RELIGION OR REDEMPTION?
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Acts [GW] 17:16-30 While Paul was waiting for Silas and
Timothy in Athens, he saw that the city had statues of false gods everywhere.
This upset him. He held discussions in the synagogue with Jews and converts to
Judaism. He also held discussions every day in the public square with anyone
who happened to be there. Some Epicurean and Stoic philosophers had discussions
with him. Some asked, "What is this babbling fool trying to say?"
Others said, "He seems to be speaking about foreign gods." The
philosophers said these things because Paul was telling the Good News about
Jesus and saying that people would come back to life.
Then they brought
Paul to the city court, the Areopagus, and asked, "Could you tell us these
new ideas that you're teaching? Some of the things you say sound strange to us.
So we would like to know what they mean."
Everyone who
lived in Athens looked for opportunities to tell or hear something new and
unusual.
Paul stood in the
middle of the court and said, "Men of Athens, I see that you are very
religious. As I was going through your city and looking closely at the objects
you worship, I noticed an altar with this written on it: 'To an unknown god.'
I'm telling you about the unknown god you worship.
The God who made
the universe and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth. He doesn't live
in shrines made by humans, and he isn't served by humans as if he needed
anything. He gives everyone life, breath, and everything they have. From one
man he has made every nation of humanity to live all over the earth. He has
given them the seasons of the year and the boundaries within which to live. He
has done this so that they would look for God, somehow reach for him, and find
him. In fact, he is never far from any one of us.
Certainly, we
live, move, and exist because of him. As some of your poets have said, 'We are
God's children.' So if we are God's children, we shouldn't think that the
divine being is like an image made from gold, silver, or stone, an image that
is the product of human imagination and skill. (Jn.3:3)
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