The Power of Persuasion in
Preaching
Introduction
History teaches us
many lessons, and the book of Acts is one of the greatest historical
records ever given to man. In its pages, we see how people from
various backgrounds reacted to the gospel of Christ. In Acts 17,
Paul’s work in Thessalonica, Berea, and Athens reveals a clear
pattern: the same gospel preached, the same method
employed—reasoning from the Scriptures—and a wide range of
responses. His goal was simple and unchanging: to persuade people to
leave false religion and accept the truth of Jesus Christ. This
remains the church’s responsibility today.
The Method: Reasoning from
the Scriptures
When Paul entered
Thessalonica, he went first to the synagogue, where people already
had knowledge of God. For three Sabbaths, he reasoned with them from
the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Christ had to
suffer, rise again, and that Jesus is that Christ. His approach was
deliberate: no emotional manipulation, no philosophy or
entertainment, only Scripture-based reasoning. The aim was
persuasion—not to personal opinion, but to the truth of God’s word.
Paul’s message
persuaded some, including devout Greeks and influential women. This
was his duty, as he later wrote in 2 Corinthians 5:11: “Knowing
therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men.” Persuasion must
be rooted in Scripture, calling all people to Christ, regardless of
their background.
The Rejection: When the
Word Provokes Opposition
Not all were
persuaded in Thessalonica. Many Jews became envious and stirred up
trouble, even forming mobs. Their rejection was not of Paul
personally, but of God Himself (Luke 10:16). This rejection carried
eternal consequences (John 12:48). Paul did not alter his message to
avoid conflict; his responsibility was to please God, not men
(Galatians 1:6–10).
The Noble Response in
Berea
In Berea, Paul
again went to the synagogue and preached the same message. The
Bereans were “more noble” because they received the word eagerly and
examined the Scriptures daily to see if Paul’s teaching was true.
The result was that many believed. This is the model for conversion:
the pure seed of the word (Luke 8) is sown, and those with honest
hearts respond with obedience.
Athens: Preaching in an
Idolatrous City
In Athens, Paul
was stirred in spirit by the city’s idolatry. He reasoned daily in
the synagogue and marketplace, aiming to persuade men to leave false
religion. His message was consistent: salvation is only in Christ.
For Paul, telling people to remain in their existing faith was not
an option; false religion could not save. His goal was to confront
error with truth, no matter how unpopular.
The Message: Foolishness
to the World, Power to the Saved
In Athens and
elsewhere, some mocked Paul, others delayed decision, but a few
believed. As he explained in 1 Corinthians 1:18–29, the message of
the cross appears foolish to the world, but it is the power of God
to those who believe. God’s chosen method of saving the lost is the
preaching of the gospel—not worldly wisdom, philosophy, or
entertainment.
The Universal Call to
Repentance
Paul concluded
his message in Athens with a universal command: “God… now commands
all men everywhere to repent” (Acts 17:30–31). Judgment is certain,
and the assurance of it is the resurrection of Christ. Though most
did not respond, a few believed—and for Paul, that made every effort
worthwhile.
Conclusion
From
Thessalonica to Berea to Athens, Paul never changed his message or
method. He reasoned, explained, and proved from the Scriptures,
seeking to persuade people to leave false religion and follow the
only way to the Father. This is still the church’s mission today: to
hold fast to the one gospel, calling all to faith, repentance,
confession, baptism for the forgiveness of sins, and faithful living
until death.
The Power
of Persuasion in Preaching Sermon Outline:
Introduction
-
Value of
history as a teacher (Acts as historical record)
-
Acts 17 as
case study of gospel preaching and varied reactions
-
Paul’s
consistent method and message: persuade with Scripture
I. The
Method in Thessalonica (Acts 17:1–4)
-
Paul begins
in synagogue—reasoning from Scripture
-
Content:
Christ’s suffering, resurrection, and identity
-
Aim:
persuasion, not entertainment or philosophy
-
Result: some
persuaded, joined Paul and Silas
-
2
Corinthians 5:11 – persuading men is our duty
II. The
Opposition (Acts 17:5–9)
-
Many Jews
reject message, stirred by envy
-
Mobs formed,
city in uproar, persecution of believers
-
Luke 10:16 –
rejecting the messenger is rejecting God
-
John 12:48 –
same word will judge rejecters
-
Galatians
1:6–10 – no changing the message to please men
III. The
Noble Bereans (Acts 17:10–12)
-
Same method,
same message
-
Bereans’
nobility: eager reception, daily Scripture examination
-
Many believe
as result
-
Luke 8 –
pure seed produces fruit in good soil
IV. Athens:
A City of Idols (Acts 17:16–21)
-
Paul’s
spirit provoked by idolatry
-
Same method:
synagogue, marketplace, daily reasoning
-
Goal:
persuade men to leave false religion for Christ
-
Salvation
only in Christ—false religion offers none
V. The
World’s View vs. God’s Power (1 Corinthians 1:18–29)
-
Cross seen
as foolishness to perishing
-
God saves
through gospel preaching, not worldly wisdom
-
Few of
worldly wise, mighty, noble persuaded
VI.
Universal Call to Repentance (Acts 17:30–34)
-
God commands
all to repent—judgment certain
-
Resurrection
proof of Christ’s authority
-
Mixed
responses: mockery, delay, belief
-
Even few
converts make the work worthwhile
Conclusion
-
Paul’s
message and method unchanged across cities
-
Church today
must reason from Scripture, not human methods
-
Call to obey
the gospel: faith, repentance, confession, baptism, faithful
living
Call to Action
We live in a
world as full of idols and false religion as Thessalonica, Berea,
and Athens. God has entrusted us with the same mission He gave Paul:
to persuade people with His word to leave error and embrace truth.
Let us commit to using the Scriptures—not human wisdom—to reason,
explain, and prove that Jesus is the Christ, that salvation is in
Him alone, and that obedience to His gospel is the only way to the
Father.
Key Takeaways
-
Persuasion
must come from Scripture, not emotion or human philosophy (Acts
17:2–3)
-
Rejection of
the gospel is rejection of God (Luke 10:16)
-
The noble
hearer examines the Scriptures daily (Acts 17:11)
-
Salvation is
only in Christ; false religions cannot save (Acts 4:12)
-
The gospel
is God’s power to save, even if viewed as foolishness by the
world (Romans 1:16; 1 Corinthians 1:18)
-
God commands
all people everywhere to repent (Acts 17:30–31)
Scripture
Reference List
-
Acts 17:1–34
– Paul’s work in Thessalonica, Berea, Athens
-
2
Corinthians 5:11 – Persuading men knowing the terror of the Lord
-
Luke 10:16 –
Rejecting Christ’s messengers is rejecting Him
-
John 12:48 –
The word will judge in the last day
-
Galatians
1:6–10 – No other gospel
-
Luke 8 –
Parable of the sower
-
Acts 4:12 –
Salvation only in Christ
-
1
Corinthians 1:18–29 – God’s wisdom vs. man’s wisdom
-
Acts
17:30–31 – Universal command to repent
-
Romans 1:16
– Gospel is God’s power to save
-
Revelation
2:10 – Be faithful unto death
Prepared by
Bobby Stafford of the church of Christ at Granby, MO
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