Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: June 10th (Ezekiel 15 & Acts 12:25—13:12)
Episode Date: June 9, 2021Wood fit only for burning. The start of Paul's first missionary journey. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in ...supporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Ezekiel chapter 15.
And the word of the Lord came to me.
Son of man, how does the wood of the vine surpass any wood,
the vine branch that is among the trees of the forest?
Is wood taken from it to make anything?
Do people take a peg from it to hang any vessel on it?
Behold, it is given to the fire for fuel.
When the fire has consumed both ends of it and the middle of it is charred,
is it useful for anything?
Behold, when it was whole, it was used for nothing.
how much less when the fire has consumed it and is charred can it ever be used for anything?
Therefore thus says the Lord God,
like the wood of the vine among the trees of the forest,
which I have given to the fire for fuel,
so have I given up the inhabitants of Jerusalem,
and I will set my face against them.
Though they escape from the fire, the fire shall yet consume them,
and you will know that I am the Lord when I set my face against them,
and I will make the land desolate,
because they have acted faithlessly, declares the Lord God.
Ezekiel chapter 15 contains just one short oracle in which Israel is compared to a vine.
Daniel Blocks suggests that some connection might be seen between this oracle and the second
oracle of the preceding chapter, in the words, How Much Less of verse 5, which he sees as relating to
Chapter 14, verse 21. For thus says the Lord God, how much more when I send upon Jerusalem my four
disastrous acts of judgment, sword, famine, wild beasts and pestilence, to cut off from it,
man and beast. Block also sees verse 8, with its resemblances to chapter 14, verses 21 to 23,
as giving further substance to these connections. The oracle consists of a metaphor,
the wood of the vine, followed by an interpretation, concluding with a recognition formula,
and you will know that I am the Lord. The House of Israel was compared to a vine on several
occasions in scripture, most notably Isaiah chapter 5 and Psalm 80. Isaiah chapter 5 verses 1 to 7.
Let me sing for my beloved, my love song concerning his vineyard. My beloved had a vineyard on a very fertile hill.
He dug it and cleared it of stones and planted it with choice vines. He built a watchtower in the
midst of it and hewed out a wine vat in it and he looked for it to yield grapes.
But it yielded wild grapes. And now, O inhabitant,
of Jerusalem and men of Judah, judged between me and my vineyard. What more was there to do for my
vineyard that I have not done in it? When I looked for it to yield grapes, why did it yield wild grapes?
And now I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard. I will remove its hedge, and it shall be
devoured. I will break down its wall, and it shall be trampled down. I will make it a waste,
it shall not be pruned or hoed, and briers and thorns shall grow up. I will also command
command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it. For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the
house of Israel, and the men of Judah are his pleasant planting. And he looked for justice,
but behold, bloodshed, for righteousness, but behold an outcry. Psalm 80, verse 8 to 16,
You brought a vine out of Egypt. You drove out the nations and planted it. You cleared the ground
for it. It took deep root and filled the land. The mountains were covered with its shade,
the mighty cedars with its branches. It sent out its branches to the sea, and it shoots to the river.
Why then have you broken down its walls so that all who pass along the way pluck its fruit?
The bore from the forest ravages it, and all that move in the field feed on it.
Turn again, O God of hosts. Look down from heaven and sea. Have regard for this vine,
the stock that your right hand planted, and for the sun whom you made strong for yourself.
They have burned it with fire. They have cut it.
it down, may they perish at the rebuke of your face. Going back even further in scripture,
Jacob uses vine imagery in his blessing of the tribes, especially in his blessing of Judah in Genesis
chapter 49, verse 22. Other instances of vine imagery can be found in places like Deuteronomy
chapter 32, verse 32, Jeremiah chapter 2 verse 21, and Josea chapter 10 verse 1. Vine imagery in several
of these places is used to speak of Israel's failure in some manner, whether with its degeneration
from a cultivated vine to a wild one, or to refer to the destruction of the vineyard. In the Gospels,
Jesus picks up on this imagery in speaking of himself as the true vine, and also in telling
the parable of the wicked vine dresses. Imetry of a vine will reappear in a couple of chapters
time, with Ezekiel's parable of the eagle and the vine. The vine imagery of this chapter develops
a different comparison from those that we see elsewhere. Its focus is upon the useless character
of the wood of the vine for any purpose but burning. The chapter begins with a number of rhetorical
questions about the wood of the vine, underlining its uselessness. One couldn't even fashion a useful
peg or pin from it. As Joseph Blenkinsop observes, the contrast between the way that the imagery of the
vine is used here and other places where it is used is noteworthy. Typically the vine is an image of
fruitfulness and growth. However, here the vine is dead. The question is whether the wood of the
unfruitful vine is useful for any other purpose. The vine is short-lived. It only lives for about
40 years. Its wood is unsuitable to fashion any useful object from. You can't build with it.
It's only possible service as firewood. Given the history of the use of the imagery of the vine
for the House of Israel, the story implied by the dead vine would not be difficult to discern.
Jerusalem's narrative has arrived at its terminus.
The vine has ceased to bear fruit and is dead, is being cut down,
and the only question is what to do with its wood.
As it has no practical value for construction,
it will be used as fuel for the fire.
And when the fire has burned much of it and what remains is charred,
it is of even less use.
At this point, Jerusalem is fruitless, dead,
and what remains of it has been greatly charged
by Babylonian invasions and mass deportations.
What remaining value does Jerusalem have?
The parts of Jerusalem that escaped the earlier fires of invasion
would yet be consumed by later ones.
The vineyard of the land would be desolated.
It has no residual purpose or practical use.
A question to consider.
Can you enumerate the different ways that vine imagery is employed in Scripture?
Acts chapter 12 verse 25 to chapter 13 verse 12.
And Barnabas and Saul returned from Jerusalem.
Jerusalem when they had completed their service, bringing with them John, whose other name was Mark.
Now there were in the church at Antioch prophets and teachers, Barnabas, Simeon who was called Niger,
Lucius of Cyrene, Manian, a lifelong friend of Herod the Tetrarch, and Saul. While they were
worshipping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, set apart from me Barnabas and Saul for the work
to which I have called them. Then, after fasting and praying, they laid their hands on them and sent
them off. So being sent out by the Holy Spirit, they went down to Solution, and from there they sailed
to Cyprus. When they arrived at Salamis, they proclaimed the word of God in the synagogues of the Jews,
and they had John to assist them. When they had gone through the whole island as far as Paphos,
they came upon a certain magician, a Jewish false prophet named Bar Jesus. He was with the pro-consul,
Sergius Paulus, a man of intelligence who summoned Barnabas and Saul and sought to hear.
the word of God. But Elimus the magician, for that is the meaning of his name, opposed them,
seeking to turn the proconsul away from the faith. But Saul, who was also called Paul,
filled with the Holy Spirit, looked intently at him and said,
You son of the devil, you enemy of all righteousness, full of all deceit and villainy,
will you not stop making crooked the straight paths of the Lord? And now behold,
the hand of the Lord is upon you, and you will be blind and unable to see,
the sun for a time. Immediately, mist and darkness fell upon him, and he went about seeking people
to lead him by the hand. Then the proconsul believed, when he saw what had occurred, for he was
astonished at the teaching of the Lord. Acts chapter 13 begins Paul's first missionary journey.
It is part of a transition from Jerusalem and out into the wider world. With it comes a shift
in focus, a movement into travel. There are several missionary journeys which accent travel much as we
see in the book of Luke, as over a third of the book is concerned with the movement from
Galilee down to Jerusalem. Barnabas and Saul going down to Jerusalem at the end of chapter
11 and returning at the end of chapter 12, book ends the story of Peter's deliverance from prison.
It also marks a sort of passing on of the baton, whereas the focus has been upon Peter to
this point. Now the narrative focus shifts to Paul and his companions. John Mark accompanies
them from Jerusalem. He is the son of Mary in whose house the Jerusalem Church met for prayer.
The church in Antioch was introduced to us back in Acts chapter 11, verses 19 to 26. There the church
had been founded primarily among a diaspora population, but the message of the gospel had been
spread further by some Sirenians and Cypriots. Barnabas, a Levite of Cyprus himself, was sent there
from Jerusalem at a later point. Here we learn of the prophets and the teachers in the Antioch Church.
They clearly have a number of gifted men working there.
The church has a number of leaders, perhaps overseeing different constituent communities of the larger Antioch Church.
One of the features of the early church, as we see it in Acts, is to have a number of teachers and leaders in each church, rather than simply one.
Some suggest that there are two different groups mentioned here, the first set of three, Barnabas, Simeon and Lucius, being prophets, and the second set of two, Manian and Saul, being teachers.
As Craig Keener claims, however, this is likely too neat a division, not least because we see Paul exercising prophetic gifts at various points.
The earliest church had more charismatic forms of ministry, prophecy and other things like that, alongside more institutional forms of ministry, and the Antioch Church provides an example of this.
The list of prophets and teachers is a diverse one.
The cosmopolitanism of the early church is something that should always strike us as we read the Book of Acts.
Many of the leaders of the church were extremely widely travelled, familiar with several different cultural settings,
able to speak in a number of different languages, and certain of them were also very well connected.
Barnabas, of whom we have heard several things so far, is one of them.
Simeon called Niger is another.
Many have reasonably speculated that, given his name, he might have been a black African.
Niger was a common name among Romans, so this doesn't prove his ethnicity one way or another.
If he was an African, however, he wasn't the only one, as Lucius, who was most likely one of the founders of the church, was from Cyrene in present-day Libya.
The Roman Empire included within it much of the very north of Africa.
The empire surrounded the Mediterranean on all sides.
As it is often a matter of modern concern, we should note the groups populating Roman North Africa would in many cases be very similar to those found in other parts of the Mediterranean part of the empire.
Sireini was originally a Greek settlement with a sizable Jewish population.
Much of the population of many parts of Roman North Africa
would have consisted of Romanized North Africans
living alongside Greeks, Romans, Jews and others.
However, there would have been darker-skinned Africans in many of these places,
so we shouldn't be surprised at the possibility that Simon might have been one.
We've already encountered a black African,
the Ethiopian eunuch, as the first Gentile convert back in Chapter 8.
Some have identified Lucius with Luke, an identification that has a long history in the church.
It is, however, an unlikely one.
Mannion is another important figure.
As he was raised with Herod Antipas, he was likely an older man of some social status,
although it's possible that he was a higher-class slave, who might later have become a freedperson.
The Antioch Church was engaged in worship and fasting, when the Holy Spirit instructed them, most likely through prophecy,
to set apart two of their most valuable men for a work appointed to them.
They fasted and prayed for them, and then they laid their hands on them,
appointing and charging them for their mission and sending them forth.
The church, directed to send them by the spirit and laying their hands on them,
is the means by which the Holy Spirit himself sends out Saul and Barnabas upon their journey.
They begin by going to Sulusha nearby on the Syrian coast,
and then they sail to Cyprus, a large island in the eastern Mediterranean,
beneath modern-day Turkey.
Barnabas, we should remember, came from Cyprus,
and the Church of Antioch had strong Cypriot connections.
As Paul will generally do on his missionary journeys,
he proclaims the word of God in Jewish synagogues on the island,
his messages to the Jews first and then later to the Greeks.
We should recall that most of the Jewish population at this period
lives outside of the land of Palestine,
in many parts of the Roman Empire.
In practically every city the early church mission,
would visit, there would already be Jews to be found. Barnabas and Saul are assisted and accompanied by
John Mark, who is Barnabas's cousin, who had joined them in Jerusalem. They arrive at Salamis, the main
port city, and they make their way throughout the island. Salamis may have had as many as 150,000
inhabitants, something that's derived from the fact that it had a theatre that could sit 15,000.
With its large population of Jews, there are a number of synagogues there, and after
spending some time there, Barnabas and Saul go through the entire Ireland, as far as Paphos,
which is about 115 miles away by the southern coastal route. At Paphos, they encounter a Jewish
magician and false prophet named Bar Jesus. He is associated with the pro-consul, Sergius Paulus.
Apparently word of the mission of Barnabas and Saul had spread, because Sergius Paulus wants to hear
from them about the word of God. Yet this Jewish magician associated with him, Bargeus, also called
Elemus seeks to oppose them and to prevent the pro-consul from turning to the faith.
Jeff Myers has highlighted the fact that this is a Jewish sorcerer.
He's a false prophet who's providing false counsel to a Gentile ruler.
He's like the character of Wormtong with Theodon in the Lord of the Rings.
He's leading someone astray and making it hard for him to see the truth.
In this particular conflict, we're seeing a broader conflict between the church as the
council of the rulers of the nations and the false Jewish council that is provided by
unbelieving Jews like Bargesus or Elamus. We've previously seen conflicts with magicians in the story of Simon
the Sorcerer back in chapter 8. There Simon was juxtaposed with Philip and here Elimus or Bargesis will be
juxtaposed with Saul. Elimus has two names within the text, Bar Jesus and Elimus. And here we see that
Saul has another name. He's also called Paul and hereafter that will be the name that Luke uses of him.
Luke is always attentive to the names that he gives to characters,
and when he uses two different names for a character,
those names are seldom used without close consideration.
It is noteworthy that Saul is called Paul in the same narrative
in which we encounter Sergius Paulus, who has the same name.
In verse 9 we read,
But Saul, who was also called Paul,
and we might wonder what the also refers to.
Does it mean that Paul had two names, Saul and also Paul?
or is it rather about connecting the name of Paul with the name of Sergius Paulus,
who's also called Paul?
I think that might be the case.
In this context, there are significant word plays with names.
The name of the sorcerer, Bargesus, does not seem to be the same word as Elimus.
Bargesse seems to mean the son of Jesus, much as Barnabas is referred to as the Son of Encouragement.
Why is he called Elimus? What's going on there?
How do you get from Bar Jesus to Elamus, and what's the significance of these names?
That is one question to consider.
Another question is what sort of play is going on with Paul's name?
Should we focus upon the meaning, which means small?
Perhaps he is called that because he is the least of the apostles,
not worthy to be called an apostle because he persecuted the church.
Maybe that's part of it.
But more likely in this immediate context is that it is related to the name of the pro-consul.
There is the conflict between a false,
counsellor and a true counsellor. Now it would seem that if your name is Sergius Paulus,
your fitting counterpart might well be called Paulus too, and so Paul is the fitting counterpart
and counsellor to the man who is his namesake. Bar Jesus is also an interesting name. Throughout the
Gospels, Jesus is the name that we associate with Christ almost exclusively. In the book of Acts,
there are a couple of occasions where we see another character called Jesus. We have a reference to Joshua
as Jesus, in the Greek form of that name.
But it seems strange that we would have bar Jesus mentioned at this point,
only for him to be called immediately afterwards by another name.
His name seems to connect him with Jesus, or with the Jesus' movement.
Maybe his name, literally Son of Jesus, highlights this falsehood.
It might indicate that he is someone who is seemingly affiliated in some way with the
early church, but he is a false Jewish prophet and an opponent.
His opposition to Paul is framed along these lines.
You have a false Jewish prophet who has an identity, a name that threatens the movement of the church
because of its proximity to the name of Christ Jesus.
And he is named as if he was the son of Jesus.
But he is in fact no son of Jesus.
He's not a disciple of Jesus at all.
Later on we encountered the sons of Skeva, who tried to cast out demons in the name of Christ.
And then the demons attack them and drive them away, wounded and naked.
Earlier on we have Simon the sorcerer who's confronted by Peter.
He claims to be a magician and he wants the power of the Holy Spirit.
Once again there is a conflict with someone who is close,
but in some way claims to represent or be associated with the Jesus movement,
but who is actually false, he's actually an opponent.
Paul's conflict with Bar Jesus here might highlight plays of identity,
indicating that he is the true counsellor to Sergius Paulus,
because he is Paulus himself,
and on the other hand that he is the one who reveals the true identity of the magician,
not as Bar-Jesus, a true son of Jesus, but as Elimus the sorcerer.
Now what does Elimus mean?
Rick Strullin has suggested a connection with the character of Elam, who is a descendant of Shem.
Elam is the one whose line leads to the Persians, and the Medes and the Persians are associated with magic.
They were famed for it.
This name then would present him not as part of the Jesus movement, not as someone associated,
with Jesus Christ, a son of Jesus, but as a false magician, like the magicians of Pharaoh,
or the false advisors that were in Herod's court in Matthew chapter 2.
Beyond playing their names off against each other in different ways,
there is also a play of the character of Paul over against the character of Elemus.
Saul's name is switched to Paul in the narrative in the immediate context
in which Paul speaks the word of judgment to Elemus the sorcerer,
and what he says is quite arresting.
It's almost exactly the same as the judgment that befell him on the road to Damascus.
Elamus is struck blind and he has to be led by the hand.
And there are other details that might recall that story.
In Acts chapter 9, Ananias is instructed to lay his hands upon Saul so that he would regain his sight.
In this chapter, the hand of the Lord rests upon the false prophet Elamus so that he loses his sight.
There is a play here with Saul's older identity and with his new identity.
and this I believe is why his name is shifted at this point.
The judgment that falls upon Elamus is the judgment that fell upon Paul's old identity as Saul.
Elimus is said to make crooked the straight paths of the Lord.
We saw a street called straight back in chapter 9 of Acts.
It was the street to which Saul went after his vision.
Now he is no longer making straight paths crooked.
The hand of the Lord came upon him in a street called straight.
And this juxtaposition between the two characters,
between Saul and Elmas really comes to the foreground in the narrative as the two are held over against each other as Saul judges the sorcerer.
We saw a similar juxtaposition between Philip and Simon the Sorcerer back in Chapter 8.
Paul, having his name changed, is dissociated from the old Saul, the false persecutor.
His conversion was a judgment upon his old identity, a judgment on persons like Bar Jesus,
who present themselves as false associates of Christ, like the sons of Skeva or like.
Simon, but who are not of Christ at all. The juxtaposition of Saul or Paul and Bargesus
sets up Paul as the true counsellor to Sergius Paulus, the Christians as the true
counsellors of the rulers of the Gentiles, and as the false counsellor is struck with blindness,
something about his true spiritual state is revealed. Sergius Paulus can now be counselled
by another Paul, one who has his same name, and now he will be advised well, taught the
message of the kingdom, no longer guided by a blind man. The false Jewish prophet, who in spite of
his other name, is not in fact associated with Jesus, but is a son of the Elamites, associated with
the magicians, the Persians, and that sort of false religion. He's judged. Here in Saul, who is also
called Paul, we have the true wise man, a wise man who will bring counsel that will lead to the
healing of the nations. A question to consider. Looking at the references to the Holy Spirit is
in this passage, how can we see the spirit working in the mission of Saul and Barnabas?
