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(739)ACTS 15- Some brothers from Judea came down to Antioch and taught the believers that they had to be circumcised and keep the law in order to be saved. These are the Pharisees out of Jerusalem who became believers. They tried to put the gentile believers under the yoke of the law. Paul and Barnabas disagree strongly with this teaching. They decide to bring the question before the Apostles and Elders at Jerusalem. This is the first church council in history. The Jerusalem council. At the meeting the dispute arises. Peter speaks up and recounts his experience at Cornelius house. How God showed Peter that he would justify people by faith, without having to become converts to Judaism. James chimes in and quotes a famous verse [famous now!] from the prophet Amos in those days I will rebuild Davids tabernacle and all the gentiles upon whom my name is called will see me. I want to stop here for a minute. On this blog I wrote a chapter on Davids tabernacle. It is in the booklet The great building of God you might want to read it if you are not familiar with Davids tabernacle. I want to note that scholars disagree on what James means here. Some see Davids tabernacle as the house or dynasty of David. Like Paul saying house of God when speaking of the family of God. Others say this verse teaches the rebuilding of the Temple. The main reason James is quoting this verse is really not for the rebuilding of Davids tabernacle section. It is for all the gentiles who call upon my name part! James is agreeing with Peter and taking the side of grace when he says look, even Amos said gentiles would call on Gods name. Paul does this in Romans, he quotes the Old Testament prophets in context of the gentiles being accepted. So I wanted to just put some context to why James is bringing up this verse. But I also give credence to seeing Davids tabernacle as speaking of the New Testament house of God [the Body of Christ] and Gods intent to tabernacle in his people. Acts does teach that Jesus has ascended and is seated on a throne that includes Israel as well as the whole universe! So in this context Christ can be seen as building the tabernacle of David [spiritual temple of believers] that includes all ethnic groups. Yes, gentiles too can call upon his name! The Apostles and Elders and brothers all reach agreement and write a short letter and send Judas and Silas along with Pauls group back to Antioch to read the final decree. They told the gentile believers they were not under the law and did not have to convert to Judaism to be saved. They did give four simple restrictions. Dont eat meat with the blood in it, dont eat food offered to idols or strangled animals. Dont commit fornication. Basic requirements that later on will lose their emphasis as the church grows in grace [accept for fornication! God does require believers to walk in holiness]. Now this chapter is vital for every believer. The 16th century reformation restored the truth of people being saved freely by grace. Many Christians were lost in the legalistic requirements of religion. Many believers thought they could buy their way out of purgatory with money! Others thought they would be saved by keeping church law. This early church council gave freedom to the church in seeing herself accepted by grace. The church grew in her understanding of Gods grace. As Gods revelation of himself progressed thru out the early church, they saw him as being inclusive not exclusive! The more they learned about God, the more they understood him justifying people freely. It is easy to lose the reality of God justifying man freely thru grace. No excuses for living in sin, but true acceptance and forgiveness because of Christ. This is truly the heart of the gospel. The first church council laid the foundation of Gods free grace. The gentiles at Antioch and the other towns were ecstatic over this decision. Truly the gentile churches are experiencing more freedom than the church at Jerusalem, after all they had the Pharisees who believed at Jerusalem, and they werent willing to give up on their belief of the importance of the law and circumcision. They will haunt Paul thru out his life. After the letter is read, Paul and Barnabas continue to teach at Antioch and the 2 brothers who were out of Jerusalem are free to leave. Judas goes back, but Silas likes the freedom at Antioch and decides to stay. Paul says lets go visit all the brothers in the cities where we preached Barnabas says great, lets take John Mark! Paul doesnt want him because he abandoned them on an earlier missionary journey. Paul takes Silas and John goes with Barnabas. The visiting of all the brothers is also described as visiting the churches. Once again, the brothers [and sisters] in the cites are defined as the churches. They were called out groups of believers who were recognized not because they attended church on Sunday but because they were followers of the way.
(740)ACTS 16- Paul and Silas hit the road. They are being led by the Spirit and are evangelizing large regions without a lot of money, organization or corporate help. Now, these things are permitted, but we need to make sure we are seeing this story right! Jesus imbedded a mindset into the Apostles, he told them dont think you need a lot of extra equipment for this. You are the equipment! No special appeals for funds [ouch!], keep it simple [Message bible- Jesus instructions when he sent them out by twos]. So here we actually see the Apostles living the vision. Paul by the way has a vision! He sees a vision of a man in Macedonia saying come and help us. Luke writes we took this as a sure sign of God sending us. Wow, what childlike simplicity. The great theologian Paul, the man who could argue orthodoxy all day [and win]. He has a vision and says we took it as Gods will. Dont develop doctrines that cut you off from Gods supernatural guidance. Sure, people have gotten into trouble with visions. Cults have prophets and apostles. But the church also had these things and it helped on the journey. Now at Philippi they convert a woman down by the river. They cast out a demon from a fortune teller. The masters see they lost their money maker and stir up trouble in the city. Paul and Silas get thrown in jail. They praise God and sing, an earthquake happens. The doors swing open. The jailer thinks they all escaped and is going to kill himself. Paul and Silas preach the gospel and he asks what must I do to be saved they say believe on the Lord Jesus and you will be saved, your family too! The whole house gets baptized and the city leaders send word tell them to leave. Now, Paul is a lot like me. He doesnt let stuff slide. He says they beat us unlawfully, we are Roman citizens! Now they want us to leave secretly. Let them come and tell us publicly the leaders hear they are Romans and are worried. Paul made them squirm! Lets do a little overview. We are halfway thru the book of Acts and we see the churches as these free flowing believers carrying out the gospel. Baptisms and healings and visions. We also see doctrinal growth. We challenge the mindset of many evangelicals, baptismal regeneration is not taught [at least I dont see it] but baptism in water is the immediate outward identification of the believer. In essence it was the New Testament altar call. Our Catholic friends will eventually develop an idea of baptism as washing away original sin. But sometimes we miss the other idea of putting off adult baptism because of fear of future sins. Saint Augustine, the emperor Constantine and others delayed their baptism thinking they would use it to clean them up after any future faults. The doctrine of baptism in Acts is seen as an immediate rite that does affect the believer [as do all outward acts of obedience! Even the Lords Supper strengthens the faith of the believer]. But justification and believing are prior to baptism. But not two weeks or two years prior! But a few minutes. I also forgot to mention that Paul has Timothy circumcised in this chapter. The great Apostle Paul, who will eventually pen the words circumcision means nothing, but a circumcised heart is what matters here he gave in. Paul and Silas are fresh off the recent Jerusalem council. They have been accused of teaching Jews abandon the law and circumcision. The decree from Jerusalem said the gentiles dont need to worry about these things. But they were still teaching Jewish converts to maintain Jewish law and custom. Timothy was not circumcised, and everyone knew it! His mother was Jewish but his father was Greek. So Paul realized that the judiazers would eventually say see, Paul is even teaching Jews to break Moses law so Paul gives in and compromises here. Do the restrictions at the Jerusalem council still hold sway over Jewish believers today? No. Paul will eventually abandon all Jewish law and custom from his doctrine of justification by faith. But at this stage they are still learning and growing. The mindset of God in this book is one of less restrictions and more acceptance as time rolls on. We see enough stuff on baptism to not call the churches who emphasize baptism Cambellites/heretics [the term Cambellite comes from the founder of the Church of Christ/ Disciples of Christ groups. Their founder was Alexander Campbell. He falls into the restorationist camp. He saw the emphasis on adult baptism in scripture and many of his followers see the act of water baptism as the moment of conversion]. But we also see the basic ingredient for acceptance as faith. So God is not excluding those who focus on baptism [Peters initial converts] but showing us greater acceptance among those who believe [Acts 10]. This is what I tried to say in our introduction to this study. As we read we shouldnt be looking for formulas or hard and fast verses to simply justify our churches beliefs against the church down the block. But we need to see the heart and mind of God. We also shouldnt trace our peculiar belief to this historic church and say see, our group is the most accurate one. Why? Dont I believe my idea of simple church is closer to the historic church? Yes. But the church will develop in good and bad ways as the centuries roll on. The fact that many Catholics and Orthodox and future Protestants will grow and fight and reform, means the church herself has within her the inherent ability to get back to the Cross or the reality of all of these groups believing in Jesus causes there to be a fundamental unity that exists because we all possess Christs Spirit. So even though I personally see the organic church in Acts, this doesnt mean that I see the other expressions of church as totally illegitimate or lost! So lets end this chapter rejoicing with the jailer who heard the gospel and believed with all his house.
ACTS 17- Paul heads to Thessalonica and preaches 3 Sabbath days in the synagogue. Once again the unbelieving Jews follow him and stir up trouble. Paul heads to Berea and speaks the word. The Bereans are said to be more noble because they heard Paul out and then searched the scriptures to see if he were telling the truth. The message he preached is that Jesus is the Messiah that the Old Testament prophets spoke of. In 1st John, John says whoever believes that
(740)ACTS 16- Paul and Silas hit the road. They are being led by the Spirit and are evangelizing large regions without a lot of money, organization or corporate help. Now, these things are permitted, but we need to make sure we are seeing this story right! Jesus imbedded a mindset into the Apostles, he told them dont think you need a lot of extra equipment for this. You are the equipment! No special appeals for funds [ouch!], keep it simple [Message bible- Jesus instructions when he sent them out by twos]. So here we actually see the Apostles living the vision. Paul by the way has a vision! He sees a vision of a man in Macedonia saying come and help us. Luke writes we took this as a sure sign of God sending us. Wow, what childlike simplicity. The great theologian Paul, the man who could argue orthodoxy all day [and win]. He has a vision and says we took it as Gods will. Dont develop doctrines that cut you off from Gods supernatural guidance. Sure, people have gotten into trouble with visions. Cults have prophets and apostles. But the church also had these things and it helped on the journey. Now at Philippi they convert a woman down by the river. They cast out a demon from a fortune teller. The masters see they lost their money maker and stir up trouble in the city. Paul and Silas get thrown in jail. They praise God and sing, an earthquake happens. The doors swing open. The jailer thinks they all escaped and is going to kill himself. Paul and Silas preach the gospel and he asks what must I do to be saved they say believe on the Lord Jesus and you will be saved, your family too! The whole house gets baptized and the city leaders send word tell them to leave. Now, Paul is a lot like me. He doesnt let stuff slide. He says they beat us unlawfully, we are Roman citizens! Now they want us to leave secretly. Let them come and tell us publicly the leaders hear they are Romans and are worried. Paul made them squirm! Lets do a little overview. We are halfway thru the book of Acts and we see the churches as these free flowing believers carrying out the gospel. Baptisms and healings and visions. We also see doctrinal growth. We challenge the mindset of many evangelicals, baptismal regeneration is not taught [at least I dont see it] but baptism in water is the immediate outward identification of the believer. In essence it was the New Testament altar call. Our Catholic friends will eventually develop an idea of baptism as washing away original sin. But sometimes we miss the other idea of putting off adult baptism because of fear of future sins. Saint Augustine, the emperor Constantine and others delayed their baptism thinking they would use it to clean them up after any future faults. The doctrine of baptism in Acts is seen as an immediate rite that does affect the believer [as do all outward acts of obedience! Even the Lords Supper strengthens the faith of the believer]. But justification and believing are prior to baptism. But not two weeks or two years prior! But a few minutes. I also forgot to mention that Paul has Timothy circumcised in this chapter. The great Apostle Paul, who will eventually pen the words circumcision means nothing, but a circumcised heart is what matters here he gave in. Paul and Silas are fresh off the recent Jerusalem council. They have been accused of teaching Jews abandon the law and circumcision. The decree from Jerusalem said the gentiles dont need to worry about these things. But they were still teaching Jewish converts to maintain Jewish law and custom. Timothy was not circumcised, and everyone knew it! His mother was Jewish but his father was Greek. So Paul realized that the judiazers would eventually say see, Paul is even teaching Jews to break Moses law so Paul gives in and compromises here. Do the restrictions at the Jerusalem council still hold sway over Jewish believers today? No. Paul will eventually abandon all Jewish law and custom from his doctrine of justification by faith. But at this stage they are still learning and growing. The mindset of God in this book is one of less restrictions and more acceptance as time rolls on. We see enough stuff on baptism to not call the churches who emphasize baptism Cambellites/heretics [the term Cambellite comes from the founder of the Church of Christ/ Disciples of Christ groups. Their founder was Alexander Campbell. He falls into the restorationist camp. He saw the emphasis on adult baptism in scripture and many of his followers see the act of water baptism as the moment of conversion]. But we also see the basic ingredient for acceptance as faith. So God is not excluding those who focus on baptism [Peters initial converts] but showing us greater acceptance among those who believe [Acts 10]. This is what I tried to say in our introduction to this study. As we read we shouldnt be looking for formulas or hard and fast verses to simply justify our churches beliefs against the church down the block. But we need to see the heart and mind of God. We also shouldnt trace our peculiar belief to this historic church and say see, our group is the most accurate one. Why? Dont I believe my idea of simple church is closer to the historic church? Yes. But the church will develop in good and bad ways as the centuries roll on. The fact that many Catholics and Orthodox and future Protestants will grow and fight and reform, means the church herself has within her the inherent ability to get back to the Cross or the reality of all of these groups believing in Jesus causes there to be a fundamental unity that exists because we all possess Christs Spirit. So even though I personally see the organic church in Acts, this doesnt mean that I see the other expressions of church as totally illegitimate or lost! So lets end this chapter rejoicing with the jailer who heard the gospel and believed with all his house.
ACTS 17- Paul heads to Thessalonica and preaches 3 Sabbath days in the synagogue. Once again the unbelieving Jews follow him and stir up trouble. Paul heads to Berea and speaks the word. The Bereans are said to be more noble because they heard Paul out and then searched the scriptures to see if he were telling the truth. The message he preached is that Jesus is the Messiah that the Old Testament prophets spoke of. In 1st John, John says whoever believes that