The Bible Recap - Day 347 (Acts 24-26) - Year 2
Episode Date: December 13, 2020SHOW 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: - 1 Corinthians 1:18 - Re...commend TBR to your church! We’d love for your church to read along with us next year! 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.
Yesterday, 470 soldiers delivered Paul to Governor Felix in Cesaria.
Today we pick up five days later when some of the authorities from Jerusalem have come to
talk to Felix about Paul.
They brought a spokesman's lash lawyer named Tertelis with them.
Tertelis starts off by flattering Felix, then launches into accusing Paul of starting
riots and defiling the temple, neither of which he's done.
Paul defends himself with the truth.
He says he goes to great lengths to live with integrity, and that he has honored the
ways of Yahweh, including everything written in the law in the prophets, which is the
shorthand way of saying all the Hebrew scriptures, i.e. the Old Testament.
Felix is pretty familiar with 1st century Christianity, or the way, as Paul calls it,
possibly because he lives in Cesaria among prominent evangelists like Philip.
He wants to hear more from Paul, so he tells the people who came down from Jerusalem that he'll
make a decision later and sends them back home. In the meantime, he tells the soldiers to keep Paul in prison but to be nice to him.
Remember, in this day, prisons aren't required to care for you.
Your friends have to do that, and sometimes prison guards even prevent the friends from
doing that.
Felix keeps calling Paul up to talk to him about the way, but it's never enough for him.
He's also kind of hoping Paul is going to pay him a bribe so he can get out of prison,
but even here, Paul maintains his integrity, sharing the gospel and obeying the rules.
After two years, Felix leaves office unexpectedly.
History tells us he was kicked out of office because he couldn't keep peace between the
Jews and the Gentiles.
So in order to make things less awkward with the Jews, he leaves Paul in prison.
Festus takes over after Felix, but even after two years, the issue with Paul has not cooled
off at all.
In fact, this is one of the first things that gets addressed when Festus comes into office.
While he's in Jerusalem, the authorities say, hey Festus, have your people bring
Paul up here so we can deal with this.
They want to do it this way because they've hatched another plan to kill Paul along the
way.
But Festus says, you guys just come back to Caesarea and we'll deal with it there.
I've got a few empty seats in my chariot so you can just hit your ride back with me.
They come down a week or so later, make their case against Paul,
and he maintains that he hasn't broken any laws, not Jewish law and not Roman law.
Vestus wants to keep peace with the Jews too, and certainly doesn't want to be evicted from
office like Felix was, so he says,
How's about we take you back to Jerusalem for trial, which the Jews would love?
Paul says,
Hard pass, between the two of you,
this is going nowhere,
so I'm gonna make an appeal to Caesar instead.
As a Roman citizen,
Paul is asking to be elevated to a higher court,
one that in theory should weigh more in his favor,
Festa agrees to his appeal.
A few days later,
King Herod Agrippa II comes to town.
While Governor Festa and King Agrippa are chatting, Festus lays out the whole story
for him of what's happened with Paul, and Agrippa says, I want in on this too.
Bring him out tomorrow so I can hear his side of the story.
The next day they bring Paul out in front of Agrippa and some of the prominent leaders
in town, and Festus introduces him by basically saying, everyone wants this guy to die, but
I don't think he's done anything wrong.
What should I do?
This all sounds far too familiar, doesn't it?
Paul opens by asking the king to be patient with him as he tells his story.
Let's hope the king isn't sitting on an open-third-story window while he talks.
Paul tells the story about his days as a persecutor of the church, followed by his conversion.
Near the end, Vestus interrupts and tells Paul he's lost his mind.
Paul has just given a beautiful explanation of the Gospel, butbestest doesn't get it.
This reminds me of what Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 118.
The word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing.
Paul says,
I'm not crazy, and the king knows it too.
You believe all of this, don't you, King Agrippa?
And maybe Paul was right.
A king Agrippa probably feels like he's on the spot in front of the governor and the
local leaders.
So he says, whoa, whoa, I'm not sure I'm ready to convert just yet Paul.
Give me some time.
And Paul says, as long as it takes, as long as it takes, because I want everyone who is
here today to convert, I want everyone to know the God I know and love the God I love.
My only hope is that it doesn't land you in prison too. They wrap things up, and as the King and Governor and leaders are all discussing things afterward,
they agree that Paul is innocent, and they say that timing is a shame because if Paul hadn't
appealed to Caesar and King Agrippa had been allowed to decide his case, then he would have
been set free. But even in what seems like terrible timing, God is at work. And that's where I saw my God shot today.
Even though Paul missed his chance at freedom,
God is still directing Paul's steps according to his plan.
We'll continue to see that, but even Paul sees it already.
Today in 2622, he said,
to this day, I have had the help that comes from God.
Think about all he's been through, trial after trial,
false accusations, character
assassination, torture interrogations, beatings, shipwrecks, imprisonment, you name it. And
even in all of that, he says he sees God's help every step of the way. Paul has his eyes
set on eternity. He has his heart set on the glory of God. And he knows help looks very
different with that mindset than if he were seeking his own good.
He refuses to trade the temporary for the eternal.
And even though the road is hard and lonely and frustrating,
God equips him with all he needs along the way.
God is our helper.
And he's where the joy is.
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