Tuesday, 21 July 2020

Starting where people are at


Sermon on Acts 17: 16-31 and 1 Peter 3: 13-15


St Matthew's, Oxford, 14th June 2020

Today my sermons is about evangelism: an appropriate subject given that St Matthew’s is about to hold an Alpha course.   Now I confess I have never been a big fan of evangelism.   I have always taken comfort in that verse in Ephesians which goes ‘The gifts he [Jesus] gave were that some would be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers[1].  So not all are called to be evangelists then.  Well that lets me off the hook. But of course it doesn’t, or at least not entirely, because as our reading from 1 Peter Chapter 3 today reminds us we should ‘always be ready to make our defence of the hope that is in us.’  That’s all of us and not just some of us.

Our reading from Acts, today, gives us an object lesson in how to give a defence of the hope that is in us and in particular suggests, that in doing so, we need to ‘start where people are at’.  It gives us three tips.  When embarking on a discussion about the good news of the Gospel:
Firstly listen to what your listeners have to say first
Secondly find out what they want and need
Thirdly talk to them in words they understand. 
These are rules to be followed in most conversations.  However you may not want to follow them in some situations such as when shouting at your child to step away from the fire but even then you’ll want to use words they understand.

But before moving on to these tips, let’s go back to our passage from Acts for a moment.  It’s an account of a speech Paul gives in the Areopagus in Athens in around AD 50.  The Areopagus was, by this point, a sort of meeting point where you could catch an interesting public lecture.   A bit like the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford.

Luke tells us in Acts Chapter 17 that ‘all the Athenians and the foreigners living there would spend their time in nothing but telling or hearing something new.’  Now this might sound rather sarcastic on Luke’s part.   But on the other hand what Paul had to say to the Athenians was new.   So I think it is better to interpret this verse as Luke telling us that the Athenians were, at least in theory, open to the something new that Paul had to tell them.  I think it is always worth starting with the assumption that people are open to what you have to say, and vice versa, until proved otherwise.


So Tip number 1: Listen to what your listeners have to say first.  

Paul, before he embarked upon his lecture to the Athenians had clearly taken the time to look around Athens and to delve into Athenian beliefs.   And he starts his lecture by saying, ‘Athenians, I see how extremely religious you are in every way’.  Now again that might sound as if Paul was being sarcastic.  But I don’t think Paul had much of a senses of humour.  And sarcasm – the lowest form of wit – I am fairly sure wasn’t his bag.  It seems to me more likely that he was being serious.  

We are inclined to think of Greek religion in terms of Gods like Zeus and Apollo and Goddesses like Hera and Aphrodite who gratuitously interfered in the affairs of humans whilst living it up on Mount Olympus   But of course for a long time there had been Greeks who had thought much more seriously about religion and even had a conception of God quite similar to that of Paul.  Here is Plato on God in the Timmaeus:
‘For God desired that, so far as possible, all things should be good and nothing evil; wherefore, when He took over all that was visible, seeing that it was not in a state of rest but in a state of discordant and disorderly motion, He brought it into order out of disorder, deeming that the former state is in all ways better than the latter. For Him who is most good it neither was nor is permissible to perform any action save what is most fair.

Plato’s God is not a million miles from our God who Paul tells the Athenians is the one ‘who made the world and everything in it’ (Acts Chapter 17 verse 24) and ‘gives to all mortals life and breath and all things’ (verse 25). And when Paul says God ‘who is Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by human hands’ (verse 24) he is echoing the Greek poet Epimenides who Paul quotes later in his speech. 

Epimenides had written a well-known poem (in the 6th century BC) poking fun at some Cretans who had built a tomb for the god Zeus:
They fashioned a tomb for thee, O holy and high one
The Cretans, always liars, evil beasts, idle bellies!
But thou art not dead: thou livest and abidest forever,
For in thee we live and move and have our being.

The last line could be straight from one of Paul's epistles

So, in discussions about the gospel, it always worth hearing what people already believe rather than making assumptions.  In today’s world we perhaps need to find out more about our neighbours’ faiths before trying to convince them of our own.  And even those who would not subscribe to any particular religion have beliefs and reasons for those beliefs which need taking seriously not dismissing as stupid.


Tip number 2 is to find out what your listeners want and need.

Paul had found, whilst site-seeing in Athens, an altar with the inscription, ‘To an unknown God.’  Some commentators on this passage argue that the Athenians were hedging their bets here and ensuring that there wouldn’t be some god angry at being neglected.  This is, in my view, to diss the religious beliefs of the Athenians.   Another way to view the matter is that some Greeks had already come to think that God was unknowable and not just super-human as some of the myths about Zeus and the other gods suggested.

Don’t we Christians think that God was largely unknowable until revealed in the person of Jesus.  And even now there is some unknowability to God.  Paul takes the inscription seriously, rather than sneering at it, and addresses the longing for the unknowable to be known when he tells the Athenians that God has made us ‘so that [we] would search for God and perhaps grope for him and find him—though indeed he is not far from each one of us’(Chapter 17 verse 27).

However in defending the hope that is in us we cannot assume our hope is what others hope for.   In my youth evangelists had a tendency to explain the Gospel merely in terms of sin and repentance as if we all must feel ourselves to be unworthy and in need of being saved from that feeling.   These evangelists assumed that if we didn’t feel unworthy we needed to do so and that if we felt unworthy that was right and proper because we were.   This, in my view, can get very close to saying that all shame is justified and good, even if that shame comes from others’ abuse.    

For me God’s saving work in Jesus is as much about restoring meaning to my life as it about me feeling better about myself.   But I think God saves people though Jesus in many different and glorious ways.


Tip number 3 is to use words that make sense to your listeners.

Paul’s speech to the Athenians in the Areopagus in Acts Chapter 17 is very different to his speech to the Jewish members of the synagogue in Antioch in Acts Chapter 13.  Both speeches start where his listeners are at.  In Antioch. Paul addresses his listeners as ‘My brothers, you descendants of Abraham’s family’ In Athens he associates himself with his listeners by telling them that, ‘From one ancestor God made all nations to inhabit the whole earth. In Antioch Paul quotes the Psalms: in Athens he quotes Greek poets.

Now you could see these differences in the speeches as demonstrating Paul’s rhetorical skills, as different devices to achieve the same end of conversion but I think they demonstrate Paul’s sensitivity to using words that his listeners will understand.   The gospel message has always needed translation from its original Aramaic, but more than just translating from one language to another, it needs translating from one culture to another.

Now the words that we Christians use, often as shorthand, to discuss the gospel within our community - words like sin, repentance, salvation, etc. - don’t mean the same to people outwith our community as they mean to us.   I think there is a case for avoiding words like sin when giving a defence of the hope that is in us.   At the very least we need to recognise that words like repentance will need, a lot of unpacking, to explain that it doesn’t just mean feeling sorry for the bad things you have done recently

But of course there is a limit to just using words that make sense to your listeners when defending the gospel.  Paul in his speech in Athens ends with the resurrection of Jesus (as he does in his speech in Antioch).  Now unlike the belief that God created the world and everything in it, which Paul and many of the Athenians shared, Jesus’ resurrection and the significance of that to Paul was something that most of the Athenians were not going to accept.   Paul, elsewhere, in his first letter to the Corinthians says ‘For Jews demand signs and Greeks desire wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling-block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles.  Wisdom in the shape of rational argument, such as the Greeks treasured, will only get you so far when it comes to being convinced of the life-changing good news that is the Gospel.

Now it is interesting I think to note that while, as I said, Paul’s speech to the Athenians, gives us an object lesson in how to give a defence of the hope that is in us, Luke tells us that, in response, only a few joined Paul and became believers: one, a man called Dionysius the Areopagite and the other, a women called Demaris.  Contrast this with the 3000 who became believers after Peter’s speech in Jerusalem at the first Pentecost.

And yet Luke sets aside over half a chapter of his Acts of the Apostles to record what was Paul said in this lecture  in the famous university town of Athens and to tell us that for two people at least the lecture changed their lives.




[1] Ephesians 4: 11

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