Prepare to Teach

Acts 20:1-6

Gospel mission continues through encouragement, travel, and shared labor despite opposition.

Scripture Text

20:1 After the uproar had ceased, Paul sent for the disciples, took leave of them, and departed to go into Macedonia.

20:2 When He had gone through those parts, and had encouraged them with many words, He came into Greece.

20:3 When He had spent three months there, and a plot was made against Him by Jews as He was about to set sail for Syria, He determined to return through Macedonia.

20:4 These accompanied Him as far as Asia: Sopater of Beroea; Aristarchus and Secundus of the Thessalonians; Gaius of Derbe; Timothy; and Tychicus and Trophimus of Asia.

20:5 But these had gone ahead, and were waiting for us at Troas.

20:6 We sailed away from Philippi after the days of Unleavened Bread, and came to them at Troas in five days, where we stayed seven days.

Anchor

Gospel mission continues through encouragement, travel, and shared labor despite opposition.

After the uproar, Paul strengthens the disciples, travels through Macedonia and Greece, and gathers companions as He returns toward Asia.

Point of Contact

Pastors and elders must reject self-preservation, greed, selective teaching, and careless oversight, embracing instead watchfulness, sacrifice, doctrinal courage, and care for the weak.

Rhythm
  1. Churches Encouraged Under Pressure Paul strengthens disciples across Macedonia and Greece while avoiding a hostile plot.
  2. Word, Table, and Resurrection Comfort in Troas The gathered church breaks bread, hears extended teaching, and is comforted by Eutychus being restored alive.
  3. Urgent Journey Toward Jerusalem Paul travels deliberately toward Jerusalem, bypassing Ephesus to avoid delay.
  4. Apostolic Ministry Remembered Paul recalls His humble, tearful, comprehensive ministry and His commitment to finish the task given by Jesus.
  5. Full Counsel Declared Paul declares Himself innocent because He proclaimed the whole counsel of God.
  6. Elders Charged to Shepherd and Guard The elders must watch themselves, shepherd the purchased church, and guard against external wolves and internal distorters.
  7. Entrusted to Grace Paul commits the elders to God and the word of grace, calling them to generosity, labor, and care for the weak.
  8. Farewell in Prayer and Tears The elders grieve deeply, pray with Paul, and accompany Him to the ship.
Crucial Turning Point

Paul encourages the churches, escapes a plot, gathers with believers in Troas, restores Eutychus, travels toward Jerusalem, and charges the Ephesian elders to guard themselves and shepherd the church of God.

Acts 20 argues that gospel ministry must be measured by faithfulness, not comfort, ease, or self-preservation. Paul’s life demonstrates humble service, tearful endurance, public and private teaching, repentance toward God, faith in Jesus, full proclamation of God’s counsel, and willingness to suffer to finish the task. The Ephesian elders are charged to continue this ministry by watching themselves, shepherding the flock, guarding against wolves, and entrusting the church to God and the word of His grace.

Theological logic
  1. Paul continues strengthening churches after opposition, showing that persecution does not end pastoral responsibility.
  2. His altered travel plans show prudence under threat, not retreat from mission.
  3. The gathering at Troas emphasizes word, fellowship, breaking bread, and resurrection comfort among believers.
  4. Eutychus’s restoration comforts the church and shows that God’s life-giving power accompanies the apostolic mission.
  5. Paul’s urgency toward Jerusalem reveals purposeful obedience within the unfolding mission.
  6. Paul’s speech to the Ephesian elders is grounded in his known life among them, not merely in office or title.
  7. He served the Lord with humility, tears, and trials, refusing a self-protective model of ministry.
  8. He did not withhold what was profitable, showing that faithful ministry gives people what they need, not only what they prefer.
  9. He taught publicly and house to house, showing both broad proclamation and personal pastoral care.
  10. His message to Jews and Greeks was repentance toward God and faith in the Lord Jesus.
  11. He goes to Jerusalem under Spirit compulsion, accepting uncertainty and suffering.
  12. He values completing the task of testifying to the gospel of God’s grace more than preserving his own life.
  13. He declares himself innocent because he proclaimed the whole counsel of God.
  14. The elders must first watch themselves, because shepherds who neglect their own souls endanger the flock.
  15. The Holy Spirit has made them overseers, so their role is divine stewardship, not personal possession.
  16. The church belongs to God and was purchased with blood, giving the flock immeasurable value.
  17. Savage wolves will come from outside, and distorters will arise from within, so vigilance is non-negotiable.
  18. The word of grace is sufficient to build up the elders and give them inheritance among the sanctified.
  19. Paul’s financial integrity and labor model ministry free from greed.
  20. Care for the weak and generous giving reflect the words and character of the Lord Jesus.
  21. The tearful farewell reveals that faithful ministry forms deep gospel bonds.
Watch Out
  • Do not equate strategic retreat with fearfulness.
  • Do not overlook the centrality of encouragement in apostolic ministry.
  • Do not treat the companion list as incidental; it reflects church partnership.
  • Do not detach travel details from theological purpose.
  • Do not minimize the persistent threat faced by Paul.
  • Do not reduce travel notes to mere logistics.
  • Avoid assuming every change of plan reflects fear rather than prudence.
  • Do not over-speculate about the conspiracy details.
  • Guard against isolating Paul from His team-based ministry.
  • Do not separate encouragement from doctrinal instruction.
Invitation Arc
  • Encouragement is essential after seasons of conflict.
  • Strategic flexibility may be required when opposition arises.
  • Shared ministry across cultures reflects gospel unity.
  • Leadership involves strengthening, not merely planting churches.
  • Festal rhythms intersect with mission travel.
Response
  • Encourage disciples deliberately and often.
  • Teach what is profitable, not merely what is popular.
  • Declare repentance toward God and faith in Jesus clearly.
  • Aim to finish the task the Lord Jesus gives.
  • Proclaim the whole counsel of God.
  • Watch Yourself and Your doctrine.
  • Shepherd the flock as God’s purchased possession.
  • Guard the church from wolves and distorters.
  • Entrust believers to God and the word of grace.
  • Labor with integrity and help the weak.
  • Pray and love deeply in ministry relationships.
Formation Aim

Humility, courage, perseverance, tears, doctrinal faithfulness, vigilance, generosity, self-watchfulness, and deep love for the church.

Canonical Thread
Gospel Clarity

The gospel advances through sustained encouragement, wise planning, and unified labor among believers.