Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Acts 22-28 Part 2 • Dr. Scott Woodward • July 31 - Aug. 6
Episode Date: July 26, 2023Dr. Scott Woodward explores Paul being the Lord’s messenger as the people become members of the new covenant and how the new congregations breach the various cultural and personal differences to bec...ome one people.00:00 Part II–Dr. Scott Woodward00:07 Bearing testimony in front of non-believers02:30 Oklahoma Women’s softball bears testimony of Jesus Christ03:14 Elder Ballard addresses Paul’s testimony06:12 Dr. Woodward shares a personal story of testimony and conversion09:43 Paul is turned over to Julius via ship11:25 How do we respond to prophetic warnings?16:21 Paul reminds those in a storm that hope is not lost17:43 Paul’s advice is heeded and lives onboard are saved18:47 A message of hope20:08 The island of Melita and Paul is bitten by a viper21:45 Assumptions of an Apostle24:19 Parallels drawn between Paul and Jesus29:35 Jesus’s suffering and Paul’s trials point us to Jesus31:47 The final wrestle of Acts33:41 Paul is preaching under house arrest in Rome34:29 The cliffhanger conclusion 37:04 Why does he quote Isaiah?39:59 The purpose of Luke’s record 41:52 The conversion of Karl G. Maeser44:03 What tradition tells us of the death of Paul46:20 Dr. Woodward’s takeaways from Paul and the Acts of the Apostles53:29 End of Part II–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
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Continuelessly, or part two, Dr. Scott Wooden, Acts chapter 22 through 28.
I am inspired by how bold Paul is in front of these people.
I don't know if I've ever shared a testimony like that outside of a congregation of members.
We're very comfortable bearing our testimony, I think, in front of other believers,
but when it comes to someone who doesn't believe,
that can be scary.
It says in the manual, when Paul delivered
the powerful testimonies recorded in Acts 22 and 26,
he was being held prisoner by Roman soldiers.
The people he spoke to had the power to condemn him to death,
yet he chose to boldly bear witness of Jesus Christ
and the heavenly vision he had received. And then a couple of questions. What inspires you about his words? Consider the opportunity to
share your testimony. For example, do your friends know how you feel about Jesus Christ?
Or when was the last time you told your family how you gained your testimony of the gospel? It goes
to Joseph Smith in Joseph Smith history, talking about
his own vision. It was a fact that I had beheld a vision. I have thought since that I felt
much like Paul, when he made his defense before King Agrippa and related the account of
the vision he had when he saw the light and heard the voice. But still there were few
who believed him. Some said he was dishonest, others said he was mad, and he was ridiculed
and reviled. But all this did not destroy the reality of his vision.
He had seen a vision, he knew he had, and all the persecution under heaven could not make
it otherwise.
And though they should persecute him unto death, yet he knew and would know to his last
breath that he had built scene a light and heard a voice speaking into him, and all the
world could not make him think or believe otherwise.
And then he goes on, Joseph goes on to give his famous statement,
I had seen a vision, I knew it, I knew that God knew it,
and I could not deny it.
So let's talk about this just for a second.
How can we be more bold in our testimonies?
I'm glad you brought this up.
I love that Elder Oopdorf has brought up
this idea of normal and natural ways.
Just say what you think.
I like the Clayton Christians and the power
everyday missionaries.
When someone says, how is your weekend?
Don't think of Saturday, think of Sunday.
And say, we had the best time of church.
We had this really interesting lesson of just normal
and natural.
Just tell people about it.
I know this is a
good time to bring up the Oklahoma women softball team. Okay. I don't know if
you guys have seen this just a post game interview with three members of the
Oklahoma women softball and TWA softball team. So how important is this win?
This this win that you just gotten everything in. These women were so natural and bold.
And that really isn't that important to me.
I can't remember exactly.
So I'm paraphrasing apologies to Oklahoma women's softball
if I get this wrong.
But they were just, you know, really that's that.
What's important to me is Jesus.
What's important to me is the life that I built
and the understanding that I have of life.
And what's really important because of Jesus. And one after another, these three women just just
very matter of factly, but very boldly said, winnings great, winnings awesome love being here.
The thing I built my life on is Jesus Christ and his gospel. And I was just like, wow,
listen to that. And it was, they taught me. Just tell them, we all feel this way, but like you said,
Hank, sometimes it's a little harder just to come out that way, but they did and it kind of went
viral, maybe at least in some circles, about listen to these women just matter of fact, that
winning is awesome, it's great, but Jesus Christ is the most important thing.
This discussion reminds me of Elder Ballard's talks. You guys are old enough to remember
this way back in 2004, which I can't believe is almost 20 years ago. He talked about bearing
pure testimony. And here's what he says, the Apostle Paul bore fervent testimony of Christ and
converted many through his missionary labors. He did not shrink,
in bearing his testimony before King Agrippa. He says, the lesson, I believe, is clear.
Having a testimony alone is not enough. In fact, when we are truly converted, we cannot be restrained
from testifying. And so it was with apostles and faithful members of old. So it is our privilege,
our duty, our obligation, to declare the things which we know to be true.
He continues, miraculous things happen when members join with missionaries and share pure
testimony with those who are not members of the church. As we stand together, the Lord will help
us find many more of his sheep who will know his voice as we unites at least share our testimonies with them. He talks about the night that Parli P. Pratt visits Hiram Smith. And if you study
the history of the church, you know how crucial both of those men are to the restoration.
But Parli becomes quite a missionary. He says, because Hiram testified fearlessly of the divine truth that has been revealed to his
brother Joseph. Then he tells this story, present-ballard, Joseph Kimber, a humble new convert in
Fetchum, England bore a simple testimony to a fellow farmhand. I believe brother Kimber's witness
of Joseph Smith in the restoration is what ignited the fire of belief
in 17 year old Henry Ballard's heart
and caused him to ask to be baptized.
Generations of the Ballard family
are the beneficiaries of that humble testimony, right?
Just one farmhand, telling another farmhand,
what he believed turns into the Ballard family, right, who have a legacy
in the church.
That reminds me, Hank, of 1 Peter 315, be ready always to give an answer to anyone that
asks if the reason for the hope that is in you, to kind of even prepare for that, what
if someone were to ask me, what would I say?
Just that idea in a normal, natural way.
This is what gives me such hope and happiness
and helps me be a good cheer in life,
like that softball team.
I think we could all probably say,
or trace in our family history to a place where
other we or our ancestors came into the church
because of someone who was willing to be bold
and testify in natural, normal ways, in ways
that they didn't apologize for. Just a quick story of a 17 year old girl, I admire with
Mahalhar, her name's Nancy. The missionaries came to her door. She was interested, her family
listened to the first lesson or so, and then afterwards they're like, this is ridiculous.
She said, no, I'm very interested. And so she continued to listen.
It got so bad that her family got some anti, they called them anti-mormon back then.
Some anti-mormon people to come over to the house and to tell Nancy why this was a delusion,
why she was an idiot to join this church. Her boyfriend told her that,
you've either got to choose between this church or me. She stood up after hearing everybody and she said,
thank you for all of your concern. Thank you all for caring about me. And then she just bore her
simple, beautiful testimony. And she said, I'm going to join this church. And I'm going to leave soon.
I'm probably never going to see any of you all again. And she does. She leaves her home. She goes to
Na'avu where she meets the prophet Joseph.
She meets a guy named James Woodward.
That's how I come into the church because Nancy is beautiful,
courageous, 17 year old girl, is willing to listen to humble testimony
and then she's willing to stand to her family and say,
I feel this deeply in my soul.
And I got to follow this wherever it leads.
And that's been a blessing to generation.
So I will always praise Nancy McCurdy's name.
Scott, thank you so much for that.
That was really powerful.
I have the same feeling towards the two girls.
I don't know their names, but two girls
who invited my mom to seminary.
The one time she had gone to church
and her whole life was to be baptized.
So she'd gone to church once before she was,
you know, 17 and 16, I think. And these two girls said, why don't you come to seminary with us? And she
said, they won't want me in there. She said that she smelled like cigarettes. Her parents
both smoked heavily and she said, they won't want me in there. And they said, oh, come on over,
you'll like seminary. It's like church, but fun. And so she went with them and she kept going.
Finally, the teacher said, you can't keep sloughing whatever class you're missing to come
to this class. So you better sign up. So she signed up. And from that, ended up becoming
active in the church, going to BYU meeting my dad to girls who said, do you want to come
to seminary? Cindy, do you want to come to seminary? Change my world. So I think those
are names we praise, people we praise for being bold.
I don't think they knew they were being bold.
I think they just were thinking, hey, she should come with us.
And they're not all success stories, right?
Like Paul, Paul didn't move a grippa, but they're not always success stories.
But Paul understood that, you know, you preach, you throw the seed out there.
Yeah. Yeah. You throw the seed and let God do
What God does let the spirit do with the spirit does well shall we go to Rome?
Let's do it. We're on chapter 27 now, right? Yes, 27 did the ancient Romans cut their pizza
What's what's the answer John? I don't know with lethal scissors. It's a dad joke. It's a beautiful
joke. And for the for anyone who's still listening to the podcast after that, thank you for
sake with us. All right. So here's what happens. Chapter 27. It's determined verse one that they should go to Italy and they turn
Paul over to a centurion named Julius and to get in the boat there's like 266 people in the boat. Many of
those are prisoners and they're on their way to Rome. They go island hopping verse four to Cyprus and
down slowly verse seven says they come to this place in verse a called fair havens
But this isn't like the best timing year to go. This is probably October
In fact, some people some scholars have said this is October 5th
They say that because of
Verse 9 now when much time was spent and the sailing was now dangerous
Because the fast was now already passed Paul had managed them
So is that little
clue right there that they think this is about Yam Kippur in the year. I think it's 58 AD. And so
that would have been right about that first part of October. So dangerous time to sell especially when
you get into November and December, those are and January, those are like no, don't sell, no sales
zones. So this is kind of flirting with, okay, we're getting there.
And Paul says, ah, verse 10, sirs.
Sirs is the prisoner speaking up.
Prisoner raising his hand.
Sirs, I perceive that this voyage will be with hurt
and much damage, not only of the lading in the ship,
but also of our lives.
Nevertheless, the Centurion, Julius,
he believed the master of the ship and the owner of the ship
more than those things which were spoken by Paul. I think it's cool that Luke is kind of slowing
down here. I think there's a little less and he wants us to gather here. In verse 12, he says,
because the Haven was not commodious to winter in, there's some discomfort if they stayed there.
The more part advised to depart then. This is pause for a second. So let me
throw out a scenario. Suppose an apostle says that a particular choice might be
dangerous and will lead to hurt in much damage. What should we do? We have a
choice and then you've got an expert, the master of the ship, and you've got a
majority that Paul calls verse 11, the more part. So I just throw this question out
could be a fun discussion to have as a family or a Sunday school class.
But what's the danger of believing experts and the majority more than a profit of God?
Here you go.
This is a perfect setup.
This story sets this up.
It was not Commodius, verse 12 says, to winter there.
So what the Apostle is suggesting is something that's inconvenient,
there's an inconvenient thing you say, I think we should stay here, though it will be inconvenient,
because I perceive with both prophetic insight and some seafaring experience himself,
that there is going to be hurt and much damage. But the more part go against that, so let's
kind of watch how this plays out. So verse 13, when the south wind blew softly, supposing that they had
obtained their purpose, losing thence, they sailed close by Crete. See? No problem. Paul was paranoid.
Everything's fine. But verse 14, but not long after, there arose against a tempestuous wind called
Euro-Clydon, kind of one of those we'd call it a Norrister today, right?
Northeastern wind coming down.
And when the ship was caught and could not bear up into the wind, we let her drive.
Uh-oh. So now what's driving the ship?
They've lost control. They've lost control of the ship.
So you can kind of moralize all through this.
What's the moral of the story so far? Like they didn't listen to the Prophet.
They thought everything's going to be fine.
So they went into a place where you lose some control, right?
Once you get into the ship, you lose some of your control.
So don't get into ships that apostles warned you not to get into.
It was one of the things I'm thinking of, right?
And sometimes those could even be relationships.
I was that one John said, okay?
Is that a good one?
Are we banging on what exactly what Luke was hoping
to get out of this?
Probably not.
But I think there's just some interesting insights here.
And then verse 16, running under a certain island, which is called Klaada, we had much
work to come by the boat.
There's certain, they're ever going to try to get this thing under control.
You start throwing stuff overboard here.
And verse 18, and we being exceedingly tossed with a tempest the next day, they lighten
the ship.
And now they're throwing more over.
So it's just an interesting movement.
And verse 21, Paul, I don't know if he had his arms folded across his chest or not,
he said this. But after long abstinence, I think Paul was biting his tongue, biting his tongue,
but then he couldn't, he couldn't hold it anymore. And he said, Sirs, you should have harkened
unto me and not have loosed from creed and to have gained this harm and loss. You should listen
to me.
You know, I think it's just kind of interesting this idea.
Sometimes we gamble with apostles' words and warnings
and sometimes we lose.
And we could upload all kinds of stories here, right?
Of people that we know, we could probably talk for hours
about people who've gambled with the words of apostles.
They have met with much hurt and much damage
and thinking about such advice as
just simple like in my teens, right, avoid serious dating in your early teenage years. Don't
get into that ship. Pornography is harmless fun for couples, right? That can help strengthen
your marriage. Some experts say, some experts are saying that the prophets don't know what they're
talking about. And there's groups of people that are needing to choose and they're getting into this ship of the non-heteronormative value
ship. The redefinition of the family ship. What modern prophets are calling the disintegration of
the family, marriages are on the decline, divorces are on the rise, almost 50% of children today are
born out of wedlock. And we have prophets like Paul saying, we warn that the disintegration of families
going to bring upon individuals, communities, and nations, the calamities foretold by ancient
and modern profits. Like, there's a gambling that's happening with the words of profits
about some serious issues, some ships that experts and maybe our own majority, at least
the groups that we associate with, some of our majority might say, let's go with the experts not prophets on these things. That's a gamble that too
many have taken and have met with much hurt and harm.
It's a great application, that's really good. They go from being really confident to verse
20, all hope that we should be saved was taken away. You can see him going step by step. It's getting
worse. It's getting worse. It's getting worse. He says, you should have listened to me, but many
people in those situations are looking back going, I should have listened. I should have taken that
counsel more seriously. Yeah, there was neither son nor stars. The light starts to go.
And the hope is lost. And again, I don't know
if Luke was writing this with some metaphor in mind, but he is slowing down enough with
this story to help us see these details where I wonder what he was hoping we'd get out
of this. That's one application that comes to mind for me.
Absolutely. But then there's a twist in the story, not all hope is lost, at least. So
Paul says in verse 22, now I exhort you to be of good cheer.
I think you learned that from Jesus, didn't he?
Everything's going wrong. We've made dumb choices.
We've got into ships. We shouldn't have got into.
Follow people. We shouldn't have followed.
And Paul still says, be of good cheer.
For there shall be no loss of any man's life among you but of the ship.
Yeah, ships have gone.
But for there stood by me this night
The angel of God who's I am and whom I serve and here's what the angel said fear not Paul
That must be brought before Caesar and low God has given the all of them that sail with thee
Oh
Wherefore serves be of good cheer says in second time for I believe God
That's where Paul's drawing his strength. I believe God
that it shall be even as it was told me. We are going to be cast upon a certain island somewhere,
so I saw that too. So here we go. So they hold on. So they hold on. So they continue to drive.
They're driving. They're being driven. They're starting to drop anchors. Try to slow the ship down,
so it doesn't violently smash into rocks on the shore. That's something they would do. They would drop an anchor, it's slow, and then it would get to the tension point
where it would break the ship, and then they'd cut the anchor, drop another anchor. They start doing that in verse 28, 29.
And then some people started to try to escape. Paul warns in verse 31, if you get out of the ship, you cannot be stupid.
It's not going to happen.
Do not leave this ship now. We've got to take this the
full way. So they cut the escape ships off. They fall into the water. So now they're in it for good.
Paul then says, wherefore I pray you, I know you've been fasting for a while. It must be a lot of Jews
on this ship. Take some meat for this is for your health. And then he says, look at verse 35,
this is a look familiar. And when he had thus spoken, he took bread and gave thanks to God and presence of them all.
And when he had broken it, he began to eat.
Then were they all of good cheer.
And they also took some meat.
And that's when he gives us the number.
There's 266 souls.
Sounds like there's been a bit of a mutiny on this ship and Paul's in charge now. Do you know what I love about that?
That is right after the you should have harkened unto me and
They're all going yeah, you're right and right after that be of good cheer because now I think they are listening
If I was right there and listen to me now be a good cheer. There's not any loss of life man. Oh, okay
I'm gonna believe in this time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
When all hope is taken away, then all of a sudden your ears are prepped, right?
Ready to for some message of hope.
I love verse 25.
My goodness.
I believe God.
That's a sermon in a sentence.
Be a good cheer for I believe God that it shall be even as it was told me,
like to encourage young adults with their patriarchal blessing. Do you believe him? Do you believe
what he said? What more can he say than to you? He hath said, like the hymn says, right? I believe
God it was as he told me. That's a great verse. They then they do shipwreck. They shipwreck in
verse 41, falling into a place where the two
seas met. They ran the ship aground and the four parts stuck fast and the rest was broken
with the violence of the waves. And so the soldiers say, let's kill all the prisoners.
And then the Centurion Julius is like, no, no, no, no, because he wanted to save one of them, Paul.
He says, no, willing to save Paul, he kept them from their purpose and commanded the day, which could swim, should cast themselves into the sea and
get to land. The rest grab onto some boards. And so they come, all of them, everyone lives
266, escaped safely. They make it to this island. There they are today that we know that
island as Malta, right, or Malita as it says in our Bible maps
And that's just now south of Italy. So they're close, but they're not quite there yet
We have one chapter left. So they get to this island called Malita verse one says and there's a barbarous people there that showed us no little kindness
Meaning they did show us kindness, right? They they showed us a lot of kindness. They kindled the fire
meaning they did show us kindness, right? They showed us a lot of kindness. They kindled the fire. They received us, everyone, a bunch of prisoners. That's a nice
show of faith by those people. The people of the island of Malita. They received
us everyone because of the present rain, because of the cold. And so Paul goes
out to gather some firewood. There's a fun story. And he lays them on the fire
and there was a snake he didn't know about. There was a viper out of the heat that came and just struck him right on the hand,
fastened on his hand.
The people of the island knew that snake as a venomous snake.
And so when the barbarian saw the venomous snake hanging on his hand,
they set among themselves.
So here's here you go, right?
You see something now you have to tell yourself a story to make sense of it.
Let's see what story they say. They say, oh, no doubt this man is a murderer.
Right? Otherwise, why would bad things happen to somebody, right? They've has to be something bad.
They did. No doubt this man is a murderer, whom though he had escaped the sea, yet vengeance
suffered not to live. He thought he could escape his judgment, but it has come.
But Paul shakes the beast off into the fire.
He felt no harm.
How be it?
They all looked when he should have swollen or fallen down dead suddenly, but after they
had looked a great while and saw no harm come to him, they changed their minds.
And they said, he was a God.
Wow, he's gone from murderer to God in just a couple of verses.
The stories we tell ourselves about
people, about in this case, and again, another story about an apostle, assumptions about an
apostle. Paul's going to become very popular on this island because he actually is going to heal
the chief's father, the chief of the island named Publius, heals him in the name of God lays hands on him
verse 8 heals him.
Then others when they found out that Paul could do that, they bring their sick to him, he
heals him right after the manner and image of Jesus Christ.
They stay there for three months on that island verse 11 says, and then they head off finally
going up to Syracuse, Regime, Puthioli is where they land, and then they go over to
three taverns, the form of apias in Rome, and you can see this on the Bible map really
clearly, they eventually get to Rome.
Now, I want to point something out before we talk about Rome, that I find absolutely fascinating.
I want to know your guys' thoughts on this.
We know that Luke is the author of both the book of Luke,
the gospel of Luke, and the book of Acts. And some scholars have noticed that there are many parallels
between the book of Luke and the book of Acts that seem deliberate on Luke's part. And I guess
my question for you to consider as I go through a few of these is why is Luke doing this? Okay?
So, for instance, he's going to compare Paul and Jesus.
He doesn't do it overtly.
You just kind of cut a catch it.
And so if I do this right side by side, this will be easy.
So, for instance, Jesus is traveling ministry in Luke, chapters 5 through 9, where he's
in Galilee for a long while, and then his long travel narrative to Jerusalem is
paralleled in the book of Acts in chapters 13 through 20 by Paul's traveling ministry is missionary
journeys. So far I'm like I don't know if I'm convinced, right? But then these keep adding up,
watch this. Then in Acts chapter 20 verse 22, right, Paul says, I go bound in the spirit to Jerusalem,
not knowing the things that shall befall me there.
That should echo back to Luke 951 when Jesus steadfastly said his face to go to Jerusalem on the side, right?
No one understood why Jesus has to go to Jerusalem. Only suffering awaits him there. He told it to his disciples multiple times. They never understood him. None of Paul's friends see why he needs to go to Jerusalem, only suffering awaits you there, Paul. And from the moment Paul determines to go to Jerusalem, there
are seven references to him going to Jerusalem at Luke mentioned seven times. After Jesus
said his face to go to Jerusalem, seven times, seven references to Jesus going to Jerusalem.
Jesus has initially received positively in Jerusalem, so is Paul. Jesus had built up a
bad reputation in Jerusalem among the leadership, however. Jesus had built up a bad reputation in Jerusalem among the
leadership, however. Paul had built up a bad reputation in Jerusalem among Jewish Christians.
Upon his arrival to Jerusalem, Jesus goes initially right to the temple. Upon his arrival, Paul
goes initially to the temple. Paul was seized by a crowd. Then he undergoes four separate trials,
the Sanhedrin, the governor Felix, Festus
the new governor, and then Herod Agrippa. Jesus was seized by a crowd and guess how many?
Then he undergoes four separate trials, Sanhedrin, Pilate, who was the governor, which he was in the
same position as Felix. Then he goes to Herod and he comes back to Pilate again. Both Pilate and
Herod say that Jesus has done, quote,
nothing worthy of death and should be released.
Both Felix and Herod Agrippa say that Paul has done, quote,
nothing worthy of death, exact same phrase,
and should be released, were it not that he appealed to Caesar?
On the boat, Paul takes bread, gives thanks,
and when he had broken it, he began to eat,
almost exact phrase that Luke used to describe Jesus
at Passover, quote, he took bread and gave thanks and break it.
A Roman centurion of all people acknowledged that Paul was a good man and he sought to
favor Paul and to save Paul.
And remember Luke highlights that it was a Roman centurion at the cross of all people who
acknowledges that Jesus surely was a righteous man.
And in this narrative, as you continue to watch these narratives build, the crucifixion
moment that parallels with Paul is the storm of the sea and then the snake bite on the
island.
This is interesting.
Like, why does he point out that little detail about the snake bite?
And why all that detail about the stormy ocean?
So there's a stormy ocean. So in the Jewish style you got to upload kind of Jewish thinking here the ocean represented like the chaos waters
Where evil things would come there were monsters of the sea when God showed that he like
Had power over the waters that was a really big deal for the Jews, right? When he splits the red sea, like he had power to control the monster, that the later talk about that as they write about God,
like how did they say, defeating the monster of the sea kind of a thing? Like, the sea was evil,
it was suspicious, it was chaotic. And so the stormy ocean narrative here, where where Paul,
and everyone in the ship is being, it's almost as if the ocean was trying to swallow them up, right, and it could not swallow Paul
because of the protection of God.
Nor could the venomous snake bite,
which the snake right in Jewish thinking,
this is the epitome of evil,
the snake bite couldn't thwart his mission.
That's interesting, right?
Neither the dark powers that were let loose on Jesus
in Gethsemane, I think about the flood,
or some of what we once called it it the flood of hell's dark gloom
poured out upon the head of Jesus Christ.
The Satan did his worst in Gethsemane
to try to swallow him up, right?
The dark powers let loose on Jesus in Gethsemane's
likened to this ocean moment
and then death on the cross, the snake bite moment, right?
The snake bite, where, remember the prophecy in Genesis,
where the Lord said to Adam and Eve,
that a seed, a seed would come from the woman
who would receive a bite,
would receive a bite from the snake on his heel.
But he would with that heel,
then crushed ahead of that snake.
And so the snake bite motif as a representation of,
though Jesus was bitten by
the snake, right? This would be his death. The poison didn't take. Oh, death, where is
thy sting? Where is the poison of that bite? Through his resurrection, Jesus shakes the snake
off into the fire. It just seems like Luke is doing this like on purpose. One scholar named
Charles Talbert, who compiled the longest list of these parallels he calls this an
architectural pattern of correspondences
between the career of Jesus and the life of Paul here. Why is Luke doing this? Well, I think what he's not doing is he's not saying Paul is basically equal to Jesus like I don't think Luke's doing that
I don't think he would do that. I don't think anyone Paul included would feel comfortable with that
So if that's not what he's doing like why is he doing that and Luke don't think you would do that. I don't think anyone, Paul, included, would feel comfortable with that. So if that's not what he's doing, like, why is he doing that?
And Luke never answers that question, and so we get to kind of speculate. Any thoughts
on that? Sometimes we notice patterns, and it's evidence of design, evidence of design
in the way he wrote it, is that he's trying to show us something. This is a pattern of
Christ.
And that somebody would notice that is awesome. It makes me think, I got to notice things more.
There are some very careful readers of Scripture. Yeah, and, and that these were carefully written
testimonies as well. I think that impresses me. But why not show a pattern of a follower of Christ
that's in a shadow of Christ? Like you said at first, okay, but then it just keeps going.
You think, yeah, look at that. Yeah, look at that.
Yeah, I read 12, too. You guys, there's more than 12, but after 12, you start to think,
I think Luke was doing something on purpose here.
I wonder if this is Luke's way of saying, if you're going to be a disciple of Christ, you will
like Paul, you got to follow the footsteps of Christ. You have to
endure like Christ. You have to suffer in some ways like Christ as his disciple. Yeah, and Jesus
said that to Peter that you're going to go through some of the same things I did. Jesus said that
to Peter at the end and here's Paul going through it so many. It's got to be pointing us to something and that's.
Luke is tantalizing that way.
We'll talk about how he ends his book too.
He does it again the second time in the ending here in just a moment.
I think this is just worth thinking about worth savoring, hoping we make some connections
between Paul and Jesus.
What was that name again, Charles?
Yeah, this is Charles Talbert.
Maybe Luke is saying disciples model their lives after Christ, especially in trials.
They submit to God, they abandon themselves to God.
And look at Paul saying, be of good cheer
as Jesus in John, be of good cheer. I've overcome the world Paul's
well we're going to make it through all this. And I like what you're saying there
and Hank you mentioned this as disciples of Jesus and that's where my mind goes
is that looks probably underlining the idea that when people follow Jesus as
way like their stories might begin to look like his story. This is the cost of discipleship in some ways.
The meaning behind the metaphor of taking up your cross to follow Jesus.
What Paul called in his letter to the Philippians, he called it the fellowship of Christ's sufferings.
This is how the kingdom of God is built by people who are willing to sacrifice.
It's not through tanks, missiles, and grenades, or even a constant stream of uninterrupted blessings.
That's not what it means to be in the kingdom of God,
but it means that through patience, diligence,
and perseverance, and long suffering,
like both Jesus and Paul experience,
like this is how the kingdom of God is built.
Kingdom people are the kind of people
that are willing to get in those trenches
and to do what Jesus did.
So I love that. This is a fun wrestle like Luke is asking us to do this very thing to have this
very conversation, I think. I'm reminded of the Liberty jail, the son of man, have to descend it
below them all. You're going through tough things, Joseph. I did too. Okay, you ready for his last thing? The last little
Stuart. Yeah, let's wrestle. So the book of Acts ends this way. In Acts 28, Paul makes it to Rome.
He's delivered in verse 16 over to the captain of the guard there, but he's allowed to dwell
by himself with a with a soldier. He's basically on house arrest again, but Paul has to pay the rent for the house.
He doesn't waste any time in verse 17. He reaches out to all the Jews in Rome.
He wants all the leadership of the Jews to come and meet him so that he can explain himself and get ahead of the story.
He even asked them like, I don't know what you guys have heard.
Some people in Jerusalem have spoken against me saying that I'm like I'm going against
the law that I'm going against Israel, but I'm telling you that that's not true. It's for the hope
of Israel, verse 20, that I am bound with this chain. And they answer him and say, we haven't heard
anything about this, man. We neither receive letters out of Judea concerning thee, neither any of the
brethren that came, showed or spaked any harm of the.
So we want to hear it straight from you.
What a good way to this is good, right?
Verse 22, we desire to hear of the what thou thinkest.
It's not refreshing considering where we've been from chapter 21.
We want to hear what thou thinkest.
For as concerning this sect, again, that's a reference to the Christianity sect of Judaism.
They're not two separate religions yet.
It's just a branch of Judaism for this. This sect, as concerning this sect, we know that everywhere
is spoken against. So we want to hear it from you. We've heard the bad rumors. We've heard the bad
people naysaying this. We've heard the gossip, but we want to hear it from you. So I love the maturity
of that. Nivest 23. And so they all came together and he expounded and he testified. Was he
testified? The kingdom of God. That's his message. The kingdom of God.
Persuading them concerning Jesus, the king of the kingdom. Both out of the
law of Moses, out of the prophets from morning until evening. He didn't have
anything else to do. For him, this is his happy place. People are coming to the house.
He was free to teach and speak.
There was just a Roman soldier there making sure
there's no shenanigans.
He preached and people came to listen.
And when they agreed, not among themselves, verse 25 says,
they departed after the Paul had spoken one word.
Well-spaked, the Holy Ghost by Isaiah is the prophet
and to our father, saying, and then he uses a verse that they took as kind of insulting some of them did.
Go to this people and say, hearing ye shall hear and shall not understand and seeing ye shall see and not perceive.
For the heart of this people is waxed gross and the ears, dull of hearing and their eyes have closed. So some people that don't believe what Paul is saying and he's like, you guys remind me of this I say it first. And that didn't make him friends or
influence people there. Verse 28, be it known, therefore unto you. Here's my final
word to you guys. He says that the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles and
that they will hear it. And when he had said these words, the Jews departed and had great reasoning among themselves.
Now here's the tantalizing ending to Luke's Book of Acts, verse 30 and 31.
And Paul dwelt two whole years in his own hired house, paying the rent himself, and received
all that came in unto him, preaching the kingdom of God and teaching those things
which concerned the Lord Jesus Christ with all confidence, no man forbidding him.
And we are left on a cliffhanger.
Luke has spent more than like ever since chapter 20 building up, Paul's going to go to Jerusalem.
Then in Jerusalem he learns he's going to go to Rome.
He's going to go to Rome and the Lord appeared to him. He's going to go to Rome. The gospel's got to go to Jerusalem. Then in Jerusalem he learns he's gonna go to Rome. He's gonna go to Rome and the Lord appeared to him.
He's gonna go to Rome.
The gospel's gotta go to every nation, right?
That was set up at the very beginning.
And now he's in Rome and then no conclusion.
And what happens?
No conclusion.
The camera pans away with Paul preaching in a house
that he's renting with a Roman soldier standing by.
Wow.
What? What?
What?
How does it, does he ever got talked to Caesar?
He appealed to Caesar.
Has he ever talked to a Neyro?
Luke, this is the heart of the world.
This isn't the whole world.
He's gone to Rome, but like, what happens, brother?
And so, you know, given Luke's car as a writer,
a lot of scholars are convinced
that this open-ended ending is clearly intentional. Again, that's a good result to think about,
like, Luke's doing this on purpose. He's not telling us why, and we don't have to just think about
it and think, okay, so why? Why did he end like that? He's such a careful writer. Why did he leave some of these ends untied?
These loose ends, why is he not tying them all up?
So again, I will ask you to, what do you guys think?
What does this do to your mind and your heart?
Some of you call this the most odd ending
of any book in scripture.
Mark doesn't even have an ending
so that doesn't really count.
But like this is a deliberate weird ending like on purpose.
It's kind of up there with a book of Jonah that just that kind of ends without resolving the story.
Yeah. Most authors want to tie all the loose ends together.
But Luke is like,
Bye. Yeah. Wait, what?
I love that he quotes that Isaiah verse that
We first hear it at least if we're reading the Bible chronologically
We hear it right after the parable of the sower. Why are you teaching parables?
And he gives that Isaiah prophecy. Well, some will see some of not here
I've noticed that that call of Isaiah is repeated in every one of the gospels and here.
It must have been important to him. It's in Matthew 1315, Mark 412, Luke 810, and Luke 1240.
And then here it is. And I just, I love this. The last part of it just sounds like this is
the last they, I think I think means otherwise they could see
with their eyes here with their ears understand with their heart and should be converted and I should
heal them mean who wouldn't want that that's what the Lord wants see with their eyes here with
their ears understand with their heart be converted and be healed. Any thoughts on why that's in everyone of the gospels and here?
I've just always thought, how interesting.
They must have all known the calling of Isaiah in their hearts or something.
It's provocative, right?
It's intentionally provocative.
I was like, are you guys hearing this?
Are you picking up what I'm putting down?
This is the most important message in the world. And you have so much internal noise that's getting in the way of you being able to hear
it. Humble yourselves, humble yourselves, empty your assumptions. Try to hear this as
if for the first time without all your baggage. Otherwise, you fit Isaiah's prophecy. You
fit his condemnation of those who just insist on not getting the true story,
the resisting the true story. I think also in Matthew 13, Jesus says, who have ears to hear,
let him hear. It's like, some will hear this, some won't. But boy, if you could hear, you could see
with your eyes here, with your ears understamped your heart, be converted and be healed. It almost
seems like Luke then pulls that here.
He's saying he ends verse 30 and 31 with his cliffhanger
and he doesn't resolve it leaving the reader
to have to do something.
You and I now have to do some work to bring this book
to a conclusion.
And so it's I think that's interesting, John,
that he's kind of pulling Jesus moment here
where sometimes Jesus would tell a story
and then not narrate
the moral.
Just let people kind of wrestle with it.
I thought of what you taught us in the very beginning of our interview where Acts is
designed to parallel what Jesus said.
You will teach in Jerusalem, in Judea and Samaria, at the uttermost parts of the earth.
And here's Paul.
The last verse is, he's in the uttermost parts of the earth. And here's Paul. The last verse is, he's in the uttermost parts of the earth.
So maybe in Luke's mind, he's like, I did tell you this story.
It's the story of Jesus.
It's not the story of Paul.
This is what Jesus said would happen and it happened.
Yeah.
Now that goes right along with this great quote
from a scholar named Ben Witherington,
who's written a whole book just on the book of Acts. Great thinker. He said, the ending of the book of Acts
makes it clear that Luke's purpose wasn't simply the chronicle of life and death of Paul,
but rather the rise and spread of the gospel and of the social and religious movement to which
it gave birth. Luke, through both Luke and Acts, has provided a theological history.
The trace is the spread of the good news from Jerusalem to Rome, from the eastern edge of the
Roman Empire into its very heart. And then he says, Rome was not seen in Luke's day as the edge
of the known world. That's Spain. And so the reader would know very well that Jesus' mission to
spread the gospel to the ends of the earth, CX 1 verse 8, was still ongoing in his own day.
So when the reader sits down to read this, they're like, well, we haven't got there yet.
And Luke's like, exactly.
So for Luke, so he says, for Luke, Paul's story is really about the unstoppable word of
God, which no obstacle, no shipwreck, no snake bite, no Roman
authorities could hinder from reaching the heart of the empire and the hearts of those
who live there. And then from there, it would go as the gateway into the ends of the earth.
It's almost like Luke is including and challenging the reader to consider your own like ending
it. How are you going to help this story end?
What do you want to do about this?
The story isn't over.
As you can see, we can all participate in it.
We can help spread the kingdom of the risen king to the ends of the earth.
What are you going to do about it?
We made it to the heart.
Yeah.
What are you going to do?
Dear reader, the story is not finished.
Will you help spread the good news about the risen King, Jesus Christ,
all the world, because we're not there yet. Something like that. I like that. I like that,
Allah. Before we wrap up, I wanted to mention one thing in verse 22 when these people come out to
hear Paul and they say, we don't know anything about you, but we do want to hear about Christianity,
know anything about you, but we do want to hear about Christianity because everyone is speaking against it. I think that's fascinating that one, they have the maturity to go, not believe
everything they hear, that they might be like, hmm, I want to hear it from an actual Christian.
I want to hear it from somebody who actually knows the story. And it reminded me of
Carl G. Maeser. He talked about his being introduced
to the church. He said, it was a very dark period of my life when I was searching for a foothold
among the political, social, philosophical, and religious opinions of the world.
My attention was called to a pamphlet on the quote, Mormons, written by a man named Bush.
The author wrote in a spirit of opposition to that strange people,
but his very illogical deductions and sarcastic infectives aroused my curiosity and an irresistible
desire to know more about the subject of the author's anodinment version caused me to make persistent
inquiries concerning it. He says, so I wrote a friend who lived in Copenhagen because I knew that missionaries in the Mormon Church were maintained particularly in the Scandinavian countries.
Then he ends up joining the church and if you don't know, he has some impact.
Carl G. Meiser in Provo, Utah, starts a little school called Brigham Young Academy, which eventually becomes Brigham Young University.
So fascinating that the only thing these people in Acts
have heard about Christianity has been negative,
but it ends up leading to them wanting to know more
about the message.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, if we could have that mindset, right?
If we could just have that mindset.
I desire to hear from those that are being maligned,
like, I wanna hear your story. Yeah, I wanna hear mindset, I desire to hear from those that are being maligned. Like, I want to hear your story. I mean, I'm going to hear you. So basically,
from what I understand, what you just said, Hank, is we have Brigham Young University
because some anti-mormons, pamphlet, the pique de curiosity of Carl D. Meiser, that's
awesome. We should never fear those things, I guess.
Just one last thing, Scott, why don't we talk to our audience about we all, I think, in
our minds think I thought Paul was beheaded in Rome.
How do we know that?
Is that a scripture or is that a tradition?
Yeah, so Luke never tells us how Paul died.
There is a tradition that he was killed in Rome.
It's an early tradition, but it's not scriptural.
Some people think he actually ends up going from Rome to Spain.
A lot of people think that second Timothy was written after this.
And then he tells Timothy that he had been in the lion's mouth,
which some people think, some scholars think that's him saying
he survived his interview with Nero.
But there's a little bit of right. We have to do some
deduction there. Does he make it to Spain or some early Christian father say he made it all the way to Spain?
Luke never tells us that's not in scripture. We don't have any of his epistles that confirm that Paul's memory kind of now starts to get shrouded in a little bit of legend after this
How did he die exactly? We don't know. Is there strong legends about that?
Yeah, there are.
That he was beheaded.
How do we know that?
Tradition, hearsay, there's just, you know?
And so this is where it kind of starts to get a little murky,
but yeah, Luke doesn't think that's an important part of the story.
Luke thinks this is about Jesus and about the spread of his word.
And as long as Luke was a fit messenger to like show how Jesus was using an apostle to do that,
awesome, but apparently his point was made
by the end of X 28 and he has no more to say about Paul.
So it's a little tantalizing, wish we had more.
That's tradition.
Scott, before we let you go,
I want to read something from the come follow me manual
and then ask you a question.
The manual says, as Paul's ministry clearly shows,
difficulties in our lives are not a sign that God disapproves of us or the work we are doing.
In fact, sometimes it is during the difficulties that we feel His support most strongly.
And then it asks us to kind of review Paul's life and how the Lord stood by him and ask ourselves how the Lord
is stood by us. I like that summary. We've been studying the life of Paul here for the last month.
What do you hope our listeners get out of studying the life of Paul? And particular, maybe these
last few chapters. Gosh, there's so many takeaways from Paul. I'd highly recommend any of your listeners download a copy of NT Wright's book on Kindle called Paul, a biography. That's what I want to say.
It's like 900 pages. That's what I want to say. No, I might take away. I was trying to drop
a few today. It's just how impressive he is as a disciple showing us what it means to be a follower
of Jesus. And it seems that Luke is intentionally trying to say it,
note like he's following Jesus, almost like phrases and words and circumstances.
So I think Luke wants us to see that for sure.
You know, let me end with a quote.
I know this is a quote that some of your previous guests have mentioned, but it's so good.
I just want to highlight it one more time.
This is from Elder Holland. When he was talking about the book of Acts, he gave it another title.
He says, it's called the Acts of the Apostles and understandably so. It leads us to great respect
for Peter, Paul, and John, and the others, but not surprisingly from the outset, from the first verse,
the declaration is that the church will continue to be divinely led, not mortally led.
And here's where he gives his title.
Indeed, a more complete title for the Book of Acts could appropriately be something like
the acts of the resurrected Christ working through the Holy Spirit in the lives and ministries
of his ordained apostles.
He says, now you can see why someone voted for the shorter title, but my suggest the
title is more accurate." He says, I think as we conclude the life of Paul, I think both Paul and Luke would want us to
see that point that what was happening with Paul was bigger than Paul. What was happening
through Paul was bigger than Paul. It was the Lord Jesus Christ, a resurrected Christ, working through the Holy Spirit in the life of Paul
to help the gospel go from a little house of Israel,
blood lineage, house of Abraham, group to the whole world,
to invite all nations, kindreds, tongues, and people
into the family of God, which is called the house of Israel.
Help them partake of all the promises,
become heirs of all the promises, become
heirs of all the promises God has ever made to his people.
Like I think that's the bigger picture.
If we walk away saying that Paul is impressive, we would be right.
But Luke would say, good, now go and read it again.
You missed my major point that I was trying to make.
Go read it again.
This is about Jesus.
And I think the book of Acts for me is like a little microscopic view of how Christ,
the resurrected Christ, leads a church.
We still today believe this about our church,
is the church of Jesus Christ.
And you hear apostles testifying all the time
that he leads this church, that he's at the head of this church.
And so if we want to ask, what does that look like?
What does that actually look like up close?
The book of Acts is showing us a little peek into, what does that look like? What does that actually look like up close? The book of Acts is showing us a little peek into what does that look like when Jesus works
with weak and simple servants, Peter, Paul. Sometimes they have temper, sometimes they have
problems. They're not perfect servants, but Jesus works with them. He works with them
great. And through them, this message is going to the whole world. If we come away from
the book of Acts, more impressed with Jesus.
I think Luke will say, my job here is done.
We have more insight into that great book of Mormon phrase,
and first need to fight through the dealings of God
with his people.
Like, how does the resurrected Jesus deal with his people?
That's what the book of Acts is showing us.
At the end of Paul's life, I say he's impressive.
He's an incredible disciple of Jesus Christ. He models for us what it looks like to just lean into any suffering that might come
from misunderstanding, from being maligned, from being the brunt of other people's misperceptions
and false assumptions and still pushing into it and pushing forward because the cause is worth it.
into it and pushing forward because the cause is worth it. The cause matters.
This is about Christ's family.
This is about God inviting everybody in.
And so if we have to deal with some bumps along the way,
so be it, I hear Paul saying,
but just never lose sight of the bigger picture.
This is about Jesus as the kingdom of God
and he wants everybody to come and participate in it.
And we can help in some small way.
Fantastic. I was really touched by Acts 23 11. The Lord stood by him and said,
be of good cheer. I hope our listeners felt that. That's part of the overall message of
Acts is the Lord saying to his followers, be of good cheer. I'm with you. I'm standing by you.
John, what a great day. Yeah, I love it. I got to listen to this one again. There's so many things I want to write down.
Thank you, Scott. Yes, Scott. As John said, thank you so much for for being with us.
It has been an honor. Thank you. Thanks for having me on.
You guys are awesome.
Love the show.
Keep it up.
We want to thank Dr. Scott Woodward
for being with us today.
What a treat.
We want to thank our executive producer,
Shannon Swanson.
We want to thank our sponsors,
David and Verla Swanson,
and we always remember our founder, Steve Swanson.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We're not done with Paul.
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