Category: Acts for a 21st c. Church

Acts Apostolos - Acts of the Apostles - the chronicles of Christ's Apostles - a history of Christ's Church including early leaders like Stephen, Philip the Evangelist, Paul, Barnabas and many others
Acts of the Apostles + a History of Christ’s Church

Acts of the Apostles 1-28

 

Acts of the Apostles:
+ The first century Church SHARED Christ while suffering severe persecution.
+ Luke records a historic account of the Church which gives 21c Christians a context to SHARE the Gospel of Jesus Christ with others.

Read more about the Early Church & add your COMMENT on Scripture.

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+ SHARE the Gospel history witnessed in the CURRENT chronological SERIES from ACTS of the APOSTLES.

  • Matthias – Scripture fulfilled in Jerusalem – מַתַּתְיָה

    Matthias – Scripture fulfilled in Jerusalem – מַתַּתְיָה

    Choosing Matthias

    And they drew lots for them, and the lot fell to Matthias; and he was added to the eleven apostles.

    Acts 1:26 NASB20

    Matthias fills a position of an Apostle from off the bench (so to speak) as a substitute for Judas who had betrayed Christ and then took his own life. This new Twelfth Apostle gets little mention as we could readily move on to some of the more miraculous events of Acts. (Luke mentions Matthias only twice in these verses.)

    What I missed before Peter’s great preaching at Solomon’s Portico in the Temple was the Apostle’s taking up the mantle of leadership of the Church in an upper room in Jerusalem.

    Peter preaching in candle-lit upper room in Jerusalem

    Peter Preaching in the Upper Room

    After Ten Days Peter finally Acts: Shepherding Christ’s Flock

    Acts 1:

    The Apostles & others have waited ten days after Jesus’ ascension.

    And in those days Peter stood up in the midst of the disciples, and said, (the number of names together were about an hundred and twenty,)

    Acts 1:15 KJV *Note: μαθητής – mathētēs translated as disciples in the KJV refers to learners of a teacher, not to be confused with Apostles; other versions translate as ἀδελφός adelphosgenerally translated as brethren (in Christ)

    Why replace Judas?

    After a hundred disciples of Jesus returned to Jerusalem and waited together, we can suppose that the Holy Spirit reveals to Simon Peter why Judas must be replaced by a twelfth Apostle.

    “Brothers, the Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit foretold by the mouth of David concerning Judas, who became a guide to those who arrested Jesus. For he was counted among us and received his share in this ministry.”

    Acts of the Apostles 1:16-17 NASB – Simon Peter preaching to the hundred in Jerusalem

    What had David said that applied to Judas now, a thousand years later?

    Peter preaches by the same Holy Spirit who inspired David of what is written in the Psalms.

    .. the Holy Spirit through the mouth of David foretold about Judas, who became a guide to those who arrested Jesus.17 For he was one of our number and shared in this ministry.”

    18 Now this man acquired a field with his unrighteous wages. He fell headfirst, his body burst open and his intestines spilled out. 19 This became known to all the residents of Jerusalem, so that in their own language that field is called Hakeldama (that is, “Field of Blood”). 20 “For it is written in the Book of Psalms:

    Let his dwelling become desolate;
    let no one live in it; and
    Let someone else take his position.

    Recalling Judas’ betrayal in the upper room and in Gethsemane

    In his first account Luke records Judas’ betrayal of Jesus nearly two months prior to Peter anointing his replacement shortly after Christ’s ascension into heaven.

    Luke 22:

    Then entered Satan into Judas surnamed Iscariot, being of the number of the twelve..

    “This cup, which is poured out for you, is the new covenant in My blood.

    But behold, the hand of the one betraying Me is with Mine on the table. For indeed, the Son of Man is going as it has been determined; but woe to that man by whom He is betrayed!”

    Gospel of Luke 22:21-22 – Jesus foretells His betrayal by Judas at the last supper

    That fateful night two months past in Gethsemane

    23 And they began to debate among themselves which one of them it was who was going to do this.

    While he was still speaking, suddenly a mob came, and one of the Twelve named Judas was leading them. He came near Jesus to kiss him, but Jesus said to him, “Judas, are you betraying the Son of Man with a kiss?”

    49 When those around him saw what was going to happen, they asked,

    “Lord, should we strike with the sword?” Then one of them struck the high priest’s servant and cut off his right ear.

    (We know that it was Peter who cut off the ear of Malchus.)

    51 But Jesus responded, “No more of this!” And touching his ear, he healed him.


    Preaching Scripture

    Peter had learned well from Jesus the lessons of Scripture for three years.

    During more than a month following Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection the Lord certainly must have instructed His disciples of the great significance of events recorded in the Bible (their Old Testament or Old Covenant).

    Luke records Jesus’ routine of teaching in Jerusalem, which Peter and the Apostles most certainly would have followed during these first days of the Church.

    Now [days] during the day [Jesus] He was teaching in the temple, but [nights] at evening He would go out and spend the night on the [hill] mountain that is called [Olive Grove] Olivet.

    And all the people would get up very early in the morning to come to Him in the temple to listen to Him.

    Gospel of Luke 21:37-38 NASB [incl. footnotes]

    Did you miss this during all the times you have heard the gut-wrenching drama of Christ’s Passion during the Lord’s last week in Jerusalem?

    I did.

    And you may have even wondered about Jesus preaching about David in Psalm 110 from Luke 20.

    Peter also points back to David and Psalms in his understanding of replacing Judas recorded by Luke in Acts.

    Jesus and Judas, Like David’s enemy

    Psalm 41:

    All who hate me whisper together against me;
    They plot my harm against me, saying,

    “A wicked thing is poured out upon him,
    So that when he lies down, he will not get up again.”

    Even my close friend in whom I trusted,
    Who ate my bread,
    Has lifted up his heel against me.

    Psalm 41:9 NASB

    How Peter and the Eleven must have also suffered in failing to discern the betrayal of their fellow Apostle.

    Psalm 69:

    May their camp be desolated;
    May there be none living in their tents.

    For they have persecuted him whom You Yourself struck,
    And they tell of the pain of those whom You have [pierced] wounded.

    according to [lilies] Shoshannim. A Psalm of David. 69:25-26 NASB20

    Psalm 109:

    A Psalm of David.
    God of my praise,
    Do not be silent!

    .. In return for my love they act as my accusers;
    But I am in prayer.

    So they have [laid upon me] repaid me evil for good,
    And hatred for my love.

    May his days be few;
    May another take his office.

    Psalm 109:8 NASB – quoted by Peter in Acts 1:20

    Peter connects David’s Psalm to Judas

    Acts 1:

    14 They all were continually united in prayer..

    Now Peter by the Holy Spirit speaks of replacing the Apostolic office of Jesus’ betrayer.

    21 “Therefore, from among the men who have accompanied us during the whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us— beginning from the baptism of John until the day he was taken up from us—from among these, it is necessary that one become a witness with us of his resurrection.”

    YES, during the three years of Jesus’ earthly ministry MANY disciples followed the Lord, believed His teaching and witnessed His acts of miraculous signs only possible through the Lord God.

    painting of Peter casting lots to choose between Justus and Matthias

    So they proposed two: Joseph, called Barsabbas, who was also known as Justus, and Matthias.

    A helpful early church history linked below provides insight about casting lots used by the Apostles to choose Matthias over Joseph. 

    Matthias: an Apostle by Providence

    “The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord.”
    Proverbs 16:33

    It was crucial to the remaining 11 Apostles that the number 12 Jesus had chosen be completed again. They chose as candidates two equally qualified disciples, prayed, cast lots and Matthias was chosen.

    Sandra Sweeny Silver – EARLY CHURCH HISTORY—LIFE IN ANCIENT ROME & THE EARLY CHRISTIANS – CASTING LOTS IN THE BIBLE

    24 And they prayed and said,

    “You, Lord, who know the hearts of all people, show which one of these two You have chosen to [take the place of] occupy this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place.”

    And they [gave] drew lots for them, and the lot fell [upon]to Matthias; and he was added to the eleven apostles.

    Acts of the Apostles 1:26 NASB – the selection of Matthias as a twelfth Apostle

    Matthias

    Μαθθίας

    Matthias = “gift of God” -the apostle elected to fill the place of the traitor Judas [Acts 1:23, 26]

    – apparently a shortened form of G3161; Matthias (i.e. Mattithjah), an Israelite:—Matthias.

    • Mattathias = “gift of Jehovah”
      • the son of Amos, in the genealogy of Christ
      • Mattathias was the son of Semei in the genealogy of Christ

    LUKE records in his Gospel genealogy, beginning at 3:23

    And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age, being (as was supposed) the son of Joseph, which was the son of Heli, which was the son of Matthat, which was the son of Levi.. which was the son of Mattathias, which was the son of Amos.. which was the son of Maath, which was the son of Mattathias, which was the son of Semei.. which was the son of Nathan, which was the son of David.. [ etc.. ] the son of Adam, which was the son of God.

    Of Hebrew origin מַתַּתְיָה (H4993)

    • Mattithiah = “gift of Jehovah”
    • Mattithiah occurs in 8 verses in the KJV, always a son of the priestly line of the Levites.

    Matthias – a post script

    We do not read of Matthias again in Acts or the pastoral letters; but aren’t you wondering what awaited this important Apostolic ministry for this new twelfth Apostle?

    Here is a reliable, little-spoken historical account (though not by Luke).

    The Apostles in Jerusalem & all the world

    • About two thousand Christians, with Nicanor, one of the seven deacons, suffered martyrdom during the “persecution that arose about Stephen.”
      • God-willing, we will read more about Steven in Acts 7.
    • James the son of Zebedee was martyred about ten years later in A.D. 44.
      • As mentioned in my introduction to Acts, Luke had not yet recorded even his Gospel until about A.D. 60.
    • Philip thrown into prison [in Phrygia] , and afterwards crucified, A.D. 54.
    • The Apostle and Gospel-writer Matthew was slain with a halberd [a two-handed battle axe] in the city of Nadabah, [Ethiopia] A.D. 60.
    • At the age of ninety-four [James the Less] was beat and stoned by the Jews; and finally had his brains dashed out with a fuller’s club.

    Matthias
    Of whom less is known than of most of the other disciples, was elected to fill the vacant place of Judas.

    He was stoned at Jerusalem and then beheaded. *

    SOURCE: FOX’s BOOK of MARTYRS

    https://www.ccel.org/f/foxe/martyrs/fox101.htm
    * Other traditions claim that Matthias was martyred in Cappadocia [modern day Turkey]. 
    -- St. Jerome and the early Christian writers Clement of Alexandria and Eusebius of Caesarea attest that Matthias was among the 72 disciples paired off and dispatched by Jesus. - Source: Britannica 
    
    * OR Died	c. AD 80
    Jerusalem, Judaea or in Colchis (modern-day Georgia) 
    -- The tradition of the Greeks says that St. Matthias planted the faith about Cappadocia and on the coasts of the Caspian Sea, residing chiefly near the port Issus. Source: Wikipedia
    

    NEXT: The Acts of Pentecost

    To be continued...
  • Acts of ALL with one accord

    Acts of ALL with one accord

    The Holy Spirit Promised

    While he was with them, he commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for the Father’s promise.

    Acts 1:4a CSB

    But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come on you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

    Acts 1:8 CSB

    9 After he had said this, he was taken up as they were watching, and a cloud took him out of their sight. 10 While he was going, they were gazing into heaven, and suddenly two men in white clothes stood by them.

    Pretty EXCITING AND AWESOME STUFF!

    Luke begins ACTS with Christ Jesus taken up into heaven, then ‘two men in white’ (we know they are angels) ask:

    “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into the sky?

    This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you have watched Him go into heaven.”

    Acts 1:11 NASB
    https://talkofjesus.com/acts-of-the-holy-spirit/

    AWESOME! JESUS ascending..

    AND angels

    What could possibly be next?

    Ten days of the Apostles we may have missed

    As Christians, now that we have begun Luke’s prologue in Acts and read his account of the AWEsome ascension of Jesus into the clouds, we can hardly wait for the powerful bestowing of the Holy Spirit in Jerusalem.

    BUT WAIT! Like you I was ready to read ahead to the anointing of the Apostles by the Holy Spirit and the beginning of their ‘acts,’ Then I thought about those TEN DAYS (more than a week) between Jesus’ ascension and Pentecost. (I had always merged these two amazing events together in the historical timeline I conceived in my mind.)

    Of course the eleven Apostles would have rather fled to their homes from the relatively remote Mount of Olives just a stone’s throw from the walls of Jerusalem; but now the Lord Jesus has commanded them to wait.

    So what happened while the eleven Apostles waited?

    Luke tells us (and we may have matter-of-factly dismissed it).

    Meanwhile, back in Jerusalem..

    Luke records those present:

    • 11 Apostles (by name)
    • ‘the women’
    • Mary, the mother of Jesus (the last mention of Mary by Luke)
    • Jesus’ brothers (Jude & James, but not named here)

    12 Then they returned to Jerusalem from the mountain called Olivet, which is near Jerusalem, a Sabbath day’s journey away. When they had entered the city, they went up to the upstairs room where they were staying, that is, Peter, John, James, and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, Simon the Zealot, and Judas the son of James.

    These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication, with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren.

    Acts 1:14 KJV

    ὁμοθυμαδόν – ‘with one accord’

    We will soon see this again in Luke’s account of the Acts of the Apostles, so lets take a quick look at his description of this gathering.

    ὁμοθυμαδόν

    • with one mind, with one accord, with one passion

    A unique Greek word, used 10 of its 12 New Testament occurrences in the Book of Acts, helps us understand the uniqueness of the Christian community. Homothumadon is a compound of two words meaning to “rush along” and “in unison”. The image is almost musical; a number of notes are sounded which, while different, harmonize in pitch and tone. As the instruments of a great concert under the direction of a concert master, so the Holy Spirit blends together the lives of members of Christ’s church.

    Outline of Biblical Usage – G3661 – BlueLetterBible.org

    Christ Ascends

    WAIT in Jerusalem

    & then Pentecost

    Our glance at this scene in a first century upper room in Jerusalem will look different from famous paintings of the Italian Renaissance or an illustration from our Children’s’ Bible.

    We observe eleven Jewish men (the Apostles), a large group of women (some wives of the Apostles) plus more followers and witnesses to the risen Christ Jesus, including our Lord’s mother and brothers.

    All these were continually devoting themselves with one mind to prayer.. (Acts 1:14a NASB)

    A Crowded upper room: Christians ALL with one accord

    The Apostle Peter is about to speak to those present.

    But as we have noted of these past ten days, MANY have gathered in this upper room in Jerusalem.

    These men and women from many places throughout the Empire had witnessed the cruel crucifixion of Jesus. Yet now they have obediently returned to the same Jerusalem which had crucified their now-risen and ascended Christ Jesus.

    Jesus’s promise has not yet been fulfilled; so as commanded, they ALL WAIT.

    At this time Peter stood up among the brothers and sisters

    (a group of about 120 people was there together),

    and said, “Brothers, the Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit foretold by the mouth of David..

    Acts 1:15-16a NASB

    One Hundred Twenty (120) with one accord (all together)

    The Apostle Peter addresses well over a hundred men and women in this room.

    And ALL have been together praying with one accord. (See all the instances Luke uses this to describe these saints of the early Christian Church.)

    And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord G3661 in one place.

    Acts 2:1 KJV – Strong’s G3661 linked

    Is your Christian gathering of 120 like this?

    Here is how the first century Church ‘acted:’

    • And they, continuing daily with one accord G3661 in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart
    • ..they lifted up their voice to God with one accord, G3661 and said, Lord, thou art God, which hast made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and all that in them is:
    • And by the hands of the apostles were many signs and wonders wrought among the people; (and they were all with one accord G3661 in Solomon’s porch.

    But I’m getting ahead of myself in Luke’s ACTS of the Apostles (and others).

    NEXT: Peter’s speech to the 120

    To be continued... 
  • Acts of the HOLY SPIRIT

    Acts of the HOLY SPIRIT

    “The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it is coming from and where it is going; so is everyone who has been born of the Spirit.”

    Gospel of John 3:8Jesus Christ teaching on the Holy Spirit

    Introducing the Third Person of the Trinity:

    Acts 1:

    Luke tells us that his first book, the Gospel, was about Jesus Christ and that this second account, Acts, will be about what Jesus accomplished through the Apostles AFTER His ascension into heaven.

    We look for the actors (so to speak) who Luke records doing the crucial early works of the Church. Peter immediately comes to mind as well as Paul.

    What most Christians may have missed in Luke’s chronicles of the first three decades of Church history is that mysterious Person we first met in the Gospels, the ungraspable Image of God in the Holy Spirit.

    Luke tells us that during forty days after His resurrection Jesus appeared to many (in addition to the Apostles).

    4 Gathering them together, He commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised, …

    Here, mentioning the Father and the Person of the Son, Luke records the words of Jesus to the Apostles as they must have testified to our author of Acts:

    “Which,” He said, “you heard of from Me; for John baptized with water,

    but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.”

    Acts 1:4b NASB

    God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” – Gospel of John 4:24 ESV

    Baptism

    And I remind us that baptism [baptizō] ‘produces a permanent change.

    The Apostles and others are about to be overwhelmed by a permanent change of the Spirit, a baptism receiving the third Person of God, the Holy Spirit. Luke records this cleansing baptism like no other, more that a baptism of water for repentance only.

    Ascension of the Lord Jesus

    The palpable tension of the Apostle’s encounters with the risen Christ, their beloved friend and Master which concluded Luke’s Gospel now builds once again. Luke records what happens next with this risen Jesus (who they could touch, who shared bread and wine with the Eleven), even the same Jesus who now continued to teach them more for the past forty days.

    Christ Jesus again establishes the providence and authority of the Person of God the Father.

    He said to them, “It is not for you to know times or periods that the Father has set by his own authority.

    Acts 1:7 CSB

    but you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses G3144 ..

    Acts of the Apostles 1:8a NASB20

    μάρτυς Witness (to the ACTS which Luke is about to unfold)

    • martys [gk.] [Strong’s 3144] Definition:
    • a witness
      1. in a legal sense
      2. an historical sense
        • one who is a spectator of anything, e.g. of a contest
      3. in an ethical sense
        • those who after his example have proved the strength and genuineness of their faith in Christ by undergoing a violent death

    Luke is witness through the Apostles not only of the Ascension of Jesus Christ, but a convincing witness to the Holy Spirit as Luke records God’s great acts of power only possible by the Holy Spirit of Almighty God.

    Roger@talkofJESUS.com

    Jesus was taken up as the Apostles watched!

    Luke records that this Son of Man, risen in flesh and blood from the grave, had been with them — forty days — and then powerfully and mysteriously Jesus rises into the clouds as they look on (actually, up) in awe!

    The Holy Ghost – In AWE of the Spirit!

    How would your have reacted to this powerful, yet unexplainable rising of the Lord Jesus into the clouds?


    You may find Luke’s account from the King James Version of the Bible helpful in describing your FEAR and AWE of this historical event which also includes angels of God.

    The Holy Ghost in Acts – KJV

    The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach, Until the day in which he was taken up, after that he through the Holy Ghost had given commandments unto the apostles whom he had chosen:

    To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God:

    And, being assembled together with them, commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have heard of me.


    Luke records what fear and expectation Jesus planted in their hearts prior to the Lord’s ascension. Jesus compares this power with what they had received from John the Baptist.

    For John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence.

    Acts 1:5 KJV – Jesus promising the Apostles a baptism of the Spirit of God (the Holy Ghost)

    ἁγίου  πνεύματος – hagios pneuma the Holy Ghost

    Unless you have a question for me by way of comment, we cannot get into some of the more mysterious depths of discussion about that which we cannot see and understand even less, the Person of the Holy Ghost. For to speak of the Spirit yields little fruit in the hearts of those ‘christians’ who have not yet received the Holy Spirit.

    So allow me to define BOTH GREEK WORDS and you can take it from there.

    hagios – HOLY

    • from ἅγος hágos (an awful thing) (compare G53, G2282); sacred (physically, pure, morally blameless or religious, ceremonially, consecrated):—(most) holy (one, thing), saint.

    pneuma spirit

    KJV translate this as:

    GHOST

    people receiving the Holy Spirit descending like a dove
    (May I just add that our imagery of the Holy Spirit descending sometimes obscures the awesome power of the third Person of the Trinity, that is, the Holy Ghost.)
    
    READ just some of these definitions from Strong's G4151 for Pneuma below:

    Outline of Biblical Usage 

    1. the third person of the triune God, the Holy Spirit, coequal, coeternal with the Father and the Son
      1. sometimes referred to in a way which emphasises his personality and character (the “Holy” Spirit)
      2. sometimes referred to in a way which emphasises his work and power (the Spirit of “Truth”)
      3. never referred to as a depersonalised force
    2. the spirit, i.e. the vital principal by which the body is animated
      1. the rational spirit, the power by which the human being feels, thinks, decides
      2. the soul
    3. a spirit, i.e. a simple essence, devoid of all or at least all grosser matter, and possessed of the power of knowing, desiring, deciding, and acting
      1. a life giving spirit
      2. a human soul that has left the body
      3. a spirit higher than man but lower than God, i.e. an angel
        1. used of demons, or evil spirits, who were conceived as inhabiting the bodies of men
        2. the spiritual nature of Christ, higher than the highest angels and equal to God, the divine nature of Christ
    4. the disposition or influence which fills and governs the soul of any one
      1. the efficient source of any power, affection, emotion, desire, etc.
    5. a movement of air (a gentle blast)
      1. of the wind, hence the wind itself
      2. breath of nostrils or mouth

    ACTS in the Spirit

    Luke will have much more to say about this mysterious Person of the Trinity and crucial character in his historical account of Acts.

    • And when they had prayed, the place was shaken where they were assembled together; and they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the word of God with boldness.
      • Acts 4:31

    And we are his witnesses of these things; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom God hath given to them that obey him.

    Acts 5:32
    • And God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as he did unto us
      • Acts 15:8
    • And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Ghost came on them; and they spake with tongues, and prophesied.
      • Acts 19:6

    Although contemporary ‘christianity‘ characterizes the Holy Ghost less fearfully, in order to see his emphasis on the Person of the Holy Spirit let’s close Luke’s AWEfilled [awesome] introduction to ACTS from the KJV:

    • Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. – Acts 2:38

    Acts Apostolos - Acts of the Apostles - the chronicles of Christ's Apostles - a history of Christ's Church

    to be continued..

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