God Designed Us to Be Together

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Grow the Church!!

We shift our emphasis now today to Paul and specifically his missionary journey to Troas
Troas - This a major seaport located far Northwest of Israel. It is in the current site of the Greek Peninsula.
The next step in the journey is just a short distance across the Adriatic Sea to Rome or the “boot of Italy.” Followed closely behind to Spain and then to the rest of Europe.
I have heard several stories from many of you concerning how you’ll got to the Sunnyside or this area. Many of you, grew up here, “went away to the big city, realized it wasn’t what we expected and came back.” Some of us are proud transplants. Jill and I… this is our 9-month anniversary here at Sunnyside First Baptist.
Remember how your family got here? By birth? By Transplant? Was this a final stop along the way or did someone on the way to somewhere stop here.
Paul had wanted to come to the far reaches of known civilization for quite awhile but was forbidden by Jesus…until he wasn’t
Paul arrived by way of more than a few stops along the Mediterranean. At first he was told to avoid this area but had a vision that now he was free to go to what is now Greece.
Paul and his traveling companions, you’ll see that “we” is used as we go. Probably with Timothy and maybe Luke.
But Paul in that great moment, not only of his life, beheld, not the Lord high and lifted up, but a man of Europe, one of ourselves, and heard a human voice pleading in the darkness for such help as he could give. It was the vision rendered possible by the Incarnation of the Son of God, and necessary by the state of the world. He beheld a man! That is the vision needed to–day.

I. THE VISION. “They came down to Troas”—that is, to Troy, a modern city bearing the name, and marking the region, if not the site, of Priam’s Troy, the City of the Iliad and the blind singer’s deathless song. Such places are fountains of inspiration in themselves. Hill and grove, stream and plain, are vocal with great memories; and the soul that is worthy of such a scene hears, as Augustine heard voices in the air saying, “Let us, too, conquer something.”But more depends upon the soul than on the scene; for whatever it looks upon the eye can only see what the eye brings with it, the means of seeing, for everything wears the hue of the spirit. Xerxes, Alexander of Macedon, Julius Cæsar, and many more came to this famed region, and each one saw and heard according to the spirit that was in him visions of battles. But the man who had now come to Troy had brought with him another spirit and an eye capable of nobler visions. He brought with him a great soul, wide in the range of its sympathies, sensitive, impressionable, and glowing with the quenchless passion of love to God and man. Never in all its eventful history had Troy an eye so rich in the means of seeing whatever Troy could show. And what did Paul see upon the Trojan plain? Behold, then, the new Troy that God would have besieged and conquered, as the spring besieges, and as the summer conquers the land! Isaiah saw the Lord high and lifted up, and the message that moulded his life came to him from the very lips of God, speaking in person. That was the highest vision of which the best man in that stage of the world’s spiritual development was capable. But Paul in that great moment, not only of his life, beheld, not the Lord high and lifted up, but a man of Europe, one of ourselves, and heard a human voice pleading in the darkness for such help as he could give. It was the vision rendered possible by the Incarnation of the Son of God, and necessary by the state of the world. He beheld a man! That is the vision needed to–day. In all our difficulties in England, political, economic, social and ecclesiastic, the devil’s policy is still to raise such a dust of controversy as to hide man from man. Penetrate to the heart of any question of the day, and there you find a man, a man asking for help. At the heart of the Drink Question, at the heart of the Labour Question, there are men, not monsters, but men, flesh of our flesh, men with difficulties, crying to us, calling to us, pleading with us. And our only hope of settling these questions lies in laying the cloud of devil’s dust of passion and prejudice until we can see the man and hear what he is saying. And this great matter of missions, what is it? Do some of you young people think that, after all, it is nothing but a war of religions? that it is simply a crusade of one creed against another? Nothing of the sort. It is man’s ministry to man. How shall we figure heathenism to ourselves to–night? Shall we call up a vision of idols and groves and temples and mitred priests and garlanded victims? No; all that is mere detail. If you want to see heathenism in the fullest pathos and tragedy of its fate, think of it under the guise of a man with soul enough to conceive the sublime ideas of Brahminism, with conscience enough to appreciate the grand moral precepts of Buddha, with brain enough to frame the marvellous scheme of Confucius, and spirituality enough in him to see with Zoroaster that the difference between good and evil is no measurable distance, but a distance as between day and night. We have to approach them rather in the spirit of brotherliness; for a man stands before us, and yet in a spirit of compassion for this man, so noble, so subtle, so mighty of intellect, is weighed down, is cramped, he is weary with searching and cannot find, he is a baffled man, and he asks us to help him with that very thing in the possession of which alone we are superior to him, the thing which, perhaps, when we have handed it to him he will be able to make a very much better use of than we have made.

II. THE CALL. Human need is always sacred and ever oracular, for through it God speaks. The will of God is the only plain thing in this universe, the only thing that is absolutely known. Everything else has darkness and mist about it, but the will of God is absolutely plain. The will of God is gladness, sunshine, music, life. It is everywhere. Go forth into the byways and highways of London with open eye and reverent heart; and you shall see it written upon every human need, and you shall hear it speaking to you in every human cry. It is the will of God that men be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth; and God’s will be done! The call of God is a call to unity. “When he had seen the vision we sought to go forth.”It is noticed that the word “we”comes in here for the first time. The men felt that it was a call not only to action, but to united action. There had been quarrels and partings at Antioch. Paul and Barnabas had separated; but this revelation of the need of the world cameto give compression and compactness and unity to this little band. If you want to see the quarrel at Antioch in its true nature, look at it in the light of Europe’s need; and if you want to see the divisions and the jealousies that divide Christian people at home, look at them against the world’s need to–day. God is not calling us simply to action, but to united action, to co–operation, to Christian unity. Twice one man is not simply two, but two plus their unity. It does not matter how many they are. It is not the number of men that work; it is the spirit in which any number work; their unity tells.

III. THE WORK. “God had called us to preach the gospel unto them.”Dr. Owen, in his sermon on this text, says: “No men want help like the men that want the gospel.”But what is the gospel? l. Preaching the gospel; what is it? It is calling the righteous to repentance. There were good folk in Philippi, and Paul found them engaged in a good work on a good day. Well, then, let well alone? No, for it is not at all well. Nowhere in all Philippi was Paul more needed than among these good folk praying on the Sabbath–day by the river’s brim; and there is no one in all England that needs a mission more than many a good, blameless, irreproachable, man. But are there good among the heathen? Oh! yes. I am no more concerned to deny goodness to India and China than St. Luke to Philippi. There is goodness among the heathen, conscientiousness, aspiration, prayerfulness. Why, then, send missions to go people? Why? Because the goodness of the world, almost more then its badness, demonstrates the absolute necessity of the gospel. If the badness of the world proves how far down man can fall left to himself, the goodness of the world goes to show what a very little way, left to himself, he can lift himself from where he has fallen. 2. Preaching the gospel, what isit? Deliverance of the captives. As Paul passed and repassed through the streets on his way to the place of prayer, to preach to the good, kind people, he saw another phase of European life—a poor girl, onwhose supposed powers of divination greedy men were making a fat living. Well, she, too, as well as Lydia, should be helped. Paul held a gospel in trust for her. Oh! yes: but think of the difficulties and the danger of doing it! For timid friends tell Paul, who had never been in Europe before; never been face to face with downright heathenism before: “She is a property, a human chattel; she belongs to the men who live upon her powers.”Salvation for her means ruin for them: good money is good in Europe, and what it might mean ultimately for Paul no one could say. Then think of the scandal, the interruptions of the good work so nicely begun—all this to be stopped and a great scandal raised, and Christianity itself, perhaps. Yes, there were strong reasons for not touching this matter, and Paul seems to have shrunk from doing so. But God forced his hand. The girl followed him day by day, advertising the mission that he had been sent upon, until, at last, able to bear it no longer, he stood there in the open street and, in the name of Christ, opened fire upon the devil in her, and the more malignant devil in her masters. Yes, there was a scandal and tumult, and much trouble came of it. But it had to be done, for in this matter peace is with the devil and the fight is with God. 3. Preaching the gospel to the heathen is preaching Christ as the Saviour of lost men. Philippi held not Lydia only, not girls like that poor lost, wild one; but men like this gaoler, coarse, hardened, sceptical. What can Paul do to help that man? What does that man want? Why, he wants everything; he wants the chief thing. And so, from obeying the vision they saw and following the call they heard, God led these people into a work that touched the European town at every point of its life, and stirred it to its lowest depths. They left it in a few days a different place from what they had found it. (J. M. Gibbon.)The cry of the heathen:—This was no doubt a special vision sent of God for the direction of the apostle. And yet the vision may be very readily accounted for by natural causes. Men usually dream of that which is most upon their minds. Who marvels that the miser dreams of gold, the mother of her infant, the soldier of battle? No wonder that Paul, whose whole soul was full of his Master’s cause, should have a vision concerning a new field of labour. God sometimes tells men in their sleep the secret they could not discover when they were awake. We have heard of the preacher who dreamed his sermon and then preached it. The text suggests that—

I. THE GREATEST HELP THAN CAN BE GIVEN TO ANY PEOPLE IS THE PREACHING OF THE GOSPEL. Those who have not the gospel stand in the greatest need of help; but when the gospel is carried, you carry everything within it. 1. Many lands are still subject to despots. How is liberty to be established in these lands? We need something more potent than steel to carve out the liberty of mankind. If liberty, equality, and fraternity, the three great words that are the world’s heirloom, are ever to be fully known, it must be by the preaching of the Word of Jesus. 2. See how the nations are lying under gloomy superstition. How many have their intellect blighted, their hopes blasted, their progress stopped, by the cursed dominancy of priests. But the preaching of the gospel which teaches that believers are all priests and kings—this, and this only, is the world’s hope of its deliverance from the slavery of the body and the yet more accursed bondage of the soul. 3. There are many places where all social comforts and enjoyments are as yet totally unknown. Nothing else can make the barbarian into a civilised man but the cross. 4. There are districts where the ground is red with blood. What shall we do to put an end to war? The gospel of Jesus shall yet break the battle–bow in sunder. 5. But still, the greatest help that the gospel brings is help to the soul. Does not your heart desire that the blind eye should be opened, the misguided directed, the vicious led to virtue, and the virtuous to righteousness? Ye must send the gospel far and wide. How can they believe without a preacher? How can they preach except they be sent?

Acts 16:6–7 NIV
Paul and his companions traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been kept by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in the province of Asia. When they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to enter Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus would not allow them to.
Acts 16:6–10 NIV
Paul and his companions traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been kept by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in the province of Asia. When they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to enter Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus would not allow them to. So they passed by Mysia and went down to Troas. During the night Paul had a vision of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.” After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave for Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to them.
Acts 16
God is clearly directing the missionaries: they were kept by the Holy Spirit from entering Asia (v. 6); the Spirit of Jesus would not let them into Bithynia (v. 7). Maybe there were guards blocking the way? Whatever it was, the apostles understood it to be the clear direction of God.
Teaching Acts: Unlocking the Book of Acts for the Bible Teacher (1) The Call to Macedonia (Acts 16:6–10)

God is clearly directing the missionaries: they were kept by the Holy Spirit from entering Asia (v. 6); the Spirit of Jesus would not let them into Bithynia (v. 7). Maybe there were guards blocking the way? Whatever it was, the apostles understood it to be the clear direction of God.

Where were they to go? The answer comes in verse 9. Paul sees a vision of a man of Macedonia speaking and begging for help (v. 10). This was the call of God to Europe. From the outset, the team is working under the oversight of God.

Acts 16
God is clearly directing the missionaries: they were kept by the Holy Spirit from entering Asia (v. 6); the Spirit of Jesus would not let them into Bithynia (v. 7). Maybe there were guards blocking the way? Whatever it was, the apostles understood it to be the clear direction of God.
God is clearly directing the missionaries: they were kept by the Holy Spirit from entering Asia (v. 6); the Spirit of Jesus would not let them into Bithynia (v. 7). Maybe there were guards blocking the way? Whatever it was, the apostles understood it to be the clear direction of God.
Where were they to go? The answer comes in verse 9.
Acts 16:9 NIV
During the night Paul had a vision of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us.”
Paul sees a vision of a man of Macedonia speaking and begging for help.
Paul sees a vision of a man of Macedonia speaking and begging for help (v. 10).
Acts 16:10 NIV
After Paul had seen the vision, we got ready at once to leave for Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to them.
This was the call of God to Europe. From the outset, the team is working under the oversight of God.
This was the call of God to Europe. From the outset, the team is working under the oversight of God.
FIRST MAJOR POINT FOR TODAY… The Team is working under the oversight of God
God has given an opportunity for us here at First Baptist to go to our own “Europe” and ignite a ministry. We don’t have to board a ship, worry about death, flogging or imprisonment.
You see our calling is right here in Sunnyside, in your neighborhoods and right here at First Baptist.
So he got to Troas…blindly, no contacts, no referrals, no attention, nothing except his small little band in a world full of idol worship. We already have a basis for our relationships so we have everything that Paul did not
Acts 16:13 NIV
On the Sabbath we went outside the city gate to the river, where we expected to find a place of prayer. We sat down and began to speak to the women who had gathered there.
Acts 1
Note that Paul here was still mindful the Sabbath, He and his companions were always aware of the opportunities to spread the Gospel. On the Sabbath the men would have all been at the Synagogue. The women were “outside the city gate,” down by the river
They didn’t expect to do ministry that day. They didn’t wake up that morning and say “I’m going to go to pray and instead I’m going to talk to a group of “women who had gathered.”
They gathered to “go to church.” No Synagogue, no building, no resources, no format, no guidance (except from the dream, “come to Macedonia.”)
They didn’t expect to do ministry that day. They didn’t wake up that morning and say “I’m going to go to pray and instead I’m going to talk to a group of “women who had gathered.”
Why were the women there??? Scripture doesn’t say but my guess is they were gathering water, washing clothes, washing their kids.
Women have played a VITAL role in moving the Gospel forward, of ministering, of pastoring flocks in moving the agenda of God forward.
Elizabeth and Mary where with each other during there pregnancies (John and Jesus)
Mary attended Jesus’ first miracle…the Wedding at Cana.
Women played a significant role in the 3 ministry years of Christ on earth
The women stood by, although at a distance from Jesus at his crucifixion.
On resurrection day… It was the women who saw him first.
Women have played a VITAL role in moving the Gospel forward, of ministering, of pastoring flocks in moving the agenda of God forward.
Acts 16:14 NIV
One of those listening was a woman from the city of Thyatira named Lydia, a dealer in purple cloth. She was a worshiper of God. The Lord opened her heart to respond to Paul’s message.
Acts 16:15 NIV
When she and the members of her household were baptized, she invited us to her home. “If you consider me a believer in the Lord,” she said, “come and stay at my house.” And she persuaded us.
Acts 16
SECOND MAJOR POINT FOR TODAY… In the small group, big things are done.
Jill and I have been involved in a small group for 26 of our 31 years of marriage. We have seen and experienced… alot
26 children were born or raised
2 members of our group died
2 members got remarried and brought 2 more kids
2 couples got divorced
Lydia was transformed that day in a small group of women. They probably didn’t gather for prayer, for worship but to do some of the household duties. The Lord opened her heart to his message. This happens in a small group.
As you have moved in-and-out of various groups at various times the Lord works in those gatherings
Small group experience is life transforming...
Small group experience is life transforming...
This transformation is God-led.
Small group experience takes what we learned in our heads, experienced in our hearts and moves it to our hands for Gospel action. Gospel Action with each other, Gospel Action in our large and small contexts
Action, Gospel action, reaching each other, our families, our neighbors, friends with the living Gospel.
Being Jesus with skin on is our command, our calling and our reward.
Acts 16:15 NIV
When she and the members of her household were baptized, she invited us to her home. “If you consider me a believer in the Lord,” she said, “come and stay at my house.” And she persuaded us.
Being part of group pulls us along spiritually… whatever that next step is for you.
commitment or recommitment to Christ, maybe for the first time,
commitment to change your life and lifestyle,
commitment to get Baptized and officially joining the membership of Sunnyside First Baptist.
All of these things happen best in the context of the small group.
THIRD MAJOR POINT FOR TODAY… Small groups of all kinds make up a church body.
Families, Women’s, Men’s, Kids and all mixture of all of those. The important thing is not what or where you meeting or study. The important thing is meeting and connecting with others.
Acts 2:42–47 NIV
They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.
You see this is NOT a strategy, a program, an event or “another church thing.” This is the life and life blood of the church
Jill has agreed to take the organization and administration of this venture on her shoulders.
She is going to take a few minutes right now to introduce, do some initial planning and gathering and to talk about an upcoming event.
Jill...
Communion
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