Naylor Community Christian Church
Naylor, Georgia
I. Introduction
-- turn in
Bibles to Acts 18:1-11
Acts 18:1 After this, Paul left Athens and went to
Corinth. 2 There he met a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, who had
recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had ordered
all Jews to leave Rome. Paul went to see them, 3 and because he was a tentmaker
as they were, he stayed and worked with them. 4 Every Sabbath he reasoned in
the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks.
5 When Silas and Timothy came from Macedonia, Paul
devoted himself exclusively to preaching, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was
the Messiah. 6 But when they opposed Paul and became abusive, he shook out his
clothes in protest and said to them, “Your blood be on your own heads! I am
innocent of it. From now on I will go to the Gentiles.”
7 Then Paul left the synagogue and went next door to
the house of Titius Justus, a worshiper of God. 8 Crispus, the synagogue
leader, and his entire household believed in the Lord; and many of the
Corinthians who heard Paul believed and were baptized.
9 One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a vision: “Do
not be afraid; keep on speaking, do not be silent. 10 For I am with you, and no
one is going to attack and harm you, because I have many people in this city.”
11 So Paul stayed in Corinth for a year and a half, teaching them the word of
God.
-- well,
it's over -- after weeks of frantic activity -- after weeks of buying and
decorating trees and putting up lights -- after weeks of shopping and wrapping
presents -- of going to Christmas parties and preparing special meals and
goodies only made once a year -- Christmas came and went with a whisper -- just
a moment in time -- and now it's done and gone
-- you'd
think that given the amount of time and preparation that we put into Christmas,
that we'd see it last a lot longer than it does -- you'd think Christmas would
be something that would linger -- a celebration that would at least last as
long as the time of preparation -- but by Christmas Day, the gifts are opened,
the food has been eaten, and plans are being made to take the decorations down
-- just
think for a moment about how much time you spent preparing for Christmas and
how quickly it was over -- much like the first coming of Christ to this world
-- the
world looked for the coming of the Messiah for 4,000 years -- the Jews spent
thousands of years preparing the people to receive their King -- but despite
all their years of preparation -- despite all the time they took getting ready
and decorating their temple with religious trapping, when He came, He really
was not with us that long
-- Jesus
only lived 33 years on this earth -- and other than the two stories in Matthew
and Luke about His birth and the one account of Jesus being left in the temple
as a boy of 12, we know nothing about how He spent the first 30 years of His
life
-- really,
all we know about Jesus is what He did during the last three years of His life
-- the three years of His ministry that culminated in the cross and the empty
tomb
-- and I
bring this up to make a point -- if before even the creation of this world, the
plan had been for Jesus to come to earth to be our Savior and to show wayward
humans the way back to the Father -- if God had prepared the people for 4,000
years to get ready for the coming of the Messiah through His word and His
prophets, it seems to me that He would have spent more time on earth with us than
just 33 years
-- and
certainly, it seems that if His mission was so great as to cause the death of
His one and only Son, that He would have spent more than just three years out
of His short 33 years of life directly ministering to us
-- His time
here was brief, to say the least -- and that makes me wonder why -- and that
makes me wonder what we are to do with this after-Christmas Jesus
-- C.S.
Lewis once wrote that “a great many things have gone wrong with this world that
God made -- and God insists, and insists very loudly, on our putting them right
again”
-- this is
the reason for Christmas -- this is why Jesus came to us as the incarnate
Messiah 2,000 years ago
-- He came to
show us how to live in God's kingdom -- He came to put things right in the
world again through His death -- He came to give us power through His very
presence indwelling us -- and then He returned to us the original
responsibility given to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden -- the
responsibility to take care of this world and of all He has created -- and to
bring Him glory with our lives
-- in his
essay, "The Mood of Christmas," Howard Thurman wrote:
--
"When the song of the angels is stilled -- When the star in the sky is
gone -- When the kings and princes are home -- When the shepherds are back with
their flock --
[then] the work of Christmas begins:
-- "To
find the lost -- To heal the broken -- To feed the hungry -- To release the
prisoner -- To rebuild the nations -- To bring peace among people -- To make
music in the heart."
-- Jesus
stayed no longer than necessary to put all things right once again and to give
us the power to do the work of Christmas through His sustaining Spirit -- He
restored the world through His death -- He broke the chains of sin and death
through His resurrection -- and then He left this earth and returned to Heaven,
leaving us as His stewards and instruments of His grace in this world
-- so, what
do we do with an after-Christmas Jesus? -- what do we do now that Jesus has
left and Christmas is over? -- we continue on with the work He started -- we
complete the mission Adam and Eve failed to do -- we take back the night and
usher in the light of Christ into this world
-- Christ
told us in the Great Commission in Matthew 28:18-20 what to do -- He said to go
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
the Son and the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey all the things He
commanded us to do
-- but what
does that look like? -- the Great Commission is an easy passage to memorize --
it's an easy passage to talk about within the safe confines of a Sunday worship
service -- but what does this look like in practice? -- how do we fulfill the
Great Commission? -- how do we the work of Christmas?
--
educators tell us there are two primary ways of learning -- you either learn by
doing -- by hands-on education -- learning on-the-job, if you will -- or you
learn by example -- by watching what someone else does and then applying it in
your own life
-- we
haven’t done a very good job in the church in discipling members and giving
them hands-on instruction in ministry
-- all too often, our ministry
consists of donating money or resources to others while they go out and
actually minister and share Jesus’ love with others -- and while I know that
sometimes this is all we can do in the moment, I would like to see us think of ministry
ideas where we can go out and leave the comfortable confines of this church and
reach out to others one-on-one, because this is one way we can learn how to
minister in a way that challenges most of us
-- but until we are able to do
that, the other way we can learn to minister in Jesus’ name is by learning from
others -- learning from their examples and from their teachings
-- here in Acts 18, we can learn a
lot about ministry from the example of the Apostle Paul -- from the way he
accomplished the continuing work of Christmas in his day
-- so, let’s look at this passage
now to see what the Apostle Paul did and how we might follow his example and do
the same in our own communities and areas of influence
II. Scripture
Lesson (Acts 18:1-11)
-- before
we turn back to the Scriptures, let me give you the context of this passage --
Acts 18 finds the Apostle Paul in the midst of his second missionary journey --
this trip throughout the lands of the Mediterranean started with an argument --
a sharp dispute with his partner Barnabas that caused them to separate and Paul
to leave with Silas instead -- that spirit of contention followed Paul
throughout his journey
-- in
Philippi, Paul and Silas were thrown in prison because of their ministry -- in
Thessalonica and Berea, Paul found himself at odds with the Jews and was forced
to flee these cities because of their threats against him -- and then in
Athens, Paul was rejected by the Greeks with his talk of the resurrection -- as
a result, Acts 18 finds Paul moving yet again, from Athens to the city of
Corinth
-- if you
would, please look back at verse 1 here and let’s see what we can learn about
doing the work of Christmas through Paul's ministry in Corinth
-- verse 1-5
Acts 18:1 After this, Paul left Athens and went to
Corinth. 2 There he met a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, who had
recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had ordered
all Jews to leave Rome. Paul went to see them, 3 and because he was a tentmaker
as they were, he stayed and worked with them. 4 Every Sabbath he reasoned in
the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks.
5 When Silas and Timothy came from Macedonia, Paul
devoted himself exclusively to preaching, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was
the Messiah.
-- when
Paul was in Athens, he was alone -- he had fled Berea because of the threats of
the Jews, leaving Silas and Timothy behind and went to Athens by himself -- and
although he spoke to the Greeks at a meeting of the Areopagus, the gathering of
the leaders and great thinkers of Athens, Paul did not enjoy great success in
that place
-- Paul was
lonely and discouraged -- and so, when he arrived in Corinth, he immediately
sought out the company of two other Christians -- Aquila and Priscilla -- and
he stayed with them and worked with them until his companions arrived from
Macedonia
-- there's
a lesson there for us -- God's plan was not for us to minister alone, but to
minister and to serve alongside others -- in the gospels, we read that when
Jesus sent out His disciples to minister in the region around Judea, He didn't
send them alone -- He sent them out in pairs because, as it says in
Ecclesiastes 4:9, "Two are better than one, because they have a good
return for their work"
-- Paul's
example to us is to seek the company and support of another Christian as we
seek to do the work of Christmas -- that doesn't mean we use this as an excuse
to not share the gospel or not minister to those in need -- if you are the only one there, God certainly
expects you to do as Paul did in Athens and to speak and act in His name -- but
the best option is to minister with someone else to share the load and to offer
support and encouragement
-- verse 6-8
Acts 18:6 But when they opposed Paul and became
abusive, he shook out his clothes in protest and said to them, “Your blood be
on your own heads! I am innocent of it. From now on I will go to the Gentiles.”
7 Then Paul left the synagogue and went next door to
the house of Titius Justus, a worshiper of God. 8 Crispus, the synagogue
leader, and his entire household believed in the Lord; and many of the
Corinthians who heard Paul believed and were baptized.
-- the
world will always be filled with two kinds of people -- those who receive the
word of God with gladness and trust and believe in Jesus as their Savior and
those who reject Jesus and His gospel of grace
-- when you
do the work of Christmas, expect opposition -- expect rejection -- Jesus was
rejected from the moment He was born -- during the Advent Season, we read again
the story of the coming of the wise men and of Herod trying to kill Jesus --
that rejection continued throughout Jesus’ life, as the Pharisees and the
Sadducees and all of the Jews rejected His message and turned from Him -- as it
says in John 1:11, “He came to that which was His own, but His own did not
receive Him”
-- this
same rejection was experienced by all the disciples, including the Apostle Paul
-- Paul was rejected by his own people and cast out of the synagogues in every
town he went to -- and the Bible makes it clear that we will experience the
same rejection as Jesus and the disciples when we try to do the work of
Christmas in this world today
-- but know
that when you face opposition and rejection, it is not you they are opposing --
it is not you they are rejecting -- they are rejecting the person of Christ --
they are opposing the message of the gospel because their eyes have been
blinded by the god of this age and they do not want to come into the light for
fear that their deeds will be exposed
--
opposition and rejection will come -- but, on the other hand, so will
acceptance -- not all the seed falls on hard and rocky ground -- some falls on
the good soil, as someone hears the word and understands it and begins to grow
in Christ, producing fruit a hundred, sixty, or thirty times as much as in the
beginning
-- when Paul was forced to leave
the synagogue in Corinth because of the Jew's opposition, he turned to the
Gentiles and saw great fruit among them -- many of the Corinthians heard the
message of grace and believed in Jesus as their Lord and Savior and were baptized
-- if you
persevere in doing the work of Christmas, you will see fruit -- when we first
started to give out the Christmas bags, it was hard -- we had a lot of
rejection -- a lot of the places we visited had workers who were immigrants and
who were not Christians, so when we offered them a present in the name of
Jesus, they didn’t want it -- they took it, but they held it like it was a
poisonous snake -- and it was very disheartening
-- but then
we went to a few other places, and the response was different -- the workers
were genuinely excited to receive the little gift we had -- they smiled and
thanked us and some even gave us hugs -- all for a bag with just a little bit
of candy and cookies
-- that's
the way it is when you do the work of Christmas throughout the year -- that's
what we see here in Paul's ministry -- some will reject what you have to offer
-- but others will receive the good news of Christ with open hearts and open
arms, just as Luke says many of the Corinthians did
-- verse 9-11
Acts 18:9 One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a
vision: “Do not be afraid; keep on speaking, do not be silent. 10 For I am with
you, and no one is going to attack and harm you, because I have many people in
this city.” 11 So Paul stayed in Corinth for a year and a half, teaching them
the word of God.
-- when I
think of the Apostle Paul, I picture him as a giant of a man -- maybe not large
in stature, but large in ministry -- here was a man who went on three
missionary journeys -- who suffered at the hands of his own people -- who was
stoned to the point of death once but revived by God -- who was in peril at the
hands of thieves and robbers -- who went hungry and thirsty -- who experienced
shipwrecks and heartache -- but who persevered and continued to carry the
message of grace to the world
-- I
picture him as a man who never gave up -- who never faltered in the face of
opposition -- who always picked himself up and kept going no matter what came
against him -- a man who was always strong and never doubted
-- but
these verses tend to say otherwise -- Paul was a person, just like us -- and
there were times when he was afraid -- when he was discouraged -- when he
despaired
-- can you
imagine what it felt like to be rejected time and time again by your own kin?
-- to only find welcome in the arms of strangers?
-- I think
there were times when Paul felt like giving up -- and I think Paul may have
been in that state of mind while he was in Corinth -- so God spoke to Paul in a
vision and encouraged him -- He told Paul to not be afraid, but to keep on
speaking -- for He was with him and would never leave him or forsake him
-- and then
at the end of verse 10, the Lord tells Paul the reason why he should not give
up -- "I have many people in this city"
-- the
first time I read that verse, I thought that the Lord was referring to the
other believers in Corinth -- the church that He had established through Paul
-- but looking at the context, that doesn't bear out
-- why
would Paul be afraid if he was surrounded by great numbers of believers? -- why
would he doubt if he saw this much fruit from his ministry?
-- I think
God was giving Paul a glimpse of the harvest to come -- I think God was telling
Paul to stay, because there were many in the city of
-- Jesus
had many people in the city of Corinth who needed to hear the gospel from Paul
so they could receive Him as their Lord and the Savior
-- the
fields were ripe for the harvest -- they just needed Paul’s message to bring it
to pass
-- I think
that's something we should consider as we seek to continue to do the work of
Christmas throughout the year -- it's easy to get discouraged and disheartened
when we don't see any results -- when we share the love of Christ by giving
people money and resources and never hear from them again until they need
something else -- it's easy to lose heart and question why we're here in the
first place
-- I have
to confess that I lost heart last year after our Christmas outreach -- we tried
so hard to put together a Christmas celebration for the community and invited
everyone to come -- and after all our work, we only had a handful of people
show up -- and we never saw them again -- we didn’t have a single visitor after
that outreach -- and that was discouraging
-- but I
believe this message of God to Paul is a message for us, as well -- there are
many people in this community who belong to Jesus -- they just don't know it
yet
-- there
are many people in this community who need to hear the gospel -- who need to
know the love of Christ -- and who Jesus promises will come to Him -- and I
believe that He wants us to be the ones to reach them
-- we know
by experience that there are people in this community who are not being reached
by the traditional churches -- people who have been overlooked and who are
struggling in the shadow of the steeples
-- we have
seen some of these people respond to Christ through the ministry He has given
us here -- and I believe there are many more that He is calling for us to reach
-- it's
just a matter of trusting in God's word and persevering in the work to which He
has called us -- Paul responded to this vision of God by staying in Corinth for
a year and half -- longer than he had spent at any city prior to this time
-- I'm sure
it wasn't easy -- I'm sure he faced continual difficulty and opposition and
rejection -- but many were added to the church through Paul's ministry in that
place -- and I believe that God wants us to continue on and minister in His
name so many might be added to His church in this place
III. Closing
-- there’s
a Christian song that was very popular a few years ago called, "God of
This City" -- -- it was originally written and performed by a group from
Ireland called “Blue Tree,” but it really took off when Chris Tomlin released
it -- when I started thinking about doing the work of Christmas and the message
of God to Paul in Corinth, I couldn’t help but think about this song
-- the
story behind it is remarkable and speaks to what an after-Christmas Jesus does
in our world today -- I know some of you know this story, but maybe not all of
you -- so let me share it with you this morning
-- the band
Blue Tree had been invited by some friends to travel to Thailand to be part of
a Christian worship event -- the lead singer for the group wrote that this was
the darkest place anyone would ever go to -- physically and spiritually -- they
said you can just feel the evil there -- you can just feel the enemy all over
that place
-- the band
played for several days in a resort area there in Thailand -- and they said it
was great -- they really experienced God’s presence there -- but they felt
called to do more -- and so they told their friends, “If you can get us
anywhere else to play -- anywhere -- we want to play -- we just want to do what
we do in the middle of somewhere and go head-on [against the evil in this
place]”
-- there
was a bar there in Thailand called the Climax Bar -- it’s on a street that is
filled with every vice imaginable -- thousands of prostitutes -- including
children as young as eight and nine years old selling themselves on the street
to whoever wanted them -- drugs -- alcohol -- gambling -- a den of iniquity --
a cesspool of evil
-- the
owners of this bar said that Blue Tree could come in and sing if they brought a
group of people with them and if the people agreed to buy drinks during the
entire show -- the owners didn’t know that Blue Tree was a Christian band -- in
fact, the band said most of the people there didn’t even speak English -- all
the owners wanted was to get someone in there who would spend money
-- it turns
out the bar was a strip club and brothel -- but Blue Tree still went and played
-- and for two hours -- standing right there on the stage next to the stripper
poles -- Blue Tree lifted God up in praise
-- in the
middle of the darkness, they did the same thing that Paul did in Corinth --
they did the same thing that God is calling us to do today -- they praised Him
for what He had done -- they praised Him for His miracles -- for His
forgiveness of sin -- for His victory over death
-- and as
they were singing, God spoke to the band -- all of a sudden, the lead singer
started singing the phrase, “Greater things,” over and over again -- and he
said it felt like God was prophesying over that city -- over the evil in that
land
-- the
words just came -- the music followed -- and before they knew it, God had given
them the song, “God Of This City” -- played for the first time on earth in a
brothel -- played for the first time on earth in a place of evil -- played to
proclaim God’s presence and plan for the people in that city in Thailand
-- here’s
the words that God gave them that night:
-- "You’re
the God of this city -- you’re the King of these people -- You’re the Lord of
this nation -- You are
-- You’re
the light in this darkness -- You’re the hope to the hopeless -- You’re the
peace to the restless -- You are
-- There is
no one like our God -- There is no one like our God
-- For
greater things have yet to come -- and greater things are still to be done in
this City -- For greater things have yet to come -- and greater things are
still to be done here
-- We
believe -- We believe in you, God"
-- the
message of this song is the same one that Jesus brought when He was born in a
manger over 2,000 years ago -- it's the same message that He carried up the
hill of Calvary -- it's the same message that burst forth from the tomb on
Easter morning -- it's the same message that Paul proclaimed in Corinth and the
same message we are called to proclaim here in Naylor and in this community
-- God is
in the business of doing great things -- that is what Christmas is all about --
God has done great things -- but greater things have yet to come -- greater
things are still to be done -- for there are many people in this city who
belong to Jesus that He wants us to reach because we can do it where no one
else can
-- the
question before us this morning is, “What greater things does God want to do in
this place? What greater things does God want to do in you?”
--
Christmas may be over, but Christ is not done -- the after-Christmas Jesus
calls us to action this morning -- He is calling us to carry His light to the
darkness -- His hope to the hopeless -- His peace to the restless
-- He is
calling us to greater things -- so as I close, let me ask, will you commit to
His call right now? -- will you leave here and do the work of Christmas in this
new year?
-- let us
pray