Video Transcript: Acts 1-2

Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener. In his teaching and the book of Acts. This is session number 7, Acts chapters 1 and 2.  


Dr. Keener - Acts chapters 1 and 2 teach us about powerful witness. They  introduce an emphasis and empowerment for cross cultural witness that is  highly significant for the rest of the book of Acts. Acts 1:8 is central in this. Not all ancient works, had a thesis statement or something like that at the beginning, but sometimes they did. And Acts is one of those works, that does. Acts 1:8, you will be witnesses to the ends of the earth, once the Spirit comes on you. 


Now  Acts 1 and 2 recapitulate Luke 24, the pivot between Luke and Acts. So this is a very strategic section. And it shows us it highlights for us, a major emphasis of Luke Acts, namely, the empowerment of the Spirit, that Jesus mission is to be carried on by his followers, obviously, not his mission of dying for the world, to save the world, but his mission of ministering grace to the world, and spreading  the good news of what Jesus has done. We see that in Acts 1-2. In Act 1:4-8, we read about the promise of Pentecost, in 1:12-26, we read about preparation for  Pentecost, including prayer and leadership in 2:1-4, the proofs of Pentecost, 2:5- 12, the peoples of Pentecost, 2:17-21, the prophecy of Pentecost, 2: 22-40, the preaching of Pentecost, and 2:41-47, the purpose of Pentecost. 


First of all, looking at the promise of Pentecost, I'll be doing this one in more detail than some of the others. The promise of Pentecost is so important that Jesus says, stay in Jerusalem, wait for what the Father has promised. Waiting for the power of the Spirit is more important than just getting out and trying to do it on your own. Because we can't succeed in Christ's mission without his power. In fact, usually, whatever he calls us to do, in many respects, is something we can't do in our own strength. So we learn to depend on his strength instead of our own. 


The disciples ask the obvious question, in verse 6, Jesus has been talking about the kingdom, he's been talking about the Spirit. Well, the outpouring of the Spirit was associated with the end-time restoration of Israel. You have that in Isaiah  44:3, you have in Isaiah, perhaps 61, perhaps 59. You have it in Ezekiel 36, 37, 39, you have in Joel 2, and so forth. So Jesus is talking about the Spirit, he's  talking about the kingdom. And the disciples ask the obvious question, is this the time that you're going to restore the kingdom to Israel? And Jesus answers by saying, well, it's not for you to know the times of the seasons yet. The consummation of the kingdom will come verse 7. But the Spirit is going to be  given now, verse 8, to prepare the world beforehand to prepare witnesses beforehand. The Spirit was associated with the end time. So Jesus followers  must display the life of the future age would be like, pointing to saying that the  disciples you have a foretaste of the world to come. And if the world around, can't look at the church, and see what heaven is going to be like and see what the new world is going to be like, it’s because the church is living short of the church's birthright because Jesus has given us the spirit, the foretaste of the age to come. 


And of course, we see that throughout the New Testament, that  emphasis that the of the already not yet that the king who was yet to come has already come. So we're looking for a second coming, but he's already come once the resurrection of the dead. We're waiting that but the disciples were able  to preach in Jesus the resurrection from the dead Acts 4:4, because Jesus had already been raised the first fruits 1 Corinthians 15 says, the firstborn from among the dead. We see the association with with the Spirit elsewhere. Hebrews 6 says that we've received the Spirit we've tasted the spirit and we've tasted the powers of the age to come Galatians 1:4, we've been delivered from this present evil age, Romans 12:2 Don't be conformed to this age, but texts that actually mentioned the Spirit directly in that connection. 


We have the the first  fruits of the Spirit, Romans 8:23. We have the downpayment. It's a  Greek word arrabōn. It's used in business documents, meaning the actual first installment the first payment, we have the beginning of our future inheritance. Ephesians 1, also, II Corinthians 1, II Corinthians 5, we have the down payment of our future inheritance. I Corinthians 2:9-10. Paul says eye has not seen, neither has ear heard, neither has it entered the human heart, the things that  God has prepared for those who love Him. But God has revealed them to us by His Spirit. So by the Spirit, we have a foretaste of the world to come, and the world should be able to look at us and see what the world to come, is to be like a sample of what the world to come, is to be like.


Jesus said, you'll receive power, when the Spirit comes on you. We talked about this earlier in the  introduction, that in Luke, in the Gospel, and in the book of Acts, power is not exclusively but is most often associated with healings, and the driving out  demons. So this is ultimately what some have called Power evangelism. That is, God backs up his word with power. That's why we see signs and wonders in the book of Acts, drawing people's attention to this. Now, you may have heard me continued to qualify at various points that we don't always see that happening.  But if you're in a place where it's always happening, please don't complain, just  rejoice in it. But the power is associated with the Spirit. 


The Old Testament often  associated the spirit, with the prophets, and with prophetic speech, and  sometimes other kinds of prophetic actions. Early Judaism, especially made that association that was the one that they developed the most. Some of the other connections of the Spirit do appear elsewhere. And especially in the Dead Sea Scrolls and jubilees, things connected probably with the Essenes. Those sources, associate the spirit a lot with purification. But they also do mention  prophetic empowerment, and other Jewish sources all over the place mentioned the spirit in association with prophetic empowerment. So when Jesus says that you are going to receive power from the spirit, it's as if he's looking at the disciples and saying, you will be like Ezekiel, you will be like Jeremiah, you'll be  like Isaiah, you'll be like Hulda, or Miriam, or Deborah, or Daniel, we've been given different kinds of giftings, there were different kinds of prophets in the Old Testament, Elijah, but the same power that was given to the prophets of old  is given to us to let the world know about Jesus, witnesses to the ends of the  earth, Jesus says there'll be.


The language reflects Isaiah. And it's not surprising that would reflect Scripture because Luke 24, when it gives this commission talks about power, from on high, using language from earlier in the  book of Isaiah, it says, it says that this is Jesus was teaching this based on  Scripture. So it doesn't have to repeat that point, saying it's based on scripture in Acts 1 for people to realize, yes, this is based on Scripture. They would be  witnesses for God, Isaiah 43:10, Isaiah 44:8, witnesses for Yahweh. But here, whose witnesses are they? Jesus says, You'll be my witnesses. It fits very clearly with the theme on Jesus being divine. Of course, you have that  introduced very early in Luke's gospel, even when John the Baptist comes  preaching. The quote is from Isaiah 40:3 of voice, one crying in the wilderness,  Prepare the way for our God, prepare the Lord, the Lord's Way, referring to  Yahweh's way. And then he goes on to talk about all flesh, including the  Gentiles. In other words, seeing the salvation of our God. 


Well here, Acts 1:8, it  has very clear Christological message including that Jesus is divine. And our mission is to carry on this mission that God's people were told about and Book  of Isaiah, when they would receive the Spirit, they would be witnesses. And the  association is with the Spirit also in that section of Isaiah. And it would be to the ends of the earth. Jesus says here in Acts 1:8, well, that can echo a number of passages. But especially it echoes Isaiah 49:6, which talks about the mission to  the ends of the earth, a light to the ends of the earth. And that's actually quoted  in Acts 13:47 words applied to Paul's own ministry, it's not just for the 12. 


Now,  Jesus is directly addressing the 12 here, rather the 11, Judas has died. But he's not just addressing the 11. If you if you look at the end of Luke 24, it's the 11 and those who were with them. So it's a bit larger than that, to begin with. Those who are directly called witnesses especially, are the ones who were with Jesus, the 11, the person who replaces Judas, also, to become one of the 12. They were witnesses of these things originally, but Paul is also called a witness in Acts. So Stephen called the witness next. Moreover, the Spirit is given not only to the 12,  but the Spirit is going to be given to all believers to carry on this mission. And  you see that clearly in Acts 2:38-39. Using the same language that we have here, in this context, where you receive the gift of the Spirit, you receive what  what has been promised, and, and so forth. Well, this introduces a major theme, in, in Acts, the gospel spread. And you see this through summary statements  throughout the book of Acts, the Lord added to the number daily 2:47, the word  of God spreads 6:7, the church grew in numbers 9:31, 12:24, the word continued to increase 16:5, the churches grew daily in numbers 19:20, the word spread and grew 28:31, without hindrance he preached. And these reflect the  growth of the church in Jerusalem, across class boundaries, in Judea, and Galilee, further in Judea, in southern Asia Minor and urban Ephesus, in Rome and so forth. It's just showing how the, how the good news goes forth. 


And even more explicit outline. We have an Acts 1:8. But it's a very rough outline. It's not,  it's not meant to be a detailed outline. But Acts 1:8, gives kind of a summary statement of where the gospel is going. Jerusalem, chapters 1-7, Judea and  Samaria, chapters 8 and 9, and then to the ends of the earth, everywhere beyond there, beyond the Holy Land and chapters 10-28, where it's dominated, especially by the the diaspora mission, where Paul is, is the most prominent figure. Gentiles in chapters 10 and 11, are already foreshadowed in chapter 8,  Cyprus and southern Turkey and in 13,14, a theological center of the book, many consider chapter 15, Asia in Greece 16, through 20, and then in route to Rome via Jerusalem and Caesarea in the final quarter, 21 through 28.  


Geographically, something very significant is that Luke's Gospel begins and ends with the temple in Jerusalem. From Zechariah, in having the vision in the  temple, and the disciples praying in the temple in Jerusalem, at the end of Luke  24, but the book of Acts, moves from Jerusalem, picking up where Luke's Gospel left off to Rome. And there's a theological reason for this. Theologically, we could say that Luke Acts moves from heritage to mission, it first make sure  that everything is very grounded in heritage, so that you understand that where  the gospel is going forth is what was predicted. It's what was already grounded in the history of Israel that had come before it. But this history history of Israel  without discarding the history of Israel without discarding the heritage, it's it's also moving beyond there to mission. 


Now, for Luke's audience being in the in  the empire, getting to the heart of the Empire, was a significant climax for the  book of Acts. But really, the book of Acts is open ended. And it says the Gospel goes to the end of the year ends of the earth. Where are the ends of the earth?  Well, and sit in it. There were different things that were labeled the ends of the earth back then the Western ends of the earth, were thought to be Spain, and the river ocean, which was thought to run around the whole earth. Although  some people knew of things further west than Spain, and even some things  further west than that, what they consider the river ocean, to the east, you had  Parthia, you had India, you had China, there were trade connections with China, they knew they knew of places like that. So the ends of the earth, they already  had to know that it would include places like India and China. So in the north, places like Scythia, which partly is where Russia is Germany, Britain, to the  south, then you have Africa, South of Egypt, there were trade ties as far south  as Tanzania. They've actually found a bust of Caesar that far south. The Nubian  kingdom, but Meroe appears in chapter 8:29, a very powerful kingdom, south of  Egypt, that Ramnath and Rome found itself unable to subdue, and just had to make trade connections with and peace treaty with. So they knew of the ends of the earth beyond Rome. They didn't know of North and South and Central America. So they didn't know of the hemisphere in which I live. But they, they did know that it went beyond Rome. That's Rome is important for Luke's audience. But Rome is a proleptic. Foreshadowing of the ends of the earth, just like the conversion of the African official, and Acts 8, is a foreshadowing of the, of the  gospel reaching the southern ends of the earth. Just like in Acts 2, where you  have Jewish people from every nation under heaven, that's a foreshadowing of  the gospel going to the ends of the earth. So Luke keeps giving us reminders of the of the future promise. The mission is open ended. It continues today, the  book of Acts is open ended, it opens into the future. Even though Luke just has  two volumes, we know that history is going on. 


Well, there's another biblical  allusion. In Acts 1:9-11, Jesus ascends to heaven. Well, Greeks had stories of people ascending to heaven, Romans did, Jewish people did. But there's one in  the Old Testament, before Jewish people would have been exposed to these other things. And this is the one with which Luke's audience would be most familiar because it's in their canon, it's in Scripture, this is something they would,  they would have heard regularly, Elijah, ascended to heaven. And when he did  that, in II Kings 2, what happened, he left for Elisha, a double portion of his spirit. So Jesus is ascending to heaven. In chapter 1:9-11, but he's just promised the disciples, the same Spirit who empowered him Acts 10:38, Luke 4:18, the  same Spirit who anointed Jesus is now the same Spirit is going to empower the church to carry out our mission. And like Elisha was carrying on the mission of Elijah, we're to carry on the mission of Jesus. Again, not for dying for the sins of  the world, but for the kinds of things that the Spirit Empower Jesus to do in terms of, of bringing healing and well being to people and preaching the good news of  the kingdom. 


So also, we have a section about preparation for Pentecost. I'm not going to spend as much time on the section, but they have to reestablish the leadership structure, because they've had a scandal, one of the leaders has  fallen away, and ended up dying as well. They need to prepare in faith that God  will use them. Just like David wasn't allowed to build the temple. But he stored  up material so that Solomon could build the temple. And it's not time for them to  go yet. But they do prepare in faith that God is going to bring about the promised restoration. They therefore make sure that a 12th disciple is appointed. So they come back up to the number that they need to be to because Jesus said  you're going to sit on 12 throne studying the 12 tribes of Israel. 


Also, they pray  together in verse 14. And you have both men and women praying together, and  they're praying before the outpouring of the Spirit. And this is the theme as we  saw in our introduction, that runs throughout Luke Acts, now I know that some of you probably didn't want the introduction you wanted to get right into the text.  And so you skip the introduction. And that's alright if that's what you wanted to  do. But just Just briefly, this is a theme that comes over and over again, in Luke Acts. But especially it's important in terms of prayer before the coming of the Spirit. That's a frequent theme in Luke Acts, the Spirit is on Jesus when comes on Jesus, when he's praying. At His baptism, you also have the praying here,  and then the Spirit is poured out in Acts 2. In Acts 4, they're praying, and they're filled the Spirit so that they can continue the mission. In Acts 8, they prayed for  the Samaritans to receive the Spirit and the Spirit came on the Samaritans.  Prayer also precedes the outpouring of the Spirit in Acts 9 and Acts 10, although the connection isn't made as explicit by Luke in these cases, but it's mentioned in both cases. It's not to say that that's the only way God ever pours out His Spirit. In fact, the Acts 10 Peter is rather surprised when it happens. Even  though he was praying before it all happened, as well as Cornelius was praying before it happened. But they weren't praying specifically for the outpouring of  Spirit. 


I believe that of all the things I found out in writing my 4000, roughly, page Acts commentary. As I worked through the book of Acts, perhaps the most  important for the church today, or at least much of the church today is this. God  poured out His Spirit in the book of Acts, it's crystal clear. The church needs the Spirit, to fulfill the mission that God has given us. We can't do this on our own.  It's God who multiplies it. It's God who makes it count. It's God who makes it  fruitful. And the chief prerequisite, maybe not prerequisite, but the chief  preparation we can give before the outpouring of the Spirit is prayer. We want to  see God move. Let's ask him for it. Because He promised us Jesus promised us in Luke 11:13. You know, in Matthew, if you ask for the gifts, your father will give  you good gifts. But Luke focuses on a particular good gift. If you ask for for  bread, your father won't give you a stone. How much more if you being evil,  know how to give good gifts to your children? How much more will your  heavenly Father, give the Holy Spirit to those who asked him? Let us ask him for the outpouring of the Spirit upon us. Let us ask him for the outpouring of the  Spirit on his church around the world, that He will send forth laborers into His harvest, as he's instructed us to pray for that. 


Many pilgrims gathered at the  temple for the day of Pentecost. And so this was a strategic time when many  people would be gathered there. And in chapter 2:2-4, we have that whole section before it frames kind of in prayer. The disciples are praying early in that section and then chapter 2:1, they're all together in one place in one accord,  what are they doing? Well, presumably, they're still praying. People may have been coming and going, but the prayer meeting is still going on. But in chapter  2:2-4, we get the evidences of Pentecost, the Spirit is being poured out. Chapter 2:2, you have the sound of a mighty rushing wind. And that evokes a  theophany. Often you have something like the sound of a wind, when God reveals himself in the Old Testament. Also, it may be associated in Ezekiel 37,  with resurrection life, end time resurrection life. God sends His rock His Spirit,  like a wind, to revive the Dry Bones of his people, and bring about the  restoration of his people. So you have you have the wind, you also have fire. In  verse 3 of chapter 2. The fire again evokes a theophany, often with with God  revealing His glory, in the Old Testament comes like fire. But also fire is  associated, like in Isaiah 66, and so on fire seems to be associated with with  eschatological judgment, what would be understood as end time judgment by interpreters in the first century. These are not repeated in later outpourings of the Spirit and the book of Acts. They're important here because they, they show the God is showing up they also show like a foretaste of the future, a foretaste of  eschatology, but they aren't repeated at subsequent outpourings of the Spirit in the book of Acts. That's not to say that they can never be repeated. They have  been repeated at some outpourings of Spirit. In the past, the the wind came, and I believe even the fire perhaps at the outpouring of the Spirit at the beginning of the Timor, West Timor revival in Indonesia, you had fire also with the outpouring  of the Spirit Pandita Ramabia's orphanage in India in the early first decade of the of the 20th century around 1904 or so. 


But the the third sign that is given  in this case is that they begin praying in tongues, they begin speaking in other languages, and tongues is the most significant of these three for Luke, because  it's repeated at initial outpourings. In chapter 10:46, and chapter 19:6, it's also  clearly important because it provides the catalyst here for the multicultural audience that gets it gets people's attention and it gets people's attention cross culturally, in this case, Jewish people from all these different locations were  parts of a variety of cultures in a secondary way. It also sets up for for Peter's  message, because it says when this sound was heard, people said what does  this mean? And Peter says, “This is what Joel meant, when he said, I'll pour out  my Spirit on all flesh, your sons and daughters will prophesy. Well, it relates to  Acts theme in chapter 1:8. You see how is that? Peter interprets it in 2:17 and 18 is the Spirit of prophecy about which Joel spoke. Acts 1:8 talks about the Spirit empowering us for witness how do these relate together? Remember what it  says about witness in Acts 1:8. This is inspired speech inspired by the Spirit. It's  it's prophetic speech that fits 2:17-18. But it's also Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria,  and to the uttermost parts of the earth. It's cross cultural speech, what greater sign could God give his church, that he was empowering them to cross all  cultural barriers, then to enable people on the day of Pentecost? To begin  worshiping God in other people's languages? What greater way could he show them this the purpose for which I am empowering you with the Spirit of prophecy? Not so you can entertain yourselves, but I'm empowering you with the Spirit of prophecy to send you to the ends of the earth. That's the purpose of  the outpouring of the Spirit. 


Now, if you look at the history of the past century or so of discussion about this late 19th century, radical evangelicals, they were emphasizing holiness and missions and healing. This was an  interdenominational movement. It a lot of it came from Methodism. But but at  this point, it was spread among Presbyterians, it was spread among many, many different churches, emphasis and holiness, missions and healing. And many were seeking what they called baptism in the Holy Spirit. I didn't really go into  that, in Acts 1:4-5, what that means, I don't know if I can deal with that briefly without going off on to too many different things. Traditionally, Reformed  churches have said, the baptism the Holy Spirit represents conversion. And that seems to be how it's used in I Corinthians 12:13, where one is baptized by the Spirit into Christ's body. And traditionally Wesleyan and holiness oriented  churches, and Pentecostals have said, it applies to something that happens after conversion. And they've pointed to people having experiences with the Spirit after conversion in the book of Acts. Remember that this goes  back to what John the Baptist prophesy, John the Baptist spoke of being  baptized in the Holy Spirit, and in fire, in both Matthew, Matthew 3 and Luke 3.  And in the context, you've got a contrast between that, presumably people are either going to be baptized in the Holy Spirit, or they're going to be baptized in  fire. Don't have time to go into all that. But if you look at the context, the fire  clearly is not baptism in holiness, although we all affirm the importance of  holiness. But when he talks about being baptized in fire, just look at the context  for yourself. When you when you have the opportunity, the context is talking  about the fire of judgment. In Matthew, actually, it's the verse right before and  the verse right after both speak of judgment, Luke, it's a little bit more spread  out. But it's, it's still pretty clear there. The two verses talking about fire right around it are talking about judgment. So either you get the Holy Spirit, you get  the fire, that might suggest it refers to conversion. At the same time. John the  Baptist was also aware that the, like what the prophet Joel said, what Peter  quotes here in Acts 2, that this when the Spirit is poured out, your sons and  daughters will prophesy. This was the Spirit who would empower God's people.  


So how do we put those things together? Well, Luke is going to emphasize one aspect of the Spirit's work, he's not denying the other aspects. He's not denying conversion. He associates them actually in 2:38-39, I believe. But he's  especially going to be talking about power for witness. And this prophetic empowerment. That's how Peter interprets it this in this inaugural sermon, in  Acts. And Jesus inaugural sermon and Luke's Gospel, it also has to do with  empowerment for mission, although he takes a different text for that. So that's going to be Luke's emphasis not to say he denies the other things, not to say it  never talks about anything else, people are filled with Spirit in Acts 13. And  they're filled with joy when they're filled with Spirit. So the Spirit can be associated with different things, but especially with empowerment, for mission.  


Now, that raised the question, does that always happen at conversion? Or can it sometimes happen after conversion? Well, theologically, in principle, I believe it  happens at conversion, we receive access to the whole package of the Spirit's work, but in practice, well, you know, in principle, we all according to Paul, we all became dead, to sin at conversion. But in practice, some of us appropriate that more different times. I think when John the Baptist was talking about baptism in the Spirit, he's envisioning the whole sphere, the Spirit's work in the coming age, and different passages in the New Testament, focus on different aspects of that.  And you have different churches focusing on different aspects of that, focusing on different passages that focus on different aspects of that. So I don't see it as this church is right. And that church is wrong, I see it is, is, well, we need the Spirit for conversion, we also need the Spirit for empowerment. And I think all of us agree when we get past semantics, because I Timothy clearly says, We're not supposed to waste our time, arguing about words may have some value,  debating about words, but let's go for the heart of the matter. All of us, or virtually all of us agreed that that we received the Spirit in some way at conversion, and certainly access to the Spirit of conversion. I think virtually all of us agree that  subsequent conversion, we can have experiences with the Holy Spirit. In fact, in the book of Acts, we see people having multiple experiences with the Spirit. Peter is filled with the Spirit in Acts 2:4. He's filled with Spirit in Acts 4:8, he's  part of the group that's filled with spirit Acts 4:31. That's three times already.  Paul, in 9:17, filled with the Spirit. In chapter 13. In around verse 9, again, it says, Paul, being filled in the Spirit speaks out. Maybe it's possible, that instead of arguing about some of the details about this, all of us would do better. To ask God more for the work of His Spirit in our lives. Like we pointed out in Luke  11:13, he'll hear us if we cry out for the Spirit. If we recognize our thirst for  God, if we recognize that we can't fulfill all this mission on our own, but the  power of the Spirit is available to us. 


If we look at the history of the past century or so of discussion, late 19th century radical evangelicals, they were emphasizing all these things they were praying for the baptism, the  Spirit, would you agree with the terminology or the nomenclature or not? Don't  worry about it. They were praying for something good. They were praying for the outpouring of the Spirit. Many were also praying in that connection for what they call missionary tongues. They said, look, we've got to evangelize the world. This is an impossible task. How can we do this? We need the power of the Spirit for this. And why spend two years learning the language when God can give it to us miraculously. So they were praying for missionary tongues. And some of the people who were praying for this became what we call the early Pentecostals. These were people who were seeking missionary tongues, they were praying for the outpouring of the Spirit. They were praying for empowerment for mission by the Spirit. And they began praying in tongues and there was so much Did they  left for foreign countries, and they tried out their missionary tongues. And in  most cases, there were a few exceptions. In most cases, nobody understood what they were saying. And they were cruelly disappointed, especially since most of them had bought one way tickets. Well, the early Pentecostals kept tongues for prayer, as in I Corinthians 14, but most of them abandon the missionary tongues idea. But I think that they had actually recognized something genuine about the connection in Acts at the beginning. Luke emphasizes the power of the Spirit, to speak for God across cultural barriers. Therefore, tongues was not an arbitrary sign, what greater sign could God give, then, to enable his servants to worship God and other people's languages? So Pentecostals and others sometimes debate, well, are tongues evidence of this empowerment and classical Pentecostal say, yes, and most other people say no. But if we get past the question of whether they are evidence of this empowerment for every  individual, many of us would say, No. Acts 8, the tongues aren't mentioned and  so on. But that's debated either way. But it's all right. Whatever view you hold on that, whether we say it evidence, this is it for every individual. And since I just  told you that, it's not for every individual, I don't think in power, it entails it for every individual. Let me just also, since I'm already in hot water say for the other side, I do pray in tongues myself. And now going back to the other side, for  those of you who are against that, Don't think badly of me, because I didn't do it  on purpose. It just happened to me two days after my conversion, I hadn't heard  of it. It just started in my life. And I've been doing it ever since. But I didn't know what it was when it first started. God just did it for me. But my wife doesn't pray  in tongues, for example. 


So tongues is evidence of this empowerment, I see it  not as necessarily evidence of each individual who receives it, but evidence of  what the experience was about. Yes, it evidence is the nature of the baptism of the Holy Spirit, that this is empowerment for cross cultural ministry, and that God has empowered his church that all of us should be crossing cultural barriers. So  what does that say about us whether we pray in tongues or not, if we don't care  about reaching other peoples, if we can't be reconciled across ethnic or racial  lines? Well, that's where Acts 2 takes us next, the peoples of Pentecost, Acts  2:5-13, speaks of Diaspora Jews from every nation under heaven. It foreshadows the mission to the nations that was talked about in 1:8, just like the  African court official. And in Acts 8, just like the the mission that it gets to Rome,  and Acts 28. And here, as elsewhere, we probably have another biblical allusion. 


There is a list of nations in Acts 2:9-11. Well, Jewish people will hear this or  people who knew the Bible who heard this, they might think of the first list of  nations the list of nations in Genesis 10. And if you're really good with math, you know that the chapter that follows Genesis 10, immediately is Genesis 11, where God came down to scatter the languages where here, this the Spirit comes down and scatters the languages. But this time not to divide the peoples as at Babel. But this time, the Spirit comes down and scatters the languages to bring a new cross cultural unity to the body of Christ. 


Now, going back to what I was  talking about earlier about early Pentecostalism, it happened in the context of a  lot of different revivals that were taking place, the Welsh Revival that had a dramatic impact. Also Pandita Ramabai's orphanage in India was a dramatic outpouring of the Spirit. It was happening in different parts of the world,  independently, at about the same time, the Korean revival shortly after this. So God was doing different things among different groups of Christians. At roughly the same time, there also had been in a prayer in the Catholic Church where they were praying that the next century would be an outpouring of the Holy Spirit. So we see it coming from a lot of different angles. But Azusa Street the revival as it spread to Azusa Street, that's where the the early Pentecostal revival really went international. 


People coming from different different nations  and different, a lot of missionaries coming there. And in Los Angeles, there were  a lot of different people groups. The person who was heading it was William Seymour, who was an African American who was born to parents who were or who were born in slavery? Well, some of the people who were there said that  the color line had been washed away by the blood. You know, in the US, there was ethnic prejudice between whites and blacks. Seymour had had gotten this,  his particular understanding about tongues and so on. He gotten it, especially  from Charles Parham. Charles Parham, was his white mentor. But Parham  came from a different kind of church background, and Seymour did. Seymour  came from a background that was, you know, they expressed their excitement to God in very loud ways. Parham came from a different kind of church tradition  where they were very quiet. When the Spirit came on you, you would be very quiet. And God can work both ways, right? But what happened was that Charles Parham, came to the Azusa Street Mission, and he tried to take it over. And  Seymour wouldn't let him and Parham went out and complained about what was happening in Azusa Street. And one of the ways he complained about it, he said it was nothing but quote, A darky camp meeting. It was a very racist way of denouncing what was happening at Azusa Street. And Seymour changed his emphasis. 


Seymour still believed in in tongues as valuable, he still believed in a lot of the things he believed before. But now, he added another emphasis that's really here in the Pentecost narrative, the spirit and ethnic reconciliation, because he said, How can you how can you really have the Spirit and not love  your brother and sister across racial lines? When when we really submit to the  Spirit, the Spirit will take us beyond beyond racial prejudice beyond ethnic  prejudice beyond class prejudice, beyond cast prejudice. The Spirit will unite us so that we can speak for God and work for God together as partners in the mission to reach the world for Christ. 


We come into the prophecy of Pentecost. In chapter 2:17-21, well, Peter says, what they what they spoke with what you've heard the disciples speaking in tongues, it fulfills Joel's prophecy about prophetic empowerment. And he quotes from Joel, but he adapts the  wording some, which was common in Jewish interpretation, you could adapt the wording some to to get across the point. And Joel, it says afterwards, it doesn't actually say in the last days, but Peter adapts the wording some. Because in the context of Joel, you go on to Joel 3:1. It talks about when God restores the fortunes of His people Israel. So it was in the context of the restoration of God's people, so afterward, meant in the last days, so Peter says in the last day says God, I will pour out my Spirit and all people will, that's what it just been happening. Your sons and daughters will prophesy. It transcends gender barriers as well. God will empower both men and women to to proclaim the good news of Jesus. And then old men and young men, it transcends age barriers. They'll have dreams and visions. 


Well, who in the Old Testament had dreams and visions, especially the prophets, not exclusively, but especially the prophets. And then Peter adds in another line, because it said, your sons and daughters will prophesy on male and female servants, I'll pour out my Spirit. And then he  adds in the line, and they shall prophesy. Well, Joel already mentioned prophecy. But Peter mentioned it again, he wants to make sure you don't miss the point. This is the same Spirit who empowered the prophets of old. Now the  same Spirit is empowering us, God's people. And by the way, when he talks about male and female servants, the one other place that word for female servant is used is for Mary in Luke 1, when the Spirit comes on her, and she has the Spirit causing Jesus to be conceived inside of her. So this is actually her second experience with the Spirit. But she is also called the handmaiden of the  Lord. So she becomes in a sense a model for the church on the day of  Pentecost as God pours out His Spirit, submitting to God, willing to be used by God in whatever ways he wants to use us. 


And and then he goes on to quote Joel speaking of signs and heaven on earth, but he adds in the word wonders, why? Because he wants to emphasize the ones on Earth. Not everything has happened that Joel spoke of yet, but it is a time of fulfillment. That's why in verse 23, as soon as he's done quoting Joel, sorry, verse 22 As soon as he's done  quoting Joel, he speaks of Jesus of Nazareth, the man appointed by God, who performed miracles and wonders in signs among you. And of course, you had the signs that Jesus death with the sun, being turned to darkness and so on. So, he goes on to quote, what Joel says, Whoever calls on the name of the Lord.  And in Joel, this is whoever calls in the name of Yahweh, whoever calls in the name of God will be saved. He breaks off the quote there. But he's not done thinking of Joel, because later on in verse 39, he picks up again with part of  where that sentence went on in Joel, Joel went on to say everyone that the Lord our God will call. And Peter goes on at the end of His message to say, your sons and your and your daughters all are far off as many as the Lord or God shall  call. So he's still thinking of Joel, he's doing like a good Jewish interpreter with Midrash. He's taking the last line is quoted and he's going to explain it. What does it mean to call him the name of the Lord now is the era of salvation, now is  the era of the outward spirit now is the era of the prophetic empowerment. Well,  therefore, it's the era that whoever calls the name of the Lord will be saved. The  this is the last days. 


And of course, we know this is true for us today, because if it was last days, then it's not any earlier. Now. God didn't pour the Spirit out then and poured, poured the Spirit back afterwards. But what is it mean? Whoever calls in the name of the Lord will be saved? Well, we are empowered, as, as end time Prophets for Christ you, you go through, you go through the book of Acts, it talks about the word of Lord, which in the Old Testament could mean the Torah,  it also could mean the prophetic message. For us also, in the book of Acts, as they're carrying forth the gospel in the power of the Spirit, that is the word of the  Lord. So you do have people prophesying in the book of Acts, but even when we're sharing the gospel with people, and in fact, that's, that's Luke's emphasis when we're sharing the gospel with people, we can trust that the Spirit of God is speaking Christ to these people, so that we can trust that, that if God touches their hearts, God touches their hearts through this gospel, God is using us in that way. And all believers can embrace that power and expect God to speak through us to reach people with the good news of Christ. 


Well, in any case, and he speaks of all flesh, probably, you know, that's the quote in Joel. But probably Peter doesn't even realize what implications that has, because it takes  me a while leader, to think about the Gentiles. But the preaching of Pentecost  now he's going to go on to explain this passage. He breaks off Joel's quote from Joel 2:32. And then he picks up Joel's quote, the rest of 2:32, at the end of  his sermon in verse 39. And between verses 21 at 39. He's explaining what he's  just quoted in verse 21. What is the Lord's name? What is your ways name on which the to call for salvation? Well, in good Jewish midrashic form, he links together some texts based on common key words, that's called gezera, shava, by later rabbis links together, these common these texts based on common  keywords, the links together to text from the Psalms, he says, okay, the Lord's at the right hand, the Lord's at the Father's right hand. We're witnesses, that Jesus is the Risen One, and he has been exalted. Well, the risen one, is it God's right  hand, Psalm 16, says, and the one that God's right hand Psalm 1:10 says, is the Lord. And so therefore, what does it mean to call on the Lord's name, you can  call on the name of the Lord, who is at the right hand of the Lord. And the name of that one who's risen and exalted is Jesus. So here's how you call him the divine Lord's name. He says it in Acts 2:38. Repent, and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ. So this was the first Christian sermon already acknowledges that Jesus is divine that Jesus is Yahweh. 


Now, here, Peter brings it home. And Peter has been asked in 2:37, what shall we do to be  saved? Peter says, Repent, and be baptized. Now, this was a radical thing for Jewish people to be baptized when they had their regular ceremonial  illustrations. But it was it was quite a different thing when it was a once for all kinds of turning. Repent, evokes the language of the Old Testament prophets. Sometimes people have said well met and oh, well, it's just The change of mind  changes the way you think about this. But it was really more than that. You can't  take a word and just split it into component parts and say that's what it means.  word means the way it's used. And this word actually evokes, the way it's used in the New Testament especially evokes the language of the Old Testament  prophets when they're talking about Israel turn back to God. So he's calling  them to turn. 


And when he's calling to be baptized, when Gentiles were converting to Judaism, they would be immersed in water. Now, that's not just  reported in Jewish literature. It's also reported by some Gentiles who knew about this from this period, that Jewish people expected Gentiles to be to be baptized in water. So when he this isn't going to be too hard, they had immersion pools all over the temple, because people regularly did ceremony illustrations. In fact, they normally did them in the nude. So you'd have men  going to one place and women going to another place, and people just dunk themselves in the water and then step out. But there was plenty of water in the  Temple Mount. No problem there. But when he caused them to be baptized, this isn't just you know, a regular ceremonial cleansing before you go into the  temple. This is conjoined with with the kind of repentance a turning to God, this  is a special kind of turning where you are going to turn your whole life over to God. He's treating them as he's inviting them to come to God, he's summoning  them to come to God on the same terms as Gentiles, which is to say that none  of us can simply depend on our ancestry. I was not raised in a Christian home. But for people who were raised in Christian homes, we can't just depend on our parents faith, we can't just depend on our grandparents faith, it's good that they have that faith. But the same way that on the day of Pentecost, they couldn't depend. We belong to the chosen people. All of us have to come to God, with faith in Christ, all of us have to trust in Christ. 


Now when Peter says, Repent,  and be baptized, the way this repentance is expressed, is very interesting.  Because the question that they ask what what should we do to be saved? That's a question that gets asked elsewhere in Luke Acts. Remember the the rich ruler, in  Luke 18. He says, What must I do to have eternal life, Jesus says, sell everything you have and give to the poor, which Jesus also said to his disciples  and 12:33, and especially 14:33. Talking about surrendering your resources, for the good of the kingdom, if you're really turning to God, then everything you have, and everything you are, you'll want to use it. For God's  purposes. It doesn't mean everything everybody tells you is for God's purposes,  but but you want to, you want to devote your life to God's purposes. Here, he says, Repent and be baptized when they ask what they must do. 


In Acts  chapter, Acts 16. the Philippian jailer says, What must we do to be saved? Paul  says, Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you'll be saved you and your household.  Now, in each case, the answer is somewhat different, but they're all linked  together. Because if we really believe in Jesus, we really stake everything we are in Jesus, why would we want to keep anything for ourselves, Jesus saves  our life. He doesn't just save us from the penalty for sin. He saves us from sin he saves us from our rebellion. He brings us into a relationship with Himself, we go  from being enemies to God to being on God's side, to serving God, we really  want to serve Him, we really want to please Him. 


Now, again, even though in principle, we're dead to sin and conversion, not everybody experiences all that  at once. Sometimes it takes some time to grow in relation to the Holy Spirit. But  ultimately, that's what we want. And that's what the community was experiencing here. And it's expressed very clearly. You have the effective evangelism and  2:41. You have effective evangelism through the way the community lives and  2:47 As I mentioned earlier, and and we see the transformation in the community by how they treat one another. They worship together, they have meals together, they they eat together from house to house, it's fellowship that  was a way of expressing covenant relationship. 


So for example, in one Greek  story, it talks about how one, two warriors from opposite sides were getting  ready to wake make war with each other. They're getting ready to fight each other. And then they discovered this one's father had hosted this one's father to banquet years ago. Well, that meant that there was covenant relationship between their fathers and therefore between them eating together meant sharing covenant. That's why the Pharisees was swept set when Jesus was  eating of sinners, to bring them into the fold. But here the believers are eating  together. It's a sign of covenant fellowship. Maybe expressed sometimes in some different ways in different cultures. But But But Unity together and praying  together, they continue together in prayer together. And in the heart of this in  verses 44 and 45. And we know this is important also because it's the next outpouring, the Spirit, chapter 4, this happens again. But one of the results of the outpouring of the Spirit was shared possessions, 2:44-45. They were willing to  sacrifice for one another. And it doesn't mean that they immediately sold all their  goods and move down to the street. But it means is, as clarified in chapter 4, that whenever anybody was in need, people sold what they had to meet their needs. Not the possessions were bad, but they valued people more than possessions. And if we have resources instead of, instead of acquiring things that may lose their value over time, why not do as Jesus our Lord said, and lay up our treasure in heaven, which means investing in people and investing the things that matter to God, using our resources for the kingdom. That's what the early church did. Sometimes we want to talk about the outpouring of the Spirit in ways that are more self centered. But the outpouring of the Spirit and the book of Acts, especially when the Spirit was poured out in the community poured out on on  believers as a group, it meant that they reached out with the good news to others. And it also meant that they they expressed this in love for one another. There were a number of different ways the outpouring of the Spirit was expressed, and sometimes one church will emphasize one, some one church  will emphasize another. Let's go for all of what the Bible says about the outpouring of the Spirit. 


And so we come to the purpose of Pentecost, we see  conversions that are followed with by discipleship. people participated in prayer, and what we call Bible study. It was in the text, it's the teaching of the apostles.  But we have that most available to us in Bible study. When it when we talk about what what God has spoken. We're not saying that this is all that God has ever spoken. I mean, in I Kings 18, Obadiah, says he hid 100 prophets in a cave. We don't have their prophecies recorded. All these prophecies in the New Testament house churches, we don't have those prophecies recorded for us in the Bible.  The Bible isn't all that God ever said to anybody. God's Spirit witnesses together with our spirit that were children of God were to have every every person his name is in the book of life, written by name individually in the Bible. It's not everything that God ever has spoken, but it's the canon. It's the measuring stick by which we judge everything else. 


The message that God gave us, it's been  tested through time, the message of Prophets, many prophets in Jeremiah's  day, but most of them proved to be false. Jeremiah's prophecy was tested by  time his prophecy came true. So we have the message of these holy apostles  and prophets that's been given to us in the Scriptures. And, and so we can study that and that will keep us on track and our own relationship with God. So just as they listened, they did prayer and Bible study or prayer and apostolic teaching,  we can get a lot of that apostolic teaching from studying the Bible. Also, you  had, you had a continuing witness with signs that's mentioned in Acts 2. And you get an example of that, in Acts 3, they're on the way to prayer, and God does a  sign. But it's not just the dramatic signs that we we often think of, I mean, you do have these things. We've been talking about them on the Day of Pentecost. But you also have not just the Spirit’s gifts, you have the Spirit’s fruit, people parted with their possessions, because they valued one another, more than they valued their property, and the church kept growing. So the fruit of the spirit, our lives are transformed by the Spirit. God empowers us with the Spirit to cross cultural barriers to worship Him to form one new multicultural community of worshipers committed to Christ and to one another.  


Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener in his teaching and the book of Acts, this is session number 7, Acts chapters 1 and 2.




Modifié le: mardi 9 mai 2023, 08:06