Follow-up; Giving. Acts 20:1-6
We start a new chapter and a new movement because
Paul, as we have seen, has been on his third missionary journey but now he is
leaving Ephesus. He has been there for a little over two years and is going to
leave and retrace the steps that he took on the second missionary
journey—going to Troas, crossing over to Philippi and Thessalonica, and
spending some time in Macedonia and then moving south. And a lot of the first
part of chapter twenty reads sort of like a travelogue, so of course it is
going to be important to have a map in front of us (This is why they put maps
in the backs of the Bibles).
The follow-up is that Paul is retracing his steps to the
churches he has established. All through this chapter we see more of a glimpse
of PaulÕs history as a pastor, as a guide, and a leader in these churches that
he has established. Then there is something that is not brought out within the
text but if we want to understand where he is going and what is going on, when
we look at related passages in the epistles, especially 2 Corinthians and
Romans which are written during this part of his third missionary journey, we
see something related to the doctrine of giving that is important and needs to
be emphasized every now and then. Whenever we look at the scriptural teaching
on giving it is a little bit of a jolt, I think, to some people but it is
something we need to pay attention to as part of our spiritual life.
Paul is going to leave Ephesus and head north to Troas
and then head across the Aegean Sea to Macedonia. Then on his return he will
come back to Troas and Miletus. That is where he has a meeting with the elders
at Ephesus.
Acts 20:1 NASB ÒAfter the
uproar had ceased ÉÓ So this places us in time at the end of the riot which
occurred in Ephesus. As the gospel was taught it challenged their belief
system, and as they turned to God and believed in Christ the result of that was
that the people were no longer spending their money on all of the little
magical charms and depictions of various gods and goddesses that were being
manufactured by the silversmiths and it was hurting their livelihood. As has
been pointed out, when people operate on biblical principles of finance,
biblical principles emphasizing responsibility in how you handle money, not
living on a debt system, then it impacts on how they personally handle their
money. And it also impacts how groups of Christians who have been well taught
biblically are going to emphasize managing their money well, their investments
well, not living on debt, not spending frivolously. There are going to be
families that save and build for the future. But when you see a country going
more into paganism where people are more self-absorbed and there is a greater
emphasis on satisfying whatever their wants and desires are right now, what
happens is they spend frivolously and donÕt save for the future. They go into
debt and live on borrowed money all the time and the end result eventually is
that it brings about a collapse of the culture. And we are living in the midst
of that.
We have all these things that are going
on in Washington related to the debt crisis and to just funding the government
and getting a budget, and it is just absurd. And we have seen this for forty or
fifty years where government leaders seem to have this complete disjunction
between how they handle large sums of money and how they handle their personal
finances. No individual in Washington lives and spends their money the way they
spend taxpayersÕ money. But the more we get into a pagan, self-absorbed,
Me-oriented culture the more it impacts how we handle finances.
What we see in a microcosm in Ephesus
is just how Christianity impacts how people handle their money.
ÒÉ Paul sent for the disciples, and
when he had exhorted them and taken his leave of them, he left to go to
Macedonia.Ó What he means by the disciples here are the believers who are in
Ephesus. These are the ones who are the learners. The word for disciple in the
Greek is mathetes. The verb is not
used in Acts here and it is one of the few times after the Gospels that the
term ÒdiscipleÓ is used. It refers to those who are going somewhere in the
Christian life. They are learners, they are studying the Word; the word
disciple is not a synonym and never has been for a believer. Some people get
into that error in the Gospels and before long you begin to realize that they
have a works oriented salvation. Because as Jesus talks about the things a
disciple should do, if you have to do something in order to be a Christian, in
order to be saved, then you have a works salvation. This is typical of a
variety of theological systems but most notably we see it in Reformed theology
and in lordship salvation.
So he calls the disciples together.
These would be the believers who have a more positive attitude, those who are
growing, those who have demonstrated a desire to know the Word and to live it
in their lives. Then he departs to go to Macedonia. We see that his ultimate
objective is to go to Macedonia but how he gets there is not specifically
stated in the passage. In fact, in these three verses we see more of a summary.
We have to look at some of the things that are in the epistles to understand
what was going on at this point in PaulÕs life. Luke gives us just a very brief
travelogue.
Acts 20:2 NASB ÒWhen he had
gone through those districts and had given them much exhortation, he came to
Greece.Ó At that time Greece was restricted to the southern area, the area of
Achaia. All Luke is telling us in a very short manner is that he goes to that
region which is Macedonia.
Acts 20:3 And {there} he spent three
months ÉÓ That would be in Corinth. Ò É and when a plot was formed against him
by the Jews as he was about to set sail for Syria, he decided to return through
Macedonia.Ó He is down in Corinth and then he is determined to go back to
Jerusalem because he has purposed this by means of the Spirit. This is using
the same phrase that we find in a number of places that reference some sort of
specific divine guidance. In Acts chapter nineteen Paul specifically stated
that this was done en to pneumati,
in or by means of God the Holy Spirit (19:21). So he was getting specific
divine guidance to go where? To go to Jerusalem after he had passed through
Macedonia and Achaia. So God the Holy Spirit is directing him to go to
Macedonia and then to Achaia before he goes to Jerusalem and before he goes to
Rome—the same terminology. Using the article before the noun pneuma for ÒSpiritÓ is unusual, and
where it is found mostly in the Gospels and in Acts it is related to some sort
of specific divine guidance. Sometimes the article is dropped off and it still
has the idea of something more than the filling of the Spirit, it has to do
with prophetic guidance. So again, Paul is making this determination under the
ministry of God the Holy Spirit.
Paul heads north from Ephesus to Troas
where he is planning to join Titus. There is no mention of Titus in Acts here. He
plans to have Titus accompany him to Macedonia. Titus is coming with news from
Corinth and Paul gets tired of waiting for Titus in Troas and so he leaves and
goes on to Philippi in Macedonia where he will connect with Titus. The verses
for Titus are in 2 Corinthians 12:12, 23. It is at that time when he meets up
with Titus that he writes 2 Corinthians.
2 Corinthians 2:12 NASB ÒNow when I came to Troas for
the gospel of Christ and when a door was opened for me in the Lord ÉÓ By that he means he has
had an opportunity to reach the Word and to proclaim the gospel in Troas. [13]
ÒI had no rest for my spirit, not finding Titus my brother; but taking my leave
of them, I went on to Macedonia.Ó He is restless, he is impatient, his target
is Macedonia, and Titus has not appeared. So Paul is there about a week in
Troas and then he leaves. He goes on from there to Philippi where he finally
connects with Titus.
2 Corinthians 7:5, 6 NASB
ÒFor even when we came into Macedonia our flesh had no rest, but we were
afflicted on every side: conflicts without, fears within. But God, who comforts
the depressed, comforted us by the coming of Titus.Ó Luke doesnÕt go into all
the details of the opposition and the persecution that Paul faced during this
time. But Paul faced an increasing amount of opposition and persecution, part
of which is described in 2 Corinthians. It was a time when they had little
rest, he was physically tired and facing a tremendous amount of
opposition—Òconflicts without, fears within.Ó Fears within doesnÕt mean
that he was necessarily out of fellowship, it is that when we face certain
circumstances there are anxieties, emotional reactions that take place in the
area of fear or worry or anxiety. The issue at that point is how we are going
to handle that. Are we going to handle that by using some of the ten
problem-solving devices (the ten stress-busters)? Are we going to use the
faith-rest drill or doctrinal orientation? Are we going to trust in God to
solve the problems? Or are we going to give in to the anxiety or the fear that
has arisen because of the external circumstances?
Paul is talking about the fact that on
the outside he is facing adversity. (Adversity is what we face on the outside.
On the inside is when we respond negatively or wrongly to the outside
adversity. Then we experience stress.) His conclusion is, ÒBut God, who
comforts the depressed, comforted us by the coming of Titus.Ó What he means by
ÒusÓ here is that there are more people with him than just himself. He is
travelling at this time with at least Luke because in the narrative in Acts 20
when he gets to Macedonia he picks up Luke. The last time we saw Luke with him
was when he left Philippi, and apparently Luke stayed behind in Philippi to
pastor and lead that congregation.
This has been several years since his
second missionary journey when he established churches in Philippi and
Thessalonica, and now through these areas and beyond other churches are
established. There are groups of believers now scattered throughout Macedonia.
Paul takes his time to travel throughout Macedonia. The indication is from 2
Timothy that he has gone as far as Illyricum which is in the areas of Serbia,
Bosnia, the former areas of Yugoslavia on the coast of the Adriatic. He does
that until winter approaches, and as it does in the winter of 56-57 AD
he has to head south down to Corinth because it is too cold to stay up in the
area of Macedonia. There he is going to minister for three months É Òand when a
plot was formed against him by the Jews as he was about to set sail for Syria,
he decided to return through Macedonia.Ó
What we learn from this is that the
typical port that you would depart from in Corinth to go to Syria is at
Cenchreae. It was here that he would have departed, but they get word that the
Jewish opposition has hired a hit squad to kill Paul. So Paul decides to leave
the group and to head north.
Acts 20:4 NASB ÒAnd he was
accompanied by Sopater of Berea, {the son} of Pyrrhus, and by Aristarchus and
Secundus of the Thessalonians, and Gaius of Derbe, and Timothy, and Tychicus
and Trophimus of Asia.Ó So he has a group of Gentiles (there may have been one
or two Jews) and they are from different churches in different areas that he
has planted. They took a ship and head back to Troas whereas he takes off on
his own, accompanied by Luke.
Acts 20:5 NASB ÒBut these
had gone on ahead and were waiting for us at Troas.Ó The ÒusÓ indicates that
Luke, the writer, has joined up with Paul. The two of them take the land route
and the others take a ship back to Troas.
Acts 20:6 NASB ÒWe sailed
from Philippi after the days of Unleavened Bread ÉÓ Another name for Passover.
So they celebrate the Passover. ÒÉ and came to them at Troas within five days;
and there we stayed seven days.Ó So they observe the Jewish holy days in
Philippi with the believers that are there. This is another indication of the
transitional nature of Acts. This is not something that most believers would do
today. Most Christians would have no idea what the Jewish calendar was. But this
was part of their culture. They are not putting themselves under the Law, this
is their ethnic background, their culture, and they have observed the Jewish
high holy days on their calendar, not as part of their Christian life or
something that makes them more spiritual. It was something that was very much a
part of their ethnic heritage. At this time Paul has further ministry in Troas.
A side trip for just a minute to talk
about one facet of his ministry. Paul has been teaching, encouraging, and strengthening
them. As part of what he has been doing, we learn from 2 Corinthians and Romans
that he has been taking up a collection for the saints in Jerusalem. This is
important to understand in terms of the doctrine of giving because we come from
a theological heritage where there are some different views on the whole
methodology of giving. Our tradition has been heavily influenced by some
Plymouth Brethren theology—in good ways and some not so good ways. The
Plymouth Brethren was a breakaway denomination that broke away from the their
perceived apostasy of the Anglican church in the early 19th century
in England. They are called Plymouth Brethren because on of the first places
where they met and began to really formulate their understanding of the ministry
of the local church was in Plymouth, England. They are called Plymouth Brethren
because of their emphasis on the fact that the men in the congregation were the
ones who were to lead the congregation and to teach the congregation. Plymouth
Brethren do not believe in an official, professional, pastoral leadership of
the church. In Plymouth Brethren ecclesiology they believe that the men in the
church should lead the church. At almost every meeting of the Plymouth Brethren
they will observe the LordÕs table.
One of the more famous Brethren
ministers in the mid-nineteenth century was a man named George Meuller, of
Bristol. He had an orphanage. He is known in church history as a man did not
believe that it was right to ever ask anybody for a dime, and that if God was
going to supply his needs for the orphanage then all he needed to do was talk
to God about it and God would provide, and that was all there was to it. You
did not ever mention financial need to anyone. And there are some remarkable
stories about how the orphans were down to the last little crumb of bread and
they would gather together for breakfast in the morning and pray that God would
provide bread for them, and a bread truck would break down in front of the
front door. Things like that. God was always supplying their need.
Well that is wonderful; that is his
conviction. But that is not biblical. That is not something the Bible teaches.
In fact the apostle Paul did just the opposite and went to the congregations
and said there was a famine going on in Jerusalem and our brothers in Christ
are suffering because of it. He instructed the Corinthians church to set aside
money on the first day of the week for the collection for Jerusalem. Then when
he came he would take what they had collected back with him to Jerusalem. He
went through the churches taking up a collection for a specific need which he
talked about, prayed about, indentified, and challenged people in the churches
to meet.
Too often in our environment we react
to the crazy extremists on television. IÕve been in services where six or seven
collections were taken up. People are just done for money in many situations in
Christianity, and so there is a tendency to react to that and go to the other
extreme and never mention money. But neither is a pattern that is authorized by
Scripture. Scripture doesnÕt authorize a specific pattern, and so it is a
decision that should be made by each ministry and each congregation as to how
they are going to handle these kinds of things.
Romans 15:25, 26 NASB Ò but
now, I am going to Jerusalem serving the saints. For Macedonia and Achaia have
been pleased to make a contribution for the poor among the saints in
Jerusalem.Ó Macedonia and Achaia refers to the Gentile believers and the saints
in Jerusalem are the Jewish believers. This recognizing that there is a
relationship and that Christians are dependent in some sense on their Jewish
brethren because they were the ones who were the custodians of the Scriptures
of the Old Testament, and they are the ones through whom the Messiah came. Paul
talks about that as a form of indebtedness to their fellow Jewish believers in Jerusalem.
[27] Ò É For if the Gentiles have shared in their spiritual things, they are
indebted to minister to them also in material things.Ó The Gentiles have been
blessed through the Abrahamic covenant, they have been blessed through the
descendants of Abraham. Their duty as Gentiles is also to minister to them, the
Jewish believers in Jerusalem, in material things. So he is clearly teaching that
there is a responsibility on the part of believers to financially and
materially take care of other believers who are in legitimate need.
This is not socialism. Socialism is
when a government comes along and imposes requirements, mandates and percentages,
and taxes people to shift wealth from one group to another group, and in order
to transfer that wealth from one group to another group. But Christian giving
is all based on individual volition.
One of the things that can always be
noticed is when a liberal who reads a passage like this says that we need to
take care of the poor, and immediately they translate it into some sort of
government program. They say the government needs to do this. They go back into
the Old Testament. God accuses the wealthy in Israel of ignoring the poor, and
so they say we need to have programs to take care of the poor. It is an
individual responsibility. In every one of these circumstances and contexts it
had to do with individual believers who were failing in their personal,
individual responsibilities to provide for the needs of those who were
destitute. It didnÕt have to do with a corporate or government responsibility,
it had to do with individual responsibility.
In the Old Testament there were two
ways of giving. First of all there was a mandated way of giving, called the
tithe. There were three tithes. And there was also freewill giving. There was
no command in the Old Testament to give anything until the Mosaic Law. Prior to
the Mosaic Law there are two times in Genesis where there is a reference to
believers giving a tithe. Once with Abraham and the other was Jacob. It was a
freewill offering though, not the result of a mandate. The first command for
believers to give anything to God was in the Mosaic Law, which had three
different tithes. The first one was a ten per cent tithe. It was like a tax.
Under the theocratic government of Israel where God ruled over Israel this
functioned similar to an income tax to supply the financial needs of the
bureaucrats, i.e. the priesthood.
Numbers 18:21 NASB ÒTo
the sons of Levi, behold, I have given all the tithe in Israel for an
inheritance, in return for their service which they perform, the service of the
tent of meeting.Ó
The second tithe was imposed upon all
Jewish citizens, both believers and unbelievers, to support the costs of the
temple sacrifices.
Deuteronomy 14:22, 23 NASB
ÒYou shall surely tithe all the produce from what you sow, which comes out of
the field every year. You shall eat in the presence of the LORD
your God, at the place where He chooses to establish His name, the tithe of
your grain, your new wine, your oil, and the firstborn of your herd and your
flock, so that you may learn to fear the LORD
your God always.Ó
This was like having a large national
celebration every year. They would take ten per cent. If there was a really bad
year they wouldnÕt be taking very much, and so they wouldnÕt be eating and
drinking very well at the national birthday party, so to speak. But if they had
prospered well during the previous year and the national gross product was high
then they would be eating the finest of everything. They would have a
tremendous celebration. In the Old Testament God tied physical blessing to
spiritual obedience. This was an annual barometer, as it were, to measure the
spirituality of the nation. If they were obedient God would prosper the people,
and bless them in terms of the abundance of their crops. If they were
disobedient then just the opposite would happen. The women would be barren,
they would have droughts, the ground would become hardened, their livestock
would not produce and their incomes would go down.
The third tithe was only taken every
third year. This was to be taken up in order to provide something of a safety
net for people who were truly without within the society and with no one to
provide for them. First of all, the Levite, then the stranger [foreigner] who
is left destitute in the land, the fatherless [orphans] and the widows.
There is nothing wrong with having some sort of safety next, but what has to be guarded against is a safety net turning into a hammock. This is exactly the kind of thing that we have in our society. We have built a safety net that has formed into a hammock and people donÕt want to get out of the hammock. This was taken care of in the Mosaic Law because this wasnÕt going to provide an enormous amount of income for those who were destitute. It would keep them alive and provide the basic necessities.
These three different tithes were
mandatory; they were part of the Mosaic Law. They donÕt apply to anybody
anymore.
Then there was also a freewill
offering.
Leviticus 22:18, 21 NASB
ÒSpeak to Aaron and to his sons and to all the sons of Israel and say to them,
ÔAny man of the house of Israel or of the aliens in Israel who presents his
offering, whether it is any of their votive or any of their freewill offerings,
which they present to the LORD for a burnt offering É When a man offers a sacrifice of peace
offerings to the LORD to fulfill a special vow or for a freewill offering, of the
herd or of the flock, it must be perfect to be accepted; there shall be no
defect in it.Ó
What survives into the New Testament
church is only the freewill offering. It is not something where a percentage is
mandated. But giving is mandated.
Malachi 3:8 NASB ÒWill
a man rob God? Yet you are robbing Me! But you say, ÔHow have we robbed You?Õ
In tithes and offerings.Ó If they were not giving their tithes into the storehouse
of the temple they were stealing from God; they were taking GodÕs money. He is
speaking to the nation Israel because they were disobedient in relation to the
laws of the tithes. They were not giving to the Lord to take care of the widows
and orphans. The giving was individual. There was a mandate for ten percent,
which would be used to provide this minimum safety net. It is not a socialistic
scheme. But they didnÕt want to do that. The correction was to bring all of the
tithes into the storehouse. The storehouse is not the church. In the ancient
world temples were used as banks.
Malachi 3:10 NASB ÒBring the
whole tithe into the storehouse, so that there may be food in My house, and
test Me now in this,Ó says the LORD of hosts, Òif I will not open for you the windows of heaven
and pour out for you a blessing until it overflows.Ó
As pointed out earlier, under the
Mosaic Law there is the connection between physical material prosperity and
obedience to God. Remember, they didnÕt have the Holy Spirit, they didnÕt have
the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and there has to be some ways to have some
concrete, measurable and quantifiable metrics for determining whether or not
they were being spiritual.
When Paul goes on his second missionary
journey he is met in Macedonia by Titus who brings him word.
1 Corinthians 16:1 NASB ÒNow
concerning the collection for the saints, as I directed the churches of
Galatia, so do you also.Ó They have already been taking up a collection. Notice
both the word for collection and then the word for saints has a different
article. It is Òthe collectionÓ for the saints in Jerusalem, and then Òas I
directed the churches of Galatia, so do you also.Ó Notice this is not an
option. He is using the word diatasso
in the Greek, which means to command, to issue and order. He is issuing an
order because this is a part of the Christian life responsibility. [2] ÒOn the
first day of every week each one of you is to put aside and save, as he may
prosper, so that no collections be made when I come.Ó He recognizes that it is
important to do this in an orderly manner and that it was to follow a certain
methodology where every week they would put aside something and not just wait
until he got there. This is also indicated in Romans 15:26.
The point that we see here is that Paul
is not hesitant to instruct on how believers should use their personal
resources. He is very bold in terms of how he tells them they should use their
time and their talent and their treasure. So this gives us some great insights into
the doctrine of giving. The believers in Jerusalem were destitute and so other
believers were solicited to aid them financially.
The order was that on the first day of
the week they were to lay something aside. So there was a plan and this is what
every believer should do. The giving should be regular and consistent, just
like saving for the future. Sometimes people like to give for special events
and special times, and that is nice, but Christian organizations donÕt operate
on big gifts coming at different times. What really helps Christian
organizations is consistency, because when they have a consistent regular
income they can somewhat predict on the basis of that income and then they can
responsibly budget their resources because there is a regular consistent income
being provided.
1 Corinthians 16:3 NASB
ÒWhen I arrive, whomever you may approve, I will send them with letters to
carry your gift to Jerusalem.Ó So they were going to pick someone who was
responsible and trustworthy who would be given the money to take to Jerusalem.
That is a general approach in 1
Corinthians 16. There is more detail in 2 Corinthians 8.
2 Corinthians 8:1 NASB
ÒNow, brethren, we {wish to} make known to you the grace of God which has been
given in the churches of Macedonia É Ó Where was Paul
when he wrote 2 Corinthians? He is in Macedonia. Were the Macedonians very
wealthy? Not at all. Several time he mentions that they are very poor, yet they
gave out of their poverty. He is bragging to the Macedonian believers to the
Corinthian church. [2] Ò É that
in a great ordeal of affliction their abundance of joy and their deep poverty
overflowed in the wealth of their liberality.Ó It wasnÕt easy for them to give
but they gave even though they didnÕt have much. Their motivation was their joy
in Christ. We are motivated by our own spiritual gratitude for what God has
provided for us. The word there for deep is bathos,
which indicates something of great depth—the depth of
their poverty. It is not that they are giving from their abundance; they are
giving from their lack of anything. They are giving in a way that shows their
grace orientation. Grace orientation supplies abundantly the needs of others,
just as GodÕs grace abundantly supplies ours.
2 Corinthians 8:3 NASB
ÒFor I testify that according to their ability, and beyond their ability, {they
gave} of their own accordÉÓ Beyond their ability doesnÕt mean they pulled out
their Visa card and put it on their card and were then going to pay it off.
They didnÕt have credit like that, they just recognized that they were going to
have to refrain from certain things in their life instead of spending what
little they had on some of the pleasures of life. They were going to give that
money for the ministry of the Lord.
In 2 Corinthians chapter
nine they go on to describe a bit more about their motivation from their
orientation to GodÕs grace.
2 Corinthians 9:5 NASB
ÒSo I thought it necessary to urge the brethren that they would go on ahead to
you and arrange beforehand your previously promised bountiful gift, so that the
same would be ready as a bountiful gift and not affected by covetousness.Ó He
is going to send some of his entourage down to Corinth to teach giving and to
have them set aside money that would be collected when Paul arrived.
2 Corinthians 8:5 NASB
Òand {this,} not as we had expected, but they first gave themselves to the Lord
and to us by the will of God.Ó Paul talks about the fact that the foundation is
first of all our relationship with the Lord. It is not about the money; it is
not about how much we give; it is about our relationship with the Lord. The
priority is our own personal spiritual life and spiritual growth, and giving is
a byproduct of that.
The foundation begins in verse 9 with the
understanding of salvation. NASB ÒFor you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though
He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, so that you through His poverty
might become rich.Ó He is following the pattern of GodÕs grace giving through
salvation.
Also emphasized is
consistency in verse 11: ÒBut now finish doing it also, so that just as {there
was} the readiness to desire it, so {there} {may be} also the completion of it
by your ability. [12] For if the readiness is present, it is acceptable
according to what {a person} has, not according to what he does not have.Ó Some
people have more and some less, and each has to give as unto the Lord in
relation to how God has prospered us and according to the principle of
generosity.
2 Corinthians 9:6 NASB ÒNow this {I say,} he who
sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and he who sows bountifully will also
reap bountifully. [7] Each one {must do} just as he has purposed in his heart,
not grudgingly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.Ó A cheerful
giver there has to idea of someone who is generous and grace oriented in their
giving. [8] And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that
always having all sufficiency in everything, you may have an abundance for
every good deed; as it is written, ÒHE SCATTERED ABROAD, HE GAVE TO THE POOR, HIS RIGHTEOUSNESS
ENDURES FOREVER.Ó
God is the one who
provides for us.
This is what Paul is
doing in part of his ministry. As part of his teaching, encouraging and
strengthening believers he is also
teaching them about giving and taking up a collection that he will take with
him to the church in Jerusalem.