Oh dear Paul. He is
always in some sort of ruckus. He finally made it to Jerusalem, but not without
considerable fallout.
In Chapter 22 of the Acts of the Apostles, Paul was
defending himself to the Jews in Jerusalem.
They listened to him but then started shouting, “Take such a one as this
away from the earth. It is not right
that he should live.”
As if that wasn’t enough, listen to how Luke describes the
situation and the rising tension:
“And as they were yelling and throwing off their cloaks and
flinging dust into the air, the cohort commander ordered him to be brought into
the compound and gave instruction that he be interrogated under the lash . . .”
Can’t you just see it?
Cloaks flying, dust flinging, cries for him to be killed?
Oh my.
After traveling all over the place by land and sea (aboard a
cargo ship, not a cruise liner), after being arrested and about to be whipped,
in the midst of this huge kerfuffle, Paul continued to be attacked—all for
preaching the gospel!
Earlier in Chapter 21, we hear “The whole city was in
turmoil with people rushing together.”
Having seized Paul and having him dragged out of the temple, “all
Jerusalem was rioting.”
What was the problem here?
Well, the cohort commander who had him arrested couldn’t
exactly figure out what was going on. “Some
in the mob shouted one thing, others something else; so, since he was unable to
ascertain the truth because of the uproar, he ordered Paul to be brought into
the compound” where he was carried by soldiers “because of the violence of the
mob.”
As a side note, I just want to mention that part of the
problem was that Paul was a Roman citizen and they weren’t supposed to be doing
anything to him because of that.
But here’s what I want you to see—nobody withstands all of
this without real conviction. Paul was
so “in” after his conversion on the way to Damascus, that he was willing to
endure whatever he had to in order to continue spreading the word about Jesus.
How convinced are YOU that Jesus is God?
That he came from the Father?
That he took on humanity to save us?
In today’s reading from the Gospel of John, Jesus said in
his prayer to the Father that he gives us the glory that the Father gave
him. That is so amazing!
And, he prayed for us. He came, for us. And not only us, but,
also, as he said, “for those who will
believe in me through their word, so that they may all be one.”
So important was all of this to Paul that he willingly
stepped into the fray wherever it found him, to testify, to give his witness
story about all that God did for him.
Instead of “binding both men and women and delivering them
to prison” for following the “Way,” bringing others “back to Jerusalem in
chains for punishment, Paul himself was now returning to Jerusalem, a changed
man, defending God in battle, if you will.
Spreading the Good News of salvation is clearly not for the
faint of heart. I pray that each of us—today—opens
our heart and willingly speaks of all that God has done for us.
Don’t worry that you will not have the right words. God will provide what you need.
Janet Cassidy
janetcassidy.blogspot.com
janetcassidy.blubrry.net
janetcassidy.blogspot.com
janetcassidy.blubrry.net
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