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Reflections

We’re at a natural break in the narrative of Acts, so I thought I would touch on some issues that have absorbed this blog for months now.  In a sense, this momentary lapse from following the Biblical narrative is necessary to explain future events within Acts.

Throughout the history of the Christian church, the church has struggled with those who would redefine the gospel and promote their own beliefs in the place of orthodoxy. The church has deemed these people heretics. Unfortunately, the title of heretic has been flung at Biblical believers at times, so that the term requires re-examination to understand what it means. Ultimately, it comes down to a definition of the gospel, which prepares us for Acts 15, when the early church first undertook the task of making a definitive statement concerning the gospel.

It would be wonderful if God and the church had created some all-encompassing statement of faith during Jesus’ lifetime and had Him say, yes, this is the gospel. No such statement exists and that, in and of itself, proof that Christianity is the truth. Canned religions start out with statements of faith at the outset. The early church came to know God sort of like one gets to know their spouse – a little at a time. They dealt with issues as they came up. And, thus, what was heresy and what was orthodoxy was given to the early church, but dealt with in succeeding generations as outsiders and those from inside who had confused ideas challenged the basic beliefs of the church.

Dr. Harold O.J. Brown wrote an excellent book in 1984 titled “Heresies: The Image of Christ in the Mirror of Heresy and Orthodoxy from the Apostles to the Present.” This comprehensive book that traces the various heresies found in the church from the 1st Century to the present.  Dr. Brown defined heresies as “those beliefs that are so at odds with orthodox Christian theology that they are a direct threat to the basic beliefs necessary for adequately understanding God’s plan for personal salvation.” They are more than differences of opinion. The heretic must have some claim on calling himself “Christian”, some real original relationship to orthodoxy. A non-believer cannot be a heretic. In a sense, some of what we call “heresies” are not truly heretical, but another religion entirely.

All the theological concepts subject to heretical interpretation are found in the Bible. These are primarily those surrounding the Trinity and the nature of Jesus, although other subjects have become the basis for some heresies. The earliest Christians generally understood these concepts in the natural course of their faith. However, when heretical beliefs started developing, there grew a need to formally refute them; thus, over time, these basic Christian beliefs were systematized in understandable ways.

It took several centuries for the early theologians to develop the ideas and vocabulary needed to present orthodox beliefs on the Trinity and the nature of Jesus. When this was done the results were the various major creeds (Apostles, Nicene [AD 325/381], Athanasian, Chalcedonian [AD 451]) created for popular use. Even this is not enough. For though some will generally agree with the particular postulations, the intellectual need to further explain these basics in the extreme leads to heretical thought. This led to the subsequent (to AD 451) one thousand five hundred fifty years of repeating heresies. Most, if not all, modern heresies are revivals of or share assumptions with heresies of the first 450 years of Christianity.

In Dr. Brown’s book, he explained this history in a logical, chronological narrative. He showed that in the early persecutions, some heretics were genuine martyrs. More importantly, he explained the ramifications of any particular heresy, not just dwelling on why it is wrong Biblically, but thoroughly discussing the logical implications, conclusions and even actions to which this variant belief brings the heretic.  

The story progresses to the political successes of the church when it achieves official state recognition and eventually becomes an official state religion. He recounts with sadness the change of the church of the martyred saints into a government organization persecuting, or when not yet official, having the government persecute, its “enemies.” These enemies were not always heretics, but often political rivals with minor differences of theological opinion. Even some of this difference of opinion was really the result of linguistic misinterpretation (willful or incidental depending on the goals of the personages) between Latin and Greek speakers. When the opponents actually were heretical there were instances when the persecutions strengthened opposition to orthodoxy much in the same way early persecutions strengthened the church. It was some of this attitude and prejudice that left varieties of North African and Middle Eastern Christians vulnerable to the wholesale conversions to Islam in the 7th and 8th Centuries.

This is one reason why apologetics is so important to modern Christianity. We live in a day and age when the Internet makes it very easy to spread heresies and Biblical ignorance makes the average Christian vulnerable to claims that are partially based upon the Bible, but not fully founded there. Without a firm understanding of Biblical truth and modern writers who can put ancient theological terms into understandable modern language, we face a situation in North America and Europe that is very similar to 7th and 8th Century North America and Middle East. We must guard against this and the first defense is an understanding of the meaning of the gospel.

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Planning for Disaster

The passage we’re looking at today is one of the foundational passages for the SBC Cooperative Program, whereby local churches voluntarily contribute money to the larger organization to be distributed as needs arise or are foreseen. Monies may be given generally, without designation, or designated to a particular area of ministry that a church may want to see targeted. It allows us to combine our funds and get more “bang for our buck” than we could ever manage as single congregations. Many of the principles I touch on in this study are drawn from CP literature which is drawn from the interactions we see working in this passage.

“Now at this time some prophets came down from Jerusalem to Antioch. And one of them named Agabus stood up and began to indicate by the Spirit that there would certainly be a great famine all over the world. And this took place in the reign of Claudius. And in the proportion that any of the disciples had means, each of them determined to send a contribution for the relief of the brethren living in Judea. And this they did, sending it in charge of Barnabas and Saul to the elders.” Acts 11:27-30

We know from Acts 13:1 that the Antioch church had its own prophets, but for some reason God sent several prophets from Jerusalem to Antioch. Why? First, because w have seen God working sovereignly in His church throughout Acts, we can assume that the Holy Spirit arranged this message to be delivered in the way that it was. The Jerusalem church was older and more mature, so it may be that the prophets from Jerusalem had something to teach the prophets from Antioch. God was perhaps demonstrating the unity of the body of Christ, the church, emphasizing the interdependence within the body of Christ. As in the human body, each individual member relies upon the rest of the body, just as the whole body needs the one member (1 Corinthians 12-14). This is as true of the world-wide Christian church as it is of the local church congregation. It applies to finances and prophesy and a myriad other situations. God gives gifts to some members of His body in one place so that they might minister to other members of the body in another place. The kids in my youth group wanted to know why it was necessary to send more than one prophet. A plurality of prophets confirmed Agabus’ words concerning the coming famine. Paul later addressed this in 1 Corinthians 14:29 “And let two or three prophets speak, and let the others pass judgment.” I think the prophets all had the same basic message so that the church could judge this revelation in light of God’s Word.

We will meet Agabus again in Acts 21:10-14, by the way. He foretells Paul’s arrest. Look at the prophesy and note that the famine wasn’t just going to hit Jerusalem. Antioch was going to suffer from it also. Neither Agabus nor any of the other prophets told the Antioch Christians what to do about this prophesy. It seems from Luke’s account that they decided to save up and give money to the Jerusalem church all on their own. Go ahead and re-read it if you don’t believe me. The Christians at Antioch apparently reckoned that the famine would hit Jerusalem hard because of the persecution they were already experiencing and they purposed to be prepared for the coming hard times and to help the Judean saints when it came. This should be a pattern for ministry of any kind. The Antioch Christians felt an obligation to minister to fellow believers first, something we later see in Romans 12:16 and again in Galatians 6:10. Christians are “our brother’s keeper.” The generosity of Antioch was a ministry from one church to another, not the act of a few isolated saints to a few isolated saints. The gifts were sent through Barnabas and Saul to the elders in Judea. It was an intentional ministry, undertaken by strangers on behalf of strangers, from believers in one country to believers in another. The unity of the body of Christ necessitates ministry which crosses racial, social, political, and economic lines. We see far too little international ministry today. The ministry of the Antioch church to the Jerusalem church was a demonstration of unity and inter-dependence that was voluntarily undertaken to meet a future need. Often we moderns respond to a need as it arises, once a church or organization is teetering on the edge of disaster. The Antioch Christians saw a crisis coming and they prepared for it. This could apply not just to money, but to ministry in general. Wise ministry looks ahead and anticipates trouble, preparing to minister to needs as they arise through planning and preparing. In the spirit of interrelatedness, the Antioch Christians and the Jerusalem Christians ministered to each other from their strengths to each other’s weaknesses. They were reciprocating one to another, but not in like-kind, because they did not have the same needs.

It is almost certain that these two very different churches would have experienced a tendency for friction and dissension, at least among individuals within each church, if not the leadership. Yet God providentially arranged for these two churches to be able to transcend their barriers to show unity through Jesus Christ. This is God-inspired agape love, similar to what will later be seen in the Macedonian church 2 Corinthians 8 and 9. 

How gracious God was to bring these two churches—so diverse and different, so easily inclined to drift apart or contend with each other—together. He first brought them together by salvation in Christ, then He brought them together through ministry, one to another. The saints in Jerusalem ministered through their gifted men, and the saints in Antioch ministered through their money. What a wonderful union God wrought there. We should pray that God manifests this same unity among us in our church and between our church and other churches, locally and worldwide.

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Teamwork

Good leadership often requires a recognition of teamwork. I know some pastors who are “one-man shows”, but rarely do they do as well as those pastors who form a ministry team with their church, whether it be the general congregation or a handful of lay leaders. Some might do well in their generation, then their church falters when they pass from the scene. Barnabas was a good pastor.

“And considerable numbers were brought to the Lord. And he left for Tarsus to look for Saul; and when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch. And it came about that for an entire year they met with the church, and taught considerable numbers; and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.” Acts 11:24-26

Quickly recognizing God’s work in the saints in Antioch, Barnabas encouraged the new believers to remain strong and growing in the faith. Even as he sized up the situation, more Gentiles were being saved and Barnabas was faced with the very real knowledge that these Gentiles lacked the Scriptural knowledge of Jewish disciples and were likely to become lax in the disciplines of the spiritual walk. Sanctification, like salvation is God’s work, but it is a work in which Christians must cooperate.

In the past, we saw Barnabas encouraging Saul as a new Christian. Some scholars think Barnabas and Saul were students of Gamaliel together before their respective conversions and this was the genesis of their friendship. Maybe so. Or maybe the Holy Spirit just gave Barnabas discernment to recognize that Saul was now God’s man.  Being a man who did not seek to build an edifice or empire for himself, Barnabas sought to find the best ministry partner possible to work among this wholly new and unique church. Barnabas, for whatever reason, had faith that God could minister to this body of believers through Saul. And, the need for such ministry was great, for the church continued to grow both through evangelism (verse 21) and discipleship (verse 24). Some churches think these two are mutually exclusive; a church is either an evangelistic church or a discipling church. I disagree, partially based upon the Antioch experience. As the Antioch church grew spiritually it also grew in its evangelism which made the need for spiritual growth even more pressing.

Barnabas did not just go seeking any ole ministry partner. He deliberately sought Saul. Why is this important? Well, I think it might have somewhat to do with Luke’s seemingly incidental statement in verse 26: “… and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.” Luke didn’t waste words; every statement in Acts has a purpose. Names are meant to identify things and distinguish them from other things. Saul’s would soon change to Paul, indicating some significant change. God often gave new names to men, indicating a particular future or destiny. Abram (exalted father) was renamed Abraham (father of a multitude), before he was even a father at all. It is significant that the disciples needed a name and the name itself is significant.

Prior to this, most of those who were saved were Jews. When they were saved, they remained Jews. They were what we now call “completed Jews,” but they were still Jews. They continued to observe the Jewish holy days and festivals, and to worship in the temple or to gather at a synagogue. Those who were Gentiles were, up until this point in time, proselytes, or God-fearers. They too became Jews.

At Antioch, Barnabas was dealing with Gentiles, pure pagans. They were not Jewish, and when they came to faith in Jesus they did not go to the synagogue nor did they associate with the Jews. They were very different and distinct from the Jews, and their faith did not make them Jewish. These people had no recognized identity. What would you call this new large body of people who had been saved, but were not a part of any established religion? They needed a name which depicted their essential uniqueness and characterized them. The name which people in Antioch coined was “Christians” because the one thing which characterized every one of these new believers was their faith in Christ.

The point of this naming of the saints is that the people of Antioch recognized that the church was distinct from Judaism. Israel and the church differed. Luke signaled that the people of Antioch recognized the reality of the church as a new entity, distinct from Judaism, with the unifying element being its belief in Jesus. This pagan city saw what many in the church still hadn’t recognized -- the church as a separate entity, a body which is united in and by Christ, belonging to Him, neither Jewish nor Gentile.

Saul was a Hellenistic Jewish Christian who had a distinguished background in Judaic law and had shown a zeal for preaching the gospel. Barnabas, faced with a wholly untaught congregation, recognized that Saul’s unique background qualified him to teach the Antioch Christians all they needed to know to become mature Christians. Barnabas, and apparently Paul, did not seek to turn these Gentiles into Jews. The gospel message was the same, but the practice of Christianity varied. These Gentiles needed to have some framework for morality, but they didn’t need to follow Jewish ceremonial law, which hadn’t exactly worked for the Jews.  Thus, Barnabas found a like-minded Jewish Christian with formidable understanding of the Jewish law to teach the formerly-pagan Antioch Christians how to be Christians, using the Jewish laws as mere guides. As Barnabas was the exact right man for the job of pastoring this new church, he chose the exact right man for training this new church.

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Wise Leadership

My mother-in-law may be moving from New England to Alaska. So, my husband and I have been investigating what it will take for us to move her and her stuff to Alaska.  It’s nearly 5,000 miles, which is no big for me because I already have to drive 800 miles round trip for an Arby’s sandwich or a high-quality office suit. It means one week of driving. For Alaskans, road trips are a necessary inconvenience that we embrace. I’m actually looking forward to it, U-Haul and all, because it means traveling I-90, a route I have mostly managed to bypass in my travels.

However, as we research the trip (which currently would be taken by myself with Bri riding shot-gun – my construction worker husband would stay here to make money while the sun shines) we’re discovering that we know of a lot of the cities we’ll be passing through, but not a lot about the cities. Somehow, I never knew that Buffalo is a stone’s throw from Niagara Falls or that Minneapolis is less than a day’s drive from my mother’s hometown in North Dakota.

In a similar fashion, as I began this study, I realized that the term Antioch was just a city to me. I knew precious little about the community itself. It seems like such an important city in the history of the church ought to have more of an identity. We all know about Rome, which is to me of far less importance to the church than Antioch. So, it seems like a good idea to focus on the city where God chose to sovereignly plant the Gentile church.

Antioch still exists as Antakya in the Hatay province of Turkey, about 18 miles upstream on the Orontes. It was founded by the Seleucid dynasty in 300 BC and was named after Nicator’s father, Antiochus, whose name had also been used for the port city of Antioch at the mouth of the Orontes.  As the capital of the Seleucid monarchy, Antioch quickly became a prominent city. When Pompey (Julius Caesar’s partner in tyranny) reorganized Western Asia in 64 BC, he made Antioch a free city and the seat of administration for the Roman province of Syria. It was the third largest city in the Graeco-Roman world (surpassed by only Rome and Alexandria). The produce of Syria and more eastern lands passed through Antioch on their way to the west, making it a commercial center as well as a political capital. Situated between the urbanized Mediterranean world and the eastern desert, it was more cosmopolitan than even other Hellenistic cities, so here is where Christianity first displayed its cosmopolitan character.

Jewish colonization of Antioch began almost as soon as the city was founded and by the beginning of the Christian era, proselytes to Judaism were especially numerous in Antioch. Nicolaus (Acts 6:5) was a proselyte from Antioch, for example. Many other nationalities resided in the city. The city’s reputation for moral laxity was enhanced by the sex cults of Artemis and Apollo at nearby Daphne, though this cult actually had started as ritual prostitution under the Syrian goddess Astarte. The Roman satirist Juvenal was referring to Antioch when he wrote “the sewage of the Syrian Orontes has for long been discharging itself into the Tiber.”

Yet God had other plans for this city of debauchery.  The dispersed disciples of Christ followed the great trade routes by land and sea northward to Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch. Here Christianity contacted and came to grips with Roman and Greek civilization. At the point of our lesson, it’s maybe AD 40-45, barely a decade after Jesus’ death. Antioch soon superseded Jerusalem as the center of Christianity and remained so for a great many years, producing a famous school of theology and theologians like Ignatius and John Chrysostom. By the time of the Council of Nicea in AD 325, the reported Christian population in Antioch alone was 200,000. Between AD 253 and 380, Antioch was the seat of no less than 10 church councils and its patriarchs took precedence over those of Rome, Constantinople, Jerusalem and Alexandria.

Who would have thought that the quintessential heathen city would become the vanguard for the gospel in the ancient world? Certainly humans wouldn’t have expected that. How God’s ways always surpass ours! An unnamed group of Christian men went to a God-forsaken place, preaching the gospel. God worked then as He works today, in ways we would never conceive or even request. Always His ways are above and beyond our own.

“And the news about them reached the ears of the church at Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas off to Antioch. Then when he had come and witnessed the grace of God, he rejoiced and began to encourage them all with resolute heart to remain true to the Lord; for he was a good man, and full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And considerable numbers were brought to the Lord. And he left for Tarsus to look for Saul; and when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch. And it came about that for an entire year they met with the church, and taught considerable numbers; and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.” Acts 11:19-26

The apostles were not infallible or perfect. They had displayed prejudice toward Gentiles and God would be correcting that error soon as Peter met Cornelius. The overall leadership of the apostles had helped those who followed them to see beyond their leaders’ prejudices and to obey God rather than men, even their own leaders. Despite their prior negative leadership, the apostles took a very positive step in their response to the news of the Antioch conversions. I suspect Peter had already arrived with his news and explanation of the Cornelius affair, so that the apostles now responded more positively to the Antioch situation. The Jerusalem church was able to accept the salvation of the Antioch Gentiles. In response, they sent Barnabas to Antioch as their representative, in much the same way they had sent Peter and John to Samaria (Acts 8:14).

The first question is not why Barnabas was sent to Antioch rather than one of the apostles (as was the case in Samaria), but why the Jerusalem church sent anyone at all. After all, they didn’t seek to evangelize Antioch; that had been done by others. Why not simply leave Antioch alone to thrive on its own? Well, the Jerusalem church had certain Biblical leadership functions. Jesus gave His disciples, the apostles, the responsibility to make disciples of every nation. His commission to them was the foundation for leadership in the church. While the apostles did not initiate the preaching of the gospel at Antioch (God did that!), they did respond to God’s leadership by following up on these new converts as per the Great Commission. It was their responsibility to assure that the pure gospel was preached and to assure that these people in Antioch had truly turned from idols to worship God. I think the church at Jerusalem was very sensitive to the truth being proclaimed. They rejoiced at hearing the “gospel” was preached and that others believed, but they wanted to make sure they believed the right gospel. Up to this point, it had mostly been the Apostles and men they knew teaching the gospel; with new preachers on the scene, they wanted to assure that they were still preaching as apostolic men, sent out from Christ with Christ’s message of salvation. Not only did they want to assure the purity of the gospel message, but they also wanted to investigate the sincerity of the professions of faith. Remember when Peter rebuked Simon? A false or distorted gospel would have gotten instant attention from Barnabas and the apostles. Barnabas was also sent to witness whether these new believers had experienced the baptism of the Holy Spirit. If the Spirit had not yet descended upon these saints in Antioch, then the church in Jerusalem was obligated to facilitate it.

There may have been some transfer of authority through Barnabas. We are not told until Acts 11:26 that the group at Antioch was considered a church. Up to that time, they seem to be merely individual Christians perhaps meeting together, but afterward they are called a church. Because this was a wholly Gentile church, such incorporation may have been considered necessary by the apostles. The church must be established according to God’s requirements, and it would seem that this was one reason why the church at Jerusalem so quickly and eagerly responded to the report of the salvation of many at Antioch.

The Jerusalem church also seems to have sent Barnabas to Antioch in order to facilitate and communicate the essential unity which existed between the two churches. Becoming a Christian means to become a member of the body of Christ. To become a church was to become one with other churches, especially the church at Jerusalem. Barnabas was sent to teach, facilitate and strengthen the unity of the body of Christ and the unity between these two churches.

I don’t think we should consider Barnabas as the “apostle of the church at Jerusalem, sent to take charge of the church at Antioch and to see to it that things are set in order.” This was, I think, not a dictatorial or hierarchical step. Barnabas was sent not as a taskmaster, but as a gift from the Jerusalem church to the church in Antioch. He went not so much to rule as to serve by exercising God-given, God-appointed leadership. I think the church in Jerusalem had a very simple reason for sending Barnabas—the situation in Antioch required spiritual leadership, and the church there was leadership poor, while the church in Jerusalem was overflowing with leaders. Just as the church in Antioch would share its material wealth in order to alleviate the economic poverty of the saints in Judea (Acts 11:27-30), the church in Jerusalem would share its wealth in spiritual leadership to alleviate the leadership poverty of the saints in Antioch. Simply put, the church in Jerusalem sent Barnabas to Antioch because there was a need for the kind of leadership which Barnabas could offer.

Why Barnabas? Why not one of the apostles, as in Samaria? Was Barnabas a kind of “second class” apostle, chosen because none of the apostles would go, or because the Jewish believers in Jerusalem did not think these heathen brethren were worthy of full-fledged apostles? Quite the contrary! I think Barnabas was the very best leader they could choose for Antioch! Unlike the apostles, Barnabas had been raised in a culture that was similar to the Antiochians. He spoke their language. He could relate to them much more than the apostles, being Judeans, could. The church at Antioch was founded by Hellenistic Jews and it’s likely the apostles (Judeans) would not have wanted to stir up the old Judean versus Hellenistic widows controversy. Hellenistic Jews were every bit as good Christians as Judean Jews. Barnabas was a highly esteemed Hellenistic Jewish Christian. He was a man of godly character and spiritual vitality (Acts 12:24). He had the charisma for the task at hand. He found great joy in the grace of God, particularly as he saw it working in the lives of others. He was a man whose personal life was characterized by faith and in whom the Spirit of God was producing spiritual fruit. He was the right man for the job!

Luke emphasized Barnabas’ character, not his methodology. We moderns have an undue fixation with methods and are quick to imitate any program we think is successful. Luke didn’t mention Barnabas’ methods at all, but focused on his character. We can always find someone to imitate technique, but we need more Christians with character, “full of the Spirit and of faith.” We should seek to find ministers for God who meet God’s requirements rather than those who are successful in their church building. Numbers mean less to God than depth of spiritual maturity. Churches that catch onto that idea are much more likely to be around and thriving in a generation than those who focus on numbers and the “flavor of the month” preacher.

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A New Work

If this passage seems a bit familiar it is because Luke took a step backward here to pick up a story line he had left behind in order to pursue the one following Philip and then Peter. During the Jerusalem persecution more than one group of Christians scattered across the Holy Land. There were many such groups. So, here, Luke paused and took a step backward in order to follow another line of church growth. We moderns would probably have made more of an emphasis on this backtrack, but that’s not how things were accomplished by historians in the 1st Century.

Stephen’s death and the persecution that followed brought Christians to Phoenicia and Cyprus, but also Antioch in the southern part of Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), with Cyprus not far off the coast. The first group consisted of Jews who shared the gospel only with other Jews, but then another group of men, mainly from Cyprus and Cyrene, began to speak with the Greeks of Antioch. Antioch was a Gentile city. Many Hellenistic Jews lived there, but the majority population was Gentile. The Scriptures don’t tell us who these men were beyond where they were from. They would Hellenistic Jews.  When word reached Jerusalem that large numbers of Gentiles in Antioch were being saved, they sent Barnabas to investigate. Barnabas was a Hellenistic Jewish Christian from Cyprus, so his choice seems practical. Send a Hellenist Jewish Christian to check out the activities of Hellenistic Jewish Christians in a Gentile city. Barnabas found nothing to object to and rejoiced at the salvation of the Gentiles, but quickly recognized the need for teaching. These new Christians likely knew nothing of Judaism beyond what they had learned from their standoffish Jewish neighbors. Seeing the need, Barnabas sought out the most qualified teacher he could think of – Saul of Tarsus – and brought him back to Antioch to help teach these new Christians. It was at Antioch that the word “Christian” was first coined. Before that, the saints were called “people of the Way.”

“So then those who were scattered because of the persecution that arose in connection with Stephen made their way to Phoenicia and Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word to no one except to Jews alone. But there were some of them, men of Cyprus and Cyrene, who came to Antioch and began speaking to the Greeks also, preaching the Lord Jesus. And the hand of the Lord was with them, and a large number who believed turned to the Lord. And the news about them reached the ears of the church at Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas off to Antioch. Then when he had come and witnessed the grace of God, he rejoiced and began to encourage them all with resolute heart to remain true to the Lord; for he was a good man, and full of the Holy Spirit and of faith. And considerable numbers were brought to the Lord. And he left for Tarsus to look for Saul; and when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch. And it came about that for an entire year they met with the church, and taught considerable numbers; and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.

“Now at this time some prophets came down from Jerusalem to Antioch. And one of them named Agabus stood up and began to indicate by the Spirit that there would certainly be a great famine all over the world. And this took place in the reign of Claudius. And in the proportion that any of the disciples had means, each of them determined to send a contribution for the relief of the brethren living in Judea. And this they did, sending it in charge of Barnabas and Saul to the elders.” Acts 11:19-30

In some ways we’re seeing a fading of Jewish Christianity. Antioch as the first Gentile church is an interesting point of change for the church because it was dynamic. It was from Antioch that God would launch the gospel to many nations. Antioch is from where Barnabas and Saul were first sent out as missionaries. The Jerusalem church certainly ministered to Antioch, but Antioch financially supported Jerusalem. Antioch would be the first church to respond to the heretical teachings of some from Judea, sending Paul and Barnabas back to Jerusalem to settle the matter. By Acts 12, we bid farewell to Peter (more or less) as Luke begins to follow the narrative of Paul and Barnabas as they go forth with the gospel, always to the Jews first and then to the Gentiles. We see a great stride being taken by the church as the Holy Spirit begins to work in a larger community. It is a stride taken primarily by Hellenistic Jews.

There are those who would like to conclude that the initial evangelism of the Gentiles was a happy accident caused by Christians so overflowing with joy and love for God they could not be selective with whom they spoke. This may be the case in some instances, but I think Luke deliberately inserted verse 19 to show that the Judean Jews were not going to the Gentiles initially, and then the Hellenistic Jews began to preach deliberately to the Gentiles. One of the commentators I read noted that there are two Greek words used here – one laleo which means speaking and the other evangelize which means “preaching”.  The Judean Jewish Christians perhaps were willing to talk with their fellow Jews about their belief in Jesus, but they stayed away from Gentiles, while the Hellenistic Jews were deliberately spreading the gospel to Gentiles. It might be noted that those who were from Jerusalem might have been inclined to pattern their behavior after the practices of the apostles. The apostles, despite all they had been taught by the Holy Spirit, seem to have remained reluctant to reach out to Gentiles. Why would these Jews be willing to incur the anger of unbelieving Jews and some Jewish Christians as well? What made them live the exception rather than the rule?

The sovereignty of God was most definitely at work here. God had used the unbelieving opposition of Saul to scatter the church and force the proclamation of the gospel to unreached areas. He used men like the apostles in spite of their limitations and disobedience. God does not need us to achieve His purposes. He is a sovereign God who can even use the rebellion of men to praise Him. The success of their evangelism efforts shows that God was guiding them and establishing their ministry. What God sovereignly purposes, He also accomplishes by means of His Holy Spirit. He did this through the use of His followers’ backgrounds, languages and cultures. Hellenistic Jews were much more comfortable with interacting with Gentiles than Judean Jews were. Perhaps the stress on ceremonial cleanness was not as great. Certainly they might have spoken the native languages. God used the best resources at that time.

An easily missed point is that these Christians lived their lives by what the Word of God taught rather than what men taught. This is a critical truth! The events in Acts indicate that the preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles occurred at a time when the Christians and even the apostles were not seemingly aware of the necessity to do so. God gave Peter a revelation and prepared the church in Jerusalem, but that was not the cause of this evangelistic outreach to Antioch. Recognizing that Luke has stepped back in time, it’s good to realize that Antioch was being evangelized at the same time as Samaria, when the Jerusalem Christians were happily nested in their bigotry. These Hellenistic Jews did not allow the limitations of their leaders to limit their evangelism. While the apostles were still working out whether or not to talk with Gentiles, the Hellenistic Jewish Christians were already talking to Gentiles. In a very real way, Peter’s encounter with Cornelius was God saying “this work over here is MY work, accept it.”

Christians should never be limited in our spirituality or our doctrine by our teachers and leaders. God does not excuse us for failing to do right or for doing wrong simply because that is the way we were taught or led.

A fundamental difference between Christianity and cults rests in our conception and practice of leadership. Cults almost invariably are founded by some “charismatic” leader who wants to do all your thinking for you.  You need not trouble yourself to discern the “will of God”; the cult leader will tell you what God wants you to do. The apostles founded the church, but the church grew beyond them and did just fine. How is that possible?

First and foremost, Christ is the Leader of His church. Peter’s words to Cornelius sum it up “He is Lord of all” (Acts 10:36). Paul frequently made reference to the headship of Christ. (See Colossians 1:15-20). For this reason, leaders in Christian churches are meant to be servants, not “lords”. Christ is the Head of the church, and therefore its Leader. His leaders are servants. Paul spoke of himself as a servant (1 Thessalonians 2:1-12; 2 Corinthians 11:19-21), and Peter taught elders to lead by example rather than dictum (1 Peter 5:1-4). The apostles had confidence that God was the Author and Finisher of our faith. His work is accomplished through the Word of God and the Spirit of God (Philippians 1:6; Acts 20:32). The apostles clearly believed that leadership is God’s working through the Word and the Spirit in men’s lives. Paul worked to persuade others to accept doctrine, but indicated that it was God Who would do the final work (Philippians 3:15).

Cultists and false teachers do not want men to be left alone with the Bible because people might find out what’s really in it. They want to tell men what the Bible teaches, thus promoting their own distortions of the Word of God above the Word itself. John warned of this in 1 John 2:24-27, exhorting his readers to abide in the Word of God and the gospel of Jesus Christ. The Word of God, illumined by the Holy Spirit Who indwells every Christian, is all that we need. We don’t need to listen to would-be teachers, especially if what they teach doesn’t line up to the Bible.

It seems that because of their confidence in God’s working in Christian lives through the Word and the Holy Spirit, the leadership of the apostles tapered off over time. Initially, they were the center of the church, the ones who taught, preached, and led. As time passed, leadership began to pass to the hands of others who have grown and matured in their faith. Peter’s leadership seemed to fade, and James became more dominant (or at least prominent). Barnabas moved from the “driver’s seat” to the “passenger’s seat” in Acts. The apostles, who initially seemed to make all the decisions regarding the church in Jerusalem (Acts 6:1-6; 8:14), gradually gave way to the elders of the church and others, who took a more aggressive leadership role as time went on (Acts 11:1-2, 18, 27-30; 15:1-2).

I think this was a healthy choice. As the apostles grew older and faced the approach of death, they continued to express confidence in God’s working in and through those they would leave behind, particularly if they remained grounded in Scripture (2 Timothy 4; 2 Peter 3:14-18). The apostles had confidence in those who trusted in God, knowing the Word of God would adequately equip them for any work God called them to do (2 Timothy 3:14-17; Hebrews 4:12-13; Romans 15:14). By teaching their disciples to follow the Word of God rather than the words of men, they prepared their followers to take up the reins of leadership. By allowing the new leadership to step up beside them before their passing, they provided a transition that was neither traumatic nor fraught with the risk of heresy asserting itself from new leaders who weren’t exactly sure what their predecessors had taught. It was a dual training system that worked very well in the years prior to the full publication of the New Testament.

The apostles were not sinless or infallible. Jesus had taught them to lead in a self-correcting way, so that their personal failures would not destine those under their tutelage to failure. God had taught them to lead as servants, in humility rather than as authoritarian dictators. They pointed men to God and to His Word rather than force any sort of dependence upon them as leaders. Thus, even when the apostles were wrong, those who were under their authority need not fall prey to the same evil. To me it is incredibly comforting to know that our confidence is not in fallible men, but in a perfect and powerful God, a God Who has given us His Word, which is adequate, sufficient, infallible and inerrant! He has also given us His Spirit to interpret and apply the Word to our hearts and lives. While teachers may expand our understanding and challenge our shallow or erroneous understanding of Scripture, we are not doomed without them, and we are not to blindly follow them. We are to “search the Scriptures,” like the Bereans (Acts 17:11), to follow God rather than men, when men depart from the Word of God, like these Hellenistic Jews, who preached to the Gentiles, even when Peter and the apostles refused to do so.

This handful of noble saints who preached the Lord Jesus to the Gentiles knew the difference between the “teachings of men” and the “teachings of God.” No doubt they had a great love and respect for their leaders, the apostles and the elders. But their grasp of God’s Word, His goals and purposes, and His commands, was not limited to that of their leaders or teachers. They were limited only by their obedience to God.

Tags: Antioch   Acts  
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Good News!

A friend of mine is expecting a baby!
 
This would not normally be the sort of news that I would put out for the whole world to know, but this is the culmination of a 10-year saga of prayer and patience.
 
When I first met K she was a lesbian who had been in a (she thought) monogamous relationship for 11 years -- since her teens. There was a history of child sexual abuse and she hadn't spoken to her parents in years. We became friends through work. She was the first lesbian I can honestly say I am friends with. I've been acquainted with a few before, but K and I hit it off. She was accepting of my beliefs as a Christian and I cared for her as a friend without condoning her lifestyle choices. I prayed for her, that God would make Himself real in her life, but I never shared the gospel with her because it wouldn't have been appropriate at work and the right opportunity never presented itself when we were out in the world. A former pastor of mine calls what I was doing "the ministry of presence."  I was there, she knew who I was, she knew I cared about her, she knew she could talk to me, but the time wasn't ripe yet.
 
There was one hiccup in the road a couple of years in. K and her partner wanted to get "married" before they had a child they were planning by sperm donor. Alaskan law expressly makes such unions unlawful, but it is known that some local (liberal) pastors will perform a ceremony. I do not know why they didn't just ask their friends who these pastors were, but they instead began calling pastors and asking. Eventually, they contacted my church. K knew it was my church; she'd heard me say the name before and I know about what happened because she told me about it later. My pastor at the time, PW, is a very sincere man who truly loves everybody he comes in contact with, but will ALWAYS obey God over man. He did not, as some of the pastors did, cut them off and say "No way! Go away!" He instead agreed to talk with them. He explained that he only marries born-again Christians because he believes that God can only bless marriages between people who are committed to Him first. In his conversation with them, he had come to understand that they were not Christians in the Biblical sense of the word. He briefly shared the gospel with them and they agreed they did not believe that and did not think they wanted to at that time. He never really addressed the fact that these were two women asking him to marry them. He actually gave them a name of another pastor he knew who would marry non-Christians. He knew that Dale, the other pastor, had ministered in San Francisco and would be better equipped to handle the lesbian issue in a Christ-like way. K told me later that Dale told them that while he would marry non-Christians, he did not condone their lifestyle choice and therefore could not marry them. They, predictably, got mad at Dale. Which is where I came in.
 
K came to me and asked if my pastor had been lying, avoiding "marrying" them because they were lesbians. I explained that PW was probably perfectly sincere -- I knew for a fact that he doesn't marry non-Christians. Then she wanted to know about Dale, whom I knew, since he was an SBC pastor. I had to be honest and I was. My Bible tells me that homosexuality is a sin. I can love K as a friend, but I could not condone her lifestyle choice because I must obey the Bible. She didn't get angry with me. I guess God spoke through me that day because she understood that I was rejecting her, just being honest. I don't know what exactly happened, but K and her partner never did find a pastor to marry them locally.
 
So, K and her partner had their baby and I rejoiced with K at her joy of being a new mother. There were other life events that we shared. Then her partner abruptly left her and immediately entered into another relationship with another woman. Thirteen years and bye-bye. K was devastated. At one point, crying in my office, she accused me of being happy that her partnership had ended. I said "I'm not happy you're in pain."  I continued praying for her. In time, she healed and found a way to move on. Then something interesting happened.
 
K met a man whom she found interesting. He was her landlord, living in the house next door (Alaskan houses are not really all that close, so don't assume this was an across-the-alley sort of relationship). He was a single parent with a child in the same age range as K's daughter. The two children were in the same class at school. She found this man mannerly and intelligent. She had never had voluntary sex with a man, but she wanted to have sex with this one. Only he wouldn't have it. A born-again Christian, he didn't sleep around. For over a year they did this sort of courtship thing in which she really tried to get his attention and he really tried to ignore her. Then his mom came to town and she wormed her way into K's confidence and shared the gospel with her in a real and powerful way. K became a Christian. Several months later, her landlord asked her out on a date and several months after that he asked her to marry him. They've been married about three years now.
 
K's job had taken her away from the agency I work for except as a contractor, so we hadn't talked much since maybe a year before her conversion. Everytime she'd come into town for a contract, she'd hint she had something to tell me, but for whatever reason, we'd never exchange email addresses or telephone numbers. We'd briefly touched on it in the rock pool at the local hot springs when I noticed her wedding ring, but there'd been no time to fill in the details and writing down an Anchorage telephone number in those circumstances was impossible. But, yesterday, she was in town and a client canceled and we had lunch together in the lunch room, speaking in detail for the first time in four years.
 
She and her husband are expecting a baby girl. She is happier, she says, than she has ever been in her life. Her life "makes sense" now. She has made amends with her parents. She recognizes that what happened to her as a child was not really their fault. Maybe they should have known, but they didn't. She shared with me what Dale had said as he had explained why he couldn't marry her partner and herself. "A decision made in sin can never ben God-blessed and you're asking me to perform a ceremony asking for God's blessing." At the time, she had felt condemned. Now she knows Dale was speaking in love. Over the years, she explained, she had tried to "get" me, why I was her friend, but I refused to accept her lesbianism. It wasn't like I said much against it, but she knew I disapproved and she couldn't understand how I could hold that belief that she was a sinner, but still my friend. However, I guess I once made the comment that I was a sinner also and she had puzzled that over the years. When she became a Christian, it made perfect sense to her. She had wanted to tell me about it, but she said "I now know why you never shared the gospel with me openly.  It's a hard thing to talk about in this work environment." (Lefty-loony social work central). However, she told me, I had shared the gospel with her in a million less-dramatic ways. I had always been her friend and I had always been honest with her. And, I had always prayed for her.
 
"How'd you know that?" I asked.  "Someone had to be," she insisted and, looking back, she thinks I might have been the only Christian she really knew at the time, the only one who would care enough to pray for her. I doubt that, but I'll pass the roses to God and let it be.
 
Christian ministry is not always about standing on a street corner shouting into a megaphone that Jesus is Lord and Repent or You're Going to Hell. More often it is about building relationships with people, being their friends, and shining a light into their darkness. I never really did anything for K with regards to the gospel. I was just a Christian in her life and I prayed for her. Others did the heavy lifting. What I did was apparently exactly what God wanted me to do. I planted, Apollos watered, someone else harvests. God works through people as He sees fit and sometimes that is only through being the best possible Christian I know how to be in the secular world in which I live.
 
Light your lamp and put it on a lampstand because people need to see!
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Internal Conflict

One of my former pastors was a gear-head who bought a cool sports car used, fixed it up and drove it on pastoral visits.  On occasion, it would be reported to members of the church that the car had been seen outside this or that bar and weren’t we concerned with the company our pastor was keeping. Of course, we all knew that PW was a very sincere man who was incapable to telling a falsehood, so when asked point-blank, “Were you drinking alcohol in the Mecca?” we could be assured that his answer of “No” was truthful. He had reasons for being there, primarily that Native churches often have members who are recovering alcoholics who, when they fall off the wagon, return to drinking and their old haunts. Sometimes their spouses would call, once in a while the bartender or a concerned patron would call, sometimes they themselves would call, but usually too deeply entangled to remove themselves from the situation.  PW would go get them, get them home, take them to rehab, take their car keys, etc. Some of those people are now active and very sober members of our congregation. Understanding that sometimes ministry to challenging populations means taking some social risks, our church never “called him on the carpet” the way Peter would be called to account in Acts 11. We understood that appearances aren’t always reality.

Peter lived in a society where appearances were everything. His fellow Jews took the laws surrounding ceremonial cleanness very seriously.  To violate them in even a small way meant you could not worship God (in the Temple, which was the only place “good” Jews believed you could really worship God). Even associating with someone who was ceremonially unclean could result in ceremonial uncleanness and banishment from the Temple. His fellow apostles were still very Jewish in their thinking and very concerned with worshipping God. Thus, evangelizing Gentiles (who were always considered ceremonially unclean) put Peter in hot water with his brethren.

Peter had referred to his actions as illegal, which was true if one gave weight to Jewish interpretation and application of the Old Testament laws (Acts 10:28). Peter was neck-deep in risky business accompanying Gentiles to a Gentile house then remaining as their guest for several days.  Peter himself had initially refused to partake of anything “unclean”, showing the rift between Gentiles and Jews. The two could not touch one another. Peter’s change of mind and heart becomes a turning point for the church in Jerusalem in its attitudes and actions toward Gentile converts.

Th