The island of Crete is the 88th largest island in the world and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, Sardinia, Cyprus and Corsica. Three hundred years before the time of Christ, Homer wrote about Crete’s hundreds of villages. It was a heavily populated island at that time, which means at the time of Paul’s visit there were that many more inhabitants.
In Acts 14 is an account by Luke of how extensively the Apostle Paul traveled. In Acts 17, Paul goes to Thessalonica and spends two weeks in the Jewish synagogue and the result was a local church was established.
"If you go to Philippians 4, you’ll notice he stayed in Thessalonica more than two weeks," says Richard Jordan.
“Philippians 4:15:
‘Now ye Philippians know also, that in the beginning of the gospel, when
I departed from Macedonia, no church communicated with me as concerning giving
and receiving, but ye only.’
“Philippi was a major metropolis of the area at the time of
Paul’s travels. When it says it was a ‘colony,’ the Romans had a way of
establishing a city. You know the term ‘city-state.’ You actually had to have
citizenship in the city.
“The commentaries say this city was built by Alexander the
Great in honor of his dad Philip (the ruler of Greece prior to Alexander). If
that’s true, that city is not located down on the coast by Thessalonica; it’s
rather in what is modern-day Bulgaria, which at that time was called Macedonia.
“At one time the city was called Philipopolis. Plavdiv is
the city now and it is a considerable distance north of when Thessalonica is.
If it weren’t for verse 12, you would assume it would be the Philippi down at
the coast.
“If it’s the city down on the coast, you could compress the
time some. If it’s Plavdiv, which is way up north in the Baltic mountains,
you’re going to expand the time. Paul is at Thessalonica and twice the Philippians
send offerings to him. What that means is somebody had to go from Philippi to
Thessalonica and then go back to Philippi and then go back to Thessalonica and
then go back to Philippi. Two round trips.
“In Paul’s day, you’re talking about a five-mile-an-hour
clip on an animal to travel somewhere and it’s better than 120 miles to Plavdiv
down to Thessalonica, so you’re looking at him taking a little bit of time.
“My point is Paul was there maybe, tops, 3 months. I Thessalonians
1. Here’s a bunch of people where Paul goes in, evangelizes them, then teaches
them, and in a period of only a few months, leaves them. He goes on down to
Berea, then Athens, then goes to Corinth. While he’s in Athens and Berea, he
sends Timothy back to Thessalonica to get a report. Timothy meets him in
Corinth and Paul writes I Thessalonians in Acts 18.
“Notice what he says in verse 3: ‘Remembering without
ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope in our
Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father;
[4] Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God.’
“These folks had gotten busy in a hurry! There’s only just a
few months from their conversion, and the establishment of the church in
Thessalonica, that Paul writes this back about them.
“Notice verse 4. You know how many people still fight about
election?! These people know all about it; he doesn’t even explain . . . he
says, ‘You know these things.’ And you go through I Thessalonians and it’s
amazing the doctrines that he refers to that they know about.
“I’ve always wondered about how in the world is something
like that possible because I’m used to dealing with people like you—wonderful,
sweet, kind people but just a little thick-headed. People who like to argue a
little bit; got your own ideas.
“On our trip in the 1990s to Bulgaria, we went into some homes, shared the gospel, people got saved. You
began to sit around and instruct them.
“More than once people would get saved, you’d talk to them
about the clarity of the gospel, being complete in Christ, living under grace,
right division, the difference between Peter and Paul, Israel and the Body of
Christ, the one Baptism and the Bible version issue, all in a two-hour period
of time after they got saved! And they would understand and grasp.
“There were several times I just wanted to stop and say, ‘Wouldn’t
somebody like to argue?’ But people were just receiving it, coming out of
tradition, coming out of religion and superstition, and standing in grace.
“You see, what was happening is more or less what Paul was
experiencing there. He took the pattern of soul-winning and then teaching the
converts, establishing leaders among them, and then having the leaders go back
and repeat the process. That pattern is what the work of the ministry is all
about. It’s not building buildings, and dogma developments, and tradition and
institutions.
“We’re talking about the life of the Body of Christ
functioning through the doctrines of grace and that’s where they work.
“Consistently down through church history, based on that
pattern, the one thing that you can take to the bank and cash and never run out
of is that as soon as a movement, or a group, lets down the issue of
soul-winning (nowadays people call it evangelism) . . . when that element is
missing from a group, or a local assembly or movement, the road to apostasy has
been joined.
“Now maybe they won’t get there right away, but the people
that they hand the ball to will get there. I’m talking about the cycle of life
of that Body working and the way you see that cycle of life is in that
reproductive process of the giving of life.”
(new article tomorrow)
No comments:
Post a Comment