What sort of attitude, or state of mind, would you have if you were well into your second year of prison?
What if you knew that you weren’t guilty of any sort of crime?
What if, not only were you innocent, but after several trials which proved your innocence, you were still under arrest?
What sort of attitude would you have?
Would it glorify the Lord or would its focus be completely on yourself?
If these things were true, what would be your chief desire? What would come first?
Would it be to bring glory to God, even if it meant another two years in jail?
Would your primary desire be for your immediate release?
Or would it be the salvation of the prison guards & the wicked people who were keeping you incarcerated?
Think about these questions.
How Christian is your heart, and how Christian would you behave?
I can’t remember if we have made this comparison before, but if we haven’t we should have.
Paul’s situation was not totally unique, even within the pages of the Word of God.
For example, we could talk about Daniel and the lion’s den or his 3 friends and their furnace at Auschwitz.
But there is another situation which parallels Paul even more closely: Joseph, the son of Jacob.
And after being made a servant of other prisoners, still desiring to be a blessing to those people.
When he saw that Pharaoh’s baker and butler were upset he went out of his way to comfort them.
For one it turned out well and for the other not so well.
This evening let’s think for a few minutes about Paul’s desire, as he expressed it here in verse 29:
“Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.
And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.”
I think that we can say that this is a very Christian kind of attitude.
Whether or not we are ever in prison, this should be our desire and attitude as well.
To my muddled mind these words border on blasphemy.
In fact, even though they aren’t commonly used in modern English, most of the time when we do hear “would to God” they are spoken in a blasphemous way.
If all that the speaker means is “I hope” or “I wish that such and such would take place” then blasphemy has been committed.
As we read this morning, “Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain; for the LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain.”
Even Christians need to beware of using the name of God in vain.
I would be a far wealthier man today, if I had a dollar for every misuse of God’s name that I have heard over the last two weeks by a bunch of people who profess to be Christians.
But obviously, Paul was not cursing, swearing or committing blasphemy when he said, “I would to God.”
There is absolutely nothing wrong, and a whole lot that is right, about expressing our prayers in public.
It was the prayer of Paul to God that Agrippa and the others in that court-room were Christians as he was.
This should be used to remind us that the conversion of the lost is something about which we need to pray.
What would have been the likelihood that Festus or Agrippa would ever become Christians?
Humanly speaking it would be hard even to hope for such a thing.
But the salvation of the lost is not a human thing; it is not a Christian thing; it is not something that even a great apostle can accomplish.
The salvation of the lost is the work of God; it is a miracle; it is impossible without the working of divine omnipotence.
We may look at a religious secularist like Festus and think that he could never become a Christian.
We may look at Herod Agrippa II and think to ourselves that we’d never even want him to be a Christian.
But then we would have earlier said the same sort of things about Saul of Tarsus.
The persecutor, Saul, with the blood of some of our friends, the saints of God, on his hands, doesn’t deserve to be a part of our church, and we don’t want to see him in Heaven.
Would to God the Agrippas of this world were saved.
We need to discipline ourselves to pray for even those most incorrigible.
We’re not going to see anyone converted whom the Lord doesn’t convert.
We don’t need the Lord’s assistance in the work of evangelism, we are the assistants.
Pray for the lost; pray for specific lost people;
Pray regularly; pray often; pray fervently; pray humbly; pray beseechingly; pray importunately; pray.
“And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.”
And it would dumb to think that Paul didn’t want to get out of Caesarea.
The way that he raised his arms and jangled the chains between them reminds us that he wanted his liberty.
And the reason that he had appealed to Caesar was to get out of town.
But at this point in the conversation, he said that it was his prayer that Agrippa, Festus, Bernice and the others would be saved.
So even though he had personal needs and desires, it was not to himself that referred.
What would you endure in order to see the conversion of someone?
These are not rhetorical questions:
Would you go to jail if you knew that through it, your Philippian jailer would come to know Christ?
Would you be willing to be beaten and locked into the stocks?
Would you somewhat quietly remain behind those bars for two years or more?
What about those men in the Culpepper jail stretching their hands through the bars beseeching the lost to come to Christ, while wicked men with sticks and whips and stones broke and mutilated those hands?
And what if, not a single soul was actually saved, but in your evangelistic efforts, your efforts simply brought glory to the Lord?
Paul honestly and sincerely wrote to the Romans:
That I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart.
For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh.”
“And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.”
The Bible interpreters tell us that the words “almost and altogether” are somewhat strange.
Jamison, Fausset and Brown say that they might mean “whether sooner or later.”
But I’m going to have to skip these experts and agree with John Gill who restates the obvious:
were not only within a little, or in some low degree,
but entirely, and in the highest and fullest sense, Christians, as he was.”
“Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.”
The experts are divided on that question as well, but it seems to me that Agrippa was totally sincere.
And Paul’s response was just as sincere:
“And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.”
Did Paul say one thing or two?
It is my prayer that everyone here might “almost be a Christian.”
but it is infinitely better than being an atheist, a Muslim, a Hindu, or a Mormon.
To almost be a Christian is what usually happens when people attend church and Sunday School throughout their young lives.
To almost be a Christian is to grow up in a family where Mom and Dad are Christians, living the principles of the Word of God and teaching the Gospel.
To almost be a Christian is to know that people are praying for your conversion and regeneration.
It is a very good thing to almost be a Christian.
To have memorized a hundred Bible verses is not the same as to have experienced those verses.
To be christened, or even to be immersed, is not what makes a sinner a saint of God.
It was his prayer that they be ALTOGETHER like Paul.
Of course Paul was several different things.
And it is kind of interesting that he didn’t explain himself more fully.
He didn’t actually say, “I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether CHRISTIANS.”
Paul was an Apostle of Christ, but that was probably not his prayer for those men.
Paul was a servant of God, and although it should be every Christian’s desire that everyone they know be servants of God, before the child can run he needs to learn to walk.
“It would be wonderful, King Agrippa, if the Lord would call you to be a missionary to the Inca Indians, but it’s my prayer that above all else, you become a Christian.”
You see, Paul had no regrets for becoming a child of God.
Yes, he had been persecuted, but what did that matter compared to “the glory that should be revealed in him?”
And his persecution went even to the edge of death, if not actually beyond, but “to die is gain.”
He had been jailed on several occasions, but he had never been so free, prior to the day of his salvation.
It had been tough for him to be a Christian, but he would have had everyone he knew know Christ apart from the persecution that he endured.
Paul knew that what he possessed in Christ was greater than anything that King Herod Agrippa possessed in his royal position.
So it was Paul’s desire that Agrippa, Festus, Bernice and all the others present become children of God as he was.
And it should be our desire that the people whom we know become Christians as well.