Acts 20:1-12. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on August 18, 2024.
Following the riotous mob in Ephesus, lead by Demetrius the silversmith, Paul then journeys to Macedonia (northern Greece).
If it takes a mob to do what you want to do, then it is probably not the right thing, and it is definitely not the right way to go about it.
Yet, Paul had already purposed in the Spirit to leave Ephesus, travel to Greece and then travel to Jerusalem. Everything from this point on has the sense that Paul may not see these people again. It isn’t known for sure by him, but it is his working premise. What he knows for sure is that persecutions and tribulations await him in Jerusalem.
Let’s look at our passage.
As Luke has already told us in the previous chapter, Paul follows Timothy and Erastus, whom he had sent ahead in Acts 19:22. This previous preparation, along with verse one of this chapter, shows us that Paul was not fleeing Ephesus. Rather, he takes the time to gather with the disciples there and say goodbye.
Nothing is said of Paul’s journey through Asia and the ship ride from Troas to Philippi in Macedonia, but this would have happened. Similarly, we are not told how Paul reconnects with Timothy and Erastus, or who left with him from Ephesus.
Verse two mentions that he goes to Greece after “he had gone over that region.” Of course, we tend to think of Macedonia as Greece, but this is due to the conquering of Philip of Macedon, the father of Alexander the Great. We should not see this as a mistake, but as the language of someone who knows how the people of southern Greece viewed themselves in relation to the area of Macedonia.
By the way, some believe that this is probably the best time for Paul to have preached in Illyricum, which is only mentioned in Romans 15:19. This is what we would call Albania today.
So, Paul connects with churches in that area and then travels south into Achaia. Luke does not mention any particular city, but the mention of sailing to Syria from there was most likely a reference to Corinth. We also know that Paul had written 1 Corinthians from Ephesus, which said that he was working to come to them. Paul ends up staying for three months.
As Paul plans to sail to Syria (most likely Antioch), a plot against him is discovered. It is believed that the plan may have involved attacking Paul while on the ship because it would be impossible for him to get away.
Of course, this doesn’t happen, but the root of these disturbances are not the people involved. The root is found in those evil spirits in league with the devil. Synagogue leaders and silversmiths are not Paul’s enemies. They are simply captive to the devil’s schemes and manipulated by him. We need to understand this about our own land. You can look at politicians, political parties and individuals, and see that they are leading against the ways of Jesus Christ. This does make them an enemy to the Gospel. Yet, Christ doesn’t tell us to fight against these people. We are to fight against the spiritual enemies (Ephesians 6) that are in the heavenlies. They are the ones that manipulate these people to operate against Christ. We are called to interpose ourselves between the manipulated person and the enemy of their soul. We work for the purposes of Christ, which is to set them free from the devil’s lies.
Having discovered the plot, Paul changes his plan. He does not sail from their to Syria, but rather, he goes back through Macedonia, believing that he will run into less resistance there.
Luke lists seven companions of Paul on this part of the journey. Sopater of Berea (some manuscripts add that he is the son of Pyrrhus), Aristarchus and Secundus (this is a common slave name) of Thessalonica, Gaius of Derbe, Timothy (whom we know to be from Lystra, which is near Derbe), and Tychicus and Trophimus of Asia. These last two could be from Ephesus, but they also may be from one of the seven churches of Revelation. I would also point out that the pronoun “we” crops up again in verse 5. Luke also has joined the group, although he does not name himself. This gives eight guys, nine counting Paul who traveled together. Paul then sends most of the men ahead to wait for them at Troas.
This large group of men may have been traveling with Paul due to funds he was carrying for Jerusalem. In his letters, Paul asked the churches to have money ready for him to pick up when he came through in order to bless the hurting churches of Judea. Their numbers would dissuade any highwaymen from trying to assail them. We should also notice the variety of places they are from. They also would serve as witnesses that the money was not pilfered, but indeed, made it to Jerusalem.
Regardless, Paul’s plans are changed. It can sometimes feel like someone or something has messed up our plans, or even our lives. I really do believe that God uses these situations to direct us. Those who are seeking the leading of God’s Spirit do not need to fear these type of events. It may change your plans, but God helps us and will be with us.
Of course, sometimes God Himself changes our plans. He may speak to us in prayer, or through another Godly person. In this case, we have wicked people intent on doing evil. Of course, God isn’t inspiring them to do this. Yet, the Christian is never at the mercy of other people, or even the spiritual powers of wickedness. What they intend for evil, God works to the good for us. Like the story of Joseph, his brothers were brought to a place of repentance. They had intended evil, but God worked it to the good of Joseph, and of them. He brought them to a place of repentance over their evil deeds. You can trust God!
It is here that Luke explains that they leave Philippi after the feast of Unleavened Bread (immediately follows Passover). This means it is spring and would place the previous three months in Corinth during the winter months. Sailors avoided traveling in winter months. Paul decides to remain at Troas for 7 days.
Having reunited with their group in Troas, they fellowship with the church there. Verse 7 explains that the day before Paul left was the “first day of the week.” This is the first clear mention that Christians gathered on the first day of the week, Sunday. “To break bread” was a reference to eating a fellowship meal together, and was often connected to also celebrating communion, or the Lord’s Supper. They gathered to eat together and then Paul preached to them.
There are several other places in the New Testament that allude to Christians gathering on the first day of the week, Sunday. In 1 Corinthians 16:2, Paul tells them this. “On the first day of the week, let each one of you lay something aside storing up as he may prosper, that there be no collections when I come.” It is clear that they are giving the offering when the group is gathered. Though it is not said that they do anything else, it is implicit that they typically gathered on that day.
There are some who try to make a big deal about what day you worship on, similar to what foods you eat. Colossians 2:16-17 tells us, “So let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths, which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ.” It appears that Christians are free to worship on any day, even many days. The day of rest (the sabbath was sundown Friday to sundown Saturday) is a shadow or lesser image of Jesus Christ). We now dwell in the realities of what these things pointed to.
We are told that Paul preaches to midnight. This is another one of those clues that gives us the sense that Paul knows he may not be coming back. In fact, he isn’t stopping at midnight. We typically take our church gatherings for granted. However, when it may be your last one with these people, such a meeting would take on great significance. We are not guaranteed tomorrow. Thus, we should not take our gatherings lightly. God teach us to love one another with all of our hearts.
Verses 7-8 set up a classic situation. The description of a young man would place him between 20 and 40 years old. I would lean to the younger side of this range. Luke gives us several factors in a row that lead up to the young man falling out of a window. First, Paul has preached up to midnight and does not seem to be stopping. Second, there were “many lamps” in the upper room where they were gathered. I would assume that these are oil lamps. It would make the room warmer and mixed with exhaust. They are on the third floor with a sleepy, young man sitting in a window. It is at this point that Eutychus falls out the third-story window to the ground below. Paul’s words may seem to contradict the next statement, but we should not ignore Luke’s statement, “he was taken up [picked up] dead.”
This interrupts the service. Of course, in any gathering of God’s people, there may be an series of things that we want to do together, such as: eating, worshipping and hearing the Word of God preached. However, our ultimate purpose is to glorify Jesus and encourage one anther in the faith.
We are told that Paul rushes down and falls upon the young man. I don’t believe this means he tripped and fell upon the lad. This is reminiscent of 1 Kings 17, where Elijah lays on the dead boy, praying for God to bring him back to life.
Paul’s statement that the boy is not dead, i.e., “Do not trouble yourselves, for his life is in him,” can be seen a contradiction to the earlier statement of death. However, it is even more likely that it is Paul’s statement after he knew that God had heard him and touched the young man. Regardless, faith and the will of God are both involved here. Paul has been preaching about the resurrection of Jesus, no doubt. Here is fresh proof of God’s power over life. This would powerfully impact the group. Essentially Paul is saying that everything will be alright. In fact, Paul goes back to preaching.
They return to the upper room, where Paul preaches until morning. It then mentions that the young man was brought in alive. This makes the most sense if the young man was still unconscious and being looked over since Paul’s prayers. To say his life is in him does not mean that he was dancing in the street. In fact, he may have still been unconscious. By morning, however, he is well enough to come join the group. What a demonstration of God’s miraculous grace to this young man. This is a true resurrection.
When we think about the resurrection, we can think of it as only a future promise that seems disconnected from our present. However, the message of the resurrection speaks to our present. It shows us that we don’t have to fear threats in the present, whether they physically threaten our life or metaphorically threaten it.
In 1 Corinthians 15:32, Paul talked about fighting with wild beast in Ephesus. I don’t think he is talking about literal beasts. The mob and Demetrius were as offspring of the beast empire that Rome represented. Of course, Paul did not fight with them in the natural. Rather, he fought the intimidating spiritual powers through the power and leading of the Holy Spirit.
We don’t have to fear these spiritual power, or the natural powers. Everything about the cross and death says that we have lost; it didn’t work; God doesn’t love you or care about you; He is not keeping His promise. It says all those things that the devil tempts us to believe, at least that is what our flesh hears. Yet, three days later, when Jesus is resurrected, we see that we shouldn’t listen to the enemy in our hearts and mind. We must not look at the things of this world and extrapolate from what we see a conclusion about God’s care for us.
The resistance and difficulty that we experience in this world, even from our own flesh, says nothing about God’s love for us. God is greater than everything that we may face. We don’t deny the reality of those difficulties, but instead, we recognize the greater reality of God’s power over them. May God help us to walk in faith, our eyes upon Him and not upon what we see down here!