Chapter 23
Berea and Athens
AT Berea Paul found Jews who were willing to investigate the truths he taught. Luke's
record declares of them: "These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that
they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the Scriptures daily,
whether those things were so. Therefore many of them believed; also of honorable women
which were Greeks, and of men, not a few."
The minds of the Bereans were not narrowed by prejudice. They were willing to investigate
the truthfulness of the doctrines preached by the apostles. They studied the Bible, not
from curiosity, but in order that they might learn what had been written concerning the
promised Messiah. Daily they searched the inspired records, and as they compared scripture
with scripture, heavenly angels were beside them, enlightening their minds and impressing
their hearts.
Wherever the truths of the gospel are proclaimed, those who honestly desire to do right
are led to a diligent searching of the Scriptures. If, in the closing scenes of this
earth's history, those to whom testing truths are proclaimed would follow the example of
the Bereans, searching the Scriptures daily, and comparing with God's word the messages
brought them, there would today be a large number loyal to the precepts of God's law,
where now there are comparatively few. But when unpopular Bible truths are presented, many
refuse to make this investigation. Though unable to controvert the plain teachings of
Scripture, they yet manifest the utmost reluctance to study the evidences offered. Some
assume that even if these doctrines are indeed true, it matters little whether or not they
accept the new light, and they cling to pleasing fables which the enemy uses to lead souls
astray. Thus their minds are blinded by error, and they become separated from heaven.
All will be judged according to the light that has been given. The Lord sends forth His
ambassadors with a message of salvation, and those who hear He will hold responsible for
the way in which they treat the words of His servants. Those who are sincerely seeking for
truth will make a careful investigation, in the light of God's word, of the doctrines
presented to them.
The unbelieving Jews of Thessalonica, filled with jealousy and hatred of the apostles, and
not content with having driven them from their own city, followed them to Berea and
aroused against them the excitable passions of the lower class. Fearing that violence
would be done to Paul if he remained there, the brethren sent him to Athens, accompanied
by some of the Bereans who had newly accepted the faith.
Thus persecution followed the teachers of truth from city to city. The enemies of Christ
could not prevent the advancement of the gospel, but they succeeded in making the work of
the apostles exceedingly hard. Yet in the face of opposition and conflict, Paul pressed
steadily forward, determined to carry out the purpose of God as revealed to him in the
vision at Jerusalem: "I will send thee far hence unto the Gentiles." Acts 22:21.
Paul's hasty departure from Berea deprived him of the opportunity he had anticipated of
visiting the brethren at Thessalonica.
On arriving at Athens, the apostle sent the Berean brethren back with a message to Silas
and Timothy to join him immediately. Timothy had come to Berea prior to Paul's departure,
and with Silas had remained to carry on the work so well begun there, and to instruct the
new converts in the principles of the faith.
The city of Athens was the metropolis of heathendom. Here Paul did not meet with an
ignorant, credulous populace, as at Lystra, but with a people famous for their
intelligence and culture. Everywhere statues of their gods and of the deified heroes of
history and poetry met the eye, while magnificent architecture and paintings represented
the national glory and the popular worship of heathen deities. The senses of the people
were entranced by the beauty and splendor of art. On every hand sanctuaries and temples,
involving untold expense, reared their massive forms. Victories of arms and deeds of
celebrated men were commemorated by sculpture, shrines, and tablets. All these made Athens
a vast gallery of art.
As Paul looked upon the beauty and grandeur surrounding him, and saw the city wholly given
to idolatry, his spirit was stirred with jealousy for God, whom he saw dishonored on every
side, and his heart was drawn out in pity for the people of Athens, who, notwithstanding
their intellectual culture, were ignorant of the true God.
The apostle was not deceived by that which he saw in this center of learning. His
spiritual nature was so alive to the attraction of heavenly things that the joy and glory
of the riches which will never perish made valueless in his eyes the pomp and splendor
with which he was surrounded. As he saw the magnificence of Athens he realized its
seductive power over lovers of art and science, and his mind was deeply impressed with the
importance of the work before him.
In this great city, where God was not worshiped, Paul was oppressed by a feeling of
solitude, and he longed for the sympathy and aid of his fellow laborers. So far as human
friendship was concerned, he felt himself to be utterly alone. In his epistle to the
Thessalonians he expresses his feelings in the words, "Left at Athens alone." 1
Thessalonians 3:1. Obstacles that were apparently insurmountable presented themselves
before him, making it seem almost hopeless for him to attempt to reach the hearts of the
people.
While waiting for Silas and Timothy, Paul was not idle. He "disputed . . . in the
synagogue with the Jews, and with the devout persons, and in the market daily with them
that met with him." But his principal work in Athens was to bear the tidings of
salvation to those who had no intelligent conception of God and of His purpose in behalf
of the fallen race. The apostle was soon to meet paganism in its most subtle, alluring
form.
The great men of Athens were not long in learning of the presence in their city of a
singular teacher who was setting before the people doctrines new and strange. Some of
these men sought Paul out and entered into conversation with him. Soon a crowd of
listeners gathered about them. Some were prepared to ridicule the apostle as one who was
far beneath them both socially and intellectually, and these said jeeringly among
themselves, "What will this babbler say?" Others, "because he preached unto
them Jesus, and the resurrection," said, "He seemeth to be a setter forth of
strange gods."
Among those who encountered Paul in the market place were "certain philosophers of
the Epicureans, and of the Stoics;" but they, and all others who came in contact with
him, soon saw that he had a store of knowledge even greater than their own. His
intellectual power commanded the respect of the learned; while his earnest, logical
reasoning and the power of his oratory held the attention of all in the audience. His
hearers recognized the fact that he was no novice, but was able to meet all classes with
convincing arguments in support of the doctrines he taught. Thus the apostle stood
undaunted, meeting his opposers on their own ground, matching logic with logic, philosophy
with philosophy, eloquence with eloquence.
His heathen opponents called his attention to the fate of Socrates, who, because he was a
setter forth of strange gods, had been condemned to death, and they counseled Paul not to
endanger his life in the same way. But the apostle's discourses riveted the attention of
the people, and his unaffected wisdom commanded their respect and admiration. He was not
silenced by the science or the irony of the philosophers, and satisfying themselves that
he was determined to accomplish his errand among them, and, at all hazards, to tell his
story, they decided to give him a fair hearing.
They accordingly conducted him to Mars' Hill. This was one of the most sacred spots in all
Athens, and its recollections and associations were such as to cause it to be regarded
with a superstitious reverence that in the minds of some amounted to dread. It was in this
place that matters connected with religion were often carefully considered by men who
acted as final judges on all the more important moral as well as civil questions.
Here, away from the noise and bustle of crowded thoroughfares, and the tumult of
promiscuous discussion, the apostle could be heard without interruption. Around him
gathered poets, artists, and philosophers--the scholars and sages of Athens, who thus
addressed him: "May we know what this new doctrine, whereof thou speakest, is? for
thou bringest certain strange things to our ears: we would know thereof what these things
mean."
In that hour of solemn responsibility, the apostle was calm and self-possessed. His heart
was burdened with an important message, and the words that fell from his lips convinced
his hearers that he was no idle babbler. "Ye men of Athens," he said, "I
perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious. For as I passed by, and beheld your
devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, To the Unknown God. Whom therefore ye
ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you." With all their intelligence and general
knowledge, they were ignorant of the God who created the universe. Yet there were some who
were longing for greater light. They were reaching out toward the Infinite.
With hand outstretched toward the temple crowded with idols, Paul poured out the burden of
his soul, and exposed the fallacies of the religion of the Athenians. The wisest of his
hearers were astonished as they listened to his reasoning. He showed himself familiar with
their works of art, their literature, and their religion. Pointing to their statuary and
idols, he declared that God could not be likened to forms of man's devising. These graven
images could not, in the faintest sense, represent the glory of Jehovah. He reminded them
that these images had no life, but were controlled by human power, moving only when the
hands of men moved them; and therefore those who worshiped them were in every way superior
to that which they worshiped.
Paul drew the minds of his idolatrous hearers beyond the limits of their false religion to
a true view of the Deity, whom they had styled the "Unknown God." This Being,
whom he now declared unto them, was independent of man, needing nothing from human hands
to add to His power and glory.
The people were carried away with admiration for Paul's earnest and logical presentation
of the attributes of the true God--of His creative power and the existence of His
overruling providence. With earnest and fervid eloquence the apostle declared, "God
that made the world and all things therein, seeing that He is Lord of heaven and earth,
dwelleth not in temples made with hands; neither is worshiped with men's hands, as though
He needed anything, seeing He giveth to all life, and breath, and all things." The
heavens were not large enough to contain God, how much less were the temples made by human
hands!
In that age of caste, when the rights of men were often unrecognized, Paul set forth the
great truth of human brotherhood, declaring that God "hath made of one blood all
nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth." In the sight of God all
are on an equality, and to the Creator every human being owes supreme allegiance. Then the
apostle showed how, through all God's dealings with man, His purpose of grace and mercy
runs like a thread of gold. He "hath determined the times before appointed, and the
bounds of their habitation; that they should seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after
Him, and find Him, though He be not far from every one of us."
Pointing to the noble specimens of manhood about him, with words borrowed from a poet of
their own he pictured the infinite God as a Father, whose children they were. "In Him
we live, and move, and have our being," he declared; "as certain also of your
own poets have said, For we are also His offspring. Forasmuch then as we are the offspring
of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone,
graven by art and man's device.
"And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men everywhere
to repent." In the ages of darkness that had preceded the advent of Christ, the
divine Ruler had passed lightly over the idolatry of the heathen; but now, through His
Son, He had sent men the light of truth; and He expected from all repentance unto
salvation, not only from the poor and humble, but from the proud philosopher and the
princes of the earth. "Because He hath appointed a day, in the which He will judge
the world in righteousness by that Man whom He hath ordained; whereof He hath given
assurance unto all men, in that He hath raised Him from the dead." As Paul spoke of
the resurrection from the dead, "some mocked: and others said, We will hear thee
again of this matter."
Thus closed the labors of the apostle at Athens, the center of heathen learning, for the
Athenians, clinging persistently to their idolatry, turned from the light of the true
religion. When a people are wholly satisfied with their own attainments, little more need
be expected of them. Though boasting of learning and refinement, the Athenians were
constantly becoming more corrupt and more content with the vague mysteries of idolatry.
Among those who listened to the words of Paul were some to whose minds the truths
presented brought conviction, but they would not humble themselves to acknowledge God and
to accept the plan of salvation. No eloquence of words, no force of argument, can convert
the sinner. The power of God alone can apply the truth to the heart. He who persistently
turns from this power cannot be reached. The Greeks sought after wisdom, yet the message
of the cross was to them foolishness because they valued their own wisdom more highly than
the wisdom that comes from above.
In their pride of intellect and human wisdom may be found the reason why the gospel
message met with comparatively little success among the Athenians. The worldly-wise men
who come to Christ as poor lost sinners, will become wise unto salvation; but those who
come as distinguished men, extolling their own wisdom, will fail of receiving the light
and knowledge that He alone can give.
Thus Paul met the paganism of his day. His labors in Athens were not wholly in vain.
Dionysius, one of the most prominent citizens, and some others, accepted the gospel
message and united themselves fully with the believers.
Inspiration has given us this glance into the life of the Athenians, who, with all their
knowledge, refinement, and art, were yet sunken in vice, that it might be seen how God,
through His servant, rebuked idolatry and the sins of a proud, self-sufficient people. The
words of the apostle, and the description of his attitude and surroundings, as traced by
the pen of inspiration, were to be handed down to all coming generations, bearing witness
of his unshaken confidence, his courage in loneliness and adversity, and the victory he
gained for Christianity in the very heart of paganism.
Paul's words contain a treasure of knowledge for the church. He was in a position where he
might easily have said that which would have irritated his proud listeners and brought
himself into difficulty. Had his oration been a direct attack upon their gods and the
great men of the city, he would have been in danger of meeting the fate of Socrates. But
with a tact born of divine love, he carefully drew their minds away from heathen deities,
by revealing to them the true God, who was to them unknown.
Today the truths of Scripture are to be brought before the great men of the world in order
that they may choose between obedience to God's law and allegiance to the prince of evil.
God sets everlasting truth before them--truth that will make them wise unto salvation, but
He does not force them to accept it. If they turn from it, He leaves them to themselves,
to be filled with the fruit of their own doings.
"The preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are
saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise,
and will bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent." "God hath chosen
the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things
of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the world, and
things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to
nought things that are." 1 Corinthians 1:18, 19, 27, 28. Many of the greatest
scholars and statesmen, the world's most eminent men, will in these last days turn from
the light because the world by wisdom knows not God. Yet God's servants are to improve
every opportunity to communicate the truth to these men. Some will acknowledge their
ignorance of the things of God and will take their place as humble learners at the feet of
Jesus, the Master Teacher.
In every effort to reach the higher classes, the worker for God needs strong faith.
Appearances may seem forbidding, but in the darkest hour there is light above. The
strength of those who love and serve God will be renewed day by day. The understanding of
the Infinite is placed at their service, that in carrying out His purposes they may not
err. Let these workers hold the beginning of their confidence firm unto the end,
remembering that the light of God's truth is to shine amid the darkness that enshrouds our
world. There is to be no despondency in connection with God's service. The faith of the
consecrated worker is to stand every test brought to bear upon it. God is able and willing
to bestow upon His servants all the strength they need and to give them the wisdom that
their varied necessities demand. He will more than fulfill the highest expectations of
those who put their trust in Him.
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