Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: June 16th (Ezekiel 35 & Acts 15:36—16:5)
Episode Date: June 15, 2021Judgment upon Mount Seir. The start of the second missionary journey. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in sup...porting 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 35,
The word of the Lord came to me,
Son of man set your face against Mount Seer, and prophesy against it,
and say to it, thus says the Lord God,
behold, I am against you, Mount Seer,
and I will stretch out my hand against you,
and I will make you a desolation and a waste.
I will lay your city's waste, and you shall become a desolation,
and you shall know that I am the Lord,
because you cherished perpetual enmity,
and gave over the people of Israel to the power of the sword at the time of their calamity,
at the time of their final punishment.
Therefore, as I live, declares the Lord God,
I will prepare you for blood, and blood shall pursue you.
Because you did not hate bloodshed, therefore blood shall pursue you.
I will make Mount Seer a waste and a desolation,
and I will cut off from it all who come and go,
and I will fill its mountains with the slain,
on your hills and in your valleys, and in all your ravities,
those slain with the sword shall fall. I will make you a perpetual desolation, and your city shall not be
inhabited. Then you will know that I am the Lord. Because you said, these two nations and these two
countries shall be mine, and we will take possession of them, although the Lord was there. Therefore,
as I live, declares the Lord God, I will deal with you according to the anger and envy that you showed
because of your hatred against them, and I will make myself known among them when I judge you.
and you shall know that I am the Lord.
I have heard all the revilings that you uttered against the mountains of Israel,
saying, they are laid desolate, they are given us to devour,
and you magnified yourselves against me with your mouth,
and multiplied your words against me. I heard it.
Thus says the Lord God,
while the whole earth rejoices, I will make you desolate,
as you rejoiced over the inheritance of the House of Israel,
because it was desolate.
So I will deal with you.
You shall be desolate.
Mount Sia and all Edom, all of it. Then they will know that I am the Lord.
Ezekiel chapter 35 and 36 continue the collection of prophecies of restoration and renewal
with which the book of Ezekiel concludes. The two chapters likely belong together, directed
to contrasting mountains, Mount Sia of Edom in chapter 35 and the mountains of Israel in chapter 36.
The first will be desolated and the others will be restored. Both Edom and Israel,
are addressed with a focus upon their respective lands and features of their terrain.
Mountains, hills, valleys and ravines are mentioned in both chapter 35 verse 8 and chapter 36 verse 6.
The prophecies seem to come under the same divine address with the introduction of chapter 35 verse 1,
functioning for both of the chapters, and Edom continues to be in view into chapter 36,
for instance in verse 5 of that chapter. Therefore thus says the Lord God,
surely I have spoken in my hot jealousy against the rest of the nations and against all Edom,
who gave my land to themselves as possession with wholehearted joy and utter contempt
that they might make its pasture lands a prey.
As Daniel Block notes, chapters 35 and 36 verses 1 to 15 can be read together as two panels,
one speaking of removal of obstacles to restoration and former causes of devastation,
and the other speaking of the renewal that the Lord will then accomplish.
a similar pattern can be seen in the preceding chapter concerning the Lord's judgment
upon the unfaithful shepherds of Israel and his regathering of his flock.
Mount Seer stood for the territory of Edom, of which it was a part.
It was the mountainous region to the south-east of Judah, between the Dead Sea and the Gulf of
Acaba, with the Araba on its east.
Formerly occupied by the Horites, it had been taken over by Esau and his descendants.
Under the regional sway of Israel at several points in its history, the ancient twinning and
rivalry between Esau and Jacob continued in the relations between these two nations.
In Genesis chapter 36, for instance, we can see the descendants of Esau functioning in some respects
as a mirror of those of his twin to the north. In Deuteronomy chapter 23 verse 7, for instance,
we see a continued remembrance in Israel of the fact that Edom was Israel's brother.
Judgment against Eden was declared earlier in the book in chapter 25 verses 12 to 14. Thus says the Lord
God, because Edom acted revengefully against the House of Judah, and has grievously offended in
taking vengeance on them, therefore thus says the Lord God, I will stretch out my hand against
Edom, and cut off from it man and beast, and I will make it desolate, from Teeman, even to
Didan, they shall fall by the sword, and I will lay my vengeance upon Edom by the hand of my
people Israel, and they shall do in Edom, according to my anger and according to my wrath,
and they shall know my vengeance, declares the Lord God.
Edom had not come to the aid of Judah in his day of distress. What was worse, however, was the fact that they had rejoiced in the day of Israel's calamity, taken advantage of its brother's weakness, and prayed upon it.
As Psalm 137 verse 7 declares, remember, O Lord, against the Edomites the day of Jerusalem, how they said, lay it bare, lay it bare, down to its foundations.
This betrayal of the bond of brotherhood is spoken of on several occasions in the scriptures, most notably, perhaps.
in the book of Obadiah. A similar message to Ezekiel chapter 35 and 6 is expressed in condensed
form in Lamentations chapter 4 verses 21 to 22. Rejoice and be glad, O daughter of Edom,
you who dwell in the land of us, but to you also the cup shall pass. You shall become drunk
and strip yourself bare. The punishment of your iniquity, O daughter of Zion, is accomplished.
He will keep you in exile no longer. But your iniquity, O daughter of Eden, he will punish.
will uncover your sins. Other condemnations of and declarations of judgment upon Eden for their
behaviour at the time of Judah's downfall can be seen in Joel chapter 3 verse 19 and Malachi
chapter 1 verses 2 to 5. For Edom's part in making Judah a waste and a desolation, they would
themselves be rendered a waste and a desolation. In this judgment God would demonstrate his justice
and his sovereignty, proving that he is the Lord. They had rejoiced over Judah's downfall,
gloating over their brother, now they would suffer the same fate. The Lord is against them.
The cause of the Lord's firm opposition to Edom is unpacked in the verses that follow.
Edom continues to cherish perpetual enmity, still nursing the rivalry that set Esau against
his brother Jacob from the womb onwards and led him to seek to take his brother's life.
This deep hatred for their brother led them to take delight in giving Israel over to the sword.
The rivalry between Edom and Israel will continue in history, also but
being expressed in the actions of Haman the Eagagite and the Ijimaeans at the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD.
Edom had first received the name Edom in Genesis chapter 25 verse 30,
when he had sought some of Jacob's red red stew from him.
He had received that name in connection with the colour of the stew.
Some commentators have speculated that Esau thought that the stew was a forbidden blood stew,
a position strengthened by various allusions back to the full narrative of Genesis chapter 3 in the passage.
In addition to playing off the term for red, and likely the name Adam also, the name Edom was close to the word for blood, damn.
Ezekiel's prophecy plays with this near homophone in verse six, repeating the word blood four times.
Edom had quite possibly received his name at first out of a hunger for forbidden blood, and his bloodthirstiness continues.
He will be judged accordingly. He would be prepared for and pursued by blood.
his territory would be littered with the bodies of the slain,
and his cities would suffer the same fate
as the fate that caused him to rejoice over his brother.
This would all demonstrate the Lord's identity, sovereignty and power.
With the deportation of Judah by the Babylonians,
leaving only a small remnant of poor Israelites in the land,
the Edomites had fancied that they would be able to possess the land of their brother Israel
in addition to their own territory,
not considering that the land was actually not the possession of Israel,
but the inheritance of the Lord, with Israel dwelling there only on his sufferance.
The time would come when Israel would be restored to the land,
and the Lord would not accept Edom exceeding the bounds of his own portion
to seize the possession of his brother,
continuing the rivalry over the blessing and the firstborn portion
that had continued since the time of the patriarch Isaac their father.
According to Edom's hubris and hatred, the Lord would judge them,
once again demonstrating his identity and power to them in the process.
The way that Edom had spoken concerning the mountains of Israel, to which Ezekiel will soon turn his address in a few verses time at the beginning of chapter 36, failed to consider the Lord. Indeed, it was a matter of magnifying themselves against the Lord in their pride, fancying that the Lord's own land was theirs to consume in their hatred and envy. While there would be a more general reversal of fortunes in the region, the Edomites would not benefit from this. Indeed, they would be rendered desolate, suffering the faith that.
that they had gloated over when it befell Israel.
A question to consider,
in what way ought the Edomites have related to Israel?
What might a faithful Edomite have been like?
Acts chapter 15, verse 36, to chapter 16, verse 5.
And after some days Paul said to Barnabas,
Let us return and visit the brothers in every city
where we proclaim the word of the Lord,
and see how they are.
Now Barnabas wanted to take with them John called Mark,
but Paul thought best not to take with them one who had withdrawn from them in Pamphylia
and had not gone with them to the work, and there arose a sharp disagreement, so that they
separated from each other. Barnabas took Mark with him and sailed away to Cyprus, but Paul
chose Silas and departed, having been commended by the brothers to the grace of the Lord, and he
went through Syria and Salicia, strengthening the churches. Paul came also to Derby and to Listra.
A disciple was there named Timothy, the son of a Jewish woman who was a believer, but his father
was a Greek. He was well spoken of by the brothers at Listra and Iconium. Paul wanted Timothy to
accompany him, and he took him and circumcised him because of the Jews who were in those places,
for they all knew that his father was a Greek. As they went on their way through the cities,
they delivered to them for observance the decisions that had been reached by the apostles and elders
who were in Jerusalem. So the churches were strengthened in the faith, and they increased in numbers daily.
At the end of Acts chapter 15, Paul's second missionary journey begins. Paul and Barnabas had returned
to Antioch after their Jerusalem visit. Having ministered for a while in Antioch, they determined to go
back to the churches that they had visited on their first missionary journey and to see how they
are progressing in the faith. They were very young in their faith, and one can imagine that Paul and Barnabas
would be anxious to hear that they were progressing.
The fact that these churches would be facing persecution
and there were potentially false teachers going around
might also have increased their concern to engage in such a mission.
Barnabas wanted to take John Mark with them.
John Mark was the son of Mary in whose house Jerusalem Christians
had met for prayer in chapter 12.
John Mark was Barnabas' cousin, as we discovered in Colossians chapter 4 verse 10.
John Mark has traditionally been identified with the author of the Second Gospel,
Barnabas and Saul had a major falling out over the inclusion of John Mark.
He had originally accompanied them on the first missionary journey,
but he had abandoned the mission in chapter 13 verse 13.
The disagreement that they have is a very serious one.
We are given the impression that it was very heated.
It is so sharp a disagreement that they have to part ways at this point.
Reading through the Book of Acts,
in many respects we are seeing the highlights of a period stretched out
over almost three decades in several different locations.
We've just had a high point in the events of the Jerusalem Council,
which had followed a very troubling period,
as there had been a serious dispute between Peter and Paul themselves and Antioch,
and teachers from Jerusalem had threatened the entire mission to the uncircumcised.
Now there is another setback with a falling out between two key people
whose shared mission had been so pivotal in the last few chapters.
One can imagine that with such a young movement
and with so much riding upon particular key relationships,
relationships that would have constituted bonds between churches,
we should remember that Barnabas is originally from Jerusalem
and likely the strongest personal tie between the two most important churches,
this would certainly have been a very serious discouragement and setback,
potentially throwing much into uncertainty.
As readers of the Book of Acts in the 21st century,
we know how the story turns out,
but we should try to enter into something of the feelings of the early Christians
and to recognise just how vulnerable they might have felt at some of these junctures.
Knowing of the incredible success that the church has experienced
from the days of the apostles onwards,
we don't feel the full blows of the discouragements in the text.
For those living through such history, however,
it might have felt like riding a roller coaster at times.
Barnabas took along John Mark with him to Cyprus,
As we should recall from chapter 4, Barnabas was a Levite from Cyprus,
while Paul chose Silas to accompany him and goes throughout Syria and Silesia
to encourage and strengthen the churches.
These missions were incredibly important in forging a robust church.
Much of the formation of the church at this stage was not merely about the development of lots of local churches,
but about the development of a lively network between many otherwise isolated churches
across Judea, Syria and at this point Asia Minor,
forging bonds of mutual love and trust
would enable the movement to grow in ways that it could not
if every church was isolated from the others.
Many of the new churches may not yet have had mature Christian ministers
but would have depended heavily upon visiting teachers, prophets and missionaries.
Paul returns to Derby and to Listra.
While at Listera, he encounters a disciple called Timothy,
who is held in high esteem by the Christians in the region.
Timothy's mother was a Jew and his father was a Greek,
which would certainly have provoked severe disapproval
in some more observant Jewish quarters,
although some diaspora Jews may have been more relaxed about it.
The problem was not chiefly an ethnic one, but a religious one.
Intermarriage with people outside of the covenant
was seen as a very serious matter in many parts of the Old Testament.
From 2 Timothy chapter 1 verse 5,
we learned that both Timothy's mother and grandmother were faithful persons
and that he was taught the scriptures from a young age.
So we should not suppose that Timothy's mother was indifferent towards her Jewish faith.
We can speculate over whether or not Timothy's father was a godfairor
associated with the synagogue.
However, the fact that Timothy had not been circumcised
raises the possibility that his mother's marriage was less than ideal,
perhaps arranged by an unbelieving father.
Timothy's religious status would have seemed rather unbelled.
ambiguous then, and might perhaps have been a cause of scandal to Sam.
Timothy himself, though, is a living example of a Jew and Gentile union.
He straddles these two worlds in his very person.
Considering the obstacle that Timothy's ambiguous status might provide for the mission, though,
Paul determines that it would be best to circumcise him,
a course of action that might seem surprising,
given how strongly Paul has recently opposed the circumcision of Gentiles.
Timothy, however, is not a Gentile, but a Jew of Ambassadors.
vigorous origins. Paul's concern is not circumcision, but the cause of the mission. Circumcising
Timothy will help them to accomplish this. The principle that Paul is following here is that
which he describes in 1 Corinthians chapter 9, verses 19 to 23. For though I am free from all,
I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them. To the Jews I became as a Jew,
in order to win Jews. To those under the law, I became as one under the law, though not being
myself under the law, that I might win those under the law. To those outside the law, I became as one
outside the law, not being outside the law of God, but under the law of Christ, that I might win those
outside the law. To the weak, I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all
people, that by all means I might save some. I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share
with them in its blessings. In circumcising Timothy, Paul plays the part of a father to him.
Timothy would come to be immensely important in Paul's later ministry,
serving as Paul's personal representative.
Timothy is Paul's Shiliuk, the one who personally represents Paul,
where Paul himself cannot be.
As such, Timothy would come to participate in the exercise of Paul's apostolic ministry.
He is the co-author of epistles, 2 Corinthians, Philippians, Colossians, 1st and 2nd Thessalonians,
philemon.
He acts as Paul's personal emissary in places like Acts 19, verse 20.
and 1 Timothy chapter 1 verse 3.
He is the one who served Paul so that Paul could give himself to the primary task
of preaching without any distraction,
something that we maybe see in Acts chapter 18 verses 1 to 5.
Timothy could participate directly in Paul's exercise of its apostolic power.
Paul and Timothy are a pair.
They are bound together in a single apostolic mission.
On occasions the distinction between them is made very plain.
Only Paul is the apostle proper.
while on other occasions their alignment is stressed.
Timothy is a co-worker, he's a helper and a sharer in Paul's calling.
Relative to the churches to which they were ministering,
Timothy was to be treated as a bearer of Paul's own authority.
However, relative to Paul, Timothy was a subordinate,
without an independent commission of his own, but rather a share in Paul's.
The relationship between Paul and Timothy is exceptionally close,
and Paul speaks of Timothy as his own son.
The language here is not merely that of emotional closeness, but of representation.
The son represents the father, his authority, his presence and his interests.
It also points to a relationship similar to that which pertained between Old Testament leaders and prophets and their Shiliacs.
In Numbers chapter 13 verse 16, we see that Joshua's name was given to him by Moses,
who also lays his hands on Joshua in Deuteronomy chapter 34 verse 9.
A similar relationship exists between Elijah and Elisha.
Elisha receives a double portion of Elijah's spirit,
the inheritance appropriate to the firstborn,
and as Elijah is taken into heaven,
Elisha addresses him as his father.
Matthew Colvin observes,
That Timothy is a virtual copy of Paul
is underlined by 1 Corinthians chapter 4, verses 16 to 17.
I urge you, imitate me.
For this reason, I have sent Timothy to you,
who is my beloved and faith.
son in the Lord who will remind you of my ways in Christ as I teach everywhere in every church.
The charge to imitate Paul then is accompanied by the sending of Timothy toward the fulfillment of
this end as the son is the preeminent imitator and representation of his father.
As a participant in his father's ministry and as Paul's right-hand man,
Timothy would come to have immense authority to wield,
even being given the commission to choose and appoint church officers
as Paul's representative.
As the apostolic ministry was temporary,
upon Paul's death, Timothy would cease to be the Apostle's apostle,
and would presumably have become a bishop.
Timothy might not usually be in the foreground of the story in the Book of Acts,
but his importance for Paul's missionary work should not be understated.
As Timothy accompanies Paul and Silas,
they passed through the cities,
giving them word of the judgment of the Jerusalem Council,
encouraging them and strengthening them in the faith,
knitting them in with the wider body of the church that has been formed in various parts of the world.
A question to consider.
Considering what we know of Paul and Barnabas's different characters,
what might have been some of the factors influencing their falling out concerning John Mark?
