ACTS 3 - You Have Something Others Need - what will you do?

Acts 3

I love this story. It starts with Peter and John going to the temple to pray at 3:00 in the afternoon. The New American Standard says “the ninth hour, the hour of prayer.” So it was a planned service, a time of prayer. Peter and John are participating in this. I don’t want to get into a soap box on this, but they were where they should have been, attending the local worship service. They were not at Meijer getting groceries or attending the local movie theatre or even at the February Chile cook off (which actually sounds pretty good right now), they were participating in the local worship service. Ok, done with soap box.

On their way to the temple, there sits a lame man. Others have passed this man by, but Peter and John stop by and look at him with intentionality (“Peter and John looked at him intently.”). How many times do we look at people with intentionality as we pass by them? To look with intentionality to me means we look at them purposefully, as if to offer some kind of help. Too many times people pass right by those with needs (and people did 2,000 years ago as this man was at the temple gate all the time looking for help.

The man looked at Peter and John eagerly, expecting to receive something.  He saw Pete and John and thought they could help him. He was expecting to receive something, perhaps money.

Peter says, “I don’t have any silver or gold for you. But I’ll give you what I have. In the name of Jesus Christ the Nazarene, get up and walk.” (Acts 3:6 NLT).

Peter may not have had what the man thought he needed, but Peter did have what God knew the man needed.  The result is the man is healed, leaping and praising God!

Verse 12 is sometimes overlooked, but it says “Peter saw his opportunity and addressed the crowd.”  A spiritual and physical healing had just occurred, and people are amazed. Peter realizes this is one of those teachable moment type situations, so he takes the opportunity and proclaims Jesus as the one who can truly save and bring times of refreshment in

PC  thoughts :

While we are busy about the Lord’s work – attending our launch team services (going to church), planting a church, and our other areas of life, there are people that we come across with physical and spiritual needs.

Question: do we look at them – maybe even with some intentionality (like putting on our calendars a visit to ______ and then following through)??

When those “outside” the church look at “us” (Christ followers) they have expectations of us.

Do we offer times to pray with them, to offer prayers of healing and offer Jesus?

(It’s ok to not always have the “right” answers or to not be able to solve their issues but “money and gold have we none but Jesus.”)

And of course, always be ready to look for an “opportunity” to share Jesus!

 

Posted on February 9, 2014 .

Acts chapter 2 - New Beginnings

Acts chapter 2 is a dynamic fun chapter and the reason I think it’s that way is that it marks the fading out of one thing but the beginning of something new.

The thing fading out is the priority or favor that the nation of Israel had as the Old Testament people of God. Time and time again they rejected God and this time they not only rejected God but they rejected His son, Jesus.

At a time when they should have been fruitful, they were barren; that is to say, very unfruitful. They were to be God’s blessing to the world, but they had fallen and were anything but a blessing to the world (Mark 11:12-14).

However, God has other ways to bless the world with His Grace and His presence – He takes the people who were following Jesus, about 120, and uses them to launch His new creation, the church (this is the beginning of something new).

As they meet in prayer while staying in Jerusalem, Jesus baptizes them with the Holy Spirit (Luke 3:16; Matthew 3:11). They are immersed in the Holy Spirit as He is immersed in them. They are gifted, empowered and now Peter stands up with boldness to declare that Jesus is the Christ (Messiah, anointed one of God). If the people will repent of their ways, receive Christ, be baptized, they will also receive His wonderful gift of the Holy Spirit.  The result is that 3,000 were saved that day and the church was now on its way, guided by the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.

Perhaps in your life, you have had thoughts like, “I’ve done so many rotten things in my life, why would God want to use me?”, “How can God use me or desire me after all the terrible things I’ve done?”  But if you will just realize that God is not limited by your limitations, errors or thinking, and that He desires to use you in new ways you might never have realized, He will move and work in your life.

Open your heart again to Him. Let His Holy Spirit immerse you, baptize you, fill you and control you, and you will see God doing creative things in your life to reach those in your sphere of influence.

Posted on February 5, 2014 .

Acts of the Apostles or Acts of the Holy Spirirt?

The book of Acts is a wonderful book. I never tire from studying it. Its title is Acts of the Apostles, but you, know book and chapter titles are man-made; however the text is inspired (God breathed).  Isn’t that something too… the inspiration of the scriptures are not like someone being inspired from watching a Rocky movie; or inspired from a Shakespearean  play; rather, inspiration is defined as God breathing , moving the writers according to their own personalities and writing styles and what they produced was God breathed, inspirational scripture having the power to create faith and change lives.

Just as God breathed into Adam and Eve and they became living souls, God breathes and moves the writers to create inspired scripture.

What has that to do with the book of Acts (Acts of the Apostles)? Well , I think the title should really be (and I’m not suggesting I can provide better insight than our early church fathers) the Acts of the Holy Spirit. 

When Dr. Luke wrote his gospel of Luke, he wrote about “all that Jesus set out to do up to his crucifixion and until he was taken up to heaven” (Acts 1:1-3). Before Jesus ascended to heaven, He promised them the coming of the comforter, the “paraklesis” – that is the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit would come and they would receive empowerment.  They were to wait in Jerusalem to receive this empowerment, called the Baptism with the Holy Spirit. Jesus would be baptizing them, immersing them, filling them, with the Holy Spirit which would empower them to do His much needed Kingdom work.

But for those followers of Jesus prior to this event (called Pentecost in Acts chapter 2), would receive the Holy Spirit from Jesus directly. How? He breathed upon them and they received the Holy Spirit. Just as God breathed upon Adam and Eve and they became living souls, Jesus breathed out the Holy Spirit to them and they became “alive” spiritually. They were still to wait for the empowering baptism of the Holy Spirit which would happen in Acts 2.

This is how the book Acts begins and it just continues that way throughout the 28 chapters. It really is all about the Acts of the Holy Spirit.

So, if you would like to learn more about this fantastic book and to learn more about the third person of the trinity, the Holy Spirit, I invite you to join us at our Sunday morning launch team services, 10 AM.

See our events page for more details.  

Posted on January 27, 2014 .