Sketches From The Life of Paul
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 4: Ordination of Paul and Barnabas.
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This form was a significant one to the Jews.
When a Jewish father blessed his children, he laid
his hands reverently upon their heads. When an
animal was devoted to sacrifice, the hand of the
one invested with priestly authority was laid upon
the head of the victim. Therefore, when the
ministers of Antioch laid their hands upon the
apostles, they, by that action, asked God to
bestow his blessing upon them, in their devotion to
the specific work which God had chosen them
to do.
The apostles started out upon their mission,
taking with them Mark. They went into
Seleucia, and from thence sailed to Cyprus. At
Salamis they preached in the synagogues of the
Jews. "And when they had gone through the
isle unto Paphos, they found a certain sorcerer,
a false prophet, a Jew, whose name was
Bar-jesus; which was with the deputy of the country,
Sergius Paulus, a prudent man; who called
for Barnabas and Saul, and desired to hear the
word of God. But Elymas the sorcerer (for so
is his name by interpretation) withstood them,
seeking to turn away the deputy from the faith."
The deputy being a man of repute and
influence, the sorcerer Elymas, who was under the
control of Satan, sought by false reports and
various specious deceptions to turn him against [p. 45] the apostles and destroy their influence over him.
As the magicians in Pharaoh's court withstood
Moses and Aaron, so did this sorcerer withstand
the apostles. When the deputy sent for the
apostles, that he might be instructed in the truth,
Satan was on hand with his servant, seeking to
thwart the purpose of God, and prevent this
influential man from embracing the faith of Christ.
This agent of Satan greatly hindered the work
of the apostles. Thus does the fallen foe ever
work in a special manner to prevent persons of
influence, who could be of great service to the
cause, from embracing the truth of God.
But Paul, in the power of the Holy Ghost,
rebuked the wicked deceiver. He "set his eyes
on him, and said, O full of all subtilty and all
mischief, thou child of the devil, thou enemy
of all righteousness, wilt thou not cease to
pervert the right ways of the Lord? And now,
behold, the hand of the Lord is upon thee, and thou
shalt be blind, not seeing the sun for a season.
And immediately there fell on him a mist and a
darkness; and he went about seeking some to
lead him by the hand. Then the deputy, when
he saw what was done, believed, being astonished
at the doctrine of the Lord."
The sorcerer had closed his eyes to the
evidences of truth, and the light of the gospel, therefore
the Lord, in his righteous anger, caused his
natural eyes to be closed, shutting out from him
the light of day. This blindness was not
permanent, but only for a season, to warn him to
repent, and to seek pardon of God whom he had
so offended. The confusion into which this man
was brought, with all his boasted power, made
of none effect all his subtle arts against the [p. 46] doctrine of Christ. The fact of his being obliged to
grope about in blindness, proved to all beholders
that the miracles which the apostles had
performed, and which Elymas had denounced as
being produced by sleight of hand, were in truth
wrought by the power of God. The deputy was
convinced of the truth of the doctrine taught by
the apostles, and embraced the gospel of Christ.
Elymas was not a man of education, yet he
was peculiarly fitted to do the work of Satan.
Those who preach the truth of God will be
obliged to meet the wily foe in many different
forms. Sometimes it is in the person of learned,
and often in the person of ignorant, men, whom
Satan had educated to be his successful instruments
in deceiving souls and in working iniquity.
It is the duty of the minister of Christ to stand
faithfully at his post, in the fear of God and in
the power of his strength. Thus he may put to
confusion the hosts of Satan, and triumph in the
name of the Lord.
Paul and his company now continued their
journey, going into Perga, in Pamphylia. Their
way was toilsome, they encountered hardships
and privations, and were beset by dangers on
every side, which intimidated Mark, who was
unused to hardships. As still greater difficulties
were apprehended, he became disheartened, and
refused to go farther, just at the time when his
services were most needed. He accordingly
returned to Jerusalem, and to the peace and
comfort of his home.
Mark did not apostatize from the faith of
Christianity; but, like many young ministers,
he shrank from hardships, and preferred the
comfort and safety of home to the travels, labors, [p. 47] and dangers of the missionary field. This desertion
caused Paul to judge him unfavorably and
severely for a long time. He distrusted his
steadiness of character, and his devotion to the cause
of Christ. The mother of Mark was a convert to
the Christian religion, and her home was an
asylum for the disciples. There they were always
sure of a welcome, and a season of rest, in which
they could rally from the effect of the fierce
persecutions that everywhere assailed them in their
labors.
It was during one of these visits of the apostles
to his mother's that Mark proposed to Paul
and Barnabas that he should accompany them
on their missionary tour. He had witnessed the
wonderful power attending their ministry; he
had felt the favor of God in his own heart; he
had seen the faith of his mother tested and tried
without wavering; he had witnessed the
miracles performed by the apostles, and which set
the seal of God upon their work; he had himself
preached the Christian faith, and had longed to
devote himself entirely to the work. He had, as
the companion of the apostles, rejoiced in the
success of their mission; but fear and discouragement
overwhelmed him in the face of privation,
persecution, and danger; and he sought the
attractions of home at a time when his services
were most needful to the apostles.
At a future period there was a sharp contention
between Paul and Barnabas concerning
Mark, who was still anxious to devote himself
to the work of the ministry. This contention
caused Paul and Barnabas to separate, the latter
following out his convictions, and taking Mark
with him in his work. Paul could not, at that [p. 48] time, excuse in any degree the weakness of Mark
in deserting them and the work upon which they
had entered, for the ease and quiet of home; and
he urged that one with so little stamina was
unfit for the gospel ministry, which required
patience, self-denial, bravery, and faith, with a
willingness to sacrifice even life if need be.
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Preface.
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