Archives for November 2012

WEEK #47 – DAY 326 – MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2012

TODAY’S READING: ACTS 15-17

 

OVERVIEW: 

TheJerusalemchurch addresses false teaching (chapter 15); Paul’s second missionary journey (chapters 16 and 17).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

Acts 15 introduces to us continuing controversy surrounding the salvation of the Gentiles.  When Paul and Barnabas return to Antioch of Syria they are met by some false teachers who are disputing with and convincing the newly saved Gentiles that they must be circumcised to be saved.  Indeed, circumcision was a significant symbolic act under the Old Testament law, but through the blood of Jesus Christ, the law had been satisfied and circumcision was no longer necessary (Galatians 5:6).  Paul, seeing the gospel in jeopardy, begins “no small dissension and disputation” (15:2) with these false teachers.  Finally, it is determined that this question must be addressed by the apostles inJerusalem. 

 

Peter weighs in with the point that whether Jew or Gentile all are saved by grace so “why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?” (15:10). James settles the dispute: “my sentence is, that we trouble not them, which from among the Gentiles are turned to God: But that we write unto them, that they abstain from pollutions of idols, and from fornication, and from things strangled, and from blood” (15:19, 20).  If the Gentiles are saved by grace, then why do they have to “abstain from meats offered to idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication” (15:29) when none of those things is related to salvation or sanctification?  James answers the question in verse 21: “For Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogues every sabbath day”.  These stipulations were placed upon the Gentiles in an effort to keep the door of faith open to the Jews.  This is the same principle Paul followed in his ministry and described in 1 Corinthians 9:19-23 where he states, “unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law . . . I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some.  And this I do for the gospel’s sake”.  Paul, Barnabas, Judas and Silas deliver the letter to the church atAntiochand there is much rejoicing at the decision of the apostles.

 

In approximately 50 AD, Paul and Barnabas determine to revisit the cities where they had preached the gospel and planted churches, but they can’t agree on who should be their companions.  Even the heroes of our faith are carnal at times!  Barnabas takes his nephew, JohnMark, who abandoned them on their first journey, and heads forCyprusfollowing the original route (15:39).  Paul selects Silas (also called Silvanus) and takes a new route throughSyriaandCilicia(15:40, 41).

 

Chapter 16 opens with Paul and Silas arriving in the neighboring cities of Derbe and Lystra.  Paul is impressed by a young disciple named Timotheus (Timothy) who has a remarkable testimony in his hometown, Lystra and another city, Iconium (16:2).  Paul invites Timothy to join him and Silas on this second journey but determines that Timothy must first be circumcised since he is half Jewish (16:1,3).  Timothy was circumcised not as part of his salvation or sanctification, but in preparation for preaching the gospel to the Jews (I Corinthians9:19-23).  After passing throughPhrygiaandGalatia(16:6), Paul’s team is “forbidden of the Holy Ghost” to go anywhere butMacedonia.  Once the team lands at Philippi, a chief city of Macedonia, we discover exactly why God wanted them there: He had arranged divine appointments with lost souls like Lydia and her family (16:14), a young girl possessed by a demon (16:16-18), the Philippian jailer and his family (16:30-34), Jews and Gentiles in Thessalonica and Berea (17:1-4,10-12) and Dionysius, Damaris and others in Athens (17:34).  Proverbs 16:9 declares, “A man’s heart deviseth his way: but the LORD directeth his steps”.  Paul’s heart was leading him toAsiaandBithynia, but God directed his steps toMacedonia.  Imagine the consequences if Paul had been stiffnecked, insisted upon his own plans and strategy, and forced his way intoAsiaandBithyniaand neglectedMacedonia?  He would have missed God’s supernatural orchestration of events and those listed above may have entered eternity in the flames of hell.  Has God put obstacles, hindrances or roadblocks in the path of your plans?  Don’t be stiffnecked; trust the Lord.  Brethren, let the Lord direct your steps.

 

 

 

DAY 323 – FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2012

 

TODAY’S READING: ACTS 11-14

 

OVERVIEW: 

The transition fromJerusalemtoAntioch(chapters 11 and 12); Paul’s first missionary journey (chapters 13 and 14).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

As we begin today, let’s take a few moments to review what we have discovered thus far from the Book of Acts.  Acts 1-6 is the record of God offering the Messiah and the kingdom of heaven to the Nation of Israel.  In chapter 7, the question of Acts 1:6 has been answered by the Nation of Israel and God withdraws His offer of the Messiah and kingdom of heaven.  Chapter 8 marks the beginning of the transition from God dealing with the Nation of Israel to God dealing with a racially mixed group of Jews and Gentiles called the Church, the body of Christ.  Chapter 9 continues the transition with the salvation and calling of Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles.  In chapter 10, Peter, the apostle to the Jews, confirms that God is indeed offering eternal life to the Gentiles.  From these chapters alone, God has made it abundantly clear that He has postponed His dealings with the Nation of Israel and begun to focus His attention on the Church.  Today in chapters 11 through 14, we will discover the final phases of transition.

 

Chapter 11 reveals a transition fromJerusalemtoAntioch.  When the persecution arose in chapter 8, the majority of believers fled while the apostles remained steadfast inJerusalem(8:1).  Each time a new people group received the Word of God, envoys from Jerusalem were sent to confirm God’s working amidst that group (see Acts 8:14-17, 25; 11:1-3, 19-22).  Paul himself needed affirmation from the apostles inJerusalemto validate his ministry (Gal. 2:1, 9).  From these facts, it is easily seen thatJerusalemwas the base of operations and place of authority for the early church.  This makes perfect sense: 1) If you are a believing Jew waiting for Jesus your Messiah to touch down on the Mount of Olives (Acts 1:9-12; Zech. 14:1-9) and establish the capital of His kingdom in Jerusalem at His second coming – why leave Jerusalem and miss all of the action?!  2) If you are seeking to reach only Jews with the message of the kingdom of heaven and 3) If the apostle to the Jews (Peter) resides there.  But withIsrael’s rejection of the King and kingdom in Acts 7, God turns His attention to Gentiles and therefore, establishes a new base of operations inAntioch.  Watch the flow of chapter 11: once the apostles inJerusalemhave confirmed the salvation of the Gentiles (11:18), Barnabas seeks out Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles, and brings him toAntioch(11:25, 26) where a multi-ethnicchurchofJewsand Gentiles had been planted (Acts 13:1).  Notice also, that it was inAntiochthat “the disciples were called Christians first” (11:26).  It is significant to note also that for the first ten years of the church, not one believer had ever been called a “Christian”!  Not until God makes the transitions fromIsraelto the Church, andJerusalemtoAntioch, does God see fit to have His followers called “Christians”; another confirmation thatAntiochis the new base of operations.

 

In the next chapter, it is evident that the apostles now understand that God has postponed His plan forIsrael.  The first piece of evidence is that the Apostle James is not replaced after his execution.  Jesus promised the twelve apostles, “Verily I say unto you, That ye which have followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes ofIsrael” (Matthew19:28).  Since the apostles expected Jesus Christ to return immediately, they wanted to be sure.  Obviously then, since Judas Iscariot committed suicide, a replacement is required to fill twelve thrones, which is why the eleven apostles immediately elected Judas’ replacement in Acts 1:15-26.  The fact that the Apostle James is not replaced clearly indicates that the apostles realize that Christ’s return has been postponed and the Church is now God’s primary institution.

 

Another evidence is that Peter leavesJerusalemand doesn’t return (12:19).  The leadership team of Peter, James and John is being dismantled andJerusalem’s central authority is waning.  This is another indication thatAntioch, rather thanJerusalem, is the new center of God’s global outreach.

 

In Acts 13, God introduces His new institution the Church.  God’s new institution is multi-racial (13:1) and missional (13:2-4).  Paul and Barnabas are sent out as missionaries from their local church inAntioch.  Note that Paul and Barnabas were called by God to perform a particular “work” (13:2) and that “work”, as you have seen in reading Acts 13 and 14, is preaching the gospel and planting reproducing local churches.  We may deduce then, that the work of a missionary is preaching the gospel and planting reproducing local churches.  Though many faithful Christians serve in diverse capacities in missions, gospel preaching and church planting are the preeminent components of missions.

 

A comparison of the sermons preached by Peter and those preached by Paul give further evidence that God is no longer offering the kingdom of heaven toIsrael, but instead, is bringing all men into the spiritual, internalkingdomofGod.  Peter’s sermon is simply, “You Jews killed our Messiah and rejected the kingdom.  Repent and be water baptized” (see Acts2:36-38;3:15, 19, 20).  Paul’s message, however, is, “Be it known unto you therefore, men and brethren, that through [Jesus] is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins: And by him all that believe are justified from all things, from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses.”  Peter’s message is the gospel of the kingdom, while Paul’s is the gospel of grace (see13:42, 43).

 

Acts 13:4 – 14:26 is the record of Paul’s first missionary journey in approximately 46 AD.  On this first journey the gospel was preached and churches were planted on theIslandofCyprus, Antioch of Pisidia, Iconium, Lystra, Derbe, and Perga; all cities, exceptCyprus, are inGalatiawhich is modern dayTurkey.  The journey took approximately two years and covered nearly 1,250 miles!

DAY 322 – THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2012

TODAY’S READING: ACTS 8-10

 

OVERVIEW: 

The transition fromIsraelto the Gentiles (chapter 8); the salvation of the missionary to the Gentiles (chapter 9); the transition to the Gentiles confirmed by apostolic authority (chapter 10).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

Thus far we have seen that Acts 1-7 is exclusively Jewish because God is still offering the Messiah and the kingdom of heaven to the Nation of Israel.  The all-important question of Acts 1:6: “Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom toIsrael?” has been answered with a resounding “No”.  This “no” was effectively communicated through the stoning of Stephen and the fact that Jesus went from STANDING in Acts 7:56 to being SEATED in Colossians 3:1.  The Nation of Israel has clearly rejected the offer of both their Messiah and His kingdom: the literal, physical, earthly kingdom of heaven.  God’s plan forIsraelhas been postponed and the “parenthesis” of the Church Age is beginning.  The stoning of Stephen led to a “great persecution” against the believers inJerusalemand many of them fledJerusalemand began preaching the gospel “abroad throughout the regions ofJudaeaandSamaria” (8:1c).  God uses persecution to accomplish His own mission of sending witnesses to “allJudaea, and inSamaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth” (Acts 1:8). 

 

Acts chapter 8 marks the beginning of the transition from God accomplishing His plan through the Nation of Israel to the accomplishment of His plan through a body of people called the Church, which is composed of both Jews and Gentiles (Ephesians 2:11-22).  Notice how orderly God makes the transition from Israel to the Church: first, believers witness in “all Judaea” (8:1c); next, Philip, the deacon mentioned in Acts 6:5 and called “the evangelist” in Acts 21:8, preaches the kingdom of God (the spiritual kingdom that resides inside of a believer) to “the Samaritans” who are half-Jew and half-Gentile (8:1c); and finally, “the uttermost” as Philip preaches to a full-blooded Gentile on his way home from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem (8:27,28).  You may have noticed that God withheld the gift of the Holy Ghost from the Samaritans until Peter and John arrived inSamaria(8:14-17).  This was done for two reasons: 1) To prove to the apostles inJerusalemthat the Samaritans had truly received the Word of God and 2) To prove to the Samaritans that the apostles inJerusalemwere God’s ordained authorities.

 

Acts 1-6 have been dominated by the Apostle Peter because he is the apostle to the Jews (Galatians 2:7, 8).  However, a new character, Paul, enters the picture in chapter 9.  We are first introduced to Paul in Acts 7:58 where he is called by his birth name, Saul (Acts 13:9).  Paul, by his own admission, is the chief persecutor of the church: “[I breathed] out threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord” (Acts 9:1) and “imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them that believed” (Acts22:19) and “was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious” (I Timothy1:13).  Sounds like a really attractive guy!  Funny thing is, Paul was one of the most religious men on earth: “If any other man thinketh that he hath whereof he might trust in the flesh, I more: Circumcised the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee; Concerning zeal, persecuting the church; touching the righteousness which is in the law, blameless” (Phil. 3:4-6). 

 

Oddly enough, religion is the most destructive enemy of God.  It was the religious (the Jewish council) who crucified our Lord, it was the religious (the Jewish council) who stoned Stephen and it was a religious leader (Paul) who was the most destructive force against the church.  But consider the rest of Paul’s testimony: “[I] was before a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious: but I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly in unbelief.  And the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant with faith and love which is in Christ Jesus.  This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.  Howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all longsuffering, for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting” (I Timothy1:13-16).  What a radical transformation!  God can save and transform anyone!  Paul goes from being the chief misery of the church to the chief missionary of the church.  Paul was specifically saved to be a missionary to the Gentiles: “[Paul] is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the children ofIsrael” (9:15).  From this chapter forward, Peter’s role as the apostle to the Jews (Galatians 2:7, 8) diminishes while Paul’s role as the Apostle to the Gentiles increases.  In fact, Peter’s name is mentioned only one time after Acts 13 while Paul’s is mentioned 129 times.

 

Acts chapter 10 continues the transition fromIsraelto the Church with Peter, the apostle to the Jews, reluctantly preaching to a family of Gentiles.  Notice that the heavens open again (10:11), but rather than Jesus standing at the right hand of the Father (Acts7:56), a vessel of unclean animals descends and Peter is instructed to kill and eat them.  According to Old Testament law (Lev.20:25; Deut. 14:1-29), Jews were to avoid eating certain kinds of animals; these animals were called “unclean”.  So Peter, being a devout Jewish believer in Christ, refuses God’s offer to eat the unclean animals.  Pay particular attention to God’s response to Peter: “What God hath cleansed, that call not thou common” (10:15).  God is trying to let Peter know that He is transitioning fromIsraelto the Church by using unclean animals as a metaphor for Gentiles.  In effect, God is saying, “No longer consider the Gentiles as unworthy of salvation because I am about to grant them eternal life.”  But Peter has a hard time accepting the fact that God will save Gentiles.  You might call him an “unbelieving Jew”.  Soon, Peter finds himself preaching to a family of Gentiles who suddenly begin speaking in tongues.  Remember: Jews require a sign (I Corinthians1:22) and tongues are a sign for unbelieving Jews (I Corinthians14:22).  These Gentiles spoke with tongues as a sign to Peter, who in this context is a Jew who doesn’t believe that God will save Gentiles.  Once the other eleven Apostles inJerusalemcatch wind of this “casting of pearls before swine,” Peter is called to answer for this blatantly disobedient act of preaching to the Gentiles (Acts 11:1-3).  As Peter begins to defend himself, the most convincing evidence he offers to the Jewish Apostles is the sign of tongues (Acts11:15-18).  By the end of the meeting, the Jewish church inJerusalemdeclares: “Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life” (Acts11:18).  The transition fromIsrael!  to the Church is almost complete.

 

Let’s briefly summarize the transitions that we have discovered: Acts 1-6 – God is offering the King and the kingdom of heaven to the Nation of Israel. Acts 7 –Israelrejects the King and the kingdom of heaven for the third time. Acts 8 – God makes an orderly transition from Jews to Samaritans to Gentiles. Acts 9 – The transition from Peter, the apostle to the Jews, to Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles. Acts 10 – God’s transition to the Gentiles is confirmed by the apostolic authority of Peter.

DAY 321 – WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2012

TODAY’S READING: ACTS 5-7

 

OVERVIEW:

Internal and external opposition (chapters 5, 6); the final offer of the kingdom of heaven rejected by the Nation of Israel (chapter 7).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

Acts 3 – 6 reveals for us two forms of Satanic opposition: external and internal.  External opposition occurs in the form of persecution.  There are two cycles of persecution meted out on Peter and John by the Jewish leaders (4:1-22; 5:17-40).  Though Peter and John appear to be the objects of wrath, and though the Jewish religious leaders seem to be the persecutors, the fact is that, “we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Ephesians 6:12).  The real object of wrath is Jesus (4:17, 18;5:28,40), and the real persecutor is Satan.  Maybe you’ve noticed that you can comfortably talk about Buddhism, Zen, Feng Shui, the Occult, etc. with any group of people in any public place, but as soon as you mention the name Jesus, an uproar is sure to follow.  The devil hates the name of Jesus.  Please notice what angered the Jewish religious leaders (and the devil) the most: the teaching and preaching of the gospel (4:2, 18;5:28).  The obvious application: if the devil hates it, then it must be effective and we should do it all the more!  Teaching and preaching is the primary action of the Great Commission: “Go ye therefore, and teach all nations … Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you . . .” (Matthew 28:19, 20).  Teaching and preaching is the primary function of a pastor (see Acts 2:14,42; 3:12; 4:31; 5:20,42; 6:1-4; Colossians 1:28; II Timothy 4:17; Titus 1:3; I Corinthians 1:21; I Timothy 4:11-16; II Timothy 4:1,2; I Timothy 5:17; Galatians 6:6).  Satan will do anything he can to stop the preaching and teaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ. 

 

If he can’t stop the gospel with external opposition, he’ll walk right in the front doors of the church and try internal opposition.  Ananias and Sapphira were held in esteem by the believers because they vowed to sell their property and give ALL of the proceeds to the church.  But in an effort to “have their cake and eat it too,” they both told Peter that they had sold the land for less than what they actually received for it, thereby keeping a little nest egg for themselves.  They must have thought, “What a great plan!  The church will think we’re really spiritual for sacrificing so much, and we’ll still be rich!  No one will ever know.”  You can fool man, but you can’t fool an omniscient God.  Peter defines their offense clearly, “thou hast not lied unto men, but unto God” (Acts 5:4) and they both dropped dead (5:5, 10).  The issue wasn’t that they didn’t give it all; it was that they lied to God.  I wonder if this is the event that the Apostle John had in mind when he wrote I John 5:16, 17.  If you’re like me, you’re thinking, “I bet Sunday attendance dropped after that!”  Yep, you’re right.  And that was God’s plan (5:11-14)!  Notice, however, that souls were still saved. Markit down: no matter how “holy” the church, no matter how “holy” the leaders, God still purges and purifies His people in preparation for new fruit.

 

Another form of internal opposition comes from envy, strife and complaining among believers (Acts 6:1).  Keep in mind that the Grecians’ complaint was legitimate and it certainly needed to be addressed, but consider also that the devil is more than happy to keep us busy with “legitimate needs” and even “good things” as long as it keeps us from the best thing: prayer and the Word of God.  Remember Jesus’ instruction to Martha when she was so busy working to serve Him while Mary sat at His feet, communing with Him?  “Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her” (Luke 10:41, 42).  The Apostles’ deemed it necessary to continue in their primary function: prayer and the Word (6:2, 4), so they delegated the “legitimate need” to elected “deacons” (6:3, 5-7).  It is significant to note that God holds even those who carry out the simplest forms of service to a standard of “honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom” (6:3).

 

Finally, in chapter 7, we have come to the first key event or turning point in the book of Acts.  Acts 7 is the answer to the question of Acts 1:6 and marks the beginning of five of the seven transitions.  Acts 7 is the third and final offer of the King and His kingdom to the nation of Israel.  Stephen preaches an incredible sermon with three significant points: first, God promised us (Israel) a land (7:2-7); second, God promised us a Prophet like Moses (7:20, 37); third, but you leaders always kill God’s prophets and fail to respond properly to God’s message (7:51-53).  Needless to say, the council was enraged and they stoned Stephen while a young zealous Jew named Saul held the stoners’ coats.  To understand the significance of this event we need to pay close attention to verse 56: “Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing on the right hand of God.”  Stephen saw two things: “the heavens opened” and “the Son of man standing”.  Immediately following His ascension in Acts 1:9-11, Jesus SAT down at the right hand of the Father as Hebrews 10:12 tells us: “But this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of God”.  Colossians 3:1 tells us that even today in the Church Age, Jesus is SEATED at the Father’s right hand: “If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God”.  So the fact that Jesus is STANDING is incredibly significant, then add to that, the fact that the heavens are opened.  The next time we find Jesus standing and the heavens opened is Revelation 4:1-3 and 5:1, 5 where Jesus rises to take the book with seven seals from the Father’s hand which marks the beginning of the Tribulation period.  Jesus is standing because He is awaiting the nation of Israel’s response.  If it’s repentance and water baptism, then Jesus opens the first seal of the Tribulation and Daniel’s seventieth week begins. If it’s rejection, then Jesus sits back down,Israelis “blinded in part” (Romans11:25) and the Church Age begins.  Clearly, the stoning of Stephen is a rejection of God’s offer, and as expected, we find Jesus seated for the duration of the Church Age (Ephesians 1:20; Colossians 3:1).  Consequently, God turns His attention to the gospel of thekingdomofGod(the spiritual internal kingdom) and to all nations under heaven as we will see in Acts 8.

 

DAY 320 – TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

TODAY’S READING: ACTS 1-4

 

OVERVIEW:

The messengers of the kingdom prepared (chapter 1); the offer of the kingdom of heaven to the Nation of Israel (chapter 2); a second offer of the kingdom of heaven to the Nation of Israel (chapters 3,4).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

Author: Luke, the physician (Col. 4:14) and author of the gospel of Luke (compare Acts 1:1 with Luke 1:1-4).  Luke was a Gentile and traveling companion of Paul as indicated by the word “we” when found in appropriated passages of the Book of Acts (16:10-13, 16; 20:6,13-15, etc.)

Approximate date of writing: 59-65 AD Dates of the recorded events: 33-62 AD

Theme: God’s plan forIsraelpostponed and the revelation of the Church. Christ is seen as: our Great High Priest ministering in the heavens (Hebrews4:14-16) Key verses: Acts 1:6, 7 Key chapters: 7-13

Chapters: 28

Verses: 1,007

Words: 24,250

 

As we discussed in our introduction to the Book of Matthew, there are four Books of the Bible where you can lose your way if you don’t keep your compass pointed at the  “ancient landmark” of the Nation of Israel (Prov. 22:28; 23:10): Matthew, Acts, Hebrews and James.  It’s not difficult to navigate your way through the Book of Acts if you keep the following trail markers in mind.

 

  1. This Book is called “The Acts of the Apostles,” NOT “The Doctrine (or Teaching) of the Apostles”.   The Book of “Acts” is the historical record of the ACTIONS of the Apostles; it’s the story of what happened.  It could be illustrated like this: suppose a sports writer observes you sink a hole in one after the ball slices, skims across the water, bounces between a couple of trees, and hits a bird flying directly over the hole and then drops straight in the hole.  Now suppose the writer recounts that event in a chapter of “Golf For Dummies” and entitles it: “Making a Hole in One Step-By-Step”.  That’s ridiculous!  Your hole in one is what happened, but it’s not the rule for every golfer!  Likewise, Acts does not establish the rule of faith, experience, and doctrine for every Christian.  Otherwise, every Christian would have to sell everything and move toJerusalem(2:44-47) and after a short time, most, if not all Christians would be dead for lying to the Holy Spirit (5:1-11).  The most consistent thing about the book of Acts is its inconsistency.

 

  1. The key verses of the Book are Acts 1:6 and 7: “. . . [the Apostles] asked of him, saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom toIsrael?  And [Jesus] said unto them, It is not for you to know the times or the seasons, which the Father hath put in his own power.”  The literal earthly kingdom (the kingdom of heaven) and the King of that kingdom (Jesus Christ the Messiah) are still being offered to the nation ofIsrael.  The Apostles’ minds are focused on one thing and one thing only: the return of Jesus Christ and the establishment of His kingdom on earth.  Jesus’ answer in modern vernacular is: “For now, it’s none of your business.”  Based upon that answer, the Apostles assumed that Christ would return within days.  However, by the time Paul writes his first letter to the Thessalonians in 54 AD it is clear that the question has been answered: compare Acts 1:7 where Jesus says “It is not for you to know the times or the seasons,” and I Thess. 5:1, 2 where Paul says, “But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye . . . know perfectly . . .” Clearly, a transition has been made from not knowing to knowing perfectly.  As you will see, the Apostles’ question is finally answered in Acts 7 after the nation ofIsraelhas rejected the offer of the kingdom for the third time.  This brings us to our third trail marker.

 

  1. Acts is a transitional book: a bridge that carries us from one dispensation to a new dispensation, the Church Age.  We are currently living in the Church Age.  Acts is the record of God’s transition from accomplishing His plan through the nation ofIsraelto accomplishing His plan through the Church.  God’s change in plans is made obvious through seven transitions and three key events.

 

Transition #1: from the ministry of Jesus Christ to the ministry of the Holy Spirit – (1:2)

Transition #2: from “disciples” to “apostles” – (1:2)

Key Event #1: the nation ofIsrael’s final rejection of the kingdom of heaven – (Acts 7)

Transition #3: from the nation ofIsraelto the Samaritans (a race of half Jew and half Gentile) – (8:1-5)

Transition #4: from the nation ofIsraelto the Church (a group composed of Jews and Gentiles) – (8:26-11:18)

Transition #5: from the preaching of the kingdom of heaven (the literal earthly kingdom offered to the nation ofIsrael) to the preaching of thekingdomofGod(the unseen spiritual kingdom inside of individual believers) – (8:12)

Key Event #2: the salvation of the Gentile, Cornelius, and the determination by the Apostles that God is no longer dealing exclusively with the Jews, but has now taken salvation to the Gentiles – (11:18)

Key Event #3: the execution of the Apostle James, the decision not to replace him, and Peter’s departure to Caeserea – (12:1, 2, 19)

Transition #6: from Peter, the Apostle to the Jews, to Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles –(9:1-13:1)

Transition #7: fromJerusalemtoAntioch– (11:26-13:1)

 

It is important to understand that the transition from Israel to the Church and the Church Age were “mysteries,” or truths that were hidden from the twelve Apostles (see Rom. 11:25; Eph. 3:1-12; 2:11-22).  The Twelve believed that God dealt exclusively with the Nation of Israel (Matt. 10:5-7), and in their ethnocentric opinions, the Gentiles were pagan heathens unworthy to receive anything from God (Acts 11:1-3).  Like Christopher Columbus who thought he had landed in Asia, but had actually landed in the Caribbean, the Apostles thought they were going to land in the millennial reign of Christ, but actually ended up in the Church Age.  Needless to say, their journey was full of surprises!

 

  1. Jews require a sign.  The signs and wonders done by Jesus and the Apostles were designed to prove toIsraelthat the message and the messengers were sent by God.  God makes this explicitly clear in I Cor. 1:22: “For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom”.  Miraculous healings and speaking in tongues were signs for the nation ofIsrael.  I Cor.14:22says, “Wherefore tongues are for a sign, not to them that believe, but to them that believe not”.  Tongues were a sign given to unbelieving Jews and every time tongues occur in the Bible, which is only three times (Acts 2, 10, 19), an unbelieving Jew is present to witness the sign.  The reason that Apostolic healings and speaking in tongues do not occur today is because God has postponed His dealings withIsrael.  Romans11:25makes this very clear: “For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own conceits; that blindness in part is happened toIsrael, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in.”  God has temporarily blindedIsraeland is currently working exclusively through the Church.

 

With these four trail markers at the forefront of our minds, let’s take a look at some highlights in chapters 1-4.

 

Acts 2.  This chapter is a vortex of doctrinal error in contemporary Christianity.  This is where the modern day Pentecostal and Charismatic churches (speaking in tongues, baptism in the Holy Spirit) and the Church of Christ and the Christian Church (water baptism is essential for salvation) lose the ancient landmark, Israel.  If you keep your eye on the landmark and pay attention to the context, this chapter is easily understood.  Here’s the context in one sentence: Jews from all over the world (2:5-11) came to Jerusalem (the holiest city of the Jews) to celebrate Pentecost (a Jewish holiday, 2:1) where they saw the sign of tongues (Jews require a sign) and heard a Jewish Apostle (Peter) tell them that just fifty days prior, they had killed their Jewish Messiah (2:22-24,36) and that they needed to do exactly what John the Baptist (the last Jewish prophet) and Jesus told them to do in the Gospels (repent and be water baptized for the remission of sins, Matt. 3:1,2; Luke 3:3;!  Matt. 4:17; John 3:22, 23; 4:1,2) to prepare themselves for the soon coming kingdom of heaven.  I think you’ve got the point: this passage deals exclusively with the nation of Israel.  So unless you’re a Jew living in 33 A.D., there’s no need for you to speak with tongues, and water baptism does not save you from your sins.

 

Acts 3.  Again we see from the context that God is dealing exclusively with the nation of Israel.  Note that Peter and John (Jewish Apostles) are on their way to the temple (the Jewish place of worship) at the hour of prayer (Jews prayed three times a day) and Peter performs a miracle (Jews require a sign) and upon seeing the crowd gathering (other Jews at the temple to pray), Peter tells them that they killed the Jewish Messiah (3:13-16), but if they repented, then Jesus would return to establish His literal earthly kingdom (3:19-21).  Peter is offeringIsraela second chance to accept Jesus of Nazareth as their Messiah, and prepare themselves for the coming of His literal earthly kingdom.

WEEK #46 – DAY 319 – MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2012

TODAY’S READING: JOHN 20-21

 

OVERVIEW: 

Christ’s resurrection (20:1-10); Christ’s post-resurrection appearances to Mary and to His disciples (20:11-31); Jesus’ reinstatement and restoration of Peter (21:1-17); Jesus’ final instructions to His disciples (21:18-25).

 

 

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

By the time we move into John 21 in today’s reading, Jesus has already risen from the dead (John 20).  He has made numerous appearances, two of them to His disciples.  But at this point, the disciples are in danger of drifting back into their old way of life (21:3).  They had spent three years with the Lord, but all of that is pretty foggy right now.  Things didn’t really go like they had planned.  They’ve gone from disillusionment to despair.  Sure, there was certainly a tremendous rejuvenation of their hearts to realize that Jesus had risen from the dead, but at this point, the disciples still hadn’t quite pieced the whole thing together.

 

Things were different now.  For three years they had walked with the Lord and talked with Him; they were always together.  Now He appears and disappears without any notice.  It’s just different.  And on top of that, they’re all bearing the guilt of the fact that they had forsaken the Lord.  All of them but John scattered when Jesus needed them most.

 

And when you come to the end of chapter 20 in today’s reading, the main narrative ends with the great climax of Thomas’ confession of faith in verse 28 as he says to Jesus, “My Lord and my God.”  Then John gives an explanation of his purpose in writing the book in verses 30 and 31, “and many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book: But these are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might have life through his name,” and it’s a beautiful conclusion to the whole thing.  And if you couldn’t see the other chapter just below those verses in your Bible, you would think that the Book had ended with verse 31.

 

But that’s not the end!  There are still some extremely important things the Holy Spirit wants us to know about Peter’s situation.  John, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, doesn’t want his Gospel to end without telling his readers that Peter had been fully restored and reinstated.  You see, without chapter 21, there would have been a major question in all of our minds about whether a person who has blown it like Peter had, could be restored in his relationship with the Lord.  Peter didn’t just turn his back on the Lord as had the other disciples; he had actually denied Him on three different occasions!  I mean, how could someone who had done something like that still be entrusted with the responsibility of shepherding the flock of Jesus Christ?  Again, without chapter 21, the question would remain unanswered.

 

Also, were it not for chapter 21, it would be a mystery in all of our minds, why in the world Peter is so prominent in the first 12 chapters of the next Book of the Bible, the Book of Acts.  I mean, how does a guy go from completely denying the Lord when he’s 50 feet away from Him, to the boldness exemplified on the Day of Pentecost just seven weeks later, when he looks out on the religious leaders of Israel, and all the people of Judea and Jerusalem, and faced them with the fact that they had taken God’s own Son, the Lord of glory, and by their wicked hands, had slain Him!  Pretty strong stuff!  How do you go form being a coward, to having that kind of courage?  What takes place in chapter 21 is the missing link.

 

And then there is at least one other reason for chapter 21.  When you come to the end of chapter 20, the last of the disciples has come to genuine faith.  That, of course, was “Doubting Thomas.”  They had all been convinced of the resurrection, and that, of course, was wonderful, but what now?  What were they going to do about it?  And chapter 21 is Jesus’ call for action.

 

A few other things to grab a hold of as you make your way through chapter 21:

 

21:3 –   Perhaps we could paraphrase, “Well, I’ll tell you what fellas, I may not be a great preacher or evangelist, but there is one thing I do know how to do, and I’m gonna do that!  I’m goin’ fishin’! Come on boys, let me show ya how it’s done!”  Notice, they didn’t even get a bite.  The one thing Peter thought he could do, he couldn’t do anymore (John 15:5), because God had put His hand on his life and was in control.  Learn the lesson from Peter.

 

21:15-17 – No matter how our love has failed, there is restoration!  Perhaps that’s the message God wants you to receive today — there IS restoration!  And notice in this passage, the restoration was initiated by the Lord.  He could have said, “You know what Peter, you’re a chump! You talk a big talk, but you can’t be counted on to do anything!  I gave you three years of my life, and I can’t even get you to follow one simple command.  Just forget it, man.” But that’s not the way it was at all.  Jesus initiated the restoration, and provided the one who had denied Him three times, the opportunity to affirm his love three times!

 

21:17– After the third time Jesus asked Peter if he loved Him, Peter appeals to the doctrine of omniscience.  He says, “Lord, thou knowest all things.”  In other words, “Lord, you’re going to have to read my heart, because I know my love for you isn’t obvious by my life.”  The doctrine of omniscience is a tremendous thing.  I used to feel like God kind of had a way to spy on me, but now I know that if God weren’t omniscient, there would be a lot of times God wouldn’t know that I love Him, because like Peter, it isn’t always obvious from my life. I, too, have to ask Him to look on the inside, at what is in my heart.

 

21:15-17 – Saying, “Feed my lambs. Feed my sheep.  Feed my sheep,” was Jesus’ way of saying, “I forgive you, Peter.  I still believe in you, Peter.  I still think you’re the right man for the job.”

 

The things revealed in chapter 21 of John’s Gospel were a turning point in Peter’s life.   The things that took place seven weeks later on the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2 are the proof of that.  May God use this chapter to be a turning point in our lives today!

 

DAY 316 – FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2012

TODAY’S READING: JOHN 15-19

 

OVERVIEW:  Jesus teaches about abiding in Him (15:1-11); Jesus teaches about loving one another (15:12-17); Jesus warns about persecution (15:18-16:7); Jesus’ promise of the Holy Spirit (16:8-33); Jesus’ prayer of intercession (17:1-26); Jesus’ betrayal and arrest (18:1-14); Peter’s denial (18:15-18); Jesus before the high priest (18:19-24); Peter’s second and third denial (18:25-27); Jesus before            Pilate (18:28-38); Barabbas is released (18:39-40); Christ’s crucifixion (19:1-37); Christ’s burial (19:38-42).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

We enter into the whole arena of our Lord’s betrayal, arrest, and crucifixion today for the fourth time in almost as many weeks.  One of the most important things to keep in your mind as you read about His incredible sacrifice is something Jesus said back in chapter 10, verses 17 and 18.  Jesus said, “Therefore doth my Father love me, because I LAY DOWN MY LIFE, that I might take it again. NO MAN TAKETH IT FROM ME, but I LAY IT DOWN OF MYSELF. I have power to LAY IT DOWN, and I have power to take it again.”  The reason these two verses are so significant, is that they help us to interpret what is really taking place as Jesus is being crucified.  Though it appears that He is the victim, nothing could be further from the truth!  Jesus was never a victim to anybody!  The fact is, Jesus died, not because men killed Him, because they couldn’t!  There was no way that Jesus could have died had He not willed to die.

 

For centuries people have been arguing about who killed Jesus.  The Jewish leaders, of course, are the primary targets of the blame, and rightly so, because it was their plot, and their false charges that actually forced the issue.

 

Others choose to blame the Romans, and they, too, deserve a portion of the blame, because they were the ones who set aside what was normal justice to appease an angry mob, and they knowingly went ahead and executed an innocent man.

 

But if you really want to get to the bottom line on who bears the responsibility for Christ’s death, all you have to do is listen to Peter in Acts 2:23: “Him, (that is, Christ) being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken (the Jews), and by wicked hands (the Romans) have crucified and slain.”  Who was it that was responsible for the death of Christ?  It was neither the Jews nor the Romans, though they certainly bear the guilt for the actual execution and sin that was involved.  The ultimate responsibility lies with God!  It was God who destined it.  It was God that planned it.  And Jesus, in an act of submissive obedience, simply carried out the eternal plan (Rev. 13:8).  But don’t ever lose sight of the fact that HE LAID DOWN HIS LIFE!  John19:30says, “When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said, It is finished: and HE BOWED HIS HEAD, AND GAVE(!!!) UP THE GHOST.”  Nobody TOOK it.  He GAVE it! He yielded His life.  And just as surely as He laid down His life, He TOOK IT AGAIN!

 

Allow me to call to your attention to a few places in today’s reading where Jesus is demonstrating the fact that HE is in control:

 

19:16– “Then delivered he (Pilate) him (Christ) therefore unto them to be crucified. And they took Jesus, and LED him away.”

 

It seems a minor thing to say “they led him away,” but it isn’t minor.  Jesus didn’t have to be driven, He went willingly.  He followed them to the cross.  And, of course, that’s just how the prophet Isaiah said it would happen.  Isaiah 53:7 says, “He is BROUGHT AS A LAMB to the slaughter.”  Unlike cattle which are DRIVEN, sheep are LED.

 

19:17a – “And he BEARING HIS CROSS”

Notice, Jesus carried His own cross.  Why is this happening?  Because it, too, is exactly how God prophesied that it would unfold in a prophetic type in the Old Testament.  Genesis 22:6 is a prophetic type rather than a prophetic statement as in Isaiah 53:7 above.  In Genesis 22:6, Isaac is a picture of Christ, and the verse says, “And Abraham took the WOOD of the burnt OFFERING, and LAID IT UPON ISAAC HIS SON.”  So, Isaac went up toMt.Moriah(same mountain as Jesus, by the way) carrying the wood that was to be used for his own execution.  And so Jesus, controlling every detail of what is taking place in John 19, carries His own “wood,” in a perfect fulfillment of what Isaac pictured prophetically.

 

19:17b – “And he bearing his cross WENT FORTH”

“Went forth” means that He was LED outside the city walls.  Why did that happen?  Because that was Roman law.  Roman law said that no one could be crucified inside the city.  And so they had a place outside the city “called the place of a skull” (19:17c), and it was called that because from a distance the mountainside resembled a skull.  Jesus was taken there because it was the normal place for crucifixions.  But once again, long before Rome built that law into its books, way back in the Book of Exodus when God instituted the offering for sin He said, “But the flesh of the bullock and his skin, and his dung, shalt thou burn with fire without (i.e. outside) the camp: it is a sin offering” (Ex. 29:14). And Jesus, in perfect fulfillment of the picture of the sin offering in the Old Testament, was sacrificed outside the city.  The Romans had no idea about that when they made their laws, but they made that law because God knew that one day His Son was coming to fulfill the picture of Ex. 22:6.

 

19:18a – “they CRUCIFIED Him.”

This is another exact fulfillment.  And one that could not have been anticipated!  The Jews didn’t crucify people.  They stoned people.  But Christ was to be crucified.  That was a Roman way to die.  And once again, it fulfills Numbers 21:6-9, which says that whenIsraelwas bitten by snakes, they were to make a serpent and lift it up on a rod, and anybody who looked upon it would be healed.  Jesus said in John3:14– “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up.”  And that’s exactly how it happened.  Jesus was lifted up on a cross.  That kind of death was unheard of to the Jews in the Old Testament, but that’s how prophecy said it would happen, so it did.

 

19:18b – “they crucified him, and TWO OTHER WITH HIM, ON EITHER SIDE ONE, AND JESUS IN THE MIDST (i.e. middle).”  Is it significant that He died with criminals?  Absolutely.  Isaiah 53:12 says, “He was numbered with the transgressors.”

 

We could continue like this through this entire passage.  It is one fulfilled prophecy after another.  Jesus is ordering every detail of His own execution to fulfill the plan that He laid down in eternity.  He was in control of every single aspect.

 

Finally, John 19:28 says, “After this, Jesus knowing that all things were now accomplished, that the scripture might be fulfilled, said, I thirst.”  Why did He say, “I thirst”? Because He was thirsty?  I’m sure He was!  But He said it, because He knew that every single other Old Testament prophecy concerning His death had been fulfilled except that one.  Only one prophecy remained unfilled.  Psalm 69:21 says about Him in His death, “In my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink.” So, in John 19:28, Jesus says, “I thirst.”  He reaches back and grabs that one unfulfilled prophecy so that His death could be “according to the Scriptures” (See I Cor. 15:3 – for the gospel to be the gospel, it required that every detail of how the Scripture said He would die be fulfilled.)  John19:30says, “When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said, It is finished.” In other words, “Every prophecy has now been fulfilled.  I can go ahead and die now.”  And verse 30 goes on, “And he bowed his head (no slump to the side, He bowed it!)  and gave up the ghost.”  How did He die? Did he bleed to death?  Did He die of exposure?  Did He have a heart attack? Did He suffocate?  No. He died because He willed Himself to die.

 

 

 

DAY 315 – THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012

TODAY’S READING: JOHN 11-14

 

OVERVIEW:  The raising of Lazarus (11:1-46); the Pharisees’ plot to kill Jesus (11:47-57); Mary’s anointing of Jesus’ feet (12:1-11); the triumphal entry (12:12-19); Jesus’ answer to the Greeks (12:20-50); Jesus washes the disciples’ feet (13:1-17); Jesus foretells His betrayal, His death, and His second coming (13:18-14:14); Jesus promises the coming of the Holy Spirit (14:15-31).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

As has been mentioned, and as you have no doubt already noticed, the Gospel of John is the most unique of all of the Gospels.  It is unique for numerous reasons, but perhaps the main reason for its uniqueness has not yet been mentioned:  its unique author.  As far as Jesus’ disciples are concerned, John is in a category all to himself.

 

John is, without a doubt, the greatest picture or illustration of what a Christian should be in the entire New Testament.  As Jesus begins His ministry and calls the Twelve, what soon becomes evident is that out of all the disciples, John is going to be:

 

A UNIQUE FOLLOWER.

As Jesus calls the Twelve, it is interesting to observe that in a loose sense, they actually picture and represent all of Christianity.  There are things that were true about that group that have been true of every group of believers who have ever gathered together.

 

You see, of the Twelve, there was one that made the same claim as all of the others.  He looked like a Christian.  He knew how to speak Christianese.  He knew how to present himself as a Christian.  The only problem was that he had never genuinely been saved.  Of course, that was Judas.  Perhaps that same ratio exists in the church today.  Maybe one out of twelve have a “profession” of salvation, but no real “possession.”

 

Then, of the rest of the eleven, there were eight.  And these guys were saved, and just really “good folk.”  They attended the meetings of the assembly.  They sang the songs; they gave their offerings, and were a part of the activities.   But that’s about as far as it went.  They were just kind of satisfied with being “average.”  I think most pastors would tell you that just like the disciples, that description fits about two-thirds (8 out of 12) of their congregation.

 

But then there were the three.  There were three of the disciples that couldn’t be satisfied with the status quo. There were three who had a more intimate relationship with the Lord than all of the others. Of course, they were Peter, James and John.  They witnessed greater miracles than the others (Matt. 17:1; Luke9:28; Mark5:37; Luke8:51).  The Lord revealed to them what He revealed to no one else (Mark 13:3).  He shared more of His heart with them than He did the others (Mark14:32-34).  All the way throughout Jesus’ ministry, they were just more in tune with the Lord.  There is that same 25 percent in churches today.  While it seems others are just passively walking through life, they’re walking with their eyes fixed on things which cannot be seen (II Cor.4:18).  They walk up mountains with the Lord, and He reveals to them His glory (Matt. 17:1-8).  They go further than everyone else (Mark14:32-33).

 

And yet, even out of those three, there’s that one that goes even further!  And that, of course was John.  John is an incredible picture of somebody who goes all the way with Christ.  At the crucifixion, Judas had already done his thing.  James is gone. Peter is following afar off (Luke22:54).  All of the disciples have scattered (John16:32).  All except one.  You know where you find John at the crucifixion?  He’s right where He’s supposed to be!  He’s at the cross, at the feet of Jesus (John19:26).  Man, what a unique follower!  The only one who followed Jesus all the way.  Are you that one out of twelve?

 

And secondly, God has for this “unique follower,”

 

A UNIQUE TITLE.

On six different occasions when the Bible is making reference to John, when it could have very easily simply said “John,” the Holy Spirit inspired it to be written, the “disciple whom Jesus loved.”  It is a phrase not used of any of the other disciples.  Didn’t Jesus love them?  Certainly He did.  But Jesus had a very special love for John.  And do you know why Jesus had such a special love for John?  It was because John had a very special love for Jesus!  John is a great example of what it is to love Jesus with all of your heart.  And that love for Jesus gave John something else:

 

A UNIQUE CONFIDENCE.

In the upper room with His disciples when Jesus revealed that one of the Twelve would betray Him, Matthew 26:22 says they “began every one of them to say unto him, Lord is it I?” All of them except John.  John13:25says that John’s question was, “Lord, who is it?”  John may not have had enough spiritual discernment to figure out which one would betray Him, but there was one thing he knew for sure.  It wasn’t going to be him!

 

But there is at least one other thing that makes John more unique than perhaps any other person in the Bible, and that is that John had:

 

A UNIQUE PRIVILEGE.

In fact, John had the privilege of privileges!  John13:25says that in the upper room the night before Jesus was crucified, he had the unbelievable privilege of laying his head on “Jesus’ breast.” And do you realize Whose breast that actually is?  It is God in human flesh!  Here is John with his head on Jesus’ breast, as he listens to the very heartbeat of God!

 

That may sound like an over-spiritualization, or you may think it is dramatizing the point, and yet the fact is, the problem we face in Christianity today is that we don’t have our head on “Jesus’ breast”! Because we don’t, we don’t hear the heartbeat of God!

 

Most Christians are so in love with themselves (II Tim. 3:2); they hear and know their own heartbeat.  Most Christians are so preoccupied with people’s opinion of them; they definitely hear and know the heartbeat of others (I Cor. 4:3).  Most Christians are so engulfed in the world and enamored with the things of this world; they hear and know the heartbeat of the world.  But realize today, that the Book you hold in your own two hands today is God’s heartbeat (John 1:1, 14).  Through it, lay your head on Jesus’ breast, and listen today with John (John13:25), to the very heartbeat of God!

 

DAY 314 – WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2012

TODAY’S READING: JOHN 8-10

 

OVERVIEW: 

The conflict over Moses (7:1-8:11); the conflict over Abraham (8:12-59); the conflict over Christ’s Sonship (9:1-10:42).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

As we continue seeking to get our bearings in John’s Gospel, and seeing how it relates to the other Gospel accounts, there is plenty to glean by observing the introductory genealogy in each of the Books.  Because Matthew presents Christ as the King of the Jews, Christ’s genealogy runs through David, back to Abraham (Matt. 1:1).  Because Mark presents Christ as the Servant of the Lord, the significant thing about Mark’s genealogy is that there is none!  A servant’s genealogy is insignificant!  His significance is determined by what he does (i.e. His work).  Because Luke presents Christ as the Son of Man, His genealogy is traced through His human mother back to the first MAN.  And because John presents Christ as the Son of God, Christ’s genealogy takes us back to the very “beginning” (John 1:1; Gen. 1:1) to show Christ’s deity (that He is, in fact, God and very God), and the fact that the Lord Jesus Christ has always eternally existed in the Godhead.  There has never been a time that Christ wasn’t, and that He wasn’t God and completely co-equal with the Father (Heb. 1:8; Phil. 2:6).  There came a time in history when He was begotten as a SON (John 1:18; Heb. 1:6,8), but He was never a “begotten God” as the Jehovah’s False Witnesses teach and some very popular versions of the Bible teach in John 1:18!  If I were a Jehovah’s False Witness and a Christian met me at their door with a New American Standard Version, I’d make a beeline for John 1:18!

 

Today’s reading is absolutely jam-packed with irrefutable biblical evidence that Jesus Christ is God.  One of the key arguments Jehovah’s False Witnesses assert is that Jesus never actually claimed to be God.  All I can say, is how do you spell “BLIND” (I Cor. 4:4)?!!

 

Familiarize yourself with8:12-57 before we take just a second to comment on Jesus’ statement in verse 58: “Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am.”

 

Do you understand what is actually happening here?  Jesus was declaring to the Pharisees (and to the whole world!) that He was God, using the same name for HIMSELF that Jehovah Himself used when He revealed HIMSELF to Moses in Exodus 3:14!  He claimed to be the Great “I AM”!!!  Listen, there is absolutely nothing that Jesus could have said that would have been a stronger claim of deity!  Note that Jesus did not say, “Before Abraham was, I WAS.”  Jesus is not simply claiming here that He existed before His physical birth (i.e. that He was a begotten God that was begotten of the Father, as were the angels, before Abraham.) He uses the term “I AM” to show that He was not only “a god,” but “THE God” — “JEHOVAH GOD”!!!

 

And be it known, that that is not simply “my” interpretation, or “one way” of interpreting the meaning of the verse!  That this verse is specifically teaching that Christ is, in fact, Jehovah God is made abundantly clear by the response of the Pharisees in the very next verse (verse 59)!  They understood exactly what Jesus was claiming!  That’s why they “took up stones to cast at him.”  Stoning, according to Leviticus 24:16, was the penalty for blasphemy!  They wanted to stone Him because He claimed to be God!

 

The same exact thing happens in chapter 10, verses 22-33.  Jesus makes His absolute claim of deity in verse 30 (again, how totally ludicrous to say that Jesus never claimed to be God!), stating, “I and my Father are one.” The Jehovah’s False Witnesses can claim all they want that that doesn’t mean that Jesus was claiming deity, but the passage teaches otherwise!  Again, those who were listening to Jesus in John 10 understood exactly what Jesus meant by what He said, evidenced by their reaction to it.  In verse 31 they “took up stones again to stone him,” because that was the Old Testament penalty for blasphemy.  Jesus even forced them to identify exactly why they were responding in such a manner so there would never ever be a question about His claim: “Jesus answered them, Many good works have I showed you from my Father; for which of those works do ye stone me? The Jews answered him, saying, For a good work we stone thee not; but for blasphemy; and because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God” (10:32-33).

 

There is no doubt about it, folks, Jesus Christ is God!

 

DAY 313 – TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2012

TODAY’S READING: JOHN 5-7

 

OVERVIEW: 

Christ and the Jewish leaders (5:1-47); Christ and the multitudes (6:1-71); the conflict over Moses (7:1-8:11).

 

HIGHLIGHTS & INSIGHTS:

As we saw in yesterday’s comments, John clearly identifies in chapter 20, verse 30 and 31, that the purpose of this Gospel was to reveal the signs Christ gave during His earthly ministry to prove His deity, so that the gift of life (both eternal and abundant – John 10:10) can be ours.

 

It is important to know that the first three Gospels have been referred to historically as the “Synoptic Gospels.”  The word “synoptic” comes from a Greek world meaning “to see together.”  These three Books, as we have seen, cover the same basic material.  Over 90 percent of the material covered in John’s Gospel is not covered in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.  While these first three Gospels deal primarily with the “events” in the life of Christ, John deals primarily with the “meaning” of these events.  Perhaps the clearest example is the feeding of the 5000.  While all four gospels record the event, only John follows the miracle with the sermon of Christ being the “Bread of Life” (John 6), which provides the explanation of the miracle. 

 

But not only does John emphasize the meaning of the events in the life of Christ, He also emphasizes the PERSON of Christ.  John records key sermons that Jesus preached in which He identified WHO He is, and WHAT He came to the earth to do.  It is significant that in John’s coverage of these sermons, John records the seven “I AM” declarations of Christ.  “I AM” is significant in the fact that it was the name Jehovah God used to reveal who He was to Moses in Exodus 3:14.  As we have noted on previous occasions, seven in the Bible is the number of “perfection” and/or “completion.”  Remember, John’s purpose in this Gospel is to reveal that Christ is “perfectly” and “completely” God (20:30-31)!

 

            1. I AM the Bread of Life. (6:35, 41, 48, 51)

            2. I AM the Light of the World. (8:12; 9:5)

            3. I AM the Door of the Sheep. (10:7, 9)

            4. I AM the Good Shepherd. (10:11, 14)

            5. I AM the Resurrection and the Life. (11:25)

            6. I AM the Way, the Truth, the Life. (14:6)

            7. I AM the True Vine. (15:1, 5)

 

Do note that there are other occasions in John’s Gospel when Jesus refers to Himself as the “I Am” in reference to His deity (4:26; 8:28, 58; 13:19; 18:5, 6, 8), but the above seven are unique in that they are not only descriptive of His deity, but of how He as God provides life (20:30-31).

 

Another very distinct, unique and interesting quality of John’s Gospel is that of the many miracles Christ performed, John chose (under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, of course) to record seven.  And in keeping with his purpose in everything that he recorded in this Gospel (20:31), these seven were specifically chosen to reveal that “Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God.” Not only, however, were these miracles specifically chosen, but they are revealed in a very specific order because they form a “perfect” and “complete” picture of salvation.

 

The first three show the MEANS of salvation:

 

  1. Water into wine (2:1-11) – Salvation is by the WORD of GOD.
  2. Healing the nobleman’s son (4:46-54) – Salvation is by FAITH.
  3. Healing the paralyzed man (5:1-9) – Salvation is by GRACE.

 

The fourth miracle stands by itself to teach that dedicated disciples must give the Bread of Life to lost sinners.

 

  1. Feeding the 5000 (6:1-14) – Salvation is brought to the world by HUMAN MEANS.

                       

The last three show the RESULTS of salvation:

 

  1. Calming the storm (6:15-21) – Salvation brings PEACE.
  2. Healing the blind man (9:1-7) – Salvation brings LIGHT.
  3. Raising of Lazarus (11:38-45) – Salvation brings LIFE.

 

It is also significant to note that each of these seven miracles actually introduced the discourse that followed.  For example: the discourse with Nicodemus was the direct result of the miracles that Nicodemus had witnessed (3:2); the healing of the paralyzed man (5:1-9) led to the discourse in 5:10-47; the feeding of the 5000 was the backdrop of the discourse concerning the Bread of Life (6:1-59); the healing of the blind man in 9:34 that led to him being cast out is what led to the discourse concerning Christ being the Good Shepherd Who never casts anyone out (10:1-41).

 

As we did for each of the other gospels, the following will provide an overall analysis of the Gospel of John:

 

  1. Information About The Author

   His name: John.

   His name means: “Jehovah” (The Lord) is a gracious giver.”

   He is referred to in scripture as the disciple whom Jesus

   loves. (Jn. 21:20-24)

   His father’s name is Zebedee. (Mt. 4:21)

   He has a brother named James. ( Mt. 4:21)

   He was intolerant of others. (Lk. 9:49-56)

   He is one of the two Sons of thunder. (Mk. 3:17)

   His initial ministry was limited to Jews. (Gal. 2:9)

   He was imprisoned on an island calledPatmos. (Rev. 1:9)

   He also wrote the books of Revelation, and I, II, III John.

 

  1. Facts About The Gospel

   Approximate date of writing: 85-90 A.D.

   Written from:Ephesus

   Dates of recorded events:  26 A.D. – 33 A.D.

   Theme: Deity of Christ

   Christ is seen as: Son of God

   Key verse: John 20:31

   Key word: Believe (99 times)

   Chapters: 21

   Verses: 879

   Words: 19,973

 

  1. Features Of This Gospel

   The gospel that identifies Christ as the Son of God more than any other gospel.

   The gospel that has the least number of events recorded in the other gospels. (7)

   Contains 15 fulfilled prophecies

 

  1. A Simple Outline Of This Gospel

    Three Witnesses

            Witness #1 – of His words and works. Chapters 1-12

            Witness #2 – to His witnesses.  Chapters 13-17

            Witness #3 – to the world. Chapters 18-21