
Encountering God at Church (Acts 4:18-31)
- Id ask you to open your Bibles to Acts
4 this morning
- these past few weeks, weve been talking
about the church weve always longed for
- when I look at the church, there is a long list
of qualities I would love to be hers
- who here wouldnt love the church to be
a caring place that welcomes all people, empowers each individual, models
integrity, and serves a broken world?
-
- theres a danger, though
- the danger is in thinking that we can ever expect
a perfect church this side of heaven
- sometimes were so busy looking for these
qualities in a church, we begin to expect perfection
- but no church is perfect
- one author writes:
- "We hear tales of glitzy, enthusiastic churches
and wonder what in the world we are doing wrong that our people dont
turn out that way under our preaching. On close examination,
though, it turns out that there are no wonderful congregations. Hang
around long enough and sure enough there are gossips who wont
shut up, furnaces that malfunction, sermons that misfire, disciples
who quit, choirs that go flat and worse. Every congregation
is a congregation of sinners. As if that werent bad enough, they
all have sinners for pastors."
-
- some people long for churches to be like the
early church
- which part of the early church would you like?
- the false teaching? the drunkenness at the Lords
Table? the persecution? the sexual immorality? the factions and divisions
in the church?
- were mistaken if we think the church has
ever been perfect
- its always had problems!
-
- if I came to church looking for a perfect pastor
and a perfect people, and worship I liked and people who never upset
me; if I came to church expecting perfection, I would be sorely disappointed
- I would never find it
- but to tell the truth, I dont come looking
for those things
- not really
- its nice if theyre there, but theres
something far more important
- I come to church to encounter the living God
- I dont come for the pastor or the people,
or the music or even the sermon I come because I plan to meet
God
-
- as we look at the early church in the book of
Acts, we see a number of things that attract us
- we see forgiven believers and powerful sermons
- we notice the love, joy, and peace that characterized
the lives of the early believers
- we sense the excitement of the Kingdom of God
advancing against the strongholds of Satan
-
- but we also notice problems
- somebody has said that the chief actor in the
story of Acts 1 and 2 is the Holy Spirit, but it almost appears that
the main character in Acts 3 to 6 seems to be Satan
- his activity is obvious throughout
- the disciples are arrested and jailed
- two church members are caught lying to the church
and are struck dead
- persecution continues and one of their number,
Stephen, is martyred
-
- the early church was encountering Satan and all
his forces
- they withstood his onslaught
- while we applaud their faithfulness, I dont
think any of us wish to trade places with them as they face such persecution
- what we do long for, however, is the real and
undeniable sense of the presence of God in the early church
- there is no doubt that they encountered the living
God
-
- I believe the church today is hungry for such
encounters
- we long to come to church and sense the manifest
presence of the living God
- Garrison Keillor, host of the popular radio series,
"A Prairie Home Companion," grew up in an evangelical church,
and he had something interesting to say about why people go to church:
- "We dont go to church to hear lectures
on ethical behavior, we go to look at the mysteries, and all the substitutes
for communion with God are not worth anyones time
If you
cant go to church and, for at least a moment, be given transcendence;
if you cant go to church and pass briefly from this life to the
next; then I cant see why anyone should go. Just a brief moment
of transcendence causes you to come out of church as a changed person."
- we come to church seeking a supernatural encounter
with God
-
- please look with me at Acts 4
- in verse 18 we read if the action of the Sanhedrin,
the supreme court and administrative body of the Jews:
- (Acts 4:18) Then they called them in again and
commanded them not to speak or teach at all in the name of Jesus.
- if the Supreme Court of Canada ordered us not
to preach about Jesus any more, what would our response be?
- Peter and John answered boldly:
- (Acts 4:19) But Peter and John replied, "Judge
for yourselves whether it is right in God's sight to obey you rather
than God.
- (Acts 4:20) For we cannot help speaking about
what we have seen and heard."
-
- verse 21 tells us that the Sanhedrin didnt
react very well to Peter and Johns boldness
- they issued further threats, but really didnt
know what else to do
- so Peter and John were released
- weve read this passage so much were
prone to overlook what happened next
- what would you do if this happened to you?
- what would your reaction be?
- would you resign yourself and say, "Ive
done everything I could do"
- would you shake your fists at the Sanhedrin and
say, "In your face! Im going to preach anyway!"
- or would you do something else first?
- lets read what Peter and John did:
- (Acts 4:23) On their release, Peter and John
went back to their own people and reported all that the chief priests
and elders had said to them.
- (Acts 4:24) When they heard this, they raised
their voices together in prayer to God.
- lets stop there and learn some lessons
from their response
-
- the first lesson we have to learn from their
response is this:
- WE ARE INVOLVED IN A SPIRITUAL BATTLE OF COSMIC
PROPORTION
- the early disciples had no hesitancy in realizing
that they were involved in something way over their head
- they were smart enough to realize that there
battle really wasnt against the Sanhedrin or even other human
beings
- to take a stand for Christ and the truth of the
Gospel made them a target of the Evil One
- they knew that they were no match for Satan and
his schemes
- they were unashamedly dependent on God at every
turn
- and they got down on their knees
-
- friends, the disciples couldnt have done
anything if they hadnt already been filled and empowered by the
Holy Spirit
- they started out as a bunch of misfits
- but they ended up "turning the world upside
down"
- their boldness before the Sanhedrin was a direct
result of fact that they had been with Jesus, and that they had received
the gift of the Holy Spirit days earlier at Pentecost
- when the promise of the Holy Spirit was fulfilled
in their lives, it turned them from petty, competitive, small-minded
men to strong-hearted, incredibly confident and powerful servants of
God
- and it was through the power of the Holy Spirit
- their first response was to turn to their friends
at church and pray to God who was in their midst
- they turned to their commander-in-chief for direction
and power
- they realized that the attack was not on them
personally
- they quoted from an Old Testament passage that
spoke of the attacks made by earthly rulers on the Lord and Messiah,
and they saw this fulfilled in the unholy conspiracy of Herod and Pilate,
of Jews and Romans against Jesus
- they knew that when the Sanhedrin persecuted
them, they were simply continuing that assault, and they prayed for
boldness:
- (Acts 4:29) Now, Lord, consider their threats
and enable your servants to speak your word with great boldness.
- (Acts 4:30) Stretch out your hand to heal and
perform miraculous signs and wonders through the name of your holy servant
Jesus."
-
- Ephesians 6:12 says:
- (Ephesians 6:12) For our struggle is not against
flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against
the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil
in the heavenly realms.
- we are involved in a spiritual warfare that requires
spiritual weapons
- the battle is real
- the consequences are great
- I dont want to minimize what happens in
other arenas of struggle, but lets put it in perspective
- if the Indians dont beat the Marlins in
the World Series, it seems pretty severe, but all thats been lost
is a game
- if a business fails, it might seem the end of
the world to some people, but all thats lost is some money
- but if believers lose the fight if theyre
not empowered by the Holy Spirit to do battle and stand boldly and proclaim
the truth of the Gospel, lives are for stake, and for eternity
- Satan wants us to believe that the World Series
is more important or that businesses are more important, but listen:
- we are involved in a spiritual battle of cosmic
proportion
- and thats why we need to encounter God
at church
- because in the battle we face, Gods power
is essential
-
- many churches lose sight of the battle and therefore
no longer need to be attentive to Gods presence
- we see spiritual warfare as something to be debated,
not as a present-day reality
- we have settled for a comfortable life in the
suburbs, risking little for the kingdom of God
- we dont sense Gods presence because
our circumstances dont require it
- weve settled for comfort instead of victory
- we are getting along quite well, thank you
-
- someone has suggested that we ask ourselves,
"What am I attempting for God that cannot be accomplished without
the Holy Spirit?"
- what is there about our lives as Christians that
demands an explanation beyond the ordinary?
- for Peter and John and the rest of the early
church, the only explanation for their boldness and accomplishments
was their radical dependence on God who was with them in the middle
of the battle
-
- another lesson I learn from these disciples is
this:
- THE BATTLE DROVE THEM TO THEIR KNEES
- their response to the battle they faced was this:
they prayed
- we must learn to pray as if our lives and ministries
depended on it, because they do
- you notice that when they began to pray, they
focused on praise rather than pity
- their focus was not on themselves; it was on
Christ
- they worshiped God
-
- but they did not hesitate to ask for Gods
help
- they requested that God enable them to speak
his word with boldness
- prayer was central to their task
-
- Dr. Richard Lovelace, church historian at Gordon-Conwell
Seminary, concludes that the twentieth-century church is not as apt
to pray first and act later
- he wrote, "The place of prayer has become
limited and almost vestigial. The proportion of horizontal communication
that goes on in the church (in planning, arguing, and expounding) is
overwhelmingly greater than that which is vertical (in worship, thanksgiving,
confession, and intercession)"
- he added, "Deficiency in prayer both reflects
and reinforces inattention toward God"
-
- Dr. Lovelace is right
- the minimal prayer, given almost as a token,
may indicate that what is undertaken is simply what we humans can accomplish
by ourselves
- we are reluctant to pray, either as individuals
or as a church body
-
- we stand at the threshold of implementing our
Strategy for Ministry
- for two or three years, we have been carefully
laying the groundwork to move ahead as a church in the areas of fellowship,
discipleship, service, and evangelism (bonding, growing, serving, winning)
- teams are meeting right now to lay the groundwork
for 1998
- but might I say that the most important thing
we can do as a church is to get on our knees
- our strategy will be nothing unless it begins
with, ends with, and is supported by prayer at every stage
- we dare not move ahead on our own strength
-
- we need to recover the biblical worldview that
is displayed in the disciples prayer to God
- if we live as they lived, and if we learn to
pray as they prayed, fully dependent upon the living God, then we too
will experience Gods presence and power in our own day
- in a marvelous and mysterious way, the risen
Christ is released to be at work in our lives and in the world when
we pray, and often, not until we pray
- the truth is that Jesus is real to those who
pray and distant to those who do not
-
- listen to what happened after they prayed:
- (Acts 4:31) After they prayed, the place where
they were meeting was shaken. And they were all filled with the Holy
Spirit and spoke the word of God boldly.
- the effect of the prayer was remarkable
- the room in which the disciples were gathered
shook
- this was a sign to them that God was present
and would answer their prayer
- we might not expect such tangible evidence that
God hears our prayers, but God is always ready to fill us with his Spirit
and empower us to boldly proclaim his Gospel
-
- as I said earlier, the thing that matters most
about this church is that it is a church where we encounter God
- you could say many things about our church
that its friendly, that they preaching is biblical and helpful
- but the critical thing, really the only thing,
is that God is here, working in us and empowering us
- we cant transform lives
- we cant convict people
- we arent very powerful
- we dont have the abilities and the boldness
necessary to turn the world upside down with the truth of the Gospel
- but thats all right
- because God delights in empowering his people
- and God removes the obstacles and turns our small
gifts into wonderful things that can be used to please him
-
- would you pray with me that God would empower
us?
- (Ephesians 3:20) Now to him who is able to do
immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power
that is at work within us,
- (Ephesians 3:21) to him be glory in the church
and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.