Acts 8:26 -40
I waitressed my
way through college. I worked at a little restaurant and lounge in Nashville
called J.C.’s. The owners were John and Sylvia Ciccatelli, so J.C.’s stood for
John Ciccatelli, but it also could have stood for Jazz Club; because along with
great food made by Sylvia, we had some great jazz music. The session players
whose day jobs were playing music for the recording industry on Music Row would
play jazz at J.C.’s at night. Glamour Magazine even included a blurb about
J.C.’s in an article about things to do and see in Nashville .
It was a great
place to work. It was hard work; being a waitress is a tough job and don’t let
anyone tell you anything different. But I made good money doing it, and I loved
the restaurant, my co-workers, and Chick and Sylvia were like my second
parents. I never thought twice about being a waitress: until I went to New
York City for the first time for a collegiate radio
broadcasting conference.
Along with being a
waitress in college, I was also a D.J. and eventually the Program Director for
my college radio station. When we heard about this conference, a group of us
from the station drove up to New York
to attend. Although there were some up’s and down’s on this trip – there’s
another whole story and sermon hidden in that sentence – it was still a great
trip. I met a lot of different people from all over the world. But one person
stands out in my memory. I don’t remember this man’s name, but we ended up in a
conversation about jazz. I told him that I played jazz at the station and that
I worked in a jazz club on the weekends. I’m not sure what he thought working
in a jazz club meant; but when I told him that I was a waitress, it was clear
to me that he didn’t think much of that position. I got that impression because
he made an excuse to stop speaking with me and walked away.
Why all this talk
about waitressing? Because Philip, one of our two characters in our story from
Acts, was essentially a waiter. Let me clarify that. Philip was one of those
chosen by the apostles to be a deacon. While our understanding of the work of a
deacon is shepherding and pastoral care, the role of the deacon designated by
the apostles was table ministry. They were to make sure that everyone received
food equitably. In other words, they waited tables.
But these early
deacons did not stay within their proscribed boundaries. Another well-known
deacon was Stephen who went far beyond being a waiter. He was empowered by the
Spirit to preach the gospel. But preaching the gospel can get you in trouble.
Stephen’s preaching so angered and threatened those around him that it cost him
his life.
Now we come to
Philip. In the early verses of this chapter, we learn that a zealous man named
Saul approved of the killing of Stephen, and that he began a severe persecution
against the church in Jerusalem .
While Saul was ravaging the church and scattering believers, Philip went down
to Samaria and proclaimed the Word
of the Lord there. Samaria : an
unlikely place for the Word to be preached and Philip, an unlikely person to do
the preaching.
But however
unlikely it was that Philip would preach to Samaritans, what happened in our
story was even more unlikely and incredible. In fact our story is pretty out
there, both literally and figuratively.
“Then an angel of
the Lord said to Philip, ‘Get up and go toward the south to the road that goes
down from Jerusalem to Gaza .’
(This is a wilderness road.) So he got up and went.”
I love how the
words “This is a wilderness road,” is in parenthesis. It seems to be an aside
from the author who is determined to let us know that Philip was sent by the
angel of the Lord out there.
On the surface it
makes no sense that Philip would be sent to this wilderness road because who
would he encounter there? But if Philip questioned the angel’s words, we do not
read about it. The angel of the Lord told him where to go, and he got up and
went. On this road, this deserted stretch of highway, where no one should be,
Philip encountered a chariot returning from Jerusalem .
In this chariot was an Ethiopian eunuch from the court of Queen Candace.
Here is another
part of this story that is out there. An Ethiopian eunuch was returning
from worshipping in Jerusalem . Why
was this eunuch from a land so far away worshipping in Jerusalem ?
He must have been a Jewish convert. But a eunuch would have not have been
allowed to enter the temple because of his physical condition. Yet, he had been
in Jerusalem . Even more out there,
while he was traveling, he was reading a scroll from the prophet Isaiah. The
court of Candace must have been well off, and certainly this eunuch was,
because he was able to read and because a scroll like that would have been
tremendously expensive. Out there!
Philip saw this
chariot and was instructed by the Spirit to go over to it. When I read those
words, I imagine Philip running alongside the chariot, trying to keep up with
it as he rumbled down this wilderness, this out there, road. Maybe the chariot
was not going that fast, or maybe the driver slowed down when he saw Philip
approach, but Philip was able to see what this Ethiopian eunuch was reading.
When he saw that it was from Isaiah, he asked the man if he understood the
words of the prophet.
The eunuch
responded, “How can I, unless someone guides me?”
With that Philip
was invited to join him in the chariot. The scripture the eunuch was reading
was this,
“Like a sheep he
was led to the slaughter, and like a lamb silent before its shearer, so he does
not open his mouth. In his humiliation justice was denied him. Who can describe
his generation? For his life is taken away from the earth.”
The eunuch wanted
to know about whom the prophet was speaking: was it about himself or was it
about someone else. With that Philip began to tell the eunuch the good news
about Jesus. I think it is important to remember that we do not know exactly
what Philip said. We do not know exactly how he interpreted this scripture to
the eunuch. We are not given a set in stone interpretation. But what we do know
is that Philip told him about the good news of Jesus.
Then another
moment of out there happens. On this wilderness road in this arid and
dry region, they came across water! Water! There was no probable reason for
water to be there, and yet it was. When they saw the water, the eunuch – not
Philip – brought up baptism.
“Look, here is
water! What is to prevent me from being baptized?”
Perhaps there were
a myriad of rules and regulations preventing him from being baptized, but those
did not matter. The chariot stopped. The two men went down to the water, and
Philip baptized this Ethiopian eunuch right there and then. As soon as they
came up out of the water, Philip was snatched up by the Spirit. The eunuch
never saw him again, but he continued on his way rejoicing. Philip found
himself in a new place, and without a look back, he went into the towns in this
region preaching and proclaiming the good news of the gospel.
Out there; it is
all out there. Philip, one who was designated for waiting on tables was used by
the Spirit to spread the good news. An Ethiopian eunuch, someone who was the
epitome of “other,” was in a chariot on a wilderness road reading Isaiah.
Water, which had no business being on that wilderness road was there. Baptism,
this “other,” this foreigner, this stranger with even stranger ways was
baptized by this unlikely messenger. It was all completely and utterly out
there!
But isn’t that the
way of God? What we see in this story and, indeed, throughout the book of Acts
was that God was on the move. The gospel needed to be preached, the Word needed
to be spread far and wide, and God through the Holy Spirit was going to use
messengers of God’s choosing to make that happen.
But if you think
about it, all of God’s story, our story, is out there. In worldly terms it is
completely out there, improbable and far-fetched. But isn’t that what makes it
good news? What we think of as improbable and out there is really God’s work
and Word coming to fruition.
This is good news.
It is good news that God is still on the move. It is good news that the gospel
still needs to be preached and proclaimed far and wide. And it is glorious news
that God still uses unlikely people and improbable circumstances to make all of
this happen. God’s good news is out there and we are called to be out there
too.
Alleluia! Amen.
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