So was it disrespectful and impersonal for Paul to preach to the Athenians in Acts 17?
Was it disrespectful for the 12 apostles to preach in Jerusalem on the day of Pentacost?
Was it disrepectful for Paul and Barnabas and Silas to preach the gospel in all the cities they traveled? Or the synogogues they interuppted.
I was thinking this
very same thing yesterday! We have to examine the audience. Paul was a Roman citizen and probably understood Roman spiritual life fairly well. He was also Jewish so understood synagogue practices. So when he was addressing an audience, it was in a way he knew to be effective and it was
usually to an audience he likely pre-determined would be receptive. Remember, he did
try inititally to just run out there and preach it, but nearly got stoned to death for it. Not everybody likes a street preacher.
The Apostles on the other hand were Jewish. Speaking in a Jewish synagogue in Jerusalem was second nature to them and they also knew most likely had sized up their audience.
I don’t recall - well I haven’t read Acts in a couple months - in Acts or the Epistles of an unsuspecting group being accosted by an unsolicited street-preaching Apostle. The Apostles in Acts on Pentecost were under the inspiration of the Spirit, who caused everyone around them to look up and say “Woah, I can understand these folks in my own language!” and then asked if they were drunk. So there was an initial inquiry by the audience. It wasn’t necessarily unsolicited proselytizing.
In Paul’s Epistles and Luke’s Acts they show even further that the Apostles and Paul were in agreement that Paul should address Gentiles and Peter the Jews. It was targeted evangelism.
Jesus himself in the Gospels (and at the Resurrection) limited his discussion to Jews that were following him around (scribes, Pharisees and disciples, etc.) but his audience was known to him and he was known to them.
So it probably wasn’t disrespectful at all for Paul, Peter, Stephen, James … any of them to preach the Gospel that way because it probably wasn’t unsolicited. Regardless, the times I remember of what one might consider unsolicited (some of Paul’s interactions in Athens perhaps ?) the preachers nearly got killed or jailed because the audience wasn’t receptive.
Just my thoughts anyway. I’m really glad you brought this point up. I think it is a valid question to ask and this was the conclusion I came to personally. Individual results may vary.
