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From: Acts 18:23-28
Galatia and Phrygia
Apollos in Ephesus and Corinth
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Commentary:
18:23-21:26. Paul’s third apostolic journey starts, like the earlier ones, from Anti-
och, but it ends with his imprisonment in Jerusalem (Acts 21:27ff). It was a long
journey, but Luke devotes most attention to events in Ephesus.
To begin with Paul tours the cities he already evangelized in Galatia and Phrygia:
this would have taken him from the last months of 53 to early 54. Then he goes
to Ephesus, where he stays for almost three years and meets up with all kinds of
contradictions (cf. 2 Cor 1:8), as he describes it in his letter to the Corinthians in
spring 57: “To the present hour we hunger and thirst, we are ill-clad and buffeted
and homeless.... We have become, and are now, as the refuse of the world, the
offscouring of all things” (1 Cor 4:11, 13). Despite this, or perhaps because of it,
his apostolate was very fruitful and the Christian message spread through all pro-
consular Asia, to important cities like Colossae, Laodicae, Hierapolis, etc. and to
countless towns; as he put it in a letter to the Corinthians (1 Cor 16:9), “a wide
door for effective work has opened to me”.
The Apostle had to leave Ephesus on account of the revolt of the silversmiths,
moving on towards Macedonia and Achaia to visit the churches he founded on
his second journey—Philippi, Thessalonica and Corinth. He stayed there the three
months of the winter of 57/58. On his return journey (to Jerusalem, to bring money
collected) he went via Macedonia to avoid a Jewish plot. He embarked at Neapo-
lis (the port near Philippi), stopping off at Troas, Miletus (where he met with the el-
ders from Ephesus whom he had called to come to him), Tyre and Caesarea, and
managing to reach Jerusalem in time for the Passover.
24. Priscilla and Aquila knew how valuable a man with Apollos’ qualities would be
if he were to dedicate himself to the Lord’s service; so they took the initiative and
spoke to him. St. Escriva sees this episode as a good lesson about boldness in
speaking about God, as “an event that demonstrates the wonderful apostolic zeal
of the early Christians. Scarcely a quarter of a century had passed since Jesus
had gone up to heaven and already his fame had spread to many towns and vil-
lages. In the city of Ephesus a man arrived, Apollos by name, ‘an eloquent man,
well versed in the scriptures’. . . . A glimmer of Christ’s light had already filtered in-
to the mind of this man. He had heard about our Lord and he passed the news on
to others. But he still had some way to go. He needed to know more if he was to
acquire the fullness of the faith and so come to love our Lord truly. A Christian cou-
ple, Aquila and Priscilla, hear him speaking; they are not inactive or indifferent.
They do not think: ‘This man already knows enough; it’s not our business to teach
him.’ They were souls who were really eager to do apostolate and so they ap-
proached Apollos and ‘took him and expounded to him the way of God more ac-
curately”’ (”Friends of God”, 269).
This was the kind of zeal the first Christians had; a little later on St Justin wrote:
“We do our very best to warn them [Jews and heretics], as we do you, not to be
deluded, for we know full well that whoever can speak out the truth and fails to
do so shall be condemned by God” (”Dialogue with Tryphon”, 82, 3).
27. God uses people, in this case Apollos, to channel his grace to the faithful.
They are instruments of his; they preach his word and reap an apostolic harvest,
but it is God himself who makes the harvest grow, by providing his grace. “It de-
pends not upon man’s will or exertion, but upon God’s mercy” (Romans 9:16). “It
is not we who save souls and move them to do good. We are quite simply instru-
ments, some more, some less worthy, for fulfilling God’s plans for salvation. If at
any time we were to think that we ourselves were the authors of the good we do,
then our pride would return, more twisted than ever. The salt would lose its flavor,
the leaven would rot and the light would turn into darkness” (St. J. Escriva,
“Friends of God”, 250).
Hence the importance of supernatural resources in apostolic activity: building is
in vain if God does not support it (cf. Psalm 127:1). “All the exterior effort is a
waste of time, if you lack Love. It’s like sewing with a needle and no thread” (St.
J. Escriva, “The Way”, 967).
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Source: “The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries”. Biblical text from the
Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of
the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and
by Scepter Publishers in the United States.