THE WORK AWAITING THE WORKER
68. Years of Inactivity.-Paul
was now in possession of his gospel and was aware
that it was to be the mission of his life to preach
it to the Gentiles; but he had still to wait a long
time before his peculiar career commenced. We
hear scarcely anything of him for seven or eight years;
and yet we can only guess what may have been the reasons
of Providence for imposing on His servant so long
a time of waiting.
69. There may have been personal
reasons for it connected with Paul’s own spiritual
history; because waiting is a common instrument of
providential discipline for those to whom exceptional
work has been appointed. A public reason may
have been that he was too obnoxious to the Jewish
authorities to be tolerated yet in those scenes where
Christian activity commanded any notice. He had
attempted to preach in Damascus, where his conversion
had taken place, but was immediately forced to flee
from the fury of the Jews; and, going thence to Jerusalem
and beginning to testify as a Christian, he found the
place in two or three weeks too hot to hold him.
No wonder; how could the Jews be expected to allow
the man who had so lately been the chief champion
of their religion to preach the faith which they had
employed him to destroy? When he fled from Jerusalem,
he bent his steps to his native Tarsus, where for
years he remained in obscurity. No doubt he
testified for Christ there to his own family, and there
are some indications that he carried on evangelistic
operations in his native province of Cilicia:
but, if he did so, his work may be said to have been
that of a man in hiding, for it was not in the central
or even in a visible stream of the new religious movement.
70. These are but conjectural
reasons for the obscurity of those years. But
there was one undoubted reason for the delay of Paul’s
career of the greatest possible importance. In
this interval took place that revolution-one
of the most momentous in the history of mankind-by
which the Gentiles were admitted to equal privileges
with the Jews in the Church of Christ. This
change proceeded from the original circle of apostles,
in Jerusalem, and Peter, the chief of the apostles,
was the instrument of it. By the vision of the
sheet of clean and unclean beasts, which he saw at
Joppa, he was prepared for the part he was to play
in this transaction, and he admitted the Gentile Cornelius,
of Caesarea, and his family to the Church by baptism
without circumcision. This was an innovation
involving boundless consequences. It was a necessary
preliminary to Paul’s mission-work, and subsequent
events were to show how wise was the divine arrangement
that the first Gentile entrants into the Church should
be admitted by the hands of Peter rather than by those
of Paul.
71. As soon as this event had
taken place, the arena was clear for Paul’s
career, and a door was immediately opened for his entrance
upon it. Almost simultaneously with the baptism
of the Gentile family at Caesarea a great revival
broke out among the Gentiles of the city of Antioch,
the capital of Syria. The movement had been begun
by fugitives driven by persecution from Jerusalem,
and it was carried on with the sanction of the apostles,
who sent Barnabas, one of their trusted coadjutors,
from Jerusalem to superintend it.
This man knew Paul. When Paul
first came to Jerusalem after his conversion and assayed
to join himself to the Christians there, they were
all afraid of him, suspecting the teeth and claws of
the wolf beneath the fleece of the sheep. But
Barnabas rose superior to these fears and suspicions
and, having taken the new convert and heard his story,
believed in him and persuaded the rest to receive him.
The intercourse thus begun only lasted a week or
two at that time, as Paul had to leave Jerusalem;
but Barnabas had received a profound impression of
his personality and did not forget him. When
he was sent down to superintend the revival at Antioch,
he soon found himself embarrassed with its magnitude
and in need of assistance; and the idea occurred to
him that Paul was the man he wanted. Tarsus was
not far off, and thither he went to seek him.
Paul accepted his invitation and returned with him
to Antioch.
72. The hour he had been waiting
for had struck, and he threw himself into the work
of evangelizing the Gentiles with the enthusiasm of
a great nature that found itself at last in its proper
sphere. The movement at once responded to the
pressure of such a hand; the disciples became so numerous
and prominent that the heathen gave them a new name-that
name of “Christians,” which has ever since
continued to be the badge of faith in Christ-and
Antioch, a city of half a million inhabitants, became
the headquarters of Christianity instead of Jerusalem.
Soon a large church was formed, and one of the manifestations
of the zeal with which it was pervaded was a proposal,
which gradually shaped itself into an enthusiastic
resolution, to send forth a mission to the heathen.
As a matter of course, Paul was designated for this
service.
73. The Known World of that
Period.-As we see him thus brought at length
face to face with the task of his life, let us pause
to take a brief survey of the world which he was setting
out to conquer. Nothing less was what he aimed
at. In Paul’s time the known world was
so small a place, that it did not seem impossible
even for a single man to make a spiritual conquest
of it; and it had been wonderfully prepared for the
new force which was about to assail it.
74. It consisted of a narrow
disc of land surrounding the Mediterranean Sea.
That sea deserved at that time the name it bears,
for the world’s center of gravity, which has
since shifted to other latitudes, lay in it.
The interest of human life was concentrated in the
southern countries of Europe, the portion of western
Asia and the strip of northern Africa which form its
shores. In this little world there were three
cities which divided between them the interest of
those ages. These were Rome, Athens and Jerusalem,
the capitals of the three races-the Romans,
the Greeks and the Jews-which in every sense
ruled that old world. It was not that each of
them had mastered a third part of the circle of civilization,
but each of them had in turn diffused itself over
the whole of it, and either still held its grip or
at least had left imperishable traces of its presence.
75. The Greeks were the first
to take possession of the world. They were the
people of cleverness and genius, the perfect masters
of commerce, literature and art. In very early
ages they displayed the instinct for colonization
and sent forth their sons to find new abodes on the
east and the west, far from their native home.
At length there arose among them one who concentrated
in himself the strongest tendencies of the race and
by force of arms extended the dominion of Greece to
the borders of India. The vast empire of Alexander
the Great split into pieces at his death; but a deposit
of Greek life and influence remained in all the countries
over which the deluge of his conquering armies had
swept. Greek cities, such as Antioch in Syria
and Alexandria in Egypt, flourished all over the East;
Greek merchants abounded in every center of trade;
Greek teachers taught the literature of their country
in many lands; and-what was most important
of all-the Greek language became the general
vehicle for the communication of the more serious
thought between nation and nation. Even the Jews
in New Testament times read their own Scriptures in
a Greek version, the original Hebrew having become
a dead language. Perhaps the Greek is the most
perfect tongue the world has known, and there was
a special providence in its universal diffusion before
Christianity needed a medium of international communication.
The New Testament was written in Greek, and, wherever
the apostles of Christianity traveled, they were able
to make themselves understood in this language.
76. The turn of the Romans came
next to obtain possession of the world. Originally
a small clan in the neighborhood of the city from
which they derived their name, they gradually extended
and strengthened themselves and acquired such skill
in the arts of war and government that they became
irresistible conquerors and marched forth in every
direction to make themselves masters of the globe.
They subdued Greece itself and, flowing eastward,
seized upon the countries which Alexander and his
successors had ruled. The whole known world,
indeed, became theirs from the Straits of Gibraltar
to the utmost East. They did not possess the
genius or geniality of the Greeks; their qualities
were strength and justice; and their arts were not
those of the poet and the thinker, but those of the
soldier and the judge. They broke down the divisions
between the tribes of men and compelled them to be
friendly toward each other, because they were all
alike prostrate beneath one iron rule. They
pierced the countries with roads, which connected them
with Rome and were such solid triumphs of engineering
skill that some of them remain to this day.
Along these highways the message of the gospel ran.
Thus the Romans also proved to be pioneers for Christianity,
for their authority in so many countries afforded to
its first publishers facility of movement and protection
from the arbitrary justice of local tribunals.
77. Meanwhile the third nation
of antiquity had also completed its conquest of the
world. Not by force of arms did the Jews diffuse
themselves, as the Greeks and Romans had done.
For centuries, indeed, they had dreamed of the coming
of a warlike hero, whose prowess should outshine that
of the most celebrated Gentile conquerors. But
he never came: and their occupation of the centers
of civilization had to take place in a more silent
way.
There is no change in the habits of
any nation more striking than that which passed over
the Jewish race in that interval of four centuries
between Malachi and Matthew of which we have no record
in the sacred Scriptures. In the Old Testament
we see the Jews pent within the narrow limits of Palestine,
engaged mainly in agricultural pursuits and jealously
guarding themselves from intermingling with foreign
nations. In the New Testament we find them still,
indeed, clinging with a desperate tenacity to Jerusalem
and to the idea of their own separateness; but their
habits and abodes have been completely changed:
they have given up agriculture and betaken themselves
with extraordinary eagerness and success to commerce;
and with this object in view they have diffused themselves
everywhere-over Africa, Asia, Europe-and
there is not a city of any importance where they are
not to be found. By what steps this extraordinary
change came about it were hard to tell and long to
trace. But it had taken place; and this turned
out to be a circumstance of extreme importance for
the early history of Christianity.
Wherever the Jews were settled, they
had their synagogues, their sacred Scriptures, their
uncompromising belief in the One true God. Not
only so: their synagogues everywhere attracted
prosélytes from the surrounding Gentile populations.
The heathen religions were at that period in a state
of utter collapse. The smaller nations had lost
faith in their deities, because they had not been able
to defend them from the victorious Greeks and Romans.
But the conquerors had for other reasons equally
lost faith in their own gods. It was an age of
skepticism, religious decay and moral corruption.
But there are always natures which must possess a
faith in which they can trust. These were in
search of a religion, and many of them found refuge
from the coarse and incredible myths of the gods of
polytheism in the purity and monotheism of the Jewish
creed. The fundamental ideas of this creed are
also the foundations of the Christian faith.
Wherever the messengers of Christianity traveled,
they met with people with whom they had many religious
conceptions in common. Their first sermons were
delivered in synagogues, their first converts were
Jews and prosélytes. The synagogue was
the bridge by which Christianity crossed over to the
heathen.
78. Such, then, was the world
which Paul was setting out to conquer. It was
a world everywhere pervaded with these three influences.
But there were two other elements of population which
require to be kept in mind, as both of them supplied
numerous converts to the early preachers: they
were the original inhabitants of the various countries;
and there were the slaves, who were either captives
taken in war or their descendants, and were liable
to be shifted from place to place, being sold according
to the necessities or caprices of their masters.
A religion the chief boast of which it was to preach
glad tidings to the poor could not neglect these down-trodden
classes, and, although the conflict of Christianity
with the forces of the time which had possession of
the fate of the world naturally attracts attention,
it must not be forgotten that its best triumph has
always consisted in the sweetening and brightening
of the lot of the humble.