I. Main points of application or "So what?"
from Acts 14
- Stay gospel-minded: continue to pray for opportunities to witness
about Jesus Christ the Savior; watch for opportunities to witness; and
witness when God gives those opportunities to you.
- There will always be opposition to the gospel. Don’t let this
intimidate or deter you from telling others about eternal life through
Jesus Christ.
- Explain the Word of God to new believers and continue to encourage
them in their Christian walk. The church is Christ’s body and needs
spiritual food, encouragement, protection, and challenges.
- Idolatry and polytheism are prevalent in our time just as they were in
the time of Paul and Barnabas. Do not allow this to be an excuse for not
speaking out for Christ and God’s viewpoint.
- Missionary reports greatly encourage those in the home church who
support the missionaries.
- People may try to put you on a pedestal like they did Paul and
Barnabas. If they mistakenly think that you are a super Christian, be
careful. If you begin to take their praise of you seriously, you are not
only setting yourself up for divine discipline, but you are also taking
God’s honor and glory to yourself.
- Whenever you are beaten up for witnessing for Christ, pick yourself up
and resume the spiritual conflict; this is your royal birthright
mission: "striving together for the faith of the gospel."
II. Summary Outline
1.
Acts 14.1-7. Paul and Barnabas traveled about 100 miles southeast
from Pisidian Antioch to Iconium. Iconium was an ancient city that, in
Paul’s day, was a part of the Roman province of Galatia. When they
reached Iconium, they did as before: they went to the Jewish synagogue
where they preached the gospel with many Jews and Greeks believing the
gospel. As Paul came to expect, many disbelieving Jews attacked him and
Barnabas, but this did not stop their ministry. Finally, when the city
divided over the gospel and events became too dangerous, the two
missionaries left to take the gospel to the Lycaonian area of Roman
southern Galatia—Lystra and Derbe. Timothy was from this region (Acts
16.1-2).
2.
Acts 14.8-18. In Lystra, Paul healed a congenitally lame man. This
miracle made Paul and Barnabas immediate celebrities, so much so that that
the people hailed them as gods. The people of Lystra simply extended their
idolatry to two more god. The missionaries could not take that: they ran
out into the crowd and said that they were also men and that they had come
to this city to tell them about the one true God, the creator who has
always had a witness to himself through the orderly seasons and harvests
that he has brought to mankind. God has always revealed himself to all
mankind through general revelation—General revelation includes creation
or nature (Psalm 19.1-6), weather
(Acts 14.17), order in creation (Colossians 1.17), God-consciousness
(Romans 1.18-21), Israel (Hebrews 11.1-2,26-27; Joshua 24; Act 7).
3.
Acts 14.19-20. “Religious” unbelievers are often very
antagonistic and intolerant toward believers who witness for Jesus Christ.
The rabble-rousing Jews from Pisidian Antioch (Acts 13) and Iconium (Acts
14) showed up in Lystra and got the crowd worked up against the apostles;
they stoned Paul and left him for dead. He apparently died and was given a
brief glimpse of heaven before God resuscitated him. Paul wrote about this
in 2 Corinthians 11.25. It probably happened while he was at Damascus,
Jerusalem, or Tarsus—between Acts 9.23 and Acts 11.30. God the Father
brings tests—not always stoning—into our lives so that we depend upon
him and his grace and so that humility replaces pride. Paul later wrote in
2 Corinthians 12.1-10 of another painful condition, the thorn in the
flesh, that also forced him to depend on God’s grace.
4.
Acts 14.20-21. The
next stop was Derbe, another city in Roman Galatia about sixty miles from
Lystra. Here they again
presented the gospel of eternal life through faith in Christ, then taught
the new believers, and so “made many disciples.” Do you see the
pattern that Paul follows? He goes to an area where he first teaches about
Jesus Christ, the savior. He then teaches basic doctrine to the new
believers who are called disciples or pupils of Jesus Christ.
5.
Acts 14.21-26. Derbe was the turnaround point for this first trip.
Paul and Barnabas left Derbe and revisited Lystra and Iconium on their way
back to Antioch. At each of these stops they taught Bible doctrine to the
new believers and encouraged them to continue in the faith. Paul and
Barnabas did not leave these new believers footloose and without spiritual
leadership. They appointed elders; these elders were the pastor-teachers
who had the responsibility of teaching (the explaining of the Word of God)
and shepherding (leading and protecting) the believers in the various
churches. After Iconium, they stopped briefly in Perga to witness and
teach before they went on to Pisidian Antioch. They had finished their
first missionary circuit.
6.
Acts 14.26-28. Since Paul and Barnabas had been sent out by the
believers in Antioch, after they arrived (Greek aorist tense) and gathered
together (Greek aorist tense) the church, they took some time reporting
(Greek imperfect tense) what God had done (Greek aorist tense) with them.
The aorist tense looks at an act generally as a whole, while the imperfect
tense was used to relate that the missionaries took some time and went
into detail about the wonderful ministry that God had completed through
them. Verse 28 continues to bring this out by saying “they were spending
(Greek imperfect tense) not a little time together with the disciples.”
When we send missionaries, we are responsible to pray for them and provide
support for them. When they return, we need to hear about the mission so
that we can better pray and support them and the new churches.
III. Dictionary of Bible Doctrine
1.
Abundant life is what we
all want—that extraordinary and supernatural and eternal kind of
life in our day to day experience. Peter wrote in 2 Peter 1.3-4
that God has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness.
This life is ours to enjoy. The movie “It’s a Wonder Life” starring
Jimmy Stewart illustrates the point that we often reject or miss that
which we really want. George did not recognize and appreciate what he
already had until he thought he had lost it. God has given every believer
the opportunity to live an abundant life; whether we experience this kind
of life depends upon our day to day relationship with God and his Word.
We often miss the opportunity to love life and to experience
God’s day to day blessings. Jesus
said in John 10.10, “I came that they might have life, and might have it
abundantly.” Jesus uses the word “life” in three ways in
John 10—eternal life, an abundant spiritual life in time, and physical
life. Peter wrote about the abundant spiritual life in 1 Peter
3.10; he quoted the Psalmist, “Let him who means to love life and see
good days….” Both John and Peter have day to day life in mind—an
abundant and fulfilling and enjoyable temporal life that is possible
because believers possess eternal life. To enjoy eternal life in time, the
abundant daily experience of eternal of life, we must continue to live in
a growing and submissive relationship to Christ our Shepherd. John 10
includes four elements for the abundant life (John 10.3, 4, 9, 10, 14): 1.
A sheep-person must be a part of the shepherd’s flock (believe in
Christ). 2. The sheep-believer must follow the shepherd (listen to him and
watch him). 3. The sheep-believer must depend on the shepherd (trust him,
believe him). 4. The sheep-believer must obey the shepherd (faith
application of the Word). The abundant life can be lived during days that
are filled with routine or suffering or testing or success or prosperity
because it does not depend on circumstances; it depends on relationship
with Jesus Christ our shepherd. Jesus taught the disciples, in John 13-17,
the central truths that they would need to live the abundant life:
occupation with Christ, knowledge of the Word, faith-rest, confession of
sin, spirituality, prayer, and ministry
in order to experience this abundant life.
2.
Blessings are good
things—a word, an act, a gift—that encourage us, lift us, and help us.
All blessing begins with God because he created the heavens and the earth
and all living creatures. The American
Heritage Dictionary defines the verb bless “to confer well-being or
prosperity on” and the noun “something promoting or contributing to
happiness, well-being, or prosperity; a boon.” These definitions are
accurate for the Hebrew (krb, berach, hkrb berachah)
and the Greek (eulogew eulogeo, euloghto~ eulogetos,
makario~ makarios) words for blessing. Believers receive unique
blessings because of their relationship with Christ. God blessed Israel in
the past and will bless Israel in the future because of the conditional
covenant with Moses (Mosaic law, Deuteronomy 28) and unconditional
covenants for Israel (Abrahamic, Genesis 12.1-3, Palestinian, Deuteronomy
30.1-10, Davidic, 2 Samuel 7.14-16, and New, Jeremiah 31.31-34).
God has blessed every church age believer with positional
blessings—the same blessings for all believers—simply because we are
believers in Christ (Ephesians 1.3; Romans 4.6-9; Galatians 3.14). He also
blesses individual believers with experiential blessings—individualized
blessings for those who practice accurately the Christian life
(Acts 20.35; Romans 15.29; Galatians 4.15; Hebrews 6.7; 1 Peter
3.14; 4.14; Revelation 22.7). God also has blessings for believers during
the millennial kingdom and eternity; these begin with Christ coming for
his church (Titus 2.13; Matthew 5.3-11; Revelation 19.9; 20.6).
3.
Encouragement is the
general ministry of believers to each other in which we encourage,
comfort, and challenge each other. Each of us is encouraged by knowing
that God cares for us (1 Peter 5.7), that we can go to God’s gracious
throne in prayer (Hebrews 4.16), that “God works all things together for
good” (Romans 8.28), that God is our helper and will never leave us or
forsake us (Hebrews 13.5-6), and that no one or nothing can take us out of
his gracious and mighty hand (John 10.27-29). This general encouragement
ministry by all believers is different from the special ministry of
encouragement directed by the spiritual gift of encouragement (Romans
12.8). God wants us to encourage each other
(1 Thessalonians 4.18; 5.11,14; 2 Thessalonians 2.17; Hebrews 3.13;
10.25). We learn to encourage others through our own personal hardship,
tests, and suffering (2 Corinthians 1.3-5). We can encourage with the Word
of God (Romans 15.4; 1 Thessalonians 4.18; Hebrews 12.5; 13.27; 1 Peter
5.12), with news of the spiritual growth and momentum made by other
believers (2 Corinthians 7.6-7,13; Ephesians 6.22; Philippians 2.19;
Colossians 4.8; 1 Thessalonians 3.7; Philemon 7), by stressing the great
encouragement that comes through our
relationship with Christ (2 Corinthians 1.5), and by reminding
others that God encourages us (Acts 9.31; Romans 15.6; 2 Corinthians 1.3;
7.6; 2 Thessalonians 2.16-17).
4.
Happiness is a joyful
and contented attitude that begins with faith in Jesus Christ as our
savior (John 20.29) and then continues as a fruit of the Holy Spirit
(Galatians 5.22-23). Happiness is also the by-product of God’s blessings
(Psalm 144.12-15) and of the faith application of the principles of the
Bible (John 13.17). This application of Bible doctrine takes many roads
that lead to happiness: 1. gracious treatment of the poor (Proverbs
14.21), 2. our possession of God’s wisdom (Proverbs 3.13), 3. occupation
with Christ and therefore gladness that we are related to Jesus Christ
and follow him (Philippians 4.4), 4. knowing that believers to whom
we have ministered are
growing in their Christian lives (Philippians 4.1), 5. our understanding
and application of the Word of God (John 13.17), 6. knowing that we are
doing the right thing (Romans 14.22), 7. we recognize the tests that come
from God and know that God is strengthening us, blessing us, and will
reward us later on (James 1.2,12; 5.11), 8.
knowing that the gospel is going to unbelievers and that we have a
part in this spread of the gospel (Philippians 1.18), and 9. awareness of
our privilege to serve God (Luke 1.45-48; 2.10). A sure way to make
ourselves unhappy is to make our own happiness the goal of our life,
especially at the expense of others.
5.
Revelation means that God has communicated himself and
his word to mankind (John 1.18; 2 Timothy 3.16-17). There are two kinds of
revelation: General and Special. Mankind knows, through General or Natural
revelation, that God, exists but General revelation does not tell mankind
how to have relationship with God (Psalm 19.1-6). We see God’s glory and
design when we look at the heavens (Psalm 19.1-6) or recognize the seasons
and weather (Acts 14.17). We know he exists when we see the design and
order of the unseen but
accepted laws that govern and maintain the solar system (Colossians 1.17).
Since the creation of man all mankind has possessed God-consciousness—an
inner knowledge of God’s attributes, power, and nature (Romans 1.18-21).
The very existence and survival of Israel
documents that God exists and has a purpose for the world (Hebrews
11.1-2,26-27; Joshua 24; Act 7). Special revelation refers to the way that
God has revealed specific details about himself and his redemption plan:
he has specifically revealed himself through his Son and our savior, Jesus
Christ, the living word (John 1.18; Hebrews 1.2-3) and through the Bible,
the written word (1 Corinthians 2.10; 2 Timothy 3.16-17). The Bible is
without error (Joshua 23.14-15; Matthew
5.18; 22.31-32; Luke 24.44; 2 Timothy 3.16-17; Deuteronomy 25.4;
Matthew 10.10; Titus 1.2). God has made his written word, the Bible, known
and understood to mankind through three steps: revelation (Acts 3.18-22; 1
Corinthians 2.10; 2 Peter 1.21), inspiration (2 Timothy 3.16-17),
communication (Ezekiel 2-3; Ephesians 4.11-12). Both general and
special revelation honor God and bless mankind (Psalm 119).
6.
Spirituality (Galatians 6.1) is the absolute condition of any
believer “walk[ing] by the Spirit” (Galatians 5.16) and “filled with the Spirit” (Ephesians 5.18). God the
Holy Spirit permanently indwells every believer (1 Corinthians 3.16; 6.19
12.13), but every believer is not always spiritual. Spirituality
emphasizes Christian life practice, while fellowship emphasizes Christian
life relationship with God (1 John 1.1-10). Spirituality is distinct from
spiritual maturity. Carnality, which describes the condition any believer
controlled by his sinful nature, is the opposite of spirituality (1
Corinthians 1.1-3 and Galatians 5.16-17). Every believer is either
spiritual or carnal at any point in time. Spirituality is the normal
condition of the believer’s life, but personal sin quenches (1
Thessalonians 5.19) or grieves (Ephesians 4.30) the Holy Spirit and places
the believer under the control of the sinful nature; this condition is
carnality (1 Corinthians 3.1-3). Spirituality is regained by confession of
sin (1 John 1.9 and 1 Corinthians 11.30 compared to Galatians 5.16-17) and
trusting the Holy Spirit to live through one (Galatians 3.2-5). The Holy
Spirit controls the sinful nature while a believer is spiritual; the
spiritual believer possesses the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5.22-23);
he can serve in the restoration of carnal believers (Galatians 6.1); he
has the spiritual freedom to please God instead of following a legal code
out of duty (Galatians 5.18); the spiritual believer has the spiritual
freedom to reflect God’s ongoing transformation of him to
Christ-likeness (2 Corinthians 3.17-18); and spirituality orders and
uplifts the believer’s soul and makes him thankful (Ephesians 5.19-20).