Find the Prisoner

Series: Acts | Topics: Christian Living
Scripture:  Acts 23:6-11

Description

Reflecting on the life of Paul, Dr. Warren Wiersbe brings out three anchors that kept him steadfast in the midst of challenges and difficulties: the power of a good conscience, the promise of a great hope, and the presence of a gracious Lord. He encourages listeners to hold onto these same anchors in their own struggles, trusting that God will guide them through delays, disappointments, and dangers, ultimately accomplishing His plan for their lives.

But when Paul perceived that the one part were Sadducees and the other Pharisees, he cried out in the council, men and brethren, and the multitude was divided. But the Pharisees confessed both, and there arose a great crime.

And the scribes who were of the Pharisees' party, oh, we find no evil in this man. Chief Captain, fearing less Paul should have been pulled in pieces by them, commanded the soldiers to go down and to take him and to bring him into the barracks. And the night following, the Lord stood by him and said, Be of good cheer, Paul, for as thou hast testified of me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness also at Rome.

And so the Lord encourages his servant, and so the Lord encourages us today. The Chief Captain had a problem. He had a notable prisoner on his hands and didn't even know what the indictment was.

He'd come to the conclusion that the problem basically rested with the Jewish theology. And so very wisely, he called a meeting of the Jewish council, the Sanhedrin, and he presented the Apostle Paul before them as the chief witness. The Apostle Paul was facing the same group that Jesus had faced, the same council that Stephen had faced, the same council that the apostles had faced.

This was the same council that the Apostle Paul had worked for when he had gone out as Saul of Tarsus to persecute the church. He stood before them as a traitor because they knew who he was and they knew what he was doing. This was one of the difficult days in Paul's life.

It seemed as though everything was falling down around him, and there he stood. He couldn't run away, Jesus Christ. There are some days when everything around you just seems to, when circumstances that seem to be going with you start going against you.

There are those days when every door seems to be, every cloud seems to be a storm cloud. Every ring of the telephone is bad news. Paul was facing that kind of a day.

Of all of the brave saints, this group sent Jesus out to be crucified, this group sent Stephen out to be stoned, this group chopped off the head of James, Paul stands there before this group with absolute self-control, no fear. And they discover that they are the prisoners, not Paul. When I read these verses, I say to myself, what was it that enabled Paul to go through that test? Now for you it may not be facing a council, it may be facing a surgeon, or it may be facing an examination.

I don't know what it is. But I'm interested in finding out what it was that kept Paul from being swept anchor number one, the power of a good conscience. Anchor number two, the presence, the promise of a great hope.

Anchor number three, the presence of a gracious Lord. Anchor number one, Paul stood still. Now all of us know what conscience is, on psychology or philosophy or theology.

That's not a bad definition of conscience. Conscience is that inward judge. And conscience does not produce the light, conscience lets the light come in.

Now conscience is a judge, not a slave master. Conscience cannot make me do right. Conscience can only approve when I do right.

Conscience cannot keep me from doing wrong. Conscience can only judge me when I do wrong. But I would trust that you and I would listen.

And Paul stood there and he was unafraid. My friend, when you have a good conscience, you can face anybody. You'll recall when our first parents sinned, they ran.

Do you remember what David said when he confessed his sin? Have mercy upon me, O God. According unto the multitude of thy tender mercies, blot out my transgression. My sin is ever before me.

That's conscience. And wherever David looked, he saw his sin. And someone came walking in with a report, and he was wondering what's in that report.

He saw two men whispering somewhere in the palace. I wonder what they're talking about. If they had had telephones in those days, the phone would have rung and we would have jumped.

I wonder who's there. I wonder who knows. That's conscience.

Paul stood before these people. He was able to stand strong and firm and unafraid because of the power of a good conscience. What is a good conscience? It's a conscience that works.

It's a conscience that is educated by the Word of God, guided by the Spirit of God, that works. And when we plan to do something wrong, it bothers us. And when we have done something wrong and we've not made it right, we toss and we turn and we can't sleep at night.

A good conscience is one that works. I'm sure you all remember the story Dr. Ironside used to tell about the Indian definition of conscience. The Indian said conscience is an arrowhead in my heart.

And when the Indian does something wrong, the arrowhead turns and it cuts and it hurts. But if I do wrong enough, it turns so much it wears out the point and doesn't hurt anymore. You see, the Bible tells us that there are several kinds of conscience.

Not everybody has a good conscience. For example, Paul tells us in Titus 1.15 that there is a defiled conscience. If conscience is the window that lets in the light of God's truth, then as that window starts to get dirty, less and less light comes in.

And my friends, you and I can make that window dirty. Defile conscience so that it no longer works the way it used to work. You say, how do I know? If I am permitting in my life to do things that six months ago would have crushed me, my conscience is defiled.

That's why when people say, well, my conscience doesn't bother me, that may not speak very well of their conscience. There's a defiled conscience. And there's also a feared conscience in 1 Timothy 4.2. Paul talks about those who have their conscience feared.

That means branded. The whole thing just blew up. And when I got to that hospital, I thought to myself, he'll never make it.

But he made it. He's alive today. He's been through surgery after surgery and plastic surgery on top of plastic surgery.

But I looked at his hands, and when the scar tissues began to form, they were feared. That can happen. We can defile the conscience, and we can brand the conscience so that no longer does it convict us anymore.

But it gets worse than that. Hebrews 10, verse 22 talks about an evil conscience. Can you imagine going from a good conscience to a defiled conscience to a feared conscience to an evil conscience? What's an evil conscience? It's one that approves what we do wrong and disapproves what we do right.

It's possible for a person so to educate his conscience and so to fight against his conscience that he completely reverses his ministry. Paul said, I stand before you as a man with a good conscience. He proved he had a good conscience.

The high priest, who happened to be a scoundrel, by Josephus, he had nothing good to say about Ananias. And Ananias said, Strike him in the mouth. And Paul, in righteous indignation and rightly so, and I applaud him for doing so, if I had been in the galleries, I would have shouted, Amen! Paul turns and says, The Lord shall smite thee, thou white dwarf.

Paul, he was using there something that Jesus had said. They're just whitewashed sepulchers. Something Ezekiel had said.

They are just pottering walls. Then they said, Do you revile the high priest? And instantly Paul's conscience went to work because even though Paul did not respect the man, he respected the office. He didn't know he was the high priest.

How would Paul know who was the high priest? Now, Ananias' conscience wasn't working. Ananias' conscience would have bothered him had he not commanded them to smite Paul. Did you ever notice how a good conscience always brings out the evil that is in people? A good conscience.

But let there stand up these men among those who have a good conscience. My friend, there's nothing like the power of a good conscience when you're facing the difficulties of life. I'll tell you why.

When difficulties come to us, the first thing we say is, What have I done wrong? So often people say to me, Pastor, What have I done wrong? Is this should happen to me? I say, I don't know. Probably nothing. Somehow we feel guilty when difficulty comes.

When doors are closed on us and when problems arise, we feel guilty. We have the idea that every... My friend, there's nothing like a good conscience to enable you to face any circumstance, any challenge, any person, any defeat, any victory, any lie, any accusation, any disappointment. Somebody here may say that's well and good, Pastor, but I don't have a good conscience.

My conscience convicts me. I know I couldn't face difficulty. I couldn't face people.

But if people knew the truth about me, then my friend, I suggest you go see Jesus Christ. Hebrews chapter 10 verse 22 says that by the blood of Jesus Christ, even an evil conscience can be purged. And what a wonderful thing it is when a person receives Jesus Christ into his heart and the blood of Jesus Christ washes that conscience.

What a joy it is to see how that the compass is set properly, the directions are right, the measurements are right, the weights are right, and conscience goes to work in that light that came. My friend, if your conscience is not a good conscience today, you'd better get alone with the Lord Jesus. If you and I are permitting in our lives things that would have kept us awake six months ago, there's something wrong.

The blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, can cleanse us from all sin. A second anchor held Paul as he was going through this difficult time, the power of a good conscience and the promise of a great hope. Paul said, I'm standing here.

Some people accused Paul of doing a very unchristian thing. He thought that part of the group was sadistic, liberal. They didn't believe in the word of God, as did the Pharisees.

They accepted the first five books of the Old Testament, that's all. They did not believe in angels, did not believe in spirits, did not believe in the resurrection. They were the liberals of their day, the naturalists.

The Pharisees were the supernaturalists. With all of their tradition and their religion and their self-righteousness, they did have true Bible truth. They certainly had good doctrine.

Paul said, I'm standing here today defending the supernatural. And to be political, to protect himself. No, he didn't.

The Pharisees had no right compromising with the Sadducees in the council. You know what's killing our churches today? People who believe in the supernatural joining hands with those who don't believe in the supernatural. Compromise.

Such things ought not to be. Take your stand. Do you believe in the resurrection? Paul did.

You say, Pastor, what in the world did the resurrection have to do with Paul's grace and calmness and poignancy and power? I'll tell you. When you read 1 Corinthians 15, which is Paul's great treatise on the resurrection, you expect Paul to end up saying something like this. I have proved to you that Jesus arose from the dead.

Paul did not write 1 Corinthians 15 to make theologians out of us. He wrote 1 Corinthians 15 to make better Christians out of us. That's the way he stood that day.

He was looking around and there was a man who would vote to kill him and there was a high priest who would vote to kill him and Paul might be damned. His resurrections are afraid of life and afraid of death and afraid of time and afraid of eternity and afraid of anything that happens. Paul wasn't afraid because he was possessed by the promise of a great hope.

I notice in my Bible that many people went through difficulties because they knew the future was secure. Moses. Moses went through so much.

120 years of it. Moses went through so much. What was it that kept Moses going? He endured.

Have I not told you about the laborers over in Ireland many years ago who were working on government roads because there was no work and the government had hired these men just to keep them busy and give them enough to eat. One day they said to the foreman, where is this road going? And the foreman said, who wants to build a road to nowhere? Maybe you already are. How can you keep on going? How can you face what life brings to you? That's why Jesus sat down and put his arms around his apostles and said, let not your hearts be troubled.

I go to prepare a place for you and no matter what may happen to you down here I'm going to see you up there. The power of a good conscience and the promise of a great hope. But there was a third anchor that kept Paul safe and secure and steadfast.

The presence of a gracious Lord. They came and whisked Paul away. They would have killed him.

And the chief captain took him back to the barracks and it looked very gloomy. I keep saying to myself, where was James? The leader of the Jerusalem church? Did he not stop to visit Paul? Where were these thousands of believers that James had bragged about? Where were they? Were they praying? I read that when Peter was in prison the church got together and spent all week and all night in prayer. I don't read that now.

My friend, there may come hours in your life when even your Christian friends don't stand with you. Paul was having one of those hours. And all night long he waited.

And all the next day he waited. And then the next night while he was meditating and praying Paul felt that Jesus was there. And verse 11 reads that the Lord Jesus Christ came into his cell and he stood by him and he spoke to him and he encouraged him.

I don't know what you're leaning on today. You say, well I'm leaning on this person or that person. Don't do it.

I thank God for Christian friends. Thank God for people who pray and who encourage. Thank God for people who come up grip you by the hand and say I want you to know I'm standing with you.

But there may come an hour in your life when they won't be there. There are times when God permits us to be stripped. When it seems like even the nearest and the dearest don't understand what's going on.

And there you are in that darkness. A darkness that you can taste and feel. A darkness that smothers you like jello.

And then what are you going to do? In that dark hour the Lord Jesus moves in and he stands with you. I want to guarantee that. If you've got that good conscience and that great hope.

When your dark hour comes Jesus comes and stands with you. Others won't see him, but he's there. A few years before in Corinth when Paul was fighting a battle and Paul sat down that night to write his resignation and Jesus moved in and said don't you leave this city.

I'm with you. Don't be afraid. They aren't going to hurt you.

Jesus had stood with Paul before and Jesus was standing with Paul now and Jesus was going to stand with Paul again. He would be on board that ship and for 14 days tossing like a cork in a great ocean. And men would be hanging on and wondering what was going to happen next.

And Jesus was going to come and say don't be afraid. You'll lose the cargo and you'll lose the ship but I'm going to be with you. Yes, when Paul got to Rome and the Roman Christians were shook in.

And Paul writes to Timothy and said at my first trial no man stood with me. No man. But the Lord stood with me.

And I want you to know that in the dark hour of your life Jesus comes and he stands with you. But that's not all. He speaks to you.

Oh how wonderful it is when Jesus Christ comes and speaks to you and the first words that came from his lips be of good courage. We translate it be of good cheer but the word doesn't mean cheer up. Be courageous Paul.

Did you ever go through Matthew, Mark, Luke and John and make a list of the people to whom Jesus said be of good courage, be of good courage. Somebody here today is about to quit. Life has gotten to be too much for you.

It hasn't worked out the way you planned. The devil says quit, give up and Jesus comes and says be of good courage. That's the way he talks to his disciples on that stormy sea of Galilee.

That's the way he spoke to them in the upper room. Their world had fallen apart and he came and said look be of good courage I've overcome the world. He spoke to them and said the word of courage and the word of commendation.

He said look you've testified for me here in Jerusalem. He commended Paul. James didn't come and say Paul thank you for the good job you're doing.

The Christians didn't come and say oh we're so grateful for what you did. If you wait for men to commend you you may wait a long time. If you live for the commendation of men you'll be disappointed.

But if you live to please the Lord Jesus there will come that day when he'll walk up to you and say you're doing a good job. You've testified for me at Jerusalem. He gave him the word of courage and the word of commendation and the word of confidence.

He said you're going to get to testify for me at Rome and Paul just relaxed. Paul wanted to go to Rome. Jesus wanted him to go to Rome.

That was his destination. That was his ministry. There'll be some delays.

There'll be some disappointments. There'll be some dangers but you'll make it. Oh my friend life is made up of delays.

He waited for two years before he even started for Rome. Some of us can't stand to wait ten minutes for a bus. And life is made up of delays and disappointments.

And Paul made it to Rome. And you know my friend you're going to make it. You're going to make it.

Oh if you say pastor I've got to go through this surgery. You'll make it. He's with you.

I've got this job problem. You'll make it. His plan is not wrong.

His map is not wrong. He knows where he wants to and he's going to get you there. Paul wrote to the Philippians knowing this that he that hath begun the good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.

And John wrote from that lonely isle of Patmos he's the Alpha and he's the Omega. He's the beginning and he's the end and I'm not afraid. And so when you come to the stormy hour of life when everything seems so impossible what are the anchors that are going to keep you? Paul had three of them.

The power of a good conscience and the promise of a great hope and the presence of a gracious Lord. And if you belong to Jesus Christ and you have a good conscience and you're believing his blessed word you can stand. And so my last word to you is the word of Paul therefore my beloved brethren be you steadfast unmovable always abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as you know that your labor is not in vain.

Heavenly Father, I pray for those here today who do not know our Savior. Oh, that they might come to trust him. That they too might have that blessed presence of the Lord Jesus, the forgiveness of sins, a good conscience, a blessed hope. Oh God, may there be those today who will trust him. And Father, I pray for those of your people who are going through the waters, going through the fire, where the burdens seem unbearable and the decisions seem impossible. Oh God, help us all to be steadfast, unmovable. Lord, cleanse the conscience. forgive us for sin when we sin not only against ourselves and others but against thee. Cleanse us, oh God. Refresh us again with the blessed hope and draw near to us that your presence might help us. Lord, deliver us from being sanctified cities who run at every battle. Help us to be strong soldiers, soldiers of the cross. For we pray in Jesus' name.