The Christians who can Claim Innocence
[Acts 25:1-22]
There is a proverb that says,
‘When we dust off, there is no one without dust.’ This proverbs means, if you want to catch a
flaw, there is no person without the flaw.
There is no one who will be flawless to those who are heartless and
harsh in their attempts to find others' flaw.
But how precious is it if there is nothing for them to catch your
flaw? Those who live such a life are
called innocent people. And the innocent
people are those who are clear and clean and without greed (Internet).
In Acts 25:1-22 we see a man named
Paul who is truly innocent, who is clear, clean and without greed. As Acts 24 tells us, the high priest Ananias
with some of the elders and a lawyer named Tertullus, who were against the
gospel and Paul, brought their charges against Paul before the governor (v.
1). They claimed that Paul was a real
pest, a fellow who stirred up dissension among the Jews throughout the world, a
ringleader of the Nazarene sect, and even tried to desecrate the temple (vv.
5-6). But Paul was innocent. He was not guilty of the charges of the
Jewish religious leaders who had sought.
Eventually, the Jewish religious leaders falsely claimed to remove Paul
without any witnesses or evidence, so the trial was delayed, and the corrupt
governor Felix was trying to get Paul to gain the hearts of the Jews rather
than free Paul. So Paul was detained in
a prison for about two years (v. 27).
Paul, who exhorted corrupt governor Felix to the gospel and the moral
life worthy of the gospel, was an innocent man without sins. Nevertheless, he was imprisoned in Caesarea
for two years (v. 27). Then two years
later in Acts 25, when Festus, the successor of governor Felix, went up to
Jerusalem from Caesarea (v. 1), Paul was charged again by the chief priests and
the leading men of the Jews (v. 2). The
Jewish religious leaders accused Paul to the new governor, Festus, to find
fault with Paul again with the intention of removing him. They tried endlessly to find fault with Paul
and accused him in order to kill him.
How scary were these people? They
asked the new governor Festus to move Paul from Caesarea to Jerusalem because
they set an ambush to kill Paul on the way to Jerusalem (v. 3).
Two years ago, in Acts 23:12-13,
more than 40 people formed a conspiracy and the plot of killing Paul. But even after two years, in Acts 25:3, it
was surprising and sad that they were Jews who wanted to ambush to kill Paul on
the way to Jerusalem. Indeed, the
persistent efforts of the Jewish religious leaders and Jews to kill Paul are
incredible. These were people who would
not give up until they killed Paul.
However, the new governor Festus didn’t listen to the demands of the
chief priests and the leading men of the Jews.
Instead, he answered, “let the influential men among you go there with
me, and if there is anything wrong about the man, let them prosecute him” (v.
5). Eventually, the Jewish religious
leaders who tried to kill Paul went down from Jerusalem to Caesarea where Paul
was and tried to bring many and serious charges against Paul which they
couldn’t prove (v. 7). In other words,
the Jewish religious leaders accused Paul of many serous charges, but the
accusations were unprovable (Yoo Sang-sup).
Then Paul said in his own defense: “I have committed no offense either
against the Law of the Jews or against the temple or against Caesar. … I
have done no wrong to the Jews, as you also very well know” (vv. 8, 10). Paul insisted on his innocence before
governor Festus and before the Jewish religious leaders, telling them he had
committed no sin, religiously or politically.
And Paul confidently said that even the governor Festus knew that he had
done nothing wrong to the Jews and had not done any injustice to them. In fact, governor Festus knew Paul's
innocence too. Several days later, when
King Agrippa and Bernice came to Caesarea and paid their respect to Festus (v.
13), this was what Festus said to King Agrippa, revealing that he knew Paul was
innocent: “When the accusers stood up, they began bringing charges against him
not of such crimes as I was expecting, but they simply had some points of
disagreement with him about their own religion and about a dead man, Jesus,
whom Paul asserted to be alive” (vv. 18-19).
The governor Festus knew that Paul had not committed any
wrongdoing. He knew that the Jewish
religious leaders brought accusation against Paul because of Paul’s message of
the death and resurrection of Jesus, the gospel of Paul. So Apostle Paul boldly said that if he was
wrongdoer and had committed anything worthy of death, he didn’t refuse to die
(v. 11). He boldly claimed his innocence
over his life.
Like Apostle Paul, we must be
Christians who can risk our lives and boldly claim our innocence. We should not have anything to blame for
those who are watching us and seeking our faults. Even if they want to dust off of us and try
to find any dust from us, we should try our best to live an innocent life so
that they cannot see any single dust in our lives. Is this possible? Doesn't it really sound impossible in our
ears? As I asked this question, I
thought about vacuum cleaners. As I
thought the vacuum cleaner that absorbs and removes dust, I tried to apply it
to my life of faith. I thought about how
I can be like Paul who boldly asserted his innocence since I have unaccountable
dusts in my life even if some people try to dust me off. Then the Spirit, I believe, reminded me of a
spiritual vacuum cleaner that God already gave to me. That spiritual vacuum is the gospel of Jesus
Christ. Just as the better the filter in
the vacuum cleaner, the better it absorbs all the dust, the best filter of the
spiritual vacuum cleaner that God already gave me is the blood that Jesus that
was shed on the cross. Therefore, when I
violate the Word of God and sin, and when the indwelling Spirit enables me to
confess and repent my sins, I experience the power of the gospel of Jesus
Christ, the precious blood that He shed on the cross that removes (forgives)
the sinful dusts in me and renews me. In
that power of the gospel and of the precious blood of Jesus Christ, we must
continue to be transformed and established as unblemished, pure, honest,
innocent Christians. May such powerful
work of the Lord and His gospel be full in us and in our church.
Relying on the blood of Jesus,
James Kim
(Hoping to be established as an honest Christian who can
claim innocence)
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