Saturday, June 20, 2009

Acts 9:24-43

Paul makes his way to Jerusalem and they're afraid of him. In a narrative like this, I always wonder, "what if?" What if Barnabbas hadn't mediated for Paul? That one move was probably high risk, but made a difference in all human history! I wonder if he thought about it that way when he did it?

Peter goes outside Jerusalem with great success. The church in Jerusalem had peace and still he went. No one had gone out before without being pushed by persecution. Paul disappears from the stage for a short time.

Layne's favorite story to act out during our family "Bible Story Charades" is the story of the resurrection of Dorcas. You should see her distribute clothing then die then get raised. It's probably much cuter than the original story!

Friday, June 19, 2009

Acts 9:1-23

As easy as it seemed in chapter eight for Phillip to introduce the chariot rider to Jesus, it is at least that hard here. Saul had to be knocked off his donkey.

From a human perspective, this was an event behind only the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus (and maybe Pentecost) in importance for the church. The whole thing could have been undone if Ananias had not obeyed. He was a poor and a blessed man. No one wanted his job. Ananias was to touch Paul and Jesus was to show him what he would have to suffer! Welcome to being a Christian.

The statement, "Jesus, whom you are persecuting," is a strong and beautiful statement of the identification of Jesus with his church. To persecute her is to persecute him. To serve her is to serve him.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Acts 8:27-40

I cannot but notice how easy this whole encounter seems. Phillip listens to the Holy Spirit and takes a trip not knowing what he will encounter. The Spirit directs him to join the chariot. As he obeys, he hears the Eunuch reading the best Messianic text (Isaiah 53) in the Old Testament. The man asks a question that is a lay up. Phillip tells him about Jesus then baptizes him. No fear, no struggle -- just make the next divinely orchestrated move. I long to be that Spirit-led.

Clearly this text teaches the priority of baptism.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Acts 8:1-26

The power of the preaching and the signs of Phillip would have been very impressive. I can see why Simon was attracted -- both for the right and the wrong reasons.

This is the first real preaching, action and church establishment outside Jerusalem. The Holy Spirit did not even come until the Apostles came. The experiences were so subject to misunderstanding and counterfeit that the authentication from the leadership was necessary. This Acts 1:8 expansion of the gospel was forced by persecution, but received very warmly when it came.

What did Peter see in Simon's offer to buy the ability to give the Holy Spirit? Paul accused him of being bound in the gall of bitterness. How doe those two things go together? This should be a warning to all who ask for or offer money for the gospel.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Acts 7:30-60

Stephen's message was NOT received well at all. I guess the people did not fall asleep on him. What was it that provoked the violent reaction? He accused them of being like their fathers who killed the prophets and rejected the law. They perceived themselves to be on the other side, the good side, of the fence with Father Abraham. He skillfully moved from Abraham to rebellion. That's what gave it a punch. It didn't help that he told them he saw the exalted Jesus. They hated Jesus telling them he'd be there, too.

This is a very sad chapter. And, the ending is even more forboding and ominous introducing Saul. . .

Monday, June 15, 2009

Acts 7:1-29

The false witnesses against Stephen said the same thing they said against Jesus, that the temple would be destroyed. Hmm.

His sermon began with Abram, recounted God's promise, the covenant of circumcision, and the move to Caanan. The rest of the speech is about Egypt. Joseph was delivered to Egypt, "But God was with him." That makes everything alright.

Then Moses grew in word and deed. He WAS a good speaker, contrary to his claim. He'd been trained in Egyptian rhetoric.

When God appeared to Moses in the burning bush and asked him to deliver Israel, Moses repeated the words, the 40-year-old words, of the Israelite that had caused him to flee. He had been playing this over and over in his mind for 40 long years, "Who made you a ruler or judge?"
Then Stephen said, "God made him a ruler and redeemer." Fascinating!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Acts 6

The growth of the church brought problems and complaints. Is anyone surprised? People borrowed trouble from other people. The widows themselves did not fuss to the apostles. This problem represents quite a distance from having everything in common a couple chapters ago.

The restructuring is genius. It maintained the primary apostolic values -- prayer and ministry of the word. It met the needs of the moment. And, it was loved by the crowd.

Stephen was full of the Holy Spirit and faith (Acts 6:5) and grace and power (Acts 6:8). The opposition couldn't withstand his wisdom and spirit. Wow! That's what I want to be.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Acts 5:17-42

They had just prayed for boldness in Chapter Four and now they were persecuted. Peters response is short and hit all the right buttons that would make them angry -- you killed him, God raised him, he sits exalted, and repent and be forgiven. That message to that audience is a "0" on a scale of 1-10 in terms of popularity. The Apostles stand fearlessly before the same crowd that crucified Jesus and say, "If it is right to obey men rather than God, you decide. We'll obey God."

Gamaliel's speech was persuasive. He cited two historical figures to say that if it is not from God, then it won't last. If it is from God and you oppose it, you'll be opposing God. So, leave them alone. News for them. . . we're still here!

Friday, June 12, 2009

Acts 5:1-16

Two or three times Luke records, "Great fear fell on them. . ." Do you think? What would the church be like if every person who made a pretense of tithing (just 10% not everything like these two) dropped dead? Yikes. I am certain God was more opposed to the pretense than he was the percentage. If they'd said, "This is all, except for what we needed for braces for Jr.," I'm sure they'd have survived the day.

When the church was of one mind, "no one dared to associate with them." You'd have to be pretty sold-out to associate with people who sold everything and then dropped dead when they lie!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Acts 4:23-37

The prayer, "Lord, concern yourself with your servants," is an interesting appeal. They ascribe magnificent sovereignty to God in their prayer. This (Acts 4:28) and Acts 2:22-24 are overwhelming -- that God would purpose to and then deliver Jesus to death. They trusted him because they knew the Scriptures. Both Acts 2 and Acts 4 are saturated with key O.T. promises.

The result of being in the hand of a God like that is deliverance, faith and community, a community full of faith and of one mind. Of course, the earthquake is cool, too.

The "everything in common" part of the church seems to good to be true. And, in chapter 5 we find that it is. There must be a governing by the Holy Spirit, not just on the leaders, but on everyone, if the congregation is to function that way.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Acts 4:1-22

Peter spoke, full of the Holy Spirit. The audience took note they had been with Jesus! Cool! I hope people can notice that about me by the way I talk. I think it was because of the way they used the Scriptures. While Peter and John were heading to the slammer, 5000 people responded to the message!

Peter spoke to the same crowd with the same prominent names that crucified Jesus. They are not friends. Their interrogation began with the question, "How did you do this?" Peter told them, by the name of Jesus who is the only way of salvation.

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Acts 3

This was not a quiet miracle! The man was jumping around, praising God. He was active and noisy -- the perfect attraction for a large crowd. And Peter exploited it for eternity's sake.

The sermon was amazing. His citations of the Old Testament are masterful. He hits the high points. I'm sure they were points Jesus had hit just days before when he opened their eyes to understand the scriptures (Luke 24:45). He referred to God's covenant with Abraham, he spoke of Moses' promise of a prophet like him. He brought in Samuel. He referenced God's self-revelation in Exodus 3.

His conclusion was the elephant in the room -- or the temple as the case may be -- these people killed the man in whose name the lame man was healed!

Monday, June 08, 2009

Acts 2:22-47

The first thing I notice in this sermon is that Peter is saying the same things to the same crowd that Jesus said. But, the Holy Spirit is doing a new thing.

The preaching was rooted in the scripture, fixed on a sovereign God who does whatever he determines, aimed at repentance, and fruitful beyond imagination. That's how I want to preach.

My vision for a church comes from here -- for preaching, for life together, and for relationships with outsiders. It is hard to imagine a more peaceful, simple, joyful church experience than this very first one. What church would not want to emulate this group?

I wonder, though, is it possible for a church to continue in doctrine, fellowship, breaking of bread and prayer like this and expect similar results? Is this designed to be normal or is it a special work of grace? God, no doubt, intended his church to be this kind of focal point and source of joy.

Sunday, June 07, 2009

Acts 2:1-21

I've never really thought much about the timing of Pentecost. It would have been an entirely different start to the church if it had not been during a feast in Jerusalem. The exquisite providence of God brought people who spoke other languages, who would notice and appreciate the tongues spoken that day. The festival collected the seeds of the church throughout the whole region. It selected devout people, who would be most interested in the message, not just some random passerby! God was completely sovereign in the timetable of the birth of his church.

Peter lifted his voice and spoke. It is the same verb, an unusual one, in Acts 2:4 and Acts 2:14. Clearly, we are to understand the connection between being filled with the Spirit and speaking boldly.

Young men will prophesy and old men will dream dreams. Interesting. Isn't it the other way around naturally?

Saturday, June 06, 2009

Acts 1

The introduction makes it clear that this book will chronicle what happens after the disciples are baptized with the Holy Spirit according to the initial promise of Jesus. Perhaps it should be called the Acts of the Holy Spirit.

The final question the disciples ever asked to Jesus was a misguided one, "When will you restore the kingdom to Israel?" Jesus blew by it, "It's not for you to know. . . but you will be my witnesses."

The first prayer in the book of Acts starts, "You, Lord, know the hearts of all!" It changes everything when you realize God is looking into your heart the very moment you pray! They prayed to an omniscient God.

I'm still not sure if the choosing of the 12th person was necessary or not. Why did they feel the need to replace Judas? He was not, after all, a superstar. It would have been very weird to be Matthias!

Friday, June 05, 2009

John 21

I love the way this wraps up the experience of the disciples. It is the same experience they had when they were called (Luke 5:3-8). I love that Nathaniel is mentioned again. I love that they count the fish! I love that at least two of Jesus' post-resurrection appearances involved food!

Peter dove into the water at John's recognition of Jesus, presumably to be near him. He wasn't grieved until Jesus asked him the third time, "Do you love me?" I think it finally dawned on him what Jesus was doing. "Do you love me more than these?" Was he talking about the fish? Immediately he went back to his old self, comparing himself with John.

Feeding his sheep is THE way to express love to Jesus. Lord, help me!

A great capstone to the book: The world could not contain the books.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

John 20

I so quickly forget the wonder of the resurrection. The shock of Mary, the wonder of the others, the doubt of Thomas all would be part of my reaction, no doubt, if I were there.

The order of things here seems different than in the other gospels. Mary sees the empty tomb, then she runs to get the others, the Peter and John come, then she sees the angel.

I love the footrace between John and Peter, and that John makes sure we know he wins! The detail about the displacement of the cloths is also an interesting one.

The summary statement for the book is great. Jesus did more than this. I wrote so you would believe and believing you would have life. This is book is a presentation of the gospel.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

John 19

Like Peter, Pilate had violent swings of emotion and resolve during the trial of Jesus. He was ready to let him go; he was mad at Him, he was afraid, and he was fickle! He was impressed with his own authority and wanted Jesus to know it. When Jesus challenge his authority with God's, he snapped, and was ready to destroy Jesus.

John points out the language issues, twice giving the Hebrew translations of things. The sign was written in three languages. Jesus was crucified close to town in a multi-cultural environment. He also records "as was the custom" for those of us who don't know or wouldn't remember.

Joseph and Nicodemus were both secret disciples because of fear. This was quite a sad coming out party for them. Why come out of the closet now? What does a secret follower do when the one he follows dies? I imagine they would give up most likely.

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

John 18

What wild swings Peter experiences in these final days of Jesus' life. He pledges his undying devotion, then he falls asleep in prayer (other gospels). He chops of the ear of a servant, flailing in Jesus' defense, then he denies Jesus. The spiritual flailing itself is an indicator of Jesus' words, "Satan has desired to sift you. . ." Spiritual flailing around is characteristic of Satanic influence, I think.

Peter's denial sends chills down my spine. It was causeless. It made no sense for him to deny Jesus.

When Jesus said, "I am." (cf. Exodus 3:14)The cohort of 600 men dropped to the ground! Wow! That's the coolest thing!

John doesn't even mention the kiss, like the other writer's do.

Pilate must have thought Jesus was out of his mind when he said, "My kingdom is not of this world." Who would say that? An alien?

Pilate's response to Jesus is classic, "What is truth?" That has been the question forever! Jesus had just said that those who are are of the truth listen to him. Obviously Pilate wasn't listening to Jesus. . . He condemned himself.

Monday, June 01, 2009

John 17

I am enjoying this part of John so much. Reading it is its own reward. Every moment spent meditating on it meets with some golden vein that is more than worth the effort.

Here is Jesus' outreach strategy: Love between his followers "That the world might know that you sent me." The relationship between the Father and Jesus is essential. You must know that. It is indispensable.

Unity between God and Jesus and between Jesus and us is an end or goal of Jesus ministry. He has given us the word from the Father to the end that He might be one with us like the Father and He are one.

Several other things stand out:
  • The eternal glory of Jesus is about to be restored!
  • The disciples belong to Jesus.
  • Both glory and followers are gifts to Jesus from the Father.
  • That we might reflect a trinitarian love is a priority to God.
  • Our set-apartness is a function of the Word of God.