Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener. And his teaching on the book of Acts. This is session number 14, Acts 12 and 13.  


Dr. Keener - Luke is brilliant in the way he arranges his material. He's been talking about Peter in the Jerusalem church. He's going to be focusing on Paul in the later part of Acts. And now in between, he's cutting back and forth between Peter and Paul. And this last time of transition, he's through  speaking of what was happening in Antioch. Now, the church in Antioch sends  Saul and Barnabas with the famine relief for Jerusalem in chapter 11:30. Well, they're going to. 

Luke is going to pick up again with Barnabas and Saul, after they've delivered this famine relief in chapter 12:25. In the meantime, is his last focus on Peter and the Jerusalem church although some of this takes place in Caesarea 


Inchapter 12:1-17 we learn about Peters deliverance. Now the persecution is becoming really serious. Herod Agrippa The first is the first  Jewish king since Herod the Great, because he was friends with the emperor in Rome. He's allowed to be king. And this is from 41 to 44, where he's allowed to  be king in Judea. He was the brother of Herodias. If you remember reading, Mark 6 about Herod there. That was Herod Antipas, the Tetrarch of Galilee. He married his brother's wife, Herodias, well, Herodias's full brother was Herod Agrippa the first. He was party buddies with Gaius Caligula, before Caligula became emperor, and he became the first official Jewish king since his  grandfather Herod the Great. His grandmother, Mariamne, was a Hasmonean  Princess. And that made him look good to the people because Herod the Great was Idumean ethnically, so his people were happy, this is the first Jewish king with a blood of the Hasmoneans the Maccabees in his veins as well. He was very popular with the people. He was also very eager to please which sometimes got him in trouble in Rome, he threw his money around, trying to please everybody there and ended up in some serious debts. Well, he did the  same thing in Judea. 


He was very eager to please, as in fact that the text here says he wanted to please, the Judeans and apparently, particularly the most conservative religious Judeans. So he was emphasizing his Judean identity, just as he emphasized his Roman identity when he was in Rome. You know, when in Rome, do as the Romans do, well, when in Judea do what the Judeans do. He  wanted to please people. He was very pro Pharisaic and frequented the temple  we know this from Josephus. Well, he arrests James, the brother of John. Jacob is really what it what it says. But in the New Testament, for some reason, Jacob has always transferred to James and he beheads him, just like John the Baptist was beheaded back in Luke 9 9. In this period, usually the  sword was used rather than the axe. Beheading was considered more merciful, was especially necessary for Roman citizens. But as a king, he held the power of the ius gladiis the power of the sword, the power of life and death. The Sanhedrin didn't have that. They had to have the governor's approval. But there was no governor of Judea during this brief period. It was just his own reign. This actually sparked a period of growing Judean nationalism, as they saw Oh, we can have our own king. What do we do when tragedy strikes us? James has been beheaded. Now Peter is arrested. Well, that's two of the leading apostles. What can the church do? 


Chapter 12:3. This was during the Feast of Unleavened Bread. The person who reads Luke and Acts together will will recall  from Luke's first volume that was the time of Jesus's execution in Luke 22:7. Agrippa sometimes executed people for public entertainment. It was part of his way of pleasing people. We know that from Josephus. It was public entertainment. Doing it at the festival served as a warning. But it also had the largest number of people, not just as a warning, but also the largest number of  people there who would appreciate entertainment. We know that Herod Agrippa the first gave generously to Gentiles outside of Judea. But his policies were  more popular with his Jewish subjects. He catered to the majority whims. His soldiers in Caesarea, his Gentile soldiers in Caesarea, who had to answer to him even though they were soldiers of Rome. They hated him. We also see that from Josephus, but Judeans, Jewish Judeans loved him. 


12:4 the location,  Agrippa of the first resided in Jerusalem. And this was presumably the place of  Peter's imprisonment, once Peter was taken into custody. It may have been in  the fortress Antonia, which is near the upper city. That was that was the place  where you had the most soldiers. In fact, he had a Roman cohort there. Some scholars have argued that he would have used to just Jewish soldiers during this period, maybe not the Levite Temple Guard, but his own Jewish soldiers. That's not what we read in Josephus. What we read in Josephus is that, he used the Roman army, the Roman cohorts that were already stationed in Judea. There will be four soldiers each on four shifts. So at any given time, there would be four soldiers guarding Peter. In 12:6, each chain tied Peter to one soldier, and then you had two guards standing watch outside, that should be pretty secure, you would expect it to be pretty secure. 


In 12:8-11. The angel  Lord appears and tells Peter to put on his his sandals and his outer garment. Prisons didn't normally supply clothes. So whatever you arrested in, that's what you had, unless somebody brought you something else. In addition, and they could get it past the guards, who often required bribes. But in any case, the outer cloak could be used as a blanket, but now he's going to need it is a cloak. And he's told to put these on and he puts them on. His chains drop off, the doors open, automatically, the Greek says by themselves. That language is used in many other ancient works. Euripides, remember he talked about Dionysus, freeing his followers, he made the chains drop off, and he made locked doors open. This language of doors opening by themselves. You have it from Homer to Josephus, it's all over the place in ancient literature. But again, it reminds us of what we saw earlier in Acts 5, that you can't fight against God.  James died, Peter survived. We don't always understand why God intervenes in one case, and God doesn't intervene in another case. But there was still work for Peter to do. And as we see in the book of Acts, part of that work, the place where he's mentioned, he's going to be mentioned again is in Acts 15 for helping with this transition in support of the Gentile mission. 


But Agrippa on wielded more direct power than the Sanhedrin. His guards were more efficient than the  guards that you read about in Acts 5. So it looks like Peter is going to die. He's asleep. But people are praying for him. Undoubtedly, they prayed for James too. But they're praying for him. Now, where is Peter? Probably he's somewhere in the upper city. That suggests maybe the fortress Antonia, which was on the Temple Mount, where the Roman cohort was. But from the Antonia Fortress, it was a straight route to the upper city. You could take one main road, if that's the  road that you took, and just cross over an arch and you would already be in the upper city. How do we know that he went to the upper city? Well, the home to which he goes is John Mark's mother's house. It has an outer gate. It has a servant who's functioning as a porter. Probably not very wealthy, because the servant seems to not just be a porter. She has to go to the door. She's not waiting at the door, but still a home of some means, in any case. From  outside of the book of Acts, we have good indication from Colossians 4:10, that  Mark and Barnabas were relatives. And we also know that Barnabas had  some means from Acts 4:36-37. So all of this supports the idea that this is a fairly well to do home. Certainly better off than average. And also from 4:36, we know that Barnabas was a Levite. So this may be a Levite family, they may even have some ties with the priestly aristocracy, if not an elite level, at least some sort of connection. Because there were a lot of well to do priests who lived in the upper city of Jerusalem as well as some living in Jericho. 


Now, here,  there's a prayer meeting going on in this home, the larger the home, the  more people you can get in it. So this was a natural place to have a prayer meeting. The Church used homes rather than special buildings for the first three centuries of the church's existence. We read about that, and Romans 16:5, and all over the place in the New Testament. Some poor synagogues had to do that as well, before they had synagogue buildings. The Jerusalem mega church could meet in the temple, which was considered public space. But in this period when persecution is severe, the church is underground and homes are much better for that than meeting in a public space. What else do we know about this home? Well, Mary is John Mark's mother. Mark was a Latin name. And so this comes from a family probably more favorable to Rome. It doesn't  necessarily indicate Roman citizenship, that they were a members of the  synagogue at The Libertines. We talked about before, but it at least doesn't  indicate typical Judea nationalism. So this is they're probably again tied to more well to do Jerusalemites. Mary was the most common women's name in Judea and Galilee. That's why you have it all over the place in the Gospels and the first half of Acts. It's again that the names that we find in Acts are suitable for the locations. These aren't names that the later church would have made up and projected back onto Judea or Jerusalem. 


The servants name is Rhoda. Rhoda means rose, which is often a name in many circles today as well. It was a common name for servants back then. Now, household servants, actually, were better off often than free people who worked in the fields. They were often better  off economically, and socially, had more social mobility more likely to  become free and achieve some sort of higher status in society, than did peasants who worked the land. However, that was not always true for the women. Women slaves and sometimes boys in the Gentile world experienced sexual harassment. And even in Jewish circles, it was  forbidden to sexually harass servants. But the very fact that it had to be forbidden suggests that temptation existed for some slaveholding men and some of them did that. However, it's significant here. This is John Mark's  mother's house, this is Mary. So Rhoda is not likely experiencing that and what we can see from the narrative, she knows Peter, she's part of the Christian community there. She's part of the household. And this is not condoning slavery, but saying this was part of the culture. And Rhoda was not in a particularly bad situation compared to probably the majority of people in the ancient Mediterranean world. 70-90% of whom were rural farmers, who were subsistence farmers, or who worked on other people's estates. 


12:14-16  learning faith by God's grace, sometimes he answers our prayers. Anyway, even when we didn't have as much faith as we ought to have had, James had been  executed, possibly in spite of their prayers. But notice the purpose for their prayer meeting. Chapter 12:5. The church is praying for Peter. They're praying for his release. So what happens when God releases him? They weren't really expecting it. They are surprised. Rhoda comes to the door. Peter’s knocking, she comes to the door, she sees it's Peter. And she's so excited. She runs back and tells the others while Peter is still at the door. And they disbelieve her, just like the disciples disbelieved the women at the tomb in Luke 24. It says ghost, they say I mean first they say you're crazy, which they  also kind of said for the women of the tomb. It's his ghost, they say. At first they  say, you're crazy. They say it's his angel just like they thought that Jesus was a ghost in Luke 24. 


Well, there were some popular traditions in which the righteous became like angels after death. But ironically, an angel had just delivered Peter, and this was the real Peter. But it wasn't that it wasn't that the narrative is condemning their faith over it, maybe be laughing at their their lack of faith, because Peter himself initially didn't think he was being released by the angel. He thought he was seeing a vision until he got out in the cold night air and got down one street and realized, Oh, this is really happening. So Peter himself hadn't believed that even though he was going through it at the time. Maybe it took him a while to wake up. But in any case, meanwhile, Peter is  pounding on the gate. Now keep in mind that there were other porters probably in the neighborhood, in upper city, Jerusalem. There were many people who had guards at their gates, so somebody else could look out and see who's that knocking at their door. It's kind of a dangerous situation, right? But the Lord takes care of it. Well, Peter recounts to them what happens when they finally let him in. Rhoda is the only one who really believes it initially, just like the women of the tomb, were the only ones who believed that initially.


Chapter 12:17. James, literally Jacob, it was it was a very common Jewish name. It's not  the same James who was beheaded in chapter 12:2. It would have been nice if his head grew back. But no, that's not the same James. This is the James who appears later on in Acts 15:13. And it seems to be taken for granted that Luke's ideal audience has already heard of James, that's why he doesn't have to be introduced in some special way. I Corinthians 15:7 and Galatians, 2:9, this was Jesus's younger brother. He was highly reputed for devoutness. Later on when he was martyred, the people of Jerusalem protested, and especially those who are most devout in the law, probably Pharisees protested James execution. What does that mean? Well, Peter, there might be people who are upset with Peter, you know, he's gone in with uncircumcised Gentiles word probably got  around. But James is probably safe with Agrippa. People are probably not going to be wanting James to be executed. And it will help the church because James was somebody who was already identifying with a very conservative Jewish Jerusalem culture. And it was probably part of his upbringing as well. 


Chapter 12:18-19. Agrippa is so arrogant that he's willing to condemn others to  death. But he accepts worship, and is damned. He examines the slaves, sorry, he examines the the guards for information, perhaps under torture, I was thinking slaves because slaves were under under Roman law and Greek practice as well often examined under torture. So he examines them, and then  he executes them. Because he doesn't find anybody else that he can blame except these four guards, they must have been negligent. This was a capital case. And in capital cases, Roman soldiers who are guards could be executed for negligence if they let the prisoner escape. And in fact, he must assume it's collusion. All the guards must have cooperated because two of them were chained to Peter. And the chains were undone. And then these other two were  were outside and there's no way Peter could have gotten past without them seeing him unless God arranged it that way and made it that they didn't see him. And that's not an explanation that he's going to go for. Well, when it says he executed the guards, that doesn't mean the entire squad of 16. It would just mean the four who were on duty at that time. But you see his  arrogance, he's condemning others to death. And now, before this narrative is over, God is going to condemn Him to death. 


Chapter 16:27, you remember when the Philippian jailer is ready to fall on his sword, we're in chapter 27:42, where the soldiers want to kill the prisoners, lest they escape, because it's risky  for them. Now, in both of those cases, they might not have been executed. But it was still a risk. In this case, though, Herod Agrippa is not a very nice person. And he salvages some of his own honor by being able to blame these these guards whom he assumes must be guilty and executes them in verse 20. 


Well, he is approached by an embassy from Tyre and Sidon. They depended on  imports for food in Tyre and Sidon. There was some of Tyre on the mainland, but much of it was still an island state that had been rebuilt on the island. And then there was still a ramp between them that had been built by Alexander the Great earlier. But they didn't raise enough food for themselves. They depended partly on Judea for for their food. And Agrippa had been holding back some of it. And  so now they they needed to comment and speak very flatteringly to him and so forth. Josephus tells us that this actually took place in the theater in Caesaea. So he's going back to Caesarea at this point where the Roman capital of Judea was even though he normally lived in Jerusalem. 


Agrippa liked to flaunt his power as  he does in verse 21. Luke mentions his royal robes. They're also mentioned by Josephus, who emphasize their splendor. Agrippa's self display on other  another occasion led to anti Jewish riots in Alexandria. Josephus portrays this particular scene in the theater of Caesarea. That theater was built by his grandfather Herod the Great, and the foundations of this theater still remained  today. And this was a special occasion where they were gathered. It was probably the Emperor's birthday if we understand the texts correctly. Josephus says that Agrippa was flaunting his power. That is flattery is praised him as a god that was common in the Greek east. Well, he was a friend of Gaius Caligula who was Gaius Caligula was now dead. Claudius was the emperor but Gaius Caligula was the one who the emperor who tried to set up his own image in the temple in Jerusalem and demand worship has a God. And Agrippa had  discouraged that we're told. 


But at this point, Agrippa apparently his power has  gone to his head he he's happy to be adored or flattered as if he's a God Himself. Remember, he likes to please people, and these are Gentiles. But even Germanicus, who was a famous general when he's in Alexandria, and peopl  hailed him as a god, he deflected such praise. Everybody except the emperor  was supposed to deflect such praise. In fact, the emperor would not like somebody accepting such praise. He didn't deflect the honor in this case. And Josephus says that he immediately collapsed, died at the age of 80. Sorry, at the age of 54, after five days of stomach pains. Death from bowel diseases and worms was considered particularly horrible. It's considered an appropriate death for tyrants. And we have some other stories of tyrants who died this way. But  both Josephus and Luke, speak of Agrippa's horrible death. Luke says he was eaten by worms, and died. 


So Agrippa, who exercise the power of life and death, who wanted to kill Peter, Peter ends up surviving, Agrippa ends up dying. The one who really holds the power of life and death is the one who knows every hair on our heads. We don't have to be afraid. When, you know if we if we  do die in the service of the gospel, we can trust. We're in God's hands. He's with us. And he'll be with us through that through that time. And if He delivers us, He  delivers us. And we rejoice in that too. Either way, we know that he's in charge. 


Chapter 12:25, through chapter 13:3, Antioch sends out missionaries. This was  not a common practice in Judaism. Travelers would take Message of the Jewish faith with them they would they would be happy to spread it, many of them, but they didn't actually send out missionaries. Remember, Saul of Tarsus has this calling that God has given to him. Barnabas knows about it. And in this case, at  this time, it's time for them to be sent out by the church. Despite chapter 1:8, the Judean apostles were still in Jerusalem at this point, we still hear about them. They're in chapter 15:6, they're expecting it to work. The gospel will spread from Jerusalem and the Gentiles will come to Jerusalem to receive the  receive the law of God, or at least hear about it from Jerusalem. But Antioch had been particularly successful in the Gentile mission, chapter 11:19-26. They had  they have a special vision for this, they could affirm this.


Chapter 12:25, the  journey back to Antioch from Jerusalem for Barnabas and Saul had delivered something to Jerusalem. And of course, that left some suspense because maybe they were even there when Agrippa was executing people. But the journey back to Antioch for them was roughly 400 miles, that was a significant journey. It was customary for ancient teachers to take disciples with them. And  Barnabas takes Mark a young man with them. Maybe he was a teenager at this  point again, around 13. They didn't have Bar Mitzvah yet in this period. But  somewhere around 13, or, perhaps soon after, when a young when a boy entered puberty, it was considered a young man in Jewish circles, and in much of the Mediterranean world. Enrollment might be 15, 16, something like that. But in any case, Mark may have been a teenager at this point, somewhere on there. It was safer to travel in groups. So there were several of them going. What were they talking about in the way we don't know. But at least rabbis, who were very pious considered that it was good to talk about the Torah, when you were  traveling, they probably did have a lot of conversation about the Bible, as they were traveling and talk about the mighty works of God in their own lives and the accounts of Jesus, probably. Luke got some of his stories about Jesus also from things that Paul told him, maybe some of the parables about grace, and so on. 


Chapter 13:1, they're back in Antioch. And Barnabas and Saul are among the leaders in the church. The overseers here are prophets, and teachers. So it wasn't just prophets from Jerusalem coming to Antioch. But you had some  prophets and teachers in Antioch, at least at this point, maybe some of the earlier prophets stayed. And these were people who spoke the word of the Lord, prophetically were by teaching or by both. Scholars have debated whether all of these were all of them, or some of them were stronger than one. Some of them were stronger than other. 


Simeon and Manaen the name Manaen is a Greek form of Menachem. It's a Jewish name. Simeon and Manaen, and they're both Jewish names, but Simeon's surname is Niger. That was a respectable Roman name. He may have been a Roman citizen. But in this case, it's not just Simeon Niger. It's Simeon called Niger. So it's a nickname. And when it was used as a  nickname, in Latin, Niger meant black. So probably, it's like Simeon the dark. He may be North African proselyte, descended from North African proselytes. In any case, he's Jewish. Well, given the name Simeon he was presumably born Jewish, but possibly to proselyte from further  south. He's a darker complexion. Lucius Cyrene had a large Jewish  population, maybe one quarter of Cyrene was was Jewish. So of Cyrene could have been Jewish. Lucius was typically a Gentile name, but Diaspora Jews use that name. So it doesn't really tell us what Lucius's ethnicity was. But we do see at least geographic diversity which was helpful for cosmopolitan  Antioch. You had a leadership team that reflects some of the diversity of the population. The leadership team is largely Jewish, ethnically, even if they're from different regions even. They may have different backgrounds before ancestors converted to Judaism. But that's natural, because who would be the people who would know the Torah the best? Who would be able to teach scripture the best? 


Well, Manaen is very interesting, because he was brought up with Herod. What does it mean he was brought up with Herod? It could mean that they shared the same wet nurse, slaves who grew up with the heir, especially slaves who were children of the heir's wet nurse, were often later freed. And they remained powerful, even slaves because of the relationship to the slave holder. I mean, if you were a slave of Caesar, there were slaves of Caesar, and especially freed persons of Caesar, sometimes wielded more power than Roman senators. So very different system than then when you think about slavery in the Americas, and many other kinds of slavery in many other parts of the world, historically, and sometimes, and normally today, as well, in many parts of the world. But he may have been a freed slave, he may not have been. Other boys also could be brought up with princes of the royal court, and they also attained prominence. Antipas had fallen a decade before this narrative. 


So Herod Antipas, actually, what happened to him was that his wife Herodias when her brother Herod Agrippa of the first became king. She said to her husband, Herod, now that's not fair. My brother just came here, and he comes as a king, but you, you have been Tetrarch of Galilee and Perea for an entire generation. So you should petition the Emperor to be king. And he said, That's not really a good idea. That's not the way things work in the Roman  Empire. But she insisted, and finally, he did petition the Emperor. And the emperor said, Nobody talks about being king, unless I initiate it. And he banished Herod Antipas and Herodias went with him. So they had lost their position of power, by this point. 


So Manaen doesn't have any strong political connections, per se. However, he comes from a very respected and probably educated background, and he may be Luke's source for the material about Herod Antipas, that we get some special material about Herod Antipas in Luke Acts, especially the Gospel of Luke, that doesn't appear in some of the other gospels. Interestingly, also, he may have been, we also have the wife of Chuza, Joanna, the wife of Chuza, Herod's steward. So there were a couple in house connections with Herod Antipas. Now, Luke may have learned of these things, just from Paul having learned these things from other people. But in a case, Luke has some apparently inside information on this, Luke 13:2-3. 


The leaders are fasting together. Fasting was typically used for mourning or repentance. Some Jewish people used it to try to seek revelations, here. They're seeking God in prayer. During one time in my life, for an extended period of several years, I want to do fast a day each week, just not over a particular issue. Because I had too many issues I would have to,  would never have been able to eat, but just just to seek God and to show my devotion sacrificially to God. And he heard he was hearing the different prayers because I wasn't worried about you know, I have to fast with this prayer. It's just I have a relationship with my father. He hears me when I pray, and I'm  demonstrating my devotion. But in any case, they're fasting, in conjunction with prayer and the Holy Spirit speaks. Now remember, the Holy Spirit was most often associated with prophetic speech or prophets. So here, the Spirit functions of the Spirit of Prophecy. Remember, the leaders were prophets and teachers. So probably one of them prophesied is probably how the Spirit spoke. 


And the Spirit said, set apart Barnabas and Saul for the ministry to which I have called them. They'd already heard from the Lord. So this was a confirmation of what they'd already heard. Wasn't like, I just got this idea you're supposed to do that. Well, sometimes then you're gonna have to wait for your own confirmation in some other way. But this was something the Lord had already been speaking to them and it's wonderful when the Lord confirms things to us that we felt the Lord has spoken to his others sometimes feel the same thing. And this was particularly important in this case. I mean, they were leaders, they had an active ministry here in an existing, growing cosmopolitan church. But now they're being sent out to begin the work in other places. Directly sent. Sending probably means that their fare was paid, probably one way as they were going on their initial mission in this case to Cyprus. 


Chapter 13:4-12. The  proconsul of Cyprus believes it was customary for messengers or heralds to travel by twos as we said before. It's also safer if you have somebody with you. Students of the Torah preferred having companions so they could study with them as they traveled or talk about the tour with them when they traveled. You know, we could get kind of boring if all you're doing is talking as walking in you  don't have anybody to talk with. But Roman roads were usually good, and they were generally safe, provided you were traveling during the day. I remember in one place in Nigeria, we heard that there were robbers at night and unfortunately, the car broke down at night. And so my Nigerian friend who was driving the car, said, Okay, I'm going to change the tire. But you, you go out and make sure that nobody hits us from the back because we don't have any lights on the back of the vehicle is it's shut down. So we found out that  a baturi, a white person was good for something in the circumstances, because my light skin it reflected the headlights of the car since so, it was nice  that it was useful for something and we, we made it in but we were concerned, you know, we weren't quite to the city yet. And, and it was already dark. But during the day, it was normally safe to travel. Travel was easier than ever before, in the in the, in this part of the world, or ever again, until close to the modern  period. And this part of the world. 


In 13:4, they they traveled from Antioch to Cilicia, which was the port city on the coast. Cilicia was about 15 miles to or 24  kilometers to the west. There was also the river Orontes going out to the coast, but but they would they could take the road. Cilicia itself is a port. It was  also a wealthy merchant city and had strong fortifications, it would be really hard to take because of the cliffs in front of it, and so on. Cyprus was a natural place for them to go. Barnabas knew Cyprus. Remember Barnabas is a Cypriot Acts 4:36. And it was 60 Miles 95 kilometers by sea, from Cilicia. Well, in 13:5, they come to Salamis, which was natural would be the first place they'd come to.  When they come to Cyprus. Salamis was a very large city,  probably over 100,000 people living there. It had a large Jewish community,  probably several synagogues. So they come and speak in these synagogues. 


Visiting teachers skilled in the Torah, would naturally be asked to speak in local synagogues. I mean, normally you've just got yourselves, but when you have visitors and in Salamis, you might have a number of visitors when you have visitors. If if they were if they were skilled in the Torah, I mean, here was Paul, he was from Jerusalem. And he'd studied under Gamaliel in Jerusalem. If they hadn't heard of Gamaliel, at least they would respect that he'd studied under a skilled teacher in Jerusalem. So some people, a minority of scholars have said, well, we can't believe in the book of Acts where it says that Paul actually spoke in synagogues, because Paul said that his mission was to the Gentiles will look at. Romans 11 we see that he also had a  vision for reaching the Jewish people. Romans 9 he said he would be he even  would be willing to be accursed from Christ for their sake. Just like Moses was  willing to lay down his life for his people. Why not? My name from the book, Moses said, of course, God wouldn't allow that. 


But even even more directly, II  Corinthians 11, Paul speaks of multiple times, being beaten with 39 Stripes. Well, that was the kind of beating you got in a synagogue. So Paul, during his ministry, obviously did spend time in synagogues. He could have repudiated the synagogue community and said, Well, I'm a Roman citizen. I don't have to go  through This, and Roman law would have protected him, but he also would have been excluded from the Jewish community. The fact that he gets beaten this way five times shows us that he kept going back to the synagogues. Didn't get beaten in all of them, of course, but he kept going back to the synagogues. So Paul's own eyewitness letters, confirm that he did, in fact speak in the  synagogues. And Barnabas seems to be leader of the team at this point. Still,  they're still being called Barnabas and Saul. And so probably they both spoke.  Although Paul seems to have spoken, maybe more eloquently. We'll see that in  chapter 14. In the early second century, the Cypriot Jewish community attacked Salamis. And in retaliation, the Jewish community was obliterated. But in the first century, there was a large Jewish community there. 


In 13:6, it says that they  traveled, they were traveling from the eastern part of Cyprus to the to the  western part, they probably took the newer southern road, it was shorter than  the older northern road, in some of the cities and route where they probably  preached in synagogues, or ministered in some in some way, Luke is just giving  us this quick summary. He's only going to have one volume for the whole  mission of the early church. And this isn't a place where he was with them. The cities en route include Citium, Amathus, and Kourion. I'm not actually  pronouncing these the way they would have been pronounced in Greek. And  some other things, I'm not pronouncing the way they would have been pronounced. But in any case, new new Paphos. Paphos was the provincial  capital for Cyprus. It was a Greek Harbor Town on the north and west of Cyprus. And it maintained some some trade relations with Judea. Now there was a  famous shrine of Aphrodite. That wasn't in new Paphos, that was in old Paphos  about seven miles or 11 kilometers to the southeast. But again, this is a predominantly pagan area. But they're brought in before the governor. And interestingly, the there's a palace that's been excavated in what was new Paphos in Cyprus, and the palace is thought to be that of the governor. So we may actually know something of what the room looked like, where Paul and  Barnabas were brought in. There was a like an apse where there was  apparently a very important chair, probably where the governor sat, to make his  decrees and judgments and so on very large room, there were murals on the wall of various mythological scenes like about Achilles, and so on. So the  environment is very pagan. But that doesn't stop the gospel. Nor does the fact  that there was a Jewish magician there. 


Jewish magicians were often thought to be the best in the Roman Empire. Of course, they're forbidden in Scripture, and they were mistrusted among pious Jews. But because Jews were thought to have the hidden name of God, they were often respected by others in the realm  of magic. Roman aristocrats were often they often attached philosophers to the  courts. Sometimes they took in philosophy. Sometimes they took in philosophers sometimes they took in astrologers. Later, Felix, whom we'll meet later on in the book of Acts and Judean Roman governor of Judea, befriended a Jewish magician from Cyprus. So we know that there were Jewish magicians from Cyprus, even some decades after this, or even a decade  after this. Sergius Paulus was a Roman citizen, but he was the first generation of Roman citizens who actually lived in the east who also members of the senatorial class. Sergius Paulus's family lived in the interior of Asia Minor. So he grew up Yes, as a Roman citizen, but also attracted to some of the ideas from  the east and here's got somebody who's, who's a Jewish magician, it would be kind of like having an Egyptian or Persian in your court, Persian magis. An Indian, wise person, these people were particularly reputed for some ancient  wisdom and some ancient mysteries. And they were considered exotic sometimes by some other people, especially in the western part of the Roman Empire. So he has this Jewish magician in his court.


13:7-8,  Sergius Paulus was apparently proconsul of Cyprus from the years 45 Certainly  in the years 45 and 46. As is always Luke has correct the specific local local title of the official. In Cyprus, it would have been the Proconsul in this period. Sergius Paulus. We don't have his name attested as proconsul of Cyprus in this  period, because we have the names of only about 1/5 of the pro consoles of  Cypress, most of them had been lost to us. So we only had a 20% chance, one chance and five of knowing what his name was, and we don't we don't know that the names of proconsul here, but we do know that it fits the career of Sergius Paulus. And it makes sense that he would have been Proconsul in nearby Cyprus, his family being from the interior of Asia Minor, it fits the other things we  know about his career. And the other things we know about his family being a  senatorial family 


13:9, Saul, who is also called Paul. Well, why? Why introduce his name here. For first time. Here's the book of Acts that have held some suspense. Oh, because by now they're figuring out Oh, this must be Paul. But early on, they may not have figured it out. Although his conversion story was so widely known. They may have figured it out anyway. But there's another reason  why it's first mentioned here. Roman citizens had three names the Tria nomina and the Roman cognomen. Which is what Paul would be it was normally cognate, Paul, Paulus was Latin for small. That identifies him probably as a Roman citizen. Almost everybody we know of who had the name Paul was a Roman citizen. And usually, Jewish parents wouldn't want to give their well  sometimes they gave their kids Roman names anyway, but we don't know of Paulus being used that way. And normally, it wouldn't be. It wouldn't go over well in Jerusalem or places like that, to have that name. And even though Saul was originally from Tarsus, Roman cognomen normally would mean, the  Roman Cogman, Paul normally would mean that he was a citizen. His Roman  name sounded similar to his Jewish name that was common to have them sound similar, or sometimes to mean the same thing. But in this case, a similar sound show in Aramaic. Shaul, Saulus in Greek and Paulus, in Latin. By the way, Saulus would probably not have been invented for him. Because even  though it was a great name for Benjamites, which we know from Paul's own letters that he was, it wasn't the best name in the Greco Roman world, where  Saulus meant something very negative. So it makes more sense for him to go by, by the name Paul, especially when he's in a Roman environment. So now that he's in a Roman environment, it transitions to his Roman name. And it it makes a good connection because Paulus is speaking do Sergius Paulus.  


Chapter 13:10-11. The Jewish magician, Elymas bar Jesus is speaking against  the message of Barnabas and Saul. Well now, Paul and Barnabas, Paul takes  the lead in this encounter. And after this, it's normally Paul and Barnabas. And he's struck blind. And Paul pronounces judgment he says, you'll be  blind for a season. Well Paul knows how that works, because it happened to him as well. He and also this man had been the blind leading the blind like Paul had  been earlier. The play on figurative or spiritual blindness and physical blindness you have it in the Old Testament prophets you have in Greek dramatists, and so on. So that's, that's not unusual. But he says you'll be struck blind for season. And he calls he calls him, the son of the devil. Well, that that also is  ironic because this was bar Jesus, meaning son of Jesus, Jesus was a  somewhat common name. It's the name Joshua in the Old Testament. In Greek, it comes over as Isous. So he's not really a son of Jesus. He's really a son of the devil and he's going to be blind for a season to learn his lesson. 


Here's what  we call a power encounter. This magician claimed to have supernatural power. But the real power, God's power is so much greater. And I'm just going to make  a few comments here about power encounters. My brother in law,  Emmanuel Moussounga is a professor of chemistry at the University of Brazzaville. He has a PhD in chemistry from a French university, just like my wife has a PhD in history from a French university. And Emmanuel is a great  guy. And very, I very much trust him. And he's, you know, he's a scientist. He's  published scientific articles. He's a very smart man. Hence, Emmanuel also teaches Sunday school, in his church, in Evangelical Church of Congo. And he  has, he recounted to me, something that happened with some of his students. There were these three boys who always stuck together. And at one point one of  them got very sick. And after a couple months he died. And then the next one,  fell very sick. And after about a month, he died. And immediately the third one fell sick. And at this point, the third one came to the Sunday school teachers and said, I need you to pray for me. The three of us had agreed among ourselves, and in with the person who told us that we would receive supernatural power, and told us that we were not supposed to tell anybody outside our group. Otherwise we would, we would lose the power, the spell wouldn't work. But we met this man in the street. And he wanted to take some of our blood, he said, If  you just could take a little bit of our blood, each of us would get supernatural  power, we'd become government ministers or whatever. And the the oldest one fell sick. After he had a nightmare, that the same man came and stabbed him with the same knife. He fell sick. And after a couple of months, he died. The night that he died, the second one had the same nightmare, and he fell sick. And the night that he died, the third one had the same nightmare and said this is not working the way it was supposed to. And came and asked the Sunday school  teachers to pray. So my brother in law, and the other Sunday school teachers banded together, and they prayed and fasted during the day for nine days. And  then they went and prayed for him to be delivered from this. And he was, and  he's last I talked with Emmanuel, the boy now a young man is still well. 


My family and I had our own unexpected encounter where a tree broke off with the roots in the context of us being cursed. Right where we just been standing. I didn't I couldn't understand that for years how that could happen until one day I  was reading Job 1 and said, Oh, Satan does have the power to blow down  homes and things like that. But God protected us. I don't really like telling my own stories about this because they aren't pleasant. So I'm going to mainly  focus on telling other people's stories. But Dr. Rodney Ragwan an Indian Baptist  from South Africa, a good friend of mine and colleague, where I, in the seminary where I taught before, told me a story from his grandfather. He'd heard it from his father. And when I was working on the book on miracles, and doing an appendix on this sort of thing. Rodney contacted his father for me so we could get the story directly from one of the people who was there, one of  the eyewitnesses. Well, his grandfather was an Indian Baptist in Durban, and met somebody at the market who said, Well, I'm going to show you that my spirit is very powerful. My spirit is going to come visit you tonight, around midnight, and you'll see my spirit is more powerful than anything you have. And that night, the family was praying and fasting till about about 11:45. And for about 20 minutes, we heard massive steps around the house and Rodney's father remembered this in great detail. This is the kind of thing that would stick in your memory, right. But then nothing happened. And the next day in the market. The man admitted to Rodney's grandfather, that his spirits couldn't get in. The Lord protected his people. 


Many spirit practitioners have been converted through power encounters. That's common in Indonesia. It's common in the  Philippines. I've lectured in, in both places and southern Africa it's common. Tandi Randa, in Indonesia, who I mentioned before, he was unharmed by  witchcraft attacks that have been used to kill others. Everyone expected him to die, but he experienced no harm. The witchcraft worker repented and accepted Christ. Here's a scene where they're burning witchcraft items. And by the way, this is not, you know, sometimes people call traditional herbalist or something, witches that that's not necessarily always correct, but these are people who claim to be witches who claim to use curses to kill people. So 12 years later, he remains Well, nothing's happened to him. Here in 2011 is a picture where there are baptizing witchdoctors who have converted during his revival meetings in a mountain area in Indonesia. 


Chapter 13:13-41, Paul's sermon in  Pisidian, Antioch. And I'm going to start with with a background on that. Chapter  13:13-14:26. Paul and Barnabas visited a number of cities all of them are long  the the Via Augusta the you could call it, Augustus highway was in Greek it was the Via Sebaste. The Augustus Highway. It was built about half a century  before this, partly because Rome wanted to make sure its armies could move  swiftly in the interior of Asia. Chapter 13:13, as they sail directly, or pretty close to directly north from, from Paphos to the southern coast of Asia  Minor, they probably landed at Antalya, which was the main harbor for for Perga. And then they probably traveled by road. Probably the river was was navigable  somewhat, but you'd still have to travel by road from the river. So made sense. You know, there were more than one of them, it made sense for them to travel by road, they traveled by road from Perga 10 miles or 16 kilometers north. Perga was five miles from even possibly navigable water from this from this river. This is Perga in Pamphylia, the text says. Pamphylia was part of the district of Pamphylia Lycia in this period. So Luke correctly describes the  territory, this was part of Pamphylia Lycia from the years 43 to somewhere around 68 definitely during this time period. 


Perga was a very significant city and the coast may have had over 100,000 people. Well, then they start, then they probably traveled northeast along the Via Sebaste Augustus highway.  There are a couple other routes they could have taken. But that was the best  one. And that's the likeliest one for where they were traveling. Now why would  they travel to the interior? Here Perga has probably over 100,000 people. But Luke is recounting stories of what happened with Antioch, near Pisidia in 1314.  Antioch, near Pisidia not to be confused with the earlier Syrian Antioch near the Orontes that we talked about, wasn't nearly as large as Perga, or other cities  along the coast. It was a Roman colony. Because again, Rome had wanted to station veterans along the way when they were establishing colonies. Because this was a way of keeping the interior of Asia Minor secure at a time in an earlier generation when it wasn't very secure. 


There were 5000 colonists, descendants of the veterans who lived there, plus other people besides the colonists, but still  that's not a very large population compared to some of the coastal areas. They were known particularly for their worship of the god Mene. The biggest temple, however, locally, was the recently built temple in honor of the Emperor, in the honor of Caesar. It was much smaller than the coastal cities. However, we know from archaeology that the family of the Sergii Paulii lived in this region, especially to the to the northeast of here. And if he had supplied them letters of recommendation, which naturally normally he would do if he became a believer  whether his faith was permanent or not, we have some reason to believe that he later became a senator and in served in Rome and a later generation. He may have done some things that are honored Caesar in some ways that Christians normally wouldn't have considered appropriate. Although we can remember Naaman who was allowed to go into a pagan temple in II Kings 5.  But he didn't actually worship the gods, he just let the King lean on him as the  king worshipped the god. 


But in any case, Sergius Paulus was at least a  believer at this time, and it would be natural that he supplied letters of recommendation that would be one reason they would go to the interior. Now, they could also speak on the Sabbath at the synagogue there are that's the only  time that Jewish public gatherings normally happened. The Sabbath and festival days. Sometimes, people would have schools if the Jewish community was  large enough, and people could go study at the synagogue. That's attested more often in a later period. But in any case, in chapter 13:15, the readings of Scripture that were that were used, Paul is probably going to start with the normal scripture readings that they give. There's a there's a reading, especially  from the Torah. We don't know if the readings were fixed yet in this period. They may have been later there's a triennial cycle. You have readings from the Torah and the prophets in this period. Some people think people may have  been able to choose their own readings, especially in the diaspora outside of Judea and Galilee, a synagogue sermon would normally be a homily on a texts  read. And Paul actually preaches, starting from the beginning and runs up through the prophets by the end of the next sermon. 


The the rulers of the  synagogue, invite him to speak again, this would be natural here's, here's  somebody who's actually from Judea visiting. And he's trained as a speaker of Scripture, of course, they're going to ask him, rulers of the synagogue was often an honorary office, but often also, it could refer to the highest officials of the synagogues inscription show that and people were often  given this office, who were particularly of honorable, respectable class, in terms  of the class divisions that were thought of in that time. These were often donors  to the synagogue as well. 


Well, in 1316, in the diaspora as opposed to what we see about Jesus like in in Matthew 5:1 in the diaspora. A speaker would, would  stand normally to speak. So, you know, Jesus reads and then sits to expound  and Luke 4, but in the diaspora, outside of Judea, and Galilee, the speaker  would normally stand and so Paul stands. And then we have a scripture laced exposition in chapter 13:16-43. Quite different from the way Paul preaches to  Gentiles. Paul, adapted to different audiences in his speeches just as he adapts to different audiences in his letters, which was considered a good rhetorical  principle in antiquity. Well, next time what we're going to pick up with is actually  the content of Paul's message at the synagogue in Pisidian, Antioch. And as  we're going to see, some people really like what Paul has to say, but some people really dislike what Paul is going to say.  


Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener. In his teaching and the book of Acts. This  is session number 14, Acts 12 and 13. 



Last modified: Tuesday, June 6, 2023, 9:01 AM