HOW TO SECURE A PROSPEROUS VOYAGE
And after [Paul] had seen the
vision, immediately we endeavored to go into Macedonia, assuredly
gathering that the Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto them.
11. Therefore . . . we came with a straight course. Acts 16:10, 11
This book of the Acts is careful to
point out how each fresh step in the extension of the Church’s work was
directed and commanded by Jesus Christ Himself. Thus Philip was sent by
specific injunction to ‘join himself’ to the chariot of the Ethiopian
statesman. Thus Peter on the house-top at Joppa, looking out over the
waters of the western sea, had the vision of the great sheet, knit at the
four corners. And thus Paul, in singularly similar circumstances, in the
little seaport of Troas, looking out over the narrower sea which there
separates Asia from Europe, had the vision of the man of Macedonia, with
his cry, ‘Come over and help us !’ The whole narrative before us bears
upon the one point, that Christ Himself directs the expansion of His
kingdom. And there never was a more fateful moment than that at which the
Gospel, in the person of the Apostle, crossed the sea, and effected a
lodgment in the progressive quarter of the world.
Now what I wish to do is to note how
Paul and his little company behaved themselves when they had received
Christ’s commandment. For I think there are lessons worth the gathering to
be found there. There was no doubt about the vision; the question was what
it meant. So note three stages. First, careful consideration, with one’s
own common sense, of what God wants us to do—‘Assuredly gathering that the
Lord had called us.’ Then, let no grass grow under our feet— immediate
obedience—‘Straightway we endeavoured to go into Macedonia.’ And then,
patient pondering and instantaneous submission get the reward—‘We came
with a straight course.’ He gave the winds and the waves charge concerning
them. Now there are three lessons for us. Taken together, they are
patterns of what ought to be in our experience, and will be, if the
conditions are complied with.
I. First, Careful Consideration.
Paul had no doubt that what he saw
was a vision from Christ, and not a mere dream of the night, born of the
reverberation of waking thoughts and anxieties, that took the shape of the
plaintive cry of the man of Macedonia. But then the next step was to be
quite sure of what the vision meant. And so, wisely, he does not make up
his mind himself, but calls in the three men who were with him. And what a
significant little group it was! There were Timothy, Silas, and Luke
—Silas, from Jerusalem; Timothy, half a Gentile; Luke, altogether a
Gentile; and Paul himself—and these four shook the world. They come
together, and they talk the matter over. The word of my text rendered
‘assuredly gathering’ is a picturesque one. It literally means ‘laying
things together.’ They set various facts side by side, or as we say in our
colloquial idiom, ‘They put this and that together,’ and so they came to
understand what the vision meant.
What had they to help them to
understand it? Well, they had this fact, that in all the former part of
their journey they had been met by hindrances; that their path had been
hedged up here, there, and everywhere. Paul set out from Antioch, meaning
a quiet little tour of visitation amongst the churches that had been
already established. Jesus Christ meant Philippi and Athens and Corinth
and Ephesus, before Paul got back again. So we read in an earlier portion
of the chapter that the Spirit of Jesus forbade them to speak the Word in
one region, and checked and hindered them when, baffled, they tried to go
to another. There then remained only one other road open to them, and that
led to the coast. Thus putting together their hindrances and their
stimuluses, they came to the conclusion that unitedly the two said
plainly, ‘Go across the sea, and preach the word there.’
Now it is a very commonplace and homely piece of teaching to remind you
that time is not wasted in making quite sure of the meaning of providences
which seem to declare the will of God, before we begin to act. But the
commonest duties are very often neglected; and we preachers, I think,
would very often do more good by hammering at commonplace themes than by
bringing out original and fresh ones. And so I venture to say a word about
the immense importance to Christian life and Christian service of this
preliminary step—‘assuredly gathering that the Lord had called us.’ What
have we to do in order to be quite sure of God’s intention for us?
Well, the first thing seems to me to
make quite sure that we want to know it, and that we do not want to force
our intentions upon Him, and then to plume ourselves upon being obedient
to His call, when we are only doing what we like. There is a vast deal of
unconscious insincerity in us all; and especially in regard to Christian
work there is an enormous amount of it. People will say, ‘Oh, I have such
a strong impulse in a given direction, to do certain kinds of Christian
service, that I am quite sure that it is God’s will.’ How are you sure? A
strong impulse may be a temptation from the devil as well as a call from
God. And men who simply act on untested impulses, even the most benevolent
which spring directly from large Christian principles, may be making
deplorable mistakes. It is not enough to have pure motives. It is useless
to say, ‘Such and such a course of action is clearly the result of the
truths of the Gospel.’ That may be all perfectly true, and yet the course
may not be the course for you. For there may be practical considerations,
which do not come into our view unless we carefully think about them,
which forbid us to take such a path. So remember that strong impulses are
not guiding lights; nor is it enough to vindicate our pursuing some mode
of Christian service that it is in accordance with the principles of the
Gospel. ‘Circumstances alter cases’ is a very homely old saying; but if
Christian people would only bring the common sense to bear upon their
religious life which they need to bring to bear upon their business life,
unless they are going into the Gazette , there would be less waste work in
the Christian Church than there is to-day. I do not want less zeal; I want
that the reins of the fiery steed shall be kept well in hand. The
difference between a fanatic, who is a fool, and an enthusiast, who is a
wise man, is that the one brings calm reason to bear, and an open-eyed
consideration of circumstances all round; and the other sees but one thing
at a time, and shuts his eyes, like a bull in a field, and charges at
that. So let us be sure, to begin with, that we want to know what God
wants us to do; and that we are not palming our wishes upon Him, and
calling them His providences.
Then there is another plain,
practical consideration that comes out of this story, and that is, Do not
be above being taught by failures and hindrances. You know the old
proverb, ‘It is waste time to flog a dead horse.’ There is not a little
well-meant work flung away, because it is expended on obviously hopeless
efforts to revivify, perhaps, some moribund thing or to continue, perhaps,
in some old, well-worn rut, instead of striking out into a new path. Paul
was full of enthusiasm for the evangelisation of Asia Minor, and he might
have said a great deal about the importance of going to Ephesus. He tried
to do it, but Christ said ‘No.’ and Paul did not knock his head against
the stone wall that lay between him and the accomplishment of his purpose,
but he gave it up and tried another tack. He next wished to go up into
Bithynia, and he might have said a great deal about the needs of the
people by the Euxine; but again down came the barrier, and he had once
more to learn the lesson, ‘Not as thou wilt, but as I will.’ He was not
above being taught by his failures. Some of us are; and it is very
difficult, and needs a great deal of Christian wisdom and unselfishness,
to distinguish between hindrances in the way of work which are meant to
evoke larger efforts, and hindrances which are meant to say, ‘Try another
path, and do not waste time here any longer.’
But if we wish supremely to know
God’s will, He will help us to distinguish between these two kinds of
difficulties. Some one has said, ‘Difficulties are things to be overcome.’
Yes, but not always. They very often are, and we should thank God for them
then; but they sometimes are God’s warnings to us to go by another road.
So we need discretion, and patience, and suspense of judgment to be
brought to bear upon all our purposes and plans.
Then, of course, I need not remind
you that the way to get light is to seek it in the Book and in communion
with Him whom the Book reveals to us as the true Word of God: ‘He that
followeth Me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of
life.’ So careful consideration is a preliminary to all good Christian
work. And, if you can, talk to some Timothy and Silas and Luke about your
course, and do not be above taking a brother’s advice.
II. The next step is Immediate
Submission.
When they had assuredly gathered
that the Lord had called them, ‘immediately’—there is great virtue in that
one word—‘we endeavoured to go into Macedonia.’ Delayed obedience is the
brother— and, if I may mingle metaphors, sometimes the father—of
disobedience. It sometimes means simple feebleness of conviction,
indolence, and a general lack of fervour. It means very often a reluctance
to do the duty that lies plainly before us. And, dear brethren, as I have
said about the former lesson, so I say about this. The homely virtue,
which we all know to be indispensable to success in common daily life and
commercial undertakings, is no less indispensable to all vigour of
Christian life and to all nobleness of Christian service. We have no hours
to waste; the time is short. In the harvest-field, especially when it is
getting near the end of the week, and the Sunday is at hand, there are
little leisure and little tolerance of slow workers. And for us the fields
are white, the labourers are few, the Lord of the harvest is imperative,
the sun is hurrying to the west, and the sickles will have to be laid down
before long. So, ‘ immediately we endeavoured.’
Delayed duty is present discomfort.
As long as a man has a conscience, so long will he be restless and uneasy
until he has, as the Quakers say, ‘cleared himself of his burden,’ and
done what he knows that he ought to do, and got done with it. Delayed
obedience means wasted possibilities of service, and so is ever to be
avoided. The more disagreeable anything is which is plainly a duty, the
more reason there is for doing it right away. ‘I made haste, and delayed
not, but made haste to keep Thy commandments.’
Did you ever count how many ‘
straightways ’ there are in the first chapter of Mark’s Gospel? If you
have not, will you do it when you go home; and notice how they come in? In
the story of Christ’s opening ministry every fresh incident is tacked on
to the one before it, in that chapter, by that same word ‘straightway.’
‘Straightway’ He does that; ‘anon’ He does this; ‘immediately’ He does the
other thing. All is one continuous stream of acts of service. The Gospel
of Mark is the Gospel of the servant, and it sets forth the pattern to
which all Christian service ought to be conformed.
So if we take Jesus Christ for our
Example, unhasting and unresting in the work of the Lord, we shall let no
moment pass burdened with undischarged duty; and we shall find that all
the moments are few enough for the discharge of the duties incumbent upon
us.
III. So, lastly, careful
consideration and unhesitating obedience lead to a Straight Course.
Well, it is not so always, but it is
so generally. There is a wonderful power in diligent doing of God’s known
will to smooth away difficulties and avoid troubles. I do not, of course,
mean that a man who thus lives, patiently ascertaining and then promptly
doing what God would have him do, has any miraculous exemption from the
ordinary sorrows and trials of life. But sure I am that a very, very large
proportion of all the hindrances and disappointments, storms and
quicksands, calms which prevent progress and headwinds that beat in our
faces, are directly the products of our negligence in one or other of
these two respects, and that although by no means absolutely, yet to an
extent that we should not believe if we had not the experience of it, the
wish to do God’s will and the doing of it with our might when we know what
it is have a talismanic power in calming the seas and bringing us to the
desired haven.
But though this is not always
absolutely true in regard of outward things, it is, without exception or
limitation, true in regard of the inward life. For if my supreme will is
to do God’s will then nothing which is His will, and comes to me because
it is can be a hindrance in my doing that.
As an old proverb says, ‘Travelling merchants can never be out of their
road.’ And a Christian man whose path is simple obedience to the will of
God can never be turned from that path by whatever hindrances may affect
his outward life. So, in deepest truth, there is always a calm voyage for
the men whose eyes are open to discern, and whose hands are swift to
fulfil, the commandments of their Father in heaven. For them all winds
blow them to their port; for them ‘all things work together for good’;
with them God’s servants who hearken to the voice of His commandments, and
are His ministers to do His pleasure, can never be other than in amity and
alliance. He who is God’s servant is the world’s master. ‘All things are
yours if ye are Christ’s.’
So, brethren, careful study of
providences and visions, of hindrances and stimulus, careful setting of
our lives side by side with the Master’s, and a swift delight in doing the
will of the Lord, will secure for us, in inmost truth, a prosperous
voyage, till all storms are hushed, ‘and they are glad because they be
quiet; so He bringeth them to their desired haven.’
PAUL AT PHILIPPI
And on the sabbath day we went forth
without the gate, by a river side, where we supposed there was a place of
prayer; and we sat down, and spake unto the women which were come
together. — Acts 16:13
This is the first record of the
preaching of the Gospel in Europe, and probably the first instance of it.
The fact that the vision of the man of Macedonia was needed in order to
draw the Apostle across the straits into Macedonia, and the great length
at which the incidents at Philippi are recorded, make this probable. If
so, we are here standing, as it were, at the wellhead of a mighty river,
and the thin stream of water assumes importance when we remember the
thousand miles of its course, and the league-broad estuary in which it
pours itself into the ocean. Here is the beginning; the Europe of to-day
is what came out of it. There is no sign whatever that the Apostle was
conscious of an epoch in this transference of the sphere of his
operations, but we can scarcely help being conscious of such.
And so, looking at the words of my
text, and seeing here how unobtrusively there stole into the progressive
part of the world the power which was to shatter and remould all its
institutions, to guide and inform the onward march of its peoples, to be
the basis of their liberties, and the starting-point of their literature,
we can scarcely avoid drawing lessons of importance.
The first point which I would
suggest, as picturesquely enforced for us by this incident, is—
I. The apparent insignificance
and real greatness of Christian work.
There did not seem in the whole of
that great city that morning a more completely insignificant knot of
people than the little weather-beaten Jew, travel-stained, of weak bodily
presence, and of contemptible speech, with the handful of his attendants,
who slipped out in the early morning and wended their way to the quiet
little oratory, beneath the blue sky, by the side of the rushing stream,
and there talked informally and familiarly to the handful of women. The
great men of Philippi would have stared if any one had said to them, ‘You
will be forgotten, but two of these women will have their names embalmed
in the memory of the world for ever. Everybody will know Euodia and
Syntyche. Your city will be forgotten, although a battle that settled the
fate of the civilised world was fought outside your gates. But that little
Jew and the letter that he will write to that handful of believers that
are to be gathered by his preaching will last for ever.’ The mightiest
thing done in Europe that morning was when the Apostle sat down by the
riverside, ‘and spake to the women which resorted thither.’
The very same vulgar mistake as to
what is great and as to what is small is being repeated over and over
again; and we are all tempted to it by that which is worldly and vulgar in
ourselves, to the enormous detriment of the best part of our natures. So
it is worth while to stop for a moment and ask what is the criterion of
greatness in our deeds? I answer, three things—their motive, their sphere,
their consequences. What is done for God is always great. You take a
pebble and drop it into a brook, and immediately the dull colouring upon
it flashes up into beauty when the sunlight strikes through the ripples,
and the magnitude of the little stone is enlarged. If I may make use of
such a violent expression, drop your deeds into God, and they will all be
great, however small they are. Keep them apart from Him, and they will be
small, though all the drums of the world beat in celebration, and all the
vulgar people on the earth extol their magnitude. This altar magnifies and
sanctifies the giver and the gift. The great things are the things that
are done for God.
A deed is great according to its
sphere. What bears on and is confined to material things is smaller than
what affects the understanding. The teacher is more than the man who
promotes material good. And on the very same principle, above both the one
and the other, is the doer of deeds which touch the diviner part of a
man’s nature, his will, his conscience, his affections, his relations to
God. Thus the deeds that impinge upon these are the highest and the
greatest; and far above the scientific inventor, and far above the mere
teacher, as I believe, and as I hope you believe, stands the humblest work
of the poorest Christian who seeks to draw any other soul into the light
and liberty which he himself possesses. The greatest thing in the world is
charity, and the purest charity in the world is that which helps a man to
possess the basis and mother-tincture of all love, the love towards God
who has first loved us, in the person and the work of His dear Son.
That which being done has
consequences that roll through souls, ‘and grow for ever and for ever,’ is
a greater work than the deed whose issues are more short-lived. And so the
man who speaks a word which may deflect a soul into the paths which have
no end until they are swallowed up in the light of the God who ‘is a Sun,’
is a worker whose work is truly great. Brethren, it concerns the nobleness
of the life of us Christian people far more closely than we sometimes
suppose, that we should purge our souls from the false estimate of
magnitudes which prevails so extensively in the world’s judgment of men
and their doings. And though it is no worthy motive for a man to seek to
live so that he may do great things, it is a part of the discipline of the
Christian mind, as well as heart, that we should be able to reduce the
swollen bladders to their true flaccidity and insignificance, and that we
should understand that things done for God, things done on men’s souls,
things done with consequences which time will not exhaust, nor eternity
put a period to, are, after all, the great things of human life.
Ah, there will be a wonderful
reversal of judgments one day! Names that now fill the trumpet of fame
will fall silent. Pages that now are read as if they were leaves of the
‘Book of Life’ will be obliterated and unknown, and when all the flashing
cressets in Vanity Fair have smoked and stunk themselves out, ‘They that
be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and they that turn
many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.’ The great things
are the Christian things, and there was no greater deed done that day, on
this round earth, than when that Jewish wayfarer, travel-stained and
insignificant, sat himself down in the place of prayer, and ‘spake unto
the women which resorted thither.’ Do not be over-cowed by the loud talk
of the world, but understand that Christian work is the mightiest work
that a man can do.
Let us take from this incident a
hint as to—
II. The law of growth in Christ’s
Kingdom.
Here, as I have said, is the thin
thread of water at the source. We to-day are on the broad bosom of the
expanded stream. Here is the little beginning; the world that we see
around us has come from this, and there is a great deal more to be done
yet before all the power that was transported into Europe, on that Sabbath
morning, has wrought its legitimate effects. That is to say, ‘the Kingdom
of God cometh not by observation.’ Let me say a word, and only a word,
based on this incident, about the law of small beginnings and the law of
slow, inconspicuous development.
We have here an instance of the law
of small, silent beginnings. Let us go back to the highest example of
everything that is good; the life of Jesus Christ. A cradle at Bethlehem,
a carpenter’s shop in Nazareth, thirty years buried in a village, two or
three years, at most, going up and down quietly in a remote nook of the
earth, and then He passed away silently and the world did not know Him.
‘He shall not strive nor cry, nor cause His voice to be heard in the
streets.’ And as the Christ so His Church, and so His Gospel, and so all
good movements that begin from Him. Destructive preparations may be noisy;
they generally are. Constructive beginnings are silent and small. If a
thing is launched with a great beating of drums and blowing of trumpets,
you may be pretty sure there is very little in it. Drums are hollow, or
they would not make such a noise. Trumpets only catch and give forth wind.
They say—I know not whether it is true—that the Wellingtonia gigantea ,
the greatest of forest trees, has a smaller seed than any of its
congeners. It may be so, at any rate it does for an illustration. The
germ-cell is always microscopic. A little beginning is a prophecy of a
great ending.
In like manner there is another
large principle suggested here which, in these days of impatient haste and
rushing to and fro, and religious as well as secular advertising and
standing at street corners, we are very apt to forget, but which we need
to remember, and that is that the rate of growth is swift when the
duration of existence is short. A reed springs up in a night. How long
does an oak take before it gets too high for a sheep to crop at? The moth
lives its full life in a day. There is no creature that has helpless
infancy so long as a man. We have the slow work of mining; the dynamite
will be put into the hole one day, and the spark applied— and then? So ‘an
inheritance may be gotten hastily at the beginning, but the end thereof
shall not be blessed.’
Let us apply that to our own
personal life and work, and to the growth of Christianity in the world,
and let us not be staggered because either are so slow. ‘The Lord is not
slack concerning His promises, as some men count slackness. One day is
with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.’ How
long will that day be of which a thousand years are but as the morning
twilight? Brethren, you have need of patience. You Christian workers, and
I hope I am speaking to a great many such now; how long does it take
before we can say that we are making any impression at all on the vast
masses of evil and sin that are round about us? God waited, nobody knows
how many millenniums and more than millenniums, before He had the world
ready for man. He waited for more years than we can tell before He had the
world ready for the Incarnation. His march is very slow because it is ever
onwards. Let us be thankful if we forge ahead the least little bit; and
let us not be impatient for swift results which are the fool’s paradise,
and which the man who knows that he is working towards God’s own end can
well afford to do without.
And now, lastly, let me ask you to
notice, still further as drawn from this incident—
III. The simplicity of the forces
to which God entrusts the growth of His Kingdom.
It is almost ludicrous to think, if
it were not pathetic and sublime, of the disproportion between the end
that was aimed at and the way that was taken to reach it, which the text
opens before us. ‘We went out to the riverside, and we spake unto the
women which resorted thither.’ That was all. Think of Europe as it was at
that time. There was Greece over the hills, there was Rome ubiquitous and
ready to exchange its contemptuous toleration for active hostility. There
was the unknown barbarism of the vague lands beyond. Think of the
established idolatries which these men had to meet, around which had
gathered, by the superstitious awe of untold ages, everything that was
obstinate, everything that was menacing, everything that was venerable.
Think of the subtleties to which they had to oppose their unlettered
message. Think of the moral corruption that was eating like an ulcer into
the very heart of society. Did ever a Cortez on the beach, with his ships
in flames behind him, and a continent in arms before, cast himself on a
more desperate venture? And they conquered! How? What were the small
stones from the brook that slew Goliath? Have we got them? Here they are,
the message that they spoke, the white heat of earnestness with which they
spoke it, and the divine Helper who backed them up. And we have this
message. Brethren, that old word, ‘God was in Christ reconciling the world
to Himself,’ is as much needed, as potent, as truly adapted to the
complicated civilisation of this generation, as surely reaching the
deepest wants of the human soul, as it was in the days when first the
message poured, like a red-hot lava flood, from the utterances of Paul.
Like lava it has gone cold to-day, and stiff in many places, and all the
heat is out of it. That is the fault of the speaker, never of the message.
It is as mighty as ever it was, and if the Christian Church would keep
more closely to it, and would realise more fully that the Cross does not
need to be propped up so much as to be proclaimed, I think we should see
that it is so. That sword has not lost its temper, and modern modes of
warfare have not antiquated it. As David said to the high priests at Nob,
when he was told that Goliath’s sword was hid behind the ephod, ‘Give me
that. There is none like it.’ It was not miracles, it was the Gospel that
was preached, which was ‘the power of God unto salvation.’
And that message was preached with
earnestness. There is one point in which every successful servant of Jesus
Christ who has done work for Him, winning men to Him, has been like every
other successful servant, and there is only one point. Some of them have
been wise men, some of them have been foolish. Some of them have been clad
with many puerile notions and much rubbish of ceremonial and sacerdotal
theories. Some of them have been high Calvinists, some of them low
Arminians; some of them have been scholars, some of them could hardly
read. But they have all had this one thing: they believed with all their
hearts what they spake. They fulfilled the Horatian principle, ‘If you
wish me to weep, your own eyes must overflow’—and if you wish me to
believe, you must speak, not ‘with bated breath and whispering
humbleness,’ but as if you yourself believed it, and were dead set on
getting other people to believe it, too.
And then the third thing that Paul
had we have, and that is the presence of the Christ. Note what it says in
the context about one convert who was made that morning, Lydia, ‘whose
heart the Lord opened.’ Now I am not going to deduce Calvinism or any
other ‘ism’ from these words, but I pray you to note that there is
emerging on the surface here what runs all through this book of Acts, and
animates the whole of it, viz., that Jesus Christ Himself is working,
doing all the work that is done through His servants. Wherever there are
men aflame with that with which every Christian man and woman should be
aflame, the consciousness of the preciousness of their Master, and their
own responsibility for the spreading of His Name, there, depend upon it,
will be the Christ to aid them. The picture with which one of the
Evangelists closes his Gospel will be repeated: ‘They went everywhere
preaching the word, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word
with signs following.’
Dear brethren, the vision of the man
of Macedonia which drew Paul across the water from Troas to Philippi
speaks to us. ‘Come over and help us,’ comes from many voices. And if we,
in however humble and obscure, and as the foolish purblind world calls it,
‘small,’ way, yield to the invitation, and try to do what in us lies, then
we shall find that, like Paul by the riverside in that oratory, we are
building better than we know, and planting a little seed, the springing
whereof God will bless. ‘Thou sowest not that which shall be, but bare
grain . . . and God giveth it a body as it hath pleased Him.’
THE RIOT
AT PHILIPPI
ACTS 16:19-34
This incident gives us the Apostle’s
first experience of purely Gentile opposition. The whole scene has a
different stamp from that of former antagonisms, and reminds us that we
have passed into Europe. The accusers and the grounds of accusation are
new. Formerly Jews had led the attack; now Gentiles do so. Crimes against
religion were charged before; now crimes against law and order. Hence the
narrative is more extended, in accordance with the prevailing habit of the
book, to dilate on the first of a series and to summarise subsequent
members of it. We may note the unfounded charge and unjust sentence; the
joyful confessors and the answer to their trust; the great light that
shone on the jailer’s darkness.
I. This was a rough beginning of
the work undertaken at the call of Christ. Less courageous and faithful
men might have thought, ‘Were we right in “assuredly gathering” that His
hand pointed us hither, since this is the reception we find?’ But though
the wind meets us as soon as we clear the harbour, the salt spray dashing
in our faces is no sign that we should not have left shelter.
A difficult beginning often
means a prosperous course; and hardships are not tokens of having made a
mistake.
The root of the first antagonism to the Gospel in Europe was purely
mercenary. The pythoness’s masters had no horror of Paul’s doctrines. They
were animated by no zeal for Apollo. They only saw a source of profit
drying up. Infinitely more respectable was Jewish opposition, which was,
at all events, the perverted working of noble sentiments. Zeal for
religion, even when the zeal is impure and the notions of religion
imperfect, is higher than mere anger at pecuniary loss. How much of the
opposition since and to-day comes from the same mean source! Lust and
appetite organize profitable trades, in which ‘the money has no smell,’
however foul the cesspool from which it has been brought. And when
Christian people set themselves against these abominations, capital takes
the command of the mob of drink-sellers and consumers, or of those from
haunts of fleshly sin, and shrieks about interfering with honest industry,
and seeking to enforce sour-faced Puritanism on society. The Church may be
very sure that it is failing in some part of its duty, if there is no
class of those who fatten on providing for sin howling at its heels,
because it is interfering with the hope of their gains.
The charge against the little group
took no heed of the real character of their message. It artfully put
prominent their nationality. These early anti-Semitic agitators knew the
value of a good solid prejudice, and of a nickname. ‘Jews’—that was
enough. The rioters were ‘Romans’—of a sort, no doubt, but it was poor
pride for a Macedonian to plume himself on having lost his nationality.
The great crime laid to Paul’s charge was—troubling the city. So it always
is. Whether it be George Fox, or John Wesley, or the Salvation Army, the
disorderly elements of every community attack the preachers of the Gospel
in the name of order, and break the peace in their eagerness to have it
kept. There was no ‘trouble’ in Philippi, but the uproar which they
themselves were making. The quiet praying-place by the riverside, and the
silencing of the maiden’s shout in the streets, were not exactly the signs
of disturbers of civic tranquillity.
The accuracy of the charge may be
measured by the ignorance of the accusers that Paul and his friends were
in any way different from the run of Jews. No doubt they were supposed to
be teaching Jewish practices, which were supposed to be inconsistent with
Roman citizenship. But if the magistrates had said, ‘What customs?’ the
charge would have collapsed. Thank God, the Gospel has a witness to bear
against many ‘customs’; but it does not begin by attacking even these,
much less by prescribing illegalities. Its errand was and is to the
individual first. It sets the inner man right with God, and then the new
life works itself out, and will war against evils which the old life
deemed good; but the conception of Christianity as a code regulating
actions is superficial, whether it is held by friends or foes.
There is always a mob ready to
follow any leader, especially if there is the prospect of hurting
somebody. The lovers of tranquillity showed how they loved it by dragging
Paul and Silas into the forum, and bellowing untrue charges against them.
The mob seconded them; ‘they rose up together [with the slave-owners]
against Paul and Silas.’ The magistrates, knowing the ticklish material
that they had to deal with, and seeing only a couple of Jews from nobody
knew where, did not think it worth while to inquire or remonstrate. They
were either cowed or indifferent; and so, to show how zealous they and the
mob were for Roman law, they drove a coach-and-six clean through it, and
without the show of investigation, scourged and threw into prison the
silent Apostles. It was a specimen of what has happened too often since.
How many saints have been martyred to keep popular feeling in good tune!
And how many politicians will strain conscience to-day, because they are
afraid of what Luke here unpolitely calls ‘the multitude,’ or as we might
render it, ‘the mob,’ but which we now fit with a much more respectful
appellation!
The jailer, on his part, in the true
spirit of small officials, was ready to better his instructions. It is
dangerous to give vague directions to such people. When the judge has
ordered unlawful scourging, the turnkey is not likely to interpret the
requirement of safe keeping too leniently. One would not look for much
human kindness in a Philippian jail. So it was natural that the deepest,
darkest, most foul-smelling den should he chosen for the two, and that
they should he thrust, bleeding backs and all, into the stocks, to sleep
if they could.
II. These birds could sing in a
darkened cage.
The jailer’s treatment of them after
his conversion shows what he had neglected to do at first. They had no
food; their bloody backs were unsponged; they were thrust into a filthy
hole, and put in a posture of torture. No wonder that they could not
sleep! But what hindered sleep would, with most men, have sorely dimmed
trust and checked praise. Not so with them. God gave them ‘songs in the
night.’ We can hear the strains through all the centuries, and they bid us
be cheerful and trustful, whatever befalls. Surely Christian faith never
is more noble than when it triumphs over circumstances, and brings praises
from lips which, if sense had its way, would wail and groan. ‘This is the
victory that overcometh the world.’ The true anaesthetic is trust in God.
No wonder that the baser sort of prisoners—and base enough they probably
were—‘were listening to them,’ for such sounds had never been heard there
before. In how many a prison have they been heard since!
We are not told that the Apostles
prayed for deliverance. Such deliverance had not been always granted.
Peter indeed had been set free, but Stephen and James had been martyred,
and these two heroes had no ground to expect a miracle to free them. But
thankful trust is always an appeal to God. And it is always answered,
whether by deliverance from or support in trial.
This time deliverance came. The
tremor of the earth was the token of God’s answer. It does not seem likely
that an earthquake could loosen fetters in a jail full of prisoners, but
more probably the opening of the doors and the falling off of the chains
were due to a separate act of divine power, the earthquake being but the
audible token thereof. At all events, here again, the first of a series
has distinguishing features, and may stand as type of all its successors.
God will never leave trusting hearts to the fury of enemies. He sometimes
will stretch out a hand and set them free, He sometimes will leave them to
bear the utmost that the world can do, but He will always hear their cry
and save them. Paul had learned the lesson which Philippi was meant to
teach, when he said, though anticipating a speedy death by martyrdom, ‘The
Lord will deliver me from every evil work, and will save me into His
heavenly Kingdom.’
III. The jailer behaves as such a
man in his position would do.
He apparently slept in a place that
commanded a view of the doors; and he lay dressed, with his sword beside
him, in case of riot or attempted escape. His first impulse on awaking is
to look at the gates. They are open; then some of his charge have broken
them. His immediate thought of suicide not only shows the savage severity
of punishment which he knew would fall on him, but tells a dreary tale of
the desperate sense of the worthlessness of life and blank ignorance of
anything beyond which then infected the Roman world. Suicide, the refuge
of cowards or of pessimists, sometimes becomes epidemic. Faith must have
died and hope vanished before a man can say, ‘I will take the leap into
the dark.’
Paul’s words freed the man from one
fear, but woke a less selfish and profounder awe. What did all this
succession of strange things mean? Here are doors open; how came that?
Here are prisoners with the possibility of escape refusing it; how came
that? Here is one of his victims tenderly careful of his life and
peacefulness, and taking the upper hand of him; how came that? A nameless
awe begins to creep over him; and when he gets lights, and sees the two
whom he had made fast in the stocks standing there free, and yet not
caring to go forth, his rough nature is broken down. He recognises his
superiors. He remembers the pythoness’ testimony, that they told ‘the way
of salvation.’
His question seems ‘psychologically
impossible’ to critics, who have probably never asked it themselves.
Wonderful results follow from the judicious use of that imposing word
‘psychologically’; but while we are not to suppose that this man knew all
that ‘salvation’ meant, there is no improbability in his asking such a
question, if due regard is paid to the whole preceding events, beginning
with the maiden’s words, and including the impression of Paul’s
personality and the mysterious freeing of the prisoners.
His dread was the natural fear that
springs when a man is brought face to face with God; and his question,
vague and ignorant as it was, is the cry of the dim consciousness that
lies dormant in all men—the consciousness of needing deliverance and
healing. It erred in supposing that he had to ‘do’ anything; but it was
absolutely right in supposing that he needed salvation, and that Paul
could tell him how to get it. How many of us, knowing far more than he,
have never asked the same wise question, or have never gone to Paul for an
answer? It is a question which we should all ask; for we all need
salvation, which is deliverance from danger and healing for soul-sickness.
Paul’s answer is blessedly short and
clear. Its brevity and decisive plainness are the glory of the Gospel. It
crystallizes into a short sentence the essential directory for all men.
See how little it takes to secure
salvation. But see how much it takes; for the hardest thing of all is to
be content to accept it as a gift, ‘without money and without price.’ Many
people have listened to sermons all their lives, and still have no clear
understanding of the way of salvation. Alas that so often the divine
simplicity and brevity of Paul’s answer are darkened by a multitude of
irrelevant words and explanations which explain nothing!
The passage ends with the blessing
which we may all receive. Of course the career begun then had to be
continued by repeated acts of faith, and by growing knowledge and
obedience. The incipient salvation is very incomplete, but very real.
There is no reason to doubt that, for some characters, the only way of
becoming Christians is to become so by one dead-lift of resolution. Some
things are best done slowly; some things best quickly. One swift blow
makes a cleaner fracture than filing or sawing. The light comes into some
lives like sunshine in northern latitudes, with long dawn and slowly
growing brightness; but in some the sun leaps into the sky in a moment, as
in the tropics. What matter how long it takes to rise, if it does rise,
and climb to the zenith?