
Paul is now in Athens.
The Greeks were cautious with their worship of the gods and didn’t want to offend a god they didn’t know, so they built the altar that Paul had noticed.
He tells the people that this god they didn’t know was God, who overlooked the times of their ignorance, wants people to repent, and tells them that believers are promised resurrection from the dead.
They want to learn more, and because of his preaching, people come to believe. Paul goes on from there to Corinth.
All over the world, and from the beginning of time, the need to believe in someone or something greater than themselves has moved the hearts of men and women.
Whether it was the Greeks, the Romans, the Egyptians, the Babylonians, or the peoples of the new world, the Aztecs, Mayans or American Indians, they named their gods. This is a deep-seated need. St. Augustine is known for the saying, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in you.” We all hunger for God.
Over the years, scientists have tried to prove that there is no need for a god and search for answers to creation and life.
Or they study, the more questions they have than answers. They search for life on different planets, perhaps thinking this will give them the answers.
Scientists have managed to “create” life in a test tube – but they need something to start with. Their work has made it possible for those previously unable to have children to become pregnant and give birth to beautiful, healthy children – but they still needed to bring together an egg and sperm.
They still cannot create something out of nothing. Paul told the Greeks about God. We have the Scriptures to tell us about God. We don’t have to search any more, and our hearts can rest in the One God and his Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ.



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