Spirit-Filled Church | Week 4 | Compassion, Conviction, & Conflict
Our passage in the context of Acts
* Saul encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus and experienced his conversion of faith and was baptized by Ananias.
* Saul then spent time with the Apostles before being prayed over and sent out on mission with Barnabas.
* Saul, now named Paul, went out with Barnabas to many different cities preaching the Gospel as God performed miracles through their acts of faith to the hurting, marginalized, and oppressed.
* The ministry of Paul and Barnabas began to look similar in many ways to the ministry of Jesus.
Helpful literary and cultural context:
* Paul and Barnabas arrive, they go from Iconium into Lystra, which is a nearby city, both are located in modern-day Turkey.
* After healing a paralytic, the people of Iconium begin to worship Paul and Barnabas as Zeus and Hermes, Greek gods.
* In a nearby region of Turkey, a neighboring region called Phrygia, there was a myth that Zeus and Hermes had actually appeared to the people there in human form and were not received well. As a result there was a massive flood that killed everybody except for two people who had received Zeus and Hermes well. And so these people living in Lystra would have known this story.
* The Jews who we see at the end of this passage are actually coming from Antioch and Iconium. Iconium was just a day's walk away or so. Antioch was much further, but it's possible that they were already in town. It's possible this scene kind of took place over multiple days. This is an escalation of persecution that had been following Paul and Barnabas from town to town.
Application Themes:
* Temptation to Worship Influential People | We see the temptation to follow the person who God worked mightily through instead of following the God who empowered the person. We should also acknowledge the temptation to accept people’s praise and worship when we've done something through the fullness of the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit has worked through us. How does Paul and Barnabas’ response to the people of Lystra have to say about our culture of influencers and celebrities (within and outside of the church)
* Seeing the vulnerable, Responding with compassion | This whole story began with Paul seeing the paralytic, recognizing faith, and acting with compassion in a way that brought healing. What does this tell us about how our Gospel ministry is or should be oriented, and what type of response we can have when God moves mightily.
* Commitment and faithfulness amidst persecution | Paul and Barnabas continued their ministry through Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra knowing there were groups of people set on their ruin. Notice how Paul and Barnabus responded to this agitation and persecution. What stands out to you and how might this instruct your commitment and faithfulness to Gospel ministry in the places God has sent you and placed you?