Acts by Scott Risley (2017)

That Time the Whole Church Almost Lost It

Photo of Scott Risley
Scott Risley

Acts 15:1-32; Galatians 2:16

Summary

The Pharisees try to divide the Church by sowing the idea that new believers need to be circumcised in order to be saved. Their influence even reaches Peter and Barnabas. Both Paul and Peter set the record straight, uniting the church in its theology of salvation by grace alone.

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Introduction

We are in Acts 15 and this is called by many the most crucial chapter in Acts. It’s right in the center of the book (as far as chapters) and it is also at the center of the book theologically. This is one the scariest times in the history of Christianity. If they went one direction, only God knows what would have happened to the early Christian church. God saw this coming and he put the right leaders in the right places for this. The real issues at stake here are about what was required to become a Christian, this is what the early church leaders are going to have to decide as more and more non-Jews become Christians. Remember, Christianity was just an extension of Old Testament Judaism. The Jewish Messiah had come, all the original apostles were Jews, it started in the city of Jerusalem, and yet now, non-Jews were becoming Christians. What do we do with these people? What do they have to do? Is simply the grace of God enough, simply putting your trust in Christ? That seems pretty easy. Is there more stuff that they have to do? As humans we want to create religion, we want to add more to the finished work of Christ. Do non-Jews have to become Jews? That’s a real question that they had. Do they have to follow the Old Testament law? Do they have to take on the practice of adult male circumcision? That’s a pretty important issue. Will Jews and Gentiles come together as one? Or will they exist as two separate ethnic groups divided along the line of race? There were all kinds of dietary laws, there were all kinds of festivals in the Old Testament. Do new believers have to observe those? These are the issues that are getting sorted out tonight.

In Acts 14, we saw Paul and Barnabas, they have already been serving for several years at this church in Antioch. This was the third largest city in the Roman empire a large and influential city. It was in this city that non-Jews started to come to Christ in very large numbers. You had Jews and non-Jews and they were having fellowship with one another, you had racial reconciliation, people experiencing the love of God together, a very exciting movement of God here. At a certain point the church at Antioch sent Paul and Barnabas west out to Cyprus and they went into southern Turkey, the province of southern Galatia which included these other cities. They traveled from city to city, telling people about Jesus, going first to the Jews and then a bunch of Gentiles started responding. They had a bunch of churches up there that were mixed, both Jews and non-Jews. It was very exciting. They spent anywhere from 8 months to a year and half travelling through these different villages and then going back to Antioch. And we read after this in Acts 14,

They called the church together and reported everything God had done through them and how he had opened the door of faith to the Gentiles, too.

This would have been very exciting to Antioch because there were so many non-Jews there. They were excited to see other Gentiles come to faith. But when Paul got back to Antioch, as time passed, he started to come face to face with problems on two different fronts.

Problems in Galatia

First of all, as reports tricked back along this road, you can see this major road stitching together Antioch, Iconium, Derbe, curving around to Antioch, where Paul was. Travelers coming back started telling him about problems. There were false teachers coming in after Paul had left there and they began to teach a very different doctrine that Paul had taught. The strategy of these false teachers was two-fold. You can imagine, you’re a new Gentile convert, in the city of Lystra, for example, and you show up for home church one week, and you see a Pharisee coming in with a two-pronged attack. Remember how much Jesus detested these guys, how angry he got about their hypocrisy. This was the most elite holy club in Jesus’s day. These guys were so scrupulous, they kept every single law, and they looked down on everyone else for not being as holy as they were. Jesus was infuriated by these guys because they thought they were good enough to be accepted by God and they were leading other people astray as to what God wanted. Some of these Pharisees came to Christ and it was hard for them to leave behind their old legalistic ways. This is our tendency. We tend to move from grace back onto rules.

These guys came in with two points. First, they would question Paul’s authority as an apostle and as a teacher. They would start teaching their thing, people would be like, ‘Wait, that’s not what Paul taught,’ and they would be like, ‘Oooh, Paul, well, Paul was not one of the original twelve apostles and he was never personally discipled by Jesus, he has hardly ever been to Jerusalem and that’s why he gets confused sometimes.’

Secondly, they would then add the law back in. They were like, ‘That’s so wonderful that you are a Christian now, that you’ve accepted this Jewish Messiah, now we have come here to complete your discipleship. The Old Testament law says you must be circumcised. You don’t look like, you’ve been circumcised.’ You’re 25 years old, you just converted from the worship of Diana and the emperor to Christ and you’ve got all this peace and joy and these guys come along and you’re like, ‘I love Jesus, but I don’t know if I can go through that.’ In a time before anesthesia and antibiotics. There were all kinds of risks going along with this. You had some people walking away from Christ because they didn’t want to get circumcised. You had other people who had fallen into their old life of sin, which happens to Christians, especially new Christians. They were feeling guilty and felt like they needed to do something about it and thought that this was the answer. They started to do these really intense works, like get circumcised, like following dietary rules. They wanted to do something, they added the law back in. Trusting in Christ just seems way to easy and then we try and come to God with our works, trying to make up for the bad things that we have done, instead of simply coming to Him and receiving and trusting that what he says about us is the way we really are and trusting in radical grace and drawing close. You had some that were getting circumcised, following the law, maybe feeling self-righteous about it.

You also had the dietary laws being added back in, which meant that the Jewish Christians and the Gentile Christians couldn’t even eat together because the Jews didn’t want to be defiled. In fact, they had this whole teaching, not just the dietary law but they had washing you were supposed to do in case you got contaminated by sin, Jews didn’t even eat with unclean Gentiles. Remember how scandalous it was for Peter to eat with those Gentiles in the house of Cornelius?

Paul starts hearing these reports coming in from these churches and he is furious that they are taking these brand-new Christians believers and take the whole yoke of the law and slam it on top of them and crush their faith. Paul writes his first New Testament book, the letter to the Galatians. You can see how these background issues play right into his approach in his letter. He starts in the very first verse,

This letter is from Paul, an apostle. I was not appointed by any group of people or any human authority, but by Jesus Christ himself… (Galatians 1:1)

A lot of times, Paul starts his letters with something about all the good things about them, how thankful he is for them, not this one! Look at verse 6,

I am shocked that you are turning away so soon from God… following a different way that pretends to be the Good News but is not the Good News at all. You are being fooled by those who deliberately twist the truth concerning Christ. Let God’s curse fall on anyone, including us or even an angel from heaven, who preaches a different kind of Good News than the one we preached to you. (Galatians 1: 6-8)

He says, “God damn anyone who comes along with a different gospel!” Paul is angry, look at chapter 3,

Oh, foolish Galatians! Who has cast an evil spell on you? …How foolish can you be? After starting your new lives in the Spirit, why are you now trying to become perfect by your own human effort? (Galatians 3:1, 3)

Why are you going back under law? Back under slavery? These dietary laws, these different laws you are following he says,

There is no longer Jew or Gentile… For you are all one in Christ Jesus. (Galatians 3:28)

Grace is the basis of our unity. He says,

So Christ has truly set us free. Now make sure that you stay free, and don’t get tied up again in slavery to the law… If you are trying to find favor with God by being circumcised, you must obey every regulation in the whole law of Moses. (Galatians 5:1-3)

You can’t just take grace and mix in a little bit of works; you can’t take Christ and mix in a little bit of law. It’s either Christ fulfilled the law for me, and I receive grace, or I am going to do it myself. The two are incompatible. Religion vs relationship. That is the heart of Christianity, and that is the heart of Paul’s letter to the Galatians. He is angry,

I just wish that those troublemakers who want to mutilate you by circumcision would mutilate themselves. (Galatians 5:12)

You guys have got the knives out, you want to cut something off? I got an idea! He is furious. He is worried. He is so concerned. There is a real tone of concern. I can imagine him staying up nights wondering, ‘Is all that we did there in vain?’ It’s in that context that he runs into his other problem. It’s not just false teachers in Galatia, it’s false teachers right there at Antioch, at this great church that sent them out. This great church, this model multicultural church, they’ve got problems. These same guys from Jerusalem,

While Paul and Barnabas were at Antioch of Syria, some men from Judea arrived and began to teach the believers: “Unless you are circumcised as required by the law of Moses, you cannot be saved.”

Paul Confronts Peter

This was bad. These guys were very influential. In fact, they were so influential, the apostle Peter was up visiting this church, had been spending some time to them. Peter would travel around and teach and encourage the brethren. He was the one that went in the house of Cornelius. He had fit right in with the Gentiles, was fully accepting them, until these guys from Jerusalem showed up. Paul tells about this in the same letter he writes to the Galatian churches,

But when Peter came to Antioch, I had to oppose him to his face, for what he did was very wrong. When he first arrived, he ate with the Gentile believers, who were not circumcised.

But afterward, when some friends of James came, Peter wouldn’t eat with the Gentiles anymore. He was afraid of criticism from these people who insisted on the necessity of circumcision. (Galatians 2:11-12)

You can imagine, Peter is there, they would have these feasts, they called them love feasts. They would have these big dinners before their home church. Peter shows up, he walks over to the table with the Gentiles, he looks up, and he sees the Pharisees. They are like, ‘Oh Peter, you’re not going to eat with them, are you? Those men aren’t even circumcised! And Peter? Is that bacon?’ He’s like, ‘Uhhhh, yeah, I was just… um… forgot my keys here…to my camel…sorry guys,’ And he heads over to the special table, the ceremonially clean table, where he is sitting with these legalists. You can imagine then; Paul shows up to that same table and asks where Peter is and they point out that he is over at the ‘special table.’ Paul has been getting these reports about all of his churches crumbling in southern Galatia that he has just planted and then he hears this, and he is angry, and wonders where Barnabas is needing to do something about this. Turns out that Barnabas was with those guys too.

As a result, other Jewish believers followed Peter’s hypocrisy, and even Barnabas was led astray by their hypocrisy.

Barnabas? The son of encouragement? The man renowned for his generosity n the early church? The man who believed in Paul as a Christian before anyone else did, who introduced him to the other brothers? Who went and got Paul and brought him to Antioch and travelled all over southern Galatia planting church after church of Jews and Gentiles with Paul? Barnabas? WHY GOD WHY? He is on the right side of everything and even he is on the wrong side of this. You can see how contagious legalism and hypocrisy are. It’s no wonder Jesus compared this to yeast silently working its way through a lump of dough, inflating itself to make it look bigger than it really is. We need to beware the danger of slipping away from radical grace and down into works-based religion. So, what does Paul do about it?

When I saw that they were not following the truth of the gospel message, I said to Peter in front of all the others,

He walks right up to the Pharisee table, in front of all the other guys and says, ‘Before these guys got here, you were eating with those guys, and now that these guys are here you are acting like you don’t. You were eating all the food they were; did you tell them your nickname? Captain porkchop?’ He says,

“Since you, a Jew by birth, have discarded the Jewish laws and are living like a Gentile, why are you now trying to make these Gentiles follow the Jewish traditions? “You and I are Jews by birth, not ‘sinners’ like the Gentiles. Yet we know that a person is made right with God by faith in Jesus Christ, not by obeying the law..

The great secret of Christianity. People ask about Christianity, thinking it’s about a bunch of rules you follow and maybe God will accept you. He says,

And we have believed in Christ Jesus, so that we might be made right with God because of our faith in Christ, not because we have obeyed the law

He says it like four different ways because,

For no one will ever be made right with God by obeying the law.” (Galatians 2:13-16)

Are you taking notes on that? Because you will never be made right with God by the Law.

Well,

Paul and Barnabas disagreed with them, arguing vehemently.

Apparently by this time, Barnabas had come back over to the right side on this debate.

Finally, the church decided to send Paul and Barnabas to Jerusalem [~250 miles], accompanied by some local believers, to talk to the apostles and elders about this question.

The Jerusalem Council

It’s a pretty big deal. They can’t work it out, so they walk 250 miles to Jerusalem to settle things once and for all. Have you ever had a debate that you are in and decide to walk to Detroit and then walk another 50 miles into Canada and settle it once and for all? Paul is like, “I’ll walk. Sounds good to me.” They had to settle this. This was too big of a deal. It was affecting every church. So, they walk the long journey from Antioch down to Jerusalem.

The church sent the delegates to Jerusalem, and they stopped along the way in Phoenicia and Samaria to visit the believers.

They stop and talk to Christian churches all along the way, catching up and updating then on what was happening.

They told them—much to everyone’s joy—that the Gentiles, too, were being converted.

They are so excited, other people meeting Christ.

When they arrived in Jerusalem, Barnabas and Paul were welcomed by the whole church, including the apostles and elders.

It’s a mixed group, some subset of the original apostles and they had raised up new leaders by this time.

They reported everything God had done through them.

This must have gone on for some time. They gathered the church together for this discussion and there is one group, that is not very excited about this. They look over and once again they see these guys…

But then some of the believers who belonged to the sect of the Pharisees stood up and insisted, “The Gentile converts must be circumcised and required to follow the law of Moses.” So the apostles and elders met together to resolve this issue.

Luke doesn’t give us much of this conversation. There was probably a lengthy debate. There was lengthy discussion. There were people citing Old Testament scriptures, the teachings of Jesus, experiences they had, things they had seen.

Peter Speaks

At the meeting, after a long discussion, Peter stood

We haven’t heard from him since Paul called him out in front of everyone at Antioch. If spiritual leadership worked like leadership in the world, this would be Peter’s chance to take Paul down a notch. Paul was a nobody compared to Peter. This was Peter’s homecourt. He could say anything he wanted here, take Paul down, and even the series 1-1. Let’s see what he says,

and addressed them as follows: “Brothers, you all know that God chose me from among you some time ago to preach to the Gentiles so that they could hear the Good News and believe.

Peter says, ‘Have you read Acts 10? If anyone knows something about preaching to the Gentiles, it would be this guy right here. Simon aka Peter aka the Rock aka the guy with the keys to the Kingdom. I was there when we unlocked the expansion of the gospel at Pentecost to the Jews. At Samaria, I was there. At Cornelius’s house, I was there when the gospel went to the Gentiles. That was me. Remember that?’ And then he says

God knows people’s hearts, and he confirmed that he accepts Gentiles by giving them the Holy Spirit, just as he did to us. He made no distinction between us and them, for he cleansed their hearts through faith.

Peter says, long before they even had a chance to get circumcised, God wasn’t focusing on that. He wasn’t looking at whether they were circumcised or whether they were obeying the dietary laws, he looked at their hearts to see if they were putting their trust in Jesus or not and he sent the Holy Spirit to dwell inside them. If you are going to blame anyone for this, blame God. He is the one who keeps cleansing Gentiles and giving them the Holy Spirit. He says that if there is anything that he has learned at Cornelius’s house, if God calls something clean, we dare not call it unclean. That is a truth that we would do well to remember in our Christian lives. When God calls you clean, you do not call it unclean. You view yourself the way he views you, and if you are not doing that, that is the biggest problem in your spiritual life. It isn’t all the sin you are into, your addictions, your habits, the way you messed up last night or today. It’s your refusal to view yourself the way God does and to thank him for it and to come to God based on the finished work of Christ.

So why are you now challenging God by burdening the Gentile believers with a yoke that neither we nor our ancestors were able to bear?

The yoke is the big heavy thing they put on the ox to pull the thing that they pull. He says, ‘who even kept the law anyways? You are telling them to keep the law, you are acting like you keep the law, have you read the law? “You shall love the Lord your God with all your soul and all your mind and all your strength.” Have you ever kept that for a single hour? Have you heard Jesus teach? Has anybody told you that he said, ‘You have heard it said don’t commit adultery, but I say, even if you lust in your heart you are guilty.’ Just because you don’t have the courage to follow through, you are doing it in your mind. ‘You get angry unrighteously in any way, you are guilty enough to go to hell.’ We have never kept the law, wake up! Jesus came with a different yoke. He said, ‘I am coming to all who are weary and heavy laden.’ He says, ‘Take my yoke upon you, for my yoke is easy and my burden is light. And you shall find rest for your souls.’ You want rest for your soul? That is what he offers, a rest you could never find under the law because there is always something else you need to do, some other way you are failing, and it is going to turn you into a legalistic hypocrite. And then I imagine him looking over at Paul as he delivers his concluding argument here,

We believe that we are all saved the same way, by the undeserved grace of the Lord Jesus.”

Which is a pretty good summary of what Paul yelled at him across the table an Antioch in Galatians 2:16. That’s the only way to be saved. This is the last time we hear from Peter in the whole book of Acts. It’s almost as though he takes the keys to the Kingdom, unlocks the last lock, and then rides into the sunset. His final, as far as Luke is concerned, his final contribution to the story he is writing is this right here. Peter really comes through here. He is not worldly; he is not a leader in the world who is political and bitter and can’t see past his ego being pricked to admit that he was wrong. He lays down his pride, he lays down whatever bitterness he might have had, and he says, ‘No, these guys are right, and we cannot add the law to the Gentiles. It must not be.’ This appear to have been the turning point in this debate. It really silenced the critics.

Everyone listened quietly as Barnabas and Paul told about the miraculous signs and wonders God had done through them among the Gentiles.

They tell story after story of God’s grace. I imagine there were tears as they heard about those meeting Christ for the first time, turning from their old ways to the love of God. There is one more voice after they had finished.

James Speaks

When they had finished, James stood

This is not James the apostle that we read about in the gospels, that is James son of Zebedee. He got killed back in Acts 12. There was a James who was the brother of Jesus. Jesus had 4 brothers at least, named in the gospel and multiple sisters. During his ministry they thought he was crazy. You can imagine how you would feel if your brother started walking around saying he was the Messiah. James was Jesus’s brother. We learn that after Jesus died and rose from the dead, he made sure to make a stop at James’s place and he comes waltzing right in. James believes. He became an influential leader. In fact, as Peter goes out on the road, James seems to rise to a position of prominence in the Jerusalem church. By this time, he must have already written his epistle. We have the letter of James in the New Testament, that was this guy right here. This is the James, Jesus’s brother. Not the son of Zebedee or of Alpheus (there were two disciples named James). They had a lot of James’ back then. They had a lot of Judas’ too. There were two disciples named Judas, and Jesus had a brother named Jude who wrote the Jude of the New Testament. Anyways. We know about James from secular history. Josephus wrote about James, he called him James the Just. It said they called him camel knees because he was on his knees praying so much, he had these thick callouses. He was, unfortunately, killed, stoned in 62 AD. It was sudden and tragic. He served the Lord for a good 30 years here. He stands up at the end to summarize and put in his opinion on what they should do. 

and said, “Brothers, listen to me.

Peter has told you about the time God first visited the Gentiles to take from them a people for himself.

He read Acts 10, he remembers that well.

And this conversion of Gentiles is exactly what the prophets predicted.

He points to the scriptures. They shouldn’t be surprised this is happening.

As it is written: [Amos 9:11-12]

‘Afterward I will return and restore the fallen house of David. I will rebuild its ruins and restore it, so that the rest of humanity might seek the LORD, including the Gentiles—

He is going to regather the Jews from their exile in Babylon and the purpose is not just for the sake of the Jews, but he wants all of the non-Jews to seek God as well.

all those I have called to be mine.

He says that the Gentiles are also God’s people now, not just the Jews anymore. The Gentiles, through the church, can become God’s people. We belong to him forever, joined to Christ, adopted as his son or daughter. That is a bond that will never be broken.

The LORD has spoken—he who made these things known so long ago.’

God knew all this was happening, it was his plan all along to work through the Jewish nation to raise up the scriptures and the Messiah and then to go out to all the nations. And so, James says,

And so my judgment is that we should not make it difficult for the Gentiles who are turning to God. Instead, we should write and tell them to abstain from eating food offered to idols, from sexual immorality, from eating the meat of strangled animals, and from consuming blood.

The Recommendation

This is a strange conclusion. What’s the point? The first thing we need to note is what is not on this list, and that is circumcision. They don’t need to be circumcised. It’s not a matter of salvation, but a matter of the mission at stake. These were Gentile, pagan practices and as he goes on to say, look,

For these laws of Moses have been preached in Jewish synagogues in every city on every Sabbath for many generations.”

All throughout the Roman empire you have communities of Jews that are totally familiar with the Old Testament laws and observe these dietary laws and all these other laws. They want to reach them too, not just Gentiles. If we have these Gentiles in front of these Jews strangling animals and eating it as part of their pagan practices, they are going to be like, ‘So this is the new, full extension of the Old Testament? No thank you.’ They are calling for some sensitivity to the Jews they are trying to reach as well. They would offer food up in these temples as part of the sacrifices and then sometimes they would go right down to the temple to eat there and end up falling into sin. This list was all associated with pagan temple worship. Jews had certain ways they had to kill an animal. They would slit the throat and hang it up and all the blood would come out. If you strangle and animal what is not going to come out is the blood. Obviously, you should stay away from sexual immorality, that was such a problem in these cities. He calls them to stay away from the temple scene, not as a matter of salvation, but for other reasons, so they can reach Jews. They were also worried about the temptation of going to the temple.

Then the apostles and elders together with the whole church in Jerusalem chose delegates,

and they sent them to Antioch of Syria with Paul and Barnabas to report on this decision.

The men chosen were two of the church leaders—Judas (also called Barsabbas) and Silas.

They send two of their own guys, two of the church leaders. Silas is actually Greek. He was a leader there in Jerusalem from a Greek background. Judas was apparently Judas. Silas was not even circumcised by the way. They send Paul, Barnabas, Judas, and Silas. They don’t just have the letter, but some guys from Jerusalem who could vouch for the authenticity. Two or more witnesses was an Old Testament principle. Here is the letter, Luke just copies the letter right in.

This is the letter they took with them: “This letter is from the apostles and elders, your brothers in Jerusalem. It is written to the Gentile believers in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia.

Not just to Paul’s group, but Syria (the area north of Antioch) and Cilicia (southern Turkey where all these churches were). Paul asked them to put in the other places as well, he wants to wipe out this legalism that is infecting the groups that he has planted.

Greetings! “We understand that some men from here have troubled you and upset you with their teaching, but we did not send them!

The men that claimed to be from James, were not actually sent from James, liars.

So we decided, having come to complete agreement, to send you official representatives, along with our beloved Barnabas and Paul,

They love and support Barnabas and Paul.

who have risked their lives for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.

These guys were awesome on the first missionary journey.

We are sending Judas and Silas to confirm what we have decided concerning your question. “For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us to lay no greater burden on you than these few requirements: You must abstain from eating food offered to idols, from consuming blood or the meat of strangled animals, and from sexual immorality. If you do this, you will do well. Farewell.” The messengers went at once to Antioch, where they called a general meeting of the believers and delivered the letter. And there was great joy throughout the church that day as they read this encouraging message.

I imagine the guy in the back of the circumcision line was very grateful. How would you like to be the guy who had gotten it done yesterday?

Then Judas and Silas, both being prophets, spoke at length to the believers, encouraging and strengthening their faith.

Conclusions

What a great story. I just see the hand of God all over this thing. God knows our tendency. He knows of our drift toward law, toward hypocrisy. We can’t be content with just plain old grace, raw grace, radical grace. We have to add something to it, we have to do something. I see Christ using Paul to turn the early church back from the edge of disaster as they were skidding toward the edge of the cliff of grace and about to fall into the chasm of legalism. There was one man standing there, saying no. A former Pharisee, the only Pharisee on the right side of this in this story was Paul, to declare the it is grace alone, not grace plus works, that equals works. Not Christ plus law, that equals law and negates what Christ has done and obligates you to keep the whole law. No, it’s simple grace, Paul says. Christ says, “It is finished.” And he meant it and there is nothing we add to that. The truth won out here.

Let’s not forget how God used Peter. Peter was a guy who was in touch enough with this grace to once again admit when he made a big mistake in front of a lot of people. To cling to grace, like we have to do if we are going to walk with God, to admit he was wrong and to take a stand for the truth, for the God who gives us a basis for us to actually work through our conflicts and disagreements, the basis for grace.

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