Tag: macedonia

  • Jews in Berea receive and believe the Gospel

    Jews in Berea receive and believe the Gospel

    What do Christians mean when they call themselves Bereans?

    Berea Bible Church photo Bill Smith creative commons license via Flickr.com

    Berean Bible Believer

    Are YOU one?

    No doubt you have your own imagery.

    (Let’s set our pictures of the past aside for a moment and go straight to the source – THE BIBLE – for some context of Paul’s visit to Berea.)



    Acts of the Apostles 17:

    So IF you are a Berean sort of believer you will first want to examine the Scriptures of our Source. Here they are!

    10 The brothers immediately sent Paul and Silas away by night to Berea, and when they arrived they went into the Jewish synagogue.

    This, of course, was where we left Thessalonica with Paul, Silas and Timothy last time in v. 10a

    Now these Jews were more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.

    Acts of the Apostles 17:11 – English Standard Version

    12 Many of them therefore believed, with not a few Greek women of high standing as well as men.

    13 But when the Jews from Thessalonica learned that the word of God was proclaimed by Paul at Berea also, they came there too, agitating and stirring up the crowds.

    14 Then the brothers immediately sent Paul off on his way to the sea, but Silas and Timothy remained there.


    A Brief Stay in Berea

    Luke, as you can see, covers this apostolic visit to Berea in just four and a half verses. And from their arrival [v. 10b] until Paul’s hurried departure [14a] even less time and scripture.

    Yet hardly a Protestant Church lacks a “Berean” Bible Study or group of some sort (even those churches lacking a Berean store front to bring in believers of the Bible).

    Βέροια – Berea or beroia

    Pronunciation
    ber‘-oy-ah

    Modern Veria in Central Macedonian Greece

    Google Earth View of Mount Olympus, Olympus mountains toward Berea
    Mount Olympus and Berea near base of Olympus Mountains

    Although the drama of Paul in this place was most brief, the mythical influence of the ancient Greek gods of Mount Olympus impacted nearby Berea. Olympus is a familiar stage of the Hellenist culture of all Greece.

    The Clash of Titans and Cultures

    Statue of Alexander the Great atop a fountain in Thessaloniki, Greece. In Acts 17 Paul fled from there to Berea on his second missionary journey;

    ALEXANDER – the Great Macedonian

    The former classical glory of Alexander’s empire had faded into a Hellenist culture for nearly four centuries and was then absorbed into a modern Roman culture of the A.D. 1st century.

    Alexander the Great was a titan among kings

    As Rome’s Caesars sought to conquer the vast lands ruled by Alexander they discovered that the same ancient Babylonians, Medes and Persians to the East had all been influenced by the Hellenist culture of Alexander.

    A Pax Romana created a culture of peace with Rome’s captive peoples and incorporated their gods and traditions into local practice.


    The cultural clashes between Jews, Greeks and other Hellenist-influenced peoples of the Roman Empire are inevitable, undeniable and central to Paul’s proclamation of the Gospel to Greeks.

    No better place than Berea near Mount Olympus to set the stage for the world into which these apostles have been sent to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ.


    What is Luke’s point in Acts 17:11?

    FIRST, what it is NOT:

    The Scriptures here are NOT the New Testament (which will later include two letters of Paul to to the Thessalonians).

    And although like in OTHER Jewish synagogues Paul undoubtedly had proclaimed the Gospel to these Jews AND probably shared the letter from the Council of Jerusalem with believers, the SCRIPTURES referenced here were EXCLUSIVELY ‘Old Testament’ similar to earlier preaching of Peter, Paul, Stephen and others connecting it all to Jesus the risen Messiah of Israel.


    Nobility

    Why does Luke refer to these Jews as ‘more noble than those in Thessalonica?’

    (After all, Paul will later write two encouraging letters to those in Thessalonica and the Epistles do NOT include a single correspondence to Berea.)
    
    Let's take a 'Berean' examination of the Scriptures illustrating Luke's meaning.

    “noble” occurs 18 times in 16 verses in the ESV, yet only 7 times in 7 verses in the KJV.

    Hear, for I will speak noble things,
    and from my lips will come what is right,
    for my mouth will utter truth;
    wickedness is an abomination to my lips.
    
    Proverbs 8:6-7 ESV
    
    Yet I had planted thee a noble vine, wholly a right seed: how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me?
    
    
    Jeremiah 2:21 KJV (after the LORD asking Judah in v.11: 
    Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods? 
    

    Luke, using Greek also common to Macedonia’s Roman rulers uses the word εὐγενής, meaning, ‘more noble-minded.’

    Nobility refers associatively to a higher class; kings, princes, the well-born of certain families.

    (Remember that Roman, Hellenist or Greek and Eastern cultures included many slaves as well; although Christ taught that more slaves than rich would follow the righteousness attached to nobility and ‘leading Jews.’)

    Paul later addresses two Roman Governors as ‘most noble’ when addressing them.

    It is this same meaning attached to the Greek women of high standing [v.12] as well.

    Why are they more noble-minded?

    Rather than being dissuaded by cultural arguments of leading Jews who rejected Jesus the Messiah of Scripture these Berean Jews examined what Paul had taught from the Scriptures.

    δέχομαι – they received the word [logos]


    Luke also records an attitude perhaps equally important to new Christians receiving the Word, who was and IS and will be, the LORD God of the heavens and earth.

    “they received the word with all eagerness.”

    Your Savior from sin and death, the Messiah of Israel will be the judge of ALL men. JESUS saved you!

    SO DO YOU RECEIVE OUR LORD WITH ALL EAGERNESS?

    μετά [meta] πᾶς [pas] προθυμία [prothymia]

    ‘with great (or all) eagerness

    zeal, spirit, inclination, readiness of mind


    The Macedonians of these towns and cities who examined the true witness of the Hebrew Scriptures and obeyed the guidance of the Council of Jerusalem formed a strong, vibrant, and spirited church who witnessed the Good News of Jesus Christ to all the Hellenists, Romans and anyone else who believed.

    Paul’s briefer stay in Berea

    14 Then the brothers immediately sent Paul off on his way to the sea,

    Christians generally note the moving on of the apostle Paul to Athens and what will become one of his most important speeches. However here we will continue our focus on the work of two remaining apostles sent out to Macedonia, Silas and Timothy.

    Timothy and Silas in Berea

    .. but Silas and Timothy remained there. 15 Those who conducted Paul brought him as far as Athens,

    and after receiving a command for Silas and Timothy to come to him as soon as possible, they departed.

    While the Berean brothers helped Paul to flee the Thessalonian Jewish posse, Silas and Timothy stayed on (as Paul and other apostles had done in the past) to organize this church who studied the Scriptures daily.

    Once arriving in distant Athens, Paul then commands them to return home and send Silas and Timothy to continue their journey later when they too will finally arrive from Macedonia NOT in Athens, but in the larger nearby city of Corinth.

    When Silas and Timothy arrived from Macedonia, Paul was occupied with the word, testifying to the Jews that the Christ was Jesus.

    Acts of the Apostles 18:5 ESV

    NEXT: Paul in Athens, ACHIA

    To be continued…

    ACTS of the Apostles 17:16-

  • Asia – Let’s Not Go There – Acts 16

    Asia – Let’s Not Go There – Acts 16

    The importance of this juncture in Paul’s journey, now with Silas and Timothy, cannot be overemphasized as these apostles are sent out beyond Asia into all the world of Euro-Asia.

    Asia – the BIG picture

    Growing up geographically-challenged (as my 5th grade teacher surely would have confirmed) in a small village far distant from Paul’s missionary journeys I was CLUELESS when I read Luke’s lists of places in Acts.

    Where were these cities? (Or were they states? Perhaps a province of some kind?)

    And ASIA? (That’s confusing.)


    Continents as I remembered (5? or 7?):

    • North America (That’s US.)
    • South America (Go toward Texas & keep going.)
    • Europe (Cross the Atlantic like Europeans did & founded 13 colonies in America)
    • Africa (everything south of the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt and all those jungle places south where Europeans brought slaves to America.)
    • Antarctica (it’s all ice and nobody lives there.. Is it the one on the South Pole or north?)
    • Asia (Russia, from where Europe ends west to the Pacific & India, China, Japan along the Pacific
    • Australia (How can an English island below Asia be called a continent?)
    C -

    Go into all the world GEOGRAPHY (remedial)

    Asia Europe Africa 21st c. view from Google Earth
    ASIA ~30% of land area of earth, part of Eurasia, ~17 million sq. miles
    Join me as I refresh some of my quite limited knowledge of geography - especially of Asia.

    Asia facts from WorldGeography.com

    • Asia is the largest and most populated continent
    • It shares land borders with Europe, which is not defined and hence share a landmass called Eurasia.
    • Afro-Eurasia is the name given to the landmass between Asia, Europe, and Africa.
    • Asia shares a lot of its extreme points with Europe, especially Russia.

    Cape Dezhnev, 66°4′45″N 169°39′7″W, located on the Chukchi Peninsular, between the Chukchi Sea and the Bering Strait [W. of Alaska] , is the easternmost point of mainland Asia.

    Pamana Island, 11°00′36″S 122°52′37″E, is the southernmost point of Asia, located in the Lesser Sunda Islands, East Nusa Tenggara province of Indonesia.

    The northernmost point on the Asian mainland is Cape Chelyuskin, 77°44′0″N 104°15′0″E. At 1370km from the North Pole, ..located at the Taymyr Peninsula,

    Westernmost Point In Asia
    • Cape Baba, 39°28′47″N 26°03′50″E, located on the Anatolian part of Turkey, is the westernmost part of Asia. Located in Babakale village also known as Father’s Castle in historical Troad. Apostles Luke’s journey around the cape, and Apostle Paul’s journey on land are recorded in the biblical book Acts of the Apostles.
    This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Troas-1024x656.jpg
    Troas on Cape Baba in Babakale, Turkey [Turkiye] is the westernmost point in Asia.

    Asia Minor, Roman Remnant of a former Empire

    Zoom in with Roman military eyes toward a vast empire to the east situated on the westernmost shores of Asia, fixing your eyes on adjacent Aegean shores of 21st c. Turkiye.

    This geographical-historical view of the Asia minor region is provided only for its context of culture as it intersects with Paul's missionary journeys 'into all the world' of Eurasia.
    map of 1st century Asia
    Asia Minor

    Follow the southern coastline from nearest to Rome toward the east and riches of former empires.

    Rome’s region of ASIA MINOR

    • conquered via the vast Mediterranean and inland to the Taurus mountains includes [W. to E.]:
    • Pisidia [N. of Perga],
    • Pamphylia [along a coast N. of Cypress],
    • Cilicia [with its port city of Tarsus] and finally
    • Syria (at times including Judea).
    • Further Roman conquests inland to the north included:

    a large Roman province of GALATIA

    • N from Iconium and on its Western edge Antioch Pisidia, all of the central plain to the borders of
    • a more remote Cappadocia in the mountains to the north of Cilicia and Tarsus and Antioch Syria,
    • N to Bithynia and Pontus on the Black Sea and again toward
    • Phrygia along the mountainous borders with Asia Minor toward Mysia and the strategically situated Sea of Marmara between the narrow isthmus connecting the Black and Aegean Seas.

    In Roman times, however, when Paul journeyed there, the country was divided into two parts, one of which was known as Galatian Phrygia, and

    the other as Asian Phrygia, because it was a part of the Roman province of Asia, but the line between them was never sharply drawn.

    Source: BibleAtlas.org
    In ACTS 16 the Holy Spirit forbids Paul from sharing the gospel in Asia Minor on this second missionary journey.
    And they went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been forbidden by the Holy Spirit to speak the word in Asia.
    – ACTS 16:6

    The Empires Before Christ

    Babylon captures Judah and brings its captives to the King of Babylon
    6th century Before Christ
    6th-5th centuries B,C. the Persian Empire (to the East) adds the Babylonian Empire to its captive provinces

    Paul, Silas and Timothy will know these events well from Scripture, but those are no longer the Empires of concern to either the Jews or Rome. In a more recent history of Judea and Eurasia one vast Empire rivals all others.

    356 BC – Macedonia

    Roman bust of Alexander the Great who conquered much of Asia and Europe

    Alexander the Great

    • Tutored by Aristotle
    • trained for battle by his father, Philip II

    Roman bust, 2nd century AD / Creative Commons license

    [Alexander’s] undermanned defeat of the Persian King Darius III at the Battle of Gaugamela is seen as one of the decisive turning points of human history, unseating the Persians as the greatest power in the ancient world and spreading Hellenistic culture across a vast new empire.

    https://www.history.com/news/alexander-the-great-defeat-persian-empire

    332 BC – Tyre: a siege of Hellenism close to home

    The siege of Tyre was orchestrated by Alexander the Great in 332 BC during his campaigns against the Persians.

    source: Wikipedia

    The reign of Alexander the Great was short-lived. After subduing all of the Persian Empire, his army marched east and got as far as India before turning back home to Macedon. But he never made it home.

    At just 32 years old, Alexander died in Persia in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II in Babylon.

    323 BC – 30BC – a Greek-ish Eurasia

    Click the link below to see a map of the Hellenized 'Greek-ish' world after Alexander the Great where the Apostle Paul now witnesses Christ. READ a detailed lecture on 

    https://brewminate.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Alexander53-768×452.gif


    There were no more city-states. Monarchies prevailed, modeling themselves after Alexander’s empire. He had achieved a divine status in his lifetime, and his successors wanted to as well. They established “ruler cults” in which they were obeyed as kings and worshipped as gods.

    A sense of cosmopolis developed in the Hellenistic Age (“polis” plus “cosmos”). Worldly, experienced, and highly-cultured people used to live in small city-states and not worry about the world beyond, but now they had seen and even ruled this world and began to say they were no longer citizens of Athens, Corinth, and so on, but instead citizens of the cosmic polis (cosmopolis), the world.

    Highly Recommended Source – From a lecture by Dr. Frank Holt, Professor of Ancient History, University of Houston (10.15.2013)

    Paul and the Apostles sent out into all the world live in the crossroads between a culture of Alexander established just a few centuries earlier AND ambitious Roman Caesars reconquering lands and cultures to be absorbed into a new Pax Romana — IF you will surrender your land and its people into one international Empire of their Roman peace.

    Western Eurasia map AD50

    AD 50 – Eurasia

    The year in the middle of Paul’s 2nd Missionary Journey.

    Rome had conquered the Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt near Judea some time ago, but the Empire’s military defense of the Eastern front in Syria kept close eye on the Parthian Empire and frequently engaged in battle losing and retaking various land.

    A Greek-ish in culture of the Eurasian world remained reticent of Roman Legions suppressing unwilling rulers in uncooperative localities.


    Politically astute men like a Herod or Saul of Tarsus understood this ever-shifting landscape of living as part of the political leadership and military power of the Roman Empire.

    Paul would have been attuned to recent changes in both Asia and Europe as the Apostle now travels toward a new destination with Silas and Timothy. They seem to be travelling intentionally and slowly (which we might easily miss in these few brief verses of Acts.

    AD 43 – During those years after Paul had witnessed Jesus on the road to Damascus, just four years prior to his first missionary journey here and to Cypress, Rome had invaded Britannia in the West. Legions had also conquered Lycia on the SW coast near Asia Minor where previously they had sailed to and from Perga.

    Lycia Source: Wikipedia

    AD 46 – Just a year prior to Paul’s first missionary journey

    After the death of the Thracian king Rhoemetalces III in 46 AD and an unsuccessful anti-Roman revolt, the kingdom was annexed as the Roman province of Thracia. The new province encompassed .. the north-eastern portion of the province of Macedonia as well as the islands of Thasos, Samothrace and Imbros in the Aegean Sea.

    Source: Wikipedia

    Acts of the Apostles 16:

    Previously:

    As they went on their way through the cities, they delivered to them for observance the decisions that had been reached by the apostles and elders who were in Jerusalem. So the churches were strengthened in the faith, and they increased in numbers daily.


    6 And they went through the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been forbidden by the Holy Spirit to speak the word in Asia.


    These apostles sent out from Antioch Syria have traveled about half-way on this 2800 mile [4500 km] journey into a Greek-ish Roman-ruled world. Their remaining journey in Euro-Asia will include many more important cities where they will preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ in the upcoming year.


    And when they had come up to Mysia, they attempted to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus did not allow them. So, passing by Mysia, they went down to Troas.

    Acts 16: route of the apostles Paul, Silas & Timothy headed toward Troas beyond Asia Minor. 
source: graceofourlord.com
    Paul’s 2nd Missionary Journey – first half through Asia

    To be continued…