Sketches From The Life of Paul
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 5: Preaching Among the Heathen
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The Lystrians rushed upon the apostles with
great rage and fury. They hurled stones
violently; and Paul, bruised, battered,
and fainting, felt that his end had come.
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The apostles next visited Iconium. This place
was a great resort for pleasure-seekers, and
persons who had no particular object in life. The
population was composed of Romans, Greeks,
and Jews. The apostles here, as at Antioch, first
commenced their labors in the synagogues for
their own people, the Jews. They met with
marked success; numbers
of both Jews and
Greeks accepted the gospel of Christ. But here,
as in former places where the apostles had labored,
the unbelieving Jews commenced an unreasonable
opposition to those who accepted the true
faith, and, as far as lay in their power, influenced
the Gentiles against them.
The apostles, however, were not easily turned
from their work, for many were daily embracing
the doctrine of Christ. They went on faithfully
in the face of opposition, envy, and prejudice. [p. 53] Miracles were daily wrought by the disciples
through the power of God; and all whose minds
were open to evidence were affected by the
convincing power of these things.
This increasing popularity of the doctrine of
Christ stirred the unbelieving Jews to fresh
opposition. They were filled with envy and hatred,
and determined to stop the labors of the apostles
at once. They went to the authorities, and
represented their work in the most false and
exaggerated light, leading the officers to fear that
the entire city was in danger of being incited to
insurrection. They stated that great numbers
were attaching themselves to the apostles, and
suggested that it was for secret and dangerous
designs.
In consequence of these charges, the disciples
were repeatedly brought before the authorities;
but in every case they so ably defended themselves
before the people, that, although the
magistrates were prejudiced against them by the
false statements they had heard, they dared not
condemn them. They could but acknowledge
that the teachings of the apostles were calculated
to make men virtuous, law-abiding citizens.
The unprejudiced Jews and Greeks took the
position that the morals and good order of the
city would be improved if the apostles were
allowed to remain and work there. Upon the
occasions when the apostles were brought before
the authorities, their defense was so clear and
sensible, and the statement which they gave of
their doctrine was so calm and comprehensive,
that a considerable influence was exerted in their
favor. The doctrine they preached gained great
publicity, and was brought before a much larger [p. 54] number of unprejudiced hearers than ever before
in that place.
The Jews perceived that their efforts to thwart
the work of the apostles were unavailing, and
only resulted in adding greater numbers to the
new faith. The rage of the Jews was worked
up to such a pitch on this account that they
determined to compass their ends in some manner.
They stirred up the worst passions of the ignorant,
noisy mob, creating a tumult which they
attributed to the efforts of the apostles. They
then prepared to make a false charge of telling
force, and to gain the help of the magistrates in
carrying out their purpose. They determined
that the apostles should have no opportunity to
vindicate themselves; but that mob power should
interfere, and put a stop to their labors by
stoning them to death.
Friends of the apostles, although unbelievers,
warned them of the designs of the malicious Jews,
and urged them not to expose themselves
uselessly to their fury, but to escape for their lives.
They accordingly departed from Iconium in
secret, and left the faithful and opposing parties
to battle for themselves, trusting God to give
victory to the doctrine of Christ. But they by no
means took a final leave of Iconium; they
purposed to return, after the excitement then
raging had abated, and complete the work they had
begun.
Those who observe and teach the binding claims
of God's law, frequently receive, in a degree,
similar treatment to that of the apostles at Iconium.
They often meet a bitter opposition from
ministers and people who persistently refuse the light
of God, who, by misrepresentation and falsehood, [p. 55] close every door by which the messenger of truth
might have access to the people.
The apostles next went to Lystra and Derbe,
cities of Lycaonia. These were inhabited by a
heathen, superstitious people; but among them
were souls that would hear and accept the
doctrine of Christ. The apostles chose to labor in
those cities because they would not there meet
Jewish prejudice and persecution. They now
came in contact with an entirely new element,—
heathen superstition and idolatry.
The apostles, in their work, met all grades of
people, and all kinds of faith and religion. They
were brought in opposition to Jewish bigotry
and intolerance, sorcery, blasphemy, unjust
magistrates who loved to exercise their power, false
shepherds, superstition, and idolatry. While
persecution and opposition met them on every hand,
victory still crowned their efforts, and converts
were daily added to the faith.
In Lystra there was no Jewish synagogue,
though there were a few Jews in the place. The
temple of Jupiter occupied a conspicuous
position there. Paul and Barnabas appeared in the
city together, teaching the doctrine of Christ
with great power and eloquence. The credulous
people believed them to be gods come down from
Heaven. As the apostles gathered the people
about them, and explained their strange belief,
the worshipers of Jupiter sought to connect these
doctrines, as far as they were able, with their own
superstitious faith.
Paul addressed them in the Greek language,
presenting for their consideration such subjects
as would lead them to a correct knowledge of
Him who should be the object of their adoration. [p. 56] He directed their attention to the firmament of
the heavens—the sun, moon, and stars—the
beautiful order of the recurring seasons, the mighty
mountains whose peaks were capped with snow,
the lofty trees, and the varied wonders of nature,
which showed a skill and exactitude almost
beyond finite comprehension. Through these
visible works of the Almighty, the apostle led the
minds of the heathen to the contemplation of the
great Mind of the universe.
He then told them of the Son of God, who
came from Heaven to our world because he loved
the children of men. His life and ministry were
presented before them; his rejection by those
whom he came to save; his trial and crucifixion
by wicked men; his resurrection from the dead
to finish his work on earth; and his ascension to
Heaven to be man's Advocate in the presence of
the Maker of the world. With the Spirit and
power of God, Paul and Barnabas declared the
gospel of Christ.
As Paul recounted the works of Christ in
healing the afflicted, he perceived a cripple whose
eyes were fastened upon him, and who received
and believed his words. Paul's heart went out
in sympathy toward the afflicted man, whose
faith he discerned; and he eagerly grasped the
hope that he might be healed by that Saviour,
who, although he had ascended to Heaven, was
still man's Friend and Physician, having more
power even than when he was upon earth.
In the presence of that idolatrous assembly,
Paul commanded the cripple to stand upright
upon his feet. Hitherto he had only been able
to take a sitting posture; but he now grasped
with faith the words of Paul, and instantly obeyed [p. 57] his command, and stood on his feet for the first
time in his life. Strength came with this effort
of faith; and he who had been a cripple walked
and leaped as though he had never experienced
an infirmity.
This work performed on the cripple was a marvel
to all beholders. The subject was so well
known, and the cure was so complete, that there
was no room for skepticism on their part. The
Lycaonians were convinced that supernatural
power attended the labors of the apostles, and
they cried out with great enthusiasm that the
gods had come down to them from Heaven in
the likeness of men. This belief was in harmony
with their traditions that gods visited the earth.
They conceived the idea that the great heathen
deities, Jupiter and Mercury, were in their midst
in the persons of Paul and Barnabas. The former
they believed to be Mercury; for Paul was active,
earnest, quick, and eloquent with words of warning
and exhortation. Barnabas was believed to
be Jupiter, and father of gods, because of his
venerable appearance, his dignified bearing, and the
mildness and benevolence expressed in his
countenance.
The news of the miraculous cure of the cripple
was soon noised throughout all that region, until
a general excitement was aroused, and priests
from the temple of the gods prepared to do the
apostles honor, as visitants from the courts of
Heaven, to sacrifice beasts to them, and to bring
offerings of garlands and precious things. The
apostles had sought retirement and rest in a
private dwelling, when their attention was attracted
by the sound of music, and the enthusiastic
shouting of a vast assembly, who had come to
the gate of the house where they were abiding. [p. 58]
When these ministers of God ascertained the
cause of this visit and its attendant excitement,
they were filled with indignation and horror.
They rent their clothing, and rushed in among
the multitude to prevent further proceedings.
Paul, in a loud, ringing voice that rose above the
noise of the multitude, demanded their attention;
and, as the tumult was suddenly quelled, he
inquired,—
"Sirs, why do ye these things? We also
are men of like passions with you, and preach
unto you that ye should turn from these vanities
unto the living God, which made heaven, and
earth, and the sea, and all things that are therein;
who in times past suffered all nations to walk
in their own ways. Nevertheless, he left not
himself without witness, in that he did good, and gave
us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling
our hearts with food and gladness."
The people listened to the words of Paul with
manifest impatience. Their superstition and
enthusiasm had been so great in regard to the
apostles that they were loth to acknowledge their
error, and have their expectations and purposes
thwarted. Notwithstanding the apostles
positively denied the divinity attributed to them by
the heathen, and Paul endeavored to direct their
minds to the true God as the only object worthy
of worship, it was still most difficult to turn them
from their purpose.
They reasoned that they had with their own
eyes beheld the miraculous power exercised by
the apostles; that they had seen a cripple who
had never before used his limbs, made to leap and
rejoice in perfect health and strength, through the
exercise of the marvelous power possessed by [p. 59] these strangers. But, after much persuasion on
the part of Paul, and explanation as to the true
mission of the apostles, the people were
reluctantly led to give up their purpose. They were
not satisfied, however, and led away the sacrificial
beasts in great disappointment that their traditions
of divine beings visiting the earth could
not be strengthened by this example of their favor
in coming to confer upon them special blessings
which would exalt them and their religion in the
estimation of the world.
And now a strange change came upon the
fickle, excitable people, because their faith was
not anchored in the true God. The opposing
Jews of Antioch, through whose influence the
apostles were driven from that district, united
with certain Jews of Iconium, and followed
upon the track of the apostles. The miracle
wrought upon the cripple, and its effect upon
those who witnessed it, stirred up their envy, and
led them to go to the scene of the apostles' labor,
and put their false version upon the work. They
denied that god had any part in it, and claimed
that it was accomplished through the demons
whom these men served.
The same class had formerly accused the
Saviour of casting out devils through the power of
the prince of devils; they had denounced him as
a deceiver; and they now visited the same
unreasoning wrath upon his apostles. By means
of falsehoods they inspired the people of Lystra
with the bitterness of spirit by which they were
themselves actuated. They claimed to be
thoroughly acquainted with the history and faith of
Paul and Barnabas, and so misrepresented their
characters and work that these heathen, who had [p. 60] been ready to worship the apostles as divine
beings, now considered them worse than murderers,
and that whoever should put them out of the
world would do God and mankind good service.
Those who believe and teach the truths of
God's word in these last days, meet with similar
opposition from unprincipled persons who will
not accept the truth, and who do not hesitate to
prevaricate, and even to circulate the most glaring
falsehoods in order to destroy the influence
and hedge up the way of those whom God has
sent with a message of warning to the world.
While one class make the falsehoods and circulate
them, another class are so blinded by the
delusions of Satan as to receive them as the
words of truth. They are in the toils of the
arch-enemy, while they flatter themselves that
they are the children of God. "For this cause
God shall send them strong delusion, that they
should believe a lie; that they all might be
damned who believed not the truth, but had
pleasure in unrighteousness."
The disappointment experienced by the idolaters
in being refused the privilege of offering
sacrifices to the apostles, prepared them to turn
against these ministers of God with a zeal which
approached that of the enthusiasm with which
they had hailed them as gods. The malicious
Jews did not hesitate to take full advantage of
the superstition and credulity of this heathen
people, to carry out their cruel designs. They
incited them to attack the apostles by force; and
they charged them not to allow Paul an
opportunity to speak, alleging that if they did so he
would bewitch the people.
The Lystrians rushed upon the apostles with [p. 61] great rage and fury. They hurled stones
violently; and Paul, bruised, battered, and fainting,
felt that his end had come. The martyrdom of
Stephen was brought vividly to his mind, and
the cruel part he had acted on that occasion. He
fell to the ground apparently dead, and the
infuriated mob dragged his insensible body through
the gates of the city, and threw it beneath the
walls. The apostle mentions this occurrence in
the subsequent enumeration of his sufferings for
the truth's sake: "Thrice was I beaten with rods;
once was I stoned; thrice I suffered shipwreck;
a night and a day I have been in the deep; in
journeyings often; in perils of waters; in perils
of robbers; in perils by mine own countrymen;
in perils by the heathen; in perils in the city;
in perils in the wilderness; in perils in the sea;
in perils among false brethren."
The disciples stood around the body of Paul,
lamenting over him whom they supposed to be
dead, when he suddenly lifted his head, and arose
to his feet with the praise of God upon his lips.
To the disciples this seemed like a resurrection
from the dead, a miracle of God to preserve the
life of his faithful servant. They rejoiced with
inexpressible gladness over his restoration, and
praised God with renewed faith in the doctrine
preached by the apostles.
These disciples had been newly converted to
the faith, through the teachings of Paul, and had
stood steadfast notwithstanding the misrepresentation
and malignant persecution of the Jews.
In fact, the unreasoning opposition of those
wicked men had only confirmed these devoted
brethren in the faith of Christ; and the restoration
of Paul to life seemed to set the signet of
God upon their belief. [p. 62]
Timothy had been converted through the
ministration of Paul, and was an eye-witness of the
sufferings of the apostle upon this occasion. He
stood by his apparently dead body, and saw him
arise, bruised and covered with blood, not with
groans or murmurings upon his lips, but with
praises to Jesus Christ, that he was permitted to
suffer for his name. In one of the epistles of
Paul to Timothy he refers to his personal knowledge
of this occurrence. Timothy became the
most important help to Paul and to the church.
He was the faithful companion of the apostle in
his trials and in his joys. The father of Timothy
was a Greek; but his mother was a Jewess,
and he had been thoroughly educated in the
Jewish religion.
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"Jew and Gentile"
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