Acts 8:26-33. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on February 12, 2023.
We have seen how God used Philip, Peter, and John to take the Gospel into Samaria, north of Jerusalem. It appears that the main impetus that made Philip go to Samaria was persecution in Jerusalem. Of course, we can preach the Gospel in jail, but Philip gets out of town and preaches in Samaria. Clearly, the Holy Spirit was leading him.
In our passage today, Philip is going to travel southwest of Jerusalem on the road to Gaza in order to help the Gospel on its way to the continent of Africa! That's right. It is most likely that the Gospel went into Africa before it ever made it to Europe.
What happened in Jerusalem is now spreading to the ends of the earth. Hmm...it is interesting that we are here, hearing the Gospel at the ends of the earth. You are an answer to the Lord's prayer, his purpose, and even prophecy.
Amen. Let's look at our passage.
God has a divine appointment for Philip on the road to Gaza with an Ethiopian eunuch.
You may have heard that phrase before now. There is a sense where a parent has a divine appointment every day, even every minute, with their children. God wants you to train them in His Word and in His ways. However, in a case like this, you know it, and it is on your "appointment calendar."
There are times that God has something out of our normal routine, or schedule. It is not on our calendar, not on our radar, but it is on God's calendar.
It is important to recognize it when God is bringing us to something that we were not expecting. When it happens, we need to learn to quickly shift gears, and focus on what God is doing. A good prayer to pray is, "Help me, Lord, to be used of You in this situation!"
In this case, Philip is told by an angel of the lord some of what he is to do.
The term angel simply means a messenger, and this is what an angel does, but this was a heavenly messenger. We are not told exactly how this meeting happened. Was Philip in prayer alone? Was he back in Jerusalem? Regardless, Philip has an angelic visitation and now the divine appointment is on his calendar.
In reading the Bible, we may come under the impression that angels should be showing up every day in our lives. This is not an accurate reading. Sometimes it was hundreds of years between a clear visitation of an angel in the Bible. In fact, Hebrews 13:2 tells us that some people have entertained angels without knowing it. Have you ever had something happen that later you thought to yourself that the person who helped you may have been an angel?
One of the men in our church, Joe Pyott, was driving at night outside of Spokane. As he was going through a snowy pass, he slid off the road in a remote area. He was a bit worried because it was late at night, and he did not figure anyone would be driving by for a long time. However, in short order, three different people showed up and helped him in different ways. One guy had a shovel and dug out the snow around his vehicle. Another man had a truck and a chain. He was able to pull Joe back on the road. Even better, Joe was able to drive the car all the way home. Praise the Lord!
We might wonder if one of those people were an angel, or even all of them. But, ask yourself this. Does it really matter if you were pulled out of the ditch by an angel, or by a human being who was quick to do God's will in the situation?
Scripture details increased angelic visits during periods in which God is doing something critical for His plan of salvation. We see this around the birth of Christ, and then later around the death of Christ, even the beginning of the Church in this passage. The situation is so critical that God gives heavenly assistance so that the moment is not lost. Now, notice that this doesn't seem to be how God led Philip to Samaria. So, why now?
There seems to be something about this man. He was a critical man, at a critical juncture of God's plan of salvation, with a desire to know God. He needed to hear the Gospel, and God could see that he would go back to Ethiopia never having heard the Gospel. That is, unless God did something out of the ordinary.
Just know this. God can lead us through supernatural methods, but we should not be stuck on only being led by angels. God is a big God, and creative too. It is up to Him how we are to be led, and we need to be aware of those ways.
Philip's instructions from the angel are to head down the road from Jerusalem to Gaza through the Judean wilderness, i.e., no one is out there. There is no indication that Philip is told what will happen. Of course, since it was an angel, he has a pretty good idea that it has something to do with spreading the Gospel. Is he going to preach in Gaza? What will he find? He doesn't know.
God doesn't always give us all the instructions up front. He is wanting to see if we will trust Him and step forward. At the right time, He will give you the next instruction. Just be faithful. Thus, we are told that Philip "arose and went."
How important it is for us to be quick to obey when God leads us to do something. Philip isn't asking why. He simply gets up and goes. Better to muse in your mind as you are obeying, then to sit at home wondering what could happen.
Yet, it doesn't have to be just about obedience. There is a higher level to all that God gives us to do. Anything that God asks us to do will be a chance to participate in something live changing. If we really understood that, then we would jump at the chance to do anything for Him. "Alright, I get to see God do something great! Let's get started!" More than that, we get to participate with Him by faith!
Remember that all responsibilities require doing duties, but when we understand the heart of God, we will jump with joy at doing what He wants done. If God is in it, then we can have joy in it because He transforms lives!
If we look at the story from the Ethiopian's view point, then it is quite different. God is leading him too, but it is unknowingly. Of course, we could say that he is not a Christian yet. True, but he is a believer in Yahweh, a convert to Judaism, a God-worshiper. Just as God can put something on our heart by His Holy Spirit, or lead us by an angelic visitation, so God can lead us without us even knowing it. Sometimes God just likes to surprise us with a divine appointment.
So, Philip is traveling along the road, sees the chariot, and the Spirit tells him to overtake the chariot.
The man in the chariot is a eunuch from Ethiopia. He was a eunuch because that was common practice for palace slaves and palace servants in much of the world throughout history. It may not seem to be important, but by the end of this sermon, you will see that it is very important that he is a eunuch.
He is also an "Ethiopian." This term was created by the Greeks to refer to Africans who lived anywhere south of Egypt. This is a very general term. However, the reference to the Candace, Queen of Ethiopia, gives us a bead on exactly where he was from. If you look at a map, you will see Egypt. As you travel south you will run into the country called Sudan today. Southeast of Sudan is the modern country of Ethiopia. Candace is not the name of this Queen. It was actually a term like "Pharaoh, or Caesar." In Greek, it is phonetically Cahn-'dah-kay, or better, The Kandake. These African Queens ruled in what we would call northern Sudan today. In the Old Testament, this kingdom is always referred to as the kingdom of Cush.
The Kandake ruled in a co-regency with her son as king. They both had their own armies, treasuries, and palaces. However, they co-ruled over the Cushites. In fact, the king's son would not be the next king. The Kandake's eldest son was king, but the first son of her eldest daughter (who would take her place upon death) would be the next king.
How had this man heard about the God of Israel? The capital of the Cushite kingdom was over 1,500 miles from Jerusalem. Notice that he had gone to Jerusalem to worship. Perhaps, he heard about Yahweh through a servant. Regardless, he believed in the God of Israel, and went to worship.
The fact that The Kandake would let him travel that far, either means that she values him very highly, or that she is interested in this religion of his, or both. God was leading this man, whether he knew it or not.
Whether you know it or not, God is leading you. That doesn't mean that we never make mistakes. In fact, we can be resisting God like Saul of Tarsus was doing. God will always be faithful to lead us into opportunity for repentance. This man had repented and believed, and so God put him on a path to hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ!
As Philip approaches the chariot, he hears the man is reading the prophet Isaiah. This scroll may be a gift to The Kandake, or it may have been purchased by him. Philip asks him a clear question that is not insulting, but also opens the door for discussion. "Do you understand what you are reading?"
Let's not jump past this simple point. God wants you to understand the Scriptures, and they have been written in such a way that they can be understood. Of course, our spiritual state will make a big difference whether or not we can understand the Scriptures. Only a person who approaches the Word with faith can begin to understand. Yet, anyone who is really looking for Truth will find it in the Scriptures.
Yes, there are parts of the Scripture that are not as clear to us. The Bible itself speaks of some parts being "milk" as opposed to other parts that are "meat." The picture has to do with development. A baby only digests milk at first. However, as it grows on that milk, it will be able to digest more and more complex food. If I read something today, and I don't know what it means, then I should just pray this simple prayer. "Lord, I love you, and I want to know what this means. Please help me to understand at the level that I can for now." In fact, it doesn't matter if you have been a Christian for 70 years. There is always stuff to learn about God's Word. He is the God of the universe. Anything that He has written is bound to keep us busy for a life time of understanding. However, that is the beauty of God's Word. You don't have to understand everything in order to understand the most important things.
Believers need to take the Word of God seriously. He wants you to understand, and understanding will take devotion to reading, studying, and discussing the text with other believers. We blow a lot of time with entertainments when we could be reading the words of the Creator of the universe! Don't squander the wealth of Truth and knowledge that God makes available in order to go after the lusts of the flesh, and the pride of life.
Some may feel like studying the Bible is the pastor's job. Don't rely upon another person for your understanding. They won't be there on that day that you stand before God and give account. He has written this Bible to you as much as to anyone else. If you really love Jesus, then you will take His Words to you seriously.
The Ethiopian eunuch's response lets us know that he was having trouble understanding. He needed a guide, a teacher. Self-study is the bedrock of understanding the Bible. However, on top of this, God provides guides or teachers. This man was isolated. How many years would it take for the Gospel to make it to Cush without some assistance from God? God saw his desire to understand the Scriptures, and He sent him a good guide.
Of course, there are many "guides" in the world today who want to lead you astray. They are false guides, even anti-guides, false teachers, and false apostles. Jesus warned that Israel's leaders had become blind guides leading the people into a ditch.
So, how do I protect myself? You protect yourself by being a person who is devoted to reading the Word, and praying to God for understanding. You protect yourself by being a person who is committed to being led by the Holy spirit. Such a person will always find that God provides exactly what they need. Thus, the Bereans of Acts 17:11 searched the Scriptures daily to see if these things that Paul was preaching were really so. Such a person will be very hard to deceive.
This brings us to the passage that the man was reading. You may have recognized the verses. They come from Isaiah 53. This is the most important section of Isaiah, which reveals God's suffering servant who would save Israel, and the Gentiles, from their sins. Of course, it is talking about the Messiah, Jesus.
During those days in Israel, it was acceptable to see this passage as talking about Messiah, but after the cross and Christians preaching Jesus, the rabbis began developing arguments against the passage speaking of Messiah. Today, the typical rabbi will say that the passage speaks about Israel saving the world through her suffering. However, this does not make good sense of the flow of God's arguments from Isaiah 40 to 53.
In fact, the argument is precisely that God made Israel to be a servant to the nations, but Israel had become a blind and deaf servant, i.e., useless. God himself would rise up and bring forth His perfect servant who would not only save Israel, but also save the nations. Isaiah 53 shows Jesus carrying the sin, and the curse of sin, of the nation of Israel and the Gentiles upon himself. He would be punished in our place and provide forgiveness through his wisdom.
I don't think the Ethiopian eunuch was reading this by accident, and Philip is not there by accident either. However, there is one more "accident," or should we say coincidence that we should give our attention.
No doubt, the eunuch not only knows that Isaiah 53 is talking about Jesus, and what Jesus did for him, for all of us, he will keep reading. Guess what he will find only three chapters later in Isaiah 56:3-8? Here is the text. As you read it, you should weep for joy as that eunuch no doubt did when he read it.
3 Do not let the son of the foreigner Who has joined himself to the Lord Speak, saying, “The Lord has utterly separated me from His people”; Nor let the eunuch say, “Here I am, a dry tree.”
4 For thus says the Lord: “To the eunuchs who keep My Sabbaths, And choose what pleases Me, And hold fast My covenant,
5 Even to them I will give in My house And within My walls a place and a name Better than that of sons and daughters; I will give them an everlasting name That shall not be cut off.
6 “Also the sons of the foreigner Who join themselves to the Lord, to serve Him, And to love the name of the Lord, to be His servants—Everyone who keeps from defiling the Sabbath, And holds fast My covenant—
7 Even them I will bring to My holy mountain, And make them joyful in My house of prayer. Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices Will be accepted on My altar; For My house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations.”
8 The Lord God, who gathers the outcasts of Israel, says, “Yet I will gather to him Others besides those who are gathered to him.”
How must that have hit him. The Lord is essentially telling this man through Isaiah (written 700 years before this), "Don't say that you are a dry tree!" In the natural, he was a dry tree. He was never going to have a family to pass on his love and knowledge. Yet, he now had a treasure within him that was Jesus, the Lord of Life!
He would take this treasure of God's love through Jesus with him back to Cush as an ambassador of the Lord. We don't know the rest of the story of this man. How many people did he share the Gospel with throughout his life? On the day that he would lay his head down in death, he was leaving behind a spiritual heritage that the God of Israel loves Cushites, and whosoever. He died so that you can be forgiven and live with him eternally. It didn't matter that he was a foreigner to Israel, or a "dry tree" in the natural. He would pass on the faith to spiritual offspring by the power of Jesus.
And, so will you, if you put your faith in Jesus. If you follow the world, you will be a dry tree. I don't care how many kids you have. But, in Christ, the Spirit of God will give you life, and that life will overflow you and impact others!