Athens: Understand Your Audience. Acts 17:16-34
We are now in Athens and this is one of three passages
in Acts where the apostle PaulŐs message is recorded. There is also one in
Antioch in Acts 13 and there is one in Acts 20. It is in these three different
messages of Paul that we get a glimpse of the core of his message. There is a
different audience each time and it is important to pay attention to that. One
of the great axioms of military strategy is to know your enemy. While the
person we are witnessing to isnŐt quite an enemy it is somebody we need to
understand if we are going to clearly articulate the gospel. Paul doesnŐt have
a canned approach. He doesnŐt go after each audience the same way. Because
people come from different backgrounds, have different education levels, and
people are at different locations along the path, we might say, in coming to
faith in Christ. Some have never heard anything about Christianity. There are
others who have hears quite a bit about Christianity and almost all we have to
do is breathe hard and they will fall over in faith in
Christ. They have heard the gospel, have maybe been raised in the church, the
terminology is familiar with them but they have never quite reached the point
where they have realized that they personally need to believe that Jesus died
on the cross for their sins. We never know who and
where people are, so we need to be engaged in asking them questions and finding
out their backgrounds and where they are coming from.
In Acts 13:15-41 we studied extensively PaulŐs address
to the Jews in the synagogue in Antioch. It was interesting to see how he used
what they knew in order to present the gospel. He had a firm understanding. In
the text we have an abbreviated version of what Paul said, not everything he
said. This is how many of the discourses in Scripture are handled. They are not
summaries, they Are simply divinely edited snapshots of what was said. Not
every word the person spoke at the time is recorded in Scripture but every word
given in Scripture they said. Paul has an assumption that he makes in Acts 13,
that is, that his audience is made up of Jews who understand and believe the
Torah and Gentiles who were God-fearers. So he doesnŐt need to define certain
terms for them. When he talks about God they have a shared commonality in the
meaning of that particular word. They know they are both speaking of the God of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. His starting point is with the Old Testament and Old
Testament prophecy related to the Messiah.
But when we come to Acts 17:17-31 we have a completely
different audience which is made up on the intelligentsia of the Greek world in
Athens, which was one of the three foremost university towns in the ancient
world (Rome, Athens, Alexandria). When Paul talks to them he doesnŐt assume
that they understand or have as a common foundation the truths that are in
Genesis 1-11. He is not going to take that for granted; he has to define his
terms. We are going to see that as he tries to communicate the gospel to these
pagans in Athens when he mentions Jesus and the resurrection they are not even
sure what he is talking about, they immediately redefine his terms and think he
is talking about two new gods they can put into their pantheon. It is a great
example of how the unbelieving mind is going to take what we say in certain
evangelistic situations and completely twist and distort what we say, because
they have been in the situation of suppressing the truth in unrighteousness for
so long that no communication can take place. So we have to work down to
basics.
But that doesnŐt apply to everybody. It is disturbing
that there are some people who think that every person needs to get the same
basic four points and theyŐve heard the gospel. This has been called drive-by
evangelism: ŇI yelled, believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved,Ó
and therefore I did my evangelistic duty. I had no conversation with them, I
donŐt know if they understood anything that I said, but I witnessed to them
because I just threw the gospel at them.Ó That is absolutely absurd and
worthless. God, of course, can use anything but when we look at the Scriptures
and any of the examples we have of a believer communicating with an unbeliever
there is a lot more going on that simply citing a pat formula and then moving
on down the road. There is conversation. There is conversation with those who
end up in condemnation sometimes, for those who reject what has been taught.
Then there is ongoing conversation and follow-up with people who have heard the
truth and have responded to the truth.
As we get into Acts 17 we need to take some time to
see how Paul is handling these sceptics, these rationalists, these
philosophers, these self-defined intelligentsia. What we are going to examine
is PaulŐs address to the Council of the Areopagus—a
sort of oversight council in Athens—where he is going to explain to them
what it is that he is teaching.
About this address, a great New Testament Greek
scholar by the name of Adolf Deissmann stated back at
the turn of the last century:
ŇThis is the greatest missionary
document in the New Testament. I have taught through this passage several times
and every time I finish with it I am always frustrated because I always feel like
there is so much more that can be taken out the passage.Ó
One of
the things I want to do just to explain this a little better as we get into
Acts 17:16ff is to follow the basic procedure of what is called basic Bible
study methods.
What we are really talking about here is how to
present the gospel more effectively. God the Holy Spirit makes it clear to the
individual, but that doesnŐt give us an excuse to be ignorant, sloppy or
irresponsible in our presentation of the gospel. That is not an excuse for
intellectual laziness in the presentation of the gospel. We are to communicate
as clearly and as precisely as we can. So the first principle is, in any kind
of evangelism we have to know the person we are talking to. We have to know our
audience. That means we have to talk to them, to ask questions, find out what
they think and what they understand. Paul understood his audience in Athens. He
understood their philosophical systems—what the Stoics believed, what the
Epicurians believed, and he used that information in
his presentation.
DonŐt get in an argument. That gets one totally
distracted and diverted from the point. It is not an ego context. We just make
it as clear as we can and it is not about us being right.
DonŐt use a formulaic gospel presentation. A lot of
times as we are developing our ability to communicate the gospel to people we
start with things that give us the basic structure. But donŐt be limited by
that because what is going to be used for one person isnŐt going to mean anything
to somebody else. We need to just know the basic facts and have conversation
with people and then present the gospel.
In commentaries on this passage in Acts chapter 17 you
will find, on the one hand, theologians talking about the fact that Paul is using
a lot of the things that the Stoics and Epicurians
believed in order to find common ground between what he is saying, his view on
Christianity, and what they believed. On the other hand, there are people who
say that there is no common ground in that sense between the gospel and what
these groups believed. The common ground is explained in Romans chapter one. It
isnŐt some other aspect; it is that every unbeliever has an internal knowledge
of the existence of God. They have reached God-consciousness and in Romans 1
they are suppressing that truth in unrighteousness. And what we are doing many
times in evangelism is giving them information that just makes them mad as a
hornet. Because they have been suppressing the truth for a long time and we
come along and tweak them with it.
How is it that somebody can be Jewish and Buddhist and
the rest of the Jews arenŐt mad at them? You can be a Jewish Buddhist but you
canŐt be a Jewish Christian. Jewish Christians believe everything that Judaism
believes in the sense of the Mosaic authorship in the Torah, the God of the Old
Testament, the absolutes of the Torah and the Ten Commandments, and yet they
believe a little bit more. Jewish Christians believe that Jesus is the Messiah.
You canŐt be Jewish and believe that but you can be Jewish and believe that
there is no personal God, that God never spoke to Moses, that God never
appeared on Mount Sinai, that there is no such thing as creation. You can
believe all of these things that are 180 degrees contrary to the Torah and
still be Jewish—unless you believe Jesus is the Messiah. Then you canŐt
be Jewish anymore. It is not logical.
One of the first things we have to understand when
witnessing to people is that the problem isnŐt logic. It is an issue of
spiritual authority with God.
The four key elements in the development of any kind
of Bible study.
1.
Observation. We have to ask, what does the text say?
2.
Interpretation.
This answers the question, what does it mean? In other words, what did the
original author intend to communicate to the original audience?
3.
How does that
fit with other parts of Scripture? This is called correlation where we compare
Scripture with Scripture.
4.
Application.
What does it mean to me?
Anybody who has studied the Bible very much knows that
the more time you spend in observation the less time is needed to spend in
interpretation, correlation and application. So many people just fly right past
observation. They donŐt take enough time to ask what the text says, they
immediately jump within five minutes to what am I supposed to do? And they
donŐt even understand what the passage says to begin with.
So what does the text say? What is happening in this
particular episode as Paul comes into Athens.
There are six different sections here. The first is in
17:16-21. This occurred in March of 51 AD.
Acts 17:16 NASB
ŇNow while Paul was waiting for them at Athens, his spirit was being provoked
within him as he was observing the city full of idols.
[17] So he was reasoning in the
synagogue with the Jews and the God-fearing {Gentiles,} and in the market place
every day with those who happened to be present. [18] And also some of the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers
were conversing with him. Some were saying, ÔWhat would this idle babbler wish
to say?Ő Others, ÔHe seems to be a proclaimer of
strange deities,Ő—because he was preaching Jesus and the resurrection.
[19] And they took him and brought him to the Areopagus,
saying, ÔMay we know what this new teaching is which you are proclaiming? [20]
For you are bringing some strange things to our ears; so we want to know what
these things mean. [21] (Now all the Athenians and the strangers visiting there
used to spend their time in nothing other than telling or hearing something
new.)Ó
They are just intellectually
promiscuous. They run around with any new idea that comes up and donŐt take any
time to really get serious about anything. That is what characterized them.
Then we have PaulŐs response. Basically
what we have just learned is that as he was talking about Jesus and the
resurrection that has really caused them much confusion because it violates
their belief system. The Areopagus is a place, Mars
Hill. On top of Mars Hill they would convene a council of approximately thirty
leaders who would evaluate somebodyŐs teaching. So there was the Council of the
Areopagus
which met on the top of the hill. Paul is going to be asked to explain
in more detail what it is that he is teaching. This is what we refer to as
PaulŐs sermon, although it is not really a sermon per se, it is an explanation.
He gives us an example of how he is reasoning, logically explaining what he is
saying.
Belief in God is not illogical. Paul
was intensely logical. It is just that unbelievers and cynics donŐt like his
first principles. Their first principle is that there is no God, end of story.
PaulŐs first principle is: you are suppressing the truth in unrighteousness;
there is a God and He is not a God who is within creation, He is outside of
creation. So Paul is going to challenge the Athenians to worship the creator
rather than the creature (vv. 22-31).
Paul is using this altar to the unknown
god as a touchstone. He is not saying the unknown god is the God he is talking
about. One of the reasons he is doing that is because Socrates was accused of
introducing new ideas and new gods, and that brought a death penalty. Then he
committed suicide. Most Greek communities had several idols to unknown deities
just in case they missed one. They didnŐt want to offend any god so they would
have one or two or more that were to the unknown god, and so Paul uses this
because it shows that they have this God-consciousness; that there is some sort
of deity.
Acts 17:22 NASB
ŇSo Paul stood in the midst of the Areopagus and
said, ÔMen of Athens, I observe that you are very religious in all respects. [23] For while I was
passing through and examining the objects of your worship, I also found an
altar with this inscription, ÔTO
AN UNKNOWN GOD.Ő
Therefore what you worship in ignorance, this I proclaim to you.ŐÓ
There is a play on words
there because the Greek word that he uses for ŇreligiousÓ is daimonion, the word for demon. So if
there was a Jew in the audience listening they would catch
that there was a little tongue-in-cheek humor going on there because of the
word that he used. All false religion has its source in Satan and so he uses a
word that means superstitious or religious and is having a little bit of fun
with them. He is going to proclaim God to them using this as a touchstone to
the fact that it recognizes that they donŐt know everything there is to know
about gods.
The God that he defines (vv. 24-29) is
unlike any deity ever imagined. The reason is that in their philosophical
religious system all of the gods and goddesses were part of the same reality.
There was no creation-creator distinction. All of the gods and goddesses were
part of what has been called the scale of nature or the chain of being.
Acts 17:24 NASB ŇThe God who
made the world and all things in it ÉÓ He immediately establishes that
creation-creator distinction. Ň É since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in
temples made with hands; [25] nor is He served by human hands, as though He needed
anything, since He Himself gives to all {people} life and breath and all
things; [26]
and He made from one {man} every nation of mankind to live on all the face of
the earth, having determined {their} appointed times and the boundaries of
their habitation.Ó That is a great text for the divine institution #5 on
nations. God determines the times, the rise and fall of nations, and their
territorial boundaries. [27] Ňthat they would seek
God, if perhaps they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far
from each one of us [28] for in Him we live and move and exist, as even some of
your own poets have said, ÔFor we also are His children.Ő [29] Being then the
children of God, we ought not to think that the Divine Nature is like gold or
silver or stone, an image formed by the art and thought of man.Ó
Then his challenge to them: Acts 17:30 NASB
ŇTherefore having overlooked the times of ignorance, God is now declaring to
men that all {people} everywhere should repent, [31] because He has fixed a day
in which He will judge the world in righteousness through a Man whom He has
appointed, having furnished proof to all men by raising Him from the dead.Ó
That immediately flies in the face of
everything that the Greeks believed. They were strongly opposed to any idea of
bodily resurrection. They immediately categorized Paul as somebody who was just
absolutely nuts and saying it is impossible as far as they are concerned for
there to be resurrection.
Acts 17:32 Now when they
heard of the resurrection of the dead, some {began} to sneer, but others said,
ÔWe shall hear you again concerning this.Ő [33] So Paul went out of their midst.Ó
This ought to give all of us great
confidence because this is Paul giving one of the best gospel presentations and
he is rejected by almost everybody who listens to him. Just because people
donŐt listen to you and donŐt respond to your gospel presentation doesnŐt mean
you havenŐt effectively and accurately given it. It has to do with their
volition. You have given it and God the Holy Spirit has made it clear to them;
they have rejected it on their own because of their hostility toward God.
However, there is always going to be some who respond.
Acts 17:34 NASB ŇBut some
men joined him and believed, among whom also were Dionysius the Areopagite and a woman named Damaris
and others with them.Ó Paul had a smaller response than at other times in his
ministry.