The Bible Recap - Day 327 (Acts 15-16) - Year 3
Episode Date: November 23, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Acts 13:13 - John 6:28-...29 - Video: Galatians Overview - The Bible Recap Book! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Before we popped over to the book of Jacob's last James, Paul and Barnabas had just arrived
back from their first missionary journey in the church at Antioch was celebrating with
them. They've been there for a while and today some guys from Jerusalem show up for a teaching trip.
And guess what they're teaching? Circumcision. They start all the drama back up again, same people have to convert to
Judy as a man order to convert to Christianity. Paul and Barnabas push back. They've already been down this road about a decade
earlier. They make a trip back to Jerusalem in hopes of dealing with it once and for all. When they arrive, we find out who is behind this circumcision requirement, the Pharisees.
These are believers who are Pharisees, though, according to 155, people who have the Holy Spirit.
Isn't it his job to teach us and help us reach unity?
Yes, he totally does that.
But like with most things, change happens slowly, not immediately.
It's often when we look back over the course of years that we see the fruit.
By the way, Paul is a Pharisee too, but he obviously disagrees with this Pharisee in Jerusalem.
While they're debating this, Peter says,
Hey, remember when this all started?
Remember how God used a Jew like me to preach to the Gentiles?
Remember how those uncircumcised people received the Holy Spirit in a way that was so obvious
and evident that none of us could deny it?
It's clear that God doesn't make a distinction between you and Gentile.
He knows all hearts, and He cleans the Gentiles' hearts too.
By saying He requires them to be circumcised, you're doing two very foolish things.
You're heaping a burden on them that none of us have been able to bear anyway, and you're
also testing God because He's made himself clear.
Knock it off.
All who are saved are saved through his grace alone, not by keeping the law.
Then Jacob slash James pipes up and says,
Simmin reported the same thing as Peter, but this isn't a new idea.
Even the prophet Amos talked about this like 800 years ago.
God has called them by his name, according to Amos.
Their relationship with God is intact.
So what we should be concerned with are things that disrupt the harmony of our relationships within
the church. Circumcision isn't on that list. Our code of conduct should be about creating unity
in the family of Christ. Let's figure out what those things are. This sounds like a great idea to
the apostles, so they hold a meeting called the Jerusalem Council to decide what to require of Gentiles.
It's important to point out that this list isn't given as a way to obtain righteousness.
It's given as a way to make sure things go smoothly as the church starts to be filled with people
from all different cultures.
So the main question is, what are the cultural dealbreakers in our worship?
If we can set those things aside, they won't have the opportunity to cause division in the
church. Those things are, eating things sacrificed to idols, eating blood, eating things that
have been strangled, and sexual immorality at large. These are all things that Gentile cultures
were engaged in and even used in their worship. The Jerusalem Council is trying to figure out how to
honor God and live together in harmony. So a Gentile ordering a medium-rare filet while he's having dinner with his Jewish brother
in Christ just can't happen, not if harmony is the goal.
So the Jerusalem Council concludes that the only parts of their culture new converts have
to lay down are the ones that conflict with Christ and the unity of his body.
And the only culture they have to pick up is the culture of Christ and his kingdom, not
Judaism. The Spirit doesn't homogenize, he unifies.
When the church reads this letter from the council, they're thrilled.
Next, Paul and Barnabas decide to visit the churches they met and planted on their first
trip. Barnabas wants to bring his cousin John Mark, but apparently something happened
during that first trip when he left early back in Acts 13. We don't know what caused that rift.
Some think since he left around the time they went to the Gentile Regions, he may have felt uneasy about it.
Regardless, at this point, Paul apparently doesn't trust him and refuses to travel with him again.
But look at God.
He uses that division to prompt multiplication, because now there are two missionary trips going out.
Paul takes Silas and Varnavus takes John Mark. that division to prompt multiplication, because now there are two missionary trips going out.
Paul takes Silas and Varnabis takes John Mark. But if that makes you a little sad, don't worry,
this story isn't over. In Lysra, which is in modern day Turkey, Paul and Silas meet up with a
guy named Timothy. He's half Jewish, half Greek. He and Paul hit it off, so Paul invites him to
join the trip. But then Paul does something totally unexpected. He has Timothy circumcised.
What?
Wasn't Paul the one who just argued against this?
Here's what I love about Paul.
Remember how he started going by his Latin name
so that he wouldn't offend the Gentiles,
he was called the minister to,
how he tries to be all things to all people
and remove any potential speed bumps for the gospel?
That's what he's doing here with Timothy.
He knows Timothy will be preaching to Jews, and Paul has seen firsthand how the Jews reject
uncircumcised people, so he's taking away any opportunity they might have to discredit
Timothy's message. All their steps are carefully directed by the Holy Spirit and visions.
Go here, don't go there, and we may wonder why, but all it can do is guess.
It reminds me of how Jesus did this a few times, too,
the way he waited for Lazarus to die,
the way he healed the woman with the blood disease
while the little girl was dying.
By the way, this is also where we find out
for the first time that Luke is on this trip, too,
because he starts saying, we, instead of they,
looks like we have an eyewitness.
They head to Philippi, where they meet a lot of people Paul
will later write a letter to, also known as the Book of Philippians, so pay attention to these people because we'll
see them again later.
They run into a women's prayer group and meet a woman named Lydia, who, by the way, is
from the very city Paul wanted to go to, but the Holy Spirit said no.
They start talking to the women and Lydia is intrigued.
Verse 14 says, God opened her heart to pay attention to what was said by Paul.
God is the one who made her interested in and receptive to their message,
and we see a domino effect in her whole family.
They all get baptized that same day and invite the men to stay at their house.
When they go back to the prayer spot later,
they encounter a demonized girl who is enslaved
because this demon can tell people about themselves and their lives
which is a big moneymaker. Of course, this demon also knows the message of Jesus and one good way for a demon to discredit and disrupt that message
among the people is by attaching a demonized girl to it.
She claims they serve the most high God, but to a community that doesn't know Yahweh,
this is most likely making the locals think they worship the Greek God Zeus.
Paul commands the demon to come out, and when it does, her masters are furious. They do a citizen's arrest and accuse the guys
of disturbing the peace. They get beaten and thrown into prison, or setting a girl free,
kind of like Jesus. But they never waste a jail sentence. They sing hymns and pray,
and everyone is listening. Then all of a sudden, there's an earthquake that opens all the doors.
But the prisoners are apparently so captivated by the message that they don't even leave.
The jailer wants to end his own life at the side of the open doors,
but Paul is like, hey buddy, we're all still here, it's okay.
The jailer is awestruck.
He asks how to be saved, and they tell him, well, first, you have to get circumcised.
Then there's this whole list of rules to follow.
No, they say, believe in the Lord Jesus and you will be saved. That's it. Believe.
This echoes what Jesus said in John 6 when the crowd asked him,
what must we do to be doing the works of God? And Jesus said,
this is the work of God that you believe in him whom he has sent.
On one hand, this seems really freeing, no long list of laws.
But on the other hand, believe seems like an even harder work, right?
Have you ever tried to make yourself believe something?
I've never succeeded at that.
I can much more easily give 10% of my income and rest on Saturday.
How do you believe something?
Remember Lydia?
Remember how God opened her heart?
He does the doing.
He initiates it, sustains it, and fulfills it.
It turns out faith is just another one of his gifts
to us that we give back to him.
And thank God, because if I have to figure out
how to believe something, I'm better off with the list.
Paul and Silas preach to him and his whole family,
and they all believe and rejoice
and are baptized that night.
He treats their wounds, they eat dinner together, and then they go back to prison. They were willing to sacrifice their
freedom for the jailer's life, because they knew he'd be killed if they disappeared.
Fortunately, the magistrate orders him to be set free and even apologizes to them. Wow!
I had one million tea-god shots today, but here's the one I'll share. In 159, Peter says, God cleanses our hearts by faith.
God uses faith like I use a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser, or like a Silversmith uses a furnace.
It's a purging fire that purifies our hearts and refines them.
Doesn't the presence of a God-ward faith in your heart tend to drive out all the things
that need to go?
Praise God!
He's the active agent in that, and he's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be starting the Book of Galations.
It's six chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes, so check that out if you've
got nine minutes to spare.
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when we launched this podcast back in January 2019.
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