Friday, July 17, 2026

JEWISH ENT TIME PROPHECY DEBUNKED #3

 FROM  "JEWISH  VOICE  TODAY"  MAGAZINE  -  JAN/FEB  2013





The  End  of  the World

As  We  Knew  It


BY  JACK  KINSELLA





Well December 21 2012  came and went and we're all still here. Of course, that was to be expected.


Nobody talked much about it; but earlier in 2012 an archeological team found another hidden chamber near the chamber where they found the Mayan calendar that ended its Long Count at December 21, 2012.


But since so many people booked rooms in Central America to await the end of the world, they didn't have the heart to reveal what they found there. It was a new calendar that picked up where the old one left off. Oh well.


What was it about the 2012 Mayan calendar that sparked such serious and intense interest? People who knew nothing about Mayan culture or Mayan history and especially Mayan astrology were completely sold out to the Mayan 'prophecy.'

This entire issue is dedicated to the proposition that the Mayan prophecy failed. It wouldn't be if it hadn't have been taken so seriously by so many people. And yet; when you look at it; the entire theory was based on the ending date to a calendar.


That's like believing it is the end of the world on December 31 just because that's when the calendar ends. Yet that is what happened. Call it "The End of the World as We Know It" syndrome or its acronym, TEOTWAWKI.

It is an all-pervading sense that the clock is winding down and that we are running out of time. That sense of impending doom is shared across the board by Christians, humanists, secular futurists, scientists, fiction-writers, Muslims, Jews, Rastafarians, Zoroastrians, Buddhists, Hindus, the Baha'i, and several Native American tribal religions, including those of the Hopi, Lakota, and Mayans.


"The End of The World as We Know It" is a film genre in Hollywood. From the Omen trilogy to the Seventh Sign, Rosemary's Baby, Arnold Schwarzenegger's End of Days, and 1991's Messiah-bashing, The Rapture to the apocalyptic series Mad Max, "The End of The World As We Know It" has been a consistent box office winner.


Among religious Jews in Israel, the Messianic expectation is expressed by banners and signs festooning Israel welcoming the Messiah. Islam believes that TEOTWAWKI will begin with a massive all-out Muslim assault on the non-Muslim world. That war will spark the return of the twelfth Imam (the Mahdi) who will lead the Muslim forces to victory, institute Islamic rule on the whole world, and usher in a period of Islamic peace and harmony. Humanists, environmentalists, and secular scientists have also developed an apocalyptic worldview as scientific  knowledge continues to Increase at exponential levels. 


The humanists envision a nuclear apocalypse as a  consequence of war between nations. They preach globalism and the elimination of the nation-state as the only prescription for humanity's survival and preach the UN as savior of the world.


Environmentalists forecast impending doom as a consequence of human damage done to the planet by its mere existence. They preach that man is a cancer on the earth and that cancer must be slowed or stopped by limiting human activity and production. Only global intervention can save mankind, and they preach the UN as savior of the world.


Secular astrological scientists are combing the known universe for an impending asteroid strike that will destroy all life on earth. Scientists estimate that there is between one chance in 1,000 and one chance in 10,000 that a "doomsday" asteroid collision will head toward earth during the 21st century. 

Everybody shares the same instinctive sense of the times, whether secular, humanist, religious, or scientific. You never have to crack a Bible to know in your heart that humanity's clock is winding down. It's hard NOT to notice.


This instinctive understanding that this is the generation of "The End of The World as We Know It" is like an elephant in the living room that nobody wants to talk about, but can't quite ignore. No matter how hard you try to look around it, it is still there.


All of these various perspectives see almost the same outcome; an existential threat to humanity that, barring the intervention of a savior, will bring about Doomsday at some time in the not too distant future.


Does this sound familiar? Not one of these theories discussed above has its roots in the New Testament. These are secular assessments derived from collating all the known variables as they become known and calculating the probabilities.


But they all point to the end result, and all follow the same formula: Judgment is coming, mankind needs a savior, or all is lost. 


That is EXACTLY what Yeshua preached 2,000 years ago—the exact same formula with the exact same conclusion being reached by the secular world today. But He uniquely named Himself as the Savior to thosewho put their faith in Him, so nothing is lost.


The year 2012 is behind us, 2013 has just begun... and we are still here. One more year to proclaim the soon return of the Messiah! One more chance to bring Yeshua to the lost. Until He comes.


"Even so, when you see these things happening, you know that the kingdom of God is near. Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened" (Luke 31-32).


Jewish Voice Today


..........


YES  IT  WAS  ANOTHER  TIME [BEEN  MANY  OVER  THE  LAST  40  YEARS]  WHEN  SOME  GOT  ON  THE  BAND-WAGON  BECAUSE  OF  MISS-UNDERSTANDING  OF  THINGS,  OR  NOT  HAVING  THE  WHOLE  STORY,  THE  REST  OF  THE  STORY,  THAT  RELIGIOUS  PEOPLE  EITHER  EXPECTED  THE  GREAT  TRIBULATION  TO  COME  OR  CHRIST'S  RETURN,  TO  HAPPEN  BY  THE  END  OF  2012.


IT  ALL  STEMS  FROM  PEOPLE  NOT  KNOWING  BIBLE  PROPHECY  CORRECTLY.  NOT  KNOWING  HOW  TO  PUT  THE  PROPHECIES  OF  THE  BIBLE  TOGETHER  CORRECTLY,  FOR  THE  1, 2, 3  STEPS,  OF  END  TIME  EVENTS.


ON  MY  WEBSITE  UNDER  "PROPHECY"  I  HAVE  GIVEN  YOU  THE  1, 2, 3,  STEPS  TO  WATCH  FOR.  NOT  UNTIL  THOSE  EVENTS  COME  TO  PASS  WILL  CHRIST  RETURN.  THE  NUMBER  ONE  STEP  IS  THE  FORMING  OF  THE  "KING  OF  THE  SOUTH"  AS  IN  DANIEL  11:40-45,  WHICH  THEN  LEADS  INTO  CHAPTER  12.  UNTIL  THE  "KING  OF  THE  SOUTH"  -  A  SOMEWHAT  UNITED  ARAB  UNION  WITH  EGYPT  SPEARING-HEADING  IT,  THE  GREAT  TRIBULATION  AND  THE  LAST  42  MONTHS [BOOK  OF  REVELATION]  OF  THIS  AGE  WILL  NOT  COME  TO  PASS.  


YES  IT  IS  JUST  THAT  SIMPLE.....MARK  MY  WORDS  WELL.  GOD  HAS  GIVEN  US  PROPHETIC  SIGNS,  GIVEN  THE  UNDERSTANDING  TO  HIS  MINISTERS  OF  PROPHECY [HAVING  THE  GIFT  OF  CORRECTLY  PUTTING  TOGETHER  THE  PROPHECIES  OF  THE  BIBLE]  WHO  WILL  TELL  YOU  THE  CORRECT  SIGNS  TO  LOOK  FOR  BEFORE  THE  END  OF  THIS  AGE  CAN  COME.


WHAT  IS  GOING  ON  IN  SOME  ARAB  NATIONS  TODAY  INCLUDING  EGYPT,  IS  THE  BEGINNING  OF  THE  START  OF  AN  EVENTUAL  ARAB  UNION  CALLED  IN  DANIEL  "THE  KING  OF  THE  SOUTH." 


UNTIL  IT  FORMS,  THIS  AGE  WILL  NOT  COME  TO  AN  END.


STEP  NUMBER  2  TO  THEN  WATCH  FOR,  IS  THE  KING  OF  THE  SOUTH  "PUSHING  AT"  THE  KING  OF  THE  NORTH [A  RESURRECTED  HOLY  ROMAN  EMPIRE  IN  EUROPE]  AND  WE  HAVE  NOT  ONLY  NO  IDEA  AS  TO  WHAT  THAT  PUSH  WILL  BE,  BUT  EVEN  MORE  IMPORTANT,  WE  HAVE  NO  IDEA  WHEN  THAT  PUSH  WILL  COME;  THE  KING  OF  THE  SOUTH  COULD  BE  MANY  YEARS  IN  FORMATION  BEFORE  THEY  "PUSH  AT"  THE  KING  OF  THE  NORTH.


THOSE  ARE  THE  TWO  BIG  THINGS  TO  KEEP  YOUR  EYES  ON.  THE  REST  OF  THE  STUFF  PROTESTANT  PROPHETS  WANT  TO  TELL  YOU [WRITE  BOOKS  ABOUT  TO  SELL  TO  YOU,  MAKING  MORE  MONEY  FOR  THEMSELVES]  IS  ALL  USELESS  AND  FICTION.


YES  MARK  MY  WORDS  WELL,  TIME  WILL  TELL  I  AM  CORRECT,  AND  YOU  WILL  KNOW  WHO  IS  THE  TRUE  SERVANT  OF  GOD,  AND  WHO  ARE  ALL  THE  FALSE  PROPHETS.


Keith Hunt


........................................





BOOK OF ACTS CHAPT. 14, 15

 


 New Testament Bible
Story

Chapter Fifty-six:

The Circumcision Question Settled

                   

              ACTS chapter Fourteen and Fifteen


FINISHING THE FIRST MISSIONARY JOURNEY

     Paul and Barnabas were in Iconium, a town in Asia Minor or
Turkey as it is called today, and they both went into the
synagogue of the Jews and spoke so powerfully that a great
multitude of the Jews and also of the gentile Greeks became
believers in Jesus as the Messiah. But once more the unbelieving
Jews stirred up a good percentage of the unbelieving Gentiles
against the brethren. Yet Barnabas and Paul stayed there quite a
time speaking boldly in the Lord, and Christ gave proof of His
grace by granted wonderful signs and miracles to be performed by
them.
     In the process of time the people of the city were divided,
part sided with the unbelieving Jews and part sided with the
apostles. The unbelieving Jews and Gentiles together with many of
their leaders decided they would take stronger action against the
apostles and stone them one day when it was the right time. But
the apostles became aware of their evil plan and fled from that
city and went to Lystra and Derbe, cities of Lycoania, and they
preached the Gospel in that whole area. This is all about 15 to
20 miles west of Tarsus, where Paul was living before Barnabas
came from Antioch in Syria to bring him over to Antioch as we
have already seen in an earlier chapter (Acts 14:1-7).

PAUL HEALS A CRIPPLE  

     In Lystra there was a man who was crippled in the feet from
birth, and who had never in his life walked. The man was looking
at Paul as he preached and Paul detected that he had faith to be
healed, and so, with a loud voice said to him, "Stand up on your
feet!"  The man stood and began walking and then leaping around,
as if he had done so all his life. It was truly a remarkable
miracle, for the man not only was healed in the feet but was
given the ability of balance and walking and leaping without ever
have to learn to do so. The people of the city in their
particular language all began to shout at the top of their
voices, "Oh, the gods, the gods, have come down to us in the
likeness of men!" They named Barnabas with the name "Jupiter" and
Paul they named "Mercurius" - two of their most revered gods. It
will be of interest here to learn a little about these two
famous gods of the Gentiles. I will quote from the Bible
Commentary by Albert Barnes:

     "Jupiter was represented as the most powerful god of the
     ancients. He was represented as the son of Saturn and
     Ops.....the worship of Jupiter was almost universal.....His
     common appellation was, the father of gods and man. He was
     usually represented as sitting on a golden or an ivory
     throne, holding in one hand a thunderbolt, and in the other
     a sceptre of cypress. His power was supposed to extend over
     other gods; and everything was subservient to his will,
     except the fates. There is abundant proof that he was
     worshipped in the region of Lycoania, and throughout Asia
     Minor.....
     Mercury, called by the Greeks 'Hermes' was a celebrated god
     of antiquity....He was the messenger of the gods, and of
     Jupiter in particular; he was the patron of travellers and
     shepherds; he conducted the souls of the dead into the
     infernal regions; and he PRESIDED OVER ORATORS, AND
     DECLAIMERS, and merchants....He was regarded as the god of
     ELOQUENCE; and as light rapid and quick in his movements.
     The conjecture of Chrysostom is, that Barnabas was a large
     athletic man, and was hence taken for Jupiter; and Paul was
     small in his person, and was hence supposed to be Mercury.
     BECAUSE HE WAS CHIEF SPEAKER. The office of Mercury was to
     deliver the message of the gods; and as Paul only had been
     discoursing, he was supposed to be Mercury" (emphasis
     Barnes).

     The head priest of Jupiter for the city ordered oxen and all
the trappings for sacrifice be brought to the city gate, and he
was ready to offer sacrifice with the people to Paul and
Barnabas. When the apostles heard this, they were abhorrent and
tore their outer garments, which was a sign and custom back then
of humiliation. They ran among the people crying out, "Sirs,
people, why are you doing these things? We are just men like
yourselves, with human passions as you have. We are teaching that
you turn from vain useless customs and practices and worship the
true living God, the one who made heaven and earth, and the sea,
and all that are in them. Who in times gone by allowed and
permitted all nations to walk after their own ways and mind. But
He was not without witness of His existence, for He did good to
people, giving rain from heaven, and fruitful harvests, filling
people's hearts with food and gladness."
     Even with those words it was still very difficult to
restrain the people from offering sacrifice to them, but they did
manage to prevent them from doing so.

     It was but a short time later when certain Jews from Antioch
and Iconium came and with clever words and emotional tactics,
they got the people so worked up against and in opposition to
Paul and Barnabas, and especially Paul, for it would seem he did
most of the preaching, that they started to stone Paul, and
actually thought they had killed him. They pulled what seemed,
his lifeless body, outside the city to rot in the sun. The
other disciples were gathered around his body, also presuming he
was dead, when he rose up on his legs and headed straight back
into the city.
     It was another miracle for sure, and it would seem the
people of the city and those who had just stone Paul, knew it was
a miracle also, for they did not come anywhere near him to try
harming him again. They probably thought if they did some
lightening bolt would come down from heaven and strike them dead.
Paul spent the rest of the day and night back in the city and
then with Barnabas departed the next day to go to Derbe.
     There they preached the Gospel and taught many about the
word of God and Jesus Christ, then with great faith in the power
and protection of God they returned again to Lystra, to Iconium,
and finally back to Antioch from where they started their
missionary journey. They strengthened the lives of the new
disciples they had made in those towns, encouraging them to
endure in the faith, and teaching them that it is sometimes
through much trials, troubles, and tribulations, that we must
enter the Kingdom of God. 
     Life as a Christian is not always a bed of roses, sometimes
along the way we have thorns and thistles we must contend with,
some have more and some have less. No one knows what hardships we
may encounter in our life as we walk God's way, unless God
decides to tell you beforehand in a dream or send you an angel to
tell you. For the vast majority of us, that does not happen. But
we must except that somewhere and at some time, we will have to
face hardship, difficulties, problems. But Paul elsewhere in his
writings told us that God would not try us above what we are able
to bear, but will with the trial make a way of escape. We need to
keep our faith in God that He will help us through all of the
valleys that come along in life, then we can really enjoy the
mountain peaks when we are riding high.

     We are also told that Paul and Barnabas (the context of the
verses is talking about those two apostles) appointed, or
separated, or decided, to make spiritual elders (in the plural)
in every Church of God they founded and established. They prayed,
they fasted, and then commended those "elders" to the Lord. Jesus
had said that we aught to pray to God that He would send out more
laborers into the harvest, for the harvest is great.
Not all are called to be spiritual leaders and guides of the
flock of God. There are many functions in the body of Christ,
some are called by God to be apostles (ones send forth
as the Greek means), prophets (given insight into prophetic
things yet to come to pass) evangelists (those acting like Paul
and Barnabas, who have a gift to proclaim God's truths to groups
of unbelievers), and teachers (pastors, overseers of the flock)
(see Acts 20:17-31 and Eph.4:11-16 with Heb.13:7,17).
     It is right and proper that men already in the functions
that Paul and Barnabas were in should be able, with prayer and
fasting, to separate and commend other men to God as "elders" in
the Churches of God. Notice the importance of the use of the
plural, it is elderS, not elder. Every Church of God should if at
all possible have elderS, for no one man should be sole spiritual
guide of any one congregation.  So also was Paul's instruction to
Titus, that he should appoint elderS in every city as Paul had
instructed him to do (Titus 1:5). And later Paul was inspired to
lay down certain requirements for the function of being an elder,
we find them in 1 Tim.3 and Titus 1.

     Paul and Barnabas also went through Pisidia and came to
Pamphylia. They preached the word in Perga and went down to
Attalia, from there they sailed to Antioch in Syria, back to
where they had been commended by the leaders of that congregation
and by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,  to go on that
missionary journey.

     When they arrived back in Antioch they gathered all the
members of the church together and told them all about what God
had done through them, and how the door of faith was opened wide
to the Gentiles. There both Paul and Barnabas stayed for quite
some time with all the disciples of Antioch (Acts 14: 8-28).

THE CIRCUMCISION DEBATE IS SETTLED

     Sometime later after Paul and Barnabas had been back in
Antioch for a while, certain men from Judea came and started to
teach the brethren there that "Except you be circumcised after
the manner of Moses, you cannot be saved."
     Paul and Barnabas never taught any such doctrine. We
remember from an earlier chapter that Paul had told us in his
writing to the Galatians, that he was taught personally
by the revelation of Jesus. He knew from the start that physical
circumcision was not required under the New Covenant for
salvation, or in order to be saved. 
     There was quite a debate that ensued, between those who had
come down from Judea teaching circumcision was needed to be saved
and Paul and Barnabas who taught that it was not required to be
saved. The whole congregation finally decided that Paul and
Barnabas and certain other brethren, should go up to Jerusalem,
to the apostles and elders of the Jerusalem church and get this
issue decided one way or the other, once and for all.
     On their way up to Jerusalem they went through Phenice and
Samaria declaring the conversion of the Gentiles, and great joy
was upon all the brethren.
     When arriving in Jerusalem they were received by the church
there, and by the apostles and the elders, and they told the
Jerusalem church all the good things God had done through them
and their teaching and preaching.

     We need here to return to Paul's writing in the book of
Galatians for he gives us some information not recorded in Acts
chapter 15 by Luke.

     Paul had not visited the Jerusalem congregation for 14 long
years. This was now about 50 to 52 A.D. as most scholars believe.
Not only Barnabas was with him but also Titus. He went up because
God revealed or impressed him to do so. He told the church
about the Gospel he preached, but he also at this time had
PRIVATE meetings with "those of reputation" just to make sure he
was teaching the same as they were teaching, and that his work
then was not in vain. He makes it clear that none of those in
reputation compelled Titus to be circumcised. He tells us that in
private conference with "those who seemed to be somewhat" that
they added nothing to his teaching or theology we may say. But
just the opposite, when they saw and knew that God was working
with Paul's ministry to the uncircumcised, in as much as He was
working with Peter's ministry to the circumcised, when James,
Peter, and John "who seemed to be pillars" knew that God
was working with Paul and Barnabas, they gave them the right hand
of fellowship, and agreed that Paul and Barnabas should go to the
uncircumcised and that they would concentrate on the circumcised.
Paul said those leaders only wanted to add one thing to their
ministry, and that was to remember the poor, which Paul said he
had already been told that and doing it. Yes, of course he had
for he had been personally taught by Jesus (Gal.2:1-10).

     So we see what went on with Paul and Barnabas in private
meetings with those who were the main leaders of the church in
Jerusalem. The circumcision question was ALREADY put to rest with
them all. They ALL agreed that physical circumcision was NOT
a requirement to be saved. Titus, who was with Paul, and who was
not circumcised, was not required to be circumcised. The issue
and question of physical circumcision was already answered by God
to the apostles of God.

     Now back to Acts 15:5. But there arose some within the sect
of the Pharisees who were believers, members of the church in
Jerusalem, they rose up and said, "It was needful to circumcise
them, and to command them to keep the law of Moses."
     Now what this was meaning was they taught everyone should
obey all the law of Moses as they did under the Old Covenant,
with all its rituals, sacrifices, and of course physical
circumcision. 
     We must try to put ourselves into those times, to understand
the picture. Physical circumcision had been a very important part
of Jewish life for about 2,000 years, right from the days of
Abraham. To now think it was no longer needed, was to some, like
cutting off their right arm and right leg. It was so ingrained in
their mental thoughts and physical life, they just could not
envision life without that physical rite. Had not God given
it to them as a sign and as a covenant? Had not God said that NO
person could partake of the Passover meal service UNLESS they
were circumcised? Yes, it was so, as under the Old Covenant. So
some of the believers of the sect of the Pharisees just could not
see salvation without physical circumcision. It was anathema to
their minds. To them it was heresy to say physical circumcision
was not required to be saved.

     There was now only one way to resolve this question, and
that was to bring the whole Jerusalem church together, with all
the apostles, with Paul and Barnabas, and have an open debate on
the matter. This is what we now read about in Acts 15 and verses
6 to 21.

THE CIRCUMCISION DEBATE

     The apostles and elders came together to consider the matter
of physical circumcision for salvation. There was  "much
disputing"  we are told. This was not  a low key talk, but a
heated and zealous debate. Peter stood up and said:

     "You know brethren that a good while ago God made it known
     to us His favor that the Gentiles should hear the Gospel by
     my voice, and they believed it. And further, God knowing the
     hearts of people, gave them the Holy Spirit even as he had
     given to us, and this is a witness for us. He put no
     difference between us and them in the purification of
     the heart by faith. Now therefore why do we want to try God
     by putting a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which
     neither our fathers nor us were able to bear. But we believe
     that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be
     saved, even as they are saved."

     In Peter talking about a yoke laid upon them, he was talking
a lot more than the physical act of circumcision. For that rite
could hardly be a yoke that none could bear, as the people of
Israel had lived very well under performing physical
circumcision, after all its only the removal of some physical
skin from an 8 day old baby boy, which thousands still practice
to this very day. This was not the burden that none could bear.
The burden that none could bear, was to try and gain salvation,
or the grace of God, by working at all the laws of Moses. It was
by trying to earn salvation through law observance, and not
through grace by faith. It was trying to live by laws, building
up more good righteous deeds than bad ones, more good thoughts
than bad thoughts, more good words spoken than bad words spoken.
So the good out-numbered the bad and thinking God then was
obliged somehow to have to give you salvation. Being saved that
way would be you earning it. But salvation was NEVER to be
achieved that way. God had always intended that salvation would
be by His grace through faith in the sacrifice of His Son, for
the sins of the whole world. 
     Anyone trying to gain salvation any other way was doomed to
failure, would then truly have a yoke upon them which no one
could bear. For it was just not possible to live a full lifetime
in full harmony with the laws of Moses, with all the laws written
in the books of Moses (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Number,
Deuteronomy). And just one sin or infraction of law would mean
you were guilty of sin and so under the sentence of death.
It's like you obeying all the traffic laws of your town for years
but then you run a red light. All the correct law observance
still cannot nullify the time you broke the law, you are still
guilty and you are still under the penalty imposed on you for
breaking that law. Even if you obey for another ten years all the
traffic laws perfectly after that infraction of the one you
broke, you still must pay the penalty for the one you broke.
     So it is with the laws of God and the way to salvation. But
the police chief sent his Son to pay for you the law/s you broke.
The fine was paid by the Son. All you have to do is believe this,
have faith, accept the Son as your savior from the penalty
imposed, be sorry, repent, set your mind to want to continue as a
way of life, the will and ways and laws of God, and you can be
under His grace, and be saved.
          No other way can work. Any other way you may want to
set as your way, your theology ideas on how to be saved, that is
NOT God's way, can only be a yoke of a burden that none can ever
bear.

     God had made a way of salvation. The apostles knew it. It
had been really revealed to them from the time they spent with
Jesus during His earthly ministry. Now, some many years later,
comes this idea from some that you must be physically
circumcised and still be under ALL the Old Covenant laws of Moses
to be saved. Peter was setting the record straight that salvation
could never be achieved this way.

     Make no mistake, the New Covenant does not "blanket" do away
with all laws of Moses. We are told very clearly  that the New
Covenant will put or write the laws of God into our hearts (see
Hebrews 8) and faith does not do away with law but it established
it (Rom.3: 31). So in living by "every word of God" as Jesus
taught us that we should do (Mat.4:4), we must let the whole
Bible interpret for us how we go about that. Here we are seeing
that physical circumcision is not required. The Old Covenant law
of going to one place or city, where God placed His name to
observe His Festivals, is no longer applicable under the New
Covenant (see John 4:21-24). No one today believes that
women must stay away from "church" when she is in her monthly
cycle, but under the Old Covenant she had to. Under the Old
Covenant a women had to stay away from "church" for a period of
certain days after giving birth to a child. No one believes that
law of Moses is applicable for Christians today.
     
     This group from the sect of the Pharisees, within the Church
of God, were teaching that all people still had to live by all
these laws of Moses, and physical circumcision  was of prime
importance to them. Their theology to salvation was incorrect,
and at this debate, the apostles were making it very clear to all
present that it was an incorrect theology.

     The multitude of the brethren were silent after Peter spoke.
Then it was time for Barnabas and Paul to have their say. And
they declared all the wonders and miracles that God had done
through them among the Gentiles. Of course they would have given
emphasis to the fact that God was doing all this without the
Gentiles having to be circumcised.

     Then James stood up after Barnabas and Paul had finished
speaking, and said:


     "Men and brethren, listen to me. Peter has declared to you
     how God at first brought in the Gentiles, to call out from
     them a people for His name. And to this agrees the very
     prophets in the Scriptures that we have; as it is written,
     'After this I will return, and will build up the tabernacle
     of David, which has seen corruption and lays in ruin; and I
     will build again the ruins of it, and set it all in correct
     order. So the relatively small elect of men may find the way
     to the Lord, and all the Gentiles also, upon whom I will
     place my name. I the Lord have done all this' (Amos
     9:11-12).  Known unto God are all His works from the
     beginning of the world. Wherefore my judgment is this. That
     we do not trouble them, which are from among the Gentile
     nations who have turned to God. But that we write to them
     that they abstain from pollutions of idols, from sexual
     immorality, from animals strangled to death in killing them
     for food, and from the eating of blood. For Moses has from
     old times in every city those that teach his word, being
     always read in the synagogue every Sabbath day" (Acts 15:
     6-21).

     A very important answer by James. He backed up what Peter
and Barnabas and Paul had to say with the very word of God. It
had been foretold by God Himself that His truths to worshipping
Him and to salvation (tabernacle of David) would be ruined, would
become incorrectly understood. But He would build it back, would
restore it to correctness, and in so doing, He would also bring
it to the Gentile nations. This, James was saying, is what God
had already done over the preceding years. The true way to
salvation had been clearly revealed to the apostles by God's word
and by acting in certain ways to show the apostles that true way.
And God had always from the beginning of His works determined
salvation would be only attained this one way. 
     
     Now verses 20 and 21 have given some great problems to
understand. Many have thought the Gentiles only have to follow
these four laws, and everything else can go out the window.
Rather silly is this reasoning, for surely the Gentiles are not
free to kill and murder, or to take God's  name in vain, or to
bow before idols, while the Jews must obey those laws. And then
notice that some of the four things mentioned are what you might
call "physical" laws; i.e. things strangled to death and then
eaten, was prohibited to the Jews by God, as one of the food laws
under the Old Covenant, for the blood was to be drained, which
meant killing the animal in such a way as to allow the blood to
drain. This is obviously a physical food law. Yet James says
Gentiles were then to obey it. Same can be said for "blood."
James is obviously talking about the physical law of not eating
blood, which God said the Israelites were not to do. 
     Yes, this can give some people problems in their thoughts,
and with some it leads to believing many errors of New Testament
theology, as well as out and out contradictions in their theology
ideas.

     Some astute Bible scholars have of course seen the strange
ideas many have devised from these two verses, and have come to
see the truth in the context of the whole New Testament.

     James listed four things the Gentiles should be warned
specifically about, so not to do or observe, because the Gentiles
HAD GREAT TROUBLE WITH THEM! Or to put it another way the Gentile
LIFE STYLE WAS FULL OF THOSE FOUR THINGS MENTIONED. The various
pollutions to idols was numerous, superstitions, lucky-charms,
fortune-telling, palm-reading, crystal-ball reading, trying to
look to the heavenly stars to see your future, and many many
more, was all over the heathen world. Sexual immorality was
everywhere in the pagan world, probably the panicle of that sin
was in having Temple prostitutes. Often the pagan Temples
employed hundreds of women whose occupation was to have sexual
relations with the men who came to worship in the Temples. Temple
sex for them was part and parcel of their religious faith and
practice. The pagan health practices were often very debased and
far from the physical health laws laid down by God to Israel
through Moses. Eating and drinking of blood in various ways was
common among the Gentiles. Much blood would be consumed by them
in strangling animals to death and not draining the blood from
them, as well as the literal drinking of cups of blood in their
religious rites and ceremonies. God had told Israel that LIFE was
in the blood, and that they should not eat and drink blood. Today
we are seeing the importance of not contaminating our cattle in
the many ways that our nations have been doing (thinking it
produces larger and quicker meat supply). But eventually it comes
back on us in health problems (the "mad cow decease" is but one,
but one of the most severe ones), for blood carries the life flow
of the animal to all its tissues, and if the animal's blood in
not drained fully, or if we drink cups of it in pagan religious
rites, then we are finally  going to reap bad health problems of
one kind or another. With things like our "mad cow decease" we
may even drain the blood from the animal correctly but its
tissue meat is so polluted we still are effected by it, even to
the point of death. 
 
     The Gentiles may have come over into the Christian church,
but as many people know who have come out of deep and gross sins
as a way of life that they perhaps lived for many years, it is
not always easy to give up fully and completely those sins, be it
mental, spiritual, or physical. How many have accepted Jesus as
their Savior, only in time to return to the sins they came out
of? Many a Pastor will tell you that it can be many who just
cannot fully and completely kill the old man with its lusts and
passions. Sadly they will tell you of many that come to Jesus
with good intentions and come to the "church" for a while, but in
time often drift away and end up back in their old way of life
and sins.
     It was no different in the days of James and this Jerusalem
debate. The Gentiles tended to have MAJOR problems with certain
pollutions with old idols, with sexual immorality, with not
killing animals in a way to drain the blood, and to even drinking
blood in various forms, in their past life. Heathen peoples often
have "blood" eating and drinking as part of their rites and
worship. Like many other things, certain physical things, that
God does not allow in our lives, can take a hold on us and be
very difficult to break, just ask (not really, but as a figure of
speech) some Christians who still have a problem in overcoming
the smoking habit.

     It is also just as obvious if we simply take it for what
James said, that James did not believe the four things he
mentioned were "done away with" under the New Covenant.
Some of them are of the "moral" law and some of them are of the
"physical" law of God. But all of them James still expected the
Gentiles (as well as the Jews of course) to obey and to live by,
living in NOT doing them.
     They were four of the MOST PROMINENT problems for Gentiles
to put away from their lives, so James felt it needful to
specifically point them out to them.  Other things they could
find out in due time, for he then went on to say what he said in
verse 21.
     They could find the ways of God, living His way of life, as
they attended Sabbath services in Jewish synagogues on the
Sabbath, not Sunday you will note, but on the Sabbath, the day
that Jews observed in accordance to the fourth commandment of the
great ten commandments. Moses, or the laws in the first five
books of the Bible, were read every Sabbath, and the Gentiles
could then "grow in grace and knowledge" as we are told to do
under the New Covenant, by hearing what Moses wrote under the
guiding hand of God. They could hear Moses every Sabbath day in
the synagogues.

     James was still upholding what Jesus said for us to do, that
is, to live by every word of God.

THE DECISION CONVEYED TO 
THE CHURCH IN ANTIOCH

     The apostles, elders, and the whole church there at
Jerusalem decided to write a letter of the outline of the
decision that was reached, to the Gentile brethren in Antioch 
and Syria and Cilicia. They also decided to send along a few
other men with Paul and Barnabas to Antioch. The men chosen were
men of leadership in the brethren at Jerusalem, and they were
Judas surnamed Barsabas, and Silas. They would also verify
what was written in the letter was true.
     The letter basically gave the outline of what we have just
studied as to what happened in the Jerusalem debate over the
matter of physical circumcision. It upheld the fact that God had
fully revealed for some time, that physical circumcision was not
required in order to be saved.

     The men were sent on their way to Antioch, and when they
arrived they gathered all the church together and delivered to
them the letter from the church at Jerusalem. The Gentiles after
reading it had great rejoicing. Judas and Silas having been given
from God the gift of functioning as prophets, encouraged the
people with many words of exhortation. They stayed for a while
and then it became time to return to the apostles in Jerusalem,
but Silas was pleased to want to stay and so he did. Paul and
Barnabas also continued as before and lived in Antioch, teaching
and preaching the word of God along with many others who did the
same (Acts 15:22-35).

PAUL AND BARNABAS HAVE DIFFERENCES 
OVER JOHN MARK 

     Time went by and one day Paul said to Barnabas that they
should go back to the churches they established on their first
missionary journey, and encourage them and see how things were
going for them all. Barnabas thought it was a good idea and
wanted to take along with them John Mark. Paul did not think so,
he just did not like the thought of taking John Mark with them
again, because, if we remember, Mark had departed from
them at Pamphylia, and had returned to Jerusalem, no longer
wanting to do the work Paul and Barnabas were doing at the time
for the Lord.
     The contention over Mark coming with them or not, grew and
grew between the two men, and the end result was that they both
decided it was best to separate and go their different ways in
doing God's work. So Barnabas took Mark with him and sailed to
Cyprus. Paul chose to take Silas with him  and was commended by
the brethren for God's work and so departed. He and Silas went
through Cilicia and Syria serving and helping the churches to
endure in the faith delivered to them (Acts 15:36-41).

     We see here NOT a difference in basic doctrinal belief or
practice between two men of God as they were doing the work of
the Lord, but what we might call "administrational thoughts" -
how to, in what way to, and with whom, would the work of the Lord
be done. Both men were still doing God's work, there was no
"church disfellowshipment" going on here, no one was being asked
to leave the Church of God. One apostle did not go to other
apostles to try and have the other he disagreed with, thrown out
of the church. This is important to remember in this example, for
in some sects of Christianity they have done just this very
thing, ministers differing over issues where difference should be
allowed, they try to "gang up" with other ministers, to have
the one they differ with cast out of their organization.
     None of that went on here. Two ministers of God differed on
how to do God's work, and who they should do it with. They could
not come to agreement on the matter, and so they simply went
their separate ways to perform the work of the Lord. They were
still fully a part of God's work, and I'm sure were both still
fully used to teach and spread the Gospel, and/or encourage those
who were in the faith.

     The rest of the book of Acts gives focus to Paul and the
work God did through him over the next number of years.


                ............................


TO BE CONTINUED

BOOK OF ACTS CHAPT. 12, 13

 


 New Testament Bible
Story

Chapter Fifty-five:

Paul's First Missionary Journey

                    

              ACTS chapter Twelve and Thirteen



DEATH OF JAMES

     It was around this same time of the great draught upon the
land of Judea especially, that the then Herod decided to vex the
Church of God. It was the Feast of the Passover and the Feast of
Unleavened Bread, what is March or April on our calendar.
The Roman's were always very touchy and somewhat high-strung at
this time, because so many uprisings had taken place by the Jews
at this spring Feast time. 
     We are not given the details as to the WHY, but Herod took
James the brother of John the apostle and had him killed by the
sword. He saw that this pleased the Jews who did not like this
"new Jewish faith" that had sprung up among them. And so he
proceeded to take the apostle Peter. He had him brought in and
thrown into prison. Herod thought that after the days of the
Passover and unleavened bread was over, he would bring Peter
out and present him to the Jews and would then see what they
wanted to do with him, maybe he thought they would want him
crucified as they did with Jesus.
     The word "Easter" in the old KJV was a blatant
mistranslation from the Greek. The Greek word used here is
Pascha, which means Passover.

     Peter was in prison but the Church of God people prayed for
him, prayed without ceasing (Acts 12:1-5).

PETER'S MIRACULOUS DELIVERANCE

     Herod was going to bring forth Peter from prison, but the
night before a great miracle took place. Peter was bound by two
chains between two guards, and the door keeper of the prison was
at the door guarding as usual. Then a mighty angel from God
came and shone brightly in the prison. The angel shook Peter
awake and said to him, "Arise, get up quickly." The chains
binding Peter's hands fell to the ground. The angel said further,
"Gird up your clothes and put your sandals on. Put your tunic on
and come follow me."
     Peter obeyed and went with the angel, but he was so dazed
and still somewhat sleepy that he thought all that was happening
was a kind of dream. They passed the first enclosure and then the
second enclosure of the prison and finally came to the prison's
court-yard gate, that led out into the city. The gate just opened
up as if magically all by itself. They went out and passed on
through one street, and then the angel just disappeared from
Peter's view.
     He finally was fully awake enough to realize it was not all
just a dream, but it was indeed very real what had all taken
place, and he knew then that God had sent an angel to deliver him
from Herod and from what the Jews may have wanted to do to him. 
     Peter moved on to the house of Mary, the mother of John,
whose surname was Mark, and many of the brethren were gathered at
her house; they were there praying together for Peter. He knocked
at the gate, and a woman by the name of Rhoda came to answer his
knocking. She heard Peter's voice and was so overjoyed she forgot
to open the gate and let him in. She ran off to tell the others
that Peter was at the gate.  Well, the brethren did not want to
believe her, and thought she was a little bit out of her mind,
but she kept insisting what she said was true. They then said to
her that she had maybe seen Peter's angel. We do have certain
angels assigned to us at times, from God, to help us in various
ways. 
     Peter continued knocking at the gate. Finally all the
brethren coming close to the gate thought well someone is
certainly out there knocking, so they opened up the door
(which was obviously more like a door than a see-through gate).
Wow....what a surprise for them, they were astonished to say the
least, for there right in front of them stood Peter. They began
to shout out with joy and praise. Peter motioned with his hands
and had them quiet down, then related to them how God had
delivered him from prison by an angel that He had sent. He then
told them to go and tell James (probably James, the Lord Jesus'
brother, the same James as we shall read about in Acts 15, when
we get there) and other disciples and apostles.
     Peter then departed from them and went to another place,
which we are not told where it was, or to whom he went (Acts 12:
6-17).

HEROD'S DEATH

     When it was daybreak the soldiers soon found that Peter was
not in the prison. It naturally caused quite a commotion. Herod
was told the situation. He was as mad as a wild bull. He called
for the prison wardens, examined what they had to say about why
Peter was not in the prison. He was not satisfied at all with
what they had to say, and commanded that the wardens be put to
death. Then he left Jerusalem and went to Ceasarea for a while.
     While there some political scheming went on between him and
the officials at the cities of Tyre and Sidon (which are up the
coast about 60 and 70 miles from Ceasarea). The officials at
those two cities had made friends with one of Herod's right hand
men, called Blastus. They came to him all in a nice cosy fashion,
desiring that peace would be between them and Herod, for Herod's
country that he ruled over provided many physical things for the
well-being and comfort of their country. Herod told them to come
before him on a certain day and they willingly obeyed. When that
day came Herod gave them what we might call a "Presidential
speech."  The people that heard this eloquent speech all
shouted out, "Oh, this is the voice of god, not of a human man."
Herod was thinking to himself that it was indeed so, just as they
said, that he was some kind of a god. Immediately as he was
agreeing with their shouts of adoration for him, an angel of the
Lord smote him. We are told that he was not giving the true God
glory, but obviously taking it all for himself. 
     He did not die instantly, but he was smitten with some kind
of sickness that worms were eating away at him, and then he
finally died. It must have been a terrible death, maybe slow and
agonizing (Acts 12: 18-23).

     The word of God grew and multiplied more and more after
Herod's death. Barnabas and Paul, who had been somewhere in the
land of Judea handing out the goods they had brought with them
from Antioch to help the draught stricken brethren of Judea, 
returned to Antioch and took with then John, whose surname was
Mark. They must have thought he would be a good servant for their
work in the ministry in Antioch (Acts 12: 24-25).

     As we look back on what we have just seen happen in Acts 12,

we must wonder why one man is killed for his faith in God and
another is delivered from what probably would have been death, if
the unbelieving Jews had had their way.  There is no specific
answer to our question.  You may remember in the Gospels where
Jesus told Peter that he would one day be led away to a place he
did not want to go, which was telling him he would die by being
led captive and executed. Peter turned to Jesus and said, "Well
what about this man here, what will happen to him, how will he
die?" This was the man John, one of the apostles, that Peter was
looking at and asking Jesus about. Jesus told Peter to never mind
about what he would do or how his life would end. He told him
what did it matter to Peter if this man were to live until Jesus
returned again from heaven. Christ told Peter to mind his own
business as we say, yes, literally to mind his own business of
doing God's work, and not be concerned about how God would work
with another man (John 21: 15-25).
     We find that history tells us Peter was taken captive and
was executed for his faith eventually, while John the apostle
lived to an old age and died as far as we know from natural
causes of old age.

     It is not possible to know all the ways and the reasons as
to why God works this way with one person and another way with
another person. Some things are hidden from us in this life time.
We must all simply be concerned with OUR life with God and what
we can do for Him, for as long as God gives us this physical
life, be it long or short, be it a natural death for us or an
execution death for our Christian faith.

BARNABAS AND PAUL START THEIR
FIRST MISSIONARY JOURNEY

     We now move back to Antioch where Barnabas and Paul had once
more returned to. 
     Antioch in Syria, on the left bank of the Orontes, sixteen
miles from the Mediterranean and three hundred miles from
Jerusalem, between the Lebanon and Taurus mountain ranges. It was
founded about 300 B.C.  The city was destroyed several times by
earthquakes. It was luxurious. Its main street, four miles in
length, was lined with magnificent mansions. It was highly
cultural, but its social life was debase, sensual, and shocking.
Jews formed a large portion of its population. It became the
third city in the Roman Empire, having a population of 500,000.
We have seen that it was there that the name "Christian" was
applied to followers of Jesus. All three of Paul's missionary
journeys began from Antioch (see a Bible Dictionary for this and
more details on the city of Antioch in Syria).

     In the Church of God in Antioch there were prophets and
teachers. The names of maybe the most prominent are given to us
as: Barnabas, Simeon that was called Niger, Lucius of Cyrene,
Manaen, and Paul.
     As they served the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Spirit told
them to separate Barnabas and Paul for a work that God had chosen
them to do for Him. They all prayed and fasted more, then laid
their hands on those two and sent them out.
     The Holy Spirit led them to go to Seleucia and from there to
Cyprus. At this point you may want to get out a good Bible map of
this first missionary journey of Barnabas and Paul, to see
exactly where they travelled to. John Mark was with them, and the
first time we are told they preached the word of God in the
synagogues of the Jews was at the town of Salamis.
     They then went through the isle unto Paphos, and came across
a certain "witch" or "sorcerer" - a false prophet - a Jew by the
name of Barjesus. This fellow often hung around with the high
official of the country named Serius Paulus. He was a prudent man
and called for Barnabas and Paul, desiring to hear what they had
to say concerning the word of God. But Barjesus stood up against
Barnabas and Paul wanting to turn Paulus away from the truth of
God. 
     Then Paul filled with the power of the Holy Spirit, looked
with piecing eyes upon this false prophet and said, "You, who are
so full of all cunningness and wickedness, you who are a son of
the Devil, you who are an enemy of all true righteousness, when
is it that you will cease to pervert the ways of the Lord? And
now, look, but you will not see, for the hand of the Lord is upon
you. You shall not be able to see the sun, you will be blind for
a season." And immediately a kind of mist and a darkness fell
upon his eyes and he had to seek people to lead him about by the
hand.
     When Paulus saw what had happened to this false prophet he
believed, for he was then astonished at the word and teachings of
the Lord (Acts 13: 1-12).

PAUL PREACHES IN ANTIOCH IN PISIDIA

     Paul and company went from Paphos and came to Perga in
Pamphylia, and it was there that John Mark departed from them and
returned to Jerusalem. We are not told as to why John Mark left
them, only that he did. It was to Paul not a good reason for him
to leave them, as we see from Acts 15:38. To Paul he abandoned
the work of God.
     Paul and company continued on from Perga to Antioch in
Pisidia, a different Antioch than the one in Syria from whence
they started their journey. They went into the synagogue on the
weekly Sabbath day, and sat down. After the reading of the law
and the prophets, the leaders of the synagogue said to all
present, "You men and brethren, if you have any word of
exhortation for the people, then speak up and we shall listen."
That was all that Paul needed to hear. He straightaway stood up
and preached to them
this little sermon:

     "Men of Israel, and all you that respectfully fear God,
     please listen to me. The God of the people of Israel chose
     our fathers, and exalted the people, when they lived as
     strangers in the land of Egypt, and with a mighty high hand
     brought them out of Egypt.
     He endured with them for about forty years in the
     wilderness. After destroying seven nations of peoples in the
     land of Canaan, He divided the land up and gave a portion to
     each tribe. There were judges over Israel for about
     four-hundred and fifty years, until Samuel the prophet. Then
     the people desired to have a king over them like other
     nations.
     He gave them Saul the son of Cis, a man of the tribe of
     Benjamin, who reigned about forty years. When God finally
     removed him as king, He gave them David to be their king.
     And God gave testimony of David saying, 'I have found David
     the son of Jesse, a man after mine own heart, which shall
     fulfil all my will.' 
     And from this man's descendants God has according to His
     promise, raised up to Israel a Savior, by the name of Jesus.
     But before He came, John fulfilled his calling by preaching
     baptism of repentance to all the peoples of Israel that came
     to him. While John was doing his work for God he said, 'Who
     do you think that I am? The Messiah? No, I am not. But there
     will come a man after me, whose sandals I'm not worthy to
     loosen.' 
     Men and brethren, children from the line of Abraham, and all
     among you that respectfully fear God, it is to you, that
     this word of salvation is sent. For those who dwell at
     Jerusalem, and their leaders, because they did not wish to
     know Him the Messiah, nor the voice of the prophets which
     are read every Sabbath day, they have fulfilled the very
     prophecies contained in the prophets by condemning the
     Messiah Jesus. Yet they could find no cause of anything to
     deserve death, but they still wanted Pilate to kill Him. And
     when all that was written concerning this man, they took Him
     down from the tree and put Him in a tomb. But death could
     not hold Him, for God raised Him up from death, and He
     was seen alive for many days by those who followed Him from
     Galilee to Jerusalem, who bear witness to this fact to all
     the people. And we are here to declare to you the good
     news about the one great promise made to our fathers. God
     has fulfilled that very promise to us the children of our
     fathers, in that He has raised Jesus from death, just as
     it is written in the psalm: 'You are my Son, this day I have
     begotten you' (Ps.2:7). 
     And as concerning the point that he raised Him to life from
     the dead, no more to ever experience physical corruption, He
     said it this way: 'I will give you the sure mercies of
     David' (Isa.55:3), and in another place in the psalms, 'You
     shall not allow your holy one to see decay and corruption'
     (Ps.16:10). David himself served the will of God in his
     generation, but fell asleep in death, was buried, and did
     see corruption. David was not writing about himself, but
     about Him that God raised from death, about him that did not
     see corruption of the physical body.
     Be it known unto you men and brethren that through the name
     of this man Jesus, is the preaching of the forgiveness of
     sins. And by Him all that believe can be justified or
     forgiven from all their sins, which you simply could not be
     from trying to observe the laws of Moses.
     Beware, take close heed to what I'm saying, lest it come
     upon you what is spoken in the prophets: 'Behold you that
     despise, and doubt, and continue on to perish because you
     will not believe. I will work a work in your days, a work
     that you may reject and not believe, even though I send men
     to tell you about it' (Habakkuk 1:5)" 

     Though in context the prophecy in Habakkuk was about the
Chaldeans coming upon Judah to punish and destroy because of
unrepentant sin - the type example was fitting for the truth of
the Gospel and personally finding salvation from sin, being
rejected by many, though preached to them.

     When the Jews had departed out of the synagogue, the
Gentiles stayed behind and asked the two apostles to preach more
of those words to them again the next Sabbath. 

     We can not here that the Gentiles did not ask Paul and
Barnabas to preach to them on Sunday, as being the Lord's day. Of
course they were new to the "new faith" being taught, so we can
say that Paul or Barnabas did not answer them by saying they
could teach and preach to them "tomorrow" - it being the Lord's
day or new Sabbath day under the New Covenant. Here was the two
apostles great opportunity to explain to them and to us today,
that the fourth commandment of the great ten had been "changed"
to "the first day of the week" or to what we call Sunday. If
Sunday had become under the New Testament the new Lord's day,
then Paul and Barnabas could have told them they could meet with
them the very next day as they would be observing the first day
of the week as Jesus' resurrection day and as the now New
Covenant Sabbath day. But as we see, no such thought or idea or
teaching like this came from either of them.  

     Outside the synagogue many of the Jews and those who had
been converted to the Jewish faith, followed Paul and Barnabas to
hear more about the Gospel. And after expounding more of the word
of God to them, many did believe and the two apostles encouraged
them to continue in the grace of God now given to them (Acts
13:13-43).

THE NEXT SABBATH - JEWISH OPPOSITION

     During the week word got around Antioch in Pisidia, about
what had happened the Sabbath before in the synagogue, and nearly
the whole city came out to hear the word of God as preached by
Paul and Barnabas. The Gentiles were out by the droves, a
multitude of them, hungry to hear more from those two preachers
that had arrived among them.
     But the Jews became filled with envy. They did not like what
it was all perhaps leading to. The Jews did not have the same
attitude of mind as the Gentiles were exhibiting. They started to
speak against the things Paul and Barnabas were saying. They
started to argue, contradict, and ended up even blaspheming. It
was a mind-set that was as if they did not believe in a God or
His inspired word. All this just made Paul and Barnabas get
stronger and stronger in preaching and teaching. Then they both
came to a revelation, they said to the Jews, "It was right and
proper that we first preach the word of God to you, but because
you have thrown it to one side, thrown it away as far as the
east is from the west, and have condemned yourself not worthy of
everlasting life, well, behold, we shall go to the Gentiles. For
we now see that God has called us for that commission, for it is
written, 'I have sent you to be a light to the Gentiles, that you
should proclaim salvation to the very ends of the earth'" (Isa.
42:6 and 49:6).

     When the Gentiles heard these words form the two apostles
they were exceedingly happy and glorified the word of the Lord.
And as many as were being called of God to eternal life, they
believed. The word of God went forth throughout the whole region.

     The Jews were some upset, upset as possibly as much as they
could be without getting violent. Many of them went to other
religious Jewish women, women of high status in the community,
many men in high-ranking official governance of the city, and
managed to get all those people to persecute in various ways the
apostles Paul and Barnabas. It all led to having them expelled
from the city. 
     The two apostles shook off the dust from off their feet as
they left the city, as Jesus had told His disciples to do, if a
town or city rejected them, and they moved on to Iconium.

     The overall good done and fruits of preaching God's word was
getting large results for the positive, and so the disciples were
filled with joy and with more of the Holy Spirit (Acts 13:44-52).

                 ..........................

TO BE CONTINUED