Only after three years did I go up to Jerusalem to confer with Cephas, and I stayed with him fifteen days. Sermons
I. THE DESTINY. St. Paul feels that from his birth he was set apart for the great apostolic work of his later years. 1. There is a destiny in every life. God has his purpose of calling us into being. 2. This destiny is determined for us, not by us. We do not choose the circumstances in which we are born, nor our own gifts and dispositions. We can with difficulty escape from our surroundings, and we can never escape from ourselves. Whether a man will see the light as a prince in a palace, or as a beggar under a hedge, is entirely beyond his control, and it is equally impossible for him to determine whether he will have the genius of Newton or the inanity of an idiot. Yet how largely do these differences effect a man's necessary future! 3. We may be long unconscious of our destiny. St. Paul never dreamed of his while he sat at the feet of Gamaliel nor while he was harrying the Christians. It is a secret of providence gradually revealed. 4. It is our duty to work out our destiny by voluntary obedience to the will of God revealed in it when once it is revealed to us. To resist it is to kick against the pricks. We can do this, for, though set apart for a work, we may refuse to follow it by our free-will, but at our great cost. II. THE CALL. In the Acts of the Apostles the external details of the call of St. Paul are described; here he gives us only the internal experience. He only could give this, and this was the really important thing. The flashing light, the arrested journey, the audible voice, the blindness, were all accessories. The one important thing was the inward voice that brought conviction to the heart of the man. Every apostle needed a call from Christ to constitute him such. But every Christian has some Divine call. We have not the miracle to convey the call, and we do not want it. By the manifest claims that present themselves to us, by the discovery of our own powers and opportunities of service, by the promptings of our conscience, Christ calls us to our life's work, To see a work for Christ needing to be done, and to be able to do it, is a providential call to undertake it. It is a disastrous superstition that keeps us back while we wait for a more articulate voice. God's will is manifest in the indication of what is right. To know God's will is to be called to his service. III. THE MISSION. 1. Its object. The revelation of Christ. St. Paul was to make Christ known. He was not to spread his own religious notions, but only to reveal Christ. He was not to teach a doctrinal Christianity so much as to show Christ himself. This was to be done, not only by his words, but also by his life. He was so to live Christ that men should see Christ in him. Thus Christ was to be revealed in him. Before he could preach Christ in words he must have the revelation of Christ in his own person. If we do not reveal Christ by our lives, all our words will count for little, being belied by our glaringly inconsistent conduct. If we act like Christ, the silent influence of our living will be the most clear and powerful setting forth of Christ. 2. The scope of the mission. St. Paul was to preach Christ among the Gentiles. His own special gospel was the message that God's grace in Christ extended to the whole world. It was not for his own sake nor even for the glory of Christ alone that he was called to his great mission. The highest missions are unselfish and beneficent. We are all called in some way to minister to others. We can do it in no way better than by revealing Christ to them in our actions as well as in our words. - W.F.A.
Then after three years I went up to Jerusalem. He returned from a spiritual as Ezra had from a bodily captivity, and to his renewed mind all things appeared new. What an emotion smote his heart at the first distant view of the Temple, that house of sacrifice, that edifice of prophecy. Its sacrifices had been realized; its prophecies fulfilled. As he approached the gates, he might have trodden the very spot where he had assisted in the death of Stephen, and he entered them perfectly content, were it God's will, to be dragged to the same fate. When he entered the city, what deep thoughts were suggested by the haunts of his youth, and by the sight of those spots where he had so eagerly sought that knowledge which he had now so eagerly abandoned. What an intolerable burden he had cast off. He felt as a glorified spirit may be supposed to feel on revisiting the scenes of its fleshly sojourn.(Archdeacon Evans.) The fifteen days were doubtless spent in conversation about the mission and life of Christ; and it seems certain — though St. Paul repudiates the presumption that he derived any part of his authority, or of the exposition which he gave of the gospel, from any person whatsoever — that he must have heard during this fortnight many of those facts of the private life of Christ, which were so well known to the chief of the Twelve, and many of those discourses which Peter so clearly remembered.(Paul of Tarsus.) I. THE VISIT TO PETER.1. After three years' seclusion Paul would yearn for fellowship with such a heart as Peter's. 2. The visit shows us that (1) (2) 3. It was a visit of pure friendship. II. THE LESSONS IT SUGGESTS. That Christian friendship is — 1. All-embracing. It includes differences of rank, gifts, culture, temperament. 2. No men could be more diverse than Peter and Paul, and yet neither disparaged or envied the other. II. EQUALIZING. Paul could now meet on equal terms the most distinguished men of his day: Peter the premier apostle, James the Lord's brother. "One is your Master, etc." III. HOSPITABLE. Paul, once a dreaded persecutor, now found a welcome and a home from the chief of the persecuted. Peter a married man. Fraternal intercourse and fellowship: — I. THE NATURE OF CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP. 1. A fellowship in Christ. 2. A fellowship of love. 3. A fellowship in which individual interests are advanced by mutual help. II. THE ADVANTAGES OF CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP. 1. Their fellowship would be profitable, because each would contribute towards a clearer apprehension of Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit. 2. The fellowship would be profitable, because it would assure each that the Christian life is one of great trial. 3. The fellowship would be profitable, because each of the apostles would see that the Christian life is one of certain comfort. III. TO SECURE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP OFTEN REQUIRES PERSONAL SACRIFICE. To see Peter and the others, Paul undertook a considerable journey, and exposed himself on the one hand to the scorn and enmity of his former friends, and on the other to the coldness and suspicion of the disciples in Jerusalem. Lessons: 1. That the opportunities for Christian fellowship are usually brief; they should therefore, when presented, be diligently improved. Paul could only remain fifteen days at Jerusalem: the persecutions of his enemies compelled him to leave. 2. Such opportunities being made the most of, lead to glorious results in time and eternity. Who can tell how much the Christian world is indebted to the harmonious fellowship of Peter, James, and Paul at Jerusalem? (R. Nicholls.) Answer to Mr. W's Fifth Objection. The Epistles of St. Paul Institutions of Jesus. Fourth Conversation Exposition of St. Paul's Words, Gal. I. 8. A Reasonable Service The Praise of Men. Sudden Conversions. So Great Blindness, Moreover, Hath Occupied Men's Minds... Travelling in Palestine --Roads, Inns, Hospitality, Custom-House Officers, Taxation, Publicans The Early History of Particular Churches. It is Also Written, "But I Say unto You... Easter Monday Fifth Sunday after Epiphany Extracts No. vii. Chrysostom Evades Election to a Bishopric, and Writes his Work on the Priesthood. The Apostle's Position and Circumstances Epistle Xlv. To Theoctista, Patrician . Jesus' First Residence at Capernaum. Indeed in all Spiritual Delights, which Unmarried Women Enjoy... |