***Part Three***
Offense of the CrossAlmost the whole city gathered? Is that hyperbole? The point is that the synagogue was packed out, standing room only with Gentiles. Not converts. Real Gentiles: goyim, ethnos, non-Jews... uncircumcised fellows... “Philistines.”
From the Evangelical Christian point of view, this would be
a happy problem indeed. From the Jewish perspective, however,
a Gentile majority in the synagogue was a serious threat to
the integrity of the community’s identity. Jewish identity was precarious enough in the face of Hellenist society. The
mainstream culture was always chipping away at the particulars
of Jewish monotheism and Torah observance. A Gentile
presence almost certainly would accelerate the tendency
toward assimilation. Besides, it was annoying. Jews were,
after all, the chosen people. It was their synagogue. Crowding
practically every Gentile in the city into the synagogue created
both a practical nuisance (Hey, that guy’s sitting in my seat!) and
a theological conundrum (If everyone is God’s Chosen people,
then being chosen loses its significance).
Luke tells us, “When the Jews saw the crowds, they were
filled with jealousy and talked abusively against what Paul was
saying.” fn They were filled with jealousy. They were not jealous
because they had never been able to raise such large crowds.
(The synagogues were not about the business of trying to
bring in big numbers. They were not “evangelical” as we would
understand the term.) They were not jealous that Paul and
Barnabas had such appeal or that their message seemed to be so
popular. They were jealous that the message of the Gospel was
compromising the particularity of their theology. The message
of the Gospel was throwing the doors of Judaism wide open to the Gentile world. The religion that had previously been a
members-only club was suddenly declared open to the public,
no table reservations necessary. Paul and Barnabas shrugged off
the Jewish objections and continued to teach and minister to the
new Gentile believers. But eventually, pressure from the Jewish
community forced them out of Pisidian-Antioch.
It is significant that the message of the Gospel itself raised no
objections from the Galatian Jewish community. On the contrary,
they listened eagerly and wanted to hear more. The message of Messiah’s death, burial and resurrection, and the justification and salvation available through Him, sounded good to their ears.
They found no offense in the cross. Those were the days before
Christian polemics had galvanized Jewish resistance to the
Gospel. There was really nothing “un-Jewish” or objectionable about the message of salvation in Yeshua.
Not until they saw the Gentiles crowding into the synagogue
did they raise their objections. Not until they realized how this
Good News compromised their exclusivity did they reject Paul’s message. To the Jewish community of Galatia, the offense of the cross was the inclusion of the Gentiles.
It was a pattern Paul would live to see repeated over and over in city after city. In Thessalonica, the same pattern emerged. Popular success at the synagogue was followed by the conversion of “a large number of God-fearing Greeks and not a few prominent women. But the Jews were jealous... ‘ Everywhere Paul went Gentiles flocked to the synagogue to hear him speak. All over Asia-Minor Paul found Gentiles eager to hear the message of the Gospel and Jews eager to be rid of that same message, not because of theological objections aboutYeshua, but because they objected to the inclusion of Gentiles in their faith, religion and synagogue.
It was Jews from these congregations in Asia-Minor who spotted Paul in the Temple in Jerusalem. They were the ones who accused him of bringing Gentiles past the “dividing-wall” and into the Court of Israel, even as he had brought them into their synagogues. They were the ones who instigated the riot and testified against him at his trials. They were the ones responsible for Paul’s chains.
The Mystery of MessiahAs Paul wrote the epistle to the Ephesians, the shackles were still
on his wrists. He told the Ephesians that it was “the mystery of
the Gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains.” fn He was
a prisoner for the sake of the mystery of the Gospel. But what
was the mystery of the Gospel to Paul? Why was he in chains? We saw from the story of his arrest in Acts 21 that the mystery of the
Gospel which held Paul fast in chains was not the mystery of the
death and resurrection of Messiah (though that is very mysterious
indeed); it was the mystery of the Gentile inclusion in Israel. To Paul, the inclusion of the Gentiles into the House of lsrael was the mysterious part ofthe Gospel.
He reminds the Ephesian Gentiles that he is a prisoner for their sake:
For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Messiah Yeshua for the sake of you Gentiles Surely you have heard about the administration of God’s grace that was given to me for yOUr that is, the mystery made known to me by revelation, as I
have alreadywritten briefly. (Ephesians 3:1—2)
The mystery made known to Paul by revelation was that the Gospel was for Gentiles too. The revelation by which the mystery was made known to him took place in the Temple, many years before, when the Master appeared to Paul in a vision and said to him, “Go; I will send you far away to the Gentiles.” fn Because of that mystery made known to him by revelation, Paul tells us, he is a prisoner for the sake of the Gentiles. Because of that revelation, he was in chains in Rome. He speaks further:
In reading this, then, you will be able to understand my insight into the mystery of Messiah, which was not made known to men in other generations as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to God’s holy apostles and prophets. This mystery is that through the gospel the Gentiles are heirs together with Israel, members together of one body, and sharers together in the promise in Messiah Yeshua. (Ephesians 3:4—6)
What is Paul’s big mystery of Messiah? It is that the Gentiles are heirs together with Israel. The Gentiles are together with the Jews as members of one body. The Gentiles share, together with the Jews, the promise in Messiah. That’s the big mystery. The Gentile inclusion is the mystery of Messiah.
Such an unanticipated turn of events, from the ethnocentric perspective of Israel, is a mystery indeed! Moreover, it is this mystery, this powerful truth, which inspired Paul’s apostleship. It drove him on when all other drives failed. It was the fire that burned in his belly and forced him repeatedly into harm’s way. He explains:
I became a servant of this Gospel by the gift of God’s grace given me through the working of his power. Although I am less than the least of all God’s people, this grace was given me: to preach to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Messiah, and to make plain to everyone the administration of this mystery [i.e. the Gentile inclusion], which for ages past was kept hidden in God, who created all things. (Ephesians 3:7—9)
Clearly, this is deep stuff. Paul is talking about a mystery that has been kept hidden in God for ages. It is a mystery that Paul believes he has somehow been entrusted with. It is a secret concealed for all the ages of creation. “The Gentiles are heirs together with Israel.” It is the mystery of Messiah.