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Summary: In Christ we see the entire scope of the punishment of sin and avenue of rescue, and because of Jesus, Paul preaches to those in the synagogue to hear the truth. What we must see in this is this our purpose as well!

To the Ends of the Earth, Part 19

Preach the truth, no matter your audience!

Acts 13:13-41

Dismiss children for nursery (under 4) and children’s church (ages 4-7)

Introduction

- Welcome to Seasons Church & 2024 sermon series, “To the Ends of the Earth”

-- In 2023 we unpacked the beginning of all history (Creation/Fall/Promise)

-- And we looked ahead, anticipated the coming & victory of Jesus (Revelation)

-- But, in order to get to the end, we have to be busy doing the work now (Acts)

- Last week we saw the work of God: for people to come TO salvation IN Christ

-- APP: The true revelation of Scripture is that Jesus is the Messiah we need

-- AND … the conviction of the Spirit leads to a place of choosing: Him or Us

-- It is not a grey area, it is not a man-made truth, it is the only truth that saves us

- Today, we will continue our examination on the topic of faithfulness to Jesus

-- Pt 3 has lots of scripture, but they will be quick to amplify the truth of scripture

-- Sometimes, it’s easier to be faithful when someone plots a path for you

-- What we see from Paul is exactly that …

- Read Acts 13:13-41 / Pray

- TR: As we dive in, let’s set a add to the background from last week …

Point 1 – The mission to the Gentiles begins

- First order of business is to recognize an obvious name change (~47 AD)

-- Saul becomes Paul in the book of Acts, and is known as that from here on

• “Saul” was his Jewish name – would be easily identifiable (REM: Pharisee)

• “Paul” is the name chosen as a Gentile – probably given to him at birth

• REM: He is a Roman citizen, Paul would be his “Roman” (birth) name

- RE: Last week (Ch. 13) we saw him in the governor’s court, Sergius Paulus

-- He rebuked the spirit within Bar-Jesus because of the Holy Spirit’s power in him

-- APP: For us: it is the signaling of his mission to the Gentiles beginning

- Previously, he spent lots of time ministering to Jews b/c “Saul” had a testimony

-- Now, he was stepping out as the minister to the Gentiles; called by God to do so

-- Much like the wedding Cana being Jesus’ first ministry event, this was Paul’s

-- (info) Romans 11:11, “God has appointed me as the apostle to the Gentiles.”

- In v13 we see something of interest to us today (do you struggle in witnessing?)

-- Mark leaves the missionary field, and he leaves Paul and Barnabas’ partnership

-- We do not have a specific reason for this – all that we know is it happens

- There are some ideas here for why he did this which include:

• Mark did not agree with the mission to the Gentiles (he was a Jew)

• Or he could not submit to the authority of Paul & Barnabas (his uncle)

• Or maybe, he just did not have the stamina for the work of evangelism

- The point to see is this: Mark chose to leave the Gospel work & go home

-- BUT … we know that he was restored and came back b/c we have his Gospel

-- APP: For us we can see this as an encouragement: Ministry isn’t easy

-- We may want to quit … but endurance is required in order to succeed

- TR: It is in their endurance that we see how God uses Paul and Barnabas

Point 2 – Paul and Barnabas begin witnessing to the Gentiles

- Side note: there are others with them (earlier in Ch 13); diverse group of men

-- However, most commonly we see in Acts these two men grouped together

-- There are two things to see as we unpack Paul and Barnabas in Pisidia

1. Paul and Barnabas enter Antioch of Pisidia and preach (vv14-16)

- Don’t miss where they went to preach … Note this for the importance it holds

-- They walked into the heart of Judaism, into a synagogue on the Sabbath

- He knew the faithful to God would be there – people living for God daily

-- He know that this was the place to be on the Sabbath – a place to reach people

-- APP: It would be where he would find both Jews and God-fearing Gentiles

- As visitors to the synagogue, they were invited to address the attendees

-- Might seem unusual, but it was actually common for visitors to be asked

- Now, understand this: an “invitation to speak” meant something very specific:

-- It meant reading from the Torah & expounding on what it meant for instruction

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