Around 884 B.C., King Omri of northern
As the gospel is spreading through ancient
One of the Christian leaders, a man named Philip, is about to go to
Philip goes on his way, and along the way he meets an Ethiopian eunuch riding in a chariot and reading from the Old Testament.
This Ethiopian is also a eunuch. Now, what is a eunuch? A eunuch is someone who has his testicles removed. In the ancient world, there were three reasons—well, four—why someone would be a eunuch. First, a person might be a eunuch because he was born that way, a birth defect. A person might also be a eunuch if he chose to be one in devotion to a cause or in devotion to his god. A person might be a eunuch by punishment; in the ancient world, people were often punished by having their testicles removed. Or, fourth, and this is probably what has happened here, powerful leaders would remove the balls of their servants to curb the hormones causing aggression; by having their balls removed, this would ensure that they would most likely not be motivated to rebellion, and they would place their devotion upon their leader. The eunuch was most likely castrated because he served as treasurer for the Queen of the Ethiopians (the official title is the Kandake or Candace).
The eunuch is reading out of the Old Testament. In particular, he’s reading from the scroll of Isaiah. Isaiah was a prophet in
Philip walks up to the chariot (this would’ve been more like an ox-cart), and he peers inside. “Hey there,” he says. The eunuch, I imagine, is surprised (there’s some random guy walking all alone in the desert), so he says, “Umm… hi.” “Watcha reading?” Philip asks. So the eunuch shows him. Philip asks, “Do you understand who Isaiah is talking about?” The eunuch responds, “No, not really… Do you know who he’s talking about?” “Yeah,” Philip says. “I do. He’s talking about this guy named Jesus.” So he tells the eunuch about how the prophecy is about Jesus’ humiliating death, and he also shares the gospel with him.
This unnamed eunuch is a converted Jew: we know this because he was returning from
Philip answers, “God will accept you now” So he baptizes the eunuch then-and-there.
See, God will accept anyone who comes to Him in faith and repentance. Faith isn’t just knowing the facts about Jesus; it involves commitment to Christ. In our modern American understanding of what “faith” is, we have this skewed idea of faith because we see it in a Greco-Roman lens, spattered with Hellenism, or Greek, abstract thought. The ancient Hebrews didn’t have this same kind of abstract thought; when they thought of “faith,” they didn’t think of just believing something; they associated it with a commitment to something. So when Jesus says, “He who believes in me [has faith in me] will live,” he is virtually saying, “He who commits himself to me will live.” If we commit ourselves to Christ and repent (this is not saying, “I’m sorry,” this is actually changing the way you live!), God will forgive us of our past, present, and future sins, and He will accept us as His friends and children!
The Ethiopian eunuch converted to God nearly 2000 years ago. God’s offer for conversion is open to us now. In the Greco-Roman mindset, conversion is a change in the way we think, but in the Hebraic mindset, conversion is a change in the way we live. In a sense, we convert from selfish, greedy, overly-self-indulgent, and indifferent people, and we become a new kind of person in the world: we were selfish, but we’ve become selfless; we were greedy, but we’ve become generous; we were indifferent to others, now we serve others in love; we were self-indulgent, but now we are God-indulgent: we live God-pleasing, God-honoring, God-serving lives. Christians are a new kind of people in the world, a people of love; this is why Jesus said that his people would be recognized by their love for others. God calls us to conversion, but if this conversion does not involve a change in the way we live, then the conversion is a lie; if we believe we’ve converted to Christianity but have not experienced life-change, even in the smallest amount, then we have convinced ourselves that we are something we are not.
Conversion in the biblical sense holds two different, equally important aspects: first, the way we look at God, others, ourselves, and our world radically changes (Gk strepho). This radical change of perspective results in a transformation of the very way we live (Gk epistrepho). We overthrow our old ways of living—lives rooted in selfishness, greed, indifference to God and others, and self-indulgence— (Heb qal) and we completely turn around and reverse in how we “do life”—we adopt a way of life rooted in love (not mere sentimental gush, but a love rooted in action), a life of selflessness, generosity, compassion and care and justice, a life where we live to please, honor, and serve God (Heb niphal). Conversion is a total transformation of both our thoughts and our actions (Heb hithpael).
God’s offer is open to you: if you come to Him in faith and repentance, you will have become a convert, not just in the way you think, but in the way you live. This new way of life is not a life of laws and regulations; it is a life of fearlessly loving God and others in genuine freedom. We don’t have to embrace God; the choice is ours. God will honor our choice, but we must bear the consequences. If we reject God, we will taste death, in this life and the next; if we embrace Him in faith and repentance, we will taste life—beginning now and stretching into eternity.
1 comment:
Phillip was from a very sucessful church.Life was going well for him. I believe GOD wanted him to remain humble. God wanted him to start again from the begining. Take a new path.
Would you do it?
Many of us get very comfortable with our walk with GOD. Even lazy. We hit the time card every Sunday (maybe) and tell ourselves we are good.
We will all be ashamed when we get heaven and see how little we have done.
Its been said before many preachers and church goer's will be sitting in the pews after the rapture.Teaching and listening to the weak and watered down message.
GOD help us please.
Post a Comment