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May 22, 2014

SOUNDS RATHER STRANGE May 18, 2014


Acts 17:16-31

“May we know what this new teaching is that you are presenting?  It sounds rather strange to us,

so we would like to know what it means.”

 

Poor, poor Paul; he always seems to be running defense.  We’ve seen him knocked off his feet by an encounter with Jesus on the road to Damascus. He’s been beaten with rods within an inch of his life, and then he was thrown into the innermost cell of the local prison, chained to the floor, left in the dark. And today we find Paul the Apostle angry in Athens. Not exactly the tongue-in-cheek, glamorous life intoned by Andrew Lloyd Webber in Jesus Christ, Superstar now is it? In the play, remember how the twelve gathered around the last-supper table with wine and bread and Jesus? They sang,

 

Always hoped that I'd be an apostle, Knew that I would make it if I tried.
Then when we retire we can write the gospels, So they'll still talk about us when we've died.

Paul never set out to be an apostle; you know that he was bent quite in the opposite way: scourging and massacring the Christians anywhere he found them. Where we meet him today he’s well on his way to spreading the gospel, writing his letters, traveling the ancient world—and running into one offense after the other.

That’s where we find him in our text this morning. He’s been secreted away from two different cities—Thessalonica and Beroea—because the crowds and authorities there threatened violence toward him. They didn’t like the good news Paul was preaching.

In Athens, , Paul seemed wise enough at first to know that he should try to keep a low profile in that city while he waited for Silas and Timothy to arrive. But as the scripture tells us, “While waiting for them in Athens, [Paul] was deeply distressed to see that the city was full of idols.” In fact, you could say that Paul was speechless.

That was too much for Paul, and he couldn’t help himself. Ever been in that position, when you know you should keep quiet, but you just gotta say something even though you know it’s probably going to get you in trouble? It should seem to us that Paul was on the defensive once again—and he was, but he wasn’t. He’d learned something from his previous close encounters of the angry kind.

Paul started off complimenting the Greeks, “Athenians, I see how extremely religious you are in every way… I went through the city and looked carefully at the objects of your worship.” That way, you see, they were busy listening to Paul instead of planning how to kill him—that’s a good first step for every preacher to take.

And what Paul was preaching, the Athenians had never heard before.  The gospel was all new to them, and frankly, it sounded rather strange to people who found nothing odd about building an altar to an unknown god.

Some said, “What does this babbler want to say?” Others said, “He seems to be a proclaimer of foreign divinities.” Yet, instead of beating Paul or dragging him off to prison again for proclaiming the offenses of the gospel, Paul is brought to the Areopagus where many could hear this new teaching—and how they loved new teachings, even when they sounded rather strange. Paul was answering their questions and curiosity with a rhetorical method still used today:  we call it apologetics.

The Greek word apologia means “defense,” and from the Greek word apologia we get our English word apologetics. Apologetics is the branch of Christian theology that seeks to “defend” or answer questions people, suspect or curious, ask about the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  Some examples of questions that are important in the context of apologetics are,

  • Why does evil exist if the world was created by an all-good, all-powerful God?
  • How do we know Christianity is true in light of the numerous religions that exist in the world?
  • Why do people suffer?

 The ambiguity of the word apologetics provides the apologist with a natural icebreaker in public or private conversations on the topic: the apologist does not exist to “apologize” for being a Christian, or indeed for anything else. The apologist’s task is to answer questions by explaining the gospel, breaking it down to its foundations and then building it up with the evidence given through scripture.

Paul’s practice of reasoning from the Scriptures when in discussion with Jews about the identity of Jesus is well known. But as we see in Acts 17, Paul was willing to depart from this practice when he debated the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers in Athens: he started from where they were in order to introduce the Gospel to them. He could not reason from the Scriptures with them since they, unlike the Jews, did not accept the authority of the Scriptures.

Now, my words may sound rather strange to you, but I do have a purpose in mind. Apologetics is absolutely crucial to both the health and the witness of the church; and it is a serious mistake for followers of Jesus to ignore it. We “who are committed to the Gospel of Jesus Christ must take seriously the application of its truth to all areas of life. Unless the Gospel is understood at the worldview level, its impact upon those who accept it, as well as its ability to change the structures of their societies, will always fall short of God’s best for his people.”[1]

Our aversion to talking about our faith in public is completely understandable. However, the argument for avoiding testimony is indefensible. And as I say that, I could guess that some of you might be offended by my remarks; but what I want you to know is that each of you has the gift of the gospel to speak to those who have settled for worshiping an unknown god. You have something far greater, much better, to offer them; and so, like Paul, speak we must.

The words of Paul are still there, at the Areopagus, “What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you. We may use them to begin a conversation not about foreign divinities, but the one true God, who sacrificed his very best so that we might have the Word, the living Word, and defend it to the end. If that sounds rather strange to you, so be it, but still tell of it, for Jesus Christ is the answer to any question about life and death that we may have. Amen.

 

May 18, 2014/First Parish Federated Church/The Reverend Donna Lee Muise



[1] Njoroge, John M. “Apologetics: Why Your Church Needs It” at rzim.org. December 29, 2009.