Acts 19:11-20. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on July 28, 2024.
The spread of the Gospel was accompanied by healings, exorcisms and works of power. Today, we will look at some more examples of some of the things that God was doing in Ephesus through the Apostle Paul.
The ministry of the apostles was a clash of the Kingdom of Christ with the kingdom of antichrist, the spirit of this world. Yet, this cosmic battle is worked out in the lives of individuals.
Let’s look at our passage.
The idea of an unusual miracle is probably itself unusual. The Greek literally says “no common works of power [miracles].” So what does that mean?
It can be seen in relation to other believers, even other Christian ministers. The things that God was doing through Paul were more astonishing than was normally happening among Christians. There may be some truth to this. However, we have already seen in Acts 5:15 that unusual miracles (healings) were happening through the Apostle Peter. Of course, Jesus also had unusual works of power: a woman is healed by touching the hem of his garment, he walks on water, resurrections, and calming the storm in Galilee. So maybe something different is meant here.
In the context of the passage, there is a contrast between what God was doing through Paul and the ineffective work of the itinerant Jewish exorcists (note that this could describe Paul, with the difference being Jesus in his life). These Jewish exorcists had some level of success in what they did, but it was nothing compared to how God worked through Paul. Like Moses being resisted by Jannes and Jambres in Egypt, they were trying to “compete” with Paul, but weren’t even close.
I think that Luke intends a mixture of both these concepts. Definitely, he has shown that the power of God through the Church (especially the apostles) eclipsed many who were practicing sorcery in the areas they went (see Simon of Samaria in Acts 8:9 and Bar-Jesus of Cyprus in Acts 13:7). The Jews here are not presented as practicing sorcery, by the way. Yet, the apostles clearly displayed greater works of power than the average Christian of their day.
The Bible doesn’t teach us, “If Peter can do a miracle, then you can too.” Rather, it emphasizes that God has giftings that He distributes in His wisdom. Yes, theoretically, there is no limitation in what God can do through a believer in Christ because He can choose to do anything. However, God has a specific calling for each of our lives with a distribution of His Spirit to assist in it.
We should not let ourselves worry about the level of power God is displaying in our lives. Instead, we should focus on being faithful to the leading of the Holy Spirit. As we do that, we may even see God work through us in an increasingly powerful way.
Just like the tests that kids take in high school to determine their aptitude for certain professions, we can try to reduce the spiritual gifts of God to such a test. I think that we should be very careful with such spiritual gifting tests. No test can tell you what God is planning to do through you down the road. Life has a way of taking you on a journey. God’s gifts grow in our lives. It is a relationship in which we are following Jesus and learning from him. He may even bring forth new gifts in our lives at later times.
God does tend to use certain people in certain ways. Yet, there are also scopes of the same giftings. A person may have a gift of teaching within a local assembly, and another person may have a teaching ministry that has a world-wide scope.
I don’t think we should think of these as lesser and greater scopes. Our egos can’t handle such language, and it falls short of the truth. It may be better to think of it as a wider or narrower scope (sphere of influence). For those who lust for “greater” things, it is easy to miss the point that the greatest things we do is in those micro-spheres. Our relationships with a spouse, children, family, local church family, co-workers, etc., are the biggest impacts that we can affect. Don’t despise the day of small things for the Kingdom of God is built upon such things. Small things are not small when God is doing it through us. All ministries of wider scope can be traced back to relationships in the narrower scope. The question is not how great I am, but how great God is.
This is where we should recognize that spiritual work for the Lord is impossible to be reduced to numbers, or metrics. In the end, only God can show us in eternity all that was accomplished through us.
Let’s get back to our passage. Luke gives us an example of an unusual miracle. Articles of clothing from Paul were used to heal people and drive out demons from others.
The “handkerchief” is a word that covers everything from something you use to blow your nose to a sweat band you would tie around your head. The “apron” is no doubt connected to Paul’s tent-making trade. It would protect your clothes from the grime and wear-and-tear of such labor.
Though it is not said, it is most likely that the demand for Paul’s ministry was so great that someone (Paul?} came up with the idea to send these things to be placed upon the person in Paul’s absence. I would assume that some believers would then pray for the person. These clothes served as a representative object. The Bible does not present this as a necessary thing any more than it presents the spit-mud that Jesus used to heal a blind man as necessary. In some ways, they are an aid to faith. However, God can also have symbolic reasons why He uses strange things. Jesus and the mud harkens our minds back to God forming man from the earth and giving it life. Jesus was the creator of man’s eyes in the beginning, and the way he healed that particular man was symbolic of this.
Some people today have turned this into a gimmick to solicit offerings from desperate people. No one was making money and soliciting donations in Acts 19. The healing of the centurion’s servant in Matthew 8 didn’t require any aid of faith. We should not make a laundry list of powerful actions or objects that we need to heal people and cast out demons. Rather, God is showing his gracious accommodation of our weakness of faith. He is also demonstrating His ingenuity in teaching us about His power.
Let me finish this part by emphasizing that God did these powerful works “by the hand of Paul.” There are two emphases here. First, God is both the source and the doer of these powerful works. God used Paul, but the gifts were only resident within him so much as the Holy Spirit was resident within him. The power was not inherent in Paul’s person, but it is inherent in the nature of God. We can look up to Paul as a man yielded to the leading and work of God in his life. But, we should never elevate a person beyond that honorable place, a good example.
The second emphasis is that the powerful works were done “by the hand” of Paul. The preposition has the sense of “through.” Paul is a means, a channel, a vehicle for the power of God. His calling, along with his faith in Christ and his faithfulness to the mission, brought opportunity to others to believe and be delivered by Jesus.
Believers should watch their lives so that they are not a clogged up channel, or a broken down vehicle. God has all the power in the universe, but He wants to work through you and me. We need to be in such a relationship with Jesus that His will and purpose is moving forward in my life. None of us are perfect, but we can keep focused on Christ and submitted to him. All of us have some level of clogging in our lives. However, the important thing is to be responding in faith to the things the Spirit of God is speaking to us about.
Verse 13 tells us that some people were trying to copy Paul’s exorcisms. I can imagine that word of his success was heard by others who trafficked in such things. Their natural curiosity would lead them to find out how Paul was having so much success casting our evil spirit. They are thinking in terms of tradition, formulas, words, and techniques. However, casting out spirits for Paul (and for us) is not a matter of technique.
Luke gives us a particular instance in which some itinerant, Jewish exorcists tried to copy how Paul cast out demons. They had developed a whole tradition of prayers and actions one could do to drive out spirits. These were not 100% effective, but they had some level of success. Jesus alludes to this when he is called Beelzebub by the Pharisees in Matthew 12. He responds, “If I cast out demons by Beelzebub, by whom do your sons cast them out?” Regardless of their level of success, The power of Christ through Paul (and other Apostles) was in clear contrast to their success and the way they went about performing them.
We must be careful in the Church today that faith in Christ and walking in the power of the Holy Spirit is the emphasis rather than a technique or a formula. We have developed our own set of traditions around exorcisms. We have our own formulaic prayers and rituals that can subtly replace the presence of the Holy Spirit in someone sent by Christ. These are power-encounters between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of darkness that operate through our faith. We have general authority over evil spirits, and yet, Jesus warns that some kinds of evil spirits cannot come out without prayer and fasting.
These seven Jewish exorcists are sons of a chief priest named Sceva. The mimicking Paul by saying, “We exorcise you by the Jesus whom Paul preaches.” This already sounds a bit wimpy. We cast you out by this guy someone else talks about? Jesus had been declared a heretic and executed by the chief priests. I’m sure these guys did not send a letter back to Papa Sceva asking if this was okay. We could chalk it up to an experiment to see if it would work. Regardless, this demonstrates the sad reality that no lineage of spiritual men can guarantee that we are anything more than a parody of our ancestors. It is not enough to have a form of godliness. We also need the power of God that comes from a relationship of faith in Jesus.
The men are going to fail badly. This is not something to rejoice over, but to weep over. These men persisted in not believing in Jesus, and yet, their pragmatism causes them to experiment with the name of Jesus. There is much pragmatic experimenting going on in the Church today, precisely because we are not walking in faith with Christ. We look for easier answers than changing ourselves.
When they attempt to exorcise the demon, it answers them. Now, let’s understand right up front that all demons are liars. You cannot trust anything they say, even when there is a thread of truth in it. We find that with this demon. The response is this. “Jesus I know, and Paul I know; but who are you?”
Notice that the demon puts the emphasis on reputation. Who are you? Your reputation must be pretty small because it has not preceded you. Essentially, I’ve never heard of you, and you have no authority here. However, the key is not about the demon hearing about your ministry. It is not your reputation, but your relationship with Jesus. These men are not in relationship with Jesus. In fact, we can say that they are as much an adversary to Jesus as the demon is. They have no authority because they don’t know the one who does have authority, Jesus.
Paul, on the other hand, was walking in obedience to Christ and was directly empowered and authorized by him. In fact, Paul is in this place because he repented when he was confronted with the Word of God, the Lord Jesus himself. The truth of his rebellion against Yahweh caused him to fall on his face in humility and beg forgiveness.
Human technique can obtain a certain level of effects. However, true spiritual power comes from spending time with Jesus and being led by Him.
Of course, they don’t know what to say to the demon’s response. This leads to the possessed man overpowering all seven of them and beating them badly. The stories of the supernatural power of demon-possessed people are legion (pun intended). It is partially because humans do not like pain and will only push themselves so far. When the demon is in control of a person, they do not care about the pain they feel. Yet, they are supernatural beings and appear to be able to animate a body at a level of power above what seems natural. Regardless of how that works, these men run out of the building with their clothes torn off and bleeding.
Evil spirits cannot stand before the follower of Jesus Christ who has a living connection with Him. I wonder if any of these seven sons of Sceva became a Christian after this. In God, even a beating from a demon-possessed man can be the mercy of God confronting us with the truth and calling us back to Him. God often uses the worst of things to reach our hearts and change our minds. Can you imagine that testimony? “The best day of my life was the beating I received from a demon possessed man because it showed me that I needed Jesus!”
We are told that this failed exorcism became widely known and fear came upon the people. Such things are unsettling to people. It is out of the ordinary and begs the question of just what is going on. They realized that there was something powerful behind Paul and these Christians.
Because of this fear, the Lord Jesus was magnified. That doesn’t mean that they all were saved. However, there was a greater appreciation for what Christ was doing through His people. There was a higher estimation of these Christians and the Jesus they were talking about. Sometimes, we can be so busy compromising that we don’t understand how much we are diminishing Jesus in the eyes of the world. May Christ be magnified through our faith.
Verse 18 tells us that many who believed, confessing and telling their (sinful) deeds. Of course, this describes repentance. To confess is to speak the same thing as another. They were agreeing with God’s word and the statements of His Apostles. They needed to agree that they were living lives of sin, and then turn towards following him. This is the transformed life.
God wants to bless and save all of us, but that can only be done by coming into agreement with Him about sin. I’m a sinner, and I am lost. If it wasn’t for Jesus, I would be stuck in my sins and hopeless. Now, I have put my faith in his work and his commands. The transformed life is one that is lived saying yes to the Word and Spirit of God. Revival is never about an exciting service, but always about a living a different life, following Jesus.
An example of their repentance and trusting Jesus is given. The Bible speaks of works that are worthy of repentance. What does it mean for people who practice magic to repent? Verse 19 tells us that “many of those who had practiced magic brought their books together and burned them in the sight of all.” It was very expensive to buy occult knowledge. These people could have chosen to sell them to others. Throwing them away seems such a waste to our flesh. The key is that they are seeing that their magic is worthless and Jesus is priceless. There really is a day to burn books. However, this is self-censorship and not a government enforced practice. We can love to tell others what they should be doing to prove that they are good people. However, we need to let the Holy Spirit teach us the drastic actions we should do that would make for true repentance. They burned all of those books that valued up to 50,000 pieces of silver. The term is not specific enough to know which coin is in view, but it is generally taken for a silver coin that was the equivalent of a day’s wage for a laborer.
Books are resistant to burning because the pages are compressed and it is hard for oxygen to get to it. You have to keep tending the fire, turning things over, so that the fire can consume it all and turn it into ash. It is not enough to start down a path of repentance. We must stick with the works of repentance until the former things are ashes.
Finally, we are told that the Word of the Lord grew mightily and prevailed. This word prevailed was used earlier of the demon-possessed man prevailing over the sons of Sceva. The devil has his day when people do not stand with God and His Anointed One, the Lord Jesus Christ. But, when we stand in Christ and do the works of faith that are led by the Holy Spirit, then the Word of the Lord will grow mightily and prevail in our homes, communities and Republic.