Paul circumcises Timothy. This appears to be a contradiction. Paul
had just established at the Jerusalem Conference the importance of not
imposing circumcision upon the Gentile converts. He even had the
decrees of the council at Jerusalem with him. Yet he circumcised
Timothy. Possibly Paul thought that if Timothy remained uncircumcised
he would be considered unclean by the Jews to which he would minister
and that they might be prejudiced against him and his message. Paul
was using circumcision in Timothy’s case, not as necessary to
salvation, but conducive to the building up of the church. Timothy was
to be Paul’s assistant and constant companion and might not be
accepted if he were uncircumcised. (“to the Jews he became as a Jew, that he might gain the Jews”)
The
slave girl in today’s passages was inhabited by a spirit. Paul
commanded the spirit to leave the girl. Even though the things she was
saying were true, they were not from God. This is an example of Satan’s
deceit and craftiness. He will tell just a little bit of truth so
that some will believe and be drawn to a particular person or group.
That’s the hook. Then he will be able to teach falsehoods and so
deceive people. He tells just enough truth so that people are easily
fooled.
The owners of the slave girl were angry that
Paul and Silas had stopped their intake of money from the girl fortune
teller. That’s why they had Paul seized claiming he and Paul were
advocating unlawful customs. The magistrate ordered them to be
stripped and beaten. KJV says the magistrates rent off their clothes,
ordering the lectors to tear them off, expressing the roughness done
to prisoners, preparatory to whipping.
They were
severely flogged and then placed in prison in stocks. This was the
inner prison (pestilential cells) damp, dark, and cold where chains
rusted on the prisoners. During the time of Paul’s journeys, many died
from flogging. Many died from the stocks.
The stocks
were instruments of torture, made of wood bound with iron, with holes
for the feet, which were stretched apart according to the severity of
the punishment or torture. Yet the response to this persecution???
Paul and Silas prayed and sang hymns to God. The Greek words here mean
“as they prayed they kept singing praises unto God”. The
word for hymn is the one used for the Paschal hymn (Psalm 113 - 118)
which might have been the hymn sung by Jesus and the disciples after
their last supper together.
The prisoners kept
listening to Paul and Silas instead of sleeping. They were awake and
listening. A violent earthquake shook the foundations of the prison,
the prison doors opened; all the prisoner’s chains were loosed. But no
one escaped. What a great witness to the jailer! It was so great a
witness that the jailer and his whole household were saved. When the
magistrates sent for their release, Paul responded with. “No! Let them come themselves and escort us out.” WAY TO GO PAUL!!!
Paul
and Silas went to Lydia’s house and encouraged the brothers.
Interestingly it was Paul and Silas, the ones who were tortured and
imprisoned that encouraged the brothers, not the other way around.
In
Athens the people had many gods and objects of worship, even an altar
“To An Unknown God” just in case they had missed one. KJV says the
city was wholly given to idolatry (covered with idols).
Epicureans
were a well-known school of atheistic materialists, who maintained
that the universe is the product of chance, and that pleasure was the
chief end of human existence. Sounds a bit like humanism among other
false religions today.
When they called Paul a babbler they were insulting him. It was a general term of contempt for any pretend teacher.
When
Paul came to Corinth he devoted himself exclusively to preaching to
the Jews. After Paul left the synagogue he left the Jews and went to
the Gentiles. Then the Lord spoke to him in a vision. He was told to
stay in the area and to continue speaking and that he would be
protected. “So Paul stayed for a year and a half, teaching them the word of God.”
It’s as if God were giving Paul a much needed time of rest, relief,
and rejuvenation. Preaching vs. teaching. Paul was preaching to the
perishing, teaching to the believers.
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