"Those who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went." (Acts 8:4)
On the day of Stephen's death, a great persecution breaks out against the church in Jerusalem. All except the apostles are scattered throughout Judea and Samaria. Saul begins to destroy the church, going house to house, dragging off men and women and putting them in prison. The persecution accomplishes the opposite of what it intends: Those who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went. The Acts 1:8 programme, which specified Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and the ends of the earth, is being fulfilled not by deliberate missionary strategy but by the pressure of persecution. God uses the opposition of the enemy to advance his Kingdom.
Philip goes to Samaria and proclaims Christ there with great effect: signs accompany his preaching, many are healed, and there is great joy in that city. Simon the magician is baptised and is astonished by the miracles Philip performs. When Peter and John arrive from Jerusalem and lay hands on the Samaritans, they receive the Holy Spirit. Simon offers money for this power. Peter rebukes him sharply: may your money perish with you, because you thought you could buy the gift of God with money. The sin of simony, the buying or selling of spiritual goods and offices, takes its name from this episode.
An angel sends Philip to the road from Jerusalem to Gaza. There he meets an Ethiopian eunuch, a high official in the court of the Kandake, returning from worship in Jerusalem, reading Isaiah 53 in his chariot. Philip runs up and asks: do you understand what you are reading? The man asks Philip to help him. Philip explains that the suffering servant of Isaiah is Jesus. The man asks: what prevents me from being baptised? There is water by the road. Philip baptises him and is immediately taken away by the Spirit. The Ethiopian goes on his way rejoicing. The Gospel has reached Africa in the person of a high court official whose conversion demonstrates that every human barrier is open to the Spirit's initiative.
Brothers and sisters, the scattered believers preached the word wherever they went. They did not wait for a mission programme or a pastoral strategy. They went somewhere new and they talked about Jesus. The person reading Isaiah 53 in their chariot, wondering who the passage is about, is everywhere. Ask God to show you the Ethiopian on your road today.
Lord God, you scatter your Church so that the word goes everywhere. Use even our dislocations and difficulties to advance your Kingdom. Send your Spirit to lead us to the people reading Isaiah by the roadside, waiting for someone to explain the good news. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.