Philip and the Ethiopian a play for Youth Groups by Joy Kingsbury-Aitken based on Acts 8:26-40

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Transcription:

Philip and the Ethiopian a play for Youth Groups by Joy Kingsbury-Aitken based on Acts 8:26-40 Personae Dramatis Radio Announcer First panellist (a church historian) Second panellist (a church historian) Radio Play Narrator God Philip The Ethiopian Treasurer The studio of a Christian radio station. Three people, wearing headphones, are seated around a microphone. Radio Christian radio welcomes you to this week s episode of The History of the Church. Today our panel of church historians will be discussing the coming of Christianity to Ethiopia. Panel, to begin with, would you share with our listeners some fascinating facts about the church in this North African nation. It may interest our listeners to know that the Egyptian Coptic and Ethiopian Orthodox churches are the only expressions of Christianity in the continent of Africa that predate the witness of western missionaries. Christianity was recognised as the state religion of Ethiopia in the fourth century, only a few years after Constantine made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire. So Christianity has existed in Ethiopia for a very long time. Indeed. There were Christians in this part of Africa from the first century. The indigenous Ethiopian church has been a great survivor. 1

For one thousand years Christian congregations flourished throughout northern Africa and the Middle East, until Christianity was replaced by Islam. Ethiopia remained a largely Christian nation surrounded by Moslem states. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is famous for its claim to possess the ancient Ark of the Covenant. The Ethiopians clearly possess an artefact of great significance to them. We can t know exactly what this is, however, as it is not available for western archaeologists to examine. Menelik, the son of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon, is said to have stolen the Ark of the Covenant from the temple in Jerusalem and brought it with him, along with teachers of the Jewish religion, when he returned to the kingdom of Sheba. Archaeologists believe Sheba included the lands of Yemen and Ethiopia. We westerners tend to consider stories like this to be more legendary than historical. Nevertheless Haile Selassie, the last Emperor of Ethiopia, believed he was a descendant of the Biblical King David. It does seem to reflect a memory of a close relationship between the Court of Sheba and the Jewish nation. From ancient times until recently there have been African adherents of Judaism in Ethiopia. In 1975 the Chief Rabbinate in Israel recognized as Jews entitled to settle in Israel, the Felasha people of Ethiopia who practice a form of Judaism that pre-dates the destruction of the Jerusalem temple by the Romans. There were several migrations of Felasha to Israel between 1980 and 1991. These people claim that their ancestors once belonged to the ruling classes in Ethiopia. As interesting as this is, perhaps we are getting off the topic of today s panel discussion, which is the origin of the church in Ethiopia. There are connections, but first we need to tell the story of the first Ethiopian convert. 2

For your listening pleasure we now have a dramatisation of this story. A narrator and three actors enter, playing God, Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch. They gather around a microphone to the side of the announcer and panellists. Narrator: God: God: God: God: Narrator: Philip, one of the church s first seven deacons, had just undertaken a successful mission in the city of Samaria, performing healing miracles and proclaiming Jesus the Messiah to crowds of people there. On his return to Jerusalem, an angel told him to travel south on the road that leads through the Judean wilderness from Jerusalem to Gaza. So Philip did as he was instructed. While he was walking along a chariot went past him. Riding as a passenger in the chariot, and reading aloud to himself, was the treasurer of the Court of the Kingdom of Sheba. Philip! Is that you speaking Lord? It is. See that chariot ahead of you. Catch up with it and join it. For what purpose Lord? So that you may speak to the man reading from the Holy Scriptures. What am I to say to him Lord? You ll know what to say once you catch up with him. Now stop wasting time with your questions and get a move on. He ll soon be too far away for you to catch up with him. Yes Lord. So Philip ran after the chariot. On reaching it he discovered that the man was reading from the scroll of Isaiah. Ethiopian (reading): Like sheep he was led to the slaughter, and like a lamb silent before its shearer, so he does not open his mouth. In his humiliation justice 3

was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken away from the earth. (puffing) Narrator: Excuse me Sir, do you understand what you are reading? How can I, unless someone interprets for me? For example, about whom, may I ask you, does the prophet say this, about himself or about someone else? I can answer that for you Sir. In that case, get up here beside me, and help me comprehend these scriptures. So Philip clambered up onto the chariot and sat down beside the Ethiopian. Isaiah is referring to Jesus of Nazareth, who died on a Roman cross. How could that be? I understand that a great man of God can suffer much and may even be martyred for his faithful obedience, but how could an executed criminal be the man of God spoken of by the prophet? He was no criminal Sir. In fact he was totally without guile. He went about the countryside performing miracles healing lepers, causing the blind to see and the dumb to speak, enabling the lame to walk and casting out the demons of those with troubled minds. He seems to have done a lot of good, so what did he do to justify being crucified? He spoke constantly about the reign of God breaking into the world. The chief priests and Roman governor feared his message and his popularity with the people so they conspired together to get rid of him. Sadly unethical, powerful people can cause great suffering to many good people. Such evil must be resisted. I hope this Jesus put up a 4

good fight before he was arrested, or at least gave a good defence at his trial. No Sir, he was like a sheep led to be sacrificed, and as the prophet writes, he did not open his mouth. That is he did not attempt to defend himself against the false charges brought against him. But his execution was not the end of him. He did not stay dead. What do you mean that he didn t stay dead? Three days after he was murdered he was raised to life, a new life, and was seen by his closest friends. Ah that I can t believe. Dead men don t come back to life. Perhaps his friends were hallucinating because of their grief. I agree Sir that the testimony of a few distraught men and women could be considered an inadequate witness. But on a later occasion he appeared to five hundred of his followers. They weren t all in a state of hysteria. So God brought him back to life. Where is he now? On the right hand of God in heaven, interceding on our behalf. I don t understand. It is as the prophet said, He was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the punishment that made us whole, and by his bruises we are healed. His death defeated death and his resurrection makes possible our resurrection. Are you saying we can have eternal life because of him? Yes Sir, because he is the long awaited Messiah but no ordinary Messiah. An ordinary Messiah might have delivered us from the Romans and ushered in a golden age of prosperity, before another empire rose up to kill and rob and enslave us. No Jesus of Nazareth is 5

the Messiah who delivers us from the powers behind the world s oppressive systems, and ultimately delivers us from the greatest of these powers death. Narrator: How could a man any man do that? Only someone who is both the Son of Man and the Son of God. You see Jesus of Nazareth is God incarnate, God among us. This is a very great revelation. What should I do? Believe the good news and be baptised in the name of God Father, Son and Spirit to receive forgiveness of sins and the gift of the Holy Spirit who brings new life. Here is living water in the stream we are passing. What is stopping me from being baptised? Nothing Sir. The Ethiopian ordered his coachman to stop the chariot. He and Philip got out and Philip baptised the official. Then the Ethiopian resumed his journey home rejoicing and Philip went immediately to Ashdod. The actors leave the studio. Our panel of experts will now comment on the story you have just heard. Sometimes what is not said in Scripture is as interesting as what is said. Luke does not say that the Ethiopian official was the first Gentile convert. That honour is given to Cornelius the Roman centurion two chapters later in the Book of Acts. The Ethiopian could have been a proselyte to Judaism. Or perhaps he was a member of a family who considered themselves Jews, like the Felasha people who migrated to Israel in the 1980s. 6

He had probably been in Jerusalem to observe one of the three great pilgrim festivals that were held there annually. Herod the Great expanded the temple complex considerably to accommodate all the pilgrims who came to worship there at festival times. However, even if the Ethiopian had the status of a Jew, he would still have been an outsider. Being a eunuch he would not have been permitted beyond the Court of the Gentiles in Herod s temple. In the twenty-third chapter of Deuteronomy, the Mosaic law says that no man whose private parts have been mutilated can be admitted to the assembly of the Lord. But a rule that appears clear cut in one scripture can be modified in another. In Isaiah, just three chapters past the passage which the Ethiopian was reading, God says, To the eunuchs who keep my Sabbaths, who choose the things that please me and hold fast my covenant, I will give, in my house and within my walls, a monument and a name better than sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off. It seems we can only speculate about his situation before he met Philip. One thing we can be certain about, God chose a very influential man to take the gospel back to Africa. Luke tells us that the Ethiopian was in charge of the entire treasury of Candice, queen of the Ethiopians. Perhaps there is a parallel between his visit to Herod s temple and the visit by the Queen of Sheba to Solomon s temple. Both brought back to the royal court their enhanced knowledge of God. Do you attribute the starting of the current Ethiopian Orthodox church to the witness of this man? The Ethiopian treasurer was unlikely to have had a complete understanding of the gospel after only one conversation with Philip. He would, however, have shared what he knew about Jesus with other members of the court, perhaps even with the queen herself. 7

Two Christians from Syria, Frumentius and Adesius, are credited with the beginnings of Christian Orthodoxy in Ethiopia. As young people they were shipwrecked and ended up as slaves for the royal family, among whom they had great success as missionaries. When the Emperor Ezana declared Christianity the official state religion, Frumentius was consecrated the first bishop of Ethiopia by Athanasius, Patriarch of Alexandria. Luke s Ethiopian represents for Africa what Luke s Lydia of Thyatira represents for Europe the first convert for a continent. Other believers besides the queen s treasurer would have contributed to the spread of the gospel in this area of northern Africa in the first century. In fact according to the early church historian Nicephorus, Matthew the apostle made a missionary trip to Ethiopia. There is a far stronger Jewish influence in the church that developed in Ethiopia than in the church that developed in the west. The Ethiopian Orthodox Christians continue to adhere to traditions in the Hebrew Scriptures, like the food laws for example. The Ethiopian church preserved for us Jewish literature that would otherwise have been lost. As a consequence, we church historians have a better understanding of the world from which Christianity emerged. Their canon also has more books than the western canon. And their history shows Ethiopian Christians to be, as already mentioned, faithful and resilient believers something we western Christians also need to be. Well that s all we have time for today. Thank you to our panellists today for a very interesting discussion. Be sure to tune in for future episodes of The History of the Church on Christian radio. The End 8