Unashamed with the Robertson Family - Ep 888 | Phil Pines over Miss Kay’s Extended Absence & Jase Sticks His Head into a Beaver Dam

Episode Date: May 16, 2024

A daytime visit from Miss Kay has Phil admitting (in his own way) to longing for her to be home with him again. Jase reflects on the time he once stuck his entire head into a beaver dam full of agitat...ed beavers. The guys and Larry Bowles go over Acts 17, and Larry offers unique insight into the five Greek philosophies of that era that Paul had to challenge with his Gospel message. Al points out that many of these philosophies are still opposing Christianity today. In this episode: Acts 17; John 3, verse 14; 1 Corinthians 14, verses 1-3 -- Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I am unashamed. What about you? So welcome back to Unashamed. We're super excited today. We've got a lot of first going on today, Jase. This is a technological marvel. We have three remote locations, and you and Dad are in the studio. We have, we have Corsack coming in from North Carolina. I guess that's the eastern layer. And we have the man. The legend, the fireman turned fire starter for Jesus, Larry Bowles, who we've been missing, Larry. Welcome from Oklahoma. Oh, thank you. Good to be back with you. Rumors of my demise have been greatly exaggerated. So you had a knee surgery.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Yeah. We'll start with that one. You had a knee surgery. You're doing well. I got you on the preaching schedule. You're coming in. You're studying Hebrews. You're going to kick us off.
Starting point is 00:00:59 I'm super excited. And all of a sudden, I hear that you took a tumble. So what happened? I was in the hospital. So, yeah, it, I fell. And so, you know, when you get to the hospital, they say, what is the cause of the accident? And just stupidity, clumsiness, you know, that sort of thing. So, yeah, when I, when I fell, you know, the scripture says to do everything that you do to the glory of God.
Starting point is 00:01:27 And man, I destroyed my knee with the. you know, the utmost effort. But yeah, it was, it did not go well. So we're in the sixth week of recovery now. And but gaining strength every day. I guess when you, when you cut into a knee and do a surgical procedure, it's not as bad as when you rip the knee apart by force. So there was a lot more muscular and tendon ligament involvement.
Starting point is 00:01:59 So you're now like, They say with the elderly man, an elderly man took a fall. So now... Exactly. Yeah. I'm in there. I got it. And the bigger they are, the harder they fall.
Starting point is 00:02:12 So I'm hip to that. Well, we are glad you're with us today. Oh, it's good to be. Good to be here. We have a new sign in our kitchen. You know, have you ever been in a shop? And it said, this workplace has been accident-free for X number of days. I've got one of those in my kitchen now.
Starting point is 00:02:28 So we just What's crazy Is when you came on Al said Larry you look like you've lost weight And then when Zach entered
Starting point is 00:02:37 Because we were worried About Zach for a while He was fashionably late He said Larry you look like You've lost weight And then it occurred to me The cause of this accident
Starting point is 00:02:48 Because you said I don't think I've lost weight Because I thought That doesn't make any sense If you tear your knee You would think That you're just sitting In a recliner
Starting point is 00:02:56 A lot You would think you would gain weight. And then it hit me that when you reach a certain age, the weight shifts to various locations. And that might have been the recalls of the tumble. Oh, gravity. Yeah. It's, it will get you. Gravity and entropy, working together, they. No, but it's all good. And I'm on the road. Look that one up, Jack. I'm looking up. My wife, Ms. Kay, she's speaking. of entropy. She's kind of going through the same thing you're going through. Basically, it was just, she's got 70, what, 73 years under her belt, but she just got weak, weakened.
Starting point is 00:03:44 They did operation there. She had, you know, barfing up something black. I don't know what it was, blood, I guess. But we got her in the hospital. She's been in there. I haven't had a woman with me, Miss Kay, in about two months now. So Jersey Joe was doing all my cooking, and he delivers it. And so he's the one that I haven't cooked by one meal. I think that was a nice way to say you miss mom. He missed his game. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:18 She actually came down for a day trip yesterday I heard. Was that nice, Dad, having her back in the house for a day? Oh, yeah. She did. And we're working out some more out. It was a lot like our man here. He's a, you know, these falls just when you rip, rip the tendons and all that, it's a bone to be chewed.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Yeah, it's just, you don't bounce back quite as fast. So, Jace, what was your definition for entropy? You know, it was a good word. I think I'm going to incorporate that into my vocabulary. gradual decline into disorder. It's the second law of thermodynamics. Yeah, I left that part out. They tear up.
Starting point is 00:05:07 A thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system's thermal energy for conversion into mechanical work. Now, why would we have to, why would you define something with something that needs, that needs multiple definitions. Because that's what guys like Zach do. But here's the warning, Larry. Don't let your entropy wind up with, intersecting with your apathy.
Starting point is 00:05:37 Okay. You put those two together. You've got serious trouble. Let's see. Am I the only person on the planet that reads a definition and tries to find a bumper sticker phrase that I can say, okay, a gradual decline. into disorder.
Starting point is 00:05:54 Okay. Why didn't you just say that? Don't put that as number two. Put that as number one, because number one, I just read to you. And what did that all mean? Only Zach would know. Well, Larry knows. A little about thermodynamics being in the, you know, fire science area.
Starting point is 00:06:12 He is a fireman for crying out loud. What you just described, have you ever seen a grass fire and then all of a sudden it'll spin up into a funnel, kind of a, like a water spout. I have seen that. A fire storm like that. It creates its own wind, and the definition you described is exactly what's happening in that scenario. It's a thermodynamic process by which it manifests itself in a physical rotation. So when in Acts 2, when the spirit fell and fire was on top of the heads, we had a thermodynamic miracle?
Starting point is 00:06:52 Yeah, because the first law of thermodynamics is that matter and energy cannot be created nor destroyed, only transferred. But that was probably a miraculous creation of new fire, to my opinion. But I would think it was probably a lot of that there were actually three miracles that occurred. And the very first one of those was the sound of a rushing wind. Thank you very much. Yeah. then came the tongues of fire and then the ability to speak in their languages. So when you read that as a fireman, you went, okay, now we're talking.
Starting point is 00:07:29 Okay, here comes a wind. That's a fire Larry didn't want to put out there. No. That's the kind of fire Larry's starting. No, I mean, you know, when Jesus said, you know, I'll not flood the earth again, but it'll be destroyed by fire. I thought, well, great, you know, and I'll be on duty that day. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:46 You know, I think to all that, Larry, job security. That's exactly right. That's what I thought when Al had this idea, because this is breaking news. This was almost a simultaneous idea, Jay. Yeah, we did, because I had the same thought since Larry and I visited Athens together and Corinth. And I thought that the last podcast, I thought they'd be good because we're fixing to get into that section, Act 17 and 18. And we had quite the stories to tell from that. But then Al sent me a text and sent us a podcast, and he had the same idea.
Starting point is 00:08:21 And I was like, that's weird. Well, this has never been done before. These are the five main contributors to this podcast altogether. Y'all look like the Brady Bunch. Me and Phil looks like we're comfortable. There's a story of a man named Larry. But it made me think, you know, how different we all are. Because I was thinking, this is like we need introductions.
Starting point is 00:08:46 You know, you have Larry, the kind of old school orator, you know, when he, it's like somebody pushes a button when you speak. And it's just, wham, you're like, wow. But he's a fireman. And you look at his life. It's like old school brought into this dynamic ministry, you know, across the world. Then you have Zach, who has this apologetic. all these new ideas he's open to thinking outside the box.
Starting point is 00:09:22 So he, you push the button here and my eyes glaze over and I'm like, it sounds right. I'm trying to figure out if, are you complimenting us? Sorry, Larry, is he complimenting us or I can't, I'm trying to, you're old school.
Starting point is 00:09:38 I was trying to get the, just like, how do we all come together? Because you have Al who's like the coat of many colors. And no matter what happens, and he's like this button of information that I never could retain from the old testimony. He's all things to all people. Yeah. Then you have Phil the ball peeing hammer.
Starting point is 00:10:02 It's like just cut to the feel. Bam! I simply read. Pull your mic up, Phil. By the way, after all this things were happening and the jailers of. were converted. Enter Paul Pied. Paul and Silas, they're trying to say, well, good night.
Starting point is 00:10:23 They cut us some slack to get out of here. After Paul and Silas came out of prison, they went to Lydia's house. Well, that was the chick that was down on the river. Yeah. Lydia. So somehow another, she just stayed with them. And they met with Lydia where they met with the brothers. They formed a relationship.
Starting point is 00:10:45 They went back. Yeah. I thought that was a point that I never hear anybody say anything about. True. Well, then I got to me, and I couldn't describe myself, which is, I don't know if that's troubling or good, but I thought crickets. It's just crickets. So I thought I would. I'll describe you, Jay's.
Starting point is 00:11:08 Okay. I got thick skin. You're not going to hurt my feelings. No, you, Jace, is the, is the. thought or the idea that nobody has thought of. It's the unique look at something that you're like, hmm, I never saw that. And so I'd say that is your major contribution to both your Bible study but also to our podcast. Well, that's good.
Starting point is 00:11:32 I mean, you come up with stuff all the time. I really had nothing. Is that not true, Zach? I mean, Jace always has a take that I haven't thought of before. Right or wrong, it's a take I hadn't thought. It's hard to have a unique thought. Fair enough. And Jace has a way of, this is my backhand, a compliment, but it actually has a compliment.
Starting point is 00:11:53 He'll start down a road. He did this one. He used to preach when I was younger, and I always loved it about him. I never knew where he was going until he got to the end. And it's like, he keeps you involved in the thing, but you're like, where is this going? And then you tie it up nicely at the end. So you have a way of keeping people hanging on to the conversation. His style is more inductive than deductive.
Starting point is 00:12:15 That's correct. It is. And he is able to maintain a line of thought, a course of thought, and tie them together at the end, like you're saying, Zach. But I get lost if I get down a rabbit hole. And he can go down any rabbit hole, come right back out. It's a rabbit hole. Rabbit holes were made for Jace.
Starting point is 00:12:36 There's no doubt about it. That's why they're there. Well, there's been a lot of time in the woods, and I've seen a lot of holes in the ground. So I did stick my head in a beaver, the biggest beaver house that I've ever been in proximity to. And I just, I had seen that movie with Robert Redford when he hid in the beaver house. And I thought, I want to try that. But when I popped my head up, because I could not get my head in unless I went under the water and went through their hole. When I popped my, pop my head up, which I don't know what I was thinking.
Starting point is 00:13:11 And what did I think I was going to find in there? I would think you run upon some beavers. A lot of angry beavers saying you don't look like the rest of us. So that's a bold move. That was a two-second. You got to remember, they have teeth that they can cut trees down. Yeah. So you don't want to get that on your arm or your leg.
Starting point is 00:13:32 I could have died, Phil. But it was interesting. So I don't know. I was just making the point that there's something unique that you have to attribute to God bringing people together. It is. It is really cool. I pointed this out to you, Jace, before, but when we're together, I'm the second oldest guy in this room. You know what I mean? It just kind of blows my mind. Well, that makes me feel better. I appreciate the old school reference. That's good. Yeah, but it, and I meant that as the backhanded compliment because, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:06 it reminds me a lot of, you know, when Phil was first converted and we would go to these small type churches and the guy would get up, you know, and I just, he was passionate and it was just a withering barrage of verses, but to a young person who didn't have any kind of background, it just, it was over my head, you know. But it was like, then we all left, but I thought, what just happened here? But you're unique in that, you know, when I hear you speak, when I say old school, it's just a, it's kind of what I tried to do because they had me fill in for you,
Starting point is 00:14:50 because you were going to give the overview of Hebrews. You did awesome. In the spirit of Larry Bowles, I just did the overview of the entire Bible. I thought you'd appreciate that. The gospel according to scripture, I call it. Yeah. So the first time, Jay, is interesting. I think I've mentioned this point on the podcast, but this will kind of get us set towards the Book of Acts, which is why I really wanted Larry to come home,
Starting point is 00:15:19 is you and I heard Larry the first time together. We were sitting next to each other at WFR. And someone had asked you, Larry, to speak, do a Bible class, a combined Bible class on the deity of Jesus. And I had not met you. I knew that you were one of our One Kingdom guys. And I knew. knew a little bit about your work, but I had not met you. So I'm sitting there next to Jace, and you start into the deity of Jesus. And about five minutes in, I get my notebook out, start taking notes, which for me means that I'm highly interested in what's going on. If I'm taking notes, that means that you're scratching the itch.
Starting point is 00:15:57 So first time I heard you, I looked over Jason, I said, who is this guy? Well, look, while you were scratching notes on your notebook, I leaned over. and this is the only time in the history of my Christian life I've done this. Because every time a missionary would get up, I would think, oh, no. And it's not what you think. I'm not anti-missionary. I love missionaries. But I always was disappointed that they would get up and tell about their ministry.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And I'm like, well, you could have just sent me a flyer. And I could have read that. Because I think when you get up, I want to hear what you're preaching. I want to hear a sermon. And Larry got up as a missionary and said, yeah, he spent 60 seconds talking about what he does, spent zero seconds asking for money, and spent an hour and 20 minutes talking about Jesus. No, I'm sorry, Larry. My sermons get longer every time I come on here.
Starting point is 00:17:04 So while Al was writing, I told Missy, I said, give me a check. And she said, what are you doing? I said, I'm fixed to contribute to this guy's mission. And she said, well, they're not asking for money. I said, I know it. That's why I'm going to do it. And you remember, I came down and as soon as you finished preaching, I just came down and sat beside him handing that check.
Starting point is 00:17:28 And you were like, well, we weren't, we weren't, I wasn't asking for money. I said, I know it. Whatever you're, if you're preaching that, I'm in. Okay. True story. Then about three years later, here you come in person. So that was awesome. I did.
Starting point is 00:17:45 So that's for the audience. You know how much we love Larry. But, and I've been missing Larry. So I was thinking, man, we're at this text, pointing the text. And this is such a fantastic. Larry, we've been saying leading up to this because we've been trying to jump to it for the last two or three podcasts. It's one of the most amazing orations, I guess, or, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:09 oratory, you know, that you see in the whole New Testament, especially in the Book of Acts. And so I thought you being, you know, working so intimately in Athens. And, of course, a lot of this were talking about this philosophical background. And even I've heard you talk about Corinth, which is up next. So kind of wanted your expertise in is a part of this discussion. So that's what got us all here today. Can I set you up with? this, Larry, because here's what it hit me last night when I was reading this. I thought, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:37 it seems like, because you don't want to miss the overview of Acts, but it seems like it all starts with Jesus versus the old way of thinking in Judaism. And that seems to be the main argument that the apostles, the witnesses of the resurrection are up against. And then when you get to Acts 10, you then get into this, well, the Gentiles are in. So then this big fundamental second argument is kind of a political argument against Rome, against the Gentile world, with these other gods. And then when you get to Acts 17, it's like philosophy. It's the philosophy angle from every conceivable idea under the sun,
Starting point is 00:19:30 Jew and Gentile. As you think about it, it's a series of godly acts, things that happened, things that happened, things that had happened, pointing the way for Jesus. I mean, there's my point, and the arguments there seem to be that are coming up. And even riots are happening, and you read that, but that doesn't come to life. I mean, you see riots on TV now. I mean, riots are scary. I mean, vandalism.
Starting point is 00:20:00 they're tearing things down. They're wanting somebody's blood. And this is all in the name of Jesus what they're up against at each turn. But what do you think about that idea as far as the opposition that's arising where we're at? Absolutely. It starts in, of course, in Jerusalem. And even though these people have gathered from all over the place, there's still Judaism is still the issue.
Starting point is 00:20:30 And as Acts goes through, especially when you get to chapter 17, you see Paul kind of exit a totally Jewish environment and now enter into a Greek environment. When he gets to Thessalonica, to Berea, and then on into Athens and then over to Corinth. And Luke gives us such incredible insight on how the culture changes. And, you know, if you're not careful, you can miss it just reading the text. But then you get to Thessalonica and you see that women are now prominent in these cities to where in these Jewish cities the women were never prominent. And so it's kind of an upside down reversal of things. But the thing that shapes the book of Acts, I think more for me than anything else,
Starting point is 00:21:25 is what Paul is trying to combat. And it's not just Judaism. It's not just keeping the old law. And that that's where he begins. But then there are about five different Greek philosophy ideas. And so I can kind of share that if you want to. Yeah, share them. What's interesting is they're still alive and well today,
Starting point is 00:21:53 especially in movies and just cultures. Yeah. And Dad even made the comment when we came in today before we started rolling. He said, you know, after, because I'd sent out some notes, a little bit of what Larry's about to share and from his perspective too. And dad was like, Al, it looks a lot like what I'm seeing today. And I'm like, well, Dad, these ideas, especially the early Greek ideas, I mean, they have, they have stood the test of time.
Starting point is 00:22:20 You still see a lot of it. It just kind of plays itself out. different way. And so right at the beginning of chapter 17, it says, as was his custom, Paul, when he gets to Thessalonica, where's the first place he goes? To the synagogue. And what does he do? He spends three Sabbath days there, and he reasons with the Jews from scriptures explaining and proving that Jesus is the Messiah, how he had to suffer and rise from the dead. And he said, this Jesus, I'm proclaiming to you, is the Messiah. And some of the Jews were persuaded.
Starting point is 00:23:00 Some joined Paul and Silas, as did a large number of God-fearing Greeks and quite a few prominent women. And so this is a different culture. But he does that again in Berea. He does it again in Athens. And then when he leaves, he does it when he gets to Corinth. When he leaves Corinth and he gets to Syria, first place he goes is to. a Jewish synagogue. But in chapter 18, he has had it like up to here with the whole Judaism
Starting point is 00:23:31 thing. And he even says, you know, the blood's on your own heads. You know, this is not, my hands are clean. I've preached the gospel. And now I'm going to the Gentiles. And even after that, he goes back to the Jewish synagogues because he's got a heart for these people. But when it comes to philosophical ideas, it's just amazing in the way that the way people thought. And this is stuff that had been around a long, long time. And religion has always been a mixture of things. This is why Christianity, the worst religion in the world is Christianity. You know why?
Starting point is 00:24:19 It's not a religion. And when we take the gospel of Christ and we turn it into a religion, then it becomes corrupted just like everything else. To your point, later Christianity was deemed, you know, by Rome in the early days as atheism because they didn't believe in all the gods. But you've got to remember, they're Epicureans. Free will shapes your life and pleasure should replace suffering to gain what you can. from life. And that's from 17. That's from 1718 when he was in a belief system.
Starting point is 00:24:58 I mean, you're like, oh, get that, come on. Well, just to give our listeners the context. So when he ran upon a group of Epicurean and Stoic philosophers,
Starting point is 00:25:08 they began to dispute with him, which I'm sure you can help us understand that. Absolutely. So they're basically, and I'm just going to run these down in real short order, but there's five primary ideas in the Greek world, or at the time that Jesus was in the world, at the time that Paul was in these places.
Starting point is 00:25:29 And the first one was empiricism. And this is Aristotle. He lived from 384 to 322 BC. And he is based all of his stuff on the idea that we can know everything that we need to know in the universe and about science and about everything else from our five physical senses. And so this was empiricism. This is the word that we use when we talk about empirical evidence. Everything's got to be proven by fact. And so 90% of the world thought this way
Starting point is 00:26:03 about the universe, about stars, about, you know, science and everything else. And this was the basis of that. Well, he had a teacher named Plato, who lived about 50 years earlier than he did. Aristotle's teacher was Plato, and he believed that, yes, we could know some things by our physical world and those pointed to other things, but there was a reality apart from that. There was a reality out there, and that true reality was represented in this unseeable spiritual realm. and that we would transcend the physical become enlightened intellectually and spiritually. And then he would come back down here in the muck with the rest of us and teach us how to be enlightened. And so that was rationalism.
Starting point is 00:26:58 And so then a few years later, a guy named Epicurus came along and he developed a thought process, a school of thought called Epicureanism. kind of named it after himself. And Epicurious believed that humanity had already become enlightened. And it was time to move past pleasing all of these various gods and get on with the business of pleasure. That there's nothing after this life. There is no resurrection. And we're just going to get it while we can get it.
Starting point is 00:27:31 And, you know, just as much pleasure, as much hedonism that we can do. And so much of what the Greek hedonistic culture, was known for came out of this line of thought. But he had a rival by the name of Zeno, who developed a thing called Stoicism. And he's like, what are you talking about, man? He said the idea is restraint, because there is an afterlife and everything that we do in this life has bearing on the next life. And so these opposing philosophies are just diametrically opposed. They're 180 from one another. And so this is the arena that Paul steps into in the idea of pure hedonism, get it while you can, to the idea that I'm going to deny myself everything in this life. And what you see in, well, I mean, there's,
Starting point is 00:28:29 There's one more too. And another thing, this was more prominent, prominent probably at Corinth as we go into 18, was dualism. And this was Eastern thought. This is what Buddhism and Hinduism is based on. Everything can be explained by tensions in the universe, you know, light and dark and good and evil and physical and spiritual, the yin-yang, all of that sort of thing. And so this is also the core of Gnosticism. which is helpful to understand when you start reading the gospel of John or first, second, and third John of what he's pushing back against.
Starting point is 00:29:08 And so all of these five ideas are in play. Every time I see Paul engaging in conversation with people throughout the missionary journeys, this is what he's encountering. And it's never just, I'm this or I'm that. It's always a mixture of beliefs. And so I tell my students, be careful what you believe because your beliefs rule over you. You don't rule your beliefs. And so if we if we, our faith is based on nothing more than religious thoughts and ideas, then it's going to fall apart.
Starting point is 00:29:45 The only person that's going to be solid in this is the person who has Christ's life in them. Everything else is just religion. And this is why Christianity is not a religion. So did all of these philosophies believe in multiple gods then? Yeah, or I mean, when you get into Epicureanism, he believed that there was gods, but he was like, I'm so past trying to please them. I'm going to please myself. Yeah, I read that the Epicurean, it was like there's gods, but they're way off, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:19 which is why he said in Acts 1724, he is not far from us, because it's like, Like their thought was he doesn't or they. I was wondering about if they all believed in multiple gods just because Jesus seemed to emphatically, you know, Mark 12 where he said there is one God. And then he famously said, love the Lord of God with all your heart, soul, mind, and his truth, and love your neighbor as yourself, you know. Yeah, I looked at the same thing, Jays. And what, and again, I didn't do a deep dive into this. but it looked like a lot of these philosophers, especially what Larry's describing when we get to Acts 17,
Starting point is 00:31:06 they had a tip of the cap to the Greek God system that the public embraced. But they were thinking kind of outside of that box as well. I mean, like, this to them was something new. And so I think maybe that's why Paul intrigued them, you know, because as Larry said, he first goes to the synagogue, which is his normal thing. But now he's in the Agora. I mean, he's there in the marketplace.
Starting point is 00:31:34 And he's just sharing now with anybody that'll listen. And so they hear this guy, they're listening to Paul, and they're thinking their interest is piqued because he's advocating something they've never thought about. And he even says the words in verse 18. He seems to be advocating foreign gods. So it's like, you know, it's something beyond their experiences, which, of course, gets an invitation to go beyond this idea. And certainly the two concepts, I think they're going to blow their minds are this idea of repentance and the resurrection. Because in their system and way of thinking, these two thoughts are nowhere near anything they've ever heard before. So I think that was sort of what piqued their interest, at least in my view of it.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And so even when Zeno in Stoicism is saying there's an afterlife, he doesn't know what that means. And so everybody, I made a trip to Central America one time. And you just see people, they're wearing a cross and they're wearing a chicken foot. And they're wearing some kind of, you know, they're trying to cover all the religious bases, you know, between voodoo and Christ and everything else. And I think when I'm talking about that religiosity has a tendency to pick and choose to triage things. I want to believe this. I reject that. I want to believe this.
Starting point is 00:33:01 I reject that. What bears this out for me is when in 1st Corinthians 13, when Paul is writing Corinth, okay, this is after all of the stuff that has gone on, he's talking to the Christians at Corinth, and he says, now I'm going to show you the most excellent way. And he says, if I speak in the tongues of men or of angels, but I have not love. Well, what he's addressing there is the philosophy that we are to transcend this and get in touch with the spiritual. And so in Corinth, they would mix opiates with the wine and go into this thing and begin this ecstatic speech thing.
Starting point is 00:33:45 And so Paul is addressing that. And he says, you know, if I have the gift of prophecy in verse two and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge. and who's he talking to there? He's talking to these philosophers and the ideas that I know something that you don't, you know, because I'm enlightened and you're not. And so all of these things are at play. And he takes a kind of a swipe at the Jews here as well. If I have faith that can move mountains, you know, and that was their thing.
Starting point is 00:34:19 Or if I give all I possess to the poor and I submit my body to heart, that I may boast, that's that stoic idea that Zeno says, I'm going to deny myself. I'm going to cut myself from any earthly pleasure. And so he's addressing all of these religious ideas as he goes through these missionary journeys and ultimately into Corinth and then on the hysteria. One of the things you can look at, too, I think is kind of a key point of what Paul's trying to accomplish here. I think he does accomplish it.
Starting point is 00:34:54 If you think about the different philosophical threads that may have been running through the conversations of those at the Ariopagus, the one thing, because I'm trying to think, like, what is the one thing they had in common? You know, because this is still very similar to today. I mean, you could probably take the five, I think you mentioned five different philosophies. You could probably find whatever the philosophy that's prevailing in our current cultural moment or anything. cultural moment would probably fit into one of those five categories. Absolutely. And what I think the vein is, the common thread is that they, they lack the intention of a personal God, a God who does not begin with themselves. But God is a person or as three persons, for that matter, in one being.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Because what he says here, he says, he sees that they're religious. But notice the juxtaposition here is, for as I passed along, and observe the objects of your worship. So he's saying, you have objects of worship, of worship, and I'm coming, and I'm going to tell you that it's not an object, it's a person. You know, God doesn't live in temples that are built by your hands, which is interesting that he's saying this to Gentiles, because that was also the same sin that the Jewish people were falling into, which is why I went to the synagogues, is that God's not in your temple.
Starting point is 00:36:20 You know, it's not in your man-made structures. But that's the big, that's the juxtaposition. And it's the same thing today. Is God in the things that we make? Is he in our man-made philosophies, our man-made structures, our man-made rationality? Or is God outside of ourselves and is he personal? Is the actual person? I think that's the one thing that Paul is really overarching trying to get these guys to see.
Starting point is 00:36:47 And some of them got it. Some of them laughed him out of the room. Well, I just had the same. thought is that because I was thinking you look at today which is why I brought up the one god thing that Jesus said because they they had all these gods and it was like they they got along I mean they actually unified more probably for the first time yeah against what he was saying because it's kind of like our culture today it's like it doesn't matter what you believe as long as you don't hurt anybody you and so you have some people
Starting point is 00:37:20 people, you know, going after extreme pleasure. You have some people going after extreme discipline, but it's like, you do your thing, we'll do ours, but when you come in and say, look, there's one God and he cares about what's going on, well, then the conflict comes up because it's like, well, wait a minute, you can't do that. And what I was going to read to add to what Zach said, because I was thinking exactly like Zach about the different philosophies, the different gods, But they also, in verse 16 of 17, when he waited for them in Athens, he was greatly distressed to see that the city was full of idols. And even this statue that he sees, this idol that says, to an unknown God, it was like
Starting point is 00:38:08 they were even covering their bases. We believe in all the gods, even the God that we're not, we haven't discovered yet. We're going to give him an idol. And it made me think, because you know their lives were not representing the character of the true guy, because in these philosophies, you had some of them saying that the gods are saying just life is all about pleasure. And it made me think, what came first, the idol or the sin? Because really, you know why the philosophy came up about pleasure is the meaning of life. that was just a nice way to rationalize going out there and doing what your nature wanted to do. That was a violation of your conscience.
Starting point is 00:38:57 And so I even thought about the garden because y'all listened to a lot of NT Wright stuff about the temple, because I think he's got it right about how God replaced the actual physical temple, just like what he said, God doesn't live in temples built by hands, with human beings housing the Holy Spirit, rising together, becoming the temple dwelling place of God. So in that vein, I thought, what came first, the idol or the sin? Because even in the garden, we always say, well, they sin. But I thought that tree is what became the idol.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Because don't you know that they kept staring at that tree saying, then why wouldn't he let us eat of that tree? Because that's all he said. Don't eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. And in a practical way, me being simple-minded, I thought, that became an idol because they thought, why can't we do that? I really want to do that.
Starting point is 00:39:59 You're left with a situation. Do I trust God? Because we're living together, living forever. Do I trust God? or do I, do I, based on curiosity? I find it interesting, you know, in John 3 in verse 14, Jesus says, just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the son of man must be lifted up.
Starting point is 00:40:31 And that whole scenario in Numbers 21, where God has had it with people and he sends poisonous snakes and they're biting him and dying, and they come to Moses and said, you know, we're sorry, we grumbled against you and against God. Pray to God. And Moses does. And he said, stop the snakes. And he said, no, I'm not stopping the snakes.
Starting point is 00:40:51 You're going to have one way out of that. And that is faith. If you look on that snake and believe, you know, well, you get into second kings. And what they're doing with that Asherapole, the same one is they're worshipping it and burning incense to it. And one of the kings, you know, chops down the Asherapole. and God says good, you know. That was a good thing. We turn our eyes off of God, off of Christ and put them on physical things.
Starting point is 00:41:23 And that's a true mark of religion. And this is exactly what Paul is saying here in verse 22 and 17, is that I see you're religious in every conceivable way there is to be religious. You'll believe anything, but their idea of God was not that God is a God of love. Gods are something that has to be obligated, that has to be pleased. You know, I'm throwing women in a volcano or I'm building a temple, whatever more magnificent structure is going to get that God to give me what I want. And Paul is saying, no, you're missing this entirely. is that the creator of heaven and earth stepped into his own creation and he came and he said,
Starting point is 00:42:16 come to me. And he said, you want to see God, you're looking at it, you know? Yeah. And this is such a, even today, as we're talking about, as people are looking for God. And here's Jesus says, no, I'm the way, I'm the truth, I'm the life. There is no way to God except through me. You can't go over me. You can't go around me.
Starting point is 00:42:36 There's not, you know, I'm not the. best of many ways. I'm the only way. And so I love this narrative in Acts 17 because Paul does something in this moment where he is in this, this is the philosophy and education center of the world. There is nowhere on earth where people are more studied and think they know more than the Ariopagus here in Athens. And what he says here in verse 23, he says, you're talking about this unknown God. He said, so you're ignorant of the very thing you're trying to worship. And then he says it again in verse 30.
Starting point is 00:43:25 He said, in the past, God overlooked this kind of ignorance. I mean, to drop the ignorant bomb in that crowd. Yeah, because that's what they were there is going to do their philosophies. You know, I wanted to read this for it because I know we just have a couple minutes left because it seems like that Paul realized, and I heard an illustration about this that I think is really good, it's like you had all these philosophies under the sun, you name five of them. And I'm sure there were probably others that we, you know, don't even know. With all these gods, with all these philosophies, with all these idols to justify however you're going to live your life.
Starting point is 00:44:07 And then it's like he chooses to play chess against everybody in one speech. And you actually see that people get so good at something, whether it's playing poker or chess, where they just take on everybody at the same time. And you're like, how in the world can they figure that out? Because they have a formula that it doesn't matter what you bring. This is superior. And so I wanted to at least read the speech. Yeah, read it 22-31, and then we can break it down on the next podcast.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Yeah. So Paul stood up in the meeting of the Ariopagus and said, men of Athens, I see that in every way you're very religious. For as I walked around and looked carefully at your objects of worship, I found an altar with this inscription to an unknown God. Now, what you worship as something unknown, I'm going to proclaim to you. The God who made the world and everything in it is Lord of heaven and earth, and he doesn't live in temples or buildings built by hands. And he is not served by human hands as if he needed anything, because he himself gives all men life, breath, and everything else.
Starting point is 00:45:24 From one man, he made every nation of men that they should inhabit the whole earth, and he determined the time set for them and the exact places where they should live. God did this so that men would seek him, perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from each one of us. For in him we live and move and have our being, as some of your own poets have said, we are his offspring. Therefore, since we are God's offspring or family, we should not think that the divine being is like gold, silver, stone, an image made by man's design and skill. In the past, God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent. For he has set a day when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed. And here is the checkmate statement.
Starting point is 00:46:23 He has given proof of this to all men by raising him from the dead. And so then the response... Death that couldn't do. I mean, what, what a speech, it's one of my favorite speeches in the entire Bible. And then you have, you see the different responses that are still just as, as frequent to respond today. Because you have some saying, when they heard about the resurrection dead, some sneered. So you have, you're always going to have the sneers. Others said, we want to hear you again on this subject to Zach's point.
Starting point is 00:47:01 it was just a subject. They still hadn't tied it with a person, but it's more positive than sneering. And then Paul, when he left the council, a few men became followers of Paul and believed. And as some of them dialed in this, a member of the Ariopagus, also a woman called Demarius, and a number of others.
Starting point is 00:47:25 So there's your three responses. And which is typical to see those same responses today. And I'll say this, Dad mentioned this earlier, the relevance today is so amazing because look at, look around at our, you know, institutions of higher learning, what should be the smartest people in our culture, a lot of young people. And look what they're doing to this very day by these riots and these protests and all this stuff. And again, whether they look at, they're looking for something they can believe in. And of all the things to do it, you know, next to Israel to be your thing you're looking for. But you see this mindset and idea how insidious it is and how much people are searching for. So we're out of time for this podcast.
Starting point is 00:48:10 We pick it up. We're going to break this text down a little bit more with our friend, L.B. And Zach and our crew and really show the relevance, not just for that day, but also today as well. So we'll see you next time on Unashamed. Thanks for listening to the Unashamed podcast. Help us out by rating us on iTunes. And don't miss an episode by subscribing on YouTube and be sure to click that little bell
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