Godly Power: Are you ignited?
Many things need power to
work. The power comes in many ways;
through electric, or fire for example.
If you are in a dark room you would turn on a lamp or light a candle to
illuminate the darkness. If you want to
feel heat in your home, you fire up your furnace or light the fire place. However, these things will not bring forth
the desired results if you do not ignite the flame or turn on the power source. If you do not ignite the flame within your
furnace for example, you will be cold until the fire is ignited. The power source has to be turned on or
ignited if you want your stove to produce heat to cook your meals. Today, I want us to look at another source of
power, godly power and what happens when it is ignited.
ACTS 1:1-8
**6
Then they gathered around him and asked him, “Lord, are you at this time going
to restore the kingdom to Israel?”
7 He said to them:
“It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own
authority. 8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes
on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”
~ I wrote about Jesus
(acts 1:1) Former book:
The
book of Acts starts with us reflecting back on the foundation that was set
before us in the “former book.” The book of Luke was written to give a reliable
and precise record of the history of Jesus Christ's
life. Luke paid great attention to
detail, including dates and events that happened throughout the life of Christ. His account shares with us the suffering of
Christ and all He did for us. A theme
that is emphasized in the Gospel of Luke is the humanity of Jesus Christ and
his perfection as a human. Jesus was the perfect man who gave the
perfect sacrifice for sin, therefore, providing the perfect Savior for
humankind. The message of this Gospel was intended for instruction (1:4) for
those among whom the book would be circulated. He wanted to commend the preaching of the
gospel to the whole world.
Act’s
starts, then with a point of reminding the disciples of the foundation that had
already been laid (on the life, death and resurrection of Jesus) and this
foundation is what was now leading them into this new chapter, the building of
the kingdom. For sure, the disciples are
ready and understand fully what is to come, right? Sorry, no, we have a problem…
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Then they gathered around him and
asked him, ‘Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?’”
(Acts 1:6)
~The disciples did not understand the kingdom. They were expecting Jesus
to set up an earthly, Davidic like kingdom where he would appoint them
positions of great honor and esteem.
They did not yet understand that the kingdom was HERE, the godly kingdom
that would never end.
~Today we do not understand the kingdom. We are no different today than the disciples
of Jesus’ time. We still do not fully
understand the kingdom. Many are
expecting Jesus to set up an “earthly domain” for them to rule or a place that
allows them comfort and ease. They are
excepting positions and places where they will be esteemed. Yet, to live for Christ does not always bring
honor and esteem, but ridicule, rejection, persecution and suffering for the
cause of Christ (Acts 15:26).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But you will receive power when the
Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all
Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth.” (Acts 1:8)
Yet, we do
not have to be discouraged! Jesus promises all
that will believe and follow Him the power to carry out the work of the
kingdom. In the scripture above, Jesus
tells the disciples where they will be able to go and do because of the power
being ignited within each of them. (Note:
this same power is available to us today to accomplish the same tasks).
The power of God would make them
able to go to:
Jerusalem
~ they would be able to go to their home town and to the same temples that
crucified Christ. The power would help
them to deal with the different groups and belief systems.
·
The Zealot movement took the
revolutionary option. It advocated outward violence, even armed rebellion, to
rid Israel of Roman oppression. {God’s power would help them tell the people to
stop trusting in their war-plans, and trust in Jesus}
·
The Sadducees were the great
pragmatists (practical thinkers) of the day. As wealthy lay-nobles, priests and
aristocrats, they sought to conserve their wealth and power through compromise
with Rome. Most of the members of the Sanhedrin
were from the Sadducee group. {God’s power would equip them to tell the people to
stop trusting in their money and status, and stop going along to get along. They had to tell them a relationship with
Christ was the only thing of great value.}
·
The Pharisees were in many ways the
idealists of Jewish society. Most of the
Scribes (the 'theologians' of the day) were Pharisees. In general, the Pharisees sought to live a
life of spiritual purity by a meticulous following of the torah (Jewish
law). They did not believe in compromise
with the Romans (as did the Sadducees) or in revolutionary activity (as did the
Zealots). Jesus rebuke of the Pharisees
was because of the emphasis on the law that resulted in legalism which in turn,
became a pretext for hypocrisy. They
believed in the resurrection of the dead. From their perspective, Jesus seemed to
relativize the law which explains their anger towards him. {God’s power would help them tell the people to stop trusting in their
observation of the Law or in their traditions. They had to tell them traditions
don’t save, heal, set free or deliver only a relationship with Christ does.}
·
Finally, there were
the Essenes who solved the
problem of Jewish identity in a Roman-occupied Israel by withdrawing to a
monastic-like setting. They completely
opted out of mainstream Jewish society. The most notable group in Jesus' time was the
Qumran community who lived an ascetic life and was waiting for God's
apocalyptic intervention in human history. {God’s
power in them would help them tell the people to stop withdrawing from the world, from suffering and being
involved, and to get engage in kingdom building.}
Judea – They would be able
to go to the homeland, which was accustomed to Jewish religion, not
Christianity, and share the message that would convert from traditions and
relying on the Laws of Moses, to a faith in Jesus Christ.
For
the ordinary people of the Jewish homeland, Rome was a kind of dominant
political factor. Although they might
not have seen Romans on a day-to-day basis, the imposition of Roman power was
certainly there. Everyone knew that Rome
was the source of both the wealth and also the source of some of the problems
that occurred in the Jewish state. So
the political reality of the day was of a dominant power overseeing the life on
a day-to-day basis. The disciples were empowered to encourage others to trust
God and stop looking at the government as the problem or the savior of their
situations, but look to God.
The Jewish inhabitants of
Samaria identified Mount Gerizim as the chosen place of God and the only center
of worship, calling it the “navel of the earth” because of a tradition that
Adam sacrificed there. Their scriptures were limited to the Pentateuch, the
first five books of the Bible. Moses was
regarded as the only prophet and intercessor in the final judgment. They also believed 6,000 years after creation,
a Restorer would arise and would live on earth for 110 years. On the Judgment Day, the righteous would be
resurrected in paradise and the wicked roasted in eternal fire.
In
the days of Christ, the relationship between the Jews and the Samaritans was
greatly strained (Luke 9:52-54;
Luke 10:25-37;
Luke 17:11-19;
John 8:48). The
animosity was so great that the Jews bypassed Samaria as they traveled between
Galilee and Judea. They went an extra distance through the barren land of Perea
on the eastern side of the Jordan to avoid going through Samaria. Yet Jesus
rebuked His disciples for their hostility to the Samaritans (Luke 9:55-56),
healed a Samaritan leper (Luke 17:16),
honored a Samaritan for his neighborliness (Luke 10:30-37),
praised a Samaritan for his gratitude (Luke 17:11-18),
asked a drink of a Samaritan woman (John 4:7), and
preached to the Samaritans (John 4:40-42).
Then in Acts 1:8, Jesus
challenged His disciples to witness in Samaria. Philip, a deacon, opened a
mission in Samaria (Acts 8:5).
The empowerment would help the disciples to
come to the fullness of Christ and heal the differences between them and
the Samaritans.
You may be saying to yourself, “I’m
saved and am filled with God’s spirit, so what does this have to do with me?” Good questions. My question then to you is why aren’t you
igniting or fanning the flame?
2 Timothy
1:6-11
6 For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying
on of my hands. 7 For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid,
but gives us power, love and self-discipline. 8 So do not be ashamed
of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner. Rather, join with me in
suffering {misery to my fleshly man} for the gospel, by the power of God. 9
He has saved us and called us to a holy
life—not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and
grace.
Fan the fire:
what does that mean? To fan a fire, you must continually give it “air”, oxygen so
that it will continue to grow. If air is cut off from a fire, it will
eventually go out. This means, we must actively allow the “air” the breath of
God, to fuel His Spirit within us. This means, we cannot become comfortable
where we are presently. If we do not
continue to “fan into flame” the gifts in us they can become cold and we can lose
our zeal for telling the gospel message and for kingdom building.
If we examine ourselves and
we are not sharing the gospel with our “neighborhoods”, or “homeland” to our “enemies”
and to the “entire world” we must ask ourselves are we truly fanning the
flame? Are we doing kingdom work or have
we become comfortable within our own “kingdom domains”? Have we become like one of the groups God
sent the disciples back to reach? Have
we withdraw from the world and become a modern day Essenes? Have we become
comfortable reading our Bible and praying, without every looking outside our
church doors to those around us? Have we
become like the Sadducees, wheeling
and dealing to accomplish our own agendas and programs? Have we become like the Pharisees, happy to
promote our traditions and heaven forbid anyone try to do anything
differently. We were not mean to become
like those that the disciples were sent to minister, we were to become the “disciples”
that were sent to make a difference!
Today we need to ask God to
re-ignite our flame for sharing the gospel with a lost and dying world. We need
to ask Him to help us if we have found ourselves conforming to the patterns of
those that Jesus came to change.
Prayer: Lord, forgive us for losing
sight of what kingdom work looks like.
We ask you to reignite us with your power and help us to go into all the
world and share the good news of Christ.
Help us to activate the gifts that are with us. Help us to become true worshippers,
worshiping you in spirit and in truth.
Today we seek to walk in your godly power---ignite us again! Amen.
Resources:
Biblegateway.com. http://www.biblegateway.com/
Carson, D. & Douglas, J. (2005). An Introduction to the New Testament.
Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.
Elwell, W. & Yarbrough, R. (2005). Encountering the New Testament. Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Academic.
Matthew Henry’s Commentary
of the Whole Bible. (1991). United States: Henrickson Publishers.
Youngblood, R. (Ed.). (1995). Nelsons New
Illustrated Bible Dictionary. Nashville,
TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers.
No comments:
Post a Comment