Blueprint #7 - Church at Its Best and Worst

READ – Acts 4:32-5:11

Many Christians read the book of Acts with all its incredible stories of God’s undeniable work and power in people’s lives and say, “We need to go back to days of the book of Acts! The church today is weak and ineffective, the early church was so powerful and impactful!” Then we read stories about people selling property and giving all the money to the church. We read about people lying and dropping dead on the spot. Then we think, “Ok… everything except that. That’s too much”. What can we learn from stories of such radical (reckless?) generosity and such seemingly unpredictable judgment?

This passage is a study in contrasts. It’s like two ends of the spectrum – at one end we see what God wants to build into churches and lives and, on the other, what he wants people and churches to avoid at all costs. They are glimpses of church at its best and the church at its worst.

1. THE CHURCH AT ITS BEST

In addition to the narrative that makes up most of the book of Acts, Luke (the author) regularly pauses to summarize so we don’t miss what is happening. The first of these narrative “pauses” is Acts 2:42-47. There Luke describes the first church in action. The next pause is here in Acts 4:32-37. When we read these summaries side by side we note 2 things they share in common – there is a focus on doctrine and there is a focus on the poor. The gospel is being preached and radical generosity is meeting needs. This is church at its best according to Acts.

Sometimes we talk about church as if we have to choose between a strong focus on doctrine and a strong focus on helping the needy. Acts tells us both are needed. The best churches are marked by gospel truth + gospel generosity. Notice that this wasn’t communism – nothing was forced; it wasn’t communal ownership. But also notice this wasn’t capitalism. Though everything was voluntary, it wasn’t about private ownership either. In this church, “no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own”. Everything was God’s. It was about God’s ownership of all. Since the church was God’s family, when needs arose, people joyfully used what God had given them to help.

2. THE CHURCH AT ITS WORST

Joseph (4:36-37) was a member of the Jewish priestly class who owned property. This meant he was wealthy man of social standing. Acts tells us Joseph was one of the people who sold land to help the needy in the church. He was a man of generosity and encouragement. So much so, he got a nickname from the apostles. They said, “There are too many Josephs out there – we are going to call you Barnabas! (which means Son of Encouragement). He’s an example of church at its best.

When we are introduced to Ananias and Sapphira the parallels are eerily similar (Acts 5:1-2). But something’s off. They wanted the recognition and honor of Barnabas without the heart of Barnabas. So they lied. They acted like they were doing the same thing he did but they kept back some of the money for themselves. One at a time they “dropped dead”.

Wow. Why did God judge them so immediately and – to our mind – so harshly? Peter is clear. They didn’t have to sell their property. When they decided to sell it, they didn’t have to give any of it to the church. So why were they judged? Their judgment was for lying – for hypocrisy (5:3,4). Hypocrisy is wearing a mask; pretending to be one thing while you are another.

Why does God see this as the worst thing that can happen in the church? Think about this - what happens when God allows hypocrisy to happen in the church unchecked and unaddressed? It means the death of the church. It means the church is a lie; a pretend church. God means to build a real church -  where real sinful, broken people don’t have to hide or pretend but can come take the masks off and come to Him. So, God chose this one incident at the church’s beginning to show us the one thing that will kill the church, the worst sin in the church—hypocrisy.

3. JESUS FOR PEOPLE AND CHURCHES AT THEIR WORST

This story teaches that the worst thing we can do is try to hide who we are and where we are at from God. But the truth is at one level or another, we all do this. We are all hypocrites. We all pretend and wear masks. Why? It’s because we are afraid to take the mask off. We are afraid to be seen at our worst.

Here’s where the gospel can cure us of hypocrisy. Jesus brings two things together that we never thought could go together = great grace and great fear. Acts 4:33 says “great grace was on all of them” and 5:11 says “great fear came on the whole church”. We might wonder how can these two things co-exist? But its when great fear and great grace come together in Jesus that we can be free of hypocrisy. How does this work?

1) We need to face the worst about us. This is a fearful thing. We need to be shown our sin, the mask needs to be taken off. The only way it comes off is if something is greater than our fear of being seen at worst; greater than our fear of what people think about us. This is the great fear of God - awe and reverence in light of His holiness.

2) We need to feel the full force of God’s grace for us. We need to be loved when our sin is revealed, even at its worst. When the mask comes off we need to be embraced, approved and accepted. This is the great grace of God in Christ.

At the cross, we see sin unmasked for what it is - deserving of the full judgment and wrath of God. At the cross, we see God’s great grace and love for sinners revealed for what it is - unstoppable, unfazed at our sin at the worst, willing to bear, to take it, to “become” it (Gal. 3:13, 2 Cor. 5:21) for us so we’d be set free from its shame and come out of hiding.

When am I really at my worst? Christianity’s answer is so surprising. It’s misunderstood by those who are not Christians and it should never get old for Christians. When am I really at my worst? Not when I’m a sinner sinning. I’m at my worst when I’m a sinner pretending and hiding. There’s nothing more transformative to the human heart than being seen at our worst and still being loved. That’s what God does for us in Jesus.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.       What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions?

2.      One commentator says Acts 4:33 could be translated, “No one staked a claim on his possessions.” The gospel meant a new stake was put down on each person’s life and all they owned.   Which of your God-given resource(s) do you most stake a claim on in your life? Why do you think this is? What would it look like to put a new stake in it – “God’s”?

3.       What difference would it make if we believed we have greater security and greater status in Jesus than we could ever have in what we own?

4.      Why do you think people and churches feel we need to choose between a focus on teaching and a focus on helping the poor? Why are both important? What might it look like for our church to focus on both?

5.      Do you agree that hypocrisy is the worst sin in the church? Why or why not?

6.      How would you answer someone who said, “I don’t believe in Christianity and I’m not interested in church because the church is full of hypocrites.”? How would this passage help you respond?

7.       How does the gospel address our deep fear of taking our masks off and being seen at our worst? How has this happened (or how is it happening in your life)?

8.      When am I really at my worst? Not when I’m a sinner sinning. I’m at my worst when I’m a sinner pretending and hiding. What difference would it make if you believed this? What difference would it make in a church if the whole church lived like this?

Blueprint #6 - Prayer and Adversity

READ – Acts 4:23-31

Everything was going great. The momentum was building. The Holy Spirit filled the church, the preaching was bold and powerful, 3000 people came to faith in Jesus – and this was only the first day of the church’s existence! The next few months were filled with joy, radical acts of generosity, awe, heartfelt praise to God and deeper connection to others than they had ever experienced. One day a man who had been crippled from birth was suddenly healed and was leaping in the temple praising God. As everyone stared in shock, Peter told the crowds that this man’s healing was a sign of the spiritual healing that had come in Jesus (3:19-20) and the coming restoration of all things (3:21). This is when the religious leaders had enough. They thought they were done with Jesus once and for all. But instead of Jesus’ death squelching the movement, somehow it was only making it stronger. They seized Peter and John, held them overnight and told them never to talk about Jesus again. The young church was faced with its first experience of adversity. How did they respond? They prayed. Their prayer teaches us some very important lessons about prayer – especially praying in adversity.

1. THE GROUNDS FOR PRAYER

Grounds #1 – Our Adversity. Life with be full of adversity. Prayer is how God meets us in our adversity. Apart from prayer we won’t be able to make sense of or mature through the adversity we face. The church needed to go back to their prayer book (the Psalms, see 4:25, 26) to understand that faithfulness to Jesus (the King, the Messiah) didn’t guarantee an adversity-free (or adversity-lite) life. In fact, it was in adversity that Jesus accomplished his greatest work. The same is true for his people.

Grounds #2 – God’s Sovereignty. None of our adversity is outside of God’s sovereignty - his loving and good plan for us. Prayer is where we learn to see all our adversity in light of God’s sovereignty. The church began by praying God’s sovereignty into their situation (4:24). They prayed Psalm 2 to remember that the worst thing that happened in the history of the world (the cross) was a part of God’s plan. He had predestined it to take place. In the worst thing that happened (the greatest evil) in the world, God planned to bring about the best thing, the greatest good. The same is true for how he works in our adversity.

2. THE CONTENT OF PRAYER

Praying Scripture. Often, we don’t know what to pray. We just don’t seem to have the words. Other times our prayers seem like one long wish list of requests. Notice where this prayer begins. Before anyone asks for anything, they pray Scripture (Psalm 146, Psalm 2). Before they asked for anything – they LISTENED. Prayer is not a one-way conversation. Praying Scripture is how we listen to God and hear him speak into our adversity.

Praying for Boldness (not to be comfortable). The most striking aspect of this prayer is that the church did not pray for an end to adversity! Instead they asked for boldness. They prayed the gospel into their situation. They prayed for the boldness to believe that their adversity could not ultimately defeat them. They remembered that God wins through defeat; that Jesus was raised from the grave; that God turned the tables on evil. Since God uses adversity to make us more like Jesus, to bring glory to Himself and show the world who He is, they asked for boldness to keep speaking this message of unconquerable hope.

3. THE GOAL OF PRAYER

Much of our disappointment about prayer comes from having the wrong goal. We can be very religious in our prayers believing that if we are living rightly and asking rightly, God will give us what we want.  We can be very irreligious when it comes to prayer, thinking, “God didn’t answer me when I prayed for ______, so what difference does prayer really make?” Both these approaches to prayer look different, but both treat prayer as a means to an end. A Christian doesn’t pray to simply get more from God. A Christian prays to get more of God. This is the ultimate goal of prayer.

Notice the order of how God answered their prayer. They asked for boldness, but God didn’t answer by zapping them with boldness. He fills them with the Holy Spirit. Which is another way of saying, He gives them himself. In being full of God’s presence, they become bold.

A GUIDE FOR PRAYING IN COMMUNITY

Based on Acts 4:23-31

Notice that the church in their adversity did not retreat to their private prayer corners for individual times of prayer. They prayed together in community. Praying with others in adversity is critical. Left to ourselves, we often can’t pray in our adversity or we struggle to find a sense of God’s presence as we pray. Private prayer is essential – but it’s not enough to get us through times of adversity. We need to join our hearts and voices with others. This guide for prayer is focused on learning to pray in community through our (and others’) adversity.

1. What adversity are you currently facing? What’s most challenging in your life right now? Share with the group.

2.  “The perspective of God’s sovereignty… is perhaps the most important teaching that [we] need to have in times of crisis” (Ajith Fernando). Before asking God for anything, begin by praying passages of Scripture focused on God’s sovereignty like the church did in 4:26.

·         Psalm 146 is where they turned. You can begin praying this Psalm line by line as an outline.

o   Other suggestions: Isaiah 40:12-32 or use the first few phrases of the Lord’s Prayer as an outline.

o   Our challenges and trials can cause us to lose sight of God and his sovereignty. Our adversity becomes bigger than us, bigger than God, bigger than anything else in our lives. Pray that God would again become bigger to you than your adversity.

3. Pray the gospel into your adversity like the church did in 4:27-28.

·         Thank Jesus for how He chose adversity for your salvation.

·         Thank Jesus for how He knows what your adversity feels like. (see Hebrews 4:14-16)

·         Thank Jesus for how He faced the temptations of adversity for you (i.e. believing that God doesn’t love us or care for us, losing hope, wanting his will over God’s will).

·         Thank Jesus for how He defeated adversity through his suffering and bold love.

·         Thank Jesus for how He uses our adversity for our good and God’s glory (even when we can’t see how) – Read and pray slowly through Romans 8:18-39.

4. Ask God for His comfort, strength and boldness in adversity like the church did in 4:29-30. Ask for the filling of the Holy Spirit to drive out fear, anxiety and worry. Pray this for each other.

·         Use Ephesians 3:14-19 as guide for this kind of prayer.

Blueprint #5 - Power

READ – Acts 3:1-4:22  | POWER

One of the central claims of Christianity is that, in the early part of the first century, Jesus of Nazareth was killed by the religious and political powers of Jerusalem for claiming to be God in the flesh. Three days later He miraculously rose from death. While the implications of that are inexhaustible, one implication is clear: Jesus’ resurrection introduced a new kind of power in the world. That’s what is on display in Acts 3-4 – the power of the new creation in the healing of a disabled beggar. It’s clear that the audience of the miracle were particularly interested in the power at work in Peter and John. The crowds were amazed by the power (Acts 3:12) and the Sanhedrin or religious rulers were annoyed by it (Acts 4:7). What is this power and how does it connect with our life today? That’s the focus of Sunday’s message.

1. WHERE’S THE POWER FROM?

The concept of power may be too abstract for us. Nevertheless, it is a very present part of our experience. Consider this: power is the capacity to affect reality. Think of a typical workplace. Power is always at work in any organization or institution. Some have legitimate power because they’re in a higher position that necessitates control over people in lower positions. Some have the power of an expert – they are influencers because they hold the right academic degrees or have the right experience. Some people you know have connectional power. They attain influence and clout in the company by gaining favor with their higher ups.

In Acts 3-4 there’s two hints about where people look for power and Peter’s message about where power can ultimately be found.

·         Looking Out | Some people look out to find power in external structures, rituals, or strong leaders. For 1st century Jews and pagans, power often came from temple(s). At the center of Judaism was the temple in Jerusalem. This was the place where a powerful connection with God could be found through worship and the place where God had promised to be powerfully present. For the modern, secular West, our places and people of power are not necessarily religious temples, but we still look out to find power. Consider Silicon Valley and the allure of technology to shape and affect reality into a better world.

·         Looking In | Some people look inward for power. For a 1st century audience, power could come from people who were highly spiritual and religious. Thus, Peter deflects attention away from himself after the miraculous healing (Acts 3:12). For 21st century people, we too often look to the self. You can discover countless self-help strategies that invite you to ignore external validation and instead become confident and bold by living up to your own standards, following your own North Star, or focusing on your own self-worth.

·         Looking Up | Peter points us to another way. He invites us to look up. If you are unsure whether or not the power demonstrated through Peter and John is really necessary, then consider this: isn’t the world and our lives filled with brokenness? Aren’t all of us (in countless ways) reaching for some kind of capacity to affect reality, to move things towards a better place? You may have relationships that are disintegrating and you feel helpless. Your kids may be ignoring Jesus and chasing after false idols and you’re powerless. You may be stuck in a job where people are abusing their power, and you are incapable of changing the system. Peter fixes our attention on the reality that God has housed and centered his power on Jesus of Nazareth.

2. WHAT’S THE POWER FOR?

The miraculous healing of the lame beggar by Jesus through the words of Peter and John shows us not only the source of power, but the purpose of the power.

First, the healing is a prophetic pointer to the cosmic healing of all physical brokenness and disability. Peter’s claim in Acts 3:21 is that Jesus’ reign will eventually result in the restoration of all things spoken of through the prophets. The Old Testament spoke often of a time when all things would be put back to rights by a chosen and anointed Messiah, a Rescuer who would come not only to make the blind see, the deaf hear, and the lame walk, but vanquish the powers that had caused the world to give way to entropy and death. Miracles in the Bible aren’t just a show of strength, but a sign about the alleviation of all suffering that’s coming through the Messiah. That means that God cares about the material world. He cares about your body. He cares about suffering and brokenness and is no happier with all of it than we are.

Second, the physical healing of the beggar also points to the spiritual healing of sinful brokenness. The man’s physical condition before the healing pointed toward our spiritual condition right now. He was disabled in his body; but the Bible’s claim is that we are all disabled in our hearts. We are constantly looking to sources of power we think will fix our problems and offer us a better world, but they actually won’t – just like some spare money from Peter wouldn’t have healed the man of his primary problem. God says that our deepest, primary problem is sin. Sin is a kind of spiritual disease. It disables us. It cripples everything we do and touch. It twists and distorts the ways in which we desire and utilize power – whether it’s money, control, significance. But it’s not something that only works on us, we also actively choose it. Peter says as much in his sermon to the religious elite in Acts 4 – sin is the rejection of Jesus, the cornerstone, the ultimate Power in the universe.

3. HOW DO WE ACCESS THE POWER?

So how do we access the power? Repentance and faith. That’s what Peter says in Acts 3:19 and Acts 3:16.  

Repentance is a kind of turning back from our own pursuit of power. It’s admitting we are not in control. It’s the confession that we are powerless. Ironically, repentance is a giving up of power that is in fact powerful. In repentance we place ourselves under the command and control of Jesus, the Christ, the Author of our lives and life itself. But in submitting to him, we are inviting the Source of all power to enter our lives and utilize us for his kingdom.

Faith is trusting in “the Name” of Jesus. That’s another way of saying the reality of Jesus. His Name stands for who he is. So faith in His Name means trusting and banking your entire reality on Jesus. If power is all about the capacity to do something to achieve a result, then faith is the opposite: it’s the recognition and rest in the results already accomplished by Jesus. It’s leaning your entire life into Jesus’ capacity and ability, not your own.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.       What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions?

2.      Is power in and of itself wrong? Why or why not? Are there legitimate uses of power? Explain.

3.       Are there ways in which you look out or look in to find power? The sermon mentioned the tech world of Silicon Valley and the techniques of self-help. What are some other ways in which we look to sources of power besides God? How do you think looking out and looking in rather than looking up affects the way we seek and use power?

4.      The power on display in Acts 3-4 points towards both cosmic physical healing and personal spiritual healing. What are some ways you have experienced God’s powerful grace in healing you this week? What are areas of brokenness in our neighborhood, culture, and world that you are longing for God to heal? What does prayer for both kinds of healing look like?

5.      Jesus was the stone rejected that became the cornerstone. He was the crucified criminal who became the King of the world. How does that shape your view and pursuit of power? What does it look like to follow Jesus with the power he grants us?

Blueprint #4 - The First Church

READ – Acts 2:42-47 | THE FIRST CHURCH

“Can’t I have Jesus without the church?” “Do we really need organized and institutionalized religion?” “What is the church for?” These are questions many people are asking. You may be asking these questions yourself.  As the one and only history of the first church, the book of Acts is the best place for us to go to find answers to these questions. The best place for us to start is on the day the church was born.    

It was a dramatic start. The first day of the church included rushing wind, fire and people speaking languages they had never heard before. The first sermon was powerful and inspiring. In one day 3000 were baptized into the church. But Acts 2 says the real highlight wasn’t all these extraordinary and spectacular events and or big results. The real awe, power, gladness and attraction was found in the ordinary and daily life of the church. A church like this is the blueprint for the kind of church Jesus seeks to build today.

1. WE WHY NEED A CHURCH LIKE THIS

The bible teaches that our need for community is rooted in the very nature of God and reality itself. God exists in community as Father, Son and Spirit. As human beings made in the image of God, we were made for community and relationship. This is why the book of Acts isn’t a collection of stories of Jesus working in isolated individual lives, it’s the story of Jesus building churches like the one in Acts 2 in every place across the ancient world.  We need a church like this because it’s only in community where we find Jesus in all his fullness and where we find what we need to become more like him.

Acts 2:42 is a one sentence summary of the kind of community every person needs. We need a church like this because there are 4 things we were never meant to (and can’t) do on our own.

1.       Learn – The apostle’s teaching is listed first intentionally. This teaching was centered on the gospel. Every day they learned more about who Jesus is, all he did and is doing for broken sinners. This was the heart, center and priority of the church. They needed a community to learn it, to ask questions about it and to work out its implications in their lives.

2.      Have Stuff – Acts says they were devoted to “the fellowship”. “Fellowship” means the sharing of life and resources. They “held everything in common” (v44). This doesn’t mean they gave up on the concept of private property; but it does mean they gave up on the concept of anyone’s ultimate ownership of their stuff. If it was all God’s, he could redirect at any time to meet the needs of others.

3.       Eat – “the breaking of bread”. The one program, strategy and context for all ministry in this church was eating in people’s homes. Eating is meant to be a communal act - an act that fosters belonging and creates bonds between people and with God. 

4.      Pray – The phrase here can be translated “the prayers”. It refers to regular set times for corporate prayer. Private and unplanned prayer is essential, but it is not sufficient for us to sustain our spiritual lives. We are meant to connect with God together through prayer.

2. HOW WE RESIST A CHURCH LIKE THIS

Although we may be intrigued and inspired at the thought of being a part of a church like this, the reason finding a church like this is so hard is that we all resist it. Why we anyone resist being a part of such a vibrant community?

#1 - We resist the commitment – The word devoted in 2:42 carries a radical intensity and commitment. Nothing about this church was accidental, casual or “organic”. The met “every day in the temple and from house to house”. This makes us uncomfortable. If we’re honest, most of us think, “I’m all for community, but it needs to be on my terms. I’ll need an opt out clause which I can use at any time if things get awkward, difficult or hard.”  But this church’s vibrancy and power came from everyone leaving their opt-out clauses at the door.

#2 - We resist the ownership – “Now all the believers were together and held all things in common” (2:46) The phrase “were together” is hard to translate. It means that each person said, “I have a part in the church being and becoming what it is meant to be just as much as anyone else. That’s ownership. The language we use for our part in the church reveals an underlying perspective. We talk about “going to church” as if it were an event among many on our calendars. This church shows us what it means not to “go to church” but to “be the church”. Church was who they were. They knew that God saves us each from sin but also saves us each into the church. Every Christian is a member and part of the church.  So, we each have a part to play, a part to own in a particular church. The bible knows no such thing as solo Christianity, private faith, Jesus without the church or quitting the church.

3. HOW JESUS BUILDS A CHURCH LIKE THIS

If everyone needs a community like this yet everyone resists it, how can we ever build a church like this? The answer is that we can’t. No human effort, strategy or resolve is enough. It must be built by Jesus. When we read this passage in context, it’s clear that this church’s devotion and ownership didn’t happen as a result of a pastor’s vision or a church’s programs. What we see is Jesus ascending, Jesus sending his Spirit, the Spirit speaking the gospel about Jesus through Peter and – a church like this is born. This passage isn’t a strategy or a program – it’s a fulfillment. It’s Jesus building what he intended to build for humanity from the beginning. A human community where needs are met, God is worshipped, joy is contagious, and people are truly one.

But how can Jesus build this church through broken and resistant people like us? It’s the good news of forgiveness that cures us of our avoidance of commitment and ownership (2:38). Forgiveness means God says to every Christian:

·         I don’t see you as a sinner or problem but as a holy saint and beloved child. Your sin—past, present, future—is forgiven.

·         I will never make you pay for your sins and failures. The debt is paid.

·         Your sins/faults don’t stand in the way of our relationship or my love.

·         Your sins/faults will never stop me from doing good for you and being for you always.

Because Jesus paid the full cost of our forgiveness at the cross, God always responds to our sin this way. No exceptions. With regard to God’s community, the church, forgiveness means the cost to get in and the cost to stay in has been paid in full by another. There’s no other community like this. When we are free from earning our place or trying to keep our place in a community, we are free to love, accept and serve other broken sinful people as they are. This is how Jesus builds a church like this.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.       What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions?

2.      Which of the 4 things we were never meant to (and can’t) do alone (from Acts 2:42) do you most find yourself trying to do all alone? How might this change?

3.       Which do you find yourself resisting more when it comes to church – commitment or ownership? Why?

4.      Read the section below. Do you agree/disagree? How is the dynamic at work in your life?

We believe that the freedom from commitment is what guards our happiness. We can’t be tied down to some boring same ole, same ole. What if we miss out on something better? We want the individual freedom to seek happiness elsewhere, so we think we need to safeguard our joy, happiness in life by having freedom from commitment. Acts 2:42-47 shows us that it’s the other way around - The freedom in commitment is what guards true happiness. If everyone can opt out at any time for any good reason, no one is safe enough to be themselves, no one feels safe enough to be honest. But with commitment comes the safety to be ourselves and – by God’s grace – to be forgiven, loved and served despite my flaws, mess and sin. This is how we experience true wonder, joy and happiness in relationships.

5.      What difference would it make in our churches if we applied the gospel to our relationships in this way:

·         The people in my church are more weak, sinful, broken than they’ll ever realize or admit. I’ll expect sin, misunderstanding and friction.

·         The people in my church are more loved, accepted and forgiven than they’ll ever know. Sin, misunderstanding and friction are opportunities for me to show them this by forgiving them.

·         I’ll never have to forgive more than I’ve been forgiven.

Blueprint #3 - The First Sermon

READ – Acts 2:21-41  | THE FIRST SERMON

Acts chapter 2 is all about firsts. Luke tells us about the first day of the church – the day of Pentecost (2:1-14). He paints a powerful picture of the first church in action (2:42-47). But at the center of everything was the first sermon ever preached (Acts 2:21-41). It was the highlight of the first day. It was this sermon that inspired thousands to be baptized and join this radical new movement of people that believed Jesus was risen and reigning over the world.  Does it strike you as one of the most (if not THE most) powerful and effective sermon/speech ever? What’s most notable about the sermon is that leaves the audience asking, “What should we do?” (v.37). Isn’t a good Christian sermon all about telling people what to do and not to do? Maybe we’ve got it all wrong.

Peter’s sermon is essentially an exposition of one verse from the book of Joel. As Peter explains each phrase of this verse, we see what the central message of Christianity is and how we get it all wrong if we think it’s about what we do.

1. “EVERYONE”

Peter explains that the last days spoken of in Joel 2 have come. A new inclusion has come to the world. It’s something neither Israel nor the world had ever seen or ever thought possible. In the last days God will call “everyone” into a new community – i.e. “sons and daughters”, “young and old”, “servants both male and female”. The Holy Spirit was poured out equally on all regardless of gender, age, social class or race (language). Peter’s sermon is announcing to all: Jesus is the most inclusive force the world has ever known.  Jesus is inclusive to everyone.

Peter’s sermon is given to “devout Jewish people from every nation”. This is a gathering of the most religious and faithful people in the world at the time. Peter’s message to them – you are just like everyone. You need to call out to the Lord just like those who you think are “far off” (v.38). He called them to repent. Their religious devotion couldn’t save them. Peter is clear – Jesus doesn’t just offend “sinners”; Jesus offends everyone who thinks their goodness is better than anyone else’s. Jesus is offensive to everyone.

2. “WHO CALLS ON”

When Peter pauses to catch his breath, the crowd asks, “What should we do?” (v.37) We can imagine Peter thinking, “Do!? Have you been listing to my sermon! I didn’t say you needed to do anything. I’ve been talking about Jesus - It’s all been done by Him. Just turn your life toward Him, He will do it for you and in you. Be baptized in his name. Let your name (all that you are and have done) be washed, covered and submerged into His name (all that He is and has done).” It’s that effortless, like water being poured over you. We just call on Him and he does the rest. Calling on Jesus is more effortless than anything.

You might be thinking, “If it’s that effortless and easy then why isn’t it automatic? Doesn’t something need to happen for someone to become or to grow as a Christian?” Yes! But it’s not something we can just do or decide upon ourselves – like a new diet or a self-help resolution. The Word has to pierce us and cut us in the deepest place in the core of our being (our heart, v.36). No one calls out until they’re first cut to the heart.

How does the human heart get pierced? It’s when the words “Jesus, whom you crucified” become personal. The cross show us the true nature and depth of our sin. But at the same time, the cross shows us the true nature and depth of God’s love for us, personally. What pierces the heart is when one can say "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners - and I am the worst of them.” (1 Tim 1:15). Calling on Jesus is more painful than anything. It’s this painful piercing that finally breaks the hardness of our hearts so that God can pour in His Spirit, his love, his forgiveness and his grace.

3. “THE NAME OF THE LORD”

Peter spends most of his sermon showing how calling on the “name of the Lord” means calling on Jesus. In the bible “name” = “person”. The name of the Lord is shorthand for all of who Jesus is and all that he has done, is doing and will do. This puts everything we do into perspective. Nothing we do to become Christians or grow as Christians is outside of our personal connection, union and relationship to Him. Everything must come back to the name of Jesus. We don’t call on Jesus to get something from Him. We call on Him. What we most need is not to get something from Him, what we most need is His name - Him.

Peter also shows from Scripture that calling on Jesus means calling on Him as Lord. In quoting Psalm 110 (v.34-35), Peter announces that Jesus is the Lord at God’s right hand and that everything must (and will) come under the name of Jesus. The bible says there are only 3 categories of persons in the universe – the Lord, those who call upon the name of the Lord and the enemies of the Lord. What Jesus shows us in His life, death and resurrection is that the hostility is not on God’s side but on ours. We could summarize the whole ministry and teaching of Jesus as announcing to the world, “God is NOT your enemy!” This is the lie beneath all other lies. Our true enemies are our own self-centeredness/independence, our self-righteousness, sin, the flesh, the world and the devil - everything that works to keep us away from God and knowing that he loves us and he made us for joy in his presence. Here is the key to Christian obedience - when we see God is not and never can be our enemy. Everything he calls us to surrender to Him is for our ultimate good. This is the message of the cross (Romans 5:10) When we see this, we gladly submit everything to him.

4. “WILL BE SAVED”

There is a certainty in these last three words. As Peter concludes, he says we can know with “certainty this Jesus is Lord and Messiah”. When we look for certainty in what we do, how good or consistent we are, or how we feel we will be disappointed. These things are not certain. When we look for certainty in finances, success, achievements, relationships, theology, doctrine, we will be disappointed. None of these things are certain. But when our certainty is found in “this Jesus”, He will never fail us.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.       What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions?

2.      In what ways can churches or Christians communicate exclusion instead of the radical inclusion of Jesus (even unintentionally)? What can be done about this?

3.       How does Jesus especially offend devout, religious, good people? Has he offended you in this way?

4.      How can becoming and growing as a Christian be more effortless and more painful than anything – at the same time? Have you experienced this dynamic in your relationship with God?

5.      Have you ever realized you were calling out to Jesus more to get something from Him than to get “more of Him”? Is there anything wrong with this? What’s the difference?

6.      What do you most struggle with placing under the Lordship of Jesus? Do you think it could be rooted in the belief that God is your enemy? Why or why not?

7.       What feels most uncertain in your life right now? How might knowing with certainty that Jesus is Lord and Messiah give you endurance, encouragement and hope?

BONUS EXERCISE - The First Sermon – A Gospel Test

You know it’s not the gospel if…

1.       It causes you to look down on, exclude, denigrate or ignore any person, in any way because of their age, gender, race or social class.

2.      It doesn’t offend you by calling you to repent of your best religious efforts and goodness.

3.       It’s telling your main problem are due to a lack of self-effort.

4.      It doesn’t cut you to the core and pierce your heart.

5.      It minimizes or excuses sin.

6.      It makes a bigger deal about or focuses more on sin than on the name of Jesus.

7.       It’s more about getting something from Jesus than about knowing more of Jesus.

8.      It doesn’t call you to bring everything in your life under Jesus, no exceptions.

9.      It makes God out to be your enemy.

10.   It points you toward certainty in anything or anyone other than Jesus (who He is and what He’s done).

DISCUSSION

·         Do you disagree with or have reservations/questions any of these 10 statements? Explain.

·         Which of these do you tend to most lose sight of or is hardest for you to grasp? Why?

·         Which of these do you most need to remember and hold onto in your life right now? Why?