SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 6/19/2017 8:13 AM
My Worship Time Focus:
3rd Intro to Acts
We want to continue to look at the sermon that John
MacArthur gave in 2014 as he introduces to us the book of Acts:
“And you might say, “Why do they need confidence? Why
do they need assurance?” For one thing, Judas had killed himself, and
another had to be chosen to replace him among the 12, and that happens in the
first chapter of Acts. Judas was an apostle. Is that a preview of more
disaster to come? But the message is that nothing can stop the purpose of
God or the power of God from unfolding, not even the apostasy and suicide of an
apostle.
“Alan Thompson writes, “The dominant feature is that the
sovereign plan of God has not been derailed by this most wicket of actions, a
betrayal from among the ranks of Jesus’ own inner circle.” And then
subsequently, the suicide of the betrayer. In fact, it is
necessary. We’re told in Chapter 1 that it fulfills prophecy. Verse
20. God is at work. All the redemptive purpose of God continues.
“So what do we call this book? The Acts of the
Apostles? The only time the apostles appear is in Chapter 1 together,
as a group, then you have Peter and John together for a while. And then
later, you have the Apostle Paul who is really not part of the apostles.
So kind of a push to call it the Acts of the Apostles, even though that’s
probably what’s in your Bible.
“Some have said it should be called The Acts of the
Father because if anybody is at work unfolding his redemptive plan, it is the
father, it is God, and you know what, you can make a case for that because the
Lord opens the heart of Lydia because in Chapter 14 in Verse 27, when they
arrive together, the church together, they begin to report all that God had done.
“So you could make an argument that we could call it The
Acts of the Father. You could also have an argument and we could call it
The Acts of the Holy Spirit because the Holy Spirit separates Paul and
Barnabas, so the Holy Spirit is working to separate these men to send them on
the missionary trip out of Antioch.
“I kind of prefer the Acts of the Risen Lord because the
theme of the preaching through the whole book is the resurrection. That’s
the theme of the preaching. Starting with the message at Pentecost,
Christ has arisen from the dead, and all the apostolic preachers feature the
risen Christ. You say, “Well, it’s one thing to preach the risen Christ,
but is the risen Christ acting?” Yes. Let’s go back to Verse
1.
“The first account, the Gospel of Luke, was about all
that Jesus began to do and teach, and so we could conclude that what he began,
he would also complete. Alan Thompson, whom I quoted a minute ago, says
this. This is his title for the book. “The Acts of the Lord Jesus through his people by the
Holy Spirit for the accomplishment of the father’s purposes.” So
write that just under Acts in your Bible. That’s it. The Acts of
the Lord Jesus through his people by the Holy Spirit for the accomplishment of
the father’s purpose.
“Is Jesus involved in the Book of Acts? Is he
continuing to be involved? Yes. He has gone back to heaven and been
placed at the right hand of God, given a name above every name. He is the
Lord. He is identified as the head of the church. Several times in
the epistles, he is the head of the church, reigning from heaven as the head of
the church as the king over his spiritual kingdom, he extends his kingdom
through the history of the Book of Acts.
“It is the Lord Jesus at work. You begin to see
that in Chapter 2, Verse 47. And the Lord was adding to their number, day
by day, those who were being saved. The one who is Lord, the one who is
the Lord of the church, he is still at work. He is saving. He is
adding people to the church. He is after all; remember now, the head of
the church and the king over his kingdom.
“In Chapter 11, I’m just giving you some illustrations,
we’ll see it as we go, there were some of them, men of Cypress and Cyrene, who
came to Antioch and began speaking to the Greeks, also preaching the Lord
Jesus, and the hand of the Lord was with them, and the large number who
believed turned to the Lord. So they were preaching the Lord and the hand
of the Lord, same Lord, was there.
“They were preaching the Lord Jesus, and the hand of the
Lord Jesus was causing people to be saved. So again, the king is on his
kingdom. The king is over his kingdom. He is the head of the
church. He is building his church. He is saving his people.
One other illustration just for the sake of time would be in Chapter 16 in
Verse 14.
“A woman named Lydia from the city of Thyatira, seller of
purple fabrics, a worshipper of God, was listening, and the Lord opened her
heart to respond to the things spoken by Paul. Some might argue that’s
God. I would argue that where Lord appears in this book, given that it
was the name of Christ, he is at work. There’s a negative indicator, too,
of Jesus’ involvement. If you go to Chapter 8, you find Paul persecuting
the church, ravaging the church.
“And we all know the story. Who stopped Paul?
Who stopped him? Jesus who showed up on the Damascus Road in Chapter 9
and stopped him dead in his tracks. Now Jesus is engaged both in the
growth of his church and in stopping the destruction of his church. Jesus
appears in the 18th Chapter in a vision to Paul and says, “Don’t be afraid any
longer. Go on speaking, and don’t be silent, for I am with you, and no
man will attack you in order to harm you, for I have many people in the city.”
“Jesus, the head of the church, says, “I’m going to reach
people in this city who belong to me, and I will protect you. I will
protect you. You have nothing to fear. Go on preaching.” So
here is the Lord building his church, and the Lord of the church protecting his
church. Chapter 23: Things are getting very difficult for Paul and
persecution ampting up with a conspiracy to actually kill him. Verse 11,
the Lord stood at his side and said, “Take courage, for as you have solemnly
witnessed to my cause at Jerusalem, so you must witness at Rome also. I’ll
protect you until you reach Rome.”
“So in summary, the Lord Jesus reigns over his kingdom from heaven.
The Lord Jesus is engaged in building his church by adding people to the list
of redeemed, saved souls. He is fulfilling the father’s plan, and he’s doing
it by the preaching of the Gospel and the power of the spirit working through
the preaching. But make no mistake; it is the Lord continuing the work he
began.
“The gospel is preached, sinners are saved, the church is
established, leaders are chosen, saints are edified, witnesses given for
Christ, and all along, the believers are suffering for their noble effort and
being rejected by the world, but the Lord is protecting them so that the gospel
can be preached, and the elect will be gathered, and this is the history of the
church until he returns.
“Acts is the first volume in that history where Christ
continues the work that he began when he was on earth. By the way, we’re
writing Volume 21 if we just count centuries, but it’s the same work.
What’s going on? The Lord Jesus is reigning from heaven. He is the
head of the church. According to the father’s plan and by the Holy
Spirit’s power, he is continuing to do what he began when he was on earth.
“The Gospel is being preached, sinners are being delivered,
the church is being established, leaders are being chosen, saints are being
edified, witness given for Christ, and all along, the saints are suffering but
being protected so that they can do the work of bringing in the elect.
This will go on until he establishes his rule on the earth when he comes to
reign.
“Now Luke is not an apostle, but he’s a close
friend. Essentially, he was a close associate of the apostles for 30
years from 30 AD to 60, it appears. And he knows the story. He
knows the history. He knows the history, from the death of Christ
on. He was part of it. So he knows what happened in Jerusalem and
Judea and Samaria and beyond because he was there.
“The Book of Acts, I want to tell you, sometimes people
ask the question – in fact, I was asked this question recently. Is the
Book of Acts descriptive of prescriptive, which is a technical way of saying is
it just history for the sake of information, or is it theology for the sake of
edification? The answer is yes. Of course it’s descriptive.
Like all narrative texts of scripture, it is descriptive history, but it is
also prescriptive theology because its history is our theology. It is our
ecclesiology. It is our pneumatology. [The Study of the word of the
Holy Spirit.]
“It is our Soteriology [the doctrine of salvation] because
they preach the gospel we preach. This is the church of which we are a
part. So in a sense, what began to be in the Book of Acts still is, and
on the same basis, we’re living this history, which while not written down in
the New Testament is written down with the same exact precision in
heaven. Kind of exciting to be a part of that isn’t it? I think
there’s another message that you need to understand was very, very important to
be communicated in this pattern of growth, and it is this: That the gospel is
universal, and it goes beyond Israel.
“Even the disciples were pretty stuck on the fact that
all the promises of God were theirs and maybe theirs alone. They had the
traditional, typical attitude toward gentiles that the Jews had developed
through centuries, and toward half-breed Samaritans, it was even worse.
And Jesus, after all, came to Israel and really never went beyond Israel, other
than journeying a little bit into Decapolis, an area around Galilee where
gentile towns had developed.
“The Jews were very provincial about the promises of God
belonging to them, but the Book of Acts just blows that to pieces. You
could go back to the Old Testament, and I could show you passages in the Old
Testament where the messianic promises relate to the world and the
nations. There are many of them. Somehow the Jews missed that.
“You’re not very long into the Book of Acts until you
realize that Philip is preaching to the gentiles, but a gentile eunuch is
converted, that Peter is preaching to a gentile soldier named Cornelius, that
the church is established after Jerusalem in a gentile city called Antioch, and
that Paul takes the gospel to the gentiles all over the Mediterranean world of
Asia Minor.
“And that leads to a discussion in Acts 15 about, wait a
minute, how does this work. This is such a hard sell that when the first
gentile conversions happen, God allows the same miraculous phenomena of tongues
to occur so that the Jews don’t think this is some kind of a second class event
to Pentecost. So there was a very important message to proclaim to the
Jews through the Book of Acts, and it starts in the very first chapter in the
eighth verse.
“Go preach in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and the world,
that Christianity is global.” And we will see that. You could
divide the Book of Acts into six sections. You won’t remember this, so
I’m not going to give you detail on it, but Section 1 ends at Chapter 6, Verse 7 tells the
story of the church at Jerusalem and the preaching of Peter.
“And it finishes by saying the word of God increased by
the number of the disciplines multiplied in Jerusalem, a great multiplication,
a great number of priests were obedient to the faith, and that’s the end of
Section 1, and the gospel expands. From Chapter 6, verse 8 through
Chapter 9, Verse 31, the
gospel spreads throughout Israel, Judea, all the way to the martyrdom of
Stephen, all the way to the preaching in Samaria by Philip.
“And that section ends this way, Chapter 9, Verse
31. So the church throughout all Judea and Galilee and Samaria enjoyed
peace, being built up, and going on in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort
of the Holy Spirit, it continued to increase. So Chapter 6, Verse 7 ends the first section by
saying the church increased.”
We will continue to look at these different sections in
our next SD. I really don’t want to put too
much material on each SD but kind of spread this sermon out perhaps for a
couple of more days so it is easier for everyone to read it, a little at a
time.
Answer to yesterday’s
Bible question: “To arrest the
Christians there” (Acts 9:1-2).
Today’s Bible
question: “Who was governor of Syria
when Christ was born?”
Answer in our next SD
6/19/2017 8:56 AM
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