Text: Acts 21:1-16
“As we were staying there for
some days, a prophet named Agabus came down from Judea. And coming to us, he
took Paul's belt and bound his own feet and hands, and said, "This is what
the Holy Spirit says: "In this way the Jews at Jerusalem will bind the man
who owns this belt and deliver him into the hands of the Gentile’(Acts 21:9-11)”
This is a rather painful scene.
At Caesarea they came into the home of Philip the evangelist. There Agabus, a
prophet of the Lord, in a dramatic, visual way, took Paul's sash from around
his waist and bound his own feet and hands, and said, "This is what the
Holy Spirit is saying to you, Paul. If you go on to Jerusalem, this is what
will happen to you. You'll be delivered into the hands of the Gentiles. They
will bind you, and you'll be a prisoner."
This was the last effort made
by the Holy Spirit to awaken the apostle to what he was doing. Agabus was
joined in this by the whole body of believers. The whole family present urged
him not to go, Luke included. We read in verse 12, "When we had heard
this, we and the local residents begged him not to go up to Jerusalem." So
even his close associates recognized the voice of the Spirit, to which the
apostle seemed strangely deaf. He refused to listen.
And in Paul's reply to them we
can detect that, without quite realizing what has happened, he has succumbed to
what today we call a "martyr complex." Paul said in verse 13,
"What are you doing, weeping and breaking my heart? For I am ready not
only to be bound, but even to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord
Jesus." These words are brave and sincere and earnest. He meant every word
of them. We can find no fault with the bravery and courage expressed in those
words. But it was not necessary for him to go, and the Spirit had told him not
to go.
Here we see what can happen to
a man of God when he is misled by an urgent hunger to accomplish a goal which
God has not given him to do. The flesh had deceived Paul and evidently he saw
himself as doing what the Lord did in his final journey up to Jerusalem. The
Gospel accounts say that Jesus steadfastly set his face to go there, determined
to go against all the pleading and the warnings of his own disciples. Paul must
have seen himself in that role. But Jesus had the Spirit's witness within that
this was the will of the Father for him, while Paul had exactly the opposite.
The Spirit had made crystal clear that he was not to go to Jerusalem.
When Paul refused to be
persuaded his friends said, "Well, may the will of the Lord be done."
That is what you say when you do not know what else to say. That is what you
pray when you do not know how else to act. They are simply saying, "Lord,
it is up to you. We can't stop this man. He has a strong will and a mighty
determination, and he's deluded into thinking that this is what you want.
Therefore, you will have to handle it. May the will of the Lord be done."
“Father, thank you for
recording so faithfully even this failure by the apostle. It is so helpful in
letting me see how I must rely not upon the arm of the flesh but upon the arm
of the Spirit. Teach me to walk in obedience, Lord, and not to venture out upon
that which would be merely the fulfillment of a great desire on my part.”
Copyright | Ray Stedman Ministries| www.raystedman.org
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