find a location | TATES CREEK armstrong mill georgetown WINCHESTER ROAD online CAMPUS TV CAMPUS
Have you ever wished you could be a Super Christian – like Billy Graham, Lottie Moon, or Paul?
The book of Acts seems to be filled with Super Christians. Those earliest believers were
amazing! Especially Paul.
Paul established churches, mentored missionaries and pastors, raised money for the
persecuted church, and found time to write letters to the churches and friends – letters so
inspired that they are part of our Bible. He stood before the leaders of the government. He
spoke before the Areopagus in Athens.
Exciting stuff! What missionary, pastor, or Christian wouldn’t want to stand in front of a group of
influential people and share the gospel? How do you follow that up?
After this, Paul left Athens and went to Corinth. There he met a Jew named Aquila, a
native of Pontus, who had recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla . . . Paul went to
see them, and because he was a tentmaker as they were, he stayed and worked with
them. Every Sabbath he reasoned in the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and
Greeks. (Acts 18:1-4, NIV)
After leaving Athens and arriving in Corinth, he simply became friends with people with whom
he had something in common: tent-making. They worked together. One can imagine them
talking about their faith and theology as they sewed -- discussing Paul’s sermons at the
synagogue and his sharing with the Greeks -- reviewing the common objections to Christ and
possible responses.
After a year and a half, the three went to Ephesus. God called Paul away because Priscila and
Aquila were now disciple-makers themselves who recognized the potential in Apollos. They
began to disciple him; and soon Apollos was ready to make disciples and was sent by the
Ephesian church to Achaia.
This was how the early church grew -- how the gospel was spread -- not through one man, Paul,
or through twelve apostles; it was through the making of disciples who made disciples.
All were ordinary people. The influential people to whom Paul spoke are rarely mentioned again.
And this is how the church will grow today. This is how the gospel will be spread -- not through
the preacher or some famous celebrity Christian, but through ordinary people like you and me
who share our faith while sharing our lives with others.
Paul’s time in Corinth had a bigger impact than his time in Athens because didn’t see the
ordinary as ordinary. He got a job and was a Super Christian right where he was.
Be a Super Christian today at work, school, home, or wherever God sends you.
By LaRaine Rice
All Rights Reserved | Immanuel Baptist Church