Acts 16:16-34
A Way of Deliverance and Liberation
James Sledge May
8, 2016
If
you were in worship last week, you heard Diane preach about when Lydia met the
Apostle Paul at Philippi. Paul had gone out from the city on the Sabbath,
looking for a place of prayer. There he met Lydia, and she and all her
household were baptized. She then opened her home to Paul, and presumably he
and his companions stayed with her during their time in Philippi.
If
you were in worship last week, or on any number of other occasions when Diane
preached, you heard her close our worship by speaking of Christians as a people
sent into the world. She charged us to go out into the world saying, “Consider
that wherever you go this week, God is sending you there.”
I
wonder if Paul discovered something about this sort of sending in the events of
our scripture for today. The story is really a part of that reading from last
week were Lydia met Paul and on beyond today’s passage. The story begins when a
vision convinced Paul he was sent to Macedonia and its leading city, Philippi. Initially,
the story played out along the lines Paul likely expected. He probably set up
shop in the city to ply his trade, traditionally thought to be tentmaker, where
he would talk to those he met in the marketplace.
On
the Sabbath, Paul had gone out to find that place of prayer. There along the
river just outside the city, Paul spoke to the worshipers he found there. Lydia
was moved by the Spirit, the Church gained a new convert, and Lydia opened her
home to Paul.
But then, on another day, Paul headed to the
same place of prayer where he had met Lydia and met someone else. More to the
point, an unnamed slave girls seems to have met him. The story says that she
had a spirit of divination, and because of this possession, she recognizes
Paul’s connection to God. She senses the Holy Spirit in him, and begins to
follow Paul and his companions around, announcing, “These men are slaves of the Most
High God, who proclaim to you a way of salvation,” or “deliverance” or
even “liberation.”
Perhaps
Paul enjoyed the attention at first, especially when he learned about her how
people paid her owners (literally “her lords”) for oracles she would speak.
Surely her words would confer a bit of prestige on Paul with the locals. But
after days of this, Paul was getting more and more annoyed. Curiously, Paul
never seems to consider that he might be sent to this slave girl, to proclaim
to her a way of deliverance or liberation. Yet when Paul can stand her no more,
he heals her in a fit of pique. “I order you in the name of Jesus Christ to
come out of her.” And immediately it was so.
Paul
seems oblivious to the possibility that he was sent to this slave girl. He has
not healed her out of any abundance of compassion or sense of mission, yet it
is this event that pushes the narrative forward. Paul’s action unleashes a slew
of events that reveal the new thing happening in Christ.
The
story does not say what happens to the slave girl. Clearly she encountered the
power of Christ, and it seems likely that she did find a way of salvation, of
deliverance. Slavery was neither racially based nor permanent in the Roman
world, and when she was no longer a source of income for her owners, it’s quite
possible that she was able to acquire her freedom.
Not
that any of this sat well with her owners, her lords. They drag Paul and Silas
before the authorities, but they don’t accuse Paul of healing the girl, of
ending her possession. Rather they stir everyone up by accusing Paul and Silas of
undermining community values. It’s a tried and true method that’s still
popular. When the deliverance and freedom are revealed, there are always people
who see it as a threat. That’s why Jesus was crucified.
When
Martin Luther King proclaimed a way of deliverance and liberation for the
oppressed of color in this country, he was labeled a troublemaker and rabble
rouser, even by many devout Christians.
As
the late Brazilian Arch Bishop Hélder Câmara put it, "When I give food to
the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why they are poor, they call me a communist."
It is fine to help people. It is dangerous to speak of freeing them.
As
King and Câmara knew well, accusations of undermining community values often
work, and so Paul and Silas find themselves beaten and jailed. I wonder if by
this point, Paul had started to recognize the truth of those words Diane often speaks
at the close of worship. God sent him into the life of that slave girl, into
this situation. I don’t know that such a realization had anything to do with why
Paul and Silas were praying and worshiping that night. But in the innermost
cell, their feet in stocks, they prayed and sang as the other prisoners
listened, and no doubt marveled.
Then
comes the dramatic rescue. An earthquake. Paul and Silas are free. But perhaps
they consider that wherever they are, God is sending them there, and they do
not flee. The jailer, who has been told he had better not lose these prisoners,
knows he is in big trouble. He is a man of duty and he has failed his. So he is
ready to die, until Paul calls to him.
“Sirs (literally “Lords”), what must I do to be
saved,” to
be rescued, delivered, freed? the jailer exclaims. Paul and Silas proclaim
their way of salvation, of deliverance and liberation, and just as happened
with Lydia before, they receive the hospitality of a stranger. He washes their
wounds and in turn is himself washed in the waters of baptism.
Paul may not have meant for any of this
to happen, but by healing a slave girl he blunders his way into a story that
embodies what Paul will write in his letter to the church in Galatia. “There
is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer
male or female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”
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I
think it’s easy, especially for Christians, to miss all that is going on in the
story of Paul at Philippi. It happened to me when I began thinking about how to
preach it. I got boxed in by words like “save” and “salvation” and “Lord.” They’re
churchy words with churchy meanings. But not for Paul or his hearers or the
writer of Acts. They were real words that spoke of real rescue and deliverance,
of real bosses, owners, and rulers.
Jesus,
this strange, alternative ruler, proclaimed a new day, a new kingdom, a new
community, a proclamation that was a way of salvation, rescue, deliverance, and
freedom. It freed people from fears of death and sin and loss, but it did much
more. It saved, freed, delivered people from what bound them, trapped them, or held
them captive. And whenever Christ is truly proclaimed and encountered, a way of
salvation and deliverance continues to free and rescue people from all manner
of fears, chains, and oppression.
Like
Paul with that slave girl, I am often oblivious to opportunities I have to
share a way of salvation. Worse, I’m too often still caught up in ways of the
world that honor divisions of gender, race, economics, culture, orientation, education,
privilege, and more. Lord, show me again your way of deliverance and
liberation. And send me to share it with others.
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