HOW TO USE: This blog is written to serve as the basis for discussion. Find a partner or group to read through it together! Take turns answering the questions and listening to each other’s answers. Comment, email, or share your insights from your discussion with us!
Salespeople are not always liars, but sometimes they are. Sometimes, a care salesman will exaggerate how useful the features of the new Ford will actually be to you. He might also skip over negative aspects that would dissuade you from buying it – like the fact that the previous owner never changed the oil, or that the speedometer is broken.
But even good, honest salespeople know to highlight the positives of their products. Who would buy a knife set from a person that says, “These knives get dull within a week. There are too many; you will only really use two out of the set of thirty. Honestly, I don’t even know why you would buy this”?
If we were trying to “sell you” Christianity, this chapter is not going to do it. You’re about to see the most gifted and positive Apostles in the early church be brutally mistreated for simply being positive and gifted Apostles! But in the book of Acts, you have already seen the beauty of the gospel and the community it creates. Nobody needs to oversell the benefits of knowing where forgiveness of sins and eternal life come from. Quite the contrary, the beauty of the gospel speaks for itself so well that Paul and Barnabas were willing to be treated as less than human simply for believing it and sharing it with others. They felt that it was worth any suffering or negative outcome. How about you? Examine your own heart as you read Acts 14, and find encouragement in your own struggle to accept hardship for the sake of the beautiful gospel.
Read Acts 14:1-7
Read Acts 14:8-20
When Paul saw that the crippled gentleman “had faith to be healed,” it seems that Paul somehow concluded that this healing would be understood properly as connected to the preaching of the gospel. And it was, even if only for a select few.
The crowd that witnessed this miracle were used to stories of mythical gods like Zeus and Hermes appearing in various forms. There were even a few stories of humble people welcoming strangers into their home for dinner, only to find out later that they were these Greek gods themselves! The reason that Paul and Barnabas took a few minutes to understand what was happening was because they were not familiar with the language of this Gentile (Non-Jewish) area.
Do you think it would be tempting for Paul and Barnabas to sit back and enjoy all the positive attention? Why or why not?
In their preaching, Paul and Barnabas do not attempt to prove that Jesus is the Messiah promised by the Old Testament. Instead, where do they begin? What do you supposed to be the reason for the different tactic?
In a few short years, Paul had gone from a man who approved the stoning of Christians (Acts 7:54-60) to suffering this brutal execution method himself! Talk about how the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ is the only reason for this drastic life change.
Read Acts 14:21-28
The strong fellowship we have been reading about in Acts is expressed in many ways – sometimes in communal meals, joyful worship, and fervent group prayers; other times in joint sorrow and shock at the sufferings endured by early church leaders.
God bless your meditation and discussion!
-Pastor Mike Cherney
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