Acts 8:26ff - Jacob Kennedy - 07-09-2025
Download MP3is it time for us to begin and as is our custom here we will begin with a word of prayer
so let's Almighty God, most holy, most righteous heavenly father, Lord you are so amazing,
you are so wonderful.
You are so far beyond our ability to comprehend, but we are so thankful that we have your
word, that we can understand better who you are, that we can understand better of how we
are to live.
Lord, we are thankful for the book of Acts, for all that we can learn about the early
church, about how we are to be as your church.
Lord, we are so thankful for the time that we have to study your word.
We pray that in all things we will seek to glorify you and grow closer to you and to be
your servants always.
And so your sons, and then we pray.
Amen.
If you would open to Acts chapter 8.
Acts chapter 8 will be the text of our study tonight.
Last time I taught class, which would have been two Sundays ago, we went through the
beginning part of chapter 8 and made it down all the way to verse 25.
So we'll be picking up on verse 26 tonight.
But as we begin, I want to notice James chapter four.
James chapter four kind of sets the stage for a thought that runs through the last half of
Acts chapter, or the last section of Acts chapter eight.
James chapter four.
I can flip there.
Sometimes these pages stick together.
Verse 13 starting, go to now ye that say today or tomorrow we will go into such a city and
continue there year and buy and sell and get gain.
Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow for what is your life?
It is even a vapor that appeared for a little time and then vanisheth away.
For that ye ought to say, if the Lord will, we shall live and do this or that." And you
might say, well, what does this have to do with Acts chapter eight?
In Acts chapter eight, we have just seen Philip, the evangelist, doing a great work in
Samaria.
He has been preaching the gospel so faithfully and been converting these souls to Christ.
And it has been an amazing, amazing thing.
Am I not on?
supposed to be on.
There we go.
It's been an amazing revival, if you will, a time in which many Samaritans have been
converted.
And while this good work's been going on, Philip gets a call.
And we'll see this as we read verse 26 starting.
And the angel the Lord spake unto Philip, saying, Arise and go toward the south unto the
way that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza, which is desert.
Philip has been doing this great work, but the Lord calls him to do something else.
The Lord calls him to do another work, to go teach someone else.
Now, looking at James chapter four, we understand that
we as humans don't know the future.
Yes, we can guess about what we think might happen.
Yes, we can predict things, but only God knows the future.
And it is God's will that we need to be following.
And here, Philip shows us an example of how to follow God's will, even when things are
going great.
Just because everything is running smoothly, everything is going great,
doesn't mean that a change does not need to happen.
Sometimes we hear the saying, all good things must come to an end.
Well, I wouldn't say that Philip was going to a bad thing, but the good work he was doing
in Samaria for him was coming to an end.
And so here we find him being called by the Angel of the Lord.
Now this term, Angel of the Lord, refers to a messenger of the Lord.
In times in the scripture, this term can be used to refer to Christ.
It can be used to refer to an actual angel.
the point behind it, the word itself, simply means a messenger of God.
So whether it was an angel or some other spiritual being that comes to Philip, the point
remains that the message that he is given is from God.
The message that he is given is God telling him to go.
Now this place, Gaza, if you've been watching the news in recent years, you know a lot
about where Gaza is located, as unfortunately it has been the subject of much news
recently.
But this road that led from Jerusalem to Gaza, it was about anywhere from about 50 to 60
miles in length.
So it was about 50 or 60 mile travel from Jerusalem to Gaza.
And what's interesting to note is that in order for Philip to intercept, if you will, the
Ethiopian eunuch, he would have had to have left about a day before the eunuch leaves.
Therefore, when God gives him this message, he plans it out to the point where Philip has
enough time to get to where he needs to be.
And it just goes to show you the amazing understanding that God has.
the foreknowledge that God has, way that God views time to know just when things need to
happen.
Truly it is amazing the God that we serve.
Notice also the fact that this says, which is desert.
When we think of a desert, what's the first thing that comes to mind?
What's that?
Lack of water.
We think of a barren wasteland.
We think about places out on the west coast, not on the west coast, but out west where
there is nothing.
There is no water.
There is very little vegetation.
There's very little animal life.
But that's not the term used here.
If you look at a topographical map of this area, of Palestine,
you'll find that this region is not barren.
is in fact actually has a good amount of water and of uh foliage.
And so the term being used here is referring to people.
It's saying that it is deserted and that there's not a large populace anywhere near there.
And this place was going through a land that did not have
any cities or large settlements.
but do not miss the fact that there was water.
And this will come into play later on as we read.
But it's interesting to think about how far Philip went.
Philip was willing to 60 miles, around 60 miles to go save a soul.
How far are you willing to travel?
As we look at our lives, we look at this world around us.
We see those who are lost.
We see those who are living in sin, those who are outside of Christ, and too often we say,
someone else will teach them.
Too often we say, well, I'll get around to it.
But if Philip was willing to travel 60 miles, can't we travel to the person next door?
Can't we share the gospel to the person that we come in contact with every day?
sobering thought, sobering reminder of the immense responsibility that we have.
And remember, the book of Acts is showing us the early church.
The book of Acts is showing us the church that we're supposed to be.
And what we see here are members who are willing to evangelize, members who are willing to
spread God's word because they realize how important it is and that it's worth traveling
60 miles.
One thing that also strikes me in this passage is that God does not tell Philip that there
is going to be an Ethiopian eunuch to convert.
He doesn't tell Philip, hey, I need you to go here to talk to this person who's lost.
He just says to go.
Philip doesn't know why.
He's not told by this messenger of God.
He's not told why he's to go.
He is simply told to go.
And what do we read in verse 27?
And he arose and went, and behold a man of Ethiopia, a eunuch of great authority under
Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, who had the charge of all her treasure and had come to
Jerusalem for to worship.
He arose and went.
This shows an immediacy, a realization of the importance of this matter.
And I dare say that if God sent an angel down to tell us, you need to go over here to
teach the gospel, or simply to say you need to go over to this place, I dare say we would
go.
But what about in his word when we read, go into all the world and teach the gospel?
Same weight, as the same bearing on our souls is the same authority behind it.
Phil was commanded to go and he went.
Now this term, as we read in verse 27 of Candice, some have considered that to be, well
that was the name of the queen.
But if you look at this word, it actually is more of a title.
We think about how titles were used and how names even became titles.
We think about the pharaohs of Egypt.
Well, Pharaoh Niko wasn't first name Pharaoh, last name Niko.
His title was Pharaoh.
His name was Niko.
We think about the Caesars of Rome.
Well, Julius Caesar, of course, being the first dictator, the first person in that kind of
level of authority, and so after him, they began to take the name of Caesar to represent
emperor.
But it wasn't their name.
It was their title.
And so the same thing is true here with Candace.
That was the title of the queen of Ethiopia.
That was not her name.
Now notice this in the end of verse 27 when he says that he had come to Jerusalem for to
worship.
Jerusalem is about 1,500 miles from Ethiopia.
1500 miles.
Now today we think about hopping on a plane and oh that's just a short flight.
75 days.
It would have taken this man 75 days to reach Jerusalem.
He was willing to ride in a chariot for 75 days to worship his God.
You know, that makes that 15 minute drive not seem too bad, does it?
even if you have to drive farther.
I dare say none of us took 75 days to get here today.
That's just one way.
Exactly.
You had to plan out a whole half a month.
A whole month.
A couple months actually.
I'll get it right eventually.
But this just shows the zeal and the dedication that this man had for God.
It gives us a peek into his heart that he was willing to go out completely out of his way
to worship the Lord God of heaven.
Now at this time, the Jewish system of faith, the worship that he was offering was no
longer acceptable because as we read, the old law had been fulfilled.
that had been done away with, and the new law was the law by which God's followers
worshiped and lived.
there was an interesting or I guess you could say theory raised by J.W.
McGarvey in his commentary on Acts he points to this man and let me read to you what he
says
He says that he thought he was a Jew living in Ethiopia and the reason being that
Well, sometimes I can't read my notes.
He thought he was a Jew living in Ethiopia, because of what we read later.
We read later when he is baptized, Luke, the author of Acts, does not make a big deal
concerning the fact that this man was uncircumcised.
Now in other passages in Acts, the exact passage is escaping me at the moment, but in
other passages in Acts, Luke does emphasize this.
When those who were uncircumcised were baptized, he makes a point to mention this.
But here he makes no such mention.
And that led J.W.
McGarvey to believe that this man was a Jew.
Now whether or not he was a Jew, I don't know.
The scripture does not tell us plainly.
But it is an interesting thought and does make sense.
When you think about the Jews, often we think about them as being good with money.
We think about them as being bankers, as being
well versed in how to deal with finance.
And so that with that thought it makes sense why he would be the treasurer of the queen of
Ethiopia.
But needless to say what is most important here is the dedication that he that he shows to
God and also the responsible nature that he had in that he was given this position of
being the treasurer of having
care of all the riches of this queen.
And we think about the wealth of a queen.
Was it comparable to the wealth of Caesar?
No.
But was it comparable to the wealth of most people?
It was exceeding most people's wealth.
And after all, she was a queen.
How much?
We don't know.
But the point is, this man was found trustworthy.
This man was found faithful enough to where he was given this position and this trust.
Verse 28.
was returning and sitting in his chariot read Isaiah the prophet.
A quick mention here concerning the fact that he was reading the prophet Isaiah.
Some rabbis in this time bound it as law that if you were traveling without accompaniment,
if you were traveling by yourself, you had to spend that time studying the law, studying
the scriptures.
Now, is this a bad idea?
No.
What better use of your time?
than studying the Word of God.
But the fact that they were binding it goes back to what Jesus was warning his disciples
about and about how the Pharisees were binding where God had not bound.
Over and over again we see the departure that the Jews had from the Scriptures, from the
Word of God, from the law of Moses that they had been given, and whether that be adding to
or taking away from the law that was given to them.
In verse 29, then the Spirit said unto Philip, Go near and join thyself to hit this
chariot.
And Philip ran thither to him and heard him read the prophet Isaiah's and said,
Understandest thou what thou readest?
And he said, How can I, except some man should guide me?
And he desired Philip that he would come up and sit with him.
Now we think about this command by the Spirit to go near and join thyself into this
chariot.
Remember we had said earlier, he just been told to go to this road, to go to the place in
between Jerusalem and Gaza.
That's all he knew.
But upon reaching this point, he receives further instruction.
It's kind of the idea of maybe a superior saying,
go over to this this area and I'll tell you what to do when you get there.
Or we think about
We think about the idea of, let's say a parent says, hey, meet me in the living room.
I want you to meet me in the living room and I'll tell you what you need to do.
I'll give you a chore to do.
Philip had been told to go and when he goes he receives the further instruction.
He then sees, ah this is the reason why I was sent here.
This is the reason why God had me leave Samaria because this man needs to be taught.
This man needs the gospel.
And it's amazing to see how even when we look at God and we say, Lord, why is this
happening?
Lord, why am I having to leave the home that I've, the only home I've ever known?
Be careful not to blame God or to speak to Him too harshly in those moments because He
might be opening a door that you just needed.
Or better still, He might be opening a door for you to teach the gospel, for you to spread
the Word of God, the joy of salvation to a soul that is in need.
That's what happened here with Philip.
And notice that Philip ran thither.
You have to admire the zeal of Philip.
When he is given a task, he is all gas, no breaks.
He does not stop until his Lord's work is done.
When he has to leave Jerusalem, he says, okay, I'll go preach to Samaria.
When he is told to leave Samaria, says, okay, Lord's will be done.
When he's told to go teach this Ethiopian eunuch, he says, okay, I'll go do it.
He is one of God's yes men.
Now we think about the term yes men and we say well that's more of a derogatory term.
It's someone who doesn't think for himself.
But Philip, he shows us that it is great.
In fact, it is the best thing in the world to be a yes man of God.
because souls are saved.
When we stop saying no to God and start saying yes and let me do it as best as I can, as
quickly as I can, as efficiently as I can, souls will be saved and God will be glorified.
That's what we see here.
That's what the example of Philip teaches us.
but also notice that he heard him read the prophet.
Many times when we're trying to focus on a passage, whether it be a passage of scripture
or it be a newspaper article, when we're trying to really focus and grasp what is being
said, often we will read it aloud.
It has been found that that helps a lot of times when we not only see it with our eyes,
but we also hear it with our ears.
This Ethiopian eunuch has a desire to learn.
He has a desire to know what God's will is.
And so as he's reading, he's reading it aloud so that he understands.
He understands what God's Word has to say.
It's amazing to see the response or the question and the response that is given.
Philip says, understandest thou what thou readest.
too often.
When we look at a passage of scripture and we don't understand what it means, we just say,
well, I don't understand and skim over.
But when we read a passage of scripture and we don't understand what it means, we need to
dig deeper.
I know sometimes we have these daily Bible reading plans and that is great.
It is amazing to have a daily Bible reading plan.
But if while you're going through that plan, you find something that you don't quite
understand, take the time to stop and study it.
Whether it be to go ahead and finish that reading and come back to that question or
whether it be to write it down and ask someone else.
Take the time to Take the time to truly understand God's Word because that's the best way
to know God.
That is the best way to please God is to take the time to read His Word, to study His
Word.
and the humility that this Ethiopian eunuch shows and saying, how can I accept some man
should guide me?
Would it be easy for this man, this follower of God to be puffed up?
I mean think about it, he is riding 70, taking 75 days one way to go worship God.
He's the Queen's treasurer.
Would it not be easy for a man in that position to say, well I know everything.
I don't even know who you are.
Why would I lower myself to ask you what this means?
But that's not the attitude that this man takes.
That's not the attitude that this Ethiopian takes.
Rather, he takes the attitude of, want to know the truth.
And if this man can teach me the truth, then by all means give him the floor.
We need to have hearts like that.
We need to have hearts that say when we're studying God's word I want to know the truth.
If it comes from someone that is a new Christian maybe.
We think, I've been a Christian for 20 years.
Surely this new convert can't teach me anything.
be surprised.
Sometimes they can't.
Nor should we say, I'm a new convert so I know everything now.
And look at a Christian that's been a Christian for 20 years trying to teach us something
and say, you don't know what you're talking about.
The Lord has no use for a proud man, but he has great use for a humble man.
He has great use for someone who is humble enough to look at God's word and to say, want
to know the truth.
I don't want to know man's opinion.
I don't want to know my own opinion.
I want to know what God is saying.
I want to know the truth that will set me free.
This is also seen in the fact that he desired Philip.
This idea of having a longing of
No, a desire.
Sometimes a word is best described by itself.
But the point is this man that so many people would have overlooked, so many people would
have glossed over, he was a man who wanted to know the truth of God's Word.
He had an honest and good heart.
Notice verse 32, and the place of the scripture which he read was this, he was led as a
sheep to the slaughter and like a lamb dumb before his sheers so opened he not his mouth.
And his humiliation, his judgment was taken away and who shall declare his generation?
For his life is taken from the earth.
And the eunuch answered Philip and said, I pray thee, of whom speaketh the prophet this?
Of himself?
of some other man.
Then Philip opened his mouth and began at the same scripture and preached unto him, Jesus.
This passage of Scripture that this Ethiopian eunuch was reading is labeled in our modern
text as Isaiah chapter 53.
I say in our modern text because they didn't have chapter and verse divisions at that
point.
He would have just been reading Isaiah.
By Isaiah 53, what do we know about Isaiah 53?
What's being discussed in that chapter?
Jesus is one of the most.
I dare say emotional prophecy of Christ.
because it describes his suffering.
It shows for us the great pain and anguish that our Lord endured.
And for the Jew, reading that text before Christ came, it would show to them what was
going to happen to the Messiah.
What was going to happen to the one who would be their Savior?
But what's interesting is the question that he asks.
He asks, who is being discussed here?
Does the prophet speak of himself or some other man?
Who is this?
Now for us today, we say, well, it's very clearly Jesus.
It makes perfect sense.
And for most Christians, if not all Christians, that is true.
It makes perfect sense.
We don't need someone to explain it to us.
But you have to understand that to the Jew, how did they view the Messiah?
What was the Jewish idea of what the Messiah would be?
a military leader.
A great king like David who would bring them out of the shackles of captivity under Rome
and deliver them back to a place of military power and political might.
Does Isaiah 53 match that description?
No, not in a physical sense.
And so the Jew reading this, they say, this can't be the Messiah.
The Messiah, the King that's going to come in and be so powerful and so military, as such
military might, surely he's not being led to the slaughter.
Surely he's not standing before his shearers.
the ones who are dealing out this punishment as though he were unable to speak.
They missed the point because they read the scripture with their own preconceived notion.
They didn't look at the Bible to say what is truth.
They looked at it to say let me prove my point.
And it is a dangerous, a dangerous slope that we fall on when we look at the Bible to say
hey, prove my point instead of to say hey, what's God's point?
And so this question makes so much more sense when we understand the thought of the Jews
at this time.
Keep in mind there was a reason why many Jews rejected Jesus.
We understand that for the Pharisees and for those in power, Jesus was a threat to them.
He was a threat to the religious power and authority and influence that they held.
But to most of the common Jews, the ones that did not believe in Christ, he didn't fit the
description.
He didn't appear to be what they wanted.
what they thought the Messiah would be.
but little did they understand, many of them sadly, that what Christ came to offer was so
much better than a physical kingdom, was so much better than physical military might.
He offered them freedom not from Rome, but from sin.
And that's the same freedom that He offers us today.
A freedom that cannot be matched.
In verse 35, then Philip opened his mouth and began the same scripture and preached unto
him Jesus.
Now this term, preached, is the same word in the Greek that is also translated as
evangelize.
It's the same word from which we get the word evangelize.
To evangelize is to preach the gospel.
To reach out and tell someone of Christ is to preach the gospel.
That's why someone who stands in a pulpit like this
He's not the only preacher in the congregation, least he better not be.
Every single one of you can be preachers in that you can teach the gospel to lost souls.
You can share the love of God, the knowledge of God, His Word to those who are around you.
The term of preaching at someone has been used in a very negative sense in modern day.
If someone is saying things we don't like, we say, don't preach at me.
Don't get on your soapbox.
put this news, the news that we have to share, the message of Christ.
It's not getting on a soapbox.
It's not preaching at someone.
Rather, it's loving them enough to show them the truth.
It's loving them enough to show them how to escape the eternal torment that awaits them
and how to live with Christ, with God, for all of eternity.
For those of you who were here two Sundays ago, you might recall what we discussed when it
comes to preaching Christ.
Does anyone remember what verse we looked at earlier in chapter eight to show us what it
means to preach Christ?
Yes, man, we did look at 1 Corinthians 15, but in chapter 8, we noticed another verse.
Absolutely.
Verse specifically kind of sums it up to what it means to preach Christ.
To preach Christ, verse 12, means to preach things concerning the kingdom of God and the
name of Jesus Christ, and it also means to preach baptism.
We know that because they were baptized.
Well, why would they be baptized if preaching Christ had nothing to do with baptism?
As we'll read later, why did the Ethiopian eunuch, why was he baptized?
if preaching Christ has nothing to do with baptism.
seems to be brought out in the text that preaching Christ does have to do with baptism.
It is impossible to preach Christ without preaching baptism, just as it is impossible to
preach Christ without preaching belief, without preaching repentance.
also was mentioned was 1 Corinthians chapter 15.
In 1 Corinthians chapter 15 we are shown that preaching the gospel, that the good news of
Christ is His death, burial, resurrection, and witness.
We also notice the witness because not only of confirmation of His resurrection, but also
of sharing the gospel with others.
We are not personal witnesses of Christ's None of us in here saw Christ on earth, but we
see Him through the Word.
We see Him through what we have been given, and as such we are witnesses.
We are witnessing to people what Christ has said, what God has said in His Word.
We are preaching and teaching the lost.
But the gospel that we are preaching, the gospel that we are teaching is the good news
that Christ died for our sins, that He was buried, but that He rose again that third day.
And Paul points out that if we are to say there is no resurrection, if we are to say that
Christ is not raised, then we have no hope.
We are of all men most miserable.
But praise be to God.
Praise be to God that Christ did raise, that Christ did arise, that He did not stay in
that tomb, but that tomb was found empty.
what a beautiful sight that is and what hope that gives to us because if Christ is risen,
then we too can rise again.
We too have hope of eternity in heaven with Christ and with God.
verse 36, and as they went on their way they came into a certain water and the eunuch said
see here is water what doth hinder me to be that bet to be baptized
Notice the fact that he says, see here is water.
There are some that suggest that what we read continuing here is that Philip and the
eunuch go down to the water and Philip takes his hands and cups them together and he pours
some water over the eunuch and he's baptized.
others will suggest well no he didn't pour it he sprinkled it
Did they not have canteens or some kind of water jug?
Do you think that he traveled 75 days one way without having water?
No, of course he had water.
And so if all he had to do to be baptized was to be sprinkled, then why didn't they just
pull over and use that water?
Why were they looking for a place that had enough water?
Because remember it says a certain water
A water that had enough pool together that fit their need.
Why would they do that if all it was was just being sprinkled?
Doesn't make sense.
There was one, uh our instructor, Brother Clark, as he was teaching the book of Acts, he
mentioned about this fact that there were, that he no doubt had water pitchers.
And so in verse 38, when it says that they both went down into the water, he said, do you
think that they opened that water jug and went down into that water jug and then came out
of that water jug?
Does that make sense to anyone?
No.
But what does make sense is that there were wadis or seasonal rivers, there were creeks,
there were an abundance of bodies of water that would suit their needs.
Remember we said as we began that this was not a desert as in a barren land, as in a place
without water, but it was a place with water, a fertile place even.
Notice in verse 37, and Philip said, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest.
And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
And he commanded the chariot to stand still, and they went down both into the water, both
Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him.
And when they were, excuse me, when they were come up out of the water, the spirit of the
Lord caught away Philip, the eunuch saw him no more.
and he went on his way rejoicing.
But Philip was found at Azatose and passing through he preached in all cities till he came
to Caesarea.
What we have here is an example of a personal Bible study.
But not just any personal Bible study.
A personal Bible study that ended in conversion.
That ended in joy.
Sometimes we in the church can be accused of only preaching baptism.
Well, that's all you Church of Christers care about is being dunked in water.
No, it's not because there's more to it than that.
but we can't miss part of God's plan of salvation.
Just as it is important to hear the word as the Ethiopian eunuch did, just as it is
important to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that He is Lord, that He is
Messiah, that He is our Savior, just as the Ethiopian eunuch did, and it is important to
confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.
Once again, as the Ethiopian eunuch did, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
I don't know about you, but I don't think it gets any plainer than that.
And what do we know about repentance?
We know that we must repent, we cannot continue in sin.
Romans 6 tells us how can we continue in sin or shall we continue in sin that grace may
abound?
God forbid.
How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein?
We can't leave any part of God's plan out.
For when we add to or when we take away from God's plan, we're saying, God, your word's
not good enough.
God, I know better than you how I ought to be saved.
We ought not do so.
when we look at verse 38 and verse 39, we have these two words here, down and up.
When we think about immersion, we think about going down into the water, being completely
buried by water, and then being raised up, coming up as a new creature, a new creation in
Christ.
What does this symbolize?
What does immersion, what does baptism symbolize?
Being born again.
It symbolizes the death that Christ died, the burial of which he was buried, and the
resurrection.
It symbolizes for us dying to sin and burying that old man and rising as a new creature, a
new creation, a Christian.
A child of God that can as this
Eunuch did go on his way rejoicing.
You know, from this we understand that salvation is not a dreary or somber thing.
We should not hang our heads and say, well, a soul was baptized today.
A soul was added to the kingdom this morning and that was good.
Is that joy?
No.
When a soul is added, we rejoice.
When a soul is added to the kingdom by God, because remember it is only God who adds, we
don't do the adding and we don't join, but rather God adds us to his kingdom.
When God adds us to the kingdom, there is joy.
There is rejoicing.
There is definitely joy in heaven as we read in Luke chapter 15.
And so if we are truly God's people, we should also be finding joy.
We should also be rejoicing in the salvation of the lost.
We notice very quickly, Asatos, when you look at this, at this city, might scratch your
head and say, what on earth is this place?
I've never heard of this.
But when you look at the background of it, at least the commentaries that I researched,
they attributed Asatos to being the same thing as Ashdod.
Now we read about Ashdod in the Old Testament.
and reference to the cities of the Philistines.
And so this was a chief city of the Philistines on the Mediterranean coast or rather near
the Mediterranean coast.
And so the same with Caesarea Philippi which is Caesarea Philippi, or rather Caesarea
Maritima.
See that's where I got, this is why I wanted to mention this.
There are two Caesareans in scripture.
There's Caesarea Philippi and Caesarea Maritima.
Maritima,
Caesarea Maritima is the one that's on the coast.
We think about marine having to do with the ocean.
Maritima is, well, having to do with the ocean.
is an easy way to remember which is which because Caesarea Philippi is over in Galilee.
That was a place that Jesus visited often.
But here we see, once again, Philip going some 60 miles out of his way to preach the
gospel.
Brothers and sisters, in Acts chapter 8, we are shown what it means to evangelize.
We are shown that there is joy when a sinner repents.
And we are shown that every one of us can be evangelistic.
Every one of us can be a preacher of the Word of God to the lost soul who's in need.
Thank you for your attention.
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