Read Message
bigmike
Read: Acts 23:6-35
The following night the Lord stood near Paul and said, Take courage! As you have testified about me  in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome. Acts 23:11
Literally, what the Lord Jesus says as he appears to Paul is, Be of good cheer. Cheer up, Paul.  That is certainly a revelation of the state of Paul's heart at this time. He is anything but of  good cheer. He is defeated and discouraged, wallowing in an awful sense of shame and failure, but  he is not abandoned. Isn't it wonderful that the Lord comes now to restore him to his ministry?
I am sure that Luke does not give us the full account of what transpired between Paul and his Lord  on that night. But there is enough here that we can see what our Lord is after. He restores Paul to  usefulness. He promises Paul success in the desire of his heart, which was second only to his  desire to win his kinsmen, i.e., that he might bear witness for Christ at the heart of the empire,  the capital of the Gentile world itself. You remember that Paul had announced that, after he went  to Jerusalem, he must go to Rome. And his prayer as he wrote to the Roman Christians was that he  might be allowed to come to them. The Lord Jesus now gives that back to him.
And yet the very form which he employs contains a hint of the limitation which Paul had made  necessary when he disobeyed the Spirit of God. The Lord Jesus puts it this way: As you have  testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must bear witness also in Rome. In other words, the  emphasis here is upon the manner in which this witness will go forth. In the way that you bore  witness to me in Jerusalem, in that same way you must bear witness in Rome. And how had he  testified in Jerusalem? It was as a prisoner — chained, bound, limited.
This encounter with the Lord Jesus must have been a wonderful moment in Paul's experience. The Lord  restored him to spiritual health, as he often must do with us. Have you ever been in this  circumstance? Have you ever disobeyed God, knowing that you shouldn't have but wanting something so  badly that you've gone ahead anyway? How wonderful to have the Lord ready to restore us. I have  been there too, so I know how God can tenderly deal with us and bring us back to a place of being  yielded.
After this Paul is his usual self again. From here on the things he says and does have that same  wonderful infusion of the Spirit's power which makes unusual things happen. And from Rome he is to  write some of his greatest letters — letters filled with power, which are still changing the  history of the world. The joy of the Lord is back in his heart. The glory returns to his ministry.  The love of Jesus Christ is filling him and flooding him, empowering him and enriching him. That is  the glory of being a Christian. You can be forgiven. You do not have to wait. And you do not have  to pay for anything. You do not have to go back and try to placate God in some way because of what  you have done. You must make it right, as far as you can, with any people you have wronged — but  you can be forgiven, and all the glory of your relationship with the Lord restored.
Father, thank you for your restoring love, for the fact that you have never abandoned me, that you  keep me and bring me back.
- Date: