Tuesday, June 20, 2017

PT-4 Intro to Acts


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 6/20/2017 8:31 AM

My Worship Time                                                               Focus:  PT-4 Intro to the Book of Acts

            In this section we continue looking at the sermon that John MacArthur preached in early January of 2014 on the intro to the book of Acts, a sermon he entitled “Continuing Christ’s Word PT-1.” 

Chapter 9, Verse 31 moves the church throughout Judea and into Samaria and says at the end, the church increased.  You come to the third section.  That would be from 9:32 over to Chapter 12, Verse 24.  That section ends – and by the way, that section includes the extension of the church to the gentiles, Antioch, and that ends with these words.  “Let the word of the Lord continue to grow and be multiplied.”

This is the story of the building of the church, the developing of the church, the addition of the church from the beginnings of Jerusalem then to Judea and Samaria, and then into the gentile world as far as Antioch.  And that also includes the salvation of Cornelius through the instrumentality of Peter.  So the gentiles are adding.

The next section is Chapter 12, Verse 25 to Chapter 16, Verse 5, and this tells the story of the church going way beyond Antioch, jumping into Asia Minor and the preaching tour through Galatia by the Apostle Paul.  And that section ends in Chapter 16, Verse 5, so the churches were being strengthened in the faith and were increasing in number daily. 

These sections that all end with the same sort of summary of the development of the growing church.  Sixteen six begins to tell the story of Paul reaching the great gentile cities, like Ephesus and beyond Asia Minor even into Corinth, and this ministry goes on all the way into Chapter 19, and it ends in Verse 20.  So the word of the Lord was growing mightily and prevailing.

That’s how all the sections end.  Final section, Chapter 19, Verse 21, goes all the way to the end and tells the story of the final years of Paul’s ministry before his imprisonment in Rome.  And how does that section end at the end of the book?  He stayed two full years in his own rented quarters, was welcoming all who came to him, preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching concerning the Lord Jesus Christ with all openness unhindered.

So that’s the overview of the history of Acts.  Got it?  It’ll be on the quiz.  The quiz will be in 20 minutes.  I wouldn’t do that to you.  But it’s important, isn’t it?  Does that get your arms around this book that could just be a lot of stories that you couldn’t quite grasp?  It ends with Paul in prison, and so Luke stops there. 

Luke had lived through 30 miraculous years from the resurrection to the imprisonment of Paul.  He’d lived in those 30 years of the first fulfillment of the great commission by the first force of apostolic preachers to the point where churches were established, and the next generation was put in place by placement of elders.  In fact, Luke wrote a history, started in Jerusalem, and ended when the gospel was penetrating Rome, the capital of the world, their world.

So I’d like to think of this as 30 years in which Jesus continued his work ordained by the father, energized by the Holy Spirit, and brought to fruition through the means of apostolic preaching of the gospel.  It’s a magnificent story.  It’s an incredible account.  Let’s go back to the first chapter for the few minutes we have.  And in Chapter 1, we have some very essential foundational elements given here because the Father’s plan worked through the Spirit’s power by the Son, has some requirements. 

And it’s quite interesting that Chapter 1 sort of lays these foundational truths.  The narrative part doesn’t really start until Verse 12 when it says, “Then they returned from the Mount called Olivet.  So before we get into the actual action here, there are some things that precede that, very important things.  Let me read 1 through 11.

“The first account I composed to Theophilus about all that Jesus began to do and teach until the day when he was taken up to heaven after he had, by the Holy Spirit, given orders to the apostles whom he had chosen.  To these, he also presented himself alive after his suffering by many convincing proofs, appearing to them over a period of 40 days and speaking of the things concerning the kingdom of God.”

“Gathering them together, he commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for what the father had promised.”  By the way, that’s how he ended Luke, and that’s how begins the next volume, which he said, “You have heard from me.”  In other words, the Lord had promised the coming of the Holy Spirit.  “For John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.”  “So when they had come together, they were asking him, saying, ‘Lord, is it at this time you are restoring the kingdom to Israel?’  He said to them, ‘It’s not for you to know the times or epics which the father has fixed by his own authority, but you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you shall be my witnesses, both in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.’”

“After he had said these things, he was lifted up while they were looking on, and a cloud received him out of their sight, and as they were gazing intently into the sky while he was going, behold two men in white clothing stood beside them.  They also said, ‘Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into the sky?  This Jesus who has been taken up from you into heaven will come in just the same way as you have watched him go into heaven.’  And with that, they went back to Jerusalem.  School was over.  Initial lessons were taught.”

Six things appear in those 11 verses that I read to you.  In what you would call the final lesson, the final preparation, this if you would like to call it is the last will and testament of Jesus.  This is the last talk he ever had with them before he went back to heaven and it was very critical,  very important.  And in these words here, and they are few, really, He gives to them all that they need.  He reminds them of all that is essential, and let me just suggest there are six things here. 

The first is He says you have to have the proper message.  You have to have the right message.  You have to have also the right confidence.  Thirdly, you have to have the right power.  And then, interestingly enough, you have to have the right mystery.  You have to have the right mission, and you have to have the right motive.

These are timeless.  These we need to know because we’re just continuing to be the instruments that he uses to finish what he began.  We need to make sure the message is right.  We need to make sure we have confidence in that message.  We need power beyond ourselves.  We need the right mystery, and I’ll explain that.  We need to have a clear vision of the task or the mission, and then an overwhelming and overarching motive.

Ok we will look at the last part of this sermon in our last SD on the introduction to the book of Acts.

Answer to yesterday’s Bible question:  “Cyrenius” (Acts 2:2).

Today’s Bible question:  “Who said ‘For unto you is born this day in the city of David a savior, which is Christ the Lord’?”

Answer in our next SD.

6/20/2017 8:55 AM

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