Blueprint Vision #4 - Going Out on Mission

READ – Acts 11:19-30; 13:1-3

2019 VISION PART 4 - GOING OUT ON MISSION

Antioch was where followers of Jesus of Nazareth were first called “Christians.” Of all the churches we read about in the book of Acts, the church at Antioch may be the community that gives us the fullest picture about what Christianity is all about and what it means to follow Jesus whether you’re living  in the first century or the 21st century. A defining trait of Jesus-followers in Acts is seen in the act of sending/being sent. Christians are those who are sent; they are on mission.

1. THE LOGIC FOR MISSION

The modern West is a post-Christian, post-truth, post-everything culture. Any conversation about mission has to take both the abuses of mission and the concerns of our neighbors seriously. The reality is that the idea of mission or the identity of being a missionary gets bad press in today’s social and political climate. For many people, the command of Jesus’ Great Commission – that His followers would go into their neighborhoods, work places, and all nations sharing the gospel is naïve, shallow, and extreme. To say, “If you don’t believe my way, then you are spiritually sick, lost, and need saving” is considered narrow-minded.

But imagine having a friend who shows symptoms of a disease you once had and beat. You know it’s life-threatening, the remedy required to bring wholeness, the effort needed to see the right doctor and receive the right treatment. What should you do? If you’re a good friend, there will be a dynamic of both love and truth in your interactions with them. You will be on mission to gently persuade them to turn to the cure. If you only loved them but didn’t know the cure, you couldn’t be on mission. Likewise, if you knew the cure, but didn’t love them, you wouldn’t be on mission.

When Christianity is dismissed as being narrow, what people really mean is: “I don’t agree with your cure.” Everyone agrees that there is something wrong with the world, some ailment that needs healing, or brokenness that requires repair. We all have views on where people need to turn in order to be saved. For early Christians, the cure, the remedy, the solution was “turning to the Lord” (Acts 11:21).  The Christian story is that God made us and even in spite of our turning away from Him engaged in a rescue mission by sending His Son to save us and remake the world. Jesus is Lord. Because that’s true, it’s the only cure for what’s wrong. That’s the logic for mission.

2. THE SHAPE OF MISSION

There were three marks of the church community in Antioch.  

First, they were a learning community. We see in Acts 11:25, 27 and Acts 13:1 that this church was characterized by teaching people, prophets communicating God’s truth, multi-ethnic leadership guiding early Christians. Why? Because believing in Jesus opens up whole new avenues for deeply learning about all of life through the lens of the gospel. If Jesus is Lord, now we have to work out the implications of that reality for our lives, money, family, work, relationships, and sexuality. None of it can be left untouched by Jesus’ lordship. We have to learn and re-learn what it means that all authority in heaven and earth belongs to Jesus.

We also have to learn our neighbors. There’s a subtle yet significant difference between Acts 8 and Acts 11. In both chapters, we see that persecution led to mission both to Samaritans and Greeks. In Acts 8 and Samaria, the Jesus-followers share “the Christ” (Acts 8:5) or the Messiah (a more technical, Old Testament title for the coming rescuer). But in Acts 11, the believers are sharing the “Lord Jesus.” Greeks and Romans would have had little to no understanding or expectation of a Messiah, and so the early Christians learned how to intelligently and winsomely share their faith by learning the language of the culture.

Second the church at Antioch was a sharing community. Acts 11:27-30 (which we looked at in more detail last week) is all about how early Christians viewed compassionate action in the community as central to the church’s mission. But if you look closely at the character of Barnabas you see a follower of Jesus who was willing to build up others, decrease so that others would increase, concern himself with the reputation of others and not himself. In short, Barnabas shared his influence, his gifts, his money, his reputation, his power in order to better someone else. Imagine what it would look like if all followers of Jesus did the same in our families, cul de sacs, classrooms, job sites, and offices?

Third, the church was a listening community. To listen intently – to listen with an attitude of humility and openness, is an act of love. Dietrich Bonhoeffer (German theologian, pastor, and resistance fighter in Nazi Germany) wrote that “...often Christians, especially preachers, think that their only service is always to have to ‘offer’ something when they are together with people. They forget that listening can be a greater service than speaking.” Maybe the best service, the best way we can be on mission in the 21st century is to listen, listen, and then listen so more. Before you can speak the Word of God to people, you need to listen with the ears of God.

3. THE ENGINE IN MISSION

What was the fuel, the engine that kept mission going in the city of Antioch? What can keep us pressing on in mission with family, friends, and neighbors? The engine won’t be obedience to a command. We need a reality that will both humble us and energize us to keep our identity as “sent” people at the forefront of our imagination.

First we need to remember that this is Jesus’ mission. It’s His. It belongs to him and he’s invited you to join. In Acts 1, Luke writes that his first volume (the gospel of Luke) “dealt with all that Jesus began to do and teach” That means Jesus is still on mission. He’s still active. He is still doing and teaching. It means he is the driver of mission, not us.

The second reality is seen in Acts 11:21. Luke records that “the Lord’s Hand was with them.” Luke is borrowing a phrase that occurs all over the Old Testament. Throughout Scripture you read that God’s Hand was either with someone or against them. The takeaway is that Jesus was with them.  The greatest catalyst and engine for you as you befriend your neighbors, as you disciple your kids, as you pour your energy into your work to help make the world a better place – it’s that Jesus’ Hand is with you. The phrase also implies that it wasn’t just that Jesus was providing them with a little push or support, but that these Christians were joining with Jesus on the frontlines. I think that’s the deepest motive for mission – simply being with Jesus where he is.

And the good news is that we join with Jesus on this side of Calvary – so the hands that are with you bear the scars of the cross, the place where the mission was accomplished, the victory won, the work was finished. See the Lord’s Hand was with them and it is with you because it was against Jesus. He took the justice for our apathy, our isolation, our callousness, and he took that all in His Hand so that we could receive His hand in love. Let’s remember this good news for ourselves and then go tell someone else.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

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

2.       How would you define the “mission” of Christianity? How do you fit into that mission?

3.        The mission isn’t just about talking and doing, but learning and listening. What might be a way that you could better learn from and listen to friends who don’t believe the same things you do?

4.       When was the last time you shared the good news of Jesus with someone? Are we doing a good job “gossiping the gospel” among ourselves as a church community? How might we grow in sharing the gospel with each other and outsiders? 

Blueprint Vision #3 - Going Out in Compassion

READ – Acts 11:19-30

The story of the church in Antioch gives us a “blueprint” for the kind of church Jesus can build in a cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic and pluralistic place like Orange County. The church at Antioch became one of the most vibrant churches in early Christianity. How did it happen? Acts 11:19-26 tells us how this church was born and how large numbers came to faith. It all happened as more and more people encountered, learned and were taught the gospel (v19, 20, 26). Acts 13:1-3 shows us how their gatherings were also centered on prayer. Their corporate prayer life brought a deep sense of the presence of God into all their gatherings. Through a deep and ongoing commitment to the word of God and prayer, this church became vibrant and people’s lives were changed.

But the story of Antioch also clearly shows us that this church didn’t choose between going deep inward together or going outward for others. These two were things integrally connected, inseparable and mutually reinforcing in this church.  Acts 11:27-30 is the story of how this church responded to a need. From their response, we learn three key steps a church must take to go out in compassion for the poor and needy.

1. KNOWING THE NEEDS OF OTHERS (AWARENESS)

Verse 27 says “in those days” (ie, those days of spiritual vibrancy and excitement in the church), some prophets came to Antioch from Jerusalem. One of these prophets, Agabus, predicted there would be a severe famine through the Roman world. Luke tells us this prophecy did come to pass under the reign of the emperor Claudius (multiple historical sources verify the severity of this famine). Why did God make this church aware of a need before it happened? What was the purpose of this prophecy? He was making this church aware of a need to move them into action. He sent someone who would be directly impacted by this famine—someone who would be hungry when the famine struck his city.

The first step in meeting the needs of others is awareness. God wanted this church to become aware of a need that he would use them to meet. This awareness was two-fold 1) prophetic awareness – this need (the physical, material needs of the poor) matters to God. He delivered the message through the mouth of a prophet 2) personal awareness – this need would be experienced by Agabus himself. He would go hungry if no one came to his aid.

2. FEELING THE NEEDS OF OTHERS (COMPASSION)

When we read these few short verses, there is such a natural flow to the story. The need is shared, the church becomes aware of the need, they respond to the need and send relief. End of story. We aren’t told that anyone connects the dots for them or that any leader stood up and took a collection. It’s as if the whole church naturally and spontaneously all felt the same thing. It’s like they said, “We should help. We are called to help. We’re all in.” But we all know from experience – it’s never that easy! Awareness of a need doesn’t always lead to action. How did a whole community respond so unanimously and spontaneously?

The answer to this question is found by looking at a pattern found here and in the larger context of the book of Acts. In Acts 2:42-47 the first church is devoted to going deep in the gospel (“apostles teaching”) AND they are selling their possessions to meet the needs in the community. In Acts 4:33ff, the apostles are teaching about “the resurrection”, “great grace was upon them all AND there was not a needy person among them”. Here in Antioch, the pattern is repeated. In 11:26 we are told they are spending a whole year saturated in the gospel AND in verse 29 we are told they “each” contributed to meet the needs of others. The pattern? As the gospel goes deep in a community, the gospel will go out in compassion to the needy and poor. In the NT, compassion on the poor is the sign, the test, the proof that the gospel is going deep in a person and a church (see Luke 19:1-10 Gal. 2:10, James 2:14-19, 1 John 3:16, 17)

The link between awareness and action that motivates, empowers and sustains the action is the link between our spiritual poverty and the material poverty of those in need. Paul makes this link explicit in 2 Corinthians 8:8, 9 - I am not commanding you, but I want to test the sincerity of your love by comparing it with the earnestness of others. For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.

Here Paul was encouraging the church in Corinth to help the needy in Jerusalem (the church there continued to struggle with poverty for many years). He didn’t use guilt or manipulation to motivate them, instead he “uses” the gospel to awaken compassion in them. What did he want them to see?

  • I am poor – I have nothing and will never have anything to give or offer to God except my sin and need. I am empty, bankrupt and in debt before him.

  • Jesus became poor for me – But in his great compassion, Jesus gave up the riches of glory and joy in heaven to take on all my sin, need and debt. He was emptied, he felt the death of spiritual bankruptcy, he paid all my debt!

  • so that through his poverty I might become rich – Why would Jesus do this? So that I get all his riches! Nothing is mine by right, by merit or effort but all from the riches of Jesus’ merit, effort and righteousness. This means everything I have is a gift; it’s all pure grace.

If I know how poor I am apart from Jesus and how rich He is toward me, how can I not use what I’ve been given by him to meet the needs of others? This is the “test” of whether we have understood the compassion of God toward us.

3. MEETING THE NEEDS OF OTHERS (ACTION)

Each phrase of verse 29 is instructive for us as we seek to act to meet the needs of others in our communities: 

1.        “Each of the disciples” – This was not a side ministry opportunity for those who were passionate about social justice or whose “thing” was compassion ministry. This was the whole church; each person sharing in ownership and taking action to help meet a need. Meeting the needs of others is something every Christian is called to do.

2.       “According to his ability” – Not everyone participated in the same way or at same level. Why? They didn’t have the same resources – and that’s ok. We should not compare ourselves to others or measure our compassion by what others do. Our season of life and responsibilities shape our response and involvement.

3.        “Determined” – Giving to and serving the needy takes a determination. The word used here “horizo” is the same word used for God determining the boundaries of creation and determining His plan for redemption. It’s not a wishy washy, when I can get to it kind of thing. It’s a decision to live within new boundaries, a new horizon of life - that expands to include the needs of others.

4.       “To send relief” - The word used for “send relief” is diakonian. It’s where we get the word deacon. It’s almost always translated as either ministry or service. Why is this important? They thought of their support as ministry. Ministry in the bible is to the whole person. There is no such thing a division between spiritual ministry and physical ministry – it’s all just ministry. Compassion ministry is a tangible expression the gospel to the world. 

5.       “to the brothers and sisters who lived in Judea” – The church at Antioch realized they were a part of a new family that stretched across ethnic and geographic lines. There is no difference in the NT between the needs of a fellow Christian and the needs of our immediate family. This was and is a radical concept! What’s more is that this family (the church) is not a closed family but a family with an always open door to take in, serve and give to the poor “outside the family” in order to show them the love of our Father and the endless grace of our older brother, Jesus.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

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

2.       What is hardest for you when it comes to going out in compassion to serve the needy? Do you believe God calls all Christians to “go out” in compassion to the needy in some way? Why or why not? Reference Scripture if possible.

3.        How aware are you of the needs of the poor in your community? How can you become more aware? How important is it that we become aware in a personal way (ie in face to face interaction with the needy, poor themselves)?

4.       How does the gospel enable us to feel the needs of the poor and needy? Re-read 2 Cor. 8:8. 9 – consider how Paul reminds the Corinthians of the gospel in terms of poverty/riches. Use the bullet summary above for help in answering this.

5.       Look at the following examples of how the gospel works on our honest objections to serving the needy. Which resonates most with you? Can you add any others to the list?

  • “I’m indifferent to the needy” – Jesus was not indifferent toward us in our need, he felt it so deeply, he felt it with us, he had to act for us. 

  • “I can help but I need to keep my distance” – Jesus didn’t keep his distance from us (in all our brokenness, mess, sin) he fully entered it; he took it all on Himself.

  • “I’ll give a little to ease the guilt” – Jesus didn’t give a little to help us out and move on, He gave everything to save us and he keeps giving because He’s committed to us become whole.

  • “I judge the poor/needy in pride. It’s their fault” – Jesus didn’t say to us, “It’s your fault, you got yourself into this now get out of it.” Jesus took the judgment we deserve so we’d be free from judgement and rich in his love and grace.

6.       In the message, we were encouraged to develop compassion for the poor by thinking about how God sees us at our poorest, most broken and most empty moments; to imagine how God sees us when we are overcome by sin, unable to get out and stuck in a cycle or a struggle that we can’t escape by our own resources- How does He feel about us? How do you think God sees you in these moments? Look up Matthew 9:36, Luke 7:13ff, 10:33, 15:11-20 for help.

7.        What is one thing you can do individually or as a group to go out in compassion in 2019?

Blueprint Vision #2 - Going Deep in Prayer

READ – Acts 13:1-3

Antioch was one of the major multi-cultural and cosmopolitan cities of the ancient world. It was here that Jesus built the first ever multi-ethnic church. This church became a large and thriving community full of people from different backgrounds. It was a church that went deep in the gospel together. Their lives were so captivated by Jesus, they earned the nickname “Christians”.  It was a church that went out with the gospel and became the first church to send people out on mission.  For all these reasons, the church in Antioch is  a blueprint for the kind of church we are praying Jesus would build at Trinity.  Acts 13:1-3 gives us a glimpse into the regular rhythms of this church and tells how it came to be that Antioch became such a thriving and outward focused church—at the heart of their life together they were deeply devoted to prayer.  

From this church’s practice of prayer, we learn one of the most important lessons about prayer: A deep and meaningful prayer life will not come by guilt or by grit but only when we are convinced that prayer is a gift.

1. BREATHING – PRAYER AND WORSHIP

The rhythm at the heart of this thriving church was worship - “As they were worshipping the Lord and fasting…” (v2). This isn’t talking about just one day, ie “One day they were worshipping…” The verb form carries the sense of an ongoing, repeated activity. This was the rhythm at the heart of the church. The word used here for worshipping is rarely used in the NT. In the OT, it referred to the intercessory ministry of the priests in bringing the life of the people to God and the life of God to the people. Most scholars of Acts say “worshipping” here refers to corporate prayer.

We know that the churches of the NT did a lot more than “just pray” together. They learned, taught, ate, connected and served each other. What this description of Antioch shows us is that prayer is what turns all these things into worship. It’s prayer that animates and gives life to them. When prayer is at the heart of a church, it guards the church from doing what it does out of routine and duty. Prayer is how our horizontal actions become vertical communion with the living God.  How was it that Antioch became a church so alive with the presence of God? The answer is that for this church—prayer was like breathing. Prayer was how God animated their lives and actions with his gift of his presence.

2. EATING – PRAYER AND FASTING

One of the things that stands out about this church is their practice of fasting. Fasting is only mentioned 3 times in the book of Acts. All 3 times it is in reference to this church. In the bible, fasting is always combined with prayer. Fasting creates space for prayer, sharpens its focus, and deepens its fervency. Fasting is not a directly commanded practice in Scripture - but it is an expected practice. Jesus said, “when you fast” and that his disciples “will fast”. The idea is not that followers of Jesus have to fast, it’s that they will want to fast. Why would we want to? Antioch helps us see why – Fasting teaches us prayer is like eating. What eating is for us physically; prayer is for us spiritually. Fasting reminds us how basic and necessary it is for us to pray. It reminds us that God gives us the gift of spiritual strength, nourishment and growth by connecting to Him in prayer.

Fasting also reminds us of an important principle – going deeper in prayer requires giving up something good to get something better (namely, a deeper relationship with God). Fasting of all kinds (from food and from other good things for a season) is training for saying “no” to good yet lesser gifts for the greater gift of prayer.

3. FIGHTING – PRAYER AND SENDING

The praying church in Antioch reinforces what we’ve seen throughout in Acts 1-12.  It’s not so much that God answers the prayers of a church to be sent as it is that God sends a praying church. The churches in Acts didn’t want to be sent. They didn’t ask to be sent.

When Jesus said, “you will be my witnesses to the ends of the earth” to his followers, what did they do? They stayed! Later, Peter refused to go to the house of a non-Jewish person. The scattered Christians who started the church in Antioch didn’t ask to be forced from their homes. Saul didn’t ask to become a missionary. The church at Antioch didn’t ask God to send their two best leaders. So how did all this happen? It happened through prayer. It was in prayer that God somehow sent the fearful, reluctant and comfortable out with boldness and power. In the early church, prayer was struggling, wrestling and fighting with God to learn that life was not about them. Prayer was where God broke them of self-centeredness so he could send them out to love and serve others.  

This is why it’s been said that “Prayer does not enable us to do a greater work for God. Prayer is a greater work for God.” The greater work of God is humbling the proud and curing self-centeredness and self-reliance. The greater work of God is opening our hearts to the greatness of his glory, the immensity of our need and the sufficiency of Jesus’ redeeming work. Prayer is the greater work because it is only humbled, broken, dependent and needy people that God uses to do great works.

4. RECEIVING – OUR PRAYER AND JESUS’ PRAYERS

In studying the role of prayer in Luke and Acts together, an important and significant insight emerges. Luke shows us that the church’s prayer life mirrors and images Jesus’ own prayer life.

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What’s the takeaway from all these parallels? 1) Jesus builds his own life of prayer into His church. 2) Jesus builds his life of prayer into the church when they are at their most clueless, helpless, scared and weak (see question 2 below) 3) Jesus gave his life to give us his life of prayer. The “unanswered prayer” of Jesus is how all our prayer is made possible. In prayer, Jesus faced two choices – 1) God could take the cup from him or 2) he could take the cup from us. In prayer, He chose to take the cup of curse and separation to give us the cup of blessing and connection with God in prayer. When we pray, we receive the gift Jesus thought was worth dying for to give to us.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.        What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions? What is most hard for you when it comes to prayer? What is most rewarding for you when it comes to prayer?

2.       Group exercise – Take a tour through the prayers of Acts (1-13).

a.        What do you observe about these prayers? Why did they pray? When did they pray? What can we learn from this?

3.        Jonathan Edwards once said, “Prayer is as natural an expression of faith, as breathing is of life; and to say a man lives a life of faith, and yet lives a prayerless life, is every whit as inconsistent and incredible, as to say, that a man lives without breathing.” If this is true, why is prayer so difficult? How might this explain why we can feel dry and lifeless in Christian practices (bible reading/study, Sunday worship, serving, etc)?

4.       Do you have any experience with fasting and prayer? If so, what have you learned from it? Why would a Christian want to fast? How might fasting help us see more clearly that prayer is a gift?

5.       It was said in the sermon, “It’s not so much that God answers the prayers of a church to be sent as it is that God sends a praying church.” What’s the difference? Why is this so important for us to learn in our attempts to do great things for God and for others?

6.       Take another look at the parallels between Jesus’ prayers and the prayers of the church in Acts. What strikes you? How is it encouraging to know Jesus is and will build his praying life into His church?

7.        Why is it so important to see how our prayers can be answered because of Jesus’ “unanswered prayer”? How might your perspective on prayer change if you believed that Jesus died to give you the gift of prayer?

8.       What is one thing you can do in 2019 to go deeper in prayer individually and as a group?

Blueprint Vision #1 - Going Deep in Scripture

READ – Acts 11:19-26

2019 VISION PART 1 - GOING DEEP IN SCRIPTURE

The church in Antioch is a “hinge” church in the book of Acts. It was in Antioch that the first diverse multi-ethnic church was formed. It was from Antioch that the first missionaries were sent to take the gospel to “the ends of the earth”. The first part of Acts (1-12) tells the story of an almost entirely Jewish church in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria – people and places that all had knowledge and esteem for the Bible. The second part of Acts (13-28) tells the story of a predominantly Gentile church in cities of the ancient world - people and places that had little to no knowledge and esteem for the Bible.

The church at Antioch is a blueprint for the kind of church Jesus can build in a multi-cultural and cosmopolitan city. It’s the blueprint for the kind of churches the apostle Paul sought to establish all over the world. It’s a blueprint for the kind of church we are praying Jesus would build here at Trinity OC.

The first thing we’ll look at is how it was a church that went deep in Scripture.

1. WHY GO DEEP IN SCRIPTURE

The story of the church at Antioch starts back to Acts chapter 8, “On that day a severe persecution broke out against the church in Jerusalem, and all except the apostles were scattered throughout the land of Judea and Samaria…. So those who were scattered went on their way preaching the word (8:1, 4).” Their story is picked up in 11:19, “Now those who were scattered because of Stephen made their way as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word to no one but Jews. But there were some of them, men from Cyprus and Cyrene, who came to Antioch and began speaking to the Greeks also, proclaiming the good news about the Lord Jesus.” At first these Christians hesitated to talk about the word with Greeks but some just couldn’t help it – they began proclaiming the good news that was the deepest part of their lives – the good news about Jesus. For the Christian who started the church at Antioch, the “word”, they spoke, the “good news” they proclaimed was what the Scriptures were all about (see Luke 24:27, 45ff).

The Christians who started the church at Antioch are a picture of what happens when someone goes deep in Scripture. The people to whom they spoke the word saw 2 things in their lives:

1)        The Scriptures somehow gave them something stronger than the worst that could happen to them. They were refugees who lost everything. Yet somehow, they not only endured their suffering, they thought of others and how important it was for them to hear this good news.

2)       The Scriptures somehow gave them something better than the best that could have happened to them. The best news they could have heard would have been, “Come back home to Jerusalem. It’s safe now”. What’s remarkable is that they could’ve heard this – if only they left behind their new commitment to Jesus and his church. But they didn’t. They couldn’t. Why not? They must’ve thought they had something better in Jesus than even the best thing that could’ve happened to them.

When these displaced Christians started talking with others about Jesus and the Scriptures, they spoke with an undeniable credibility. People must’ve been wondering – what could be this strong? what could be this good? The church at Antioch began with people deeply convinced in the truth and power of the Scriptures.

2. HOW TO GO DEEP IN SCRIPTURE

As this mix of people from different backgrounds became attracted to the message of the Bible and formed a church, what would they do first? What would be their priority and focus? Acts tells us that after Barnabas visited from Jerusalem and encouraged them, he knew exactly what they needed. He got Saul and “for a whole year they met with the church and taught large numbers”. What did it look like for this church to go deep together in Scripture?

1) Consistency – “for a whole year”. Based on the evidence from the rest of Acts, this is more than a weekly gathering. It was almost certainly a daily gathering (see Acts 2:42-46, 5:42, Acts 19:9). The soaked and marinated in the Scriptures.

2) Community – The story emphasizes the “large numbers” who were taught (11: 21, 24, 26).  Why such a focus on numbers? Reading and learning Scripture is meant to be done in “large numbers” – in community with others.

3) Conversation – We are told here what these daily teaching sessions looked like. But the rest of Acts tells us that Paul’s style was a mix of instruction and dialog. These large numbers didn’t only silently listen but asked questions and discussed what they were learning.

This is the way the church at Antioch was built. While being careful about establishing a “formula” for the variety of ways a church can go deep in Scripture – this is how Jesus built the church at Antioch. It’s the foundation for how they established a faithful, long-term presence in their city and became the first sending church.

3. THE IMPACT OF GOING DEEP IN SCRIPTURE

What was the impact of this deep engagement with Scripture over time? We could summarize it like this – a transformative personal encounter with Jesus. This is the ultimate purpose of the bible and it is the impact all our reading, studying, discussion is meant to have.

The city of Antioch was known to classify and categorize people using nicknames. There were the “Herodians”, the “Neronians” and the “Augustiani’s”. When it came to this new religious movement, the people had no way to categorize them. They finally figured out the best nickname for this community – “Christians”. The Christ-people. The people who look like and act like this Christ they keep talking about. We “become Christians” through deep engagement with the Scriptures because in the Scriptures we personally encounter Christ. Going deep in Scripture isn’t for gaining information, finding self-help advice to better ourselves or for pointing the finger at all that’s wrong with other people. Going deep in Scripture is going deep in relationship with Jesus Himself. As we encounter Him there, we become like Him.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

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

2.       What are your biggest personal objections or biggest personal obstacles to going deep in Scripture? What things have been most helpful for you in going deeper into Scripture?

3.        What is your response to the idea that the Scriptures give us something stronger than the worst that can happen to us and better than the best thing that can happen to us? How did the lives of the Christians who started the church at Antioch show this? Is it promising too much to make this claim for anyone? Have you experienced this?

4.       Of the 3 parts of the “formula” for how we can go deep in Scripture, which of them is most lacking in your relationship to Scripture? Why? How might you (or your community group) put these into practice?  

5.       What can we learn from the nickname this church earned for themselves (“Christians”)? Would anyone in your give you this nickname? What role does Scripture play in making us “look and act” like Jesus?

6.       Do you resonate with the idea that to read and learn the Scriptures is to personally encounter Jesus Himself? How is this similar or different than your motivations and reasons for reading Scripture?

a.        What questions do you have about this? What experience do you have in this?

b.       For further support of this idea, see John 5:46, Luke 24:13-49, 2 Timothy 3:10-17

7.        What is one thing you can do in 2019 to go further into Scripture? Share it with your group or a friend and ask them to regularly check in with you to see how you are doing. 

Blueprint #14 - No Rivals

READ – Acts 12:1-24

Before Acts makes a major shift in the story away from the church at Jerusalem (Acts 1-12) to the gospel going out all to the ends of the earth (Acts 13-28), there is one more story that Luke wants to tell us about this church. It’s the story about how Jesus built this church (and how he builds a life) to be prepared for and able to withstand disaster. What do we need to see, believe in and hold on to when our lives are shaken? When our faith is shaken? What makes for strong, enduring faith? Acts 12 shows us it is the firm conviction that Jesus has no rivals.

1. THE ATTACK OF RIVALS (v1-4)

After Saul’s dramatic conversion, the church of Jerusalem experienced a long season of peace and growth (see Acts 9:31). More and more people from varying backgrounds were coming to faith in Jesus and joining the church. But this time of peace didn’t last. Acts 12:1 says King Herod (also known as King Agrippa I) began to violently attack the church. He executed James. He put Peter in prison intending to kill him after the Passover. After many years of peace and coexistence with Judaism (and other religions), the natural question is, “Why did Herod attack the church?” The answer is that these Christians were living like Jesus was really king. Not Caesar. Not Herod. Not anyone or anything else but Jesus. They weren’t protesting. They weren’t being obnoxious and drawing attention to themselves. They weren’t trying to take Herod’s political power. They were simply yet consistently living like Jesus was King of kings and Lord of lords. 

The principle we see here applies to all times and places. When Jesus is given supreme authority and leadership in a life or in a church, the rival kings, authorities, leaders of a culture and of a person’s life will be challenged. And rivals don’t go down without a counter attack.

2. THE REPSONSE TO THE ATTACK (v5-18)

What was the response to this violent attack of such a powerful and vengeful king? The church did the only thing they could. In their powerlessness and helplessness, they turned to “fervent prayer” (10:5). We see two things about their prayerful response in the story. First, we see it was the right thing for them to do. Though they were powerless to do anything, God was sovereign over it all. God’s power was greater than Herod’s, greater than the 4 squads of 4 soldiers, the 2 soldiers sleeping next to Peter, the chains that bound Peter and the sentry at the door. None of that stopped God from rescuing Peter in response to the prayers of the people.

But we also see it was a hard thing for them to do. It was fervent prayer, but it was also fragile prayer. It was prayer that was a mixture of belief and unbelief. How do we know this? They didn’t expect God to answer them! When they were told Peter stood outside their door, they responded, “You are out of your mind!”. We can understand why it was so hard for them to pray. James had been killed. Peter was in prison. Their faith was shaken. Fear was settling in. Here we can draw great encouragement in times when our lives and faith our shaken and we feel we can barely pray. The sovereign power of God + the power of faithful yet fragile prayer is greater than the power of anything that might shake us.

There’s even more encouragement for us here. When we take a closer look at God’s response to this attack, we see the powerful statement God is making to a shaken church. Luke makes very intentional and specific connections between this attack on the church and the attack (and death) of Jesus:

  • Both happened at the same time - during Passover, the feast of Unleavened Bread (see Lk. 22:1, 7)

  • Both led to “fervent prayer” (22:44, the only other time this phrase is used in the bible)

  • Both attacks happened under the reign of a rival King named Herod (Lk 23:6-12)

  • Both attacks happened for the same reason. The claim of Jesus to be King (Lk 23:3, 38)

What is Luke trying to show us? He wants us to read this story as the story of two kings. He wants us to read this as the story of the response of the True King to all other rival kings. On the one side we have Herod (and Pharaoh, and all rival kings before and after). On the other side we have Jesus. There are the rival kings who kill, do violence to humanity and put people into bondage. And there is the One True King who deserved life yet was killed for us, who was innocent yet absorbed violence in our place, who was arrested and bound that we might be set free from bondage. This is our choice. Every rival king will demand you to give your life for them and put you in chains. Jesus is the only king who gives his life for you to set you free. When our lives are shaken, when our faith is shaken, we can trust Him. We don’t have to flee from or to any of the rivals. The King who was shaken for us won’t ever abandon us to his rivals. In suffering, trials, even martyrdom - He will bring us safely into his kingdom (2 Tim 4:18).

3. THE DEFEAT OF RIVALS (v19-24)

This story not only tells us rivals will attack and God will respond; it tells us all rivals to the True King will be defeated. After seeing Peter slip out his grasp, King Herod takes his wounded ego to Caesarea. There his pride and arrogance is re-inflated as delegates from two cities beg for his favor. He puts on his kingly garments (which we know from history were woven of silver), he sat on this throne and delivered a speech. The people praise him as a god and he gladly receive their praise. This was the day of his defeat. Why? “Because he did not give the glory to God” (v23). Herod had gone too far. This isn’t just a “Herod” thing. This is an everyone and every rival thing – God will not give his glory to another (Isa 42:8, 48:11). Rival kings we look to for life, peace, security and meaning can seem so powerful, glorious and indestructible – but none of them can compare to the glory of the true King. In the light of the glory of God we see all rival kings for what they really are.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

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

2.       One of core questions we ask when our lives and faith is shaken is “Why?” This story from Acts teaches us there will be seasons of peace for our growth but there will be (there must be) seasons of shaking for God to reveal his rivals and show us his supremacy over them. What’s your response to this? How might it encourage you in times when you feel shaken?

3.        Do you agree that the human heart can only have one supreme value and authority at a time? How does this play out in your life? What other “rival kings” do you look to for security and power? (Examples: Money, control, success, achievement, relationships, comfort/pleasure, approval). Why do you look to these things instead of Jesus?

4.       How is it comforting for you to see that it’s possible for God to answer prayers that are fervent yet fragile; a mix of belief and unbelief? Is there something shaking your life now that you struggle to believe whether God is “big enough” to address?

5.       The gospel is that “Every rival king will demand you to give your life for them and put you in chains. Jesus is the only king who gives his life for you to set you free.” How have you found it to be true that every other thing we look to for life ends up taking life from us?

6.       In the sermon, 3 final lessons were shared.

a.        Personal Lesson- Jesus’ loving plan for us is to defeat all His rivals in our hearts. What rivals do you need to allow Him to defeat in your heart?

b.       Political Lesson - No political party, country, leader can have our ultimate allegiance. How can this help in a time of political turmoil?

c.        Missional Lesson- Nothing is more powerful than or can ever stop the word of God, the gospel from flourishing and increasing. Read v24. How can this ease our fears and give us boldness in going “public” with our faith in Jesus?