Chapter #44
Acts 16:1-8
The supernatural gifts of the Holy Spirit by which the apostles
were confirmed as the messengers of Christ (Heb. 2:4) ceased when the
canon of Holy Scripture was complete and the apostles had all died (I
Cor. 13:10). The Bible is the perfect, complete Revelation of God.
Nothing can be added to it or taken from it (Rev. 22:19). Since there
are no inspired apostles today writing out a new word of revelation from
God, there is no need for those gifts of a supernatural, miraculous
nature by which the apostles were identified as apostles.
However, the ministries of God's servants today are just as truly
Spirit filled ministries as were the ministries of his servants in the
apostolic era. Every true gospel preacher, being called and directed in
his labors by God the Holy Spirit, exercises a Spirit filled ministry as
he preaches the gospel of Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit. Acts
16:1-8 gives us an example of such a ministry. This chapter begins with
Paul and Silas coming to Derbe and Lystra. It is the beginning of Paul's
second missionary journey. We are told nothing more about Barnabas, but
Paul and Silas continued to faithfully preach the gospel of Christ,
being led by God the Holy Spirit in all things. That is what a Spirit
filled ministry is. It is a ministry dictated by the Holy Spirit, a
ministry controlled by and in submission to the Spirit of God (Eph.
5:18). In these eight verses Luke shows us four things that characterize
a Spirit filled ministry.
A MAN PREPARED BY GOD (vv. 1-3) - Wherever you find a Spirit filled
ministry you will find a man prepared by God for the work of the
ministry. No man is called of God to preach the gospel who has not been
prepared and qualified by God for the work (I Tim. 3:1-7). When Paul
came to Derbe and Lystra, he found a young man named Timothy, whom he
ordained to the work of the gospel ministry (I Tim. 4:14; II Tim. 1:6).
Neither Paul nor Timothy knew how the Lord might be pleased to use him,
but Timothy was a young man whom God had called and gifted for the work
of preaching the gospel.
The Lord began his preparation of Timothy in his earliest years by
his special providence. Timothy's mother, Eunice, was a Jewish woman who
was a believer. His grandmother, Lois, had also been converted by the
grace of God. From his earliest days of childhood Timothy had been
taught the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make sinners wise unto
salvation through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ (II Tim. 1:15; 3:15).
Eunice gave her son the name "Timothy", which means "honored of God".
Like Hannah of old, Eunice got her son from the Lord and gave him to the
Lord. From his boyhood he was taught the Word of God.
It should be the greatest concern of parents to instruct their
children in the gospel of Christ and train them up in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord (Eph. 6:4). If parents would train their children
as they ought, they must... 1. Train them in the way the should go not the way they
would go (Prov. 22:6).
2. Discipline their children firmly and consistently,
insisting that they behave the way they should (Prov.
22:15; 23:12-14; 29:15).
3. Walk before their children in the way of faith and
obedience, showing them the way by example (Gen. 18:19).
4. Pray for God's wisdom, direction, and grace in training
their children, and for his merciful blessings upon the
training they give (Gen. 17:18).
5. Commit their children to the hands of God (I Sam.
1:24-28).
There is in Timothy's parents a display of God's marvelous
providence and grace. Though his mother and grandmother were both
believers, his father was an unbelieving Gentile. Eunice's marriage to
him was an act of disobedience to God (Deut. 7:3; II Cor. 6:14). But
providence took the sinful union of an unbelieving man and a believing
woman and prepared a messenger of sovereign grace! As God overruled
David's adultery with Bathsheba and gave them Solomon, so he overruled
Eunice's disobedience and gave her Timothy. Thank God, he does not
remember the sins of his people against them! Indeed, as John Trapp put
it, "God can (and often does) turn our sins to our good and comfort."
Like a wise physician, our Lord takes the most deadly poison and makes
it a medicine for our health.
In the fulness of time Timothy was also prepared by grace for the
work to which God had ordained him. He who preaches grace to others must
first experience grace in his heart, and Timothy did. He was a devoted
disciple of Christ, a man of blameless reputation in the community where
he lived, and "well reported of by the brethren" (I Tim. 3:7). It is
apparent that Timothy was willing to serve God's cause in any capacity.
That service which Mark despised as shameful, Timothy counted an honor
(Acts 13:5; 15:38). God uses men like that!
Timothy was further prepared for the work of the gospel ministry by
his willful submission to a man of proven faithfulness (v. 3). Before a
man can lead men, he must learn to follow. Before Elisha could be a
prophet he had to set at the feet of and serve the prophet Elijah. And
before Timothy could be entrusted with the care of the churches he had
to prove his care for the churches by serving Paul. He even submitted to
the painful ordeal of circumcision, simply because Paul, God's faithful
servant, said it would be best for the gospel's sake (I Cor. 9:19-23).
Timothy was a man prepared by providence, grace, and obedience for the
work of preaching the gospel.
A MESSAGE PROCLAIMED FROM GOD (v. 4) - That man who preaches by the
Spirit of God is God's messenger, God's ambassador to men. He has a
message from God and faithfully delivers it (II Cor. 5:18-21). They all
have the same message, the gospel of Christ. And they are all to be
heard, received, and treated as God's ambassadors. They constantly
declare "the decrees" ordained of the apostles by the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit (Acts 15:11, 18): The Scriptures alone! Christ alone! Grace
alone! All God's servants preach God's gospel: Ruin by the Fall,
Redemption by the Blood, and Regeneration by the Holy Spirit. A Spirit
filled ministry is a ministry characterized by the message of God's free
and sovereign grace in Christ.
A MINISTRY PERFORMED BY GOD (v. 5). Paul and Silas went about
preaching the gospel. They did not employ entertainers to make the
gospel more appealing, have puppet shows to reach the children, host
ball teams for the men, or organize bowling leagues for the women. They
simply preached the gospel and waited for God to work, and he did (II
Cor. 10:4-5). "Some were converted by their ministry, others confirmed.
This is still the fruit of faithful preaching" (John Trapp). This much
is certain: Anytime a man preaches the gospel in the power of the Holy
Spirit something happens for the glory of God (II Cor. 2:14-17).
A MESSENGER PROPELLED BY GOD (vv. 6-8). Faithful gospel preachers
are led, directed, motivated, and inspired in their work by the Holy
Spirit. God's servants will not allow either their own desires or the
influences of men to determine the course, place, or message of their
ministry. Paul wanted to go to Asia, but the Holy Spirit would not allow
it. He tried to go to Bithynia, but was providentially hindered. It was
the purpose of God that the gospel be carried to Troas and then to
Macedonia. There are some places in this world where God's servants are
"forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the word." "This was a heavier
judgment upon those coast," wrote Trapp, "than to be denied a harvest,
or the light of the sun. Prize the preaching of the gospel as a singular
privilege. They that are without a teaching priest are without God (II
Chron. 15:3)." Blessed beyond measure are those people to whom God sends
his servants to faithfully preach his Word (Amos 8:11-12; Isa. 52:7).
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