Chapter #58
Acts 20:1-16
In the previous chapter we read about the uproar at Ephesus. The
angry mob stood for more than two hours crying, "Great is Diana of the
Ephesians." Finally, "the town clerk appeased the people" and "dismissed
the assembly." We pick up the story in the opening verses of chapter
twenty.
DETERMINED TO GO TO JERUSALEM (vv. 1-16) - Here we have another of
Luke's rapid descriptions of Paul's ministry. He is leading up to the
Apostle's farewell message to the Ephesian elders at Miletus. But in
these verses Luke very quickly tells us that after the uproar at
Ephesus, Paul went right on doing what God had called him to do. He
spent the next several months travelling, by land and by sea, through
Asia, Macedonia, and Greece, visiting the churches which had been
established during his earlier ministry. Everywhere he went he did the
same thing. In the synagogues, in the streets, in the churches, and in
the market places, Paul preached Christ to the people. But all the while
he was hurrying to Jerusalem (v. 16).
Why did Paul have this preoccupation with Jerusalem? God distinctly
appointed him to be the apostle to the Gentiles. Yet, in reading through
the Book of Acts, we see him repeatedly determined to return to
Jerusalem on the feast days. Was this, as some have suggested, because
he had a hard time breaking with the past and shaking off the grave
clothes of dead Judaism? Not hardly! The apostle Paul was forthright and
constant in his declaration of the believer's freedom from legal,
ceremonial, carnal ordinances (Rom. 6:14, 15; 7:1; 10:4; Gal. 5:2, 4;
Col. 2:8-23). Paul was determined, if at all possible, to be in
Jerusalem on the feast days, not to observe those feasts, but because he
knew that on those days he would be able to preach the gospel to more of
his kinsman than at any other time. And he was determined to do
everything in his power to see them saved by the grace of God (Rom.
9:1-3; 10:1-4).
THE MESSAGE OF THE BIBLE - Wherever he went, the message Paul
preached was Jesus Christ and him crucified (I Cor. 2:2). Sometimes he
preached to Jews, sometimes to Gentiles. Sometimes he preached to large
crowds of lost people, sometimes to small bands of believers. Sometimes
he preached to learned philosophers, sometimes to simple women. But his
message was always the same. He preached Christ, the whole of Christ,
and only Christ to all people. Sometimes he was a little long winded,
preaching until midnight. Sometimes people got tired while he was
preaching and fell asleep (v. 9). Often he was persecuted for his
message. But Paul never changed his message. His message was Jesus
Christ and him crucified.
THE BIBLE, THE WORD OF GOD, IS IN ITS ENTIRETY A BOOK ABOUT THE
LORD JESUS CHRIST. It is not a book about science, history, politics,
morality, or even religious dogma. It is a book about Christ (Luke
24:27, 44-47). Christ is the living Word of whom the written Word
speaks. It is the business and responsibility of every gospel preacher
to preach and teach nothing else but Jesus Christ and him crucified. To
do so is to faithfully preach and teach "all the counsel of God" (Acts
20:27; I Cor. 2:2). All the prophecies of the Old Testament are
predictions of Christ. All the sacrifices and ceremonies of the law were
pictures of Christ. All the temporal deliverances of individual
believers and the nation of Israel were illustrations of the redemption
of God's elect by Christ. The law was given by Moses to show man his
need of Christ. The four Gospels record the history of Christ and his
teachings. And the Epistles explain the meaning of our Lord's teachings.
Be sure you understand this. Every book of the Bible, every chapter,
every verse, every line, every word in Holy Scripture is designed by God
the Holy Spirit to reveal Christ to his people. Stop studying the Bible
to find out facts and buttress doctrine. Study the Word of God with the
desire to know him of whom the Scriptures speak (John 5:39). If you find
any text in the Book of God that does not immediately cause your heart
to look to Christ, you do not yet understand that text. The doctrine of
the Bible is Christ. The law of the Bible is Christ. The gospel of the
Bible is Christ. Do you see that? Any doctrine divorced from Christ is
heresy, a mere show of intellectualism. Any precept divorced from Christ
is self-righteousness. Paul went everywhere preaching Christ. And any
sermon that does not point men to Christ ought never to have been
preached. Any doctrine that does not have Christ for its essence must
not be believed. Any precept that is not motivated by love for and faith
in Christ must not be obeyed. From Genesis 1:1 through Revelation 22:21,
"Christ is all, and in all!"
A PLOT DISCOVERED (vv. 1-6) - Wherever Paul went preaching the
gospel of Christ he met with opposition. Proud flesh cannot tolerate the
message of salvation by grace alone through the merits of Christ alone.
Paul again discovered a plot against his life. While in Greece the
enemies of the cross "laid wait for him" (vv. 2-3). "Over the centuries
of the Christian church the lives of God's servants often have been in
danger. Many have been martyred for their faith in Jesus Christ. Others
have suffered intensely. God has never promised a bed of roses. Remember
what Paul himself wrote to the Philippians: `For unto you it is given in
the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for
his sake' (1:29)...As a matter of fact, the church has always been at
its purest when it has had to face suffering and martyrdom for Jesus
Christ" (Donald Grey Barnhouse).
Paul left Greece after three months. As he prepared to sail to
Syria, he learned about the plot against him. So he took Sopater and
Luke, his travelling companions, and went by land through Macedonia to
Philippi, and sailed from Philippi to Troas. There they met up with
their other co-workers, and stayed for seven days.
A COMMUNION SERVICE ON THE LORD'S DAY (vv. 7-12) - Notice that the
disciples came together for worship on "the first day of the week"
rather than the seventh. Like many things in this transitional period,
sabbath observance was terminated gradually. The new day of worship, the
Lord's day (Rev. 1:10), was established by the resurrection of our Lord
(Matt. 28:1). Sunday is not the "christian sabbath". We are expressly
forbidden to observe a legalistic sabbath day (Col. 2:16) in this day of
grace. Christ is our Sabbath. We cease from our own works and rest in
him by faith (Heb. 4:9-10). Yet, it is clear that the established day of
worship in the New Testament was Sunday (Acts 20:7; I Cor. 16:2). On
this day the church gathered to observe the Lord's Supper and listen to
the preaching of the gospel. The communion service was a very simple
part of public worship, not an elaborate ceremony. When the saints of
God met for worship on the Lord's day, they passed around a loaf of
unleavened bread and a cup of wine and every believer took a portion for
himself.
There was no restricted or closed communion in the New Testament!
In this passage disciples from many different places observed the Lord's
Table together because in Christ all true believers are truly one. They
did not examine one another to see who was worthy to participate in the
ordinance, but each believer examined himself before the Lord (I Cor.
11:28).
Paul was evidently a long winded preacher. He preached until
midnight. Eutychus dozed off and fell out of a third floor window.
Everyone presumed he was dead. Perhaps he was and Paul raised him from
the dead. However, verse ten seems to imply that he was not killed by
the fall. Either way, God intervened. After that, Paul continued
preaching until daybreak!
Then (vv. 13-16), after just a short stay at Troas, Paul and his
friends departed for Assos, because Paul was determined to stop by
Ephesus on his way to Jerusalem.
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