Lydia
Deuteronomy
6:1-9 Acts
16:11
-15
I:
-- In 1939 67% of the Canadian people
lived below the poverty line. Today
only 17% live below the poverty line.
Plainly a much larger proportion of
Canada
is well off materially. In
addition the poverty line itself means something different now.
For instance, virtually anywhere else in the world anyone who had
access to
Canada
’s medical care and public education and criminal justice system would
be considered extraordinarily privileged.
The poorest people in
Canada
have access to carriage trade health services.
Therefore even the 17% who live below the poverty line are well
off, in many respects, compared to the rest of the world.
In saying this I’m not denying that some
Canadians continue to live in dreadful poverty.
I must say, however, that we Canadians are better off materially
than our foreparents ever were. I’m
aware that I am affluent. The
only difference between my affluence and the superrich person’s is
that the latter can buy bigger toys, and his financial statements have
more zeros on the page. Right
now I have more clothes than I can wear out, more food than I need.
And books? If I live
to be
150 years old I still won’t have read all the books I purchased
inasmuch as I could afford them. I
can sleep in only one bed at time, and I have a bed.
Furthermore, since wealth is measured not by what we own but by
what we have access to, and since I have access to Legal Aid, Employment
Insurance, public libraries and swimming pools and parks, I’m doubly
affluent. I think I’m as
affluent as I should ever want to be; certainly as well off as I shall
ever need to be.
Lydia
, the first person to respond to the gospel on Paul’s second
missionary journey (she’s sometimes said to be the first European to
come to faith in Jesus Christ);
Lydia
was affluent. She was
affluent like Erastus, a Christian from
Corinth
. Erastus was city
treasurer, and
Corinth
was a major financial centre in the
Roman Empire
. The point I am making is
this: not everyone who came to faith in Jesus Christ was dirt poor and
socially disadvantaged. Part
of the mythology of the anti-Christian nay-sayers is that the Christian
faith thrived in an era when few were affluent and the majority were
poor; therefore the Christian faith thrived
inasmuch as it fed and encouraged the resentment and envy and
acquisitiveness of the “have-nots” in their murderous pursuit of the
“haves.” The myth is
just that: myth. The truth
is, our Lord drew people to him from every social and economic class.
Let’s not forget that Paul himself was a citizen of
Rome
, with all the privileges that accompanied citizenship, and this when
very few people in the
Roman Empire
ever became citizens.
Lydia
was a businesswoman, an entrepreneur, a self-employed cloth merchant.
Europeans of her era valued clothing made from cloth that had
been dyed an exquisitely beautiful purple.
The purple dye dame from a substance found in shellfish.
It took thousands of shellfish to yield a usable amount of dye.
As a result the purple cloth was exceedingly expensive.
Lydia
owned and operated a carriage-trade business that sold upper-end
women’s clothing. She
wouldn’t have been out of place in
Toronto
’s Yorkville or
New York
’s
Fifth Avenue
.
II:
-- The second noteworthy feature of
Lydia
is that she was a “God-fearer” in the vocabulary of Acts, a
“worshipper of God” as some English translations have it.
The Greek expression is phoboumenoi, and the phoboumenoi,
in the First Century, were Gentiles who were attracted to the synagogue
in their town or city but who did not become Jewish converts.
They worshipped week by week with a Jewish congregation and
associated with Jewish people without ever becoming Jews.
Why were they drawn to the synagogue?
They were attracted to Jewish monotheism and Jewish ethics.
The Gentile world of that era was riddled with assorted deities.
These pagan gods and goddesses were said to squabble among
themselves incessantly and to behave immorally.
In other words, pagan religion was no more than a projection of
the messed-up human heart. Pagan
religion constantly reinforced fallen humankind’s confusion and
savagery and disintegration. There
was no help, then, to be found in pagan religion.
The God-fearers, however, recognized in Jewish faith a throbbing
conviction that God is one. God
is holy. God is exalted.
God blesses his people by suffering on their behalf, by
delivering them from assorted bondages, and by claiming thereafter their
obedience for himself. Earnest,
thoughtful, sensitive Gentiles were only too glad to live on the fringe
of the synagogue.
At the same time, they tended not to take
the final step and become Jews. If
an adult Gentile male became a Jew he had to be circumcized -- and this
in a day and age that had neither anaesthetic nor antiseptic.
And Gentile women? They
weren’t always eager to embrace all the details of the Torah, the
dietary restrictions, and so on.
Lydia
relished the company of the Jewish world without becoming a Jew herself.
At Knox Presbyterian Church we’d call her an adherent.
I’m convinced that today we are
surrounded with God-fearers. I’m
convinced that there are many people in our affluent era who are in fact
very close in outlook to
Lydia
. They are attracted to the
church in their neighbourhood, be it Presbyterian or Roman Catholic or
whatever. They are attracted
by its monotheism and its ethics. At
the same time they are cautious, reserved, lest they appear too
“religious.” They
don’t feel they can honestly, unreservedly, assent to all the major
doctrinal statements, and therefore they don’t become church members
officially. They may even
hesitate to declare themselves Christians.
Yet they come to church and associate with
its people because they are attracted by Christian monotheism and
ethics. They know that the
world is a perilous place; they know it’s a jumble of rival ideologies
and a jungle morally. If we
asked them whether they believed in God they’d say “yes” even if
they had to pause a moment before answering.
If we then asked them whether they believed in Jesus as the Son
of God, the Son of Man, the world’s sole Saviour and Lord, the Messiah
of Israel and the coming Judge, they would shrink back.
And if we said to them, “Since you are attending a Presbyterian
church rather than a Lutheran, you must think that Calvin’s extra-Calvinisticum
is preferable to Luther’s communicatio idiomata;” if we
said this to them they might not appear for a week or two.
But for now they intuit that Jesus is more than a good man or a
fine teacher even if they can’t say what more; they intuit that
there’s something unique about the cross even though they can’t
articulate the atonement or explain how the cross saves anyone.
I’m convinced that there are more such
people among us than we commonly admit.
I’m equally convinced that a major aspect of my ministry is
honouring these people in their quest; honouring them and cherishing
them. (Cherishing them?
Yes. After all, in
some churches such “questers” are suspect, to say the least.)
A major aspect of my ministry is to spare no effort, no
seriousness, no persistence in helping them; helping them, that is,
until that day when they are possessed by that faith and the assurance
of faith which prophets and apostles and saints have found to be as rich
as a goldmine, as bright as diamonds, and as resilient as springsteel.
III:
-- We
are told that
Lydia
moved from being a God-fearer to being an enthusiastic disciple as
“The Lord opened her heart to give heed to what was said by Paul.”
What had Paul said? We
aren’t told, but we may be sure that he said to her what he said to
everyone else. How did Paul
speak? We can only assume
that he spoke with her as he spoke with everyone else.
Lydia
would have heard him preach since he preached wherever he went.
In addition, we must note carefully, she would have profited from
informal conversation with him. Luke
tells us that it was as Paul sat with her -- casually -- and chatted
with her -- informally -- that the truth of the Gospel dawned upon her
and then lit up for her and finally engulfed her.
We must never underestimate casual, informal encounters.
Certainly the apostle didn’t.
We tend to imagine him addressing crowds the size of the Super
Bowl turnout in the Los Angeles Colosseum.
Typically, however, he preached to small gatherings.
And of course we overlook most readily the fact that he regularly
conversed with individuals.
All of us have no difficulty remembering
that Jesus preached to multitudes, if only because the word
“multitude,” a word none of us uses in everyday English, we have
come to associate particularly with our Lord’s public ministry.
In turn we creatures of modernity have come to associate crowds
with success and small gatherings with failure.
We appear to have enormous difficulty remembering that Jesus
spent hours patiently conversing with individuals.
Think of Nicodemus; the unnamed woman he met at high noon in a
Samaritan village; Bartimaeus, a blind man who called out to Jesus and
for whom the master stopped.
Think of the Syrophoenician woman -- bold, brassy, sassy -- who
spoke to Jesus with feminist aggressiveness.
She was a Gentile. She
called out to Jesus, a Jew, that her daughter was bent out of shape.
Jesus, the text tells us, “…did not answer her a
word.”(Matt. 15:23) When
she cried out again he said to her, “I was sent only to the lost sheep
of the house of
Israel
. You don’t belong to
Israel
, dog.” (“Dog” was the
way Jewish people commonly spoke of Gentiles.)
“But even canines get to eat table scraps,” she sassed him
back, “and so maybe you’d like to give this ‘dog’ your dinner
plate scrapings and help my ‘shiksa’ daughter.”
Whereupon our Lord did all that she asked of him. (In this
unusual conversation Jesus was testing her persistence and her
confidence in him.)
Think of the man whose son suffered from
epilepsy. Or the deranged fellow, violent and dangerous, now restored;
he wanted to join the twelve, but instead
Jesus told him to go home and tell his family how God had had mercy on
him.
We tend to think nothing important is
happening unless it’s happening to many people at once in a large
crowd.
John Wesley, George Whitefield, Charles
Wesley, the leaders of the Eighteenth Century Awakening; they preached
to huge crowds, often several times in the same day.
Come nightfall they had to stay somewhere.
Over and over I read that when these fellows settled in an inn or
a home they found themselves in “earnest conversation” (as they
described it.) “Earnest
conversation” isn’t a public address; it isn’t a lecture; it’s
not verbal aggressiveness of any sort.
(If it were, these men would have been invited to find another
home or inn.) It means,
rather, that when earnest people brought perplexities and problems and
griefs to Wesley privately he always had time for these people.
He was glad to address their perplexity or problem or grief in
the light of the gospel. For
the gospel was in his bloodstream, and he spoke of it as naturally,
unselfconsciously, as you and I speak of the weather or the latest
newspaper headline. At the
very least “earnest conversation” was the setting in which
someone’s needy heart was met by Wesley’s overflowing heart.
I myself am a preacher who will never
undervalue the preaching event. Throughout
my ministry I have given it the attention and diligence that the public
declaration of the Word of God demands.
I am dismayed when I hear sermons that were plainly scratched out
on the back of a used envelope between periods of Saturday night’s
hockey game. At the same
time I know the value of informal conversation.
People approach me anywhere at all: in the food store, at the
arena, on the street, by the gasoline pump.
They casually mention the difficulty or discouragement they
don’t raise with me on Sunday, for who knows what reason and who
cares. To be sure, I have
never doubted that the sermon is a means of grace.
But I am convinced that casual conversation is no less a means of
grace.
I’m not the first to come to this
conclusion. Anyone who reads
scripture could scarcely doubt it. But
if reminders are needed then one of the more pointed reminders is heard
in the Seventeenth Century, when the English Puritans insisted that
“Christian conversation,” as they put it, is a means of grace.
Having read the Seventeenth Century Puritans, Eighteenth Century
Methodists insisted that conversation was an instituted, divinely
instituted means of grace (along with and on the same level as
Scripture, Holy Communion, prayer and fasting.)
There are lines from informal, casual conversations that I at
least shall never forget. They
aren’t lines that someone laboured over in order to turn a
“catchy” phrase; they are lines, rather, that someone spoke as
unselfconsciously as you or I would speak of the weather or sports
scores.
My father, for instance. Throughout
his life my father inculcated in me a passion for excellence and an
awareness that non-excellence born of indifference, unnecessary
mediocrity, anywhere life, is nothing less than sin.
One evening when I was sixteen my father said to me, “Last
Sunday in church we sang a hymn with the words ‘utter, consummate
skill’. Now today is the
150th anniversary of the birth of Franz Liszt, as you
know.” (I didn’t know,
but for some reason he expected me to know.)
“Utter, consummate skill,” my father continued, “is Franz
Liszt and Frederic Chopin playing a piano duet.”
That is an image of excellence I shall take to my grave.
And then there’s my off-hand conversation
with a prison chaplain who said, quite in passing, not thinking he was
saying anything memorable, “Violence is what happens when we
reduce any individual or any group to powerlessness.”
There’s immense wisdom here.
The aged Anglican clergyman and professor
who schooled me in the subtleties of Greek syntax and whose spiritual
depth was fathomless; in the course of afternoon tea and casual
chit-chat in his living room he said, as though everyone knew already,
“Well, Victor, the worst consequence of sin is more sin.”
(His line has moved me away from the abyss more than once.)
When I was crumpled in an automobile
accident that killed three people I was hospitalized for 45 consecutive
days. A nurse, considerably
older than I, used to steal into my room and talk awhile whenever she
was working the night shift. Her
husband had left her; then she had lost everything in a house fire; and
now one of her children was in difficulty at school and in trouble with
the law. Despite the fact
that my spine was fractured, several friends were dead, my father had
died four months earlier and I was 250 kilometres from anyone who knew
me, she sought me out because she found in our late-night conversation
comfort and encouragement and hope -- truth.
I can’t tell you how often people who
conversed with me informally have been a vehicle of grace.
Some were educated, some were not -- like the
New Brunswick
lumberjacks who told me they had never had a clergyman visit them in
their backwoods shanty in the dead of winter.
The woodstove in the plywood shanty kept the indoor temperature
only slightly above the outdoor temperature.
And of course I shall never forget the
fellow, mentally ill for 30 years and furious with a minister who had
told him that mentally ill people couldn’t be Christians since they
couldn’t grasp the gospel. In
his fury he shouted to me, “Do you have to be sane to be a
Christian?” “On the
contrary, Eric,” I said, “on the contrary….”
Let us never forget that our Lord’s family thought him deranged
and came to take him home before he embarrassed the family any more.
Let me repeat: I am the last person to
belittle the preaching office. Necessary
as preaching is, however, it isn’t sufficient.
Conversation (among other activities) must always accompany it.
There are many kinds of conversation in
this regard. There is the
institutionalized conversation of pastor and counselee; the
semi-institutionalized conversation around a church meeting; and of
course the uninstitutionalized encounters at the ballpark, on the
street, in the dentist’s waiting room.
I am convinced that there are God-fearers in any congregation.
They have been attracted; they are intrigued; they find
themselves wistful. They are
tentative about their nascent faith and would feel pressured and awkward
if they were asked to endorse right now, sign ‘on the dotted line,’
a creed or confession of faith or denominational statement.
Nevertheless they are moving in the right direction and will be
helped to a Lydia-like standpoint through countless conversations on the
church premises and elsewhere in the community.
Between
Lydia
and us there stands a Christian thinker who is mentioned often from this
pulpit (I trust), Martin Luther. In
1537 Luther wrote a document called “The Schmalkald Articles.”
The Schmalkald Articles mention five means of grace: the sermon,
baptism, the Lord’s Supper, the pronouncement of forgiveness, and mutual
discussion and comforting of the brethren.
The day came when
Lydia
was possessed of such resilient faith that she asked to be baptized;
that is, she now wanted to confess her faith in Jesus Christ before the
world. She did so.
Then she opened her home to Paul and Silas.
Opened her home: that means hospitality, more neighbours,
more conversation, greater faith, wider outreach, other God-fearers
helped along the road to faith.
And so the people of God grow in grace, in
godliness, and in numbers.
Victor Shepherd
Knox Presbyterian Church,
Toronto
May 2010