Chapter VII. - Imprisonment of Paul and Silas.
In company with Silas, Paul again visited Lystra, where he
had been greeted as a god by the heathen; where the opposing Jews had followed
on his track, and by their misrepresentation had turned the reverence of the
people into insult, abuse, and a determination to kill him. Yet we find him
again on the scene of his former danger, looking after the fruit of his labours
there. {LP 72.2}
He found that the converts to Christ had not been intimidated
by the violent persecution of the apostles; but, on the contrary, were confirmed
in the faith, believing that the kingdom of Christ would be reached through
trial and suffering. {LP 72.3}
Paul found that Timothy was closely bound to him by the ties
of Christian union. This man
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had been instructed in the Holy Scriptures from his
childhood, and educated for a strictly religious life. He had witnessed the
sufferings of Paul upon his former visit to Lystra, and the bonds of Christian
sympathy had knit his heart firmly to that of the apostle. Paul accordingly
thought best to take Timothy with him to assist in his labours. {LP 72.4}
The extreme caution of Paul is manifested in this act. He had
refused the companionship of Mark, because he dared not trust him in an
emergency. But in Timothy he saw one who fully appreciated the ministerial work,
who respected his position, and was not appalled at the prospect of suffering
and persecution. Yet he did not venture to accept Timothy, an untried youth,
without diligent inquiry with regard to his life and character. After fully
satisfying himself on these points, Paul received Timothy as his fellow-labourer
and son in the gospel. {LP 73.1}
Paul, with his usual good judgment, caused Timothy to be
circumcised; not that God required it, but in order to remove from the minds of
the Jews an obstacle to Timothy's ministration. Paul was to labour from place to
place in the synagogues, and there to preach Christ. If his companion should be
known as an uncircumcised heathen, the work of both would be greatly hindered by
the prejudice and bigotry of the people, The apostle everywhere met a storm of
persecution. He desired to bring the Jews to Christianity, and sought, as far as
was consistent with the faith, to remove every pretext for opposition. Yet while
he conceded this much to Jewish prejudice, his faith and teachings declared that
circumcision or uncircumcision was nothing, but the gospel of Christ was
everything.
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{LP 73.2}
At Philippi, Lydia, of the city of Thyatira, heard the
apostles, and her heart was open to receive the truth. She and her household
were converted and baptized, and she entreated the apostles to make her house
their home. {LP 74.1}
Day after day, as they went to their devotions, a woman with
the spirit of divination followed them, crying, "These men are the servants of
the most high God, which show unto us the way of salvation." This woman was a
special agent of Satan; and, as the devils were troubled by the presence of
Christ, so the evil spirit which possessed her was ill at ease in the presence
of the apostles. Satan knew that his kingdom was invaded, and took this way of
opposing the work of the ministers of God. The words of recommendation uttered
by this woman were an injury to the cause, distracting the minds of the people
from the truths presented to them, and throwing disrepute upon the work by
causing people to believe that the men who spoke with the Spirit and power of
God were actuated by the same spirit as this emissary of Satan. {LP 74.2}
The apostles endured this opposition for several days; then
Paul, under inspiration of the Spirit of God, commanded the evil spirit to leave
the woman. Satan was thus met and rebuked. The immediate and continued silence
of the woman testified that the apostles were the servants of God, and that the
demon had acknowledged them to be such, and had obeyed their command. When the
woman was dispossessed of the spirit of the devil, and restored to herself, her
masters were alarmed for their craft. They saw that all hope of receiving money
from her divinations and soothsayings was at an end, and perceived
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that, if the apostles were allowed to continue their work,
their own source of income would soon be entirely cut off. {LP 74.3}
A cry was therefore raised against the servants of God, for
many were interested in gaining money by Satanic delusions. They brought Paul
and Silas before the magistrates with the charge that "these men, being Jews, do
exceedingly trouble our city, and teach customs which are not lawful for us to
receive, neither to observe, being Romans." {LP 75.1}
Satan stirred up a frenzy among the people. A mob spirit
prevailed, and was sanctioned by the authorities, who, with their official
hands, tore the clothes from the apostles, and commanded them to be scourged.
"And when they had laid many stripes upon them, they cast them into prison,
charging the jailer to keep them safely; who, having received such a charge,
thrust them into the inner prison, and made their feet fast in the stocks." {LP
75.2}
The apostles were left in a very painful condition. Their
lacerated and bleeding backs were in contact with the rough stone floor, while
their feet were elevated and bound fast in the stocks. In this unnatural
position they suffered extreme torture; yet they did not groan nor complain, but
conversed with and encouraged each other, and praised God with grateful hearts
that they were found worthy to suffer shame for his dear name. Paul was reminded
of the persecution he had been instrumental in heaping upon the disciples of
Christ, and he was devoutly thankful that his eyes had been opened to see, and
his heart to feel, the glorious truths of the gospel of the Son of God, and that
he had been privileged to preach the doctrine which he had once despised.
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{LP 75.3}
There in the pitchy darkness and desolation of the dungeon,
Paul and Silas prayed, and sung songs of praise to God. The other prisoners
heard with astonishment the voice of prayer and praise issuing from the inner
prison. They had been accustomed to hear shrieks and moans, cursing and
swearing, breaking at night upon the silence of the prison; but they had never
before heard the words of prayer and praise ascending from that gloomy cell. The
guards and prisoners marvelled who were these men who, cold, hungry, and
tortured, could still rejoice and converse cheerfully with each other. {LP 76.1}
Meanwhile the magistrates had returned to their homes
congratulating themselves upon having quelled a tumult by their prompt and
decisive measures. But upon their way home they heard more fully concerning the
character and work of the men whom they had sentenced to scourging and
imprisonment. They also saw the woman who had been freed from Satanic influence,
and who had been a very troublesome subject to them. They were sensibly struck
by the change in her countenance and demeanour. She had become quiet, peaceful,
and possessed of her right mind. They were indignant with themselves when they
discovered that in all probability they had visited upon two innocent men the
rigorous penalty of the Roman law against the worst criminals. They decided that
in the morning they would command them to be privately released, and escorted in
safety from the city, beyond the danger of violence from the mob. {LP 76.2}
But while men were cruel and vindictive, or criminally
negligent of the solemn responsibilities devolving upon them, God had not
forgotten
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to be gracious to his suffering servants. An angel was sent
from Heaven to release the apostles. As he neared the Roman prison, the earth
trembled beneath his feet, the whole city was shaken by the earthquake, and the
prison walls reeled like a reed in the wind. The heavily bolted doors flew open;
the chains and fetters fell from the hands and feet of every prisoner. {LP 76.3}
The keeper of the jail had heard with amazement the prayers
and singing of the imprisoned apostles. When they were led in, he had seen their
swollen and bleeding wounds, and he had himself caused their feet to be fastened
in the instruments of torture. He had expected to hear bitter wailing, groans,
and imprecations; but lo! his ears were greeted with joyful praise. He fell
asleep with these sounds in his ears; but was awakened by the earthquake, and
the shaking of the prison walls. {LP 77.1}
Upon awakening he saw all the prison doors open, and his
first thought was that the prisoners had escaped. He remembered with what an
explicit charge the prisoners had been intrusted to his care the night before,
and he felt sure that death would be the penalty of his apparent unfaithfulness.
He cried out in the bitterness of his spirit that it was better for him to die
by his own hand than to submit to a disgraceful execution. He was about to kill
himself, when Paul cried out with a loud voice, "Do thyself no harm; for we are
all here." {LP 77.2}
The severity with which the jailer had treated the apostles
had not roused their resentment, or they would have allowed him to commit
suicide. But their hearts were filled with the love of Christ, and they held no
malice against their
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persecutors. The jailer dropped his sword, and called for a
light. He hastened into the inner dungeon, and fell down before Paul and Silas,
begging their forgiveness. He then brought them into the open court, and
inquired of them, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" {LP 77.3}
He had trembled because of the wrath of God expressed in the
earthquake; he had been ready to die by his own hand for fear of the penalty of
the Roman law, when he thought the prisoners had escaped; but now all these
things were of little consequence to him compared with the new and strange dread
that agitated his mind, and his desire to possess that tranquillity and
cheerfulness manifested by the apostles under their extreme suffering and abuse.
He saw the light of Heaven mirrored in their countenances; he knew that God had
interposed in a miraculous manner to save their lives; and the words of the
woman possessed by the power of divination came to his mind with peculiar force:
"These men are the servants of the most high God, which show unto us the way of
salvation." {LP 78.1}
He saw his own deplorable condition in contrast with that of
the disciples, and with deep humility and reverence asked them to show him the
way of life. "And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved, and thy house. And they spake unto him the word of the Lord, and to all
that were in his house." The jailer then washed the wounds of the apostles, and
ministered unto them; and was baptized by them. A sanctifying influence spread
among the inmates of the prison, and the hearts of all were opened to receive
the truths uttered by the apostles. They were convinced also that the living
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God, whom these men served, had miraculously released them
from bondage. {LP 78.2}
The citizens had been greatly terrified by the earthquake.
When the officers informed the magistrates in the morning of what had occurred
at the prison, they were alarmed, and sent the sergeants to liberate the
apostles from prison. "But Paul said unto them, They have beaten us openly,
uncondemned, being Romans, and have cast us into prison; and now do they thrust
us out privily? nay, verily; but let them come themselves and fetch us out." {LP
79.1}
Paul and Silas felt that to maintain the dignity of Christ's
church, they must not submit to the illegal course proposed by the Roman
magistrates. The apostles were Roman citizens, and it was unlawful to scourge a
Roman, save for the most flagrant crime, or to deprive him of his liberty
without a fair trial and condemnation. They had been publicly thrust into
prison, and now refused to be privately released, without proper acknowledgments
on the part of the magistrates. {LP 79.2}
When this word was brought to the authorities, they were
alarmed for fear the apostles would make complaint of their unlawful treatment
to the emperor, and cause the magistrates to lose their positions. They
accordingly visited the prison, apologized to the apostles for their injustice
and cruelty, and themselves conducted them out of the prison, and entreated them
to depart out of the city. Thus the Lord wrought for his servants in their
extremity. {LP 79.3}
The magistrates entreated them to depart, because they feared
their influence over the people, and the power of Heaven that had interposed in
behalf of those innocent men who had been
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unlawfully scourged and imprisoned. Acting upon the
principles given them by Christ, the apostles would not urge their presence
where it was not desired. They complied with the request of the magistrates, but
did not hasten their departure precipitously. They went rejoicing from the
prison to the house of Lydia, where they met the new converts to the faith of
Christ, and related all the wonderful dealings of God with them. They related
their night's experience, and the conversion of the keeper of the prison, and of
the prisoners. {LP 79.4}
The apostles viewed their labours in Philippi as not in vain.
They there met much opposition and persecution; but the intervention of
Providence in their behalf, and the conversion of the jailer and all his house,
more than atoned for the disgrace and suffering they had endured. The
Philippians saw represented in the deportment and presence of mind of the
apostles the spirit of the religion of Jesus Christ. The apostles might have
fled when the earthquake opened their prison doors and loosened their fetters;
but that would have been an acknowledgment that they were criminals, which would
have been a disgrace to the gospel of Christ; the jailer would have been exposed
to the penalty of death, and the general influence would have been bad. As it
was, Paul controlled the liberated prisoners so perfectly that not one attempted
to escape. {LP 80.1}
The Philippians could but acknowledge the nobility and
generosity of the apostles in their course of action, especially in forbearing
to appeal to a higher power against the magistrates who had persecuted them. The
news of their unjust imprisonment and miraculous deliverance, was noised about through all that region, and brought the
apostles and their ministry before the notice of a large number who would not
otherwise have been reached. {LP 80.2}
Paul's labours at Philippi resulted in the establishment of a
church there, whose numbers steadily increased. His example of zeal and
devotion, above all, his willingness to suffer for Christ's sake, exerted a deep
and lasting influence upon the converts to the faith. They highly prized the
precious truths for which the apostle had sacrificed so much, and they gave
themselves, with whole-hearted devotion, to the cause of their Redeemer. {LP
81.1}
This church did not escape persecution. Says Paul, in his
Epistle to the Philippians: "Unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not
only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake; having the same
conflict which ye saw in me." Yet such was their steadfastness in the faith that
he declares: "I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every
prayer of mine for you all making request with joy, for your fellowship in the
gospel from the first day until now." {LP 81.2}
The Life of Paul