Reading: Rom.
1:10-15; 15:22-24,32; Acts 19:21; Acts 27, 28.
"And so
we came to Rome" (Acts 28:14).
An
Earthly Objective with Heavenly Significance
It is not a new idea that Paul's journey to Rome can be taken
as not only the record of a journey but as representing spiritual
factors in relation to the way of God with His Church in this
dispensation, and perhaps especially the closing phase of the
Church's history on earth, in that this journey represents the
closing phase of the Apostle Paul's life. The interpretations
vary, but the key to most of them is that the ship in which Paul
travelled to Rome is a type of the Church and of its ultimate
disintegration at the end of the dispensation. I do not find
myself able to accept that interpretation, though not
discountenancing altogether a typical interpretation of the
journey. However, let us move to the positive side.
I will mention five aspects of this account which may be taken
as typical of the Church's history. First of all, there are Paul
and his companions - Aristarchus of Macedonia, and Luke - and I
think they represent the Church. Then there is the ship,
and that to my mind represents all such man-made means employed
by God for the reaching of His ends. Then there is the sea, and
frequently in the Word of God the sea is symbolical of the world
of mankind. Further, there is the ship's company, and undoubtedly
they speak of men of the world more or less affected by the
Church, and affecting the Church. Finally there are the elements,
which are very stormy and openly malignant, and sometimes
apparently very benign; but whether in open revolt or quiet and
apparently helpful, they are always hostile. That sums up the
features of this story, but we come to the real message which
lies in the heart of it.
The Objective - The Church and its Heavenly
Function
We have first of all to get its setting in the
large realm of Divine thoughts, and that is related to the end in
view for the Church. The objective here literally was Rome - the
long-standing and intense desire of the Apostle to see Rome and
to be with the saints there for spiritual values. Now we know
that it was from Rome that he wrote those letters which, perhaps
more than anything else in all the dispensations, have been for
the enrichment of God's people. It was from Rome that he wrote
the letters to the Ephesians, Colossians and Philippians, and
there is little doubt, I think, that much in those letters was
derived from Paul's visit to Rome itself. A man of such alertness
to everything that was going on around him, of such keen interest
and so observant, was not likely to fail to be impressed by Rome
as the capital city and centre of that great worldwide empire,
with all that Rome actually meant and represented on this earth
and in this world. He was, I think, without doubt greatly
impressed, and was taking up a very great deal of what he saw
there and with which he came into touch, passing it through that
wonderful spiritual mind of his, and converting it to spiritual
account; for when we find him writing from Rome, his letters have
so much in them, in the spiritual and vaster realm, of what was,
in its limited and earthly way, true of Rome itself.
There, for instance, was the great centre of government for
this world. Rule was world-wide in Rome. There was a universality
about that centre of government, there was a great imperialism
seated there. Rome was pre-eminent among the nations and was the
place of dominion, and we know that there was great pride in
being a Roman citizen. The chief captain said to Paul, "With
a great sum obtained I this citizenship" ("this
freedom" A.V.): Paul replied, "But I am a Roman
born" ("I was free born" A.V.). And
that made the man who had paid a great price for his citizenship
recognize the superiority of this man before him.
If you look into these letters written from Rome, you see all
those features related to the Church. Its universality: its
absolute supremacy in the counsels of God: dominion centred in it
for the ages to come; all this is in his letter to the Ephesians.
And is there not a touch of that pride of citizenship in those
words of his to the Philippians - "Our citizenship is in
heaven; whence also we wait for a Saviour" (Phil. 3:20)? Yes,
Rome has made its impression upon him, but in every connection
(such as with his jailor, the soldier-keeper and his armour) he
is changing it all into spiritual values.
What is the end in view? It is not just to journey to see this
temporal Rome. The end which looms up out of that visit is the
great calling and destiny of the Church in union with Christ who
in all things has the pre-eminence. That is the sum of the
letters to the Ephesians, Colossians and Philippians - the
pre-eminence of Christ, and the Church united with Him therein.
That is the end of the journey, that is what is in view beyond.
The Objective Divinely Conceived
Then look at the way to the end. Paul's reaching Rome was the
outcome of numerous details of different kinds. We will try to
focus them, to gather them up. To begin with, there was that in
Paul's heart which was not just a natural and earthly desire, but
proved to be of God, the will of the Lord. There were many things
in Paul's interpretation of his desire which proved to be
different from the Lord's thought, but the desire itself was all
right - this longing to see the saints in Rome, and to get into
Rome for spiritual ends. Desires are put into our hearts by the
Lord. We misinterpret them and think of them in our own way, and
the Lord has to sift things out for us and adjust us, but in the
end the desires often prove to be all right. The Lord has His way
of realising, but the desire is there.
This began, then, with a desire in the heart of a man who was
wholly for the Lord. Remember that. In all that we shall see, it
is important to remember that this applies to a man who is utter
for God. There was the longing, the purpose, and the expectation.
Mistaken Human Attempts to Reach the
Objective
Then came the differences. There was the crisis of the
long-drawn-out trial in Jerusalem, that crisis when Paul, knowing
that there was a dead-set made against his life, suddenly said,
"I appeal unto Caesar". That was the crisis. Now, was
Paul precipitate, was he impulsive? Agrippa later said of him, "This
man might have been set at liberty, if he had not appealed unto
Caesar" (Acts 26:32). We may say, What a pity Paul made
that appeal! Was he impulsive? - or was he artful? Did he see
that even if he were released then, there were those lying in
wait for his life? More than forty men had bound themselves under
a curse, saying that they would neither eat nor drink till they
had killed him. (Acts 23:12). But Paul perhaps saw that his
quickest way to Rome was to appeal to Caesar, and that he would
make the Roman empire to pay his fare! I do not know, it may be.
But whether he made a mistake or not, whether he was precipitate
or impulsive or - may I use the word again? - artful, what I do
know is that this whole matter was in the hands of the Lord. We
may make mistakes, we may be caught on an impulse, we may be
precipitate, but provided our hearts are utterly for God, as
utterly for God as was Paul's, the Lord can look after our
mistakes and overrule our blunders.
Well, there were differences, you see, in the way in which
Paul went to Rome from that in which he expected to go. He had
made his plans, he had arranged his course; he was going to
Jerusalem to minister to the saints that which had been entrusted
to him, and then he was going to take his farewell of them and go
off on the journey to Rome. His expectation was all very nice -
but how differently everything turned out!
Divine Sovereignty Ruling and Overruling
Now the point is this: the Church does not proceed, even
toward Divinely-fixed and appointed ends, by a protected course.
Even with the Lord's end in view, we do not go by a way that is
completely immune either from our weaknesses or from difficulties
and adversities, and things which seem to upset completely all
our plans. Our whole course will always be that of Divine
overruling: not only ruling as in the unseen, but overruling in
the seen. You must ever remember that those two things go hand in
hand. God is ruling in the unseen: He is overruling in the seen.
In the course there will always be plenty of room for an argument
as to misadventure, calamity, defeat, tragedy, giving rise to
regret, doubt and even condemnation. If we are so disposed, we
can say, 'Oh, this is a calamity, this is defeat! This is due to
my mistake, and everything is wrecked!' Had Paul been of another
kind, like some of us, he would have said, 'I wish I had not
appealed to Caesar! See what trouble I have got myself into! I am
going to the bottom of the sea, and all my work is finished!'
There is always room for that if we are so disposed, and thus to
get under condemnation because we have made mistakes. The Lord
has never so acted with His people that there was no room for
anything like that. If we want to doubt, we shall have plenty of
occasion for doubting. If we want to speak of tragedy, we shall
have plenty of tragic experience. If we are disposed to get under
condemnation, there will be plenty to take on. The way to the end
is not a way free from these elements or from the possibility of
so interpreting things. It will be that, in all and through all,
God overrules, and at last we shall be able to exclaim, "and
so we came to Rome"; the end reached through so much.
God's Objective not Frustrated by Human
Frailty
You need to read the whole story again, and note every detail
in the light of what I am saying. What a voyage, what a journey!
How everything was threatened with complete destruction and loss!
But the end was reached; and Paul, Aristarchus and Luke,
representing the Church, were all there at the end. They were not
disintegrated in any way, and the Church, as in them, was fully
vindicated. They had made declarations, they had given warnings,
they had given promises and assurances, and they had given
commands. What they had said was at first flouted, ridiculed, set
aside. Later, under duress, they were taken note of, and in the
end perfectly vindicated. And have no doubt about it, the Church
is going to be vindicated at length. Its testimony is going to be
established and proved sure. Its word is going to be justified,
its authority is going to be recognized. The testimony was
fulfilled and the ministry enlarged to the whole scope of the
universe from what looked like a narrowing down through
straitening chains and imprisonment. The whole range of the
eternities, of the heavenlies, and of the nations, was touched by
the ministry from that imprisonment in Rome. Vindicated,
established, enlarged: that will be the end of the way for those
who are one with Him who is in the Throne, even though the way so
often offers ground for real arguments about tragedy and disaster
and for real questionings and fear because of mistakes.
The Break-up of all that is of Man
But on the way to that enlargement and vindication, while on
the one side there seemed to be so much that was working in
opposition and reverse and contradiction, on the other side it
was a case of the stripping off of all the works of men. The ship
did go to pieces, the man-made thing employed by the sovereignty
of God to reach His ends was thrown away when His ends were in
the way of realisation. There are a lot of things made by men,
and godly men at that, which the Lord makes use of, but they will
go, e.g. places of meeting, institutions, societies,
organisations: they are made by men, they are useful, they help
toward God's end, but like the ship, they are but means to the
end. You must not put all your faith in the ship; you must not
ascribe final values to the place, the means, the instrument. We
shall find that the Lord has not committed Himself to keep the
means intact, to hold the instrument for eternity. It is His
Church that He is after, which He is preserving, which is to come
out alive; and on the way, the things will have to
go, they will have to be broken up, they cannot meet the full
impact of the forces of evil in this terrific storm. The forces
of evil are too much for anything made by man, but they are not
the equal of what God has made: His Church will come out all
right. Be careful that you do not put too much upon God's means,
God's instrument, the ship. Keep your eye on God's real object.
The framework of things may break up, but God's spiritual values
will be eternally preserved. And let us not worry too much if God
sees the time has come for the stripping off of things. They may
have served a very good purpose and our hearts may be very much
linked with them, with that place or that instrumentality; but if
the Lord begins to break it up and take it from us, do not think
everything of value is going. No, it is the spiritual values upon
which our hearts must be set.
God's Objective Certain of Ultimate
Attainment
The Lord is eventually triumphant, as we see outstandingly in
this account - and triumphant in His Church. "And so we
came to Rome". What a "so" it was, and
what a "so" it is! How much is packed into that little
word "so"! It was something given into the heart by the
Lord, something around which all kinds of expectations and
imaginations were woven, all of which were entirely disappointed,
undone, brought to disintegration and changed; but the purpose of
God stood. That which God had put into the heart went through and
was found at last to be not of man but of God. I wonder what Paul
felt like as he entered Rome; remembering when long ago the thing
came into his heart, and all his visions and expectations and
hope, and all his thoughts of going beyond Rome to Spain - and
now this is how things have worked out! And so it is with us: not
as we thought, not as we expected and planned, but we are here!
That is the thing that matters; we are here!
We can transfer that to the large issue of the course of the
child of God as well as of the Church. How many times have we
looked at the storm, looked at situations, looked at our own
faults and mistakes, at what the enemy has called our blunders,
and have said, 'Oh, it is hopeless, we shall never get there!'
And yet despite all that has happened, we are still going on,
even though we cannot yet say that we have arrived. It will be
like that if our hearts are as knit to the Lord and His eternal
purpose as was that of this dear man Paul. When we get to heaven,
we shall say, 'And so we came to heaven! Here we are!' We shall
look at one another and say, 'Well, brother, you did not think
you were going to be here, but here you are!' Believe me, that is
God's sovereign part; and if any responsibility on our part comes
in at all, it is that we should be of the spirit of this man who
said, "One thing I do" (Phil. 3:13) - not, 'I
hope to do', or, 'I am going to do when my present phase of life
is passed, when my college years are finished'; not 'tomorrow',
not 'presently', not 'when I am trained'. No, "One thing
I do"; I am doing it now. If we are like that,
we can count on this sovereignty of God, which may upset our
plans and change our expectations; but we shall be there, and
heaven will triumph in getting us there.
First published in "A Witness and A Testimony"
magazine, Sep-Oct 1951, Vol 29-5