Episodes

Sunday Nov 28, 2021
Sunday Nov 28, 2021
Hello and welcome to Lechem Panim! If you’ve been following us, you’ll know that we have been studying the first great missionary journey of the apostle Paul. He and Barnabas have been traveling through many cities proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ; and God of course performs many miraculous signs through them to confirm their message. Now some people are receptive to the message (some even eager and ready to accept and follow Christ), but others feel threatened and end up persecuting Paul and Barnabas. But here in chapter 14, when they come to the city of Lystra, they are met by the opposite extreme. Paul heals a crippled man who had never walked before; and the people are so taken aback by the sign that they conclude that Paul and Barnabas must be gods; and so they seek to worship them. But Paul and Barnabas (in grief) begin telling them that not only are they not those gods, but that their belief in those kinds of gods is futile and that they need to instead trust in the Living God. Unlike their gods, Yahweh is the one who made the heaven and the earth and the sea and all that is in them. And because He is the Maker of all things, He is therefore the Lord of all things. Now Paul and Barnabas continue. They say of God that (verse 16)…
Acts 14:16-17 (ESV)—16 In past generations he allowed all the nations to walk in their own ways. 17 Yet he did not leave himself without witness, for he did good by giving you rains from heaven and fruitful seasons, satisfying your hearts with food and gladness.”
Natural Revelation— Now Paul and Barnabas know that many of the people they are speaking to do not know the Old Testament or the fundamental tenets of the Jewish faith. And so they start with what the people do know and are able to recognize for themselves. They start with the rains and the seasons, which they point out are evidence of the goodness of God, who provides the world with what it needs to survive. And what Paul and Barnabas are pointing the people to here is what is known as the natural revelation of God; the things anyone can come to understand about Him just by looking at the natural world we live in. And Paul and Barnabas zero in on the fact that God never leaves people without evidence of His existence and His loving kindness. Later Paul would write further on this in Romans 1:20, saying that the evidence in nature is so strong, that people are really without excuse for not believing. There is abundant evidence all around us (more now than ever); we just need to open our eyes and look. Now despite Paul and Barnabas’ words, it says in…
Acts 14:18-19 (ESV)— 18 Even with these words they scarcely restrained the people from offering sacrifice to them. {Now here is where things again take a turn for the worse, as Jewish leaders come to oppose Paul and Barnabas. It says…} 19 But Jews came from Antioch and Iconium, and having persuaded the crowds, they stoned Paul and dragged him out of the city, supposing that he was dead.
Fickle People— Now unfortunately, this passage offers us a very realistic look at human nature; how fickle we can be at times (John 2:24-25). Here it didn’t matter what the people had seen; the voice of persuasion from the Jewish leaders was stronger. And the same is true today. Sometimes people can become so wrapped up in a political party or a news network or what some false teacher is telling them that they can literally be convinced to look away from the evidence before them. It’s scary, but it happens all the time. And it happened here. The people of Lystra, though they had just thought Paul and Barnabas were gods and therefore sought to worship and offer sacrifices to them, now stone Paul and leave him for dead. And what you and I learn from this is that though we might feel good when people approve of us and affirm us, we need to be careful not to allow that desire for approval to cloud our reasoning or affect our decisions. We are not to be about pleasing the crowds, but are to seek to be like Jesus no matter what anybody else might think. Our faith and trust need to be in Him and Him alone; because unlike people, God never changes (James 1:17). Now it says in…
Acts 14:20a (ESV)— 20 But when the disciples gathered about him, he rose up and entered the city,
Persistent— And this just shows how persistent Paul and Barnabas were in preaching the good news of Jesus. They counted the cost and thought it worth the persecution and pain to obey Christ. And think about it; they had just escaped being stoned in Iconium (14:1-7); but here the Jews from Pisidian Antioch and Iconium track Paul down and stone him, to the point where he nearly dies. And yet he gets right back up and goes into the city to continue to preach the Gospel!!! And I just think what an incredible amount of commitment! But that is what it means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ. You and I have to be totally committed to Him. Our lives are His; and we ought to be willing to lay them down in a heartbeat if He calls us to. Paul writes in…
1 Corinthians 6:19-20 (ESV)— 19 Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, 20 for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body.
Paul Lived It— Now that’s remarkable because we discover from this passage that this wasn’t just a concept that Paul casually preached about in his sermons. No, this was something he lived. He glorified God in his body, often suffering in ways that Jesus had suffered. And we are called to do the same. Now it says of Paul in…
Acts 14:20b-23 (ESV)— and on the next day he went on with Barnabas to Derbe. 21 When they had preached the gospel to that city and had made many disciples, they returned to Lystra and to Iconium and to Antioch, 22 strengthening the souls of the disciples, encouraging them to continue in the faith, and saying that through many tribulations we must enter the kingdom of God. 23 And when they had appointed elders for them in every church, with prayer and fasting they committed them to the Lord in whom they had believed.
Returning to Disciple— And so we see that Paul and Barnabas return to the cities in which they have just been threatened and physically attacked; and they do this in order to visit with the new believers. Now that may sound foolish to us, but they knew that these new Christians didn’t have anybody to mentor, disciple, and help establish them in the faith. And so Paul and Barnabas return to encourage/strengthen them; to build them up, and to establish leadership in the church that can help lead them and help them to grow in their faith. And what we learn from this is that no matter how uncomfortable or inconvenient it is to spend time with new believers (mentoring and discipling them) that is what we are called to do. And that’s because people need more than just initial salvation; they need to be taught how to actually follow Jesus Christ. And every one of us has the responsibility to try to help that to happen in the lives of new believers. Now Paul and Barnabas center their focus on raising up church leaders. And that’s because when a Church has Spirit-led leaders, laypersons, and pastors, that church will grows. That’s why we need to pray for our church leaders and support them in any way that we can. But also, if God nudges you to enter into a leadership role in the Church, you need to be humbly willing to accept that responsibility. Now it says in…
Acts 14:24-28 (ESV)— 24 Then they passed through Pisidia and came to Pamphylia. 25 And when they had spoken the word in Perga, they went down to Attalia, 26 and from there they sailed to Antioch, where they had been commended to the grace of God for the work that they had fulfilled. 27 And when they arrived and gathered the church together, they declared all that God had done with them, and how he had opened a door of faith to the Gentiles. 28 And they remained no little time with the disciples.
Celebration— Now that must have been a wonderful time of celebration. There is nothing better than celebrating the salvation of those you helped lead to Jesus. But in reflecting on this passage, I wonder, “are we just as burdened in our hearts for those who do not know Jesus? Do we so desire them to be saved that we are willing to endure any kind of suffering in order that they might come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ?”
Tears of Burden— You know, I only got to hear my late grandfather (we called him Geempa) preach one time in person during his life. I have heard him preach on tape before, but only one time in person. And I remember he was in a church setting. And there was a special missionary banquet. And I remember him, having been a missionary in Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, and China, sharing a message with that church's congregation. And I was very young at the time and don't remember the entirety of this message. But I do remember that as he began talking about how there are people in the world who are lost; people he had been striving all of his life to reach with the gospel; his eyes began to well up with tears. He knew that every day people were slipping into an eternity without Jesus. And he, like Paul and Barnabas, anguished over that. And his love for the lost and his desire to reach them drove him into some of the most intense situations.
One time he was ministering to a tribe that 30 years prior had murdered people brutally, until it was colonized by the British. And he was in the large room where he was to sleep and, laying down to go to sleep, he stared up at the ceiling. And there, hanging from the ceiling were the severed and shrunken heads of a few of the numerous people this tribe had killed only a few decades before. Now as scary as that was for him; scary enough to drive many people away from those kinds of people (some he ministered to having probably participated in those killings); it was not his greatest fear. His greatest fear was people from that tribe never knowing about Jesus. And it was that sense of urgency that was the driving force of His life. Is that the driving force of our lives? Do we have a healthy sense of anguish for those who do not yet know Christ?
Robert Moffat, who inspired David Livingstone, once said, "In the vast plain to the north I have sometimes seen, in the morning sun, the smoke of a thousand villages where no missionary has ever been”.
William Carey, pioneer missionary to India said, ”To know the will of God, we need an open Bible and an open map."
Hudson Taylor once said, ”If I had 1,000 lives, I'd give them all for China”. He also said, "The Great Commission is not an option to be considered; it is a command to be obeyed"
Oswald J. Smith once said, “Any church that is not seriously involved in helping fulfill the Great Commission has forfeited its biblical right to exist.” What a powerful statement!
Our Commission— And in light of that, are we taking the fulfillment of Christ's great commission seriously enough? Are we bathing the lost with prayer every day? Are we following the spiritual needs of other countries and remaining open to God's calling us to do something about it? If not, we need to be. And so let us this week commit to be God’s instruments through which the world might come to know Him. Let’s do so. Amen.
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