AFRICAN HERITAGE SUNDAY

Similar documents
Philip & the Ethiopian Eunuch Acts 8:26-40

Sunday, August 13, Lesson Text: Acts 8: King James Version (KJV) I. PHILIP S CALL (Acts 8:26-29)

Rev. Troy Lynn Pritt August 8, 2010 Page 1

Pastor Kevin Clark. July 5 & 6, st Lutheran Church, Manhattan KS. Scripture: Acts 8:26-40

Our scripture today comes from the Book of Acts 8.1-8, 26-39:

A Great Day to Be Saved. Acts 8:26-39

Trans-formation of the Faithful. The Rev. Dr. Arlene K. Nehring Eden United Church of Christ Hayward, California

Jesus from Beginning to End Acts 8:26-40

Where You Go, I ll Go Acts 8: Pastor Austin Lim October 8th, 2017

Introduction. Cases of Conversion. Introduction. Character Of The Eunuch. Character Of The Eunuch. Character Of The Eunuch

THE CONVERSIONS IN ACTS SERIES - Lesson Three Conversion of the Ethiopian - How To Become A Christian - Acts 8:26-40

Fifth Sunday of Easter

Acts Chapter 8 Continued

Peace lesson 1. Fruit of the Spirit. Philip and the Ethiopian. Episode 1. Acts 8:26 40 MEMORY VERSE

127 with great mourning.) Verse 3. But Saul was going everywhere to destroy the church. He went from house to house, dragging out both men and women t

Holy Scriptures: Acts 8:26-40 (NRSV) Philip and the Ethiopian Eunuch

Bible Study Changes will turn tragedy into triumph by Bishop Manning

Acts 8: Today, we continue to move through the Book of Acts, following the movement

Readings and Sermon notes, Sunday 29 April 2018, Easter 5, St Philip s Collingwood.

The Rest of the Story

Story 3: Philip and the Eunuch

Acts 8:26-40 Philip on the Fringes

An Occurrence on a Wilderness Road. Caldwell Presbyterian Church May 6, 2012 Rev. John M. Cleghorn. Scripture: Acts 8:26-40

Philip And The Ethiopian Acts 8:26-40

This worship resource can be used in its entirety or as pieces to be inserted into your worship or other gatherings.

The Ethiopian Treasurers Conversion Text : Acts 8: 26-40

The Holy Spirit s Leading in Evangelism (Acts 8:26-40) Notes: Week Sixteen

Old South Church in Boston

Acts 8:26-39 King James Version August 13, 2017

Acts 8:26-39 King James Version August 13, 2017 International Bible Lesson Sunday August 13, 2017 Acts 8:26-39

ARE YOU IGNORANT BY CHANCE OR BY CHOICE?

Can you hear Jesus say that to you? Can you hear the Father and the Spirit together speak that truth to you? Can you hear them sing it to you?

Holy Scriptures: Acts 8: Philip and the Ethiopian

Acts 8:

ACTS 8:26-39 MULTIPLE CHOICE AUGUST 13, God told Philip to leave Samaria and travel south to the (a lake (b desert

IS JESUS THE ONLY WAY?

Acts 8:26-40 For the One

God s Good News for a Marginalised African Man, Acts 8:26-40

Session B: Becoming Disciples Who Help Jesus Make Disciples

April 21, 2013 Lesson 34: Philip Baptizes an Ethiopian

Holy God, give us eyes of faith to see your hand at work in our lives. Amen.

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

ACTS 8:26-39 MULTIPLE CHOICE OCTOBER 28, God told Philip to leave Samaria and travel south to the (a) lake (b) desert

Acts 8. They were scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the apostles

Philip preaches the Word Acts 8:1-40

Share the Message with Others Lesson Passages Acts 8:26-31; 8:30-35; 8:38-39 Lesson for April 30 May 1, 2016 Dr. James Patterson

TOTAL COMMITMENT - BAPTISM

Who is Worthy? Acts 8:26-40 After Easter, What? A Sermon Series

ACTS 8: This Ethiopian man was being prepared to receive and accept the gospel and we see this preparation in four ways.

SEIZE THE DAY: A CALL TO MISSIONS

Todd Misfeldt Rejoice April 30, 2016 West Valley Presbyterian Church

Behold the Lamb of God! John 1:35-51

May 21, Carry the Water. (5th Sunday of Easter) (Mother s Day) John 7:37-44; Acts 8:26-40

Philip the Evangelist

ONE TO ONE BIBLE STUDY ON A CHARIOT

UNDERSTANDING SPIRITUAL GIFTS

Witnessing As The Spirit Leads

AM An Inductive Study of Acts 8

Fifth Sunday of Easter holy Eucharist

Acts 8:5-40 Philip's Initial Ministry Philip fled persecution in Jerusalem and went to Samaria Preaching Christ and Healing

Look, here is water! What is to prevent me from being baptized?

Living A Good Life Series Spiritual Connection. Jesus. It is the last prayer on earth recorded by John. Besides maybe a little word of grace

(Acts 8:2 NKJV) And devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him.

HOW REVIVAL ACTS Acts 8:26-40

Called to Break Down Barriers

Philip and the Ethiopian

THE BOOK OF ISAIAH THE GOD OF OUR SALVATION

The Ethiopian Eunuch

Acts 8:18-40 The Tale of Two Conversions

THE POWER OF SCRIPTURE. in Sharing the Gospel

THE EARLY CHURCH: PHILIP AND THE ETHIOPIAN* LESSON 3

545 PASTOR CONGR. (sing) Amen. (sing) Who made heaven and earth (sing) And Thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin.

The Book of Acts, Part I. May 20 The Gospel Goes to the Samaritans and the Gentiles

Bethel Evangelical Lutheran Church

Now What? Acts 8:26-39 May 6, 2012 (Re-Dedication Sunday)

St. Paul s Episcopal Church

Play Simon Says and remind the kids to listen to what God tells them to do.

Called to Break Down Barriers

Crossover Text: Acts 8:26-40

Obedient. Session 9 ACTS 8:26-31,35, Opportunities to share the gospel message come through obedience.

INDUCTIVE LESSON EIGHT

go: global 9.0 Go global. Go on Expedition.

Why Make Disciples? Listen to Audio #3

Silence is kept for self-reflection. C B C B

May 6th, th Sunday of Easter Readings: Acts 8:26-40; John 15:1-8

So those who were scattered went on their way preaching the message of good news.

Concordia Lutheran Church 255 West Douglas St. South St. Paul, MN

MAIN POINT Our experience with a risen Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit propel us to trust God where He leads.

GREAT MISSION OF THE CHURCH

The Holy Eucharist the fifth sunday of easter

Benediction of Hebrews

UNDERSTANDING SPIRITUAL GIFTS. Part 3 February 19, 2017 River of Life-Pastor Joe Daltorio

SRM /14/2014. Acts of Bethany: Reaching Judea and Samaria Acts 8

He Got Up and Went - April 29, 2018 Congregational Church of Littleton p.1

South Texas Bible Ministry Training Center

3yr 5k Teacher Guide

Biblical Sources. Exodus 40: Tobit 12: Psalm 1: 1-6

Water Baptism Tony Llewellyn cannot be altered, but can be copied & distributed for not-for-profit. Permission details:

Philip Shares the Gospel with the Ethiopian

LAUNCH: LIFE PATH The Jesus Path Bible Fellowship Curriculum February 23, 2014

Transcription:

Sunday, February 8, 2009 The Ascent of Ethiopia (1932) by Lois Mailou Jones AFRICAN HERITAGE SUNDAY LECTIONARY COMMENTARY Peter J. Paris, Guest Lectionary Commentator Elmer G. Homrighausen Professor of Christian Social Ethics, Emeritus, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, NJ Lection - Acts 8:26-40 (New Revised Standard Version) (v. 26) Then an angel of the Lord said to Philip, Get up and go towards the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza. (This is a wilderness road.) (v. 27) So he got up and went. Now there was an Ethiopian eunuch, a court official of the Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, in charge of her entire treasury. He had come to Jerusalem to worship (v. 28) and was returning home; seated in his chariot, he was reading the prophet Isaiah. (v. 29) Then the Spirit said to Philip, Go over to this chariot and join it. (v. 30) So Philip ran up to it and heard him reading the prophet Isaiah. He asked, Do you understand what you are reading? (v. 31) 1

He replied, How can I, unless someone guides me? And he invited Philip to get in and sit beside him. (v. 32) Now the passage of the scripture that he was reading was this: Like a sheep he was led to the slaughter, and like a lamb silent before its shearer, so he does not open his mouth. (v.33) In his humiliation justice was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken away from the earth. (v. 34) The eunuch asked Philip, About whom, may I ask you, does the prophet say this, about himself or about someone else? (v. 35) Then Philip began to speak, and starting with this scripture, he proclaimed to him the good news about Jesus. (v. 36) As they were going along the road, they came to some water; and the eunuch said, Look, here is water! What is to prevent me from being baptized? (v. 37) And Phillip said, If thou believe with all thine heart, thou may. And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the son of God. (v. 38) He commanded the chariot to stop, and both of them, Philip and the eunuch, went down into the water, and Philip baptized him. (v. 39) When they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord snatched Philip away; the eunuch saw him no more, and went on his way rejoicing. (v. 40) But Philip found himself at Azotus, and as he was passing through the region, he proclaimed the good news to all the towns until he came to Caesarea. I. Description of the Liturgical Moment Many years ago when I was a member of the First Baptist Church, Capitol Hill in Nashville, Tennessee, our pastor, the late Reverend Dr. Kelly Miller Smith, prominent leader in the Nashville Sit-in Movement, began the process of celebrating our African Heritage. The festival began on a Saturday afternoon. African students at the nearby universities were invited as special guests. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Fellowship Hall was beautifully decorated with African cloth. Members of the congregation dressed in African cloth, brought various African artifacts, sculptures, books, photos, and paintings for display. The sound of African music filled the air, and the youth performed various dances created in the motherland. The Saturday festivities culminated in a celebratory worship service on Sunday morning, where the Afrocentricism continued, but with a particular focus on praising the God of the entire cosmos, the God of Africa, who has chosen African peoples to play a significant role in the world. II. Biblical Interpretation for Preaching and Worship: Acts 8:26-40 Part One: The Contemporary Contexts of the Interpreter This year marks the bicentennial anniversary of the end of the Atlantic slave trade in the United States, though slavery itself would not end on these shores until Abraham Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. For two and one half centuries, Africans had been held here in bondage followed by another century of racial segregation. On November 4, 2008, Barack Hussein Obama, the son of a black Kenyan father and a white American mother, became President-elect of the United States. Thus, Africa has been a reality in American politics 2

from the beginning of the Republic up to the present day. From the low estate of ancestral slavery, an African American has been elected to the nation s highest office. God has always chosen the lowly as messengers of love, justice and hope. The story of the Ethiopian Eunuch is no exception. Part Two: Biblical Commentary I was probably in junior high school when I first encountered the story of Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8:26-40. I remember inquiring of my Sunday school teacher what the term eunuch meant. She told us that a eunuch was a person in charge of the royal treasury. Whether or not she knew the right answer and had chosen not to tell us the truth of the matter, I will never know. Suffice it to say that it was not until I was in college taking a course on the Bible as Literature that I discovered that a eunuch was the name given to a man who had been castrated. Needless to say, I was shocked because I could hardly imagine a greater horror befalling anyone. I then wondered why the writer of the story felt compelled to report that particular detail. Later in seminary, I discovered the value of biblical commentaries as immeasurable resources for extensive inquiries into all such questions that biblical readers might ask. 1 Clearly, African peoples find the story of the Ethiopian eunuch altogether captivating because it reveals certain types of information about our ancestral homeland that renders all contrary sources erroneous. Here, we discover the story of a representative from the royal court of Candace, a city in Ethiopia, returning from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. I can imagine that the royal insignia must have been displayed prominently on his carriage and that he would have been accompanied by an entourage for both protection and personal service. Several extraordinary features attend the story. Let us mention two of them. First and foremost, we are told that he was from the court of the Queen of Candace. How she came to her royal inheritance in a patriarchal land is a matter of historical inquiry and reasonable conjecture. Suffice it to say that most patriarchal countries have experienced female monarchs from time to time. Thus, Ethiopia was no exception. Second, one cannot but ask why the eunuch was travelling from Ethiopia to worship in Jerusalem. Was he an Ethiopian Jew on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem or a Gentile? The author does not say. Some scholars speculate that this omission serves Luke s purpose of demonstrating the universal nature of the Gospel made available to all peoples rather than Jews alone. Now, on such a journey, one can easily imagine an inevitable break for rest in the midst of the day s journey. That would have been the time when the eunuch might have been sitting in his carriage reading and mediating on the 53 rd chapter of Isaiah. His devotion would not have been unusual for a pilgrim. In any case, Philip approached him and asked him what I have always thought was a rather rude or arrogant question: Do you understand what you are reading? More likely than not, when Philip saw what the eunuch was reading, he seized upon the common ground between them by viewing it as a good opportunity to begin a discussion about the connection between that passage of scripture and his own mission of proclaiming salvation through Christ. Undoubtedly, most readers may be moved by the eunuch s hospitable spirit of welcoming the conversation and inviting Philip to sit in his carriage to discuss the matter. 3

Clearly, the eunuch was not afraid of Philip who was, indeed, a stranger. Thus, he welcomed him with a friendly gesture. The story ends triumphantly as the eunuch asks for baptism which Philip gladly provides. The significance of the story lies in the place it has gained in the history of Christianity s global expansion by means of personal witness. In fact, tradition tells us that the eunuch followed Philip s example by introducing Ethiopia to the Christian message. Most important, The Ethiopian Orthodox Church has always viewed itself as connected directly to the apostles through Philip s act of baptizing their Queen s eunuch, whom the church has venerated from that time up to the present era. Let me hasten to note, however, that though the Ethiopian eunuch was a man of high social esteem in the royal court, he had been rendered sexually powerless, nonetheless, by the deliberate actions of others. As a consequence, in the eyes of the society at large, his high public office did not conceal the marginalized social status he was forced to endure for the rest of his life. Yet, despite his marginalization, 2 he was entrusted with the holy seal of baptism which equipped him to become the first ambassador for Jesus Christ in his homeland: a mission that would immortalize his activities for all time by gaining for him an honorable place in the holy bible. This is yet another instance where the grace of God can overcome all human constraints. This story reveals the most meaningful aspect of the gospel s message its liberating and saving power for the marginalized peoples of the world. The story rekindles the dignity and worth of all descendents of the trans-atlantic slave trade. It renews the pride of all African peoples, both on the continent and around the world, as sufficient evidence that God embraced the Ethiopians as the first people outside of Israel who were entrusted to be guardians of the Christian gospel in Africa from the days of the apostle Philip up to the present age. It destroys the lie of European and American racists that Africans bequeathed no value to human civilization and did not receive the gospel prior to the European Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and the colonization of Africa. It is an irony of the first magnitude that all of this should have taken place long before most European peoples had become either civilized or Christianized. Celebration God has always provided a liberation movement that can be seen in the Gospel. God has always been and continues to be on the side of the marginalized. God is with us; God is with our people. Descriptive Details The descriptive details of this passage include: Sights: A wilderness road from Jerusalem to Gaza; Philip sees the Ethiopian eunuch reading Is. 53 sheep being led to slaughter, lambs silent before their shearer, does not open its mouth, the experience of humiliation, injustice and death; the royal chariot and assumed entourage; Philip sitting in the chariot with the eunuch discussing the scriptures; the act of baptism; 4

Sounds: The gentle flow of the river; voices discussing the scriptures and proclaiming the gospel message; and Textures: The cold iron surface of the chariot. III. Other Sermonic Comments or Suggestions The story connects well with African America s historical reverence for Psalm 68:31. For a detailed analysis of the meaning and influence of this passage on African Americans, see historian Albert J. Raboteau, A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African American Religious History. Boston: Beacon Press, 1995, Chapter 2. The focus on a marginalized person in this text discovering the gospel, being baptized and proclaiming it in Ethiopia, contains the seeds of liberation which makes it a resource for all liberation theologies pertaining to race, gender, and even poverty. Notes 1. One of the best discussions of the meaning of the story of the Ethiopian eunuch for African Americans is, The commentary on The Acts of the Apostles by Demetrius K. Williams in Blount, Brian K., Cain Hope Felder, Clarice Jannette Martin, and Emerson B. Powery. True to Our Native Land: An African American New Testament Commentary. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2007. pp. 226-228. 2. See, True to Our Native Land for how this marginalized eunuch may be viewed as a fulfillment of Isaiah 56:3-7 where the prophet hails the days when eunuchs will be accepted in God s plan. Most important, African Americans have viewed the story as the fulfillment of their beloved scriptural passage in Psalm 68:31, Ethiopia will stretch out her hands to God. 5