Every great story needs a hero. And to make the story even greater, every great story needs an antihero. Maybe not a pure villain, but someone who is out to make it on their own; own the world and have the most power, wealth and notoriety. We see heroes and antiheroes all through our popular culture – where would Superman be without Lex Luther, Skywalker without Darth Vader, Aslan without the White Witch, the Smurfs without Gargamel, Toothless without Grimmel the Grisly? We even see them in our Bible, where would the story of Exodus and Moses be without the Pharoah, Elijah without Jezebel, Daniel without Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, Darius and Cyrus and Jesus without…
Well, I guess here, logically you
would guess and say Satan ... but is he the only antihero talked about all
through the gospels and into Acts?
What I am going to suggest that
there is another family of anti-heroes in the Jesus story. A family that also features in the story of Acts.
A family whose evil intent shows up around the festival of the Passover. A
family that loves to follow the Roman tradition of calling itself gods and beheading
an enemy or two. That family is the family of Herod. Today, we are going to
learn about Dynasties and the importance of answering the door – Help Me Rhonda
is more than a song.
We are doing this so that the
reality of Acts becomes so much more richer to us. The reality and the story of
Acts sits in a historical context. We learn though Acts that the church at its
best is a witness to the Gospel. We also learn that, even the church in this
context, finds it hard to recognise a miracle when the world around it just
wants to take off its head.
Let’s start with Herod. Now, we
need to not be confused here. There are many Herods in the Bible.
So, it is easy to be confused.
King Herod the Great was indeed a very great and busy man. He had to be. He had
ten wives and many many sons. One of these wives was intent on killing him and
had a mother-in-law straight out of the television series Game of Thrones who
loved to twist the innocent minds of her great children. This mother-in-law
also schemed to kill the great king, with her friend Cleopatra. Yes, the
Cleopatra of bathing in milk fame. And
yes, Herod’s eldest sons got caught up in the plot and soon lost their heads –
both figuratively and literally.
King Herod the Great had his
title gifted to him by Antony, Cleopatra’s lover and the land was gifted by Cassius
and Brutus – yes the Cassius and Brutus who killed Julius Caesar. Jesus and the
early Church were firmly planted in the great Roman Empire of our history
books.
King Herod’s children would be
gifted the regal name of Herod and thus King Herod had many sons, and those
that sat in power carried the name Herod as well. That’s where the confusion
falls in. Some scholars say that there could be up to five Herods in the Bible.
But today we are going to focus on three, Herod the Great, his son Herod
Antipas and his grandson to another wife, Herod Agrippa.
Herod Antipas was the son of
Herod the Great to his fourth wife. We first see this great antihero in the
Gospel of Mathew. It is back in Mathew 14. Herod’s brother Philip, also known
as Herod, has a wife, Herodias (I wonder where she got that name). Herodias
dances for Herod and gratifies him so much, that he, being the good Greek ruler
pledges to give her heart’s desire. She, being of the name Herod, asks for the
head of John the Baptist on a plate. Herod instantly serves this up.
And this is not children’s story.
This is how Grecco-Roman rule worked back in the day. We also learn in Mark 6
and Luke 9 that Herod ruled out of his own fear as well. Like a typical tyrant,
he knew that his power was limited. Just as Caesar Augustus saw himself as a
God in Rome, Herod was his own God over Israel and all other gods had to be
tested. So, when Herod hears about the miracles of Jesus, his instant reaction
was – but I killed John the Baptist. How can John the Baptist come back from
the dead?
As we know, John the Baptist
didn’t come back from the dead – but Jesus would. Even after Herod Antipus and
Pilate condemned him to death during the holiest of Jewish festivals – the
passover.
By the time Acts 12 comes onto
the scene, Herod Antipas has been exiled and, in his place, the grandson of
Herod the Great, Herod Agrippa is now ruling. Agrippa was not the son of
Antipas but the son of one the sons that Herod the Great executed. Agrippa was
raised in exile in Rome in the imperial court. He would become close friends
with Claudius, another Roman Emperor. The reality is the Herod family do not
just have a history connected with Israel but pretty much can name drop every
famous Roman leader around the time of Jesus and Acts.
We get to meet our antihero
Agrippa at another Passover festival in Acts 12. And both his grandfather and uncle
would be so proud of him as he has continued in the family tradition of power,
violence and wealth:
That's when
King Herod got it into his head to go after some of the church members. He
murdered James, John's brother. When he saw how much it raised his popularity
ratings with the Jews, he arrested Peter--all this during Passover Week, mind
you-- and had him thrown in jail, putting four squads of four soldiers each to
guard him. He was planning a public lynching after Passover.
All the time
that Peter was under heavy guard in the jailhouse, the church prayed for him
most strenuously. Then the time came for Herod to bring him out for the kill.
That night,
even though shackled to two soldiers, one on either side, Peter slept like a
baby. And there were guards at the door keeping their eyes on the place. Herod
was taking no chances!
Suddenly there
was an angel at his side and light flooding the room. The angel shook Peter and
got him up: "Hurry!" The handcuffs fell off his wrists. The angel
said, "Get dressed. Put on your shoes." Peter did it. Then,
"Grab your coat and let's get out of here." Peter followed him, but
didn't believe it was really an angel--he thought he was dreaming.
Past the first
guard and then the second, they came to the iron gate that led into the city.
It swung open before them on its own, and they were out on the street, free as
the breeze. At the first intersection the angel left him, going his own way.
That's when
Peter realized it was no dream. "I can't believe it--this really happened!
The Master sent his angel and rescued me from Herod's vicious little production
and the spectacle the Jewish mob was looking forward to."
Still shaking
his head, amazed, he went to Mary's house, the Mary who was John Mark's mother.
The house was packed with praying friends. When he knocked on the door to the
courtyard, a young woman named Rhoda came to see who it was.
But when she
recognized his voice--Peter's voice!--she was so excited and eager to tell
everyone Peter was there that she forgot to open the door and left him standing
in the street. But they wouldn't believe her, dismissing her, dismissing her
report. "You're crazy," they said. She stuck by her story, insisting.
They still wouldn't believe her and said, "It must be his angel."
All this time
poor Peter was standing out in the street, knocking away. Finally they opened
up and saw him--and went wild! Peter put his hands up and calmed them down. He
described how the Master had gotten him out of jail, then said, "Tell
James and the brothers what's happened."
He left them
and went off to another place. At daybreak the jail was in an uproar. "Where
is Peter? What's happened to Peter?"
When Herod sent
for him and they could neither produce him nor explain why not, he ordered
their execution: "Off with their heads!"
Fed up with
Judea and Jews, he went for a vacation to Caesarea. But things went from bad to
worse for Herod. Now people from Tyre and Sidon put him on the warpath. But
they got Blastus, King Herod's right-hand man, to put in a good word for them
and got a delegation together to iron things out. Because they were dependent
on Judea for food supplies, they couldn't afford to let this go on too long.
On the day set
for their meeting, Herod, robed in pomposity, took his place on the throne and
regaled them with a lot of hot air. The people played their part to the hilt
and shouted flatteries: "The voice of God! The voice of God!"
That was the
last straw. God had had enough of Herod's arrogance and sent an angel to strike
him down. Herod had given God no credit for anything.
Down he went.
Rotten to the core, a maggoty old man if there ever was one, he died.
Meanwhile, the
ministry of God's Word grew by leaps and bounds. Barnabas and Saul, once they
had delivered the relief offering to the church in Jerusalem, went back to
Antioch. This time they took John with them, the one they called Mark.
(Acts 12:1-25)
Often when we read Acts, we focus
on the miracles. We focus on the extraordinary in the times of the ordinary. But
I want to posit two things. Another way to read Acts is to focus on the world
in which the church lived. And added to this, another way to read Acts is to look
at how the church itself responds to the extraordinary Acts of the Holy Spirit.
Reading Acts like this enables us and empowers us to reflect on how we are
responding to our own world around us today and how we accept or reject the
Acts of God in our presence.
Acts 12 is so powerful for this,
some commentators talk about it being a humorous moment in a serious story. I
want to suggest that Acts 12 is a serious reflection of the world in which the
early church lived. I also want to suggest that the whole book of Acts is a
challenge to us on how we ourselves respond to the world of today.
We have already been introduced
to the family of Herod. We have focused on three Herods but also found another
couple along the way. And Paul later would encounter the last of the Herod
rulers. But if we really want to know about the world that the church of Acts
encountered we have to have a firm understanding of the Grecco-Roman world in
which this church was located.
As a western Christian church, I
think we have done some serious damage to our Bible over the centuries. What is
this? I believe we have sanitised it. We have been so keen that our Bible is
accessible to children, we have removed the gruesome details from it. When we
do this, we decontextualise the Bible. While we see the message in Acts as one
of miracles and God with Us, we fail to see the ‘in what’ of God with Us. God
with Us – in what? In the context of Acts, it is God with Us in the brutal
reality of Herodian rule in a Roman Empire.
This is incredibly important.
Herod the Great, his sons and grandsons ruled out of fear. Herod the Great had
married into the Hasmonean family. The Hasmonean family were a Jewish family
who were instrumental in freeing Judea from Seleucid rule through pure violence.
They served as high priests, governors and kings until Roman occupation. Herod
the Great and the dynasties that followed wanted to secure their claim to their
Jewish heritage, but they also wanted to claim their Roman titles. Each
generation of Herods sought to do both by pleasing both Rome and in particular
the Sadducees; the aristocratic families, priests and merchants of Judea.
This is why there is so much
violence and infighting in the family. And the violence was real. It was
horrific and it was the context of the early church in Acts. Herod Agrippa had
already murdered James, the brother of John when we get to Acts 12. And now
Herod was after Peter.
Added to this, there is another
factor at play in the early church. You see, as far as Rome was concerned.
Christians were atheists; they were non-believers in the Roman pantheon, nor
did they worship the Imperial cult of Ancient Rome. Christians worshiped a God outside of the
Roman tradition and they did not recognise Caesar as a God. Christians were
seen as a threat to Roman rule because of this and, for the Jews, they were a
threat to tradition.
From the time of Herod the Great
to Herod Agrippa, one thing was very clear to their maintenance of power – kill
the Christians and please both Rome and the local Jewish community. Please
both, and your throne will be maintained. Kill the Christians and your power
will be declared to the world. We see this here in Acts 12, Agrippa sees that
he pleases the Jews, so he is even more determined to have Peter’s head on a
plate.
Now put this miracle here in this
context. Put the whole of the books of Acts here in this context and what do we
learn? Some have said that a key message can be that the church is at its best
in times of persecution. I want to add something more here. What we learn from
Acts is the response of the church to brutal rule. What we learn from Acts is
how we should respond to worldly powers.
What we learn is this. At a time
of high persecution in Acts. What did the church do? Did it protest? Did it
attempt to take all operations completely underground? Did it die out? Did it
speak into the persecution? Did it cry out for peace? Did it fight? Did it pray
against the rulers of the time? Did it speak up against the Jewish leaders?
The learning we can take from
Acts, is that it did none of these things. The church merely did one thing. It was
a witness to the Gospel, to the love of God and to the sacrifice that we are
called to be for each other.
So the question to us is – are we
a witness today? And this is not a question for us as individuals but for us
here as a church. As Wainuiomata Baptist Church are we a witness to the Gospel
of Jesus Christ, the love of God and the sacrifice that we are called to be for
each other?
I don’t think the answer is a
complete no, but I also don’t think that the answer is a complete yes. Why is
this? Well if it was a complete yes, I think we would find our conversations
being very different, our actions being very different and our response to our
own world completely different.
I personally think we would find
ourselves talking more and more about the grace and mercy of Jesus Christ,
rather that our stance on national or global positions. I think we would find
ourselves just wanting to fellowship more and more. I think collectively we
would find ourselves on our knees in prayer more and more. I think we would be
seeking more and more together opportunities to witness to Jesus Christ rather
than share our own opinion.
What we learn from the church of
Acts, is a healthy church is not of the world. Nor does it respond to the events
of the world in predictable ways. A healthy church is a witness to the
testimony and victory of the cross. Afterall, what turns the ordinary into the
extraordinary, it is the presence of the Holy Spirit, the counsel of the Holy
Spirit and the freedom of the Holy Spirit.
A contemporary example comes from
a testimony captured in the secular magazine, the New Zealand Geographic. The
reporters are capturing what is happening on lifeboats in Whakaari/White Island
eruption. Remember, we, as a church, are called to be a witness, this is more
than just a response, it is to be light in the darkness of our world:
Those who had
sustained the worst burns had been placed at the front of the vessel, and two
doctors had stepped forward from among the passengers to tend to them—a general
practitioner on holiday from the United Kingdom, and another from Germany.
Geoff Hopkins, a pastor at Arise church in Hamilton with a St John certificate,
provided assistance.
His daughter,
Lillani, was at the back of the vessel with the other victims, doing her best
to stave off hypothermia and shock. She found herself singing the evangelical
song “Waymaker”:
You are here, moving
in our midst… You are here, working in this place… You are here, healing every
heart…
And if she
stopped there’d be a touch on her leg, and a whisper: “Keep singing.”
Church, are you prepared to be a
witness to the cross rather than a mere response to the things that are
happening around you? And are you prepared to recognise the extraordinary or
the Spirit when it happens. You see the core message of Acts is to be witness
to the Gospel and respond, not to the world, but to the call of the Holy
Spirit.
I mentioned when I started this
message that it was called – Dynasties: Help Me Rhonda. I did this because of
another character in this chapter – the young woman, Rhonda. We don’t know much
about her but what we do know is that her fame is her response to her excitement
of realising that Peter had been released – she forgot to open the door. Imagine
meeting Rhonda in Heaven, what would you say … oh you are the dipsy teenager
who forgot to open the door? But I also think the praying friends were just as
dipsy as they kept questioning Rhonda, praying for a miracle while, all the
time, it was knocking on their door.
Church, how do we respond to
miracles, how do we respond to the extraordinary of the Holy Spirit? Do we keep
praying for a miracle witness of the Gospel truth while it is right there
occurring before us? Do we get so excited that a miracle has occurred without
stepping into the miracle and opening the door? I could do a whole sermon on
Rhonda but in summary, I think it is fair to say that there are times that our
excitement of what is possible keeps the door shut because we have failed to
act.
There are two verses in the New
Testament that refer to someone knocking on a door and the response to that
knocking. Both refer to the church response and unfortunately one is often
misquoted to refer to the response of the lost. Church, open your eyes, tune
into your ears, are we as one prepared to open the door and let the
extraordinary in – to let Jesus in and the counsel of his Holy Spirit. Church
when Christ is knocking at our door – what is our response?
You see by the end of the
Chapter, Herod Agrippa would be dead. He saw himself as an equal to the God of
the Christians and the Message captures this so well:
That was the
last straw. God had had enough of Herod's arrogance and sent an angel to strike
him down. Herod had given God no credit for anything.
Down he went.
Rotten to the core, a maggoty old man if there ever was one, he died.
Meanwhile, the church witnessed
continually to the Gospel message. And the ordinary was turned into the
extraordinary. Are we prepared to be
that witness? But then added to this, are we prepared to respond to the Holy
Spirit when it knocks on our door and the extraordinary has occurred?
The Herod family were obsessed
with beheading all of its enemies. The family never realised one truth – the
head of the Church is Jesus Christ. And you can kill him, you can hang him on a
cross but and shut him away in a tomb, but he has overcome death. He has
conquered the grave. He is our hero. He is our saviour. He is our God, and he
is the call to our witness to the world and we will respond to that call and be
counselled by the Holy Spirit.
Then Jesus came
to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to
me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey
everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very
end of the age."
(Mat 28:18-20)
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