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Acts of the Apostles

And Gallio Cared Not (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

Christ Church on August 29, 2025

INTRODUCTION

The next city that Paul came to was Corinth, which came to be the home of one of the more important churches in the New Testament. Corinth is about 48 miles southwest of Athens, and is situated on the Isthmus of Corinth, a narrow strip of land that connected Attica (northern Achaia) from the Peloponnese (southern Achaia). Corinth was an important trading center, with access to the sea in both eastern and western directions.

THE TEXT

“After these things Paul departed from Athens, and came to Corinth; And found a certain Jew named Aquila, born in Pontus, lately come from Italy, with his wife Priscilla; (because that Claudius had commanded all Jews to depart from Rome:) and came unto them. And because he was of the same craft, he abode with them, and wrought: for by their occupation they were tentmakers. And he reasoned in the synagogue every sabbath, and persuaded the Jews and the Greeks. And when Silas and Timotheus were come from Macedonia, Paul was pressed in the spirit, and testified to the Jews that Jesus was Christ. And when they opposed themselves, and blasphemed, he shook his raiment, and said unto them, Your blood be upon your own heads; I am clean: from henceforth I will go unto the Gentiles. And he departed thence, and entered into a certain man’s house, named Justus, one that worshipped God, whose house joined hard to the synagogue. And Crispus, the chief ruler of the synagogue, believed on the Lord with all his house; and many of the Corinthians hearing believed, and were baptized. Then spake the Lord to Paul in the night by a vision, Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee: for I have much people in this city. And he continued there a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them . . . ” (Acts 18:1–17).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

Paul left Athens and arrived in Corinth (v. 1). He there met Aquila and his wife Priscilla (v. 2). Aquila was a Jew from Pontus, which runs along the southern shore of the Black Sea. This couple was in Corinth because Claudius had recently banished all Jews from Rome (v. 2). They were tentmakers, as Paul was, and so he took up residence with them (v. 3). He took every sabbath as an opportunity to reason with both Jews and Greeks at the synagogue (v. 4). Silas and Timothy finally arrived, and Paul became more importunate, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was the Christ (v. 5). They reacted in opposition to the point of blasphemy, and so Paul shook the dust from his clothing saying that they had condemned themselves. He then turned to the Gentiles (v. 6). He moved house, moving in with Justus, a worshiper of God, and who lived right next door to the synagogue (v. 7). But after Paul wrote off the Jews, the chief ruler of the synagogue, believed. And he and his house were baptized, and a large number of Corinthians believed (v. 8). The Lord encouraged Paul in a night vision, encouraging him to speak out because He had many people in this city. Paul would not be hurt (vv. 9-10). And so Paul taught there for a year and a half (v. 11). Gallio was the proconsul of Achaia, and this enables us to date the planting of the Corinthian church at 51/52 A.D. During Gallio’s tenure, the Jews made a concerted attack on Paul, dragging him before the judgment seat—recently discovered in the old city (v. 12). Their accusation was that Paul was persuading men to worship God in ways contrary to (Roman) law (v. 13). Paul was about to defend himself when Gallio, who saw through the schemers, and threw the case out of court (vv. 14-15). The bailiff, or someone like him, escorted all of them forcibly to the curb (v. 16). There are clearly some elements to this drama that we don’t have because then it says that certain Greeks beat up Sosthenes, the chief ruler of the synagogue, but Gallio didn’t care (v. 17).

GALLIO’S INCONSISTENCY

We begin with some sympathy for Gallio. He was the brother of Seneca the philosopher, and we understand why a Roman of his stature would not want to be dragged into arcane Jewish theological disputes. So far so good. But not only had Paul led Crispus, the chief ruler of the synagogue to the Lord a year and a half before, but now had apparently done it again. This Sosthenes was apparently the next chief ruler of the synagogue, and he was also converted (see 1 Cor. 1:1).

Gallio had begged off settling a theological dispute, but to have the Greeks assaulting an innocent man in front of the judgment seat was his business, and it was the kind of business that he had said he would attend to. As we consider this, our sympathy for Gallio begins to fade. The magistrate is a deacon of God, assigned the task of punishing the wrongdoer and rewarding the righteous (Rom. 13:4).

TUMULTUOUS GRACE

There is no way to introduce efficacious grace into a sinful world without causing turmoil. And the more abundant the grace, the more violent the reactions.

Remember that Paul was encouraged here in that night vision. The Lord told him that He had many people in this city (vv. 9-10). The genuine believers there were most dear to Paul (1 Cor. 4:14-15; 2 Cor. 6:11-13). There had been no riot in Athens, and why? Because that was a place where the elect just trickled in. Here, as in other places, the elect of God began to pour in. And what happened then?

Well, the Jews attacked them. And then the Greeks attacked. Then Gallio refused to help. And then, as we see from the two letters to the Corinthians that we have, not to mention a letter to them that we have from Clement, Paul’s good friend (Phil. 4:3), the church there was afflicted by internal dissensions and disruptions. Satan knows how to attack from without and from within.

And every true reformation according to grace is going to be attacked both ways. The one reaction we should not display is that of being surprised.

Christ, the friend of sinners, has never been the friend of sin.

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Sparrows in the McDonald’s Parking Lot (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

Christ Church on August 22, 2025

INTRODUCTION

So Paul was in Athens, waiting for Silas and Timothy to join him as soon as possible. While he was waiting, he found himself greatly vexed and provoked over the rampant idolatry there. Athens was disease-ridden, and their sickness was images. This passage tells us what happened next.

THE TEXT

“Now while Paul waited for them at Athens, his spirit was stirred in him, when he saw the city wholly given to idolatry. Therefore disputed he in the synagogue with the Jews, and with the devout persons, and in the market daily with them that met with him. Then certain philosophers of the Epicureans, and of the Stoicks, encountered him. And some said, What will this babbler say? other some, He seemeth to be a setter forth of strange gods: because he preached unto them Jesus, and the resurrection . . . So Paul departed from among them. Howbeit certain men clave unto him, and believed: among the which was Dionysius the Areopagite, and a woman named Damaris, and others with them.” (Acts 17:16–34).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

While Paul was waiting in Athens, he got worked up over all the idols (v. 16). And so he disputed with Jews, and with God-fearers, and with people in the marketplace (v. 17). He encountered representatives of the two main philosophical schools—Epicurean (pleasure the highest good) and Stoic (duty is). Some called him a “seedpicker” (spermologos), like a sparrow eating fries in the McDonald’s parking lot. Others thought he was preaching two gods, Jesus and Anastasis—the word for resurrection (v. 18). So they brought him to Mars Hill, and invited him to set forth his doctrine because they were curious (vv. 19-20). Luke then gets in a delightful jab about their pursuit of truth being little more than an intellectual hobby to kill time with (v. 21). So Paul stood up and began with the observation that the Athenians were really religious (v. 22). He had noticed walking around that there was even an altar to an unknown god (v. 23). This is the God that Paul was preaching (v. 23). This is the Creator God, who is not contained by any human temples (v. 24). Nor is He dependent upon man’s service, as though He were needy, because He is the source of all life and breath (v. 25). This Creator fashioned all men, who are descended from one blood, and assigned them their places of habitation (v. 26). He did this so that in our groping we might find Him, even though He was not really far off (v. 27). The “live and move” line is likely from the Cretica of Epimenides, a hymn to Zeus. The “offspring” line is from the Stoic poet Aratus, in another hymn to Zeus called Phaenomena. As God’s offspring, we must reject idols and images (v. 29). God winked at this foolishness before, but now He commands repentance (v. 30). He has fixed a day of judgment and reckoning, and has proven who that judge is going to be through His resurrection from the dead (v. 31). When Paul made the resurrection clear, some mocked, while others were still interested (v. 32), and so Paul left (v. 33). A handful believed and came along—Dionysus the Areopagite, a woman named Damaris, and some others (v. 34).

PAGAN POETS AND PROPHETS

Around 600 B.C. (the age of Jeremiah and Ezekiel), Athens was afflicted with a great plague, and they could do nothing to resolve it. The Pythonness at Delphi told them to send for Epimenides of Crete and to do whatever he said. Remember that the girl in the previous chapter had the spirit of a python. Epimenides came and as a result of his instructions, the Athenians built an altar to “the unknown God,” and sacrificed to Him. The plague then stopped. Centuries later Paul came through and saw the altar, and preached the Creator of all things to them.

In Titus 1:12, Paul quotes Epimenides, and says that he was a prophet (not a false prophet). We don’t have any complete works of Epimenides, but one reasonable reconstruction runs like this:

“They fashioned a tomb for thee, O holy and high one, The Cretans, always liars, evil beasts, idle bellies! But thou art not dead: thou livest and abidest forever, For in thee we live and move and have our being.”

The fact that this was in a hymn to Zeus should not disturb us. There were very different narratives about Zeus that were current. There was the historic Zeus, the one that the impudent Cretans had built a tomb for. There was the Zeus of folklore, the skirt-chaser and over-sized fraternity boy. But then there was the Zeus of the philosophers, the Theos who created everything. Paul, a man who hated idols, was willing to work with this.

GENTILES WELCOME

In the Old Testament, Gentiles were not the equivalent of unbelievers. Many were unregenerate unbelievers, but then again, so were many Jews. The Jews were a covenanted nation of priests.

We have Naaman the Syrian (Luke 4:27), and after his conversion (2 Kings 5:17) he was even given permission to push his master’s wheelchair into the house of Rimmon (2 Kings 5:18). We have the king of Nineveh and all his people (Jonah 3:6ff). We have Jethro, the priest of Midian (Ex. 3:1). We have Melchizedek, a Canaanite priest and type of Christ to whom Abraham paid tithes (Gen. 14:18; Heb. 7:1-2). David stored the Ark of the Covenant at the house of a Gentile, Obed-edom (2 Sam. 6:10)—and he was a Gittite, which meant he probably graduated from the same high school that Goliath did. Later on, this Obed-edom was made a porter at the Tabernacle of David (1 Chron. 15:18). And when Solomon built the Temple, in his prayer of dedication he assumed that various Gentiles would pray toward this Temple, and would be received (1 Kings 8:41-43). And then when Jesus made a whip and cleared out the money-changers and the sellers of sacrificial animals, He was clearing out the Court of the Gentiles in order to make room for them to worship. “And he taught, saying unto them, Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? but ye have made it a den of thieves” (Mark 11:17).

THE DISTANCE IS ETHICAL

Paul says twice that there was a Gentile worship of the true God that was characterized by ignorance. Note: “whom therefore ye ignorantly worship” (v. 23) and “the times of this ignorance God winked at” (v. 30). God was kind to the nations, giving them their assigned habitations so that they might grope after Him, and even find Him (v. 27). But most of them veered into the rank idolatry that their best philosophers and poets rejected (v. 29).

The God that we cannot see or find is not ontologically distant from us. We live and move and have our being in Him, a fact obvious to astute pagans. We live in a God-environment. The problem is moral and ethical. The problem is not that God is way up in Heaven, or far across the sea. The problem is that we are “seeking after Him,” but with no intention of finding Him. This is how Acts 17 is reconciled with Romans 1-3. If we are to be found, Christ must fetch us.

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Eagerly Skeptical (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

Christ Church on August 7, 2025

INTRODUCTION

Thessalonica was a major city in Macedonia. It had a huge harbor and was situated on a major trade route. It had been established by a Macedonian king named Cassander in 315 B.C., who named it after his wife Thessalonike. Paul was supported financially in his mission here by the saints in Philippi, the city he had just come from (Phil. 4:16).

THE TEXT

“Now when they had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where was a synagogue of the Jews: And Paul, as his manner was, went in unto them, and three sabbath days reasoned with them out of the scriptures, opening and alleging, that Christ must needs have suffered, and risen again from the dead; and that this Jesus, whom I preach unto you, is Christ. And some of them believed, and consorted with Paul and Silas; and of the devout Greeks a great multitude, and of the chief women not a few . . .” (Acts 17:1–15).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

They went through two Macedonian cities (Amphipolis and Apollonia) on their way to Thessalonica, which had a synagogue (v. 1). Paul followed his custom and went there first, reasoning with them there for three sabbath days (v. 2). His argument was that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead, and that this Jesus that he preached was that Christ (v. 3). Some Jews believed and attached themselves to Paul and Silas, but a great number of God-fearing Gentiles believed, and more than a few of their chief women (v. 4). The Jews who refused the proofs, driven by envy, rounded up some bad actors to get a tumult going (v. 5). They gathered up a mob, caused an uproar, and attacked Jason’s house (where Paul and Silas were presumably staying, in order to seize them (v. 5). Because Paul and Silas weren’t there, they grabbed Jason and some brothers instead and brought them to the rulers of the city. “These men who have disrupted the world have come here now” (v. 6). Their complaint was that Jason had showed them hospitality, men who were subversive to the decrees of Caesar, saying that Jesus is a different king (v. 7). This unsettled both the rulers and the people of the city (v. 8). Jason and the others with him posted bail, and were released (v. 9). And so that night the brothers packed off Paul and Silas to Berea, about 45 miles to the west (v. 10). Naturally, they went to the synagogue there. The Jews there were more noble than those in Thessalonica, and two reasons are given for saying this. They were eager for the message to be true, and they double-checked it against Scripture anyway (v. 11). A lot of them believed, and honorable Greek women, as well as Greek men (v. 12). But the unbelieving Jews in Thessalonica heard about this and decided to play the role of a dog in the manger (v. 13) and came to Berea to stir up a mob there. So the brothers sent Paul away right away, with Silas and Timothy remaining for some reason (v. 14). So Paul sailed down to Athens, and he sent word back to Silas and Timothy to join him as soon as possible (v. 15).

THE GENTILE BREAKPOINT

As we are seeing throughout the book of Acts, the lives of Gentiles and Jews were closely intertwined. It was very common for Gentile admirers of the God of Israel to be closely associated with synagogues, and you can see in both Thessalonica and Berea that what was preached to the Jews got to the Gentiles almost immediately. But from the Roman point of view, there was something unsettling about the Christian appeal to these Gentiles.

The Council of Jerusalem decided that Gentiles did not have to become Jews to become Christians. Hopefully that point has been hammered home by now. But by insisting that the Gentile converts keep themselves from the pollutions of idols (Acts 15:20), the Council decided that Gentile converts had to reject their native gods, their native customs, and They did not have to become Jews, but in this respect, they had to act like Jews.

It was possible for someone to admire the God of Israel from the back row of the synagogue without abandoning their ancient customs. In he Christian gospel opened wide one door in front of them, and slammed shut the door behind them. We are consequently seeing how the pagan populations are growing very nervous about this growing movement. Notice how the trouble-making Jews pitched this to the Gentile rulers of the city—these men are teaching something that is subversive to the decrees of Caesar. They are teaching people about the authority of a different king, one Jesus. This is the kind of charge that was guaranteed to get the attention of civic rulers—nobody wants to be the position of protecting seditious traitors, right?

EAGERLY SKEPTICAL

This is an early version of “trust, but verify.” Notice how Luke describes what it looks like to be well-born, to be noble. Someone comes with a message that promises wonderful things. A noble receives such a teaching warmly, hoping that it is in fact true. But the next step is crucial. They sit down and open up their Bibles. “To the law and to the testimony: If they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them” (Isaiah 8:20).

ANOTHER KING INDEED

We do indeed preach and declare the kingdom of God (Acts 1:3,6;8:12; 14:22; 19:8; 20:25; 28:23,31). And there can be no kingdom of God without a king, and the name of this king is Jesus. He is the one who was given universal authority by the Ancient of Days, and a kingdom which cannot be destroyed (Dan. 7:14). He is the one who was given the nations for His inheritance (Ps. 2:8), and He intends to have them all (Matt. 28:18-20).

But He is a High King, not a replacement king. This means that all current political authorities must kiss the Son (Ps. 2:12), lest He be angry. The kings of earth are instructed to wise up (Ps. 2:10), meaning that they must serve and worship Him. They do not throw away their crowns, but rather they must lay them down at the feet of the Lord Jesus, after which they receive them back again. The path of wisdom for them is to echo the words of John the Baptist, wanting Him to increase and for themselves to decrease. But this kind of decrease is glorious, and brings the honor and glory of the kingdoms of men into the New Jerusalem (Rev. 21:26).

Jesus is king. Christ is king indeed.

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Prison Acoustics are Best (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

Christ Church on July 30, 2025

INTRODUCTION

This is the place where Luke joins up with Paul’s entourage (v. 10). He may have been the man in the vision, but regardless, we know that he joined them here. When they cross over to Macedonia, this is the first recorded evangelistic foray into Europe. This is where the Philippian church is established, and reading Philippians alongside this narrative will be especially rewarding.

THE TEXT

“And a vision appeared to Paul in the night; There stood a man of Macedonia, and prayed him, saying, Come over into Macedonia, and help us. And after he had seen the vision, immediately we endeavoured to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto them . . .” (Acts 16:9–40).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

A man from Macedonia appeared to Paul in a night vision (v. 9), asking him to come to Macedonia. The conclusion was to go there in the will of God (v. 10). They left Troas, and went through Sam thrace, Neapolis (v. 11), and then to Philippi, a Roman colony and chief city (v. 12). After a few days, they attended Jewish services by the river (v. 13). Speaking to the women there, they led a woman named Lydia to Christ (v. 14). They baptized her, and she then insisted that they stay with her (v. 15). A possessed fortune-telling girl began to harass them by declaring their mission (vv. 16-17). After some days, an annoyed Paul cast the spirit out (v. 18), which wrecked her ability to make money (v. 19). Her masters grabbed Paul and Silas an accused them to the city rulers (vv. 19-20). They accused them of being Jews, not Christians, and contrasted this with the Roman customs (v. 21). So the mob came against them, and the magistrates ordered them beaten (v. 22). After many stripes, they were committed to prison (v. 23). The jailer put them in the inner prison, with their feet in stocks (v. 24). Naturally, at midnight Paul and Silas started singing hymns to God, with other prisoners listening (v. 25). That’s when the earthquake happened, breaking the doors and chains (v. 26). The jailer saw this and was going to kill himself (v. 27). Paul shouted reassurance (v. 28). The jailer called for a light, and fell down before Paul and Silas and brought them out, asking how he could be saved (vv. 29-30). The answer was for him and house—believe in Christ (vv. 31-32). The jailer cleaned them up, and they baptized him and his household (v. 33). He took them in and fed them, rejoicing (v. 34). The next day, the magistrates assumed the lesson had been learned and sent messengers saying it was time to let those men go (v. 35). The jailer passed the message on (v. 36). Paul said nothing doing. Roman citizens need to be escorted out (v. 37). When they got the message, the magistrates complied, and were much more courteous this time (vv. 38-39). They left the prison, went to Lydia’s house, comforted the saints, and then departed (v. 40).

REALLY ROMAN

Macedonia was a Greek region, but Philippi was a very Roman city. Alexander’s father, Philip, named it after himself, and strengthened it. But in 42 B.C. it was the site of the battle where Octavian (Augustus) and Mark Antony defeated Brutus and Cassius. About twelve years later it was reorganized as a Roman colony (v. 12), and a lot of veteran soldiers were retired there. These people prided themselves on being Roman (v. 21), accusing these traveling Jews of violating Roman customs when they themselves were in the process of violating basic Roman norms. But Paul and Silas were both Romans (v. 37), and Paul was the kind of Roman who had a pocket copy of the Constitution on him.

A MERCHANT OF PURPLE

Lydia is described as a merchant of purple goods, and we are told she was from Thyatira. This meant she was a dealer in luxury goods, and almost certainly wealthy. In the ancient world, purple was derived from the murex shellfish, and the extraction process was very costly. Purple was consequently indicative of status, riches, and royalty. A person in her social class would likely have had a household that had a couple hundred people in it.

THE PYTHONES

The fortune-telling girl was a devotee of the god Apollo. The original says that she had the “spirit of a python” (v. 16). The myth was that Apollo had slain a giant python at Delphi, which is why his priestess there was called The Pythoness. He was the god of reason and order, and he slew the dragon of chaos. In this biblical account, there is no hint that the girl was faking it. It was a real demon.

PRISON ACOUSTICS ARE BEST

In Philippians, Paul tells these saints that he knew the secret of contentment, well-fed or hungry (Phil. 4:11). He was contented when he was put up at the rich lady’s house, and he was contented

when flogged and housed in the prison stocks. The Philippians knew this about him. He had told the Philippians to rejoice all the time, and he had even said it twice (Phil. 4:4)—and they all knew about his midnight impromptu psalm sing. He had told them to do everything without grumbles (Phil. 2:14), and they knew that he lived in the same way that he taught. He was no grumbler.

WASHED THEM ALL AWAY

There is a wonderful picture of gospel grace in v. 33. The jailer took them and washed their wounds. When that was done, they turned around and washed away his sins in baptism. Not only so, but also everyone in his household. The Romans had unlawfully flogged these two citizens. In repentance, the jailer washed their stripes. In forgiveness, they washed his spiritual wounds in return.

So remember that Paul, the persecuted and forgiving one here, at one time had himself been the persecuting one. He had changed sides earlier in his life, just as the Philippian jailer was changing sides now. He knew what that was like.

What we are talking about is the grace of God in the gospel. This is a message of grace, forgiveness, cleansing, and all of it undeserved. You can see how this plays out in a very tangible way here. This is what it looks like. Repentance knows how to wash the wounds that you inflicted. Forgiveness knows how to wash the wounds of the one who inflicted pain on you.

In the message of the cross, we transition from getting what we deserve, good and hard, to receiving as a free gift a precious salvation, the worth of which is beyond all mortal reckoning. We labor hard for our own damnation until we are out of breath, and then God invites us to sit at His table and eat.

“And in this mountain shall the LORD of hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined” (Isaiah 25:6).

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Enter Timothy (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

Christ Church on July 23, 2025

INTRODUCTION

In this portion of the book of Acts, we are first introduced to Timothy, Paul’s companion and co-worker over the course of years. As we get to know Timothy, we are going to get to know Paul better, and we are going to see some areas where we can be strengthened and encouraged.

THE TEXT

“Then came he to Derbe and Lystra: and, behold, a certain disciple was there, named Timotheus, the son of a certain woman, which was a Jewess, and believed; but his father was a Greek: Which was well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra and Iconium. Him would Paul have to go forth with him; and took and circumcised him because of the Jews which were in those quarters: for they knew all that his father was a Greek. And as they went through the cities, they delivered them the decrees for to keep, that were ordained of the apostles and elders which were at Jerusalem . . .” (Acts 16:1–8).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

So Paul and Silas came back to Galatia, to the towns of Lystra and Derbe. There was a disciple there named Timothy, the son of a Greek father and a Jewess mother, who was Christian (v. 1). This young man had a solid testimony with the brothers at Lystra and Iconium (v. 2), also in Galatia. Paul recruited him, but circumcised him first because the Jews in that region knew that his father was Greek (v. 3). More on this shortly. As they traveled through the cities, they delivered the decision of the apostles and elders at Jerusalem (v. 4). This was an extension and application of that decision. As a result, the churches were established in the faith, and continued to grow (v. 5). They worked their way through the provinces of Phrygia and Galatia, but the Holy Spirit kept them from going into Asia (v. 6). They came to a place called Mysia, and were going to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit prohibited that also (v. 7). So passing Mysia, they came to Troas (v. 8).

KEEPING THE GEOGRAPHY STRAIGHT

Mysia was the northwest region of modern Turkey, adjoined the Hellespont and the Aegean Sea. Troas was a city on the west coast of Mysia. Remember that Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe were all cities in Galatia. Note also that Paul delivered the determinations of the Jerusalem Council to them, even though the letter had been addressed to churches much farther east—in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia. Phrygia was a large region that the Romans divided into Asia and Galatia. Sometimes regional lines and state lines don’t match up exactly (e.g. Midwest, and Iowa).

THE ODD CASE OF TIMOTHY

Many Bible readers have been baffled by the odd case of Timothy’s circumcision. What on earth could Paul have been thinking? In the early stages of the controversy, Paul exulted in the fact that he had brought Titus to Jerusalem with him, and even though he was a Greek, he was not compelled to be circumcised (Gal. 2:3). And he had confronted a fellow apostle over just this issue at Antioch, charging him with hypocrisy (Gal. 2:11). And then there had been a momentous church council, which had decided the question the right way (Acts 15:19).

So he then comes to Galatia (of all places) and circumcises Timothy “because of the Jews which were in those quarters” (v. 3). What on earth? And on top of that incongruity, the very next verse shows them delivering the decision of the Jerusalem Council to the Galatian churches (v. 4).

To understand this, we have to piece a few clues together. Timothy’s mother Eunice and grandmother Lois were genuine believers (2 Tim. 1:5). Timothy had known the Scriptures from infancy on (2 Tim. 3:15). The word child in that verse is brephos—infant. He had been raised as a devout Jew, in other words. He was an observant Jew in every respect but one—he was not circumcised because his father was a Greek. The reason Gentiles should not be forced to accept circumcision is that they would then have to keep the entire law. But Timothy was already doing that. Moreover, the fact that he lived, dressed, ate, and talked like a Jew, all while being uncircumcised, would have been obnoxious and offensive to Jews—like he was LARPing or Cosplaying. So for Paul to circumcise him here was no inconsistency.

THE AGE OF TIMOTHY

We are in the late 40’s or early 50’s. Paul could have been executed as late as 67 A.D. From 49 to 67 is almost 20 years, and in Paul’s last letter to Timothy, he told him to “flee youthful lusts” (2 Tim. 2:22). And in 1 Timothy, he had instructed Timothy not to allow congregants to despise his youth (1 Tim. 4:11-13). If he is still a young man in those letters, then he would have been a really young man when Paul first took him on as a ministerial assistant. I would estimate around 16-years-old.

THEN AM I STRONG

We are going to see that Timothy was a highly valued co-worker in Paul’s eyes. But for those who make snap decisions based on surface appearances alone, Timothy might have required some faith. Paul recruited him when he was very young. What could Paul have been looking at? Moreover, Timothy appears to have been naturally timid—Paul has to encourage him to lean into suffering (2 Tim. 1:8), and not to be ashamed. On top of that, he may have been a sickly and frail man. Paul told him to take some wine for his stomach and frequent ailments (1 Tim. 5:23).

But he is a “true son in the faith” (1 Tim. 1:2), a “beloved son” (2 Tim. 1:2; 1 Cor. 4:17). Paul knows that Timothy genuinely cares for others (Phil. 2:19-22). He was a trusted co-worker (1 Thess. 3:2), frequently entrusted with important tasks (1 Cor. 4:17). Paul has confidence in his ability to imitate perseverance (2 Tim. 3:10-11).

So it is a mistake to think that Bible characters just floated above the ground, not needing to overcome difficulties the way we do.

“Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ’s sake: for when I am weak, then am I strong” (2 Cor. 12:10).

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Our Church

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Contact Us:

403 S Jackson St
Moscow, ID 83843
208-882-2034
office@christkirk.com
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