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Friend to Friend

Something unexpected happened as the Lord was preaching the Word in a crowded house in Capernaum (Mark. 2:2). There was noise above them. People on the roof began digging out the topcoat of clay, removing and tearing away clay tiles, then pulling, tugging, and pushing at the underlying branches and timbers. One can surmise that debris from the roof rained down on those inside the house, and they clamored and struggled to get out of the way.

We imagine that bright sunlight suddenly streamed into the darkness of the home from a hole in the roof. But the men above kept working until they made a larger opening. Now particles of dust probably hung in the air from the partial demolition of the roof. Then the stream of light was blocked as a stretcher was swung over the hole, and a man who was a paralytic was lowered into the house (2:4). People shuffled and made room as the man on the stretcher was lowered and placed directly before the Lord. Above the scene now were seen four happy, hopeful friends looking down into the house.

These four determined men are examples of true friends who, in love, help needy sinners to come before the Savior. These four had a faith that refused to quit in the face of obstacles. Their friend couldn’t walk, so they carried him. The crowd blocked their access to Christ, so they went around them. The roof was in the way, so they tore a hole in it. The men went to extraordinary lengths and great effort to place their friend before the Lord.

The paralytic is a picture of all who are outside of Christ for, in our sins, we are all spiritual paralytics. The four men believed in Christ (v. 5), and they knew He could help their friend, so they brought him to Christ and were willing to do whatever it took to get that man before Him. May their same heart beat within us, having the kind of faith and zeal that would tear apart a roof to get a person before the Lord and under the hearing of the gospel. By far, the number one reason new people come to a church or go to a Bible study is that a friend invites them. When you stop and think about that hole in that broken roof, what you see is a picture of love.


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Did Paul Preach Peter’s Message Before the Grace Message?

β€œMany people believe that Saul, after his vision on the road to Damascus, began to preach Body truth. But in Galatians 1:23 the Scriptures clearly state that Saul now preached the faith which he once destroyed (Peter’s message).”

As we know, Paul spent the first two chapters in Galatians distinguishing his apostleship and message from the apostleship and message of the Twelve. In fact, he clearly states that the gospel he preached was β€œnot after man,” that is, the Twelve or any other man for that matter. Rather, his message was a direct revelation from the Lord of glory (Gal. 1:11-12). With this in mind, verse 23 must be interpreted in light of the context that precedes it.

β€œBut they [churches of Judea] had heard only, that he which persecuted us in times past now preacheth the faith which once he destroyed. And they glorified God in me” (Gal. 1:23-24).

We must remember that there was a point in Paul’s life when he rejected Christ and the seemingly ridiculous notion that He had risen from the dead. He believed Him to be nothing more than an imposter. But when the Lord of glory appeared to Paul on the dusty road leading to Damascus, his stony heart of flesh melted within him. He could not deny his senses; he believed Christ was Who He claimed to be! You see, the fact that Christ was the Son of God Who had risen from the dead was common ground between the two programs of God. So it is in this sense the apostle preached the faith that he once sought to destroy.

This is further confirmed by Paul’s statement in 1 Corinthians 15:11: β€œTherefore whether it were I [the apostle of the Gentiles] or they [the twelve apostles of the kingdom], so we preach, and so ye believed.” Preached what? Clearly in this context the resurrection of Christβ€”true, it may have been for completely different purposes; nevertheless, it was a common denominator.


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Did Paul Baptize the Gaius Mentioned in 3 John?

β€œCould the individual named Gaius, whom John wrote 3 John to, be the same Gaius that Paul baptized in 1 Corinthians 1?”

While this question on the surface might seem of little consequence, in reality, there are those who have used such situations to suggest that the Apostle Paul and the 12 Apostles had the same audience, which is not the case (cf. Rom. 11:13; Gal. 1:16; 2:7-9).

Furthermore, it does not seem likely that the Gaius that John mentioned in 3 John was the same Gaius that Paul baptized since John suggests in verse 4 that his Gaius was one of his β€œchildren,” meaning he was led to the Lord by John. We would expect that the Gaius Paul baptized (1 Cor. 1:14) would have been led to the Lord by Paul when he visited Corinth.

Gaius was one of the more popular names of the time. In fact, Paul likely worked with at least two different men named Gaius. One from Macedonia (Greece cf. Acts 19:29) and another from Derbe, which is in Asia Minor – modern-day Turkey (cf. Acts 20:4).

Interestingly, Paul wrote Romans while being hosted by a Gaius (cf. Rom. 16:23), and this almost certainly was the Gaius of Corinth, for in the same verse that he mentions Gaius, he also sends greetings to the Romans from another man named Erastus, who, according to 2 Timothy 4:20, lived in Corinth.

Another detail that suggests that Paul wrote Romans from Corinth is in Romans 15:26, where he said he had a contribution from those in Macedonia and Achaia (regions very close to Corinth) to take to Jerusalem.


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