Don’t Meddle with the Messenger
Acts Series | Acts 14:1-18 | Don’t Meddle with the Messenger. There is a saying that says, “Don’t shoot the messenger.” That’s good advice. Our passage of scripture also tells us not to deify the messenger. Let’s dig in and find out what we should do instead.
Main Idea
Passage
Outline
I - Don’t stone the messenger
Same playbook, same result
The Word reveals the heart’s intentions
The city was divided
II - The message of healing
Walking by faith
Simple obedience
III - Don’t deify the messenger
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction
In Metamorphoses Ovid collected the mythological stories that have to do with people being changed into one thing or another, which is what metamorphosis refers to, and at one place he told a story about this very area. According to Ovid’s story, Zeus and Hermes had once visited a valley near Lystra. They went from door to door, but the people refused to take them in. Finally, they came to a poor house occupied by a man named Philemon (the same name as that of the runaway slave of Paul’s acquaintance) and his wife Baucis. These elderly people received Zeus and Hermes. So they stayed the night. In the morning the gods took the couple up out of the city to a mountain, and when they looked back on the valley they saw that the gods had flooded it, drowning everyone. Then, while they were looking on, Philemon and Baucis saw that the gods had transformed their poor hovel into a great temple with a glittering gold roof.