Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Temple of Artemis and the Ephesian Riot


In the heart of ancient Ephesus stood one of the most magnificent structures the world had ever seen, the Temple of Artemis, considered among the seven wonders of the ancient world. With 127 towering pillars reaching sixty feet into the sky, adorned with breathtaking sculptures and housing untold wealth, this temple was not merely a religious site but the economic and cultural heartbeat of the entire region. Yet when the Apostle Paul arrived in this city with the simple message of Jesus Christ, the temple's power began to crumble, not through force or political maneuvering, but through the transforming power of the Gospel.

The events recorded in Acts 19:23-41 offer us far more than a historical account of a first-century riot. These verses reveal eternal truths about the nature of spiritual warfare, the cost of authentic discipleship, and the inevitable collision between the kingdom of God and the kingdoms of this world. As we examine the ruins of Ephesus today, silent stones that once echoed with the chants of "Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!", we must ask ourselves: Are we prepared to follow Paul's example when God's word threatens the comfortable idols of our age?

The Temple of Artemis

To understand the magnitude of what happened in Ephesus, we must first grasp the significance of Artemis (known to the Romans as Diana) and her temple. The Greek word used throughout this passage is Ἄρτεμις (Artemis), the goddess whom Luke tells us "all Asia and the world worship" (Acts 19:27, ESV). This was no exaggeration. The temple's influence extended throughout the Roman province of Asia and far beyond.

Archaeological discoveries have confirmed the temple's remarkable grandeur. Lost to history until its rediscovery in 1869, with the main altar unearthed in 1965, the temple revealed itself as more than a place of worship. At its center stood a black meteorite, either naturally resembling or fashioned into a grotesque female form. The lower portion was wrapped like a mummy, while the image was covered with multiple breasts, symbolizing fertility, a stark representation of the pagan worldview that celebrated created things rather than the Creator.

But the temple served an even more practical function in ancient society. It operated as a major treasury and bank, where merchants, kings, and entire cities deposited their wealth, trusting it to remain safe under the supposed protection of a deity. The economic ecosystem surrounding the temple was vast: silversmiths crafted miniature shrines, merchants sold souvenirs to pilgrims, and countless workers depended on the steady flow of worshipers for their livelihood. Artemis was not merely a religious figure; she was an economic empire.

The Greek word Luke uses for the riot that erupted is θόρυβος (thorybos), which conveys not merely disturbance but tumultuous uproar and confusion. This was no organized protest but a chaotic mob reaction. And what sparked this uproar? The simple preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Understanding Τῇ Ὁδῷ (The Way)

Acts 19:23 introduces the crisis with a phrase that appears repeatedly throughout Acts: "about the Way" (τῇ ὁδῷ, tē hodō). This is the third time in Acts that the Christian movement is described as "the Way," and the second time in this chapter alone. The definite article is significant, not "a way" but "the Way." Early Christians understood that following Jesus was not merely adopting a new philosophy or joining another religious sect. It was entering into the exclusive path of salvation, the only way to the Father (John 14:6).

This exclusivity remains one of Christianity's most offensive claims in every generation. Just as the polytheistic Romans could tolerate countless gods but balked at Christianity's monotheism, our pluralistic age welcomes all spiritual paths except the one that claims to be the only path. The Way threatens because it demands not addition but replacement, not Artemis plus Jesus, but Jesus instead of Artemis.

The commotion (θόρυβος) arose precisely because Paul's message was effective. He had "persuaded and turned away many people" (Acts 19:26, ESV), the Greek word for "persuaded" is πείθω (peithō), meaning to convince or win over through argumentation and appeal to reason. Paul was not coercing anyone; he was presenting a compelling truth that people freely chose to accept. And the Greek word for "turned away" is μεθίστημι (methistēmi), meaning to cause to change sides or transfer allegiance. The Gospel was not merely adding religious knowledge to people's lives; it was fundamentally reordering their loyalties, worldview, and worship.

When the Gospel Affects the Marketplace

The silversmith Demetrius presents the situation with remarkable clarity: "This Paul has persuaded and turned away many people, saying that they are not gods which are made with hands" (Acts 19:26, ESV). The phrase "gods which are made with hands" translates the Greek χειροποίητος (cheiropoiētos), literally "hand-made." Paul was proclaiming the obvious: objects crafted by human hands cannot be divine. Yet this obvious truth had massive economic implications.

Demetrius does not hide his financial motivations. He openly states that "we have our prosperity by this trade" (Acts 19:25, ESV), the Greek word for prosperity is εὐπορία (euporia), meaning wealth or abundance. The Gospel was disrupting their income stream. As people came to Christ, they naturally stopped purchasing idols and miniature shrines. They ceased their pilgrimages to the temple. The economic engine that sustained countless families was sputtering to a halt.

This pattern has repeated throughout Church history. When genuine revival comes, it always impacts the economy, particularly those industries built on vice, exploitation, or false religion. Charles Spurgeon famously remarked that he wished the Gospel would affect the trade of London, that certain businesses that needed cutting short would end "not by an Act of Parliament" but "by the spread of the Gospel." He emphasized that reformation must come through changed hearts, not merely legislation.

But notice the shrewdness of Demetrius's appeal. While his true concern is financial ("this trade of ours in danger"), he cloaks it in religious piety: "the temple of the great goddess Diana may be despised and her magnificence destroyed" (Acts 19:27, ESV). The word for "despised" is λογίζομαι εἰς οὐδέν (logizomai eis ouden), literally "to be reckoned as nothing." He appeals to civic pride. How dare this outsider insult our great goddess and our magnificent temple!

Then comes the ultimate appeal to popular opinion: "whom all Asia and the world worship." This is the "everybody does it" argument, still one of the most powerful rhetorical tools available. If everyone worships Artemis, surely she must be legitimate. If everyone believes something, questioning it seems not just wrong but dangerous. Yet the Gospel has always stood against consensus when consensus stands against truth.

The Mob's Madness: Σύγχυσις (Confusion) and Zealous Ignorance

What follows Demetrius's speech reveals the terrifying power of mob mentality. Acts 19:29 tells us "the whole city was filled with confusion" (σύγχυσις, synchysis), a word denoting utter disorder and bewilderment. They "rushed into the theater with one accord" (ὁμοθυμαδόν, homothymadon), a term that can describe beautiful unity (as when believers pray together) but here describes the dangerous unanimity of an enraged mob.

The theater in Ephesus could hold approximately 25,000 people, and archaeological evidence confirms its excellent acoustics; even today, sound carries remarkably well throughout the structure. Imagine the scene: thousands of people packed into this space, their voices reverberating off stone walls, chanting for two solid hours, "Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!" The Greek phrase is Μεγάλη ἡ Ἄρτεμις Ἐφεσίων (Megalē hē Artemis Ephesiōn), a rhythmic chant that would have created an almost hypnotic effect.

But here's the sobering detail: "most of them did not know why they had come together" (Acts 19:32, ESV). The Greek word for "assembly" here is ἐκκλησία (ekklēsia), the same word translated as "Church" throughout the New Testament. Luke seems to be making an ironic point: this gathering was a confused, ignorant mob masquerading as a legitimate assembly, the very opposite of the true ἐκκλησία that Paul had been building in Ephesus.

When Alexander, a Jew, tried to address the crowd, they shouted him down upon discovering his ethnicity, because Jews, like Christians, rejected idolatry. The mob's fury was indiscriminate against anyone who threatened their goddess. For two hours, they chanted, creating an atmosphere of mass hysteria. This is the power of collective delusion; once a crowd achieves critical mass, rational thought becomes nearly impossible.

Paul's Courage and the Church's Restraint

In the midst of this chaos, we see Paul's characteristic courage: "when Paul wanted to go in to the people, the disciples would not allow him" (Acts 19:30, ESV). Even "some of the officials of Asia, who were his friends," sent messages "pleading that he would not venture into the theater" (Acts 19:31, ESV). The word "pleading" is παρακαλέω (parakaleō), meaning to strongly urge or beseech. These officials, likely members of the Asiarchs, an elite council responsible for managing the imperial cult and public festivals, recognized the genuine danger Paul faced.

Paul's impulse to face the mob directly shows his shepherd's heart; his companions Gaius and Aristarchus had been seized, and Paul wanted to defend them and represent Christ before this massive gathering. Yet the Church's restraint was wise. There is a difference between necessary suffering for the Gospel and foolish martyrdom. Paul had more work to do, more Churches to plant, more letters to write. This was not the time for him to die.

This balance, courage to face opposition when necessary, and wisdom to avoid unnecessary danger, remains essential for believers today. We are called to be "wise as serpents and innocent as doves" (Matthew 10:16, ESV). We do not seek persecution, but neither do we shrink from it when faithfulness to Christ demands we face it.

The City Clerk's Secular Wisdom and God's Sovereign Protection

God's deliverance came through an unexpected source: the city clerk (γραμματεύς, grammateus), roughly equivalent to the mayor or chief administrative officer of Ephesus. His speech (Acts 19:35-40) demonstrates remarkable political acumen. He appeals to civic pride ("what man is there who does not know that the city of the Ephesians is temple guardian of the great goddess Artemis?"), then to Roman law and order.

The clerk makes three crucial points. First, Artemis's supremacy is beyond question, "these things cannot be denied" (ἀναντίρρητος, anantirrētos, meaning undeniable or incontrovertible). Second, Paul and his companions have not committed any criminal acts; they are "neither robbers of temples nor blasphemers of your goddess" (Acts 19:37, ESV). This is significant: the city clerk himself, though a pagan, testifies that Paul has not engaged in direct blasphemy against Artemis. Paul's ministry was pro-Jesus rather than anti-everything-else.

Third, and most importantly, the clerk warns of Roman consequences: "we are in danger of being called in question for today's uproar" (Acts 19:40, ESV). Rome tolerated many things, but not civil disorder. The Greek word for "uproar" is στάσις (stasis), which can mean riot, insurrection, or rebellion, precisely the kind of disturbance that would bring down Rome's iron fist on the entire city. The clerk understood that this mob's actions endangered everyone.

With these words, "he dismissed the assembly" (ἀπολύω τὴν ἐκκλησίαν, apolyō tēn ekklēsian), again using ἐκκλησία for this mob. The crisis ended not through Christian retaliation or defensive arguments but through God's providential use of a pagan official who cared about civic stability.

What Idols Rage Today?

The temple of Artemis lies in ruins today. No one worships her anymore. The magnificent structure that once dominated Ephesus exists now only as scattered stones and fading memories. Yet the spirit behind Artemis, the worship of created things rather than the Creator, the elevation of fertility and sexuality to divine status, the marriage of religion and commerce, thrives in new forms.

Consider the modern equivalents of those two-hour chants to Artemis. Today's culture chants with equal fervor: "Great is personal autonomy!" "Great is sexual liberation!" "Great is material prosperity!" "Great is political power!" "Great is technological progress!" Each generation builds its own temples, mints its own idols, and grows wealthy from systems that the Gospel threatens to disrupt.

When Christians speak truth about human sexuality, gender, the sanctity of life, or the exclusivity of Christ, we face our own Demetrius, not silversmiths but academics, entertainers, corporate leaders, and political activists whose prosperity depends on maintaining the status quo. Like Demetrius, they cloak their economic and ideological interests in moral language: "You're on the wrong side of history!" "You're hateful and bigoted!" "You threaten our civil rights and dignity!"

The abortion industry, for instance, generates billions of dollars annually, a modern Artemis cult built around fertility, autonomy, and the sacrifice of the vulnerable. The pornography industry enslaves millions while generating massive profits. The pharmaceutical industry promotes chemical solutions to spiritual problems. The entertainment complex shapes worldviews and normalizes behaviors that Scripture condemns. These are not merely businesses; they are economic ecosystems with vested interests in opposing Biblical truth.

When God's Word Threatens: The Nature of Spiritual Warfare

The Ephesian riot illustrates a crucial truth: authentic Christianity will always threaten the world system. When Paul later wrote to the Ephesians, he devoted substantial space to spiritual warfare (Ephesians 6:10-20). This is no coincidence. Ephesus had taught him that behind economic opposition, religious fury, and mob violence stood "the rulers, the authorities, the cosmic powers over this present darkness, the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places" (Ephesians 6:12, ESV).

The Greek word for "struggle" in Ephesians 6:12 is πάλη (palē), referring to wrestling, close, personal, intense combat. This is not a distant, academic conflict but an intimate, exhausting struggle. The riot in Ephesus was not merely human opposition to Paul's ministry; it was demonic resistance to the advance of God's kingdom.

Theologian Arthur Pierson observed, "This chapter teaches us all a permanent lesson: that when disciples have a true revival, society gets a revolution. When the Spirit moves mightily upon children of God, we may look for other mighty movements among unbelievers, and need not be surprised if the devil himself comes down, having great wrath, as though he knew that his time was short."

We must not be naive about this opposition. When the Gospel truly takes root in a community, when believers live radically different lives, when the Church becomes the pillar and ground of truth (1 Timothy 3:15), resistance will come. It may come in the form of economic pressure (losing jobs, losing customers, losing opportunities). It may manifest as social ostracism (losing friends, status, and reputation). It may come as legal persecution (losing rights, losing freedom, losing life itself).

Are We Prepared to Follow Paul's Example?

This brings us to the heart of the matter: Are we prepared to follow Paul's example? Are we willing to preach a Gospel that threatens the idols of our age? Are we ready to face economic consequences, social backlash, and potentially violent opposition for the sake of Christ?

Paul's approach in Ephesus provides a model. First, he was faithful to his calling. He did not set out to attack the temple of Artemis or organize protests against her worship. He simply preached Christ crucified and risen. He proclaimed that salvation comes through Jesus alone, that idols cannot save, and that we must turn from created things to worship the Creator. The disruption to Ephesus's economy was a consequence of Gospel faithfulness, not the primary goal.

Second, Paul was courageous but not foolhardy. He wanted to face the mob directly, showing his willingness to suffer for Christ and his companions. Yet he accepted wise counsel from the disciples and the Asiarchs. There is no virtue in unnecessary martyrdom. We must be willing to die for Christ, but we should not be eager to die unnecessarily.

Third, Paul trusted God's sovereignty. He did not organize a counter-protest or hire lawyers to fight Demetrius. He trusted that God would protect His work and His workers. And God did, through the unlikely instrument of a pagan city clerk concerned about Roman reprisals. God's ways are not our ways, and His deliverance often comes through unexpected means.

Fourth, Paul maintained his focus on Gospel proclamation. Despite the opposition, despite the riot, despite the danger, Paul's mission remained unchanged: to preach Christ and make disciples. He did not become distracted by political battles or cultural skirmishes. The Gospel was his weapon, and he wielded it faithfully.

The Ultimate Victory: Artemis Falls, Jesus Reigns

Here is the glorious irony of Ephesus: despite the riot, despite the mob's fury, despite the economic power of the silversmith's guild, despite the magnificence of the temple and the supposed deity of Artemis herself, the Gospel won. Christianity spread throughout Ephesus and the region. The Church grew. Within a few centuries, the worship of Artemis had vanished, her temple had fallen into ruin, and Jesus Christ was worshiped where she had once been exalted.

Today, millions upon millions worldwide worship Jesus Christ. Countless believers would willingly die for Him, and many have, and continue to do so. The Gospel that seemed so fragile in that Ephesian theater, threatened by a mob of 25,000 people chanting for two hours, has conquered the world. Not through military might, not through political power, not through economic dominance, but through the foolishness of preaching (1 Corinthians 1:21).

All idols have expiration dates. Every false god eventually falls. Every system built on lies eventually crumbles. The temple of Artemis is rubble. But Jesus Christ, crucified under Pontius Pilate, risen from the dead on the third day, ascended to the right hand of the Father, lives forever and reigns supreme.

Standing Firm in Our Generation

The ruins of Ephesus speak to us across two millennia. Those silent stones cry out a message: God's word always threatens unbelievers, and God's people must be prepared to face the consequences of faithfulness. The question is not whether we will face opposition; we will, if we are truly following Christ. The question is how we will respond when opposition comes.

Will we soften our message to avoid offense? Will we compromise Biblical truth to maintain our economic security or social standing? Will we remain silent when the world demands we speak its lies? Or will we, like Paul, faithfully proclaim Christ regardless of the cost?

The Way (ἡ ὁδός) remains narrow, and few find it (Matthew 7:14). Following this Way will cost us something, perhaps our jobs, our reputations, our comfort, our safety, or even our lives. But we serve a Master who gave up everything for us. We follow a Savior who endured the cross for the joy set before Him (Hebrews 12:2). And we trust a God who works all things together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28).

Let the mob rage. Let the silversmith complain. Let the world build its temples and mint its idols. We have seen how this story ends. Artemis is dust. Her priests are forgotten. Her worshipers have vanished. But Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Hebrews 13:8). His kingdom will never end. His word will never pass away. And those who faithfully follow Him, regardless of the cost, will hear the words they long to hear: "Well done, good and faithful servant" (Matthew 25:21, ESV).

The ruins of Ephesus testify to this truth: kingdoms rise and fall, empires crumble, idols decay, but the word of the Lord endures forever (1 Peter 1:25). Are you prepared to stake your life on that promise? Are you ready to follow Paul's example? The question facing every believer is not whether God's word will prevail; it will. The question is whether we will be faithful witnesses to that word in our generation, whatever the cost.

Great is Artemis of the Ephesians? No. Great is the Lord Jesus Christ, King of kings, Lord of lords, the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. To Him alone be glory, honor, and praise, forever and ever. Amen.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Hell Cannot Conquer the Church


In the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 16, Jesus leads His disciples to the district of Caesarea Philippi. It was a place dominated by a massive rock face dedicated to the worship of Pan, a site known historically as a center of pagan worship. Against this backdrop of looming cliffs and spiritual darkness, Jesus asks the most important question in human history: “Who do you say that I am?”

Peter answers with a flash of divine insight: “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”

Jesus’ response to Peter changes the trajectory of the world. He declares:

“And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” (Matthew 16:18, ESV)


For centuries, theologians have studied these words. They have parsed the grammar and argued over ecclesiastical authority. But to truly understand the weight of this promise, one must step out of the classroom and into the crucible of history. One must go where the "gates of hell" have swung wide open, threatening to swallow the faithful whole.

One must go to the Nineveh Plain.

In our modern era, few places have physically embodied the collision between the Kingdom of God and the powers of darkness like Northern Iraq. Here, ancient Christian communities, some dating back to the first century, faced the literal armies of death in the form of the Islamic State (ISIS). Their survival, and that of the Mar Mattai Monastery, serve as a living exegesis of Jesus’ promise. Antonio Graceffo wrote about his recent visit to Christians in Iraq’s Nineveh Plains. By looking at the original Greek of Matthew 16 and the testimony of those who survived the genocide of 2014, we can see that the Church is not merely a building that can be bombed, but a force that hell itself cannot contain.

Mar Mattai Monastery (the Monastery of Saint Matthew), Iraqi Kurdistan. Photo by Antonio Graceffo


Flesh and Blood vs. Divine Revelation

Before Jesus gives the promise of the Church’s invincibility, He highlights the source of Peter’s confession.

“Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven.” (Matthew 16:17, ESV)


The phrase “flesh and blood” translates the Greek σὰρξ καὶ αἷμα. In the Semitic idiom of the first century, this denoted human limitation. It referred to mere mortality, human wisdom, human strength, and human military strategy. Jesus is drawing a sharp line in the sand. The knowledge that Jesus is Lord does not come from human logic or political consensus; it is a revelation from God.

This distinction is palpable when you travel across the Nineveh Plain today.

The drive from the Kurdish capital of Erbil to the Mar Mattai Monastery (the Monastery of Saint Matthew) cuts across this historic region. It stretches east from the Tigris River near Mosul, encompassing roughly 3,600 square kilometers of flat, fertile land. To make this journey is to travel through a landscape defined by vulnerability. Graceffo traveled in an armored SUV, a necessary precaution in a land scarred by conflict. The vehicle’s thick glass and heavy doors, weighing nearly 200 pounds each, were a constant reminder of the "flesh and blood" dangers that persist.

As Graceffo rolled across the open terrain of agricultural fields, passing scattered villages of low concrete houses and shepherds tending flocks, the physical fragility of the Christian presence was obvious. These communities are ethnic Assyrians. They are the indigenous people of the land. They speak dialects of Aramaic, the very language Jesus spoke. Their liturgical language, the words they use to pray, remains ancient Aramaic. They trace their lineage to the missions of Addai and Mar Mari, disciples of the Apostle Thomas.

From a "flesh and blood" perspective, a σὰρξ καὶ αἷμα perspective, these communities should not exist. They are a small minority surrounded by a sea of volatility. They have no massive standing army, no oil wealth of their own, and they have been caught in the crossfire of empires for two millennia. Yet, they remain. Why? Because their existence is not sustained by political alliances alone, but by a revelation of who Jesus is.

As they drove, Graceffo’s translator Dlo, a member of the Free Burma Rangers (FBR), pointed out the window. "And this is another village," he said. "It’s called Al-Faf. They’re all Christian." They passed another. "Maghara. It’s called Maghara."

In Maghara, there is a playground. It was sponsored by Reload Love, an NGO that funds playgrounds for children in war zones, and installed by the Rangers during the fighting. It stands as a defiant splash of color in a dusty landscape. Dlo noted grimly, "ISIS tried to murder them because this village is very close to the front line."

From a human standpoint, building a playground on a front line is foolishness. But the Church does not operate on human wisdom. It operates on the revelation that life triumphs over death.


The Rock: Πέτρα (Petra) and the Living Stone

Jesus continues with a play on words that has defined ecclesiology for two thousand years.

“And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church…” (Matthew 16:18, ESV)


In the original Greek, Jesus says, "You are Πέτρος (Petros), and on this πέτρα (petra) I will build my church."

Πέτρος refers to a stone, a fragment, or a rock that can be moved. πέτρα, however, refers to a bedrock, a massive ledge of rock, or a cliff face. While Roman Catholic theology views Peter himself as the rock of foundation, and Protestant theology often views Peter's confession of faith as the rock, the imagery implies stability that transcends the individual. It is the stability of the divine reality Christ brings.

This imagery of the πέτρα, the unshakeable bedrock, comes alive when you approach Mar Mattai.

The monastery does not sit on the mountain; it is carved into it. As our vehicle turned up the steep, winding road, the structure revealed itself, built into the living rock of Mount Maqloub. Founded in AD 363, it is the oldest Syriac Orthodox monastery in the world.

Father Joseph, a monk at the monastery, explained its origins. In the fourth century, Saint Matthew (Mar Mattai) fled persecution from the Roman Empire. He and 25 fellow monks journeyed along the Tigris River, seeking refuge. They found this mountain. "They were living in the caves first," Father Joseph said, "until miracles led them to build this monastery here."

For 1,600 years, this structure has clung to the πέτρα of Mount Maqloub. It has withstood the Persian Empire, the Arab conquests, the Mongols, the Ottomans, and finally, the Islamic State.

Dlo’s brother, Omar, a high-ranking member of the Kurdish security forces, traveled with us. He recalled the days when the "gates of hell" opened in 2014. "ISIS tried to take the monastery," Omar said. "They wanted to sneak up the mountain and destroy it, the same way they did in Mosul."

ISIS, in its campaign to erase history, sought to destroy the very foundations of the faith in the region. They blew up the tomb of Jonah (Nebi Yunus) in Mosul. They destroyed the monastery of Mar Behnam. They wanted to turn the πέτρα into dust.

But the promise of Jesus is that the Church is built on a rock that cannot be dynamited. It is a spiritual reality that anchors the believer even when the physical stones tremble.

The Church: Ἐκκλησία (Ekklesia) Under Fire

“…I will build my church…”


The word Jesus chooses here is vital. He does not use the word for "temple" (hieron) or "synagogue" (synagoge). He uses ἐκκλησία.

Ἐκκλησία comes from two roots: ek (out of) and kaleo (to call). It literally means "the called-out ones." In secular Greek usage, it referred to a gathering of citizens called out from their homes to assemble for civic business. Jesus co-opts this term to describe His people. The Church is not a shrine; it is a movement. It is people called out from the world to belong to Him.

This distinction became a matter of life and death in 2014.

Before ISIS, the Nineveh Plain was home to the largest concentration of Christians in Iraq, between 150,000 and 200,000 people. They lived in historic towns like Qaraqosh, Bartella, and Karamlesh. But in August 2014, the ἐκκλησία was forced to move.

Father Joseph described the collapse. "ISIS entered Mosul city and they seized everything there." On June 4, 2014, the assault began. By June 9, the city had fallen. A few weeks later, ISIS issued its infamous ultimatum to the Christians of Mosul: convert to Islam, pay the extortion tax (jizya), or die.

The buildings, the stone and mortar structures, were seized. Crosses were torn down. Ancient manuscripts were burned. If the Church were merely a building, Christianity in Iraq would have ended in 2014.

But the ἐκκλησία is a people.

"Virtually the entire Christian population fled overnight," Father Joseph recounted. They fled to Erbil and the Kurdistan Region. They lived in schools, unfinished malls, and displacement camps. The Mar Mattai monastery received about 70 displaced families, who lived within its ancient walls for months.

Jesus said, "I will build my ἐκκλησία." He did not promise that the buildings would never be taken. He promised to build His people. Even in the refugee camps of Erbil, the Church was alive. Liturgies were sung in tents. Baptisms were performed in plastic tubs. The "called-out ones" had been called out of their homes, yes, but they were still the Church.

Father Joseph noted that the Kurdish government (KRG), and specifically the Barzani family, opened their doors. "They opened their hearts before the gates," he said. Dlo, a Kurdish Muslim, echoed this sentiment of brotherhood. "This mountain is called Maqloub. It is a place where we, Christians, Yazidis, and Kurdish Muslims, have been living together for many, many years."

The ἐκκλησία found refuge not just in divine protection, but in the shared humanity of their neighbors, a testament to God’s common grace.

The Gates of Hades: Πύλαι ᾅδου (Pylai Hadou)

“…and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”

The phrase "gates of hell" is often misunderstood as a defensive image, as if the Church is a fortress and hell is battering against it. But in the ancient world, gates were defensive structures. If the "gates of hell" cannot prevail, it means the Church is on the offensive. It means the Church is attacking the strongholds of death, and the gates of death cannot withstand the assault.

However, there is another layer of meaning. The Greek πύλαι ᾅδου (pylai hadou) refers to the gates of Hades, the realm of the dead. It signifies the power of death itself, or the organized power of evil.

In 2014, the Nineveh Plain stared directly into the πύλαι ᾅδου.

The prophet Nahum once described Nineveh as the "bloody city," full of lies and robbery (Nahum 3:1). ISIS brought this ancient prophecy back to life. They were a death cult, glorifying execution, slavery, and destruction. They sought to establish a kingdom of death on the very soil where Jonah once preached repentance.

Omar explained the intelligence they received during the war: "They wanted to destroy the very ancient history." ISIS viewed the Christian presence as an affront to their ideology. They regarded Kurds, Yazidis, and Christians as infidels to be wiped out.

Father Joseph recalled how close the "gates" came to swallowing them. "ISIS vehicles reached the road near the village below Mar Mattai and remained there for about 20 minutes." They were less than three kilometers away. The monks watched from the monastery walls. The Peshmerga had withdrawn. The road was open.

"We were expecting that they were going to seize the monastery also," Father Joseph said.

It was a moment where the πύλαι ᾅδου seemed poised to triumph. The forces of death were at the doorstep. The darkness was tangible.

Shall Not Prevail: Κατισχύσουσιν (Katischysousin)

“…shall not prevail against it.”


The Greek verb here is κατισχύσουσιν. It is a compound word: kata (against/down) and ischuo (to be strong). It means to have strength against, to overpower, to hold down, or to check.

Jesus promises that the powers of death will never be strong enough to hold the Church down. They may hurt it. They may scatter it. They may kill the body (the "flesh and blood"). But they cannot κατισχύσουσιν, they cannot achieve total victory.

How was this promise fulfilled on the Nineveh Plain?

First, it was fulfilled through resistance. The "flesh and blood" of the Church rose up. Christians formed militias like the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU) and Dwekh Nawsha ("Self-Sacrificing"). Dlo and Omar fought alongside coalition forces. The Peshmerga regrouped.

"Sometimes it was a real battle," Father Joseph recalled. ISIS attacked during fog and sandstorms, trying to breach the lines. Explosions shook the monastery "just like an earthquake." But the line held. The gates of hell pushed, but they could not overcome.

Second, it was fulfilled through resilience. In 2017, ISIS was defeated. The "Caliphate" that boasted it would conquer Rome crumbled into dust. And what happened next? The ἐκκλησία returned.

"After the liberation operation began, most of our places were completely destroyed," Father Joseph said. Yet, the Church led the rebuilding. They cleared the rubble. They de-mined the playgrounds. They consecrated the altars again.

Today, the bells ring across the Nineveh Plain. The NPU was recently restored as an independent force in October 2025, securing the Christian towns. The liturgy in Aramaic, the language of Jesus, is still chanted in Qaraqosh and Alqosh.

Father Joseph summed up this victory with a perspective forged in 1,600 years of history:

"At that time, when you were hearing the explosions and all this, you knew that it’s not new for us. The age of the monastery is more than 1,600 years. We have seen many wars. And by the blessing of Jesus Christ, through all these circumstances, the monastery survived."


The κατισχύσουσιν promise means that the Church plays the long game. Empires rise and fall. Dictators like Saddam Hussein come and go. Terror groups like ISIS flare up and burn out. But the Church remains.

"The Church exists much longer than any problem," Father Joseph said. "And that’s the promise of our Lord. We say that the gates of hell cannot stand against the Church."

The Keys of the Kingdom: Binding and Loosing

“I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.” (Matthew 16:19, ESV)


Jesus finishes his address to Peter with the imagery of keys (κλεῖδας) and the authority to bind (δήσῃς) and loose (λύσῃς).

In the Jewish context, binding and loosing referred to the authority of rabbis to forbid or permit certain actions, and to exclude or admit people into the community. Jesus grants this stewardship to Peter and the Church.

For the Syriac Orthodox Church, this connection to Peter is not abstract. Father Joseph explained that their patriarch, based in Damascus, is considered the 122nd successor to Saint Peter, who served as Bishop of Antioch before going to Rome. They view their stewardship of the faith as a direct line from this moment in Matthew 16.

But the true power of the "keys" lies in how the persecuted church unlocks the kingdom of heaven amid the hell of earth.

When ISIS came, they brought chains. They "bound" people in slavery and fear. The Church’s response was to "loose."

They loosed the bonds of hatred through forgiveness. It is a staggering reality that many Iraqi Christians pray for the conversion of their persecutors. Dlo mentioned the distinct worldview of the Kurds, that they are brothers with Christians. This relational "loosing" of ancient sectarian tensions allowed for survival. When the Peshmerga (Muslim Kurds) defended the Mar Mattai monastery, it was a manifestation of a kingdom principle: mercy triumphs over judgment.

Furthermore, the Church "loosed" resources. Father Joseph described how the Church coordinated shelter and food for thousands of families. "The goal was to ensure that refugees lived in safety and dignity," he said. In a time of scarcity, the Church unlocked generosity.

Promise for the Future

The drive back from Mar Mattai leaves one in a contemplative silence. The mountains of the Nineveh Plain stand as silent witnesses to centuries of bloodshed. The ruins of Nineveh, the "bloody city," are a reminder of human cruelty.

But the Monastery of Saint Matthew stands higher.

The survival of the ancient Christian communities in Iraq is not an accident of geopolitics. It is a theological signpost. It is evidence that Matthew 16:18 is not just poetic language.

When Jesus said the πύλαι ᾅδου (gates of hell) would not κατισχύσουσιν (prevail), He was making a guarantee that has been tested by fire.

Flesh and blood (σὰρξ καὶ αἷμα) cannot explain why these communities still exist.

The Rock (πέτρα) of Christ’s presence provided a foundation when the earth shook.

The Church (ἐκκλησία) proved to be a resilient people, not a fragile building.

As Father Joseph looked out over the plains where ISIS once roamed, he offered a final thought on the endurance of the faith:

"We are living here in the country. And that’s what keeps us, keeps our faith, that this is just a period and it’s going to end."

For the believer reading this today, perhaps you are facing your own "gates." They may not be the black flags of ISIS, but they may be the gates of sickness, depression, financial ruin, or cultural hostility. The promise remains the same. The gates of death have offensive power, yes. They are terrifying, yes. But they do not have the final word.

The Church is the anvil that has worn out many hammers. The Nineveh Plain is green again. The prayers are still rising in Aramaic. The Rock still stands.

And the gates of hell? They lie in ruins, while the Church marches on.


Reference: Antonio Graceffo, (2025). Ancient Monastery Town in Iraq Stood Against ISIS, Residents Refuse to Leave. Narrow Path Ministries.  https://narrowpathministries.wordpress.com/2025/10/17/ancient-monastery-town-in-iraq-stood-against-isis-residents-refuse-to-leave-until-today/


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