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(739)ACTS 9- Paul gets permission from the high priest to go to Damascus and arrest the believers. On his way the Lord appears to him and Paul is told to go to Damascus and wait for instructions. He is blind for 3 days. God gives a vision to Ananias and tells him to go to Paul in Judas house, because he too had a vision of a man coming to him and laying hands on him. Ananias is afraid but does it at the Lords insistence. I want you to see the role of visions and divine guidance in this event. The purpose of the visions and supernatural events has nothing to do with the canon of scripture. Some teach that the only reason you had supernatural guidance in the early days was because the canon was not complete. But after its completion you no longer had these types of things. First, no where is this doctrine taught in scripture. Second, you did not have total agreement on the canon [all the books that make up our bibles] until the 4th century! Now you did have a basic group of letters and writings that were accepted as authoritative, but there was not total agreement. Many early believers had the epistles of Barnabas and a few other letters that were accepted. Some did not include Revelation at all. Others questioned Hebrews and James. You also did not have a workable, readable bible in actual book form until the 12th-13th century! That's right, the actual form of our modern books was not invented until that late date. Plus the availability of books on a mass scale did not appear until the Guttenberg printing press of the 16th century. Just in time for Luthers Reformation! The first book printed on his press was the Guttenberg bible. So the point is, the idea that somehow right after the early Apostles died off you had all believers going to their bibles for direction as opposed to having dreams or visions or other divine guidance, really isnt a workable solution. In this chapter God needed to get orders to his people, he gave them visions! Now Paul immediately preaches Christ as the Son of God and Messiah. He stirs up the waters and they sneak him out of town and send him to Jerusalem. The church at Jerusalem are leery of him, Barnabas vouches for him and he is received. He starts preaching there and once again they want to kill him. He eventually is sent back to his area of Tarsus. Now Peter is still on the road preaching Christ. He heals a man at Lydda and many come to the Lord. A woman named Tabitha dies at Joppa, a town close to Lydda. They call for Peter to come and he does and raises her from the dead. What are we seeing here? An early church [community of believers] preaching the gospel and doing miracles and affecting large regions without lots of money. Without hardly any organization. Without setting up local churches in the sense that each area has separate places they see as local churches with salaried pastors running the churches. You are seeing a radical movement of Christ followers who are sacrificially giving there lives away for the gospel. No prayer meetings on how in the world are we going to reach the region for the Lord. We need tons of cash! They believed the simple instructions Jesus gave to them on going into all the world and preaching the gospel. Sure there will be times where support is sent to help them make it to the next location. But the whole concept of needing tons of cash and to build huge church buildings/organizations and to set up salaried ministers is not seen in this story. I do not think the development of these things over the centuries means all the churches are deceived type of a thing. All the churches [groups of believers who are presently identifying themselves this way] are great people of God. They are doing the works of Jesus and functioning to a degree in the paradigm that they were given [either thru their upbringing or training]. But today we are seeing a rethinking of the wineskin [that which contains the new wine] on a mass scale. As we read this story in Acts I want to challenge your mindset. Dont fit the story into your present understanding of local church. But let your understanding of Local Church be formed thru scripture. This chapter said the churches had rest and were edified and were walking in the fear of the Lord. The churches are defined as all the communities of believers living in these various locations!
(740)ACTS 10- This is another key chapter in Acts. Peter is still in Joppa and while praying on the roof he has a vision. God shows him all the non kosher animals that Jews were forbidden to eat and says rise Peter, kill and eat. Peter refuses and tells the Lord he has never allowed himself to eat unclean stuff. The Lord reveals to him the principle of not making judgments of what is clean or unclean according to the old standards of the law. It is important to fully see this. God wasnt simply saying now all things are clean he was saying the old prism of law and moral standards are no longer to be used as the measuring rule of clean or unclean. Now, was God throwing out all measuring rules? No! He will flatly show Peter that all who believe in Jesus are justified from all things that you could never be justified from BY THE LAW. In essence God is saying to Peter Jesus is the new measuring rule! [Actually he was the original one the law always pointed to]. Well at the same time Peter has this vision, a man named Cornelius has an angel appear to him and tells him to send men to Joppa and get Peter. So as Peter is wondering about his vision of the unclean animals, the brothers knock on the door and relate the angels message to him. Peter goes to Cornelius house and preaches the gospel and the Gentiles become believers. Is this the first time we see Gentile converts in Acts? No. Phillip converted the Ethiopian eunuch in chapter 8. But this is seen as the Lord giving Peter the keys of the kingdom to the Gentiles. In the gospels we read how Peter was given the keys to the kingdom. Our Catholic brothers see the office of Pope as the keys. I think a better view is to see how the Lord used Peter in Acts 2 and here to be the one to introduce the gospel to both Jew and Gentile. Keys open things. They open doors. Jesus is the open door that Peter walked them thru by faith. Now we also see Peter preaching justification by faith for the first time in Acts. His other invitations were legitimate, but they focused on repentance and baptism. Here Peter says and to him give all the prophets witness that whoever believes in him shall receive remission of sins. Now I have taught this before on this blog. I try not to make excuses for the teaching by Peter on baptism. He even says in his epistle the like figure whereunto baptism doth also now save us, not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the answer of a pure heart towards God [quick quote, go find it for an exact wording!]. Now, if you do a word check on this blog, probably in the section prophecies, dreams, visions part 2 and you find the teaching on baptism from Acts 2:38, I do give an explanation on this. I believe we are seeing the natural progression of greater understanding that Peter and the brothers were attaining as they progressed on the journey. I showed you how Stephens sermon in acts 7 hit on Pauline theology for the first time in Acts. A few chapters later we see Peter quoting a scripture on all who believe are justified. The first connection from Peter on believe and be justified. Now that Peter has opened this door we will see Paul preach this thru out the rest of the book. We see the famous verse in acts 16 believe on the Lord Jesus and you will be saved, and your house. The point is we are seeing not only the development of the Body of Christ in this book, but also the development of Christian theology. Many believers fight over these various verses and even trace the authenticity of their movements to these verses. Others try to brand you as a heretic over which scriptures you see as the conversion text. While I fully agree with the doctrine of Justification by faith as one of the foundational doctrines of scripture, I avoid calling the churches who trace their altar call experience to water baptism as Cambellites/heretics. I also disagree with those who are strong water baptism advocates when they say those who do not believe in full submersion are not Christian. In this chapter these Gentiles were justified by passive belief! No evangelical altar call at all the Spirit fell on all who heard the word. Peter says can we forbid water to those who received the Spirit like we did? There was no altar call because Peter would have never given one! Even though God gave him the whole vision and all, yet they were shocked when God actually saved them. So we see the will of God in accepting all who believe in Jesus. The justifying of these Gentiles was passive, they had no sinners prayer they were justified before they got in the water. So to all those Church of Christ [or even Catholic and Orthodox brothers] it is not totally wrong to trace your outward experience of becoming a Christian to the time of baptism [I will not get into infant baptism here!]. But it also is not wrong to trace it to the time of simple belief. Gods purpose is to save people. Acts is revealing to us the progressive journey of man with God. God does put down the requirement to believe in Christ. The entrance into communion with God is limited to all who believe in him! But dont make it harder than this. NOTE- I didnt get into all the particulars of repentance and baptism and exactly how many steps you need to get saved. Seeing Acts this way misses the main thrust of the book. But let me add, why dont we see Peter mention repentance here? Cornelius is called one who feared God. This description didnt just mean he prayed and fasted it actually described Gentile converts to Judaism. These were called God Fearers. They practiced Judaism already, except for the rite of circumcision. So this fact meant they already repented to a degree. The law did teach repentance well. It had a system that engrained the moral concept of sin and repentance into man. Hebrews chapter 6 teaches this. So you can say Cornelius and his relatives were already aware of sin and the need to turn from it [also the basic elements of Johns baptism] so here Peter bypasses the repentance part and simply shows them the missing ingredient, which was faith in Christ.
ACTS 11- Peter recounts his vision and experience he had at Cornelius house. The Jews at Jerusalem were upset that he went and ate with non Jews. He explains that the Lord showed him not to view these gentiles as unclean. They were accepted and made clean thru Christs blood. The leadership at Jerusalem agree [for now!] We begin to see the tension that will play out thru the rest of the New Testament. This struggle between Jewish law and grace will become
(740)ACTS 10- This is another key chapter in Acts. Peter is still in Joppa and while praying on the roof he has a vision. God shows him all the non kosher animals that Jews were forbidden to eat and says rise Peter, kill and eat. Peter refuses and tells the Lord he has never allowed himself to eat unclean stuff. The Lord reveals to him the principle of not making judgments of what is clean or unclean according to the old standards of the law. It is important to fully see this. God wasnt simply saying now all things are clean he was saying the old prism of law and moral standards are no longer to be used as the measuring rule of clean or unclean. Now, was God throwing out all measuring rules? No! He will flatly show Peter that all who believe in Jesus are justified from all things that you could never be justified from BY THE LAW. In essence God is saying to Peter Jesus is the new measuring rule! [Actually he was the original one the law always pointed to]. Well at the same time Peter has this vision, a man named Cornelius has an angel appear to him and tells him to send men to Joppa and get Peter. So as Peter is wondering about his vision of the unclean animals, the brothers knock on the door and relate the angels message to him. Peter goes to Cornelius house and preaches the gospel and the Gentiles become believers. Is this the first time we see Gentile converts in Acts? No. Phillip converted the Ethiopian eunuch in chapter 8. But this is seen as the Lord giving Peter the keys of the kingdom to the Gentiles. In the gospels we read how Peter was given the keys to the kingdom. Our Catholic brothers see the office of Pope as the keys. I think a better view is to see how the Lord used Peter in Acts 2 and here to be the one to introduce the gospel to both Jew and Gentile. Keys open things. They open doors. Jesus is the open door that Peter walked them thru by faith. Now we also see Peter preaching justification by faith for the first time in Acts. His other invitations were legitimate, but they focused on repentance and baptism. Here Peter says and to him give all the prophets witness that whoever believes in him shall receive remission of sins. Now I have taught this before on this blog. I try not to make excuses for the teaching by Peter on baptism. He even says in his epistle the like figure whereunto baptism doth also now save us, not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the answer of a pure heart towards God [quick quote, go find it for an exact wording!]. Now, if you do a word check on this blog, probably in the section prophecies, dreams, visions part 2 and you find the teaching on baptism from Acts 2:38, I do give an explanation on this. I believe we are seeing the natural progression of greater understanding that Peter and the brothers were attaining as they progressed on the journey. I showed you how Stephens sermon in acts 7 hit on Pauline theology for the first time in Acts. A few chapters later we see Peter quoting a scripture on all who believe are justified. The first connection from Peter on believe and be justified. Now that Peter has opened this door we will see Paul preach this thru out the rest of the book. We see the famous verse in acts 16 believe on the Lord Jesus and you will be saved, and your house. The point is we are seeing not only the development of the Body of Christ in this book, but also the development of Christian theology. Many believers fight over these various verses and even trace the authenticity of their movements to these verses. Others try to brand you as a heretic over which scriptures you see as the conversion text. While I fully agree with the doctrine of Justification by faith as one of the foundational doctrines of scripture, I avoid calling the churches who trace their altar call experience to water baptism as Cambellites/heretics. I also disagree with those who are strong water baptism advocates when they say those who do not believe in full submersion are not Christian. In this chapter these Gentiles were justified by passive belief! No evangelical altar call at all the Spirit fell on all who heard the word. Peter says can we forbid water to those who received the Spirit like we did? There was no altar call because Peter would have never given one! Even though God gave him the whole vision and all, yet they were shocked when God actually saved them. So we see the will of God in accepting all who believe in Jesus. The justifying of these Gentiles was passive, they had no sinners prayer they were justified before they got in the water. So to all those Church of Christ [or even Catholic and Orthodox brothers] it is not totally wrong to trace your outward experience of becoming a Christian to the time of baptism [I will not get into infant baptism here!]. But it also is not wrong to trace it to the time of simple belief. Gods purpose is to save people. Acts is revealing to us the progressive journey of man with God. God does put down the requirement to believe in Christ. The entrance into communion with God is limited to all who believe in him! But dont make it harder than this. NOTE- I didnt get into all the particulars of repentance and baptism and exactly how many steps you need to get saved. Seeing Acts this way misses the main thrust of the book. But let me add, why dont we see Peter mention repentance here? Cornelius is called one who feared God. This description didnt just mean he prayed and fasted it actually described Gentile converts to Judaism. These were called God Fearers. They practiced Judaism already, except for the rite of circumcision. So this fact meant they already repented to a degree. The law did teach repentance well. It had a system that engrained the moral concept of sin and repentance into man. Hebrews chapter 6 teaches this. So you can say Cornelius and his relatives were already aware of sin and the need to turn from it [also the basic elements of Johns baptism] so here Peter bypasses the repentance part and simply shows them the missing ingredient, which was faith in Christ.
ACTS 11- Peter recounts his vision and experience he had at Cornelius house. The Jews at Jerusalem were upset that he went and ate with non Jews. He explains that the Lord showed him not to view these gentiles as unclean. They were accepted and made clean thru Christs blood. The leadership at Jerusalem agree [for now!] We begin to see the tension that will play out thru the rest of the New Testament. This struggle between Jewish law and grace will become