Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Acts 22-28 Part 1 • Dr. Scott Woodward • July 31 - Aug. 6
Episode Date: July 26, 2023How do we continue to share the gospel with “good cheer” amidst opposition? Dr. Scott Woodward explores the opposition facing Paul as he takes the gospel to the known world.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Scot...t Woodward01:11 Introduction of Dr. Scott Woodward02:52 Background to Acts 22-2805:17 Cutting a covenant–old and new07:20 The blood of the new covenant08:45 Paul working with the Gentiles and the Jews11:09 God is God of the whole earth13:29 Temple veil was torn 14:28 Paul’s separate journeys16:49 Acts 20:22 Paul returns to Jerusalem18:16 Paul gives report in Jerusalem20:51 The Law of Moses has been as a school master21:48 Becoming a servant and messenger for Christ24:30 Paul was completely misunderstood29:34 Paul’s work at the temple was also misunderstood31:42 Violence and mob mentality32:32 Making choices34:42 Paul addresses rumors37:46 Paul reminds the crowd he had authority to persecute Jews but met Jesus39:50 They desire to scourging of Paul41:39 The fruits of the Spirit42:42 Paul rebukes them 44:47 Paul is sent to Felix and Caesarea 48:58 “Be of good cheer”50:58 Paul speaks for himself in front of Felix53:10 Paul is under house arrest and Festus replaces Felix56:40 Paul appeals his case to Caesar58:52 Paul speaks to Herod Agrippa1:07:14 Paul’s testimony is effective to many 1:09:29 Translation differences in Agrippa’s response1:13:15 End of Part 1–Dr. Scott WoodwardPlease rate and review the podcast.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I'm here with the legendary John by the way.
Hello John.
Hi Hank.
The last few weeks we've been studying the Apostle Paul.
I have personally benefited so much from this study John.
How have the last couple of weeks been for you?
Yeah, I've loved that too.
I mentioned this before but we talk about the desire to be
an instrument in the Lord's hands. And Paul is like a Swiss army knife. He can go anywhere, talk to
anybody. He can talk differently with different groups. He's awesome. And it's fun to watch what he
does and what he says. Yeah. Absolutely right. Joining us today is Dr. Scott Woodward Scott. How can the
church benefit from studying the life of the Apostle Paul? Paul is, I think the epitome of a disciple of Jesus Christ, intrepid, undaunted, like,
knows the Lord's will and is willing to do it at all costs.
I think his example is actually kind of intimidating to me, but inspiring at the same time if
that makes sense.
Yeah.
Scott, we're so happy to have you back on the program.
It's been a couple of years.
John, can you introduce Scott again to everyone?
Yes, we had Scott with us when we were doing
the Doctrine and Covenants,
and we had some really great episodes with Scott.
Scott Woodward graduated with his PhD
in Instructional Psychology and Technology from BYU. He's been teaching professionally in the church educational system for nearly two decades, including seminaries in institutes, BYU religious education, and he's currently a member of BYU Idaho religion faculty. Central. I hope everybody has looked and explored and you could spend hours on that site.
So helpful. And also I want to mention that Scott Woodward and Casey Griffiths have a podcast they
do together called Church History Matters. It's awesome. They attempt to answer the hardest
questions in church history. And you can trust these guys. They're faithful out of
the day. Saints, you'll be edified and enriched and informed by looking at that.
So we're really glad to have you back Scott.
Thanks for joining us.
Thanks John.
That's good to be here with you and Hank.
This is a blast for me.
I gotta just tell everyone,
if you weren't with us and our doctrine covenants here,
if you don't know how to go find this,
you can find it on our website, followhim.co,
followhim.co, and look at doctrine covenants 18 and 19 go look at those two episodes those two part one and part two
They were life changing for me. They really were case got we are in the last chapters of acts today
Acts 22 through 28. I think we're gonna spend our time talking about Paul aren't we?
I think so. I think that's what Luke wants us to do.
That's how he's written the book. So I think we need to do that today. Is Paul the only one mentioned
almost in the... Let me read something from the manual, I'll turn it over to you. The
Come Fall Me manual says this, When we are on the Lord's errand, President Thomas S.
Monson promised, we are entitled to the Lord's help. We are not entitled, however, to a smooth
road and an endless stream of success. For proof of entitled, however, to a smooth road and an endless
stream of success. For proof of this, we need to look no further than Paul the Apostle.
His errand from the Savior was to bear my name before the Gentiles and kings and children
visual. In these chapters, we see Paul fulfilling this errand, but facing great opposition, chains
and prisonment, physical abuse, shipwreck, and even a snake attack. But we also see that Jesus stood by him and said, be of good cheer.
But with that, let's turn it over to you, Scott.
Do you want to give us a little background before we jump in?
The section that we're looking at today, chapters 22 through 28,
fit in the third part of a three-part kind of division of the Book of Acts.
And this division is actually right in the very first chapter of Acts.
If you kind of think about Acts as a three-part structure outlined in verse 8 of chapter 1.
This is Jesus right before he ascends. He says to his apostles the following. He says, I'm quoting now, Acts 1-8,
but ye shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost has come upon you and ye shall be witnesses unto
me, one, both in Jerusalem, two, in Al Judeia and in Samaria, three, unto the uttermost part of the
earth. So it's a nice way to think about the book of Acts because if you look at this first part where
he says in Jerusalem, that's Acts chapter one through seven. Then he says in all Judea and Samaria,
that's Acts chapter eight and nine.
And then he says unto all the world,
that's chapters 10 through 28,
all the way to the end.
So really what Luke is trying to show us here,
Luke is the author here of both Acts and the book of Luke traditionally.
And so Luke is actually doing a two-part thing here.
And he wants to show us eventually
how the gospel is going to go out to all the world. That's the big announcement, right? This is not
just an Old Testament people thing anymore. This isn't just for the bloodlines of Israel anymore.
This is for everybody. And the Apostle Paul is going to play the major role in that third part to take this to all the world.
Now, I've heard it said before that Jesus is the message and Paul is the messenger.
It's almost how that Luke set it up. Here's the message. Here's the messenger. He's going to take it to all the world.
I like that. That's a fantastic way of saying it. There's so many growing pains that are happening during the Book of Acts that Luke is showing us. And the Apostle Paul's letters are just dripping with these growing,
it's the growing pains of transitioning from the old covenant to the new covenant.
And the old covenant maybe needs a little clarification.
This is what happens with Israel, right?
In Exodus 24, when the House of Israel were emancipated from
Redeem from Egypt we come down to Mount Sinai and at Mount Sinai the Lord says I brought you here because I want you to become my covenant people and here would be the terms and conditions and he lays out the 10 commandments along with some other judgments and he says
what do you think and
Moses actually approaches the people and says are you willing to do this and they say yes?
And he says well, let's show it through the blood of the covenant.
That's what he calls it.
The blood of the covenant, they cut some oxen,
they drain the blood, half the blood goes on the altar,
representing God, half the blood goes on the people,
representing themselves, and the blood kind of binds them to God.
And through the blood of the covenant,
they are now God's covenant people.
And that's referred to from the New Testament perspective as the old covenant.
The old covenant God made with his people.
It wasn't the old covenant then.
They weren't like, oh, I'm glad you're here.
It was just the covenant.
Exactly.
No, it was just, we are God's covenant people.
Who was God's covenant people?
It was the house of Israel.
It was the seed of Abraham who had been promised or Abraham had been promised that God would
raise up a nation from his seed. And through that nation, he would bless all the nations of Abraham who had been promised. Abraham had been promised that God would raise up a nation from his seed and through that
nation he would bless all the nations of the earth.
It's a very slow centuries, millennia, long process for God to eventually fulfill that
promise.
And the whole message kind of gets murky in the middle about exactly what are we supposed
to do?
How are we supposed to bless all the nations?
But then along comes this Israelite name Jesus, who embodies all of Israel,
who is actually the son of David, the David King,
fulfilling part of the Davidic covenant
that Messiah, the anointed one,
would come through David's line
and that he would rule over the house of Israel.
And somehow, he would rule over the whole world.
In the middle of all of that, when Jesus comes,
or a new Testament author is trying to show us this transition from old covenant people to new covenant people, that's where
we get the names, Old Testament, New Testament. And in Luke 22, for instance, when Jesus introduces
what we call the sacrament during the Passover, he says, behold, the blood of the New Covenant
in some translations. In the KJV, I think he says, the blood of the new testament, or this is the new testament in my blood. The only two times that phrase, blood of the covenant
shows up is Exodus 24. And when Jesus is introducing the new covenant at the Passover, essentially
saying, at my death, there's going to be a new arrangement. At my death, what it means to be my
people is going to shift and to change. At my death, and he means to be my people is going to shift and to change.
At my death, and he doesn't explain all this all at once, we have to pick this up over time,
and Paul is going to help us out a lot, but essentially at my death, there's a new blood that's
been shed that's now going to open the way for all mankind, all nations, kindreds, tongues, and
people to come into the family of Israel. So the growing pains in the book of Acts and
letters of Paul that he's trying to work out is what does that look like for a people who've always been God's people, the house of Israel, who are now supposed to open the doors to
Gentiles, other nations to come in. And the book of Acts is showing us these growing pains,
for instance, in Acts 10.
We see the president of the church wrestling with this Peter as he has that groundbreaking impression
in Acts 10 where he says, I finally realized that God is no respecter of persons. But in every nation,
those who work righteousness are accepted of him. That's with Cornelius.
Yeah, Cornelius becomes the very first Gentile to become part of the House of Israel without having to first become a Jew.
This is a season, basically the season of the new covenant is the season of radical inclusion.
And this is such a difficult mental shift for many Jewish Christians to make to invite
the Gentiles into the family of Israel to become heirs of all the promises made to the ancient
covenant fathers.
For some Jewish Christians, that inclusion of Gentiles
into their promises felt like an intrusion
into a place that they should not be.
At the temple precinct, there's like this wall,
like the Gentile wall.
Like no Gentile shall pass this spot.
Gentiles could hang out in the outer court,
but they could not pass like a literal barrier.
And Paul and others are certain, Paul's the best,
but others are trying to say that barrier has been broken and
Jesus is inviting all in because of the shedding of his blood
Many Jewish Christians were trying to get on board with this and others were struggling pretty bad acts 15
dealt with the troubling question of what ought to be expected of a baptized Gentile Okay, let's say the Gentiles can come into the family of Israel
So now what does that mean they need to take on all the
obligations of the law of Moses to be circumsized? They need to start living sure laws?
Yeah, celebrate all the holidays, you don't keep bored and pass over and everything like
Exactly how Jewish does a Gentile convert need to be and that's where they wrestle with back and forth
And if you are a Gentile convert
Does that mean you're kind of a second class citizen in the House of Israel, or are you an equal heir with all? Well, I don't
think we can fully like fathom like how difficult this time period was. We don't have anything quite
like this today. I mean, Christian unity has always been a challenge, but Christian unity was the
greatest challenge the early church faced. How can two very different groups of people become
one? That's part I think of what Paul meant in 1 Corinthians when he says that Christ gospel is
a stumbling block to Jews and its foolishness to Gentiles and how we're going to get that message
in both hearts and help bring those people together. So Saul was called to be the Lord's
Apostle to the Gentile specifically to try to help
bridge this gap and heal that breach. Awesome. What a great summary. John, what do you got?
What, John, on me, reading this, just I know that in the ancient world everybody had kind of their own
gods in their country and their community, in their region, and how interesting it would be for Paul to say, well actually the God of Israel
is the God of the whole earth and trying to send that message out. I know you've got all your gods.
I mean going into Greece and seeing the pantheon of gods they have there and for Paul they have to
go and actually Israel's God is God and it reminds me of the closing line in the Ten Commandments
when Ramsey sits down with the Fraterian says,
Moses is God is God.
It's this b-b-b-b-b-b moment.
And here's Paul saying, God of Israel is the God of the whole earth.
And now, like you said beautifully,
has to go to the Gentiles to the whole world now.
This is the beginning of missionary work as we know it.
Like there was no such thing as like going out
and trying to convert people.
Like that wasn't even a thing until the season
of the New Covenant.
You think about like Matthew chapter 10,
Jesus calls his 12 apostles and then he commissions them
to go out to the house of Israel.
He says go out to the last sheep of the house of Israel,
but unto the Gentiles, yeah, do not go,
do not go there, right?
Now what happens after his resurrection?
Matthew 28, he says, now go to the whole world.
What has changed?
What has changed between Matthew 10 and Matthew 28?
The shedding of Jesus' blood, that's what changed.
There's a new blood of a new covenant, that's it.
And now he's wanting to invite everybody in,
and Paul's gonna deal with this over and over again
in his letter, his Galatians, Ephesians, Ephesians, he talks about Jesus through everybody in, and Paul is gonna deal with this over and over again in his letters, Galatians Ephesians Ephesians,
he talks about Jesus through his death,
breaking the barrier, the wall of partition
between Jews and Gentiles.
So we can all become fellow citizens
in the family of God, not strangers and foreigners.
God's trying to help us become one family.
And this is the way, the surprising shocking way
that God had always planned all along
that through Abraham's
seed, especially Jesus, all the nations of the earth will be blessed. So Paul is trying to help
everybody see that, both Jews and Gentiles, that this is what God meant all along and it's up to us
to now participate in that and work out the details. Yeah, that's the greatest part. Here's what
you're going to do. You work out the details and that's what that's where we get a lot of these letters working out the details.
Can we add to that the symbol of the veil of the temple being rent? Kind of, you talked
about that. This is also a symbol of, okay, now everyone.
Yeah, it's not just one high priest once a year who can come into the Holy of Holies.
Now, anybody can approach the throne of God
boldly as the author of Hebrews will say, right? You can now boldly approach the throne of God. Man and women Jews and Gentiles, like this is so radically inclusive, right? This is not
like it's ever been done before. Nobody sought coming quite this way. Isaiah prophesied about
the light of God going out to the Gentiles, Israel,
their light blessing the Gentiles,
but nobody thought that it was gonna happen
quite like this.
And so that's where they're navigating
in the first century of these apostles.
Paul at the forefront.
Love that phrase, radical inclusion.
That's a great phrase.
Keep going.
From what I've read,
Paul is going through the known world. He is covering some serious ground.
That's right. Yeah, between Acts 13 and Acts 21 through those chapters, like Paul goes on three
separate journeys. You can go in your scripture maps, you can see their color coded, there's some
pictures, and you can see it goes on three different journeys with various companions on land and see
and you can see it goes on three different journeys with various companions on land and sea
spanning several years. I think he travels over 10,000 miles when you add those all up and these aren't this isn't this isn't air miles walking and yeah foot miles and ship miles and he establishes at
least 14 different Christian communities by preaching what he sometimes called the kingdom of God. That's what he called his message the kingdom of God
That's what he's announcing his typical pattern was always to go into a city first into the Jewish synagogue
To announce to his fellow Jews that the good news that the Messianic King that was promised in the Hebrew Bible was Jesus of Nazareth
They could always like back it up with powerful historical,
theological and scriptural arguments.
He said, he didn't come to supplant the Jewish hopes,
this Jesus of Nazareth fulfilled them.
He fulfilled the promises.
And then once he had either converted
or offended as many Jews as possible,
he would then switch his audience to be the Gentiles,
and he would proclaim to them the good news
that the one true God, like you were talking about John, the one true God who happens to be the Gentiles, and he would proclaim to them the good news that the one true
God, like you were talking about John, the one true God who happens to be the God of Israel,
had invited them to repent and join the kingdom of God and join his people. Now this message was
always inevitably by some people misunderstood either Jews seeing it as scandalous blasphemy
on the one hand or like a social threat blasphemy on the one hand,
or a social threat to Gentiles on the other hand,
because the very social stability of those people
was built, and talking about the Roman culture,
was built on the worship of various Roman gods
to say there's only one true God
and that their gods were not that true God
was socially destabilized.
Yeah, it could be bad for business.
This is bad for business.
Not to mention the claiming that a crucified man was risen from the dead as now king of
the world.
That didn't always go over very well in Caesar's empire.
So sometimes they beat him, sometimes they stoned him, sometimes they imprisoned them,
sometimes they just ran him out of town, different strokes for different folks.
But that's how they reacted to Paul. Either they loved him or they hated him.
Is that where we pick up then, Scott, in Acts 22? Is he towards the end of his life here?
Yeah. So now we're at the end of the third journey. So in Acts chapter 20, at the end
of his third journey, he has this almost out of the blue insight verse 22,
where he just starts to announce, he says, I now go bound in the spirit unto Jerusalem,
not knowing the things that should befall me there. And it doesn't sound good, it doesn't
bode well, but he says the spirit is urging him to go there. He had actually been collecting money
from the various branches of the Gentiles to
help meet the needs of some of their Jewish brothers and sisters back in Jerusalem. By
the way, that's another angle. He's trying to foster unity between these two groups. He's
raising money among the Gentiles to help some of the poor or afflicted in Jerusalem. So,
maybe his original plan was to let somebody else carry the money and go back to Jerusalem,
because when he starts to announce that he's going to take the money, his friends start to flip out.
They're shocked and they say, you can't do that.
You can't go.
I even say in verse 4 of chapter 21, Luke writes that they said to Paul through the spirit
that he should not go up to Jerusalem.
So he's saying the spirits tell me to go Jerusalem.
They're saying the spirits tell me he shouldn't go to Jerusalem, right?
Interesting, conflicting interpretations here.
And then they don't want him to go because it's dangerous for him.
It's dangerous for him.
Yeah, his reputation has preceded him.
And we'll see, actually, when he ends up showing up in Jerusalem,
let's go over to chapter 21.
He's kind of setting up today's block.
In chapter 21, when he shows up to Jerusalem,
let's go over to verse 17.
Maybe I'll read a little bit here.
He says this, this is Luke recording. He says, and when we, we think the we means Luke was with them.
And when we were come to Jerusalem, the brethren received us gladly.
And the day following Paul went in with us unto James, and all the others were present.
James seems to be kind of the presiding authority in Jerusalem.
And when he, Paul had saluted them,
he declared particularly what things God had
had wrought among the Gentiles by his ministry,
kind of his mission report, his ministry report here.
And might take a while.
This is gonna take a while, yeah.
Yeah, and when they heard it,
they glorified the Lord and said unto him,
wow, thou seeest, brother,
how many thousands of Jews there are, which believe?
And they are all zealous of the law, meaning that's awesome what's been happening among the Gentiles.
You probably noticed as you've come back to Jerusalem, there are a ton of Jews. There are a lot of Jews that
believe Jewish Christians. But that last line is actually a warning shot to Paul. He says, they are all zealous of the law.
is actually a warning shot to Paul. He says, they are all zealous of the law.
Zealous of the law. This idea means that they have righteous indignation for God's honor
for the unbreakable law of Moses. And there's been rumors, verse 21 says, they are informed of the
okay. This is why it was dangerous for Paul to come back to Jerusalem. They are informed of the
that thou teachest all the Jews which are are among the Gentiles, to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise their
children, neither to walk after the customs. So this, Paul's in the doghouse, there's been rumors
about him, they've been spreading about him by fellow believers who just try to capture this. These
are Jewish Christians.
These are people who've accepted Jesus as their Messiah
and they've got it out for Paul
because apparently according to the rumor mill,
he's been teaching people to forsake Moses.
When he's out there teaching Jews and the synagogues
among the Gentiles, out in Ephesus,
or out in Corinth or whatever,
he's basically telling him,
you don't have to take Moses seriously. Now, is that accurate? No, that's not accurate. That's not what he's been teaching them.
But that's the that's the skull, but that's what's made it back to Jerusalem and they're ticked.
If they find him, they want to do him harm. Now, is there a kernel of truth here that he is saying
the law of Moses is not as important as the new law now. That
does seem to be a little bit of its message or is that not been at anything he's taught.
Well, he's saying something like this if I could encapsulate, he's saying that the law was useful
as a schoolmaster, like he says in the Galatians, that it was a schoolmaster to prepare us for Messiah
to come. The Davidic Son has come.
The true seed of Abraham has come.
And so we ought to rejoice.
He's not destroying the law of Moses.
He fulfilled it.
He is the hope of Israel.
He is everything we've been wanting and everything that has come before has been good.
Everything that's come before has been right.
It's been true.
It's been from God.
And now that Messiah has come, there is a new covenant.
There is a new covenant with his people.
And it looks different.
Yeah, that was a hard pill to swallow.
And you can see how misunderstanding crept in right away.
And basically it gets to the point where people are saying,
he wants to destroy the Jewish way of life.
Like Paul is the enemy.
And he's successful.
He's a successful missionary. He's having an impact.
Incredibly.
I'd like to maybe just pause here for a sec to think about this.
What does it mean to be a servant of Christ and a messenger of Christ?
As we see with Paul, he was a victim of false assumptions.
He's a victim of false assumptions.
As Jesus' disciples, I think we can expect that
to some degree or another, right?
When some people learn that your convictions about Jesus
and his teachings disagree with something that they hold dear
or conflicts with a lifestyle that they're committed to,
as we see here, the Jewish way of living,
that's when the defensive false assumptions come rushing in.
It's a human tendency, we all do it.
It's a psychological,. We all do it.
It's a psychological, self-defense tactic to tell ourselves horrible stories about people
we disagree with and who threaten our status quo and to ascribe to them the worst possible
motives.
This is what the Jewish believers are doing in Jerusalem.
We would call them church members.
It wasn't quite the way it set up today, but these are church members who have it out
for an apostle who's teaching stuff
They disagree with that can we just let that sink in for a second?
It's actually dangerous for them. They almost kill him or you know about to get to those verses, but they were angry with him
What do you guys want to say about that this idea that
As Jesus disciples
misunderstanding about our motives about our
Kind of where we're coming from. It's almost bound to happen.
If you experience that, is that something you feel is an accurate way of talking about followers of Christ?
This kind of reminds me of the Book of Mormon.
When Jesus comes and tells them that the Lord Moses is fulfilled,
says they were astonished.
Now, the servant in the mount, they were astonished because of his doctor.
He taught with authority from God, not from the scribes. But in the Book of Mormon, they're astonished because of his doctor. He taught with authority from God, not from the scribes,
but in the book of Mormon they're astonished because, why, what's he doing with a lot of Moses?
And it's kind of that same shift of, whoa, so everything we've thought before, this is a whole new
system. How do we do that? And he had to keep telling him, I am, he who delivered the lie and fulfilling
the law, not destroying it. And the prophets, those that haven't happened will yet happen.
And it's interesting to see the same kind of thing.
I think in the new world, do you see that?
Exactly.
Yeah, even Jesus was misunderstood.
And I think it was, is it 35, 15?
He says, I perceive that you're still wondering what I meant when I said all old things,
have been fulfilled and all things that become new.
This is his reference to the new covenant.
I perceive that you didn't understand when I said that back in chapter 12.
Let me expound a little bit on that.
It's hard as a messenger of God, as a servant, anyone who has ever tried it.
It's hard to not be misunderstood to try to teach the truth so clearly that you're not misunderstood, but also compassionately, so people know you're
not trying to wreck things that they hold dear. Well said. Reminds me of the prophet Joseph Smith.
If you study his life, you know he's a great good man, but still today completely misunderstood
by the world and sometimes purposely misunderstood. I know what you're saying
But I'm going to twist your words and miss something else
Yeah, Paul's trying to destroy our whole Jewish way of life. Yeah, that's kind of how it comes out
Like he is the worst and we you know
Maybe the brooch is sensitive topic. We see this pretty commonly the day surrounding like LGBT issues modern apostles and
pretty commonly today surrounding like LGBT issues, modern apostles and Jesus' followers today often just take it right in the teeth when it comes to LGBT issues.
You hold up man, woman, marriage as the only God ordained way of marriage.
However humbly you approach it however thoughtfully, gently and sincerely and watch out, right?
Some are not going to be able to resist herling terms
like homophobic or hateful bigot or anti-love or whatever. Even if you're an apostle, nobody
is exempt from the hate machine here. Assumptions will be made and accusations will be leveled.
On the other hand, though, and I also notice it the other way that as efforts are made
by Christ's followers, including His apostles today. Sometimes accusations come from the other direction within the church about caving under pressure, stuff like
that, right? We've just got to learn to like slow down and challenge our initial assumptions
about each other, listen to each other and love, right? The point I'm making here though
is just as a follower of Jesus, prepare to be misunderstood, prepared to be misrepresented. It's bound to happen.
So prepare to forgive a lot.
You're going to have a lot of opportunity to forgive.
Paul knew that firsthand.
Jesus will say, blessed are those who are persecuted for my name's sake.
Like, it's going to happen.
It's part of the be attitudes, not even eloquent, powerful Paul.
It was such a good speaker and writer and explainer, and not even he could
avoid being misunderstood with his words.
So I like what you've taught us here, Scott, and I noticed my thoughts directly going to,
yes, I am misunderstood sometimes. Yes, my words are deliberately twisted, but then as
I stopped for a second, you said, stop. And probably the better lesson is, when do I do that to others?
When do I deliberately misunderstand
or when do I jump to conclusion and fault victim to,
what do they say?
They are informed of the, like, who is informing?
Where did I get the message?
Maybe the message is wrong.
Maybe what I've heard isn't the real story.
One of my good friends, Lynn Boller, who who served in lots of church leadership, I've asked him,
you know, what does he learn?
And he said, I've learned there's always two sides to every story.
You'll hear one piece of it and then you'll make a judgment on it.
This is what's happening.
And then you'll find out that the situation is a lot more complicated and nuanced than what
you thought. Yeah. Instead of attacking Paul, maybe the thing is to lot more complicated and nuanced than what you thought.
Yeah, instead of attacking Paul, maybe the thing is to go talk to Paul. The Paul, here's what I've heard to help me brother and help clarify. I have this
resist acure. Are you trying to destroy the Jewish way of life? I heard it recently with
President Oaks just gave a talk about dating and I gave some tips about dating, kind of a pretty innocuous bit of counsel
he's given before and people attacked him online. I was trying to encourage, I don't know,
1950s type marriage and dating type of standards or some of these old fashion and just kind of a
win after him, but I thought, I don't know if you actually hurt the talk, maybe go back and listen
to the talk. I just see it happening with the apostles today.
And of course it hurts,
but at also the same time,
it's like, well, that's par for the course.
That's what happens.
Wasn't that Jesus himself, the community discourse, Matthew 18,
if thy brother shall trespass against thee,
go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone.
So often when someone offends us, we talk to
everyone except that person, right? We talk to every other person there is, but the Lord is saying,
go talk to them. And he says, and if he will hear the meaning, if I think if you come to an
understanding, you've gained a brother. In this story, that's not what they do. That's what you should do, but that's not what they did.
They're followers of Jesus sort of, right?
That's how we all kind of are. We're followers of Jesus sort of. We sometimes mess this up.
We don't always do what Jesus just said there to go to the person between them and us alone.
And in this case, the Jerusalem Apostles saw the writing on the wall.
They knew it was gonna happen. They were trying to stop this from happening.
So they actually give them really good advice. They say, how about this? writing on the wall. They knew it was going to happen. They were trying to stop this from happening. So actually, given really good advice, they say, how about this,
go to the temple? What's more Jewish than the temple? Shave your head as a vow. The vow they would
take in Numbers chapter 6 of very love Moses vow. Take these four Jews with you, pay for them for
their passage into the temple and pay all the things that need to be paid to do that. Go in there, pray, meditate.
Do like the most Jewish stuff.
That's like so love mosa-se.
And let's see cross our fingers if that works.
Well, turn the page and that doesn't work.
Seven days of that we're going on
of this days of purification.
It's kind of a way you could like dedicate
and devote yourself to God, like a more deep kind of
a temporary form of purification, it's kind of a way you could like dedicate and devote yourself to God like a more deep kind of a temporary form of purification.
And when the seven days were almost ended, verse 27 says, the Jews, which were of Asia, when they saw him in the temple,
stirred up all the people and laid hands on him crying out,
Men of Israel, men of Israel, help, this is the man that teaches all men everywhere against the people,
and the law and this place, the temple. Like he's in the temple worshiping.
Like, here's the guy that's against the temple.
Here's the guy.
Look at, he also brought four Greeks also into the temple and polluted his holy place.
He didn't bring four Greeks.
Those were all straight up Jewish guys, but there they go, twisting, distorting to fit their message.
All the city, verse 30 was moved and the people ran together. They took
Paul. They drew him out of the temple and forth with the doors were shut. And as they went about to
kill him, then the chief captain of the Romans come out and they break it up and they get soldiers
to surround him and they start taking them up the stairs and bind them in chains to see what he
had done. But holy smokes, how about that reaction?
That is intense from believers.
Believers who foamed into this about,
and that seems like other Jews are getting involved too,
that maybe aren't believers, right?
Jews which were of Asia and kind of everyone in the area,
like this guy, he's defiling the temple,
he's defiling our way of life,
it's just not accurate.
They don't have their facts right. So it's really unfortunate.
Anyway, human tendency that we've got to fight against that.
Yeah, and the mob mentality there is real.
Where was Paul when it said they all came together
and most of them didn't even know why they were?
Oh, in Ephesus, yeah.
Some said this and some said that
and some didn't even know why they were there.
He said, yeah, let's go chant something.
This is, we awesome.
Right.
Yeah, grab him.
Get him.
What did you do?
I don't know, but he must be a bad guy.
I don't know.
If he wasn't a bad guy, why do people be saying things about it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Therefore, I'm seeing this chapter in a new light here, Scott, with this, they've got their
story wrong.
Usually, we act angrierly or violently against people when we believe the false stories that
we tell ourselves about them.
Usually the truth is much softer.
Usually the truth will bring about compassion, not this kind of reaction.
It's just a human thing.
We've got to work on that.
All of us do.
I feel it myself.
I got to check myself.
Is that the real story, though?
I got to go deeper into this.
What's your source? That's deeper into this like what's your source
Sometimes that's a good question. What's your source on that like let me know where you're getting this information
From what I've heard of Paul
He doesn't seem like the kind of guy that wants to destroy the Jewish way of life
But tell me more about like where are you getting that information? Yeah
Reminds me the book of Mormon the book of Mormons one of the only books you can have a very strong opinion about without having read it. Without reading, right? You can hate that book and never have read it, never have looked into it actually to see
what it says.
There was an article in the church news about the new for the strength of youth, a guide
for making choices.
You know, that you love that it's the only one of all that have ever been published of
the For the Strength of Youth pamphlets that has a subtitle, a guide for making choices.
It's like, you're gonna make this choice.
You're gonna hear him and you're gonna let God prevail,
but there was an article in the church news
about when he was like, hey, dad, it now says tattoos are okay.
And dad's like, who said that?
A president whooped or a president,
did you actually read that talk?
And he said, I knew he hadn't,
because that was a Saturday session.
We weren't there or something. But then you read the talk. Oh, you're taking a false assumption
to go away too far. What did he actually say? The idea was now go read the whole thing. I just
love the emphasis of President Nelson. We all have to learn to hear him and then let God prevail.
And that takes like you said, Scott,
there's a little bit of patience
and stepping back and saying, wait a minute,
let me make sure I understand
what's really happening here from the best sources.
And then let me get on my knees.
And usually there's a softening that happens
when we do that.
Yeah, almost always for me that happens.
There's that softening, yes.
I don't know if you guys have ever heard of anyone stereotyping and labeling
people who don't believe what they believe politically.
It used to happen.
I've never heard that.
Yeah, never.
Used to happen.
Elder Oaks talked about that too, right?
Yeah.
And the search over and over and over, President Hinckley said, we must work harder to build
a mutual respect and attitude of four parents with tolerance, one for another, regardless
of the doctrines and philosophies which we may espouse.
Concerning these you and I may disagree, but we can do so with respect and civility.
That would have been a softening there, That would have happened in Acts 21. Oh,
yeah, which is even part of our block yet. Imagine if they were to say, Hey, Paul, we heard
this. Can you clarify just imagine how different that is? Hey, Paul, we heard this, this, this,
this. What did you actually say? And how different that would be? Exactly. All of this is backstory
to where we want to go today.
Sorry, this is a really long backstory,
but X22 through 28 is our block.
But what's interesting is X22 starts out with a speech.
Starts out, men, brethren and fathers,
here, ye, my defense, which I now make in the,
you need chapter 21 to even know what's going on.
You guys go back a few verses there in the end of chapter 21.
All I actually ask permission of the Roman guard
He says can I speak to these people?
The Roman guard surprised that he can speak like perfect intelligent Greek and he's like oh speak Greek sure
And then by the way verse 38 just for fun
He's like aren't you like Egyptian guy that like led like a an uproar and led four thousand men who were murderers out of the like the Roman guards
Got a weird story about he's like are you that guy and he's like no I'm not that guy. Verse 39 he's like no I'm a
Jew of Tarsus from Slyssia. What the heck like what are people saying about Paul you know like he
so misunderstood some align yeah Joseph Smith is probably a good equivalent to this or our close
right the stories people say about Joseph but the guard guard says, okay, go ahead. Yeah, you can talk to these people.
So he turns and he speaks to them in perfect, eramaic. And the people are stunned that he can speak
eramaic quite down. Let's listen to this guy as verse two of chapter 22. When they heard that he
spake in the Hebrew tongue to them, they kept the more silence. And then he tries to do what we've
been talking about is trying to help them understand his perspective, trying to understand where he's coming from.
There's clearly misunderstanding. I'll go kind of quickly. I'll jump through some of these verses. But verse three introduces his background. I'm a Jew, guys. I'm a Jew.
I was actually brought up here. I'm from Tarsus, but I came to this city and I learned at the feet of Gamelio, one of the greatest greatest scripture teachers of the law that there is.
And then he says at the university, he says, I was zealous toward God as ye all are this
day. That word zealous. Again, that's a loaded word. That means he was this willing to defend
like to the death. I don't know if you remember his backstory, but that's what he brings up
verse four is like, I persecuted this way. That's what they call Christianity during this
time. this way. That's what they call Christianity during this time, this way. I prefer the NIV the way. And it capitalizes it too. Before
it was called Christianity, it was called the way in Acts 24, they're going to call it
the way again, instead of that way or this way. That's it. He reviews his story of how
he like persecuted it unto the death, binding and delivering people to prison,
men and women. He says, there's high priest right here in this crowd that can bear me witness,
and all the estate of the elders from whom I also receive letters unto the brethren,
right? I went to Damascus to bring them bound to Jerusalem to be punished. All these weirdos,
all these people, I don't know if we could use the word Jesus freaks. That's come up before,
but Jesus idea like all these Jesus freaks, they're just twisting the law,
twisting the way, twisting, twisting the true meaning
of the law of Moses, right?
Going after this executed criminal, such weirdos.
And this has to stop because they are polluting
the purity of our way of life, of the Jewish way of life.
Yeah, he's almost like he's saying, I was just like you.
In fact, I was really good at this.
Yeah, I probably was better at this than you guys.
Because he's dropped the names,
versus five, he's like, high priest, the elders,
I had official letters to do this.
Like, you guys are kind of this like,
this mob that's just foreign, but like,
I did this like, almost professionally.
Yeah.
Like I was legit at this.
And, and then he said,
the only thing that changed, the thing that changed for me was I
actually met Jesus. And this is one of the accounts where so he has
three times in the book of Acts, that the story of Paul's conversion is
told, the first is told by Luke and Acts chapter 9, the next two are
told by Paul personally, we get it straight from his mouth here in
22, he talks in verse seven about falling to the ground, the next two are told by Paul personally. We get it straight from his mouth here in 22.
He talks in verse 7 about falling to the ground. The question, the piercing question, Saul,
Saul, why persecute us down me? Who art thou, Lord? He says, I'm Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou
persecute? That you're deliberately trying to persecute my way. And they, that there with me,
saw the light, they were afraid, they didn't hear the voice, but I asked what should I do?
He said, get up, go to Damascus, and you'll know what to do when you get there.
Talks about Ananias.
Anyway, the whole story, he tells the story again, and he says, that's what changed for
me.
And the people were still listening.
They're not yelling anything at him during this time.
He said, I persecuted this way because I didn't understand.
I misunderstood.
I had some false assumptions about the Jesus way.
And when I met Jesus personally, that changed everything for me.
But then here's the problem.
Go down to verse 21.
And he, Jesus, said unto me, depart, for I will send the far hints unto the Gentiles.
Okay.
As soon as he says the G word, look at the next verse,
and they gave him audience unto this word. They were listening to that word. Once he said Gentiles,
they then lifted up their voices and said, Oh, way with such a fellow from the earth for it is not
fit that he should live. I mean, come on, we could disagree with each other, but we really have to.
And he doesn't even say anything about it. He's just the Lord told me to go among the Gentile.
That's it.
So all the stories are true.
So everything we've heard about is true.
Yeah, they just upload all those assumptions
and away with this fellow.
They even cry out verse 23.
They start ripping their clothes,
throw dust into the air,
and all these Jewish forms of mourning or exasperation.
And the guards like, okay, we're done here.
Takes them into the castle. They say, let's find out the truth about this guy
by scourging him.
We're gonna, that's what they would do back
and they beat the truth out of people.
They felt like it wasn't authentic
unless you were bleeding.
That's as odd to us as it was normal to them.
We had Dr. Jack Welch with us and he said,
that's how they knew if someone was telling the truth.
If they tell to something, then they beat him
and they held to their story. Okay.
Oh, it's the worst.
It's hard days to live in. Yeah. Yeah. So as they tie him up, they're ready to
congratulate him. He just asked a little question. This is one of the aces he had up his
sleeve. He says, Oh, by the way, is it, is it lawful for you to scourge a man that's a
Roman? I love this. Uncondemned.
Yeah. And then I'm like, oh shoot, right?
He dropped the Roman citizen card.
The centurion.
Then he goes and consults with the centurion.
He's like, did you know this guy's a Roman?
And he's like, no, what?
Yeah, they come back and I says, is that true?
He says, it is.
And they had ways of knowing back then they had this thing
called a, he was called a diploma, actually. A little brass thing that showed that you were a citizen of Rome.
And I don't know if you had that on his person at somewhere if he just kind of pulled it
out from underneath this tunic or whatever, but they believed him to the point where they
said, well, we're going to do this a different way then.
Tomorrow, we're going to assemble the council and the leaders of the Jews, the Sanhedrin,
and we'll let them examine you concerning this matter.
And so he avoided the flogging right there.
How many times has he kind of repeated this story of this is what happened to me?
Three times in the book of Acts, ones by Luke and then the other two, yeah,
thereby by Paul himself?
I love it because it's kind of this is how I got to R.A.M.
and I love verse 15, that'll show up because he's witness
and the all men of what thou hast.
I love these words.
It's not just what thou hast felt,
what thou hast seen and heard.
I was just over here looking at all the book
of Mormon references for the missionaries talking about.
It's not what they feel,
but what they have seen and heard
and offering kind of evidences of the gospel. So I like that. I did. It's not just our feelings. We
have seen and heard things. We've seen the fruits of the gospel in our lives and in the lives
of others. And that's all part of our testimony, along with our feelings.
Scott, so far what I'm hearing is that Paul comes back to Jerusalem. People didn't want him to go back to Jerusalem because they thought it was dangerous for him.
Turns out they were right.
It is dangerous for him.
And this mob takes him and then the Romans grab him.
They find out he's a Roman citizen, so they're like, all right, we'll set up a meeting
for tomorrow with you and the leaders of the Jews.
Did I get the story?
That's right.
And that's where chapter 23 comes.
23 picks up.
Paul stands before them and he announces this verse 1.
He says, men and brethren, I have lived in all good conscience before God until this day.
And he gets punched in the mouth right after saying that.
Like, man, verse 2, right in the mouth.
And he's like, whoa, and then Paul,
he does react a little on this one, first three.
He's like, whoa, God shall smite thee that whited wall
for a sinister doubt a judge me after the law
and command us me to be smitten contrary to the law,
your hypocrite.
So the guy's like, hey, Revileist thou God's high priest
because God's high priest, Ananias,
he's the one that told the guy to hit him in the mouth.
And he's like, oh shoot, I knew not brethren that he was the high priest, because God's high priest, Ananiyaz, he's the one that told the guy to hit him in the mouth and he's like, oh shoot, I wish not,
I knew not, brethren, that he was the high priest
for it is written.
Now shout not speak evil of the ruler of thy people.
I apologize.
Wow.
Blood trickling down his lips.
He's like, sorry about that.
The only says one more thing.
He kind of reads his audience, notice his part,
or fares his part or sages.
Really is.
What he does here is.
He says,
men and brothers in verse six,
I am a Pharisee, which is totally true.
The son of a Pharisee of the hope and resurrection
of the dead, I am called in question.
And because the sageses don't believe in the resurrection,
Luke explains in verse a, they don't believe in angels
or spirits or your spirit becomes like something after you die
But the Pharisees did you know wins a good part of the room
We're not sure what the breakup is what percentages are Pharisee and what's sad to see but immediately all the Pharisees
Come to his side and they're like you know, he's not so bad. We find no evil in this man verse nine
So Paul knew how to work a room. He knew a little bit about party politics here a little bit
But that's actually gonna be a consistent defense. He's going to put
up. He's going to listen. I haven't said anything against the law. I'm only here because
I believe in the hope of the resurrection because I met Jesus. And I know that that's
real. I know the resurrection's true. And that's the only thing people have against me.
He's going to bring that up over and over again at each of his defenses. This is the first
time. He's going to have four defenses. This is his first. And it goes bad that day. The Romans
that are watching that go on, they're going to tear them in pieces. They say, the sad
she doesn't grab them the Pharisees and they're on the rip them in half. And so the Romans
intercede again and I, all right, get back here. Let's just put you in the solitary confinement.
So he is forced away verse 11. That night, the Lord stands by him and says, this is a really
important verse.
Be of good cheer, Paul, for as thou hast testified of me in Jerusalem.
So must thou bear witness also at Rome.
So this is a major moment, a major promise because this is a key point that Luke wants to
tell in his stories.
How does the gospel go to the whole world?
And Rome is at the center of the world. It's not the uttermost edge. It's the centerpiece. And if you go to Rome and from
Rome, let the message go out from there, you could, you could reach the whole known world. I mean,
Spain is about as far west as they understand the known world to be. The Lord's calling him here.
And promising, you're going to go to Rome. It wasn't frightening when he learned the next day
from his little nephew that there was a plot by many Jews who'd sworn they would never eat or drink again
until they killed Paul. He wasn't really bothered by that. He just told his nephew to go tell
the Roman captain who then is able to avert that tragedy. He actually decides to send him
to Cesaria where he's going to be out of the hotbed of Jewish hostility. Go to Cesar Ria. Cesar Ria is kind of the headquarters of Roman rule in that part of the world.
Right on the coast there. Right on the coast. There was a strategic location for that, right?
Why don't you take a second and differentiate Cesar Ria from Cesar Ria of Philippi,
because that before I actually went there, that's what my mind got confused. Because if your name is Caesar, you can name a bunch of cities after yourself.
That's right. So there's a few Caesarias. There's Caesaria that's here just north of Jerusalem,
and then there's a Caesaria way up north, right? The Caesaria Philippi. It's kind of, they're naming
a lot of places after Caesar, kind of like we did in America with Washington. We have Washington
state, we have Washington DC.
You can do it in multiple ways.
Thanks for Washington County, right, Hank?
Washington County, that's right.
This is just that.
So this season area is the season area right by the coast, just north, what, like 30 something
miles or so from Jerusalem.
It's a great strategic location because from there they can receive and dispatch emissaries
from the Roman Empire and they can kind of send news to Rome and they can receive and dispatch emissaries from the Roman Empire
and they can kind of send news to Rome
and they can receive news and that kind of thing.
And so, Cesarie is just a nice port city
that makes sense.
And so that's where the Roman governor at that time is,
and his name is Felix.
Paul is sent off to Felix.
So the Romans are trying to protect Paul, it sounds like.
That's right. Maybe Luke's doing that
in a fun little twist of irony here, right?
That God's people, ancient Israel, now, right, with all that history behind them.
Now, when the true, when the good news comes to them, fully about Jesus Christ,
and not just that some of them haven't received Jesus because they have,
but to see the full effect of where this has all been meaning to go the whole time,
that God actually wants to take this to the whole world.
Like that becomes such a stumbling block to use Paul's word to the Jews.
And so what's God going to do?
He's going to use Gentiles.
He's going to use Gentiles.
He's going to share with the Gentiles more fully.
But in this story, Luke's highlighting some of the positive traits of some of the Gentiles.
Right.
This is sometimes Luke gets accused of overdoing it. I don't think that's true. I think he shows plenty of flaws of the Gentiles, right? This is sometimes loop. It's accused of of overdoing it
I don't think that's true. I think he shows plenty of flaws in the Gentiles
But he doesn't back away if they do a positive thing. I'll let you know. This is one of those things
They are protecting Paul from his own people Paul keeps saying over and over again
I'm a Jew. I was like you like I understand where you're coming from but listen
But they won't listen and so yeah, the Romans are protecting him probably because he's a Roman citizen.
Once he said that, once he used that card, they have been especially careful to protect
him.
He gets to go to a place where Roman citizens would be judged, which is the the seed of
government in that area off to Caesarea.
And so that's why he goes there and meets Felix.
So when he gets to Felix, Felix doesn't quite know what to do with him.
He wants to listen to Paul and he does,
and Paul explains himself to Felix.
Felix doesn't see anything worthy of death.
That's what he says.
Yes, you've done nothing worthy of death.
Scott, before we go any further,
I don't wanna miss just a little opportunity in verse 11.
The Lord stood by him and said,
be of good cheer. I think Paul might look at the Lord and go,
do you, if you've been watching the last few days here, be of good cheer.
Like, you want me to be happy about this? This is all their Nile Max. Well,
he talks about the Savior telling the apostles the night before he dies, be of
good cheer. And he says, because Christ had overcome the world,
the Atomah was about to be accomplished. Death was irrevocably defeated. Satan failed to stop
the unfolding plan of salvation. All mankind would be given through the grace of God immortality.
These were among the resplendent realities and the fundamental facts which justified the 12s being of good cheer,
not their grim temporary circumstances,
the precious perspectives of the gospel give to us this gospel gladness.
It was the same on another occasion the resurrected Jesus stood by the imprisoned Paul,
instructing Paul to be of good cheer.
Once again, the circumstances of the moment included
Paul's having been struck publicly on the mouth,
40 individuals plotting his death and a trial for sedition.
Why therefore should he be of good cheer?
Because Jesus announced, though in bad circumstances,
Paul would soon take the good news of the gospel to Rome.
He then talks about how this happened in
3 Nephites 1, how it happened to the prophet Joseph Smith, and then he says,
What precious perspective we obtain from the gospel of Jesus Christ concerning things that
really matter against which we measure the disappointments of the day. I think what
Elder Maxwell is getting to, he said it a lot more eloquently than I can, but
that these great big truths of the atonement and the resurrection can really put bad days, bad times
in their proper perspective. Wow, great insight. Scott, take us to what happens next in Cesaria.
Great, yeah, so they go to Cesaria where Paul meets Felix, the governor, who's
there. This is the place where Roman citizens ought to be tried. And plenty of Jews follow
from Jerusalem to come up and accuse Paul in front of the Roman governor. They go on waxing
eloquent about what they felt like was the problems. In fact, they even hire a certain orator, verse 1 says of chapter 24 named
Tertulis. Basically, he's a lawyer who informs the governor against Paul, basically summarizes
the case of the Jews against Paul. Paul is then allowed to dispute them. And he says in verse 10,
to cheerfully answer for myself. And he tells his story, basically, refuting each of the points that were brought up.
Then in verse 14 and 15, he says, but this I do confess under the, here's what I'm guilty
of, that after the way, there it is again, John, after the way, which they call heresy,
so worship I, the God of my fathers, believing all things which are written in the law and
in the prophets.
I am guilty of worshiping in the way, which was spoken of in the law and in the prophets. I am guilty of worshiping in the way which was spoken of in the law and the prophets which
has come in fulfillment in Jesus.
He goes on in verse 15 to say, and have hope toward God which they themselves also allow
that there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and the unjust and here
and do I exercise myself to have always a conscience void of a fence toward God and toward men as Felix
listens to him long story short he says listen I don't see any problem with this guy. I don't see anything worthy of death
But he doesn't dare to let him go because he fears the Jews
He basically just keeps Paul there sometimes he brings his wife with him who's Jewish
Paul there. Sometimes he brings his wife with him who was Jewish.
There's 24 tells us her name is Drusilla.
And so he's like, hey, you want to listen to this guy? So Paul would come and teach them about faith in Christ and righteousness and
temperance and judgment.
Sometimes Felix didn't like what he was hearing.
Verse 25 says he would tremble.
And he's like, well, go that way for this time.
When I have a convenience, he's not called for the again.
He doesn't know to these Felix's trap.
Felix is kind of an unprincipled opportunist. He's waiting. We see in verse 26 for Paul to try to bribe him.
He wants Paul to bribe him. He says, if he gives me some money, I'll let him go. But he can't tell
Paul that because that would be illegal. But Paul knows the wink wink wink not not hint hint.
And so Paul stays there verse 27 says, for two years. After two years of being in Felix's palace area,
he basically, his term is over,
and this new guy comes, a new governor
is put in place called Festus, Porsius Festus.
Let me just stop for a second,
I want you to think about that.
That Paul was told back in Jerusalem by Jesus.
Be a good cheer.
I need you to go bear witness of me in Rome. He's like, awesome, right?
Then he goes to Cesarea and nothing happens.
He waits there.
Two years.
Two years.
Like, so what's Paul to do?
What's Paul to do?
I guess wait, trust.
It doesn't see any opportunities yet.
But Festus is going to offer him one.
Festus, this new governor, the new provincial governor
over that area. When Festus comes into power, him one, Festus, this new governor, the new provincial governor over that area.
When Festus comes into power, his first act is to go to Jerusalem because that's kind
of the main group that he's kind of ruling over.
He goes there to kind of see how things are with the Jews.
What's the very first thing the Jews bring up to him?
They're bitter still about Paul.
It's been two years.
They're still upset.
Yeah, they've got a little bee in their bonnet, little burr under their saddle and it's named
Paul.
And they're concerned that Paul's up in Cesaria where they can't really get at him.
So they're asking Festus to bring Paul to Jerusalem.
I think Festus saw the writing on the wall that they probably just wanted to whaylay him
and be done with him.
And so he says, how about this?
How about, what do you guys come up to
Caesar? I want to hear the case. And so now here's Paul is third defense. He's going to now have
the accusation of the Jews against him. And now Festus wants to hear. He goes ahead and defend
himself again. The Jews come up. He defends himself. And Festus responds. And by the way, Luke is
obviously summarizing a ton of material, like looking chapter 25 verse 8, he says, while he answered for himself, quote,
neither against the law of the Jews, neither against the temple, nor yet against Caesar,
have I offended anything at all? Close quote.
That's all Luke tells us that he said, of course, Paul said way more than that,
but right, Luke's just saying, listen, he defended himself kind of in typical fashion.
But Festus willing to do the Jews a pleasure, he said to Paul, will that go up to Jerusalem and there be
judged of these things before me? And Paul said, listen, I stand at Caesar's judgment seat.
He's a Roman citizen, right? He knows his rights where I ought to be judged. To the Jews have I
done no wrong is now very well now, West Festus. For if I be an offender or have committed anything worthy of death,
I refuse not to die, but if there be none of these things where of these accuse me,
no man may deliver me unto them.
You know my rights as a Roman citizen.
So he says, he drops his ultimate trump card.
I appeal unto Caesar.
Ah, shoot, that's kind of like in Pirates of the Caribbean.
You say parlay, Parlay, right?
It's like, ah, dang it.
Now we got to take him to the Captain Barbosa.
This is that memory says, I appeal to Caesar.
So any Roman citizen, apparently, according to the judicial system of the time, could
appeal to Caesar.
Now no one was like, gutsy enough, or rarely where people gutsy enough to do that.
You don't want to waste the Emperor's time.
You don't do that lightly.
But Paul saw the writing on the wall like Festus is flirting with
the idea of sending him back to Jerusalem. Paul says, you know,
my rights as a Roman citizen. So let me just drop that card to
Caesar, I appeal, right? And so Festus says, has that
appealed into Caesar? Well, then unto Caesar shout that
out, go. So things are getting interesting. Now, here's what's
cool is that Paul was promised by the Lord that he would
go to Rome. Nothing's been happening for two years. So Paul invokes parlay and that ensures
that he's going to go where? Rome, the seat of Roman power. So I sometimes want to stop
and think about that, right? When I've been given a promise by God that doesn't seem like it's coming to pass.
There's a few different approaches.
Sometimes the Lord will say in Scripture,
stand still and see the salvation of God.
Other times, He'll say,
why don't you cheerfully do all things that lie in your power to bring about my promises to you,
right? And then stand still. And so I see that's an interesting thing
that Paul seems to be doing here.
He's like, well, maybe this is that ladder kind of a thing.
So I'm gonna appeal to Caesar and that's gonna get me to Rome.
We've got to pray to be wise enough
to discern the difference when it's a,
I need to do this myself or kind of,
I need to act in a way that's gonna help bring about
the Lord's promises versus I need to trust God. I can't force this, right? So we've got to be very wise and discerning.
In this case, politics have been initiative and sure enough that's going to lead him to Rome.
Could have been a prompting too. Would we characterize it as being in prison for two years or just being in Cisarea. Was he in house arrest? He's in house arrest.
He's a... people can come and go. He can kind of walk about. He's not behind bars. Verse 23,
let him have liberty, Festa said, that he should forbid none of his acquaintances to minister or
come into him. So kind of a loose kind of house arrest. He's not allowed to leave,
but he's not behind bars the way you think of imprisonment. Not during this time.
Scott, it does sound like Jesus said you're going to go to Rome. He sits there for two years,
kind of awaiting. Then this opportunity comes up. This could be the chance to go to Rome. So maybe
he sees Jesus not only that as a prophecy, but also as an instruction. When you get the chance to go to Rome. So maybe he sees Jesus not only that as a prophecy, but also as an instruction when you get
the chance to go to Rome.
Take it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In fact, this funny because the very next story, this is where King Agrippa comes to visit
the new governor, Festus, and he's intrigued by Festus' prisoner.
Agrippa is a Jew.
His actual name is Herod Agrippa.
He's from the Herodian dynasty, these Jews.
And so Paul could speak like insider speak to Agrippa.
By the way, this is Agrippa, the second Herod Agrippa,
the second.
This would be great grandson of Herod,
the great temple builder.
The guy, he built Cesarilla,
the very place where he's going.
Yeah, an incredible builder.
Obviously a controversial character as well.
Yeah.
Also the one who in Matthew commands the slaughter
of the innocent spell.
And his uncle, I think a grip as uncle
would have been the herod that Jesus went to
during his trial.
And so they're all connected in the herodian dynasty, right?
So a grip wants to hear Paul and they come in great pomp and
Circumstance he comes with his sister his sister is named
Bernice in verse 13
Bernice yeah, and I love that Festus says in 14
There's a guy left that Felix left me almost like
I got this huge problem that Felix just walked away from. Yeah, that's
it. That's it. And the chief priests and the Jews like they hate this guy. They want me
to bring judgment against him, but I don't really have much to judge. There's not much.
I actually love if you could listen to him with me and he's appealed to Caesar and I don't
know what to tell Caesar when I send him to to him, what are the charges against this guy?
There's some Jews that don't like him?
What do we say?
And so he says, all right, let me hear this guy on the Morrow.
And so on the Morrow.
By the way, it's kind of funny in verse 19,
from a Gentile, non-believing perspective.
If you ask Festus, what does Paul believe?
It's kind of funny to hear non-believers explain what you believe.
Here's how he says, he says, well,
the Jews have certain questions against him of their own superstition
and of one Jesus, which was dead,
whom Paul affirmed to be alive.
Like, that's summon it up right there.
That's Festus' version of Paul's testimony right there.
They had some disagreements and it's pretty much over this guy.
A dead guy who he says is still alive.
But because I doubted of such manner of questions, I asked him whether he would go to Jerusalem,
he appealed to Caesar.
So let's talk.
Let's hear him tomorrow.
So tomorrow under great pomp, 23 says under great with great pomp
grippa and Bernice and turn to the palace of hearing
with all the chief captains and principal men of the city at at Festus' commandment Paul was brought forth out. He comes the stages said
Paul comes out all eyes on him and Festus says king of grippa and all men here present with us
you see this man about whom all the multitude of the Jews have dealt with me, both a Jerusalem and here, crying that he ought not to live
any longer. But when I found that he had committed nothing worthy of death, and that he himself
at the pill to Augustus, Caesar, I've determined to send him, but I don't know what to say.
So King of Gripah, after some examination, could you help me out here? So I know what to say when I send them to Caesar.
So Agrippa says to Paul, chapter 26, you may speak.
This whole chapter is worth going slowly through.
I don't know that we have the time today to do that,
but it's a great scratch.
We'll hit on some highlights.
Paul's just cheerful.
Talk about Be of Good cheer.
Look at verse two.
I think myself happy King Agrippa,
because I shall answer for myself this day before the touching all the things where I'm accused
of the Jews, especially because I know the to be an expert in all customs and questions,
which are among the Jews. Wherefore I beseech thee to hear me patiently. Agrippa is a
Jew. And so Paul is like, finally, I get to explain this to a Jew, not to Felix, not
to Festus, like their Romans.
You'll understand me, the grippa.
When I say, what I'm about to tell you?
And then he tells this life story again.
This is similar back to chapter 22, but I'm from my own nation, Jerusalem.
I'm known of all the Jews.
Those who know me would testify that I came from the straightest strict of our religion.
I lived a Pharisee.
Notice that Paul is still calling Judaism, as we would say today, he's calling that his religion. This is still my
religion. This is just a certain sect of Judaism that a lot of people were having problems with,
but he still considers himself a Jew. He says, and now I stand and am judged for the hope of the
promise made of God unto our fathers unto whom promise our 12 tribes instantly serving God day and night,
hope to come, for which hope, say, King Agrippa, I am accused of the Jews. What hope he's talking
about? He says in verse 8, why should it be thought of thing incredible with you that God should
raise the dead? So Agrippa is a Jew and apparently the more popular Jewish opinion is that
resurrection is a reality. Sadious, he's done believe it, but they're a small
group compared to the group that believes in resurrection. And so he's appealing to that within a
grip. And he tells about persecution, verse 9, 10, 11, that he was punishing this group of
people following Jesus, right, who's this disruptor, this disturbor, this dead man. But then, verse 13, at midday, O King, I saw in the way a light from heaven above the brightness of
the sun shining round about me and them which journeyed with me. And when we were all fallen to the
earth, I heard a voice speaking unto me and saying, in Hebrew, Saul, Saul, why persecute us down me?
It's hard for thee to kick against the pricks.
This idea of oxes, right, they had these little sharp shards
that were sticking out of the down by the wheels.
And if the oxes kicked, to try to buck,
those goads would prick them in the,
in other words, Paul, you're going the wrong direction,
you're going the wrong way, man.
You think you're doing the right thing,
you're going the wrong way, you're kicking against wrong way, man. You think you're doing the right thing, you're going the wrong way.
You're kicking against the pricks and it's only going to hurt.
And I said, who art thou Lord?
And he said, I'm Jesus whom thou persecute us rise and stand upon thy feet.
I have appeared unto thee for this purpose.
This is actually the best explanation of what Jesus said to him.
He gives a little more here.
I like to compare Paul's different accounts to like Joseph Smith's different accounts
of the first vision, whereas there's little little details that he gives
that are different depending on his audience, depending on the context, and this context,
he's got a Jew who is listening and is giving him full audience. Like, tell me everything, Paul,
he does. And here's what Jesus said to me, verse 16, I have appeared on to thee for this purpose,
to make the minister and a witness, both
of these things which thou hast seen and of those things in which I will appear unto thee,
delivering thee from the people and from the Gentiles unto whom now I send thee.
Why would he send them to the Gentiles?
Here's the best answer verse 18, to open their eyes.
Jesus wants the Gentiles to have their eyes open and to turn them from darkness to light.
That's second reason, third reason. And from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins.
Forgiveness of sins is possible for Gentiles. You know, that would do for them if they receive forgiveness of sins, fourth reason. And inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me. Whoa, inheritance, inheriting the promises made to Israel.
Paul, I want you to go out and declare repentance to the Gentiles, turn them from darkness to light,
from Satan to God so they could be forgiven of their sins and become heirs of all the promises.
All the promises made to those who are sanctified by faith
that is in me. Wherefore, King Agrippa, I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision, but I
showed first unto them of Damascus at Jerusalem throughout all the coast of Judea, then to the Gentiles
that they should repent and turn to God and do works meet for repentance. For these causes, the Jews
caught me in the temple and they went about to kill me.
Having there for obtained help of God, I continue on to this day witnessing both the small and great
saying none other things than those which the prophets and Moses did say should come, which is
that Christ would suffer, that he would be the first that should rise from the dead, and that he
would show light unto the people into the Gentilesiles. He's summarizing a great deliverable testament content there, right?
Again, his audience, Paul judges his audience
worthy of these details, right?
That he will get it.
A gripper will understand what I'm saying.
This is quite a testimony.
He's bearing here and he's giving a lot of details.
It sounds like maybe he sees in the face of the audience,
at least some people in the audience that,
there, this is clicking with them.
I think so.
But it's funny though, first 23,
after he like explains exactly what the Old Testament
prophecy said, he's like waxing really eloquent.
You can kind of see people are kind of spellbound,
spellbound by what he's saying.
You know those moments when some is just giving a great talk.
You just kind of lean in and you're like,
oh, and then all of a sudden,
festus breaks the spell in verse 24. And he yells as loud as he can. The Greek here says,
as loud as he can. He says, Paul, thou art beside thyself, much learning,
duff make thee, man. Have you lost your mind? You're crazy, right? Your education is,
you've taken one too many hits in the head with a book I love how you react. He's like I'm not crazy
That's Paul's the fence. I'm not crazy most noble Festus
I speak forth the words of truth and soberness and they looks at the king and he says king you know of these things
You know what I'm talking about and persuaded that none of these things are hidden from you
For this thing was not done in a corner
And then he puts the king on a spot maybe not the smartest move, but he just went for it None of these things are hidden from you. For this thing was not done in a corner.
And then he puts the king on a spot,
maybe not the smartest move, but he just went for it.
This is Paul.
He's bold.
He says,
King Agrippa, believe us now, the prophets.
Do you believe the Old Testament prophecies?
Then he answers this question.
Maybe the grip was squirming, and so he says,
I know that I'll believe this.
And then,
and then Agrippa's like,
maybe I can speak for myself.
He says, Paul, verse 28,
almost thou persewadest me to be a Christian,
almost thou persewadest me.
Unfortunately, and I love that verse,
but unfortunately, that's not a good translation.
I found out I was a little crestfallen
when I found out that's not a good translation.
Let me pull up a good translation.
So here's a cool little trick that you can do,
that listeners might find interesting
is if you just type in, you just Google, I'm doing it right now, if you just Google a
verse, just actually type in the literal verse, so X26, verse 28, and just click enter.
And you're just going to scroll down just a little bit to something called Bible Hub.
It's always like, like, from the top four or so references.
And then it will show you instantly all the different Bible translations,
not all of them, but like all the most common or popular translations of that verse. And you'll
find that in this case the King James version is pretty lonely in terms of saying that he was saying
almost that persuadest me to be a Christian. The Greek just doesn't bear it out. Here's maybe
a better translation. So like, yeah, so for instance, if you go, you can see the NIV, new living
translation, they're right there, blah, blah, blah.
Here's a few just samples, right?
Quote.
Then a grip us head to Paul, do you think that in such a short time, you can persuade me
to be a Christian?
That's maybe a little more accurate.
You look through, you'll find, you just kind of start getting a sense and kind of cluster
the meaning after you read like 20 of these, quick translations, or you can kind of see,
okay.
And with but little persuasion,
that would as feign make me a Christian.
Oh, with such a thin case,
you think you can make me a Christian?
Or do you think I'd believe so quickly?
Or can you persuade me in such a short time
to become a Christian?
That's a little closer to the vibe
that the Greek gives off, as he's not saying,
man, almost man.
I was almost there until Festus had to break the spell.
That's how I always read it.
But when I got into the Greek, I was like, ah, dang it.
That's the translation in King James is not following that.
Not perfectly accurate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And maybe there's a little hint of like, you know, maybe in another life, Paul,
maybe under different circumstances, but not today, a know, maybe in another life, Paul, maybe under different circumstances,
but not today, a brother, not today.
And then Paul answers with humor, verse 29, Paul says, I would to God that not only thou,
but also all that hear me this day were both almost and all together, such as I am.
And it looks down at his change except these bonds, except for this.
Yeah.
I love you still got that vibrant sense of humor
in such a high-pressure situation.
He's still cracking jokes.
Accept these bonds.
Yeah.
Accept these bonds.
I wouldn't recommend that.
Aspect.
But.
And then Agrippa, he concludes like,
everyone else has concluded that he's not,
he's done nothing worthy of death or even balance.
He says in verse 31,
to Festus as they're walking away.
He says, were it not that he had appealed unto Caesar,
he could have been set at liberty.
So now we start to see the wisdom of Paul
in appealing to Caesar, right?
If he was now set at liberty,
he could have found his way to Rome.
But in this case,
he's gonna get a Roman guard like escorting him to Rome. And he's going to get actual audience with the big man
himself, the ruler, the emperor, right? The Caesar. And that's even a better way, appeal to Caesar.
So Grip, I would have let him go at this point, but he does not because of the appeal to Caesar. So, super interesting.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.