“With all boldness and without hindrance” (Acts 28:31).
Brothers and sisters, our passage concludes the book of Acts with a powerful image: the Apostle Paul, under house arrest in Rome, "proclaiming the kingdom of God and teaching about the Lord Jesus Christ with all boldness and without hindrance."
Paul is literally chained to a Roman guard, confined to a rented house, awaiting trial before Caesar – and yet Luke describes his ministry as "without hindrance." What a remarkable paradox!
This challenges our natural assumption that freedom means the absence of limitations. Paul found his greatest freedom precisely when his external circumstances were most constrained.
I'm reminded of the remarkable story of Joni Eareckson Tada. As a teenager in 1967, Joni dove into shallow water, broke her neck, and was paralyzed from the shoulders down. She initially fell into deep depression, struggling to find purpose in a life now severely limited by her physical condition.
But something extraordinary happened. Joni began painting by holding a brush between her teeth. Her artwork gained attention, opening doors for her to share her faith. She founded Joni and Friends, a ministry that has provided wheelchairs to thousands of people with disabilities in developing countries and established retreats for families affected by disability.
Through her books, speaking, advocacy, and ministry, Joni has touched millions of lives around the world – all from the confines of a wheelchair. Despite chronic pain and numerous health challenges over five decades, she has recorded several albums, written over 50 books, and become one of the most influential Christian voices on suffering and disability.
Joni once said, "I really do believe that God uses brokenness, such as my quadriplegia, as a vehicle through which His power can be displayed."
Like Paul in that Roman house, Joni discovered that limitations don't have to hinder God's purposes. In fact, her limitations became the very vessels through which God's power was most clearly displayed.
Paul's example reminds us that the gospel cannot be chained. Throughout Acts, we've seen how persecution, imprisonment, shipwreck, and now house arrest all served to advance rather than impede God's mission.
And notice what Paul does during these two years of confinement. He doesn't complain about his circumstances or lobby for his release. Instead, he welcomes visitors, teaches Scripture, and proclaims Christ. He transforms his limitation into an opportunity.
Each of us faces limitations – physical constraints, financial restrictions, family obligations, health challenges. The question is not whether we will face limitations, but how we will respond to them.
Will we, like Paul and Joni, discover that God's power works most perfectly in our weakness? Will we find, as they did, that our greatest ministry might happen not despite our limitations but through them?
As we close the book of Acts, remember that while the narrative ends, the mission continues. The same Spirit that empowered Paul empowers us. The same gospel that could not be hindered then cannot be hindered now.
Whatever chains you face today, whatever limitations confine you, know this: God's purpose for your life remains unhindered. Your circumstances may restrict your movement, but they cannot restrict God's movement through you.
May we all find, like Paul in his chains, the freedom to proclaim Christ with boldness, without hindrance, right where we are.
Reflection on Acts 28:17 – 31 by Józef.
(Listen to podcast here)
No comments:
Post a Comment