 

And thus  Paul has only one more thing to say,  “I wish not only you, but all who hear me would become as I am…” — a Christian …except for these chains.” (v. 29). With these words  Agrippa, Festus, and Bernice and those sitting with them, rise to leave (v.30), but  they are all agreed that nothing that  Paul had done or said was  worthy of death or imprisonment (v.31). He could have been set free, had he not appealed to a higher authority- Caesar.    

The overriding  and sad truth however  was that they  would not hear the life giving words, the resurrection words, the true and rational  words of Paul,  all of which was undergirded  by a humanly impeccable life, but greater still,  a life  so irreversibly  and powerfully and dynamically touched  by the Lord Jesus  on the Damascus road.

O the coldness and darkness of the human heart!  

I end with this story.  On August 1, 1914, Sir Ernest Shackleton and his crew left London aboard the ship Endurance, bound for the Antarctic. They hoped to cross the Antarctica on foot.  It never happened because, before the Endurance could reach land, she became hopelessly stuck in sea ice. And from this point on, the goal of the captain and crew became simple survival, facing many hardships facing freezing temperatures and near starvation. But of all the terrors they faced, none was more discouraging than the darkness of the long polar night. In early May, the sun vanished altogether not to be seen again until the end of July. In his comments on this experience, Shackleton's biographer wrote, “In all the world there is no desolation more complete than the polar night…no warmth, no life, no movement. Only those who have experienced it can fully appreciate what it means to be without the sun day after day and week after week. Few men unaccustomed to it can fight off its effects altogether; and it has some driven some men mad.”

It is a sad story, but there is something much  sadder, than this,  and the Bible speaks about a  deep and frosty  darkness  that encumbers every human soul, and this  ultimately  leads to a much greater despair, and that is the spiritual darkness of living in the world and afterwards in hell  without Jesus Christ.

Jesus has been proclaimed by Paul and by us as the light of the world (see 26:18), delivering us from darkness and the power of Satan and the chains of sin. And only God (26:29) by the powerful, irresistible work of the Holy Spirit (see Paul’s own conversion) can do that.If the grace of God is not first at work in the human heart, no one will believe, even if your life  speaks as well as Paul's does.

Will you spend some time now, and also in the course of this coming  week to pray again that God, in His great mercy would open those frosty dark hearts of those that you love and pray for every day?  Clearly, your open life and your loving words will not do it in itself. 

Come let us pray  and ask this of our merciful  Saviour in these closing moments of our evening worship.   

Monday, August 20, 2018

2 Timothy 4:1-4 "Preach the Word!"


We have previously seen in 2 Timothy 3:1-9   that we live in a world that doesn’t  take naturally to the truth  of God’s Word.  This  is confirmed once more in  our text, in 4:3,4, in which  we shall see  that people  do not  naturally love  to listen to sound, plain  teaching from the Word of God [cf.  2 Cor. 4:1ff]. 
Even though  the Bible is an extra ordinary, God inspired book   book,  we  find that we  are not naturally drawn to the reading  of the Bible  and to the listening  of the  simple  and clear exposition of the Bible, without gimmicks added.  
We struggle to keep up a basic discipline to read the Word regularly and systematically and to sit regularly  under public Bible teaching.  By nature people  are  more inclined  to love myth. By nature they love drama and hype and noise., and therefore they would far sooner gather around themselves teachers who tell  them  what  they  want to hear, rather than what  they  need to hear.

Our appetite for truth  and obedience  and love for God  does not  come naturally, even after we are converted. We struggle because  our old nature  battles with the new nature which we have received at conversion (Eph.4 :17ff).
In truth it sometimes feels  as  if two  dogs  were living inside of us – a good  dog and an evil one, and, depending on which dog we feed more – that dog wins  the battle for our heart and minds. Because of this, Christians  that frequently wander away  from  the Lord tend to struggle  with depression.

All this is due to the fact that we continue to live in a fallen word in which there is a fallen being, which the Bible calls Satan. John says that the world is in the grip of the evil one (1 Jn. 5:19). The apostle John calls this the spirit of the anti-Christ  (1 Jn. 2:18,22). The apostle Paul calls this “the devil’s schemes”, the “powers of this dark world … spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms“. Paul   also reminds us in Ephesians 6:10-18, that our life is a battle against the devil  who seeks to  control and manipulate this world which God has  created.

This battle manifests itself primarily in a dislike for absolute truth. The Bible claims such status for itself: It is absolute truth (John 17:17), and for this reason Satan among many other schemes  has made sure that there would be a massive battle for the reliability, authority and trustworthiness  of the Bible  in the last century. Satan knows that God’s truth is against him. And so he tries to minimize and relativize the significance of God’s Word.     Satan’s strategy in the garden of Eden, by which he deceived  Eve  is still the same  strategy which he uses  today. He still whispers into our ears, “Has God really said … Did He really  mean this?” (Gen. 3:1)  He wants us to question God. He wants us to question God’s authority. And people under his power do the same.

Thankfully, I can tell you this on the authority of God’s word, that this battle, though it is often  very testing and trying,   it is ultimately  a battle  which  belongs to the Lord.  Our text here  in 2 Tim 3:14 - 4:2  teaches us a high view of God’s Word,  and it speaks to us of the fact that there will be a day of vindication, ‘by his appearing and his kingdom’,  when Christ shall instantly  overturn the works of Satan, and when His truth shall reign.

Having then discussed  the state of the world  in 3: 1-9, and having established the basis for the inevitability of evil and   suffering  and the Christian’s perpetual struggle against it (in 3:10-13) and having given the  antidote  against   all evil  and  deception by holding on to the authority of  the Word of God  ( in 3:14-17), Paul now  makes a solemn charge  to Timothy, pastor in the city of Ephesus in 4:1-4.

Observe then:
·       V.1 The seriousness  of the charge.
·       V.2 The content of that charge.
·       Vv. 3,4  The  context to this charge.

1.  A serious charge (v.1)

1 I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom.  You and I are living in the midst of this  great battle for faith. What must Timothy do – what must we  do in the meantime, while we wait for  Christ’s appearing and kingdom? Paul is giving a solemn charge, and it sounds almost like  a charge  made at an ordination service or the administration  of an oath in which  he calls on God to be  a witness.  In doing so he piles up  five  solemn phrases:  (i)  “I  charge you....” (ii)   “ in the presence of God” (iii) “and of Christ Jesus“  (iv) “Who is  to judge the living and the dead” (v)  “and by  his appearing and his kingdom”.

What Paul is about to say is a very weighty matter. “In the light of all that I have said before I am charging you before God with this, Timothy!  In the light of the days that we are living in and the circumstances that we are living under, don’t fail in this! For this you will have to give account ultimately not to me or to your  congregation. You  will have to give  an account to God the Father and  the  Lord  Jesus (and I want to add, the Holy Spirit because  he has inspired the Word  cf. 2 Tim. 3:16) – the Tri-une  God  is the  One we have to look  to and give account to!

2. The content of the charge (v.2)

‘Preach the word. Be ready in season and out of season. Reprove, rebuke, exhort with complete patience and instruction.’ Take note of the 5 imperatives: preach, be ready, reprove, rebuke, and exhort. All this is contained in the duty of preaching the Word in these days.
Preach!  (Gr. kērussō – to  announce/ herald  - making a public announcement).  Publicly proclaim the divinely authorized message from God to man. This is really the same work that the Lord Jesus came to do (e.g. Matt. 4:17). He made a public announcement: “Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  That same work He gave His disciples to do at various times and in the great commission (Matt. 28:18-20). This became the work of the apostles and many others after Pentecost. They preached the word of the gospel to all nations!

Why is it so crucial and so very urgent that this same Word needs to be preached today? Because every new generation needs to hear this.  Because there is a judgment to come!   

When does the Word of God need to be preached? In season (Gr. eukairos) – when  the time is opportune  and when  people are eager  to hear, and out of season (Gr. akairos) when, as in the days of Jeremiah  nobody wants to listen. The Word from God needs to be preached  whether   people think it is relevant or not; when people are responsive or not.

How does this word  need to be preached?  
·    Reprove and rebuke…”. Preaching is not only the proclaiming of what the Bible teaches positively. Preaching needs to contain warning. There is no prophet in the Bible that did not, in the Name of God,   warn the people of his day. The work of the prophet was to hold the Word of God before people and to warn them   concerning their   sins. They spoke to the people’s conscience, and they aimed for conviction with a view to repentance.  The prophet reminded people of the consequences of sin, and he wasn’t allowed to water down the truth.  It is very tempting to focus only on positives, and never say what is wrong.  Preachers need to do both, and people need to know the difference, and that means being both positive and negative in our proclamation.
·       Exhort (Gr. parakaleo – admonish, urge).  Get alongside them and speak to them   in a fatherly or motherly way. Persuade them to turn from wrong things or from a wrong course of action.  Encourage them to do  what is right in God’s  eyes.

Remember that  the power for salvation lies in the preaching of the Word [Rom. 1:16-17] "For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believes; to the Jew first, and also to the gentile."

 3. The Context of this Charge: (vv. 3,4)  

3 For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, 4 and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths.

Timothy needs to keep on preaching the truth, because a time is coming when people will prefer myths to truth. They will prefer messages that their itching ears want to hear. They will prefer that to listening to God’s Word, and in the midst of such times there needs to be the proclamation of that unchanging prophetic Word of God, standing out as a  tall beacon of eternal truth, even when men and women  prefer myths.  

The task of preaching  the Word of God is so urgent because of the imminent spiritual dangers to the flock of God, and in the light of His appearing.  Let me say this again. The world is for ever pressurizing the church to of compromise the truth. And it’s a subtle pressure. But it always relates to the seriousness with which we regard the Word of Truth. And so we find that churches no longer read the Bible publicly. We find   services where the word of God may be read, and then the message has absolutely nothing to do with it; and then we have services which lead the people astray with false teaching.  We see this everywhere  and I have to deal with this on an almost weekly basis.
And the  preaching of the Word is so urgent  because of  the fact that God has appointed a  time of accounting when  at the time of His appearing He will judge ALL people  by the standard of His Word. Flee from the wrath that is to come! (Lk. 3:7)

More than ever  we need to be urged   to  preach the Word  because of these days  that are reflected in  vv. 3 & 4 ,  are reflected in our own times.   God’s kingdom is appearing. Every day, hour, minute and second it is coming nearer. The Judge is  standing at the door (James 5:9). And when He is  here  the day of salvation is over. That is why the counsel of Hebrews is critical-  “TODAY, if you hear his voice … do not harden your hearts”  (Hebr. 3:7,15;4:6

Now, you may be saying, ‘That's all very  fine and good’. This is not for me. This  is a word for preachers.   But think very carefully  about your response .

·       This is a word for you too because you have people in your circle that no pastor- preacher can reach.  Have you not been entrusted with the gospel? In fact, your pastor preacher is there to equip you to do the work of  the ministry (Eph. 4:12).  

·       This is a word for  you. You need to hear the urgency of the Word - ”by  his appearing  and his kingdom: PREACH THE WORD!” When this season of grace is over men and women will have to give an account of themselves before God. And it will  be gnashing of teeth for many.  Tell them now  before it’s too late.

·       This is a  word for you.   We need faithful, systematic biblical teaching and expository preaching, giving us the whole counsel of God.  You don’t need psychological pep talks and feel good sermons.  No, you need  God's logic- God's way of thinking about this world! Granted, it can be  challenging to sit under God's Word  because it  convicts you  in  areas that you might not want to have touched or addressed. The Word of God  plainly spoken  has the habit to invade  places in your inner being that you have been trying to keep God out of. That  can be very painful, and yet, it is so very necessary that God should do this work in us, for the Word of God is  given  to cure us of our spiritual (and associated)  diseases.      
That is why we  remain   committed to expository preaching.  When you’re preaching God's word, you are giving people answers to the real questions and issues in life. So  this is relevant for you,  for it helps you to pray for your preachers who are charged to  preach the Word  and who lead by example.

Monday, August 13, 2018

Acts 25 ”Paul appeals to Caesar”


As we continue our studies in the book of Acts we need to always keep in mind that these are  essentially the Acts of the Holy Spirit. In His sovereignty He  propels  Paul through  his many and varied  situations and crises.  And the purpose of all this is that God will glorify Himself in the life of this man, Paul.

The Gospel of Jesus will be made known in very unconventional contexts and settings. I don’t know whether you remember the words of God to Ananias (after Paul’s Damascus road experience) concerning Paul  in 9:15,16, “… he is a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel. 16 For I will show him how much he must suffer for the sake of my name." 
What a prophetic and a mighty and true word this was. In our preaching through the Book of Acts we have already seen that Paul was the great apostle to the gentiles. He is the One who also carried the Name of Jesus consistently before the   children of Israel. 
But how was this despised little  Jew  going to carry the name of Jesus before kings?   
How was he going to obtain access into the  presence of kings?  
The answer is this: He was going to obtain access to earthly kings by the means of the power of the King of kings. Remember? God is the one that opens and shuts doors. (Isa. 22:22; Rev.3:7) 

In this text before us we  will see how  God will open  the door  for Paul  to  appear before governors, kings and eventually Caesar himself.
We begin in our customary way in terms of observing the text. Chapter 25 can be simply divided:

(i)               25:1-12:  Paul before  the governor Festus, under whom  the significant appeal  to  the supreme king , Caesar is made
(ii)             25:13 – 27 and  Chapter 26 : Paul before the Jewish king Agrippa

1.     25: 1-12 :  PAUL BEFORE  PORCIUS  FESTUS

Last time we saw   that Paul was brought to Caesarea, about 90 kilometres  from Jerusalem.  There (in Chapter 24)  he appeared  before the governor Felix, an unpopular and brutal man, who was removed from office (leaving Paul in prison) . Felix was  replaced  by Porcius Festus in AD 60. You may  have suspected  that his name Porcius  has something  to do with ‘pig’ (pork)  and you  suspected rightly so!  The name Porcius comes from the noun porcus, meaning  pig . This word was sometimes used derogatorily to denote a human glutton, but in general, the Romans held the pig in much higher regard than we do today, and thus in Roman history we even have a feminine name, Porcia (which means  Sow). The name Porcius means Belonging To Swine or with Swine. It probably originated as the title of a herder of  pigs or a pig breeder.[1]  
It is before this  Porcius Festus  that Paul was  brought on trial yet again.  History describes him as a fair and reasonable man, but he was governor for only two or three years before he died. 

Porcius Festus, thought that it would be  wise  to go up  to Jerusalem  to get acquainted with the Jewish hierarchy and the high priests (25:1). As he met with Jewish authorities, they thought that  this would be a good opportunity to get  rid of  Paul,  something which they were unable to do during when  the governor Felix was the  procurator.  So they tried to manipulate the new governor, Festus. Their plan was to bring Paul back to Jerusalem, lie in wait for him, and put him to death (25:3).  There was plenty of  Jewish guerrilla activity going  on at that time.
Festus however was smart enough to realize that something was afoot, and he said, “No, we’re going to keep Paul in Caesarea. But if you would like to come down with me, and I’m going back in a few days, we’d be glad to have a hearing down there” (25:4-5).  
And so  it was that  another  trial  happened  under  Festus. They laid a number of charges  against Paul, but they couldn’t prove any of them.  (25:6,7).

When Paul’s turn came to defend himself, he said what he had said before, I haven’t said anything against the law of the Jews, nor have I made any defamatory remarks against the temple, nor have I said anything against Caesar” (25:8).  
So the whole matter appears to be a set of trumped up charges.  And Paul, by rights should have been released under the terms of the law. But Festus was subject to the making of the same mistake in 25:9 as his predecessor, Felix in 24:7. He was, after all, more a politician than a just judge, and therefore, he wanted to please the Jews more than help Paul to obtain justice.   That is actually a perversion of justice, and as such, such bias  is never defensible. But  we must remember  that  even this twisted system of  justice served  God. God remains the sovereign God in the midst of all the crooked and twisted schemes of men.  And  the apostle Paul knew  that better  than anyone else. And Paul knew that he was a dead man, should he be  taken to Jerusalem. But it wasn’t actually the fear of death at the hands of the Jews that drove him to make an appeal to Caesar (25: 10-12). Paul knew that he could not die  in Jerusalem  for  in  23:11 (!)   the Lord  had told him that he still had work for  him to do.  “The following night the Lord stood by him and said, "Take courage, for as you have testified to the facts about me in Jerusalem, so you must testify also in Rome." He  needed to  testify in Rome! He still had work to do!  And so he said, “ad caesarium pro voco“ -  in Latin, the Roman language  for , “I appeal to Caesar.”

25:13-27 : PAUL BEFORE  AGRIPPA AND BERNICE

And  so we see the divine dominoes fall! He must appear before kings. And the first  king he is to appear  before is  King   Agrippa accompanied by  Bernice. They  came to  visit the new Roman procurator. This king Agrippa  was Herod Agrippa II  the son of Herod Agrippa I  of Acts 12, the king  who had put to death James, the brother of John.  He was therefore the son of Herod the great, the king who at the time of Jesus birth ordered the massacre of the Hebrew baby boys.   So this grandson of Herod’s who ruled over a Roman territory which is roughly where Lebanon is today was living in an incestuous relationship with  his sister  Bernice,  and their living together, was one of the scandals of the day.

They came and met Festus, and they were there for some days and it was inevitable that the talk of Paul should come to the fore. Festus gave a fair report concerning Paul and expressed his opinion that there was no proper charge  in this case. It appeared to be a mere  theological squabble between one Jew  that followed Christ ( who also was a Jew) and a party of the Jews them (25:19). Festus himself, not being a Jew nor a theologian was at a loss to understand. Mind you, he was aware that Paul was a formidable and learned man (see 26:24). But remember too that Festus had received no light from the Lord. In his soul there  was no effectual grace,  and so we cannot expect him to understand the big issues  here, even though  he has  a great exponent of the gospel standing right there in front of him. But  his  is spiritually  deaf  and  blind. He doesn’t understand.

So Festus tells Agrippa about the things concerning the Apostle Paul, and Agrippa says, “You know, Festus, I  want to hear the man myself” (25:22). As a Jewish king under Roman authority  he  had received authority from the Romans to  oversee the affairs of the temple in Jerusalem  and to mediate wherever.  Paul had obviously  become  a talking point at this time, and it would have been in his political  interest and for the sake of peace in the territory to hear out Paul.  So Festus said, “Well, tomorrow you will hear him.” (25:22)

The meeting was conducted  in  pomp and glory. Agrippa  the king, and Bernice, and  the military commanders and the prominent men of the city were present (25:23). It  reminds us  of   Luther and  his meeting before the council of Worms in Germany,  which was conducted from 28 January to 25 May 1521, with the Emperor Charles V presiding, and with cardinals  and learned men  present staring down at the poor little monk  called Luther. And in like  manner  Paul is found in the midst of  all of this pomp, and one gains the impression  that no one really understands  or bothers to understand  why Paul is on trial. They are about to find out (but still not accept), and this we will consider next time in Acts 26.   

WHAT   CAN WE LEARN FROM ACTS 25? 

1.There are none as blind as those that cannot and will not see 
Here are people  that have had heard the story of the cross, and the story of the resurrection.  Many had heard what Paul had  said on so many previous occasions about Jesus -  about His life,  His death and His supernatural resurrection  from the dead- just as He said He would. Many had heard and knew what Jesus had said and claimed. No, he wasn’t coming with political power to overthrow the Romans. Jesus had said to  Pilate another political governor, “My kingdom is not of this world, if my kingdom were of this world, my servants  would have been fighting  that I might not be delivered over to the Jews. But my kingdom is not of this world.” (Jn. 18:36). It is clear that Jesus’ agenda, and Paul’s  agenda was out of this world. It was about the kingdom of God, and this kingdom had absolutely no temporal ambitions such as overthrowing the Roman government. This kingdom was  about one thing.  It was about reconciling  hearts  to  the King of kings. God in Christ  was  seeking  the hearts of people, and  it was by means of the Gospel of Jesus Christ that  God was doing this.  But unregenerate men  can’t see this . They don’t think that way. They cannot see  the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ who is the image of God. The god of this world has blinded them (2 Cor.4:4).The best that unregenerate men can do is to  think about this life, and to make sure that their society remains governable while  they live. That is why they are politicians.  Festus and Agrippa, although curious   weren’t willing to concede that behind this little Jew called Paul stood  the mighty King of the Universe – the mighty Creator  of the Heavens and the Earth – the  righteous Judge of all. Festus and Agrippa  thought of all this just as  religious talk – and a matter of personal opinion.   They did not understand that  what Paul represented , is actually the fundamental issue of life. The fundamental issue of life is a person’s  relationship to God.  The fundamental issue is not  politics  or  economics, or culture. It’s  spiritual. It’s the relationship of an individual to the Lord God. That’s the fundamental issue of life. And to be right about everything else and to be wrong on that is to be wrong about the most fundamental of life. May God help us to realize that fact.

2.Thank God that He is in charge!  The ultimate truth here is not that Paul is on trial before men.  Paul is ultimately here to further God’s plans. He must stand before kings, and he must stand  to testify before the  greatest of human kings  at that time: Caesar. So, to Caesar he will go. There is no  biblical record that Paul ever appeared before Caesar.  The Bible is silent on the matter. 

But we do have some historical commentary. About 200 years later, the church father  Eusebius recorded that,  “after [Paul] defending himself successfully, it is currently reported that the Apostle again went forth to proclaim the Gospel, and afterwards came to Rome a second time, and was martyred under Nero.”[2]  It is very likely that he  stood before  Caesar  Nero.


[1] www.abarim-publications.com/Meaning/Porcius.html
[2] Eusebius, Historia Ecclesiastica, 2.22).

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