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THE CRIPPLE AT LYSTRA
--MAY 21.--ACTS 14:8-20.--
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF--ST. PAUL AND BARNABAS PERSECUTED--
SLANDERED AND MALTREATED BY PROFESSEDLY RELIGIOUS
LEADERS--A NOTABLE MIRACLE--HONESTY
REWARDED WITH STONES--HOMEWARD BOUND--VISITING
THE CITIES WHERE THEY HAD BEEN PERSECUTED--
TRIBULATION NECESSARY FOR PERFECTING OF THE SAINTS.
"He giveth power to the faint; and to him that hath no might He increaseth strength."--Isaiah 40:29.
LEAVING Antioch of Pisidia, St. Paul and
Barnabas went to Iconium, about one hundred
miles distant. There also they preached
the Word faithfully; and there also opposition
was aroused and persecution threatened.
The record is that "when there was
an assault made, both of the Gentiles and
also of the Jews, with their rulers, to use
them despitefully and to stone them, they
were aware of it, and fled unto Lystra."
They did not permit fear to hinder them from preaching
the Gospel with courage, neither did they fear threats;
but when the persecution took a positive form, they fled.
In so doing, they were following the Lord's instructions.
He did not say, "Be fearful of persecution, withhold
your Message and put your light under a bushel"; but He
said the very reverse. Nor did He say, "Be fearful, and
flee when there is no danger." On the contrary He said,
"When they persecute you in one city, flee ye to another."
Arriving at Lystra, they began afresh to preach the
Gospel, as courageously as though there had been no
previous opposition. Amongst the auditors was a cripple,
presumably a Jew or a proselyte, who manifested much
interest in the Apostle's words. Perceiving that the man
had faith, St. Paul stopped in his sermon and called out to
him, "Stand upright on thy feet!" This was a thing that
the man had never before done; but he had the necessary
faith and obeyed the Apostle's command. Thus a
miracle resulted, evidently to the astonishment of the
entire congregation. The effect upon the people was electrical;
and they shouted in their own dialect, "The gods
have come down to visit us!"
The city of Lystra figured as the scene of a mythological
event. The tradition was that Jupiter and Mercury,
two of the gods of mythology, had once come to Lystra
in the form of men, and had been refused lodgings everywhere
until they came to the lowly hut of a poor man,
who entertained them to the best of his ability. The gods
rewarded him by turning his hut into a gorgeous temple,
and punished the remainder of the citizens with a flood.
This tradition was very old, and was perpetuated by a
statue of Jupiter at the city's gate as its protecting god.
It is easy to discern how a comparatively ignorant and
superstitious people might jump to the conclusion that the
visit of St. Paul and Barnabas was a repetition of this
visit of Jupiter and Mercury, handed down to them
through tradition. St. Paul they called Mercury, because
in their tradition Mercury was the orator, the speaker;
and Barnabas they called Jupiter. Forthwith the priest
of Jupiter prepared to offer a sacrifice of oxen before
the statue of Jupiter at their city gate, in honor of the
supposed gods present with them as men, in the persons of
Barnabas and St. Paul.
NOBILITY OF THE MISSIONARIES
The missionaries were probably quietly conversing
with some of the more interested ones, when they heard of
the commotion in the city and of the sacrifice about to
be offered. Not for a moment did they think of taking
advantage of the superstition of the people to make of
themselves some great ones. Nor did they attempt to
turn the event to a service of the Truth by claiming that
God was Jupiter, that our Lord Jesus was Mercury, and
that they themselves represented the Father and the Son.
On the contrary, most earnestly and simply did they
entreat the people to desist, explaining that they were
nothing but imperfect men like the populace themselves--
"men of like passions"--that their mission was the very
reverse of what the Lystrians supposed, and that Jupiter
and Mercury were only products of imagination, ignorance
and superstition. The two ran in amongst the excited
populace while the latter were preparing for the sacrifice;
and even then with difficulty, amidst protests of their own
nothingness, did they restrain the people from sacrificing
in their honor. Noble men they were; and their faithfulness
to the Lord and to the Truth attested the wisdom
of sending them on this missionary tour.
From this incident we may draw a lesson, helpful to all
of the Lord's people who are to any extent His ambassadors,
representatives, teachers of the Truth. The Truth
itself, especially in the light of our day, is so wonderful,
so brilliant, that it naturally reflects some of its brilliancy
upon those who represent it, causing men to marvel and
to say, as of old, "Whence hath this man this wisdom?"
(Matthew 13:54.) In some instances it might lead to an
undue deference, to an ascription of undue honor, and to
a subserviency which would not be proper for the Lord's
ambassadors to receive, and which they should as promptly
and as thoroughly repudiate as did St. Paul and Barnabas
refuse the honors which the Lystrian populace were about
to bestow upon them.
From the worldly viewpoint, however, this would be
an unwise course. Those who will accept flattery, adulation
[R5891 : page 135] and honor more than is due are likely to be prospered
in this course to some extent by the Adversary, and are
apt to find that the worldly spirit likes to worship worldly
heroes. The only wise course for the Lord's servants,
therefore, is that followed by these missionaries of our
lesson--to repudiate the entire matter, to confess that they
are men of like passions with others, and to hold up the
Word of God, hiding themselves behind it and ignoring
self altogether.
Not alone will this course be profitable as respects the
finding and the development of the true children of God,
whom He is now gathering out of the world, but it will
be profitable also for the Lord's ambassadors! for in this
way they will grow in the Lord Jesus' grace and character-likeness,
of which humility was a prominent trait. Thus
they will best abide in the love of God.
TRUE SOLDIERS OF THE CROSS
In pointing out to the Lystrians the fact that their ideas
were vanities, the Apostle well knew that this could
not bring him the favor of his hearers; for it is not human
nature to appreciate being told of our follies. To work his
way into their good graces he would have needed to tell
them a lie--that they were very wise, that their course was
a very proper one, etc. Therefore in his endeavor to be
candid and to serve the Truth, he risked their disappointment
and displeasure. Undoubtedly, as God's mouthpiece,
he shunned not to declare the whole Message of God,
whatever its results might be.
Here are good lessons for all of the Lord's people.
It requires comparatively little courage to be a soldier
of the Cross and faithful to the Truth amongst those of
like precious faith and obedience. But it requires great
courage to resist improper honor of men when we know in
advance that this resistance will not only deprive us of
their honor and friendship, but make us ignoble in their
sight, and turn them into enemies. True soldiers of the
Cross still have the same trial; and it requires hardness--
a hardening campaign of experience in the Lord's service
--to endure these things and come off joyful in them.
The babes in Christ, the weak, the untried, those who
have not passed through trials and experiences, and developed
character, are not hardened, and could not stand
such experiences. Hence it is that the Apostle advises
the Church that even proper exaltation to a position of
service in the Church should not be accorded to a novice,
lest he should be puffed up, and thus be injured himself,
as well as be injurious to others. (1 Timothy 3:6.) It requires
time and seasoning either to rightly accept and appreciate
honors and dignities along proper lines, or to
decline those along improper lines.
St. Paul pointed out to his hearers that in times past
God had been permitting all nations to walk in their own
ways, and had interfered particularly in the affairs of
only the one nation--Israel. All other nations had been
permitted to take their own course, except in so far as
they might cross some feature of the Divine Plan. Thus
the Prophet had expressed the matter to Israel: "You
only have I known of all the families of the earth." (Amos 3:2.)
The Apostle's reference to "times past" (Verse 16)
implies the change of dispensation which had just occurred
in connection with the death of our Lord Jesus, the cutting
off of Israel from any special favor, and the throwing
open of the Gospel Call to all who have ears to hear--
"to the Jew first and also to the Greek."
Now God was sending a Message of instruction to all
nations, in order that they should turn from such vanities
and should recognize the only living and true God and
His Son, the world's exalted Redeemer whom the
Father had ordained to become its Ruler in due time, to
put down sin and death and to bless with His Reign of
Righteousness all the families of the earth. The Apostle
also pointed out that although God had left the nations
without the instructions of the Law Covenant and the
prophecies, He had given them some indications of His
care, in making provision for their necessities--causing
the sun to shine and the rain to fall upon the just and the
unjust, upon the evil and the good.
STONED FOR SPEAKING THE TRUTH
The sudden change of public sentiment which resulted
from the Apostle's plain statements of the Truth led the
Lystrians to look at the missionaries with very different
eyes, now that, according to their own declarations, the
two were only common men like themselves. We may even
suppose that they felt rather humiliated that their superstition
had aroused them to do reverence to men who
repudiated it and acknowledged their unworthiness of it.
While the populace was in this spirit, certain Jews
came thither from Antioch and Iconium, explaining to the
Lystrians that the missionaries were imposters, working
upon the credulity of the people, "turning the world upside
down," raising questions about theology, and disturbing
the minds of the people. The populace was ready
for just such leading in the reverse direction, and disposed
to feel that somehow, if these two men were not
really Jupiter and Mercury, they were pretenders and
falsifiers, who had deceived the people and who should
be put to death. As a result, St. Paul was stoned, dragged
outside the city, and left for dead.
How erratic is the fallen human mind, in its condition
of superstition and ignorance! How easily the priest of
Jupiter could lead the ignorant to make gods of men, and
how readily he could lead them in an opposite direction,
equally wrong! But although the greatest of all the Apostles,
and one of the most remarkable orators and logicians
which the world has ever known, was in their midst, how
few, comparatively, could he influence in the right direction--
for the Truth and righteousness, in obedience to God!
In many respects the world is the same today as it
was then, although civilization and general intelligence
have done much to lift it out of that abject benightedness
which leads to idol worship, although Mohammedanism,
Confucianism, Churchianity and a certain kind of Christianity
have put a veneer of respectability, reason and
common sense upon it. Nevertheless, under this veneer
the masses are still in a very unsatisfactory condition.
They are still disposed to be humbugged, disposed to appreciate
those who are boastful and pretend to be
great, disposed to worship that which demands worship
rather than that which is worthy of it, disposed to misunderstand
God and His Plan and to consider these from
a devilish standpoint rather than to appreciate the lengths,
breadths, heights and depths of the Love of God.
A REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE
But God was not through with the Apostle Paul. He
was not stoned because of God's indifference, nor because
of the Almighty's lack of power to protect His servant.
On the contrary, it is quite probable that the Lord was
teaching the Apostle some great lesson, valuable both to
himself and to the Church to whom he ministers even today
in the matter of these experiences. Quite probably
the Apostle, while being stoned, remembered afresh the
death of St. Stephen, to which he had consented. Quite
probably, too, the result was a fresh realization of his own
unworthiness to be so prominent a representative of the
Lord and of His Truth.
Had the incident of the sacrificing not been thus
[R5891 : page 136] followed by some trying experience, who knows but that
the Apostle might have felt a little of self-gratulation,
such as would be natural to any man who had renounced
voluntarily honors thrust upon him. He might have been
disposed to glory in his strength of character; but his
experiences led him in an opposite direction, as he himself
subsequently wrote. (Romans 5:3-5.) All of the Lord's
faithful ones may learn good lessons here--learn to trust
in the Lord's providences in all of their affairs, not only
in those which seem favorable, but also in those which
are apparently working disadvantage and disaster. Concerning
St. Paul the Lord had said, "I will show him how
great things he must suffer for My name's sake." (Acts 9:15,16.)
From this lesson we may infer that when the
Lord's servants are permitted to suffer for His name's
sake--not for wrong-doing, not for anger, malice, hatred,
strife, evil speaking, etc., but for His sake--it is an attestation
of the Lord's favor, in the acceptance of their sacrifice,
as in the type Abel's sacrifice was accepted with fire.
As the disciples stood about the prostrate form of St.
Paul, supposing that he was dead, the Apostle arose and
returned to the city.
HOMEWARD BOUND
Their entire public preaching at Lystra was at an end;
and the next day the missionaries went to Derbe, a distance
of thirty-five miles. This implies that the Lord
wrought a wonderful miracle in St. Paul, in that he was
able to continue his journey on the very next day after
having received so severe treatment as a stoning unto
apparent death. The Lord sometimes works marvelously
for His people, as in this instance. At other times He
leaves them to the general vicissitudes of life as other men.
No particulars are given regarding the ministry of the
Truth at Derbe. We may presume that it was without
special incident. Having gone thus far, the missionaries
determined to retrace their steps, instead of proceeding
and returning homeward by the nearer route--via Tarsus,
St. Paul's home city. Apparently their motive in so doing
was their realization that the little groups of believers at
Lystra, Iconium and Antioch in Pisidia would by this
time need some encouragement and establishment in the
Truth; that because of the fierce opposition in these
places there would probably be more or less contention
and trouble, and questions would arise which the new converts
would not be competent to answer.
This was pastoral work; and in the homeward journey
there is no intimation that the missionaries attempted
further mission work. They had no expectation whatever
of converting all the people in these cities. They understood
the Plan of God too well to have any such expectations
as modern mission workers seem to have. They
knew very well that the mission of the Gospel was not
to convert the world, but to select out of the world a
special people for His name. (Acts 15:14.) They had
witnessed the Truth to these people, and had confidence
that the Lord was with them and that only such as had
the hearing ear would be reached, either by the missionaries
or by those who had already been enlightened.
Accordingly the two contented themselves with the
work of upbuilding the "little flock," encouraging them
to make their calling and election sure to a place in the
Millennial Kingdom which, in God's due time, the Age
to come, shall be used of the Lord in the world's blessing,
the world's conversion, the world's uplift.
Doubtless the brethren in these various places were
surprised that if the Gospel were of God, its servants, its
ministers, should be so at the mercy of the forces of
evil. This may have tended to shake their confidence considerably;
for the natural expectation would be that God
would protect His servants. St. Paul explained this to
the believers, declaring that tribulations are necessary for
the perfecting of the saints, for the trial of faith, for the
testing and the preparing of those who would be joint-heirs
with Christ in the Kingdom; and that after the permission
of evil shall thus have served its purpose of keeping
the "little flock" separate from the world and of polishing
and refining them for the Kingdom, then the time
will come when Satan shall be bound, and when the
righteous shall no more be persecuted, but shall reign as
joint-heirs with their Lord and Head in His Kingdom.
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