Hello friends, I'm Wayne Shepherd.
Before he went to be with the Lord, Dr. John Whitcomb spent
several years studying and teaching the book of Acts, and we enjoy
the fruit of that labor now on Encounter God's Truth. Today's
program takes us to Acts 16 and the ministry of Paul and Silas
to Europe. Our message draws many lessons
from ministry from the travels of the Apostle Paul and a special
new disciple named Timothy and their experience with the churches
of the first century. Luke, the beloved physician,
also joins Paul's team in the section we're studying, providing
much help and relief to Paul. Dr. Whitcomb originally delivered
these messages at Middletown Bible Church's Independent Fundamental
Bible Conference in Middletown, Connecticut. And we are indeed
grateful for their permission and help in bringing them to
you here on the radio. If you've been following with
us, you know that we're in volume six of this ongoing series, Acts,
Witness of the Early Church. You can listen to all the past
broadcasts in the book of Acts at sermonaudio.com slash Whitcomb. Our focus here at Encounter God's
Truth is on presenting timeless truths for changing times. Join
us now, if you can, in Acts chapter 16 and follow as Dr. Whitcomb
teaches about Paul and Silas to Europe. Paul and Silas launch
forth. and start where? Notice they're
not going the route they followed on the first trip, namely starting
down here in Cyprus and going up this way. They start in Paul's
home country, which is Cilicia, right here, and work their way
from Syria and Cilicia back through the cities they had been in that
Silas, of course, had never personally visited. But what a joy it was
to the Christians in those cities to hear from Silas, an official
representative of the Jerusalem church and a prophet of God as
well. I mean, supernaturally endorsed
messages from him. And so they went to these churches
and as they went, chapter 16, verse one, they came to Derbe
and Lystra and behold, a certain disciple was there named Timotheus,
Timothy. the son of a certain woman who
was a Jewess, and believed, a believing Jewish mother. And what was her
name? Eunice. And Eunice's mother's
name was Lois. We read that, of course, in the
epistles that Paul wrote to Timothy about this wonderful connection
he had with that godly woman. And so Timothy, in God's marvelous
providence, was the fruit of a horrible persecution that Paul
endured, namely being stoned to death in Lystra. And Philippians chapter two,
he says, I have no man like-minded. I mean, he's the most faithful,
diligent, dependable servant God has ever given me, disciple. Okay, helper in a ministry. Praise
the Lord for that. Now, he was well reported of, in spite
of the fact I should mention that his father was a Greek.
Now that may mean his father was an unbeliever, which was
well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra and Iconium.
So we're not sure exactly whether he was from Lystra, or Derby or Iconium, but I suggest
since Lystra is mentioned in both of those verses, one and
two, that he's probably from Lystra, where Paul was stoned,
okay? Him would Paul have to go forth
with him, and took and circumcised him because of the Jews which
were in those quarters, for they all knew his father was a Greek.
Now friends, this is somewhat difficult to some people. If
Paul is going around preaching as he did in Galatians, the book
of Galatians, you remember, that if you depend upon this outward
sign, you have to then go ahead and keep the whole law, and you're
under a burden you can't bear, and you've abandoned the gospel.
You've abandoned Jesus Christ. Well, then why did he do this
to Timothy? See? You say, well, he's a compromiser. May I suggest an alternative?
He is a biblical opportunist. In other words, I am doing this
in order to accomplish what? A more effective outreach to
Jewish people who would be offended if this man, Timothy, were not
a part of us and yet pretends to be. But on the other hand,
Titus, who was 100% Gentile, Paul said, I refuse to have him
circumcised because that is not at all part of God's plan. For whom? For Gentiles. Now it
gets kind of complicated, doesn't it, friends, at this point? And
I say, well, One thing is obvious, isn't this interesting, that
some people think that water baptism, believers' baptism today,
is a replacement of Old Testament Jewish circumcision. No, because
Timothy had already been baptized, so why have him circumcised?
This is absolutely absurd. It has nothing to do with baptism
at all, you see. It is not a parallel ordinance
between Israel and the church. So with that matter settled,
and now Timothy acceptable and very useful, therefore, in Paul's
work among whom? Jews in their synagogues, you
see, with Silas, who was also 100% Jew. As they went through
the cities, verse four, and delivered them the decrees to keep, they
were ordained by the apostles and elders which were Jerusalem,
and so were the churches established in the faith and increased in
numbers daily. Oh, praise the Lord for that
positive report of God's work, yes. So Paul now, you see, friends,
on his second missionary journey has a new leadership structure.
I mean, he's the leader, okay? And then comes Silas and then
Timothy, okay? And the new worker, praise God,
namely Timothy, and as we'll see, a new vision that God gave
him one night of where to go, and as a result, the finest church
God ever helped him, enabled him to establish. At where? Philippi,
okay? Now, strange, strange statement here.
Look at this. when, in verse six, when they
had gone throughout Phrygia and the region of Galatia, and were
forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia. Now,
here we are, friends, here they come. They're coming up this
way, and they obviously wanted to head to Ephesus, a great,
great city, with hundreds of thousands of people, a major
center. Now, that was Paul's strategy,
it wasn't in emissions. Don't spend time in small towns.
Spend time in big cities where you can train people to go to
the small towns. I mean, an excellent, brilliant mission strategy. Let's
head, obviously, to Ephesus. You remember the seven cities
of Asia. And what did the Holy Spirit
say to them? No. Why? We'll never know. It wasn't time. Well, so when
they came to Mysia, this region just north of Ephesus, they decided
to go up in this direction, up into Bithynia and that area toward
Pontus. And what did the Holy Spirit
say? No. Now, isn't that strange? Doors slamming shut. Negative
guidance. He didn't say where to go. He
just said, don't go here. Well, somehow they are pressured
into moving straight northwest, up to here. And when they got to Troas, right
here, a major port city, an amazing thing happened one night. Verse nine, a vision appeared
to Paul in the night. And there stood a man of Macedonia
and prayed to him saying, come over into Macedonia and help
us. Now, who did the man turn out to be? Lydia, the seller
of purple from Thyatira, from Asia. Amazing, thank you, Lord. I mean, it's almost like the
Lord has a sense of humor here in how this operates, okay? And
now who else joins this team? Look at this, are you ready for
this little hint? In verse 10, and after he had seen the vision,
immediately we endeavored to go into Macedonia, assuredly
gathering that the Lord had called us to preach the gospel to them.
Who does we now include? Luke himself. Now Luke is very
careful in his book. Whenever he's part of the team,
he says, we did this and we did that. Whenever he's not part
of the team, he doesn't allow that plural personal pronoun
to be used, first person pronoun. So now Luke, the beloved physician,
joins them. And many people believe that
he came from Philippi himself up here in Macedonia. In fact, the city of Philippi
was famous for, are you ready for this, a school of medicine. And he was a medical doctor. And I would love to find someday,
wouldn't you, what textbooks he studied, what procedures he
learned to apply to people in various types of problems. Wouldn't
that be amazing? And he must have been a very
skilled and dependable and balanced and wise physician because he
followed Paul and God's providence everywhere he went. And Paul
needed all the help he could get because of the awful things
he experienced. And God just had this man with
him many, many times on his trips. So Luke just somehow appears
at Troas and God says, join this team. How that happened, we don't
know. Perhaps God will show us some
of these things someday. Come over into Macedonia and
help us. So friends, here we go. Are you ready? The great
long westward march of the gospel, starting in Jerusalem and Judea
and Samaria and coming up to Antioch and going across this
region here to here. And now we're going into Europe.
And ultimately, after many twists and turns, the gospel is going
to go from Europe all the way across, of course, to the new
world in which we live. And from here, the gospel has
gone back across to Asia. and back to Africa, okay, and
down to Latin America, of course, the Western world, and back to
Asia. And I've been told, I'd like
to know more about this, that there are thousands of Christians
in China who have an urgent desire to go where? Back to Jerusalem
through Asia to complete the circle. Think of it. Now that
doesn't mean that no Christians ever went to China in the early
centuries, but Most of them had an inadequate message. They were Nestorians and had
a very poor mission policy and refused to allow the scriptures
to be translated into Chinese. And when persecution came, all
the churches of the Nestorians were disappeared, wiped out.
There's a museum in their honor in Hong Kong. We have physical
relics of some of their churches, inscriptions in Greek. not Chinese,
and the whole thing wiped out until missionaries came from
Europe to Asia, as you know, John Morrison and many others,
and from America. And so gradually now, it's just
as if the circle now is almost completed, almost completed around
the world, okay? So thank you, Lord, for giving
us a little glimpse into how it started. Here we go. So, verse
11, therefore loosing from Troas, we came with a straight course
to Samothrace, that's an island, and then the next day to Neapolis,
that's a coastal city, which Neapolis means new city, new
town on the coast, and from thence to Philippi, which is the chief
city of that part of Macedonia and a colony. It had a special
connection with Rome and considered themselves to be very privileged
city under direct Roman jurisdiction at Philippi, named after whom? Philip of Macedonia, the father
of Alexander the Great 300 years earlier. It's a very important
city in those days. Now, we were there in the city
abiding certain days. And on the Sabbath, we went out
of the city by a riverside where prayer was wont to be made, and
we sat down and spoke unto the women which resorted thither.
Now Jewish tradition, rabbinic law, we can even say it that
way, required how many men for a synagogue to be started? 10.
10 men who were family heads would be minimal for starting
an official synagogue worship service. So apparently there
were very few Jews in Philippi, very few. And even fewer, I mean,
hardly any believing Jewish men at all in the whole city. Just
a handful of women who believed in the Lord and gathered there
for prayer. And a certain woman named Lydia,
a seller of purple of the city of Syretira, the city of Syretira. Now that's a city, you remember,
in Asia here, where they took certain types of seashells and
from them were able to get a dye which was purple and valuable
and expensive and very popular and in much demand. I mean, she
was apparently a very wealthy widow woman. I suspect she was
a widow and she had a huge house up in Philippi as an extension
of her commercial operation. I'm amazed at the amazing skill
that God gives some business people. Anybody ever heard of Mary Kay? Well, I mean, just think, I mean,
multi-million dollar operations, you see, like this. And well,
anyway, there she was, perhaps having heard the gospel there
back in her hometown in Asia, in Syatira. And you say, now
wait a minute, how do you know she heard the gospel? Now see,
this is one of the problems we have several times in the book
of Acts. You remember back in chapter 10 where Cornelius was
a worshiper of the Lord, gave alms, I mean, prayed to God daily?
My opinion is, only God knows, of course, that he was a genuine
born-again person, but not a Christian. You say, now wait a minute here. But you see, that's characteristic
of the book of Acts, is you're in a transition period where
there are born-again people who are hangovers of pre-Pentecost
period, who hadn't heard the latest messages about Jesus.
And we're going to meet a couple of these people, namely Apollos
of Alexandria and a dozen men in Ephesus who were believers,
but not officially members of the body and bride of Christ.
Now, the greatest man who had ever lived other than Jesus was
a person like that, John the Baptist. Would you kindly agree
he was born again? Was he a Christian? No. So you
see, as soon as the Christian message, the full explanation
of who Jesus is and what Jesus did in his death, burial, and
resurrection was made known to these people, these proselytes,
these God-fearers, these Gentiles like this, they believed. They accepted the new light.
See, there's no record of any of them that didn't. So my opinion
is that she was a born-again person but had not yet, what,
entered into the full reality of the body and bride of Christ
Christian truth, okay? So watch what happens. A certain woman named Lydia,
a seller of purple of the city of Thyatira, which worshiped
God, heard us, whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended
unto the things which are spoken of Paul. Now, there is that mysterious
combination of what? Divine sovereignty and what? Human responsibility. You see,
that's an antinomy, an apparent contradiction to our rational
perspectives. It looks like a contradiction.
I mean, did God save her or did she have to do something too?
Yes, thank you. Okay. And when she was baptized,
and her household, you see, she's a wealthy woman just like the
famous Mary in Jerusalem, the mother of John Mark, who had
a huge home and lots of servants, you remember, and a center for
prayer. So this woman, likewise, her
home became the center of a great, great church. Have you noticed
throughout the Book of Acts, the function of women is frequently
focused on and emphasized by Dr. Luke? And here's a case,
of course, as well. So her house became sort of this
worship center for not only born-again people, but of course, Christian
believers among these Gentiles and Jews. And it came to pass
as we went to prayer, now here comes another woman on the scene
that is very influential in how the gospel is going to spread
through the city of Philippi. Now this is one of the strangest
things of all that we've read so far in the book of Acts. This
is amazing. Please help me out on this one, friends. It came
to pass as we went to prayer, a certain damsel possessed with
a spirit of divination met us. literally in Greek, a python. Now that is a snake. And you
see, the Greeks had a legend that over here in one of the
mountains of southern Macedonia, northern Achaia, Apollo had a
temple, a shrine, where people come and worship him. And he
had a serpent that protected him, a python. And one tradition
says that Apollo killed the snake. And so people who were demon-possessed,
you see, were thought to have this python in them. This is
a weird, weird tradition, mythology, that the Greeks had. And there
were obviously demon-possessed people that really could do supernatural
things, remember. We're gonna see that especially
later on in the book of Acts. But when Jesus was here, more
than once, a demon-possessed person would come up to Jesus
and say what? We know who you are, you son of God, you come
to torment us before the time. Presumably alluding to what happened
to the demons at the time of the flood who were flung down
into, what, Tartarus, in pits and chains of darkness, until
the great day of judgment of God, and have no further access
to the world. But that was a specially evil
group of demons, apparently. Jude and 2 Peter talk about angels
that kept not their first estate, but went after strange flesh,
says like Sodom, and they were consigned, and no further access
to human beings. But the ones that were not cast
out, cast down. came to Jesus and said, do not
cast us into the abyss before the time. We know who you are. Demonic theology is in many points
very biblical. They know the triunity of the
Godhead, the deity of Christ. I mean, think of what demons
know about him. And so this woman was a demon-possessed person.
And she met us, Luke says, And she brought her masters much
gain by soothsaying, telling people about the special things
that only a supernatural being could know and so on. This damsel
followed Paul and us and cried saying, now how do you like this
for an endorsement program, a promotion program for the ministry? These
men are the servants of the most high God which show us the way
of salvation. You say amen. a free promotion
program for the gospel. And it must have attracted enormous
attention all over the city. We'll point this out in a few
moments as to the possible implication of this, okay? And this she did,
how long? Many days. I mean, apparently
the whole city was aware of the fact that Paul and Silas and
Timothy and Luke were a special team that came from God. Now, which God is the question?
They're supernatural in their origin, their message, okay? But Paul being grieved, I mean,
he, Paul is so frustrated, friends, to be endorsed by whom? Demons,
thank you. So was Jesus. You know what Jesus
did to demons that said those things to him? He cast them out
of people. He was the infinite exorcist
and Paul in like manner cast the demon out of her. Okay. I command thee in the name of
Jesus Christ to come out of her. And he came out the same hour.
The demon got the message and said, I'm out of here. Thank
you. So no longer could she say anything that had what? Supernatural
aspects to it. You know, friends, it's so hard
to find cases like this today, isn't it? I'm not saying there
aren't any, I'm just saying it's hard to find them because most
demons today, may I make this suggestion? Don't do things like
this anymore. You know what they do? They do
things more effectively than that. Paul said so to the Corinthians. He said, Satan is like an angel
of light and therefore it's no great surprise if he should transform
himself into a messenger of righteousness, you see. He wants to win people
by more subtle, more impressive forms. God's Word is true from the beginning
to the end. That was the conviction that
drove Dr. John Whitcomb, and it was at the basis of all of
his teaching, such as in this series on Acts, Witness of the
Early Church. You can read a commentary on
the book of Acts written by Dr. Whitcomb and Pastor George Zeller
of Middletown Bible Church when you go to WhitcombMinistries.org.
And for the latest from our ministry, go to facebook.com slash Whitcomb
Ministries. I'm Wayne Shepherd for Whitcomb
Ministries. I trust that today's program was an encouragement
to you, and we look forward to meeting you for next week's broadcast
and the conclusion of this message on Paul and Silas to Europe.
May the Lord bless and keep you until then. We're so glad to
have you with us on Encounter God's Truth.