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Acts of the Apostles 3

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Title: Acts of the Apostles 3


1
Acts of the Apostles 3
  • Paul with a foot in each world

2
Pauls Roman identity
  • Chapter 16 begins the we account of Pauls
    adventures.
  • Paul is accused, obviously falsely, of
    contravening Roman customs, laws.
  • And is arrested and beaten contrary to law for
    Roman citizens.
  • Paul refuses to take advantage of the liberating
    earthquake.
  • Saves the jailer, then refuses freedom and
    presses the issue of the beating.
  • Revealing that he is a Roman citizen!
  • (In his actual letters, Paul never says anything
    about this.)
  • This Roman identity of Paul becomes increasingly
    important in Acts.

3
New directions
  • From this point we hear more and more about
    friction and failures in Pauls preaching in the
    synagogues.
  • In the Areopagus of Athens, Paul reaches toward
    Greek philosophical/religious world.
  • Attempting a synchronism with Greek intellectual
    language.
  • And expresses a new universalism of religious
    experience.
  • At 18 6, he makes the momentous decision to
    abandon the synagogues and go only to the
    Gentiles.
  • Gallio plays a Pilate-like role vis à vis Paul.
    But without serious consequences yet for Paul.
  • At Ephesus Paul finds a community of followers of
    John the Baptist (19 1-7), who are easily
    incorporated into the new belief.
  • But this suggests an interesting historical
    situation followers of John the Baptist still
    active in mid-first cent.
  • And again, he leaves the synagogue and goes to a
    gentile location, the lecture hall of Tyrannus.
  • At 19 21 Paul seems to conclude his work in
    Greece, vows to return to Jerusalem, then on to
    Rome.

4
Paul in Ephesus
  • Acts reports a two-year sojourn in the most
    important city of Asia Minor (ch.19).
  • Performs a Christ-like role in the healing that
    comes of his garments or handkerchiefs.
  • But the power is non-transferable.
  • Rather comic conclusion to the attempted theft of
    Pauls healing power (1916)?
  • And the economic cost of turning Christian in the
    magic books that are burnt.

5
Great is Artemis of the Ephesians
  • An illustration of the clash of cultures? Part
    of the adventures of Paul?
  • Or maybe the real reason Paul had to leave
    Ephesus?
  • Suggests a great clash between Greek fertility
    goddess and emerging Christian belief and the
    economic implications.
  • This Artemis a fusion of the Phrygian Cybele, a
    mother goddess, and/or the Phoenician Astarte.
  • But the real point, for author of Acts, seems to
    be the role of Roman law in relation to Pauls
    mission.
  • Speech of the town clerk (mayor?) emphasizes
    the role of law in adjudicating the complaint
    again Paul and his companions.
  • Heres Artemis

6
Artemis of the Ephesians
7
Prolepsis? Another death in Jerusalem?
  • Pauls speech to the Ephesians in Miletus seems
    to foreshadow his death 2022.
  • As a captive to the Spirit, I am on my way to
    Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me
    there.
  • And none of them will see him again.
  • Much weeping and grief 37-38).
  • Then in ch. 21 We again.
  • More apprehension of danger disciples in Tyre
    tell Paul not to go to Jerusalem (214).
  • Agabus encounter more anticipation of danger in
    Jerusalem (21 10ff).
  • I am ready not only to be bound, but to die in
    Jerusalem (21 13)
  • And in fact, the possibility of death does seem
    to await him.

8
Jew or gentile? In Jerusalem the danger of
double identity.
  • Danger from believers among the Jews.
  • The plan is to show that Paul is a good Jew.
  • But it doesnt finally work.
  • Another commotion in the Temple.
  • And another death threatened (2131).
  • BUT rescued and arrested by Romans.
  • Speaks Greek to the tribune, Hebrew (Aramaic)
    to the Jews (21 37-40).
  • And tells his story of his conversion (2nd time
    this narrative occurs, 22 6-16).
  • Mention of gentiles (22 21) again causes
    violence.
  • The turning point? The Lord appears
    presumably Jesus -- and predicts Pauls witness
    in Rome, as in Jerusalem (23 11).

9
But saved by the Romans
  • Jesus was flogged now Paul is almost flogged.
  • And Paul claims his Roman citizenship in fact
    hes more Roman than the tribune.
  • But in answering the high priest, also insists
    hes a loyal Jew 23 5.
  • In face of conspiracy, Paul is hustled out of
    Jerusalem again saved by Romans.
  • Luke writes some Roman speeches (23 26-30,
    24 2-8, Pauls speech, 24 10-21).
  • Paul appeals to emperors tribunal Rome.
  • Felix gt Porcius Festus gt Agrippa and Bernice.
  • (Festus procurator of Judea from around 60 to
    62.)
  • Paul gives a very Hellenistic/Roman speech to
    Agrippa, telling the conversion story (3rd time),
    becoming more Roman by the minute!
  • And makes a little joke at the end? (26 29).

10
The voyage to Rome
  • Now the narrative becomes a stirring sea story a
    Hellenistic genre. Luke becomes a salty sea
    dog!
  • We again.
  • With lots of seafaring terminology (sea anchors,
    tackle, lowering boats, etc.) and a close
    itinerary of the voyage.
  • Its a large grain ship (27 37).
  • Surprisingly (!), the centurion pays more
    attention to what the ships captain and the
    owner say about sailing than to Paul 27 10.)
  • But Paul is right, even about sailing.
  • Undergirding the ship 27 17.
  • Shipwreck rather exactly described.
  • And everyone survives, even Paul when a viper
    attaches itself.
  • And Malta is touched by the power of the Spirit.

11
Then finally to Rome
  • The Twin Brothers out of Alexandria the
    Dioscuri, Castor and Pollux, an Egyptian cult.
  • Across to Sicily (Syracuse, modern Siracusa),
    then to Reggio Calabria, and up to Bay of Naples
    (Puteoli, modern Pozzuoli).
  • Where they find brethren (adelphoi, Christian
    believers).
  • Then overland to two towns just south of Rome.
    More brethren . . .
  • . . . and sistren?)
  • Then to house arrest in Rome.

12
The end of Pauls story?
  • Doesnt really tell the end
  • Which was, according to second-century tradition,
    execution in Rome.
  • The narrative ends around 61 or 62 (Nero is
    emperor), but was presumably written some 20
    years later.
  • Perhaps Luke intended to write a third volume,
    but wasnt able to?
  • Or tradition about Pauls execution may not be
    right (its late 2nd century)?
  • And theres another tradition that Paul went on
    to Spain.
  • So finally, a mystery.

13
But thematically, not really the end?
  • The Jerusalem/Rome theme remains prominent in
    speech to Roman Jews.
  • Paul continues to preach Jesus in terms of law
    of Moses and all the prophets.
  • Some converted, some not.
  • And the prophecy of Isaiah, used in Luke 810,
    now used to signal the transfer of the Spirit to
    the gentiles.
  • And a concluding statement, that doesnt really
    conclude.
  • A George Lucas sort of ending -- an opening for a
    sequel?

14
Some conclusions about Acts
  • As Jesus ascends in the opening, the Spirit
    descends.
  • And becomes the hidden protagonist?
  • Active in Peter first, then Paul.
  • And negotiates the cultural divide from Judaism
    to gentiles.
  • The continued relevance of Israel, the Hebrew
    Scriptures, even as gentiles predominate.
  • Several key turns, the final Pauls treatment in
    Jerusalem and his rescue by the Roman
    authorities.
  • The error of Pontius Pilate is undone by Festus
    and Felix?
  • The innocent man is not condemned, is not
    executed.
  • And in the last sentence Jesus is proclaimed as
    messiah in Rome.

15
Luke/Acts as narrative
  • The message to the gentiles the Way begins in
    Israel, in the Hebrew Scriptures.
  • Jerusalem, though destroyed and superceded, was
    the site where the Way begins.
  • And so both Hebrew Scriptures and Jerusalem (a
    literary version?) retain presence, authority.
  • The message to the Jews the Way has become
    Hellenized, Romanized.
  • Protected both from Hellenistic cult (at Ephesus)
    and the threat of Jewish violence (in Jerusalem)
    by Roman law.
  • And it survives hardship and danger as it
    traverses the Mediterranean world.
  • And perhaps the ending is that it doesnt end,
    but leaves itself open?
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