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Peter and Paul ... Apostles of Antioch (amongst other places!)
Peter and Paul - Co-founders of the Church at Antioch ...their backgrounds
could hardly have been more different. The ways in which they came to know Jesus were
certainly in stark contrast. Without the guidance of the Holy Spirit the only feelings
they would probably have held for each other - even after they ended up on the same side -
would have been a mixture of distrust and contempt.
Peter, the Galilean fisherman, portrayed in scripture as a rough diamond,
given to outbursts of temper and prey to what today might be described as setting his
mouth in motion before his brain was in gear. In the Gospels, Peter does not always seem
to be able to handle his own emotions. Yet Jesus had Peter's future mapped out - 'Upon
this rock, I will build My Church' (Matthew 16:18). After the Ascension we see a very
different Peter recorded in the Acts of the Apostles. Peter is now very much in charge; he
preaches and teaches in the Temple, he heals the sick, he declares the Gospel of Christ
before all nations (Acts 2,3,4 and 5). Clement of Alexandria claimed that Our Saviour had
entrusted Peter, James and John with a form of higher knowledge, perhaps this explains the
change.
Then there was Paul, the Roman citizen, the urbane cosmopolitan man of
Tarsus in Asia Minor, trained as a Pharisee in the school of Gamaliel. Josephus, the
Roman-- Jewish historian, records that Gamaliel had urged his pupils not to persecute the
Christians, reasoning that if there was nothing in what they preached it would all soon
come to nothing, but if there was then it should be listened to.Gamaliel's words fell on
deaf ears where Paul was concerned. So zealous was he for the ideals of Jewish purity, in
the best traditions of Judas Maccabeus and all the other Jewish folk heroes who followed
him, that he saw Christianity as something which had arisen as yet another breakaway sect,
diluting that same purity, which must be exterminated at all costs.
Paul set about doing just that, little knowing what was to happen
next.Peter's call from Jesus happened one still day by the Sea of Galilee, when he obeyed
the Lord's call and gave his life to His service. Paul's came in a blinding flash on the
road to Damascus when Jesus asked him why he was persecuting his Lord.After Paul's sight
was restored he went off to Arabia - no doubt to be guided by the Holy Spirit - communing
with no man. After that he returned to Damascus and spent three years there before going
up to Jerusalem to meet with Peter.
We know (Galatians 1:18) that their meeting lasted 15 days, but we can
only guess at what they may have talked about. The conversion of Gentiles had already
begun. The first Gentile Christian was the Ethiopian Eunuch, whom Philip helped to
understand the scriptures (Acts 8:26-39), thus fulfilling the Old Testament prophesy
'Ethiopia shall stretch out her hand to God' (Psalm 68:31). Then Peter had his vision
which told him that nothing God had made should be deemed unclean and converted the
Centurion and his household (Acts 10). From then on, Peter declares the redundancy of the
old covenant, with its circumcision and dietary laws, and proclaims the new one, purchased
with the blood of the Lamb.Paul was the first to arrive in Antioch.
After the martyrdom of Stephen most of the disciples (apart from the
Twelve) dispersed to places as far apart as Phoenicia and Cyprus as well as Antioch but at
first they spread the word among the Jews only. Then the Greeks began to listen. When the
news of that reached Jerusalem, Barnabas went to Antioch and summoned Paul from Tarsus to
help him with the work (Acts 11:19-26).So the Church at Antioch was established and
flourished. But it wasn't all plain sailing from there. The weakness of Peter was again
apparent when he arrived in Antioch. Paul remonstrated with him because, in the presence
of Jews, Peter chose to eat only with Jews (Galatians 2:12), thus turning his back on the
new doctrine he had espoused. Then Paul had his argument with Barnabas who wanted John
Mark to accompany them in their work. Paul saw Mark as a backslider and preferred to take
Silas. So Paul and Barnabas parted company (Acts 15:36-41). The latter went off to Cyprus,
where the office of Archbishop is referred to as 'The Throne of Barnabas' to this day and
many towns have a street named for Agios Varnavas.
In his 'History of the Church', Eusebius writes "Men who through the
error they had inherited from generations of ancestors were in the grip of the old
spiritual sickness of idol-worship, by the power of Christ and through the teachings of
His followers and the miracles they wrought, were freed from cruel masters and found
release from galling fetters. They turned their backs on devilish polytheism in all its
forms and acknowledged that there was one God only, the Fashioner of all things. Him they
honoured with the ordinances of true religion through that divine, reasonable worship of
which Our Saviour sowed the seed in the life of men."So Antioch was a milestone. It
was the first 'Gentile' church - and also the first place in which Jesus' disciples were
referred to as Christians.
If we read the Acts of the Apostles in a casual way, as though reading a
novel, the pattern of events seems somewhat fragmented, but if we think deeply about it we
can discern the Holy Spirit at work in both Peter and Paul, driving them towards the goal
of spreading the Kingdom outwards from Jerusalem and the Jews and into the whole world,
which is borne to fruition in the achievement at Antioch.
John Moore
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