WHEN GOD SAYS NO (Acts 16:1-15)

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WHEN GOD SAYS NO (Acts 16:1-15) The great mission team had split and now Paul would begin the second missionary journey with Silas. The division was permanent but it is full of instruction for us. Martyn Lloyd Jones once noted about the failures of the saints in the Bible, I do not know what you feel, but I never cease to be grateful to these disciples. I am grateful for the record of every mistake they ever made, and for every blunder they ever committed, because I see myself in them. How grateful we should be to God that we have these Scriptures, how grateful to Him that He has not merely given us the gospel and left it at that. How wonderful it is that we can read accounts like this and see ourselves depicted in them, and how grateful we should be to God that it is a divinely inspired Word which speaks the truth, and shows and pictures every human frailty. This second missionary journey was a pivotal journey because it would open up the European continent to the gospel. Then came he to Derbe and Lystra: and, behold, a certain disciple was there, named Timotheus, the son of a certain woman, which was a Jewess, and believed; but his father was a Greek: Which was well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra and Iconium. 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 knew all that his father was a Greek. (v1-3) Instead of going west from Antioch to Cyprus, the Lord providentially directed them not to Cyprus but another way through Asia Minor (modern Turkey). For there the Lord had prepared another vital member of the team to join them. He was likely converted there when Paul visited on his First Missionary Journey. Although Timothy was a young man, like John Mark, he was mature. This was vital for the type of journey they were about to embark on. www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 1

Timothy s reputation had spread to other towns. It is always vital to have a good testimony in the church if you desire to serve the Lord. Timothy s upbringing with a Jewish mother and Gentile father would prove be a great advantage to him in his ministry. Timothy grew up in a Gentile world and would be intimately acquainted and unprejudiced against bringing the gospel to the Gentiles but he would also be acutely aware of the sensitivities of Judaism. In the providence of God, our backgrounds can become a great insight for us after we have been saved. We are explicitly told that it was Paul s desire to bring Timothy with them, Him would Paul have to go forth with him. This proves that Paul had not given up on youth. This was a tremendous honour and opportunity for this young man. As Timothy s mother was Jewish, Paul had him circumcised because he would be regarded as Jewish because of his mother. Hence, being uncircumcised he was seen as an apostate Jew. John MacArthur explains, Circumcision was the sine qua non of Judaism. Had Timothy not been circumcised, the Jews would have assumed he was renouncing his Jewish heritage and choosing to live as a Gentile. Paul s circumcision of Timothy had nothing to do with salvation; he did it for expediency s sake, to avoid placing an unnecessary stumbling block in the way of Jewish evangelism. Timothy s circumcision granted him full access to the synagogues he would visit with Paul and Silas. However, in Galatians 2 Paul fought for the right of Silas not to be as he was pure Gentile. So, Timothy was circumcised for the benefit of the gospel to allow him the liberty to be more effective in synagogues. It was not a condition of service or church membership. STUDY ON TIMOTHY Timothy or Timotheus means honour to God. He was the most prominent of Paul s travel companions and was probably no more than 21 years old at this time. He was converted probably on Paul s first MJ there and was a convert of Paul s as he described him as my own son in the faith in 1 Timothy 1:2. His mother was a Jewess and this would have been regarded as sufficient to have him recognized as a Jewish by the Jews as they believe it is passed through the mother in inter-racial marriages. Of all of Paul s associates, Timothy is preeminent in Scripture and we can infer that he was Paul s closest companion in the work. Timothy is mentioned 26 times in the New Testament and is stated to be the co-author and/or deliverer of six of Paul s letters (2 Cor; Phil; Col; 1 Thess; 2 Thess; Phlm), and the recipient of two other letters (1 Tim & 2 Tim). Paul variously calls him our brother (1Thess. 3:2; 2Cor. 1:1; Col. 1:1; Phlm. 1), a servant of Jesus Christ (Phil. 1:1), and my fellowlabourer/ my workfellow (1Thess. 3:2; Rom. 16:21). He was ordained (1 Tim. 4:14), and went with Paul and Silvanus when they first established Christian communities in Philippi, Thessalonica, and Corinth (2 Cor. 1:19; Acts 16:1;18:11), and later when Paul was traveling around the Ageaen Sea and to Jerusalem (Acts 19:22; 20:4; Rom. 16:21). Later, as evidence of his maturity, he was sent as Paul's representative to revisit the Christians in various provinces in Macedonia (1Thess. 3:1-6; Phil 2:19-24) and Achaia (1Cor. 4:17; 16:10-11). In addition, he was sent to Ephesus to guide and teach the church there (1Tim. 1:1-3; 4:11-16). We have no further biblical record concerning Timothy but according to one tradition, in the year AD 80 Timothy preached against a pagan procession of idols, ceremonies and songs in Ephesus. He was beaten by an angry mob, dragged through the streets and stoned to death. www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 2

And as they went through the cities, they delivered them the decrees for to keep, that were ordained of the apostles and elders which were at Jerusalem. And so were the churches established in the faith, and increased in number daily. (v4-5) The wording here makes clear that these NT churches were not independent from each other but interdependent. For these decrees from the council or Synod in Jerusalem were binding upon all as. The same Greek word dogmata is used to describe the fixed and authoritative decrees of the imperial Emperor in Luke 2:1 and Acts 17:7. The clear, binding, and unified decision of the Jerusalem Synod proved a great providential blessing on the other NT churches. For we now see orderly, balanced churches built up in the faith reproducing and growing. As they deepen spiritually downwards, the Lord grows them horizontally. That order is not without significance. Our supreme need is to know God more. For the more we know the power of the living God, the more He will use our lives to impact others. Now when they had gone throughout Phrygia and the region of Galatia, and were forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia, After they were come to Mysia, they assayed to go into Bithynia: but the Spirit suffered them not. And they passing by Mysia came down to Troas. (v6-8) The Apostle Paul now faces a new test as has not faced anything like this before. He was in the Western part of modern Turkey and wanted to evangelise this whole region. It was a wonderful motive, but God had other plans for him. He was forbidden by the Holy Spirit to do so now, although we are not told how or why. This word assayed is a word that means to pierce through so as to test the durability of something. Hence, Paul and his team were seeking divine leading as to where to go by testing whether this apparent natural step to take was right for them to do so. These providential hindrances in stopping them must have caused great frustration of heart for them. Asia Minor needed the gospel but it wasn t God s time. We cannot depend on logic or feelings to determine the will of God. It is very perplexing when you have the desire to do something for God and providence puts a brake on it. The apostles had been told to evangelise to all the world, but they still had to depend on God s leading. So, what did Paul do www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 3

when these doors closed? Get angry? Give up like so many? He persisted on to the next place Troas. As MacArthur points out, You know, beloved, one of the great ways to know the will of God in your life? Just keep moving. You ll sit around, I don t know what to do. God hasn t shown me. Just get up and do anything! Just do anything in His service and He ll move you where He wants you to be.you want to know something? God wanted them in Macedonia but he never told them until they couldn t take one more step. You want to know how to live by faith? That s how. Just keep pushing and pushing and pushing until you finally hit a dead end and then God will open the door so wide you won't know what hit you, and you think Paul hesitated? And a vision appeared to Paul in the night; There stood a man of Macedonia, and prayed him, saying, Come over into Macedonia, and help us. And after he had seen the vision, immediately we endeavoured to go into Macedonia, assuredly gathering that the Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto them. (v9-10) The text here switches to 1 st person plural here indicating that Luke joined them personally from this moment. It may have been that Luke was the man in the vision. To have an educated Gentile medical doctor on this arduous trip was a great blessing him of God. The expression assuredly gathering is a word that has the idea in the Greek of to bring together or to join together. Here it means that Paul and his companions could now deduce from the leading of the Lord that the facts now had come together to allow them to arrive at a conclusion. They now could understand that God s way was West to Europe by gathering all the facts that God s hand was in all of this. Robert Morgan observes, God often reveals his will by providentially arranging the circumstances of life. When you study the book of Acts, we discover that God sometimes led Paul the apostle by means of open and closed doors. In Acts 16, for example, Paul wanted to go into Asia and evangelize the Orient, but the doors wouldn t open for him. He couldn t get through www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 4

the borders. But the doors into Europe opened virtually by themselves, and Paul concluded that God wanted him to take the Gospel westward. God often will close a door to something we desire greatly because He has something better in mind. We should not be upset with God when He closes doors. What we are to do is wait! Our times are in His hands. However, when He speaks there was no wasted time and they obeyed without delay, And after he had seen the vision, immediately we endeavoured to go into Macedonia. This step of obedience will change the history of this world. For the call from Northern Greece, will bring the Gospel westward into Europe instead of eastward into Asia Minor. Someone once said that being led by the Holy Spirit is like learning to drive the car properly. You need to learn how to brake before you need to learn how to accelerate. To be used effectively of God you need to be able to allow God to restrain you before He can release you. God s no is as important as God s go! This order by the Holy Spirit to travel into Europe did not seem to make sense from a human perspective. Paul had no contacts there. He had not travelled to Europe on any of his missionary journeys before. There was a great door opened to him in Asia Minor. However, Paul didn t argue with God. He immediately made the treacherous journey by boat across the Aegean Sea to Neapolis on the Coast and then on to Philippi, the chief city of the Macedonia region. The Apostle Paul was a man who had learned to be sensitive to God s NO! To me to live is Christ, was no catchphrase but the all-absorbing principle of Paul s life. By Paul s obedience, he saw God establish one of the greatest New Testament churches in a city called Philippi. The gospel was then spread throughout Central and Western Europe. God s delay here will open greater doors of opportunity and blessing. We must be willing, like Paul, for God to overturn our plans even at the last minute. God only guides us one step at a time. The life of faith means living with uncertainty as to our next step even in the midst of doing God s will (Prov. 16:9; Isa. 55:9). There is little point in pursuing God s will if you are not willing to comply with it. The truth is that our perspective is usually wrong. Our vision and understanding is extremely limited. Only God has infinite understanding. We judge too quickly God s ways. The truth is that we don t know Him well enough when we are impatient. If we run ahead of God, we will be painfully chastened by frustration, exhaustion, and failure. Therefore loosing from Troas, we came with a straight course to Samothracia, and the next day to Neapolis; And from thence to Philippi, which is the chief city of that part of Macedonia, and a colony: and we were in that city abiding certain days. (v11-12) The city of Philippi was formerly called Dathos but was subsequently named after Philip of Macedonia the father of Alexander the Great who repaired and adorned it. It seems they waited patiently and prayerfully when they arrived. Likely they were waiting for the Sabbath hoping to begin then witnessing to Jews. For Paul s method was always to start with the Jew first and then the Gentile. And on the sabbath we went out of the city by a river side, where prayer was wont to be made; and we sat down, and spake unto the women which resorted thither. (v13) www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 5

It seems there was no synagogue so this riverside could have been the place of prayer for devout Jews. After the drama of the vision when a man appeared beckoning them to Macedonia, this does not appear an auspicious beginning for an important team of Paul, Silas, Luke and Timothy, but we should never underestimate what God could do through a few ladies. Paul s first convert in Europe and the foundation of this endeavour would be a businesswoman. Women have always played a very important part in God s work. Vance Havner noted, A good woman is the best thing on earth. Women were last at the cross and first at the open tomb. The church owes a debt to her faithful women which she can never estimate, to say nothing of the debt we owe in our homes to godly wives and mothers. Luke often contrasts two individuals in his writings. Here he contrasts Lydia and a demonpossessed woman. One of them is liberated by God; the other is enslaved to the devil. And a certain woman named Lydia, a seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira, which worshipped God, heard us: whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended unto the things which were spoken of Paul. (v14) Thyatira was famous for purple dye, which was used to make expensive cloth for the rich and famous. This woman Lydia was involved in this business and had clearly prospered in it. She had a house in Philippi, which was a wealthy city. Today we would call her the CEO of a thriving import and export business. The world would revere her as one who had made it big! Her name is not a Jewish one and she was a Gentile who, like Cornelius, was interested in the monotheistic religion of the Jews because she is described as one, which worshipped God. She was dissatisfied with the pagan gods and the pagan lifestyle. God had put a hunger in her heart for something deeper. But her interest in religion didn t save her. It didn t take her one step nearer to heaven. This passage emphasises clearly that salvation is of the Lord and Lydia could not have been saved unless God intervened first. The order is very clear. Lydia, heard us because she was the one, whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended unto the things which were spoken. This woman www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 6

wasn t saved because she was more spiritual or because God merely foresaw that she would make a good Christian. But because God first opened her heart to the Gospel, No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him. (John 6:44) Neither Paul nor even Lydia could open her heart. The conversion of Lydia is a classic illustration of God s sovereign election. Salvation is not dependent on us and that is why we do not need gimmicks to evangelise. Paul never used anything but the clear preaching of God s Word. SOVEREIGN ELECTION - There are some who argue that God chose His elect people simply because He saw some good in them or that He knew in advance that they would chose Him. The Apostle Paul pointedly ignores all of these reasons in his writings. Instead, he makes it clear that God chose us according to the good pleasure of His will (Eph. 1:5) and To the praise of the glory of His grace (Eph. 1:6). Writing to Timothy, the apostle underlines the same truth Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began (2 Tim. 1:9). We are saved solely and entirely because of the grace of God and not because of anything that we have thought or said or done. Martyn Lloyd-Jones notes The true way of salvation can be summed up like this: it is entirely the result of God s election. There is only one explanation of why any single person has ever been saved, and it is the action and the choice of God. There is nothing in us that contributes to salvation nothing at all! All of election is tied up in God s sovereign will. No one persuaded or assisted God in this. Man had nothing to do with it. God s grace had to affect the plan of salvation as man could not. As Paul explained in the second chapter of Ephesians, the unregenerate heart is dead in trespasses and sins (Eph. 2:1b). This man is having no hope, and without God in the world (Eph. 2:12). Salvation has its origin in the mind of God not in the mind of man. God chose us as spiritually dead people cannot choose anyone. We must note the great subject here God is the One that quickens or makes us alive from our spiritual deadness. Dead men cannot understand their predicament and cannot communicate. It doesn t matter how desperate their situation is. The unsaved man is spiritually, eternally dead, not merely weakened, incapacitated, disabled, or sick. He is not seeking God as There is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God (Romans 3:11; cf. 1 Cor. 2:14). This gives us great confidence in evangelizing the lost as we know that the results are guaranteed not because of our abilities, but because they are rooted in God s immutable will. Lloyd-Jones explains that understanding sovereign election should not undermine our motivation to share the gospel with the lost. For he explains, People often argue that this doctrine of divine election and choice leaves no place for evangelism, for preaching the gospel, for urging people to repent and to believe, and for the use of arguments and persuasions in doing so. But there is no contradiction here anymore than there is in saying that since it is God that gives us the crops of corn in the autumn, therefore the farmer need not plough and harrow and sow; the answer to which is that God has ordained both. God has chosen to call out His people by means of evangelism and the preaching of the Word. He ordains the means as well as the end. www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 7

We do not need to adopt unscriptural seeker sensitive methods in our churches to evangelise as the results of salvation do not depend on making the message attractive to the unregenerate mind. The old gospel message is the power of God unto salvation. Finally, this gives us absolute assurance of salvation. We know that we are eternally saved because the One who controls eternity and time is always faithful to His redemptive promises. We may be unfaithful but He never is. His love is not fickle for His children as He declares, Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee (Jer. 31:3). And when she was baptized, and her household, she besought us, saying, If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord, come into my house, and abide there. And she constrained us. (v15) Lydia provided fruits of her salvation by seeking the salvation of her household, then presenting herself and her family for baptism, and finally by opening her home to serve the physical needs of these preachers of the Gospel. The inns of that time were unhygienic, expensive, and had a reputation for immorality. A welcome heart to visitors is a mark of a changed life. The Bible reminds us, Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares. (Heb. 13:2) The fact that the inspired writer commands, be not forgetful implies that we could easily be forgetful! It s easier to shut yourself away from people and live your own life for yourself. Most people are naturally suspicious of strangers but Christians are called to be the opposite. We are called to make friends out of strangers. We are given here the example of the blessing that flowed in Abraham s life when he entertained angels unaware. He spared no expense to entertain his visitors. The point of the inspired author in Hebrews 13:2 is not that we should be hospitable hoping that an angel comes around, but rather that we have no idea how far-reaching a simple act of kindness may be. Imagine what Abraham would have lost if he had been inhospitable! CH Spurgeon pointedly remarked of this story, Some people will never entertain angels unaware, for they never entertain anybody. Kindness is one gift anyone can give. The church is not a business but a caring community. Not everyone here can be a preacher or a missionary abroad. But all here can serve in a ministry of hospitality to strangers. When you say a kind word or do a small act of service to a stranger, you are sending this message: You matter to me and to God. The first spiritual friend to us was the Lord Jesus Christ. He loved us, befriended us, and gave Himself for us when we were His bitter opponents, For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son (Romans 5:10) www.oldfaith.wordpress.com 8