Acts 20:20

"serving the Lord with all humility, with many tears, and with trials which happened to me by the plots of the Jews;"

Key Reflection

In Acts 20:20, Paul speaks of his ministry with sincerity and intensity, serving the Lord amidst trials that came from Jewish opposition. For the original Corinthian audience, familiar with both the humility required in Christian leadership and the persecution faced by early Christians, this verse vividly conveyed Paul’s dedication and the personal cost of his faithfulness to Christ.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

Verse 20. I kept back nothing, etc. No doctrine, no admonition, no labour. Whatever he judged would promote their salvation, he had faithfully and fearlessly delivered. A minister of the gospel must be the judge of what will be profitable to the people of his charge. His aim should be to promote their real welfare--to preach that which will be profitable. His object will not be to please their fancy, to gratify their taste, to flatter their pride, or to promote his own popularity. "All Scripture is profitable," 2 Ti 3:16; and it will be his aim to declare that only which will tend to promote their real welfare.

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