保羅在帖撒羅尼迦傳道

17 保羅和西拉經過暗非坡里和亞波羅尼亞,到了帖撒羅尼迦。那裡有猶太人的會堂。 保羅照以往的習慣進入會堂,一連三個安息日引用聖經與當地人討論, 解釋、證明基督必須受害,然後從死裡復活,又說:「我向你們宣講的這位耶穌就是基督。」 不少人被說服,成為保羅和西拉的同道,其中有許多是敬畏上帝的希臘人和有地位的婦女。

那些不信主的猶太人卻妒火中燒,他們召集了一群市井無賴,在城裡引發騷亂,闖進耶孫的家企圖把保羅和西拉揪出來示眾。 他們找不到保羅和西拉,就把耶孫和幾個弟兄拉到當地官員面前,高喊:「那些攪亂天下的人到我們這裡來了, 耶孫接待了他們。他們違抗凱撒的命令,說另有一個王叫耶穌。」 百姓和當地官長聽後,深感不安。 於是,官長命耶孫等人繳納保釋金,然後釋放了他們。

庇哩亞人接受福音

10 弟兄姊妹在夜間把保羅和西拉送往庇哩亞。他們二人一到,就進了猶太會堂。 11 當地的人比帖撒羅尼迦人通情達理,非常樂意接受真道,還天天查考聖經,研究這道是否正確。 12 結果有很多人信了,包括不少有名望的希臘婦女和男子。 13 可是,帖撒羅尼迦的猶太人聽到保羅在庇哩亞宣揚上帝的道,就趕來慫恿、煽動眾人。 14 庇哩亞的弟兄姊妹立刻送保羅到海邊,西拉和提摩太仍然留在庇哩亞。 15 護送保羅的人一直把他送到雅典,然後帶著保羅的口信回庇哩亞,交代西拉和提摩太儘快趕去雅典與保羅會合。

保羅在雅典傳道

16 保羅在雅典等候他們的時候,看見滿城都是偶像,心裡非常著急。 17 於是,他在會堂跟猶太人和虔誠的外族人辯論,每天在廣場上跟遇見的人辯論。 18 還有一些伊壁鳩魯和斯多亞學派的哲學家和保羅爭論,有人嘲笑他說:「這人在胡說八道些什麼呀?」還有人說:「他好像在宣揚外國的神明。」他們這樣說是因為保羅在傳講耶穌和祂復活的福音。 19 他們帶保羅到一個稱為亞略·巴古的論壇,問他:「我們可以知道你所教導的這個新道理嗎? 20 你的言論確實稀奇,我們很想知道個究竟。」

21 這些雅典人和僑居在那裡的人沒有別的嗜好,只喜歡談論和打聽一些新奇的事。

22 保羅在亞略·巴古論壇中站起來說:「各位雅典人,我看得出你們在各方面都非常虔誠。 23 我在街上走的時候,觀察了你們所敬拜的對象,發現一座祭壇上面寫著『獻給未知之神』。這位你們不認識卻在敬拜的神明,我現在介紹給你們。

24 「這位創造宇宙萬物的上帝是天地的主宰,並不住在人手建造的廟宇裡, 25 也不需要人的侍奉,因為祂一無所缺。祂將生命、氣息和萬物賜給世人。 26 祂從一人造出萬族,讓他們散居世界各地,又預先定下他們的期限和居住的疆界, 27 以便他們在其間尋求祂,或許他們可以摸索著找到祂。祂原本就離我們各人不遠, 28 我們的生活、行動和存在都靠祂,你們的詩人也說過,『我們是祂的子孫。』 29 我們既然是上帝的子孫,就不該認為上帝是人憑手藝和想象用金、銀、石頭所雕刻的樣子。

30 「上帝以往不鑒察世人的無知,現在則命令世上所有的人都要悔改。 31 因為祂已經定了日子,要藉祂所設立的人按公義審判這個世界。祂叫那人從死裡復活,給了全人類可信的憑據。」

32 聽見保羅提到死人復活的事,有些人就嘲笑他,還有些人說:「我們改天再聽你講這個。」 33 於是保羅離開了他們。 34 不過,也有人跟隨保羅,信了耶穌,其中有亞略·巴古的會員丟尼修和一位名叫戴瑪麗的婦人及其他人。

Chapter 17

Paul in Thessalonica. When they took the road through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they reached Thessalonica, where there was a synagogue of the Jews.(A) Following his usual custom, Paul joined them, and for three sabbaths he entered into discussions with them from the scriptures, expounding and demonstrating that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead, and that “This is the Messiah, Jesus, whom I proclaim to you.”(B) Some of them were convinced and joined Paul and Silas; so, too, a great number of Greeks who were worshipers, and not a few of the prominent women. But the Jews became jealous and recruited some worthless men loitering in the public square, formed a mob, and set the city in turmoil. They marched on the house of Jason,(C) intending to bring them before the people’s assembly. [a]When they could not find them, they dragged Jason and some of the brothers before the city magistrates, shouting, “These people who have been creating a disturbance all over the world have now come here, and Jason has welcomed them.(D) They all act in opposition to the decrees of Caesar and claim instead that there is another king, Jesus.”[b] They stirred up the crowd and the city magistrates who, upon hearing these charges, took a surety payment from Jason and the others before releasing them.

Paul in Beroea. 10 The brothers immediately sent Paul and Silas to Beroea during the night. Upon arrival they went to the synagogue of the Jews. 11 These Jews were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, for they received the word with all willingness and examined the scriptures daily to determine whether these things were so.(E) 12 Many of them became believers, as did not a few of the influential Greek women and men. 13 But when the Jews of Thessalonica learned that the word of God had now been proclaimed by Paul in Beroea also, they came there too to cause a commotion and stir up the crowds. 14 So the brothers at once sent Paul on his way to the seacoast, while Silas and Timothy remained behind.(F) 15 After Paul’s escorts had taken him to Athens, they came away with instructions for Silas and Timothy to join him as soon as possible.

Paul in Athens.[c] 16 While Paul was waiting for them in Athens, he grew exasperated at the sight of the city full of idols. 17 So he debated in the synagogue with the Jews and with the worshipers, and daily in the public square with whoever happened to be there. 18 Even some of the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers[d] engaged him in discussion. Some asked, “What is this scavenger trying to say?” Others said, “He sounds like a promoter of foreign deities,” because he was preaching about ‘Jesus’ and ‘Resurrection.’ 19 They took him and led him to the Areopagus[e] and said, “May we learn what this new teaching is that you speak of?(G) 20 For you bring some strange notions to our ears; we should like to know what these things mean.” 21 Now all the Athenians as well as the foreigners residing there used their time for nothing else but telling or hearing something new.

Paul’s Speech at the Areopagus. 22 Then Paul stood up at the Areopagus and said:[f]

“You Athenians, I see that in every respect you are very religious. 23 For as I walked around looking carefully at your shrines, I even discovered an altar inscribed, ‘To an Unknown God.’[g] What therefore you unknowingly worship, I proclaim to you. 24 The God who made the world and all that is in it, the Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in sanctuaries made by human hands,(H) 25 nor is he served by human hands because he needs anything. Rather it is he who gives to everyone life and breath and everything. 26 He made from one[h] the whole human race to dwell on the entire surface of the earth, and he fixed the ordered seasons and the boundaries of their regions, 27 so that people might seek God, even perhaps grope for him and find him, though indeed he is not far from any one of us.(I) 28 For ‘In him we live and move and have our being,’[i] as even some of your poets have said, ‘For we too are his offspring.’ 29 Since therefore we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the divinity is like an image fashioned from gold, silver, or stone by human art and imagination.(J) 30 God has overlooked the times of ignorance, but now he demands that all people everywhere repent 31 because he has established a day on which he will ‘judge the world with justice’ through a man he has appointed, and he has provided confirmation for all by raising him from the dead.”(K)

32 When they heard about resurrection of the dead, some began to scoff, but others said, “We should like to hear you on this some other time.” 33 And so Paul left them. 34 But some did join him, and became believers. Among them were Dionysius, a member of the Court of the Areopagus, a woman named Damaris, and others with them.

Footnotes

  1. 17:6–7 The accusations against Paul and his companions echo the charges brought against Jesus in Lk 23:2.
  2. 17:7 There is another king, Jesus: a distortion into a political sense of the apostolic proclamation of Jesus and the kingdom of God (see Acts 8:12).
  3. 17:16–21 Paul’s presence in Athens sets the stage for the great discourse before a Gentile audience in Acts 17:22–31. Although Athens was a politically insignificant city at this period, it still lived on the glories of its past and represented the center of Greek culture. The setting describes the conflict between Christian preaching and Hellenistic philosophy.
  4. 17:18 Epicurean and Stoic philosophers: for the followers of Epicurus (342–271 B.C.), the goal of life was happiness attained through sober reasoning and the searching out of motives for all choice and avoidance. The Stoics were followers of Zeno, a younger contemporary of Alexander the Great. Zeno and his followers believed in a type of pantheism that held that the spark of divinity was present in all reality and that, in order to be free, each person must live “according to nature.” This scavenger: literally, “seed-picker,” as of a bird that picks up grain. The word is later used of scrap collectors and of people who take other people’s ideas and propagate them as if they were their own. Promoter of foreign deities: according to Xenophon, Socrates was accused of promoting new deities. The accusation against Paul echoes the charge against Socrates. ‘Jesus’ and ‘Resurrection’: the Athenians are presented as misunderstanding Paul from the outset; they think he is preaching about Jesus and a goddess named Anastasis, i.e., Resurrection.
  5. 17:19 To the Areopagus: the “Areopagus” refers either to the Hill of Ares west of the Acropolis or to the Council of Athens, which at one time met on the hill but which at this time assembled in the Royal Colonnade (Stoa Basileios).
  6. 17:22–31 In Paul’s appearance at the Areopagus he preaches his climactic speech to Gentiles in the cultural center of the ancient world. The speech is more theological than christological. Paul’s discourse appeals to the Greek world’s belief in divinity as responsible for the origin and existence of the universe. It contests the common belief in a multiplicity of gods supposedly exerting their powers through their images. It acknowledges that the attempt to find God is a constant human endeavor. It declares, further, that God is the judge of the human race, that the time of the judgment has been determined, and that it will be executed through a man whom God raised from the dead. The speech reflects sympathy with pagan religiosity, handles the subject of idol worship gently, and appeals for a new examination of divinity, not from the standpoint of creation but from the standpoint of judgment.
  7. 17:23 ‘To an Unknown God’: ancient authors such as Pausanias, Philostratus, and Tertullian speak of Athenian altars with no specific dedication as altars of “unknown gods” or “nameless altars.”
  8. 17:26 From one: many manuscripts read “from one blood.” Fixed…seasons: or “fixed limits to the epochs.”
  9. 17:28 ‘In him we live and move and have our being’: some scholars understand this saying to be based on an earlier saying of Epimenides of Knossos (6th century B.C.). ‘For we too are his offspring’: here Paul is quoting Aratus of Soli, a third-century B.C. poet from Cilicia.