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October 27, 1909. THE PRESBYTERS
Sunday Scho6l
PAUL A PRISONER?THE SHIPWRECK.
November 7 1909. Acts 27:39-28:10.
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servants; and none of them that trust in him shall be desolate."
P6alm 34:22.
DAILY HOME READINGS.
.Mob.?Acts 27:27-344. Th.?Psalm 104:1-9.
T.?Acts 28:1-10. F.?Psalm 104:24-31.
W? Ps. 107:21-32. S.-Psalm 77:11-20.
S.?Psalm. 23.
SHORTER CATECHISM.
Q. 80. What is required in the tenth commandment?
A. The tenth commandment requireth full contentment
with our own condition, with a right and charitable frame of
spirit toward our neighbor and all that is his.
TOPICAL" OUTLINE.
How Paul was Saved from Shipwreck?
The ship run ashore, vs. 39-41.
All saved, vs. 42-44.
On the island, vs. 1-10.
LESSON COMMENT.
About fifty miles south of the island of Sicily and 150 miles
southwest of the most southern point of Italy, situated at the
western end of the valley of the Mediterranean sea, is the
well-known Maltese group of islands, Malta, Gozo, Comino
and the two islets, Cominotto and Filfla. Malta, the Melita of
our lesson, is the largest of the group (17 Vi miles long, 9%
broad; area 95 square miles).
On the morning of the fifteenth day after they had loosed
from Crete (November 59 A. D.), and after a voyage so tempestuous
under the force of a terrific northeast wind
(Euroclydon, Eurus and Aquilo), that anything like orderly
and regular eating was rendered impossible for the entire
fourteen days, Paul and the 275 soldiers, sailors and prisoners
failed to recognize Melita (Malta) in the gray dawn of the
rainy, tempestuous morning. On the night before (14th),
surmising, probably from the roar of distant breakers on the
shore, that they were near land, the sailors had prudently
cast four anchors from the stern of the ship. They were nowreeling
under the force of the continuing storm and threatened
with the new peril of reaching a shore amid the waves
o# a great hurricane. A hasty council of the sailors decided
them to make an effort to save their own lives, leaving the
soldiers and prisoners to whatever fate might await them.
Under pretense of placing anchors out of the fore part of the
ship, they had lowered the only life saving boat attached to
the ship. Paul observed this unheroic ruse on the part of the
sailors and promptly assured the centurion that if the sailors
left the ship they would be lost. At the command of the
centurion, the soldiers cut the rope and the boat dropped into
the sea.
While waiting for the day, Paul found his opportunity?the
hour for which his heart must have an/i moitoii tik/.
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trials of the Journey had forced all of them, soldiers, sailors
and prisoners, into a family group. Now they were tired,
cold, hungry and in terror. Calling them together, Paul, with
accents of warmest personal interest in them and of most
assured faith in the safety of each of them, besought them to
eat. With the calmness and assurance of true faith, he took
bread and gave thanks to God before them and began to eat.
The blessing of God came over all, and as they ate a feeling
of good cheer was manifest. The man of mightiest Influence
of the 276 souls was now the Jewish prisoner, Paul, the servant
of Jesus.
After daylight it was decided to make into a bay that, with
its friendly shore, seemed to offer some hope of landing.
Driven at fearful speed, the ship made into the bay, no
pilotage being possible. It soon found shallow water and
drove the fore froqt of its hull deep into the soft mud and
stuck fast. The hinder part was thus left an easy prey to the
waves which beat UDOn it from two directions The onoor
two seas?to the north and to the south?poured out itself
upon the exposed part of the ship. It began quickly to go to
? '
IN OF THE SOUTH.
pieces. Officers, sailors, soldiers and prisoners were now
equally confronted with danger. But the soldiers were
responsible for the prisoners, and life must answer fc" life;
an escaped prisoner lyeant a doomed soldier. It is not bo
unnatural, however unfeeling it may have been, for the soldiers
to have urged that the prisoners be killed at onoe.
Fearful is thy state, Paul! The storm, the sailors, the soldiers,
are alike pitiless. So for the other prisoners, for there
were others. Not so fast. There is another on that ship.
The storm knew him; the waves obey him. He had not yet
terminated Paul's work. Quietly, unseen of others, he touched
the centurion's heart. At once the centurion became Paul's
champion and defender.
"Take 110 life. Every man for the shore!" The command
rang out far above the voice of the storm. Ere long 276 sonls,
wet, cold but glad, found themselves on one of Rome's
island possessions, and bo among barbarians. The courteous
Luke followed the habit and belief of all Greeks, calling all
others "barbarians" (hoi barbaroi).
Paul, with his characteristic industry, came up pretty soon,
with arms full of wood, gathered in haste and enclosing a
deadly serpent, which, warmed into life and activity by contact
with the burning pyre, darted fiercely upon Paul's nearby
hand, held close over the fire for warmth. With a tenacity
characteristic of the viperine, though not of the crotaline
snakes, the serpent clung to Paul's hand until he shook it off
In the fire. Recall here the assurance of our Lord: "These
signs shall follow them that believe: In my name shall they
cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues: They
shall take up serpents, and if they drink any deadly thing,
it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick and
they shall recover." On the island of Malta these words
found fulfillment, not by the seeking of men, but by the dispensation
of the Lord himself. It was God's key to the door
of that island. The superstitious awe created by this notable
sign?Paul's immunity from the poison of a serpent?led to
the larger kindness of the people and of the Roman governor,
Publius, to the healing of his (Publius') father of a serious
and comnlirntpri olfimooo -?J
. UUU| aim vu an eneiiuea residence and
teaching of three months.
Lessons. 1. Paul had longed to be in Rome and had prayed for
a "prosperous journey" thither. (Rom. 1:9-11.) After he had
fallen under the hard hand of the Roman power the Lord
stood by him at night in the castle in Jerusalem with the
cheering words: "Be of good cheer, Paul: for, as thou hast
testified of me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness also
at Rome." His prayer was receiving answer, and God's purposes
were holding steadily on. So it is ever. He hears and
sovereignly answers the requests of his servants, but in his
own way. That way is sure and the only good one, though it
may lie through "perils in the deep."
2. We have here one of the most striking and suggestive
lessons of God's sovereignty and man's agency to be found '
in all the Word of God. A positive assurance that there
should be no loss of life had been given Paul; also that God
had placed the saving of all these lives into his (Paul's) hand.
"Lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee." When
the sailors proposed to take to the boats, Paul's prohibition,
jiExcept these abide in the ship ye can not be saved," was in
no sense a contradiction of the promise, "There shall be no
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saved, but he saved through obedience to his command, and
not through and in spite of disobedience; and this is but an
example of his method of working and saving in all cases.
3. The detentions and reverses of life may be, and ought
to be, and, under proper submission of ourselves to the
mighty hand of God, will unfailingly be the rich and large
places in our lives. The three months' residence of Paul and
his companions on the island of Malta was unexpected and
would not have been chosen by them. But we know from
other sources that the life of the people and of their rulers
was greatly affected and that there was a great and widespread
turning to God. The catacombs beneath tho
and other inscriptions bore testimony to the work of God
among the people in that island.
Fayetteville Ark. r. b. Willis.