2018, April 29 ~ Acts 8:26-40 and 1 John 4:7-21
Acts 8:26-40
The book called “The Acts of the Apostles” was written around 85 to 90 CE by the anonymous author of the Gospel According to Luke. The first 15 chapters of Acts are a didactic “history” of the early Jesus Follower Movement starting with the Ascension. The last 13 chapters describe Paul’s Missionary Journeys – not always consistently with Paul’s letters.
Today’s reading – the conversion of the high-ranking Ethiopian eunuch – is filled with references that were important to the late First Century Jesus Follower Community.
Philip was one of the first deacons (6:5), and just prior to this story, was converting Samaritans (thus spreading the Jesus Movement).
In the First Century, Ethiopia was seen as “the ends of the earth,” so the conversion of an Ethiopian official was a fulfillment of Jesus exhortation to the apostles to be his “witnesses … to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1.8).
Most references to eunuchs in the Hebrew Scriptures were unfavorable. Eunuchs were prohibited from making offerings at an altar (Lev. 21:20) and from being admitted to the assembly of YHWH (Deut. 23:1). The only favorable reference was to eunuchs who keep YHWH’s sabbath in Isaiah 56:4. The story of the conversion of the Ethiopian eunuch was therefore an important statement of openness in the Jesus Follower Community to all who accepted the good news.
It is also noteworthy that the Ethiopian eunuch was reading verses (vv. 33-34) from the “Suffering Servant Songs” in Isaiah 53. The Gospel According to Mark first presented Jesus as the Suffering Servant-Messiah. The four Suffering Servant Songs in the Book of Isaiah were written during the Babylonian Exile (587 to 539 BCE) and originally referred to the Judeans in captivity.
1 John 4:7-21
Today’s reading is from the first of three letters attributed to “John” – an attribution that was given to these letters in the late 2nd Century about the same time the four canonical Gospels were attributed to Mark, Matthew, Luke and John. (We do not know the actual authors of any of the Gospels.)
The author of 1 John was likely an individual speaking on behalf of a community of followers of the author of the Fourth Gospel.
Today’s reading takes key ideas from the Fourth Gospel and makes a beautiful and powerful statement that God is Love and that we love God only by loving one another.