Biblical Framework
Charles Clough
Lesson 170
Turn
in the Old Testament to Isaiah 41, we’ll look at one of the faith-rest promise
of Scripture, we’ll continue a little bit on the faith rest drill. We have three parts to the faith-rest drill,
number one is to grasp hold of a promise in Scripture; number two, to develop
the rationale around that text of Scripture; and number three, at the point we
can we trust in it, and that’s the rest of faith. Isaiah 41:10 is a promise to deal with fear and anxiety. It says “Do not fear, for I am with you; do
not anxiously look about you, for I am you God. I will strengthen you, surely I will help you, surely, I will
uphold you with My righteous right hand,” or in the King James “the right hand
of My righteousness,” and that last term in that verse, “the right hand of My
righteousness,” or in the modern translations “My righteous right hand” is
actually a Messianic term, because the right hand of God is the thing that He
accomplishes things, it’s part of Him that does things, and the part of God
that does things is the Messiah or the Son of the Trinity. So that traditionally has been looked upon
as a Messianic term.
That’s
the text, so here we are in this anxiety situation, we remember Isaiah 41:10,
we either have memorized it or we read it, so we’re thinking about it, and one
of the ways of developing the rationale so that we can actually trust in that
text of Scripture is when we look at the text originally, or when we look at
that promise originally, look in the context.
If you look just ahead of verse 10 you’ll notice that it is linked to
the election of God, the elective purposes of God. It’s not a promise that sits in isolation from this
framework. If you look in verse 8
you’ll see a specific reference to the Abrahamic Covenant and you remember that
the Abrahamic Covenant was the founding covenant of redemption in history,
because that was the covenant… God said civilization is going down the tube and
I’ve got to do something about it, so now I’m going to call into existence a
counterculture to the pagan culture. The point of verse 8 and 9 is that God is
a God of history, He moves historically.
So when you see a promise like verse 10 where we’re going to apply it
maybe in our own personal life, in our little circle, that promise is part and
nested inside of a larger circle, which is the whole plan of God for
history.
That’s
why knowing prophecy and knowing history is so important, because it gives the
frame of reference for how God works.
Then we can set our lives, and plug them inside of that frame of
reference, but if you don’t do that you’re going to have trouble applying
promises like this because they tend to come off like they’re just shallow
religious verbiage. When the pressure
is on and you’ve got a big crisis you’re trying to handle or a persistent one
you need something besides some shallow religious verbiage. You need something that has roots, something
you can hold on to. So that’s why it’s
important to see that these little promises we pull out aren’t isolated,
they’re part of a pattern. Isaiah 41:10
is one of those great promises, “Do not fear for I am with you; be not anxious
for I am your God, I will strengthen thee and uphold thee with the right hand
of my righteousness.” That’s the King
James, I’ve never got so I can memorize any Scripture in the new translations,
I started in the King James and I guess I’ll go to the grave quoting the King
James.
Turn
to Acts; we’ve got some more work to do as we look at Peter’s analysis of what
was going on at Pentecost. We want to
review again that in our idea of linking doctrine with history we have the
session and actually it’s the session of Jesus Christ sitting at the Father’s
right hand that is the basis for the second event, which is Pentecost, and
that’s the thing we want to be sure we grasp, that Pentecost is the result of
Jesus Christ’s session and Jesus Christ goes to the Father so you have the
Father and the Son who dispatch the Holy Spirit to earth. Whereas the session is the heavenly origin
of the Church, as we titled chapter one, Pentecost is the earthly origin of the
Church as we titled chapter 2. We said
in Acts 2:14 Peter gives this explanation to the people; Peter might have been
just a (quote) “lay person” but his grasp of Scripture was amazing. It’s amazing to see how he takes the Old
Testament (he didn’t have the New), he takes the facts of Jesus Christ, and he
puts them together.
So
from Acts 2:14-36 the logic of what’s going on here is that we have the events
of the birth, the life, the death, the resurrection, the ascension and session
of Jesus Christ. Those are the events. What Peter is going to do is he’s going to
surround those events with the Old Testament because the Old Testament gives
the framework in which you can understand those events. These events do not
stand by themselves; they’re part of a historic pattern. We have to think that way as Christians,
because the moment we allow a piece of the framework of Scripture to sit by
itself out here, unbelief will always eat it up; skeptical attacks will always
suppress pieces of Scripture. However,
the way Scripture defends itself is by linking it with all the other pieces of
Scripture, so you have a whole network.
It’s just like a civil engineer building a structure. One little piece of steel isn’t going to cut
the mustard but when you put it all together as a framed structure, then it
stands. That’s the way to think about
Scripture. You can’t take isolated
truths without hooking them together.
So that’s what Peter’s going to do, he’s going to take these events in
the life of Jesus Christ, particularly the ascension and session, and of course
the events of Pentecost, and then he’s going to put them inside of this Old
Testament structure.
Verse
14, he got up and he first began to work through Joel 2, so we want to look at
Joel 2 and follow his reasoning. Actually what he’s quoting is Joel 2:28-32, so
hold the place in Acts and we’ll look at how this fits together. Let’s look at Joel 2:28-32 in the Old
Testament context. “And it will come
about after this that I will pour out My Spirit on all mankind,” again who is
the subject of the action, who is the subject of the verbs? It’s Jehovah God, that’s important. “And it will come about after this that I
[Jehovah God] will pour out My Spirit on all mankind; and your sons and
daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will
see visions. [29] And even on the male and female servants I will pour out My
Spirit in those days.”
Clearly
verses 28-29 look down the corridors of time from Joel’s day and they see an
event that’s going to take place. That event is the pouring out of the Spirit.
We understood from last time by comparing “pouring,” remember the expression
“pour out” we learned to interpret what that means by turning to Prov. 1:23
where “pour out” is in parallel with sharing truth. I emphasized that because in the last hundred years there’s been
sort of a Pentecostal emphasis that pouring out the Spirit means I have to fall
on the floor and go through all kinds of shenanigans, and that’s not what the
pouring out the Spirit means here.
Pouring
out the Spirit means to share content of thinking. The teacher lets her words be made known and that process is it
transfers stuff from the teacher’s spirit to the pupil’s spirit. That’s what’s happening here, transfer of truth
from God’s Spirit to man’s spirit. So
when you see “pour out” in Joel 2:28 the thing that ought to go through your
mind is that this is talking about a day of revelation. There’s going to be revealed truth that’s
going to come out and it’s going to be known by people in all social strata. This is not going to be confined to a
priestly circle, it’s not going to be confined to a prophetic few people, it’s
going to be pretty universal; that’s verse 28-29.
Then
verses 30-31 speak of something else, “And I will display wonders in the sky
and on the earth, blood, fire, and columns of smoke. [31] The sun will be
turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and awesome day
of the LORD comes.” There’s a lot of truth in here, Peter is not
going to use all these truths. He’s
going to select out of the matrix of verses 30-31 certain truths. But before we look at Peter, let’s look at
the original text. In verse 30 it says
“I will display wonders in the sky and on the earth,” and he talks about these
wonders and signs. So whatever verses
30-31 are talking about, they’re talking about miraculous things in nature,
miracles. That’s the whole point of verses 30-31.
But
at the end of verse 31, look how that sentence ends, look very carefully at the
text how verse 31 terminates. As it
terminates it gives us a time sequence, it says at the end of verse 31, “before
the great and awesome day of the LORD comes.” The great and awesome
day of the Lord is the day that He brings judgment in and the kingdom
begins. So clearly whatever the signs
are in verses 30-31 they precede the coming of the Lord and the initiation of
the Kingdom. So they’re not a
fulfillment of the Kingdom, they’re events prior to the Kingdom.
In
verse 32, the last part of this section, here we have why all this takes place,
because verses 28-29 talk about the pouring of the Spirit; verses 30-31 talk
about the geophysical miracles that are going to happen in history, but it has
a purpose. Verse 32 says “And it will
come about that whoever calls on the name of the LORD will be delivered,” delivered from what? What has verse 31 ended with? The coming day of the Lord? So the deliverance in verse 32 harps back to
the day of the Lord in verse 31. “And
it will come about that whoever calls on the name of the LORD will be delivered,” and
“calls on the name of the LORD”
is equivalent to New Testament belief, trust.
The end of this verse, he concludes “for on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem
there will be those who escape, as the LORD has said, even among the survivors whom the LORD calls.”
The
phrase you see there, “those who escape” and “survivors” are part of an Old
Testament concept known as the concept of “the remnant.” In the Old Testament the idea was here you
have the elect nation, all sons and daughters of Abraham, here they are, the
twelve tribes, boom, boom, boom. They
make up a physical political entity.
But the prophets argued that just because you’re physically part of
Israel and you, therefore, are part and parcel of the Mosaic Covenant, just
because you’re part and parcel of the Mosaic Covenant and part and parcel of
physical Israel doesn’t mean you’re in the remnant; that means the saved
subset. So the remnant is the reference
that the prophets made clear as the nation went down the tube spiritually, and
it was deteriorating and falling apart and the monarchy was corrupted, the
people were corrupted, that’s when it was revealed to Israel that there will
come a time when Messiah will come and He will set up a righteous kingdom, but
you all aren’t going to go in the Kingdom.
The only people going into the Kingdom are the people who trust in Him,
who, in this phrase, “call upon the name of the LORD.” Verse 32
represents the gateway into the Kingdom, and verses 28-31 therefore are
phenomena, events, and historical happenings that set up the door to the
Kingdom.
With
that in mind come back to Acts 2.
Peter, in verse 16, identifies and says “what was spoken of through the
prophet Joel.” Verse 17-18 he cites
those first two verses of Joel, so it’s Joel 2:28-29 that are requited in Acts
2:17-18. However, if you look at the
text you notice that the end of verses 18 contains a phrase that is not found
in Joel. That’s Peter’s addition and
it’s Peter’s addition to that Old Testament citation that tells you what’s
going on in his mind. He says “and they
shall prophesy.” That means that when
Peter is citing these two verses the thing that he wants to get out of it is,
among many things, he could have gotten 52 things out of it but he got one
thing and that’s the thing that we want to see, what Peter’s doing here. He’s saying the Old Testament foretold a
time in history when the Holy Spirit would be poured out in a new way and it
would be cast-less, it would a pouring out of the Holy Spirit without casts,
without upper and lower strata, everybody would be involved in this thing, and
the people who are involved in it would have access to revelation. There’s a revelation process so there’d be
new doctrine or new truths, and sure enough that’s what’s happening because of
the ascension of Jesus Christ.
Then
in verses 19-21 he cites a clipped version of the Joel text, because in Acts
2:19-21 he cites most of Joel 2:30-32, actually only half of verse 32, he clips
off that section about Jerusalem and Zion.
That’s important to notice, that he’s clipped that out of there. The reason he’s clipped it out of there is
because at this point in time the issue isn’t what’s going to happen at
Jerusalem, the issue he wants to say…, he terminates it and scissors it off
after it says in verse 21 “call upon the name of the Lord,” because that’s
where he wants the emphasis. He wants
the emphasis on what are you going to do with Jesus Christ? Not that the other part of the text isn’t
important, nor that it isn’t going to be fulfilled, it’s just that Peter’s
point in quoting that text is to focus on Jesus Christ. As he does this he begins to build
something, and what we said last time was that in verses 28-29 this first
section of the Joel passage emphasizes revelation, the dissemination of new
doctrine, and the pouring out of the Spirit, obviously.
We
went down further in Peter’s message and our eyes fell on Acts 2:32 because as
he developed the theme of his preaching, he came to conclude in verse 22-23
that “This Jesus God raised up again, to which we are all witnesses. [33]
Therefore having been exalted to the right hand of God, and having received
from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, He has poured forth this which
you both see and hear.” What is it that
you “both see and hear?” The phenomenon
of Pentecost. So now what’s the thrust, logically, of Peter? Can you trace the
logic that he’s using. He’s dealing
with a group of people that have seen an event and he’s telling them how to
interpret that event. What he’s saying
is that the supernatural things that you’ve observed, Pentecost, are proof that
Jesus has made it the throne. Pentecost
is the historical evidence that Jesus Christ now reigns. It’s a momentous thing; it’s not just the
coming of the Spirit. Yes it is that,
it’s the coming of the Spirit but the deeper question is not the coming of the
Spirit, it’s who sent the Spirit.
That’s
where in verse 33 we have an enormously important piece of theology because
you’ll notice in verse 33, which is connected to verse 32, verses 32-32 start
out with Jesus as the subject, not the Father, it’s the Son, Jesus, who is the
subject here. Well if Jesus is the subject, what’s the verb at the end of verse
33; the last clause in verse 33, what’s the main verb of that clause? “Poured
out.” Where have we heard “pour out”
before? That’s the Joel passage. Who was doing the “pouring out” in the Joel
passage? Jehovah. Who is doing the “pouring out” now? Jesus Christ. Guess what the conclusion is; with all due respect to Jehovah’s
Witnesses this is saying that Jesus is Jehovah, not Michael, He is
Jehovah. It’s a substitution, clear cut
proof. That’s one of the great things
that he’s done here with this Joel passage.
He has said Pentecost, this our pouring, this miraculous thing that’s
happened is a direct result of Jesus Christ risen from the dead, ascended and
seated at the Father’s right hand, after He shows Himself to the disciples on
earth. This thing started in heaven;
this is the heavenly origin of the Church.
What’s
interesting about this, and we’ll get into this later, have you ever noticed in
the science fiction over the past 15-20 years, wherever you see a movie or read
a book about space invaders, etc., did you ever notice that almost nine out of
ten cases it’s always something evil that’s coming to earth, it’s always
something threatening that’s coming out of the heavens to the earth. To me that’s very interesting because it’s
exactly opposite to reality. Who is it
that came out of heaven to the earth at Pentecost? Not the evil, it’s the good.
But you see, the secular mind seems to think of anything coming into the
earth’s orbit from outside the earth’s orbit is something that interferes.
Does
the Holy Spirit interfere? You
bet. Then what’s the difference in the
labels? It’s the sinful mind of the
flesh wants to control, that’s the whole point of the flesh, you know, we get
in the flesh we’re control freaks, we want to control, WE want to control so that WE are in charge of
everything, and we want to be like God.
To have something come into our lives from outside of our lives from
heaven, literally out of space into this planet, that’s an interruption and a
disturbance. So it’s striking that
Pentecost is actually a mirror image of science fiction. It’s exactly opposite, it’s 180 degrees
opposite. It is the good that
infiltrates and disturbs the evil earth. Earth is evil, and the heavenly source
is the good. You watch it as you think
about the science fiction things you see, they’re entertaining and all that but
think about what’s going on. Earth is always good and the interfering power
from heaven is always evil.
Pentecost
has this image and that’s the pouring out of the Spirit. But Peter doesn’t stop there, in verse 19
where he quotes Joel he talks about signs and wonders. So we want to understand signs, wonders,
blood, smoke, sun, moon, let’s take all those words and scan from verses 22 to
verse 36. Here’s how you understand
Scripture. You do a vocabulary search
and you say to yourself, okay, does he mention earth and blood anywhere between
verses 22-36? Not that I can see,
unless you have a different text than I do, I don’t see those vocabulary words
there. Does he talk about fire and smoke
anywhere from verses 22-36? I don’t think you can find those vocabulary words
there either. Aha, but now if you scan
the words “signs and wonders,” do you find those words anywhere between verses
22-36? Yes you do, because in verse 22
is the phrase.
So
since we’ve done an objective scan of the actual vocabulary, now we say ah, so
out of the Joel passage he’s not picking up the sun, the moon, the blood, and
the fire and the smoke, he’s picking up on the words “signs and wonders.” In verse 22 he connects “signs and wonders”
with whom? The Lord Jesus Christ. Notice in verse 22 he’s not even connecting
“signs and wonders” with Pentecost.
He’s connecting “signs and wonders” to the person of Jesus Christ. So we say to ourselves, Peter, what’s your point? What do you suppose Peter would answer
us? My point is that Jesus Christ is
doing, or did, during His lifetime He did “signs and wonders” that identify Him
as God who does miracles, because who is doing the “signs and wonders” in verse
19? Who’s the subject of those? It’s God.
You’ll notice he’s very careful in verse 22 to identify that it’s “God
working through Him in your midst” he says.
He’s picked up here verse 22, unlike he does down in verse 33, in verse
22 he continues the thought that God is doing miracles and signs, or did them,
“through Him in your midst, just as you yourselves know.”
He’s
talking to unbelievers here, isn’t he?
And look what he claims. That
even unbelievers knew about the signs and the wonders, this wasn’t confined to
a back door inside a store-front church some place. This was done outside in the public. So the very fact that he can say at the end of verse 22 that “you
yourselves know” tells us that they were public signs and public wonders, open
to historical observation. A powerful
statement!
The
second reason is, by quoting this he’s now identified not only this Holy Spirit
is going to give new doctrine, but he’s saying that signs and wonders were
connected to the person of the Lord Jesus Christ and they are the same kind of
signs and wonders that He’s going to do later on. All the rest, the blood, the moon, the sun, the vapor and the
smoke, that’s yet to come. Peter at
this point didn’t know it wasn’t yet to come. Why? Because in his view the
Kingdom could have come here, it could have happened. We’ll see more about that as we move through the text.
So
he’s made his point in verse 22, now the problem is that the Jewish unbelievers
are going to say, oh, wait a minute here, hold it, you can’t have a dead
Messiah, come on, people die, Jesus died, and nobody wants a dead Messiah. Peter’s going to show them what good this
Messiah is, watch what he does now.
He’s going to turn to another text of Scripture and in verses 25-28 he’s
going to quote Psalm 16; by the way, notice how much of his sermon was Old
Testament. If Peter dared to say
something like this in the average church today he’d be completely over
everybody’s head because you’re not supposed to dig deep into Scripture these
days, you’re supposed to talk at 4th and 5th grade levels
because that’s what the media is at and if you try to talk at any higher level
than the 4th and 5th grade your bore people and they go
to sleep.
In
verses 25-28 he’s talking about the Old Testament Psalm 16. So let’s go to Psalm 16 and take a peek at
that, where did that come from; what’s the context of that remark. One of the tricks in looking at Psalms is to
look at the Psalm title. In the Hebrew
the verses are numbered beginning with that title, not like your English
Bible. In Psalm 16, for example, verse
1 starts, “A Mikhtam of David.” It doesn’t start with “Preserve me, O God,” the
title in the Hebrew is considered to be part of the text; that’s how the verses
are broken up. So what’s the first
observation about Psalm 16? Who wrote
it? David wrote it. David’s the speaker.
We’re
going to learn a little bit about the Old Testament looking at this. In Psalm 16 who’s doing the speaking? David is doing the speaking. In verse 5 he says in the middle of his
trouble, “The LORD is the portion of my
inheritance and my cup; Thou dost support my lot.” Notice something in verse 5, this is something you’ll see in the
Psalms if you observe carefully.
Remember in English, back when they taught English grammar, they didn’t
have creative writing, they had drill and syntax, in those days we used to
learn about different persons, and it used to be the first, second and third
person. First person is “I”, second
person is “you,” third person is “he” or “she.” We used to conjugate verbs that way. It’s good observation in the Scripture to watch this.
In
the Psalms they have a peculiar characteristic syntactically. There’s an oscillation that goes on between
the second and third person, and here in verse 5 is a classic instance of it. “The Lord is my portion,” he’s talking about
third person, but then he immediately says “Thou dost support my lot,” second
person. In Hebrew poetry this
oscillation back and forth between the second and third person is a tool that
the Psalmist uses to show you a perspective.
He moves from talking to the Lord to talking about the Lord; to the
Lord, about the Lord, to someone else.
So it’s constant shifting like this.
In his priestly way he talks to God, second person; then with the
knowledge that he’s gained from talking to God as a priest, he turns around as prophet
and talks to men about God. So that’s why you have this oscillation between the
second person, third person, second person, third person, it goes on and on.
Now
he develops it, in verse 7, “I will bless the LORD who
has counseled me; indeed, my mind instructs me in the night. [8] I have set the
LORD continually before me;
because He is at my right hand, I will not be shaken.” There’s a nice verse. Verse 9, “Therefore my heart is glad, and my
glory rejoices; my flesh also will dwell securely. So up to now it looks like for all intents and purposes this text
is talking about a faith-rest situation.
He’s in the middle of adversity, he’s learned things about the Lord, and
now his conclusion is he’s resting.
Here’s the faith-rest, “I will not be shaken,” “my heart is glad,” “my
glory rejoices,” the source of his happiness isn’t his circumstances; the
source of his happiness is the Lord’s promises and the Word. You know, when we finally get it right, the
few seconds that we do, that is a marvelous position to be in because it frees
you from being dependent on other people and circumstances. Right here is where that rejoicing is, “I
will not be shaken,” it doesn’t matter what the circumstances are, it doesn’t matter
who I’m against, the people in verse 3-4 is what he’s talking about, so because
verse 8, “I have set the LORD
continually before me … I will not be shaken, my heart is glad and my glory
rejoices,” that’s talking about his soul, “my flesh also will dwell
securely.”
That
little phrase, “my flesh will dwell securely” introduces a strange thought, now
watch the text carefully from here on out.
Verse 10, “For Thou wilt not abandon my soul,” what has he done? See our third person, second person, what’s
happened here? What’s happened as you move
from verse 9 to verse 10? Verse 9 is
third person, now in verse 10 it’s shifted to second person. “For Thou wilt not abandon my soul to
Sheol;” what’s he doing in verse 10 that he’s not doing in verse 9? In verse 10 he’s looking at God, “For Thou
wilt not abandon my soul to Sheol; neither wilt Thou allow Thy Holy One to
undergo decay [to see the pit.] [11] Thou wilt make known to me the path of
life; in Thy presence is fullness of joy; in Thy right hand there are pleasures
forever.”
People
cite that as a wonderful promise of God but it’s linked to verse 10. The reason “Thy presence is fullness of joy;
in Thy right hand there are pleasures forevermore,” it’s talking about
something that’s a little bit more than just faith-rest here. In verse 10 he makes this statement, this
statement in the second person; verse 9 is third person, verse 11 is second
person. Verses 10 and 11 are all
addressed to God. “For Thou wilt not abandon my soul to Sheol; and you will not
allow Thy Holy One to undergo decay.” Parallelism, what noun in the first part of verse 10 is parallel
to “Thy Holy One?” The first part of
verse 10, “You will not abandon my soul,” so it’s “my soul” that’s parallel to
“Thy Holy One.” So if we were reading
Psalm 16 fast, we were getting a promise, we’d say oh, that’s a nice thought,
I’ll claim verse 11, that’s a nice promise, until…, flip over to Acts 2, Peter takes a very startling different
approach to interpreting Psalm 16.
Acts
2:24, he’s dealing with the issue of Jesus Christ rising from the dead. Why has he had to introduce this? Because
verse 23, the people took the One who was doing signs and wonders in verse 22
and what did they do with Him? You crucified
Him, idiots. Now what’s happened? He rose from the dead, “And God raised Him
up again, putting an end to the agony of death, since it was impossible for Him
to be held in its power.” Now he’s got
to prove that, so in verse 24 he introduces Psalm 16, but look, how does he
introduce Psalm 16? What do you notice
immediately about his citation? What is
he prefacing the citation with? Look at
the text in Psalm 16. Does Psalm 16 say “David says of Him?” No, that’s Peter’s interpretive
addition.
So
now what he’s saying is that Psalm 16 is talking about Messiah, not David. Ooh, we didn’t see that over in Psalm 16,
how’d that happen? He goes on, he
quotes, “my soul,” verse 27, “my soul…thy holy one,” [28] “You made me to
know,” then in verse 29 here’s his logic.
“Brethren, I may confidently say to you regarding the patriarch David
that he both died and was buried, and his tomb is with us to this day.” Well if his tomb is there, how can verse 27
be correct? He has seen corruption, his
soul has gone to the grave and proof of it is his tomb is with us.
This
introduces a crisis. Go back to Psalm
16; that requires us to rethink what we just read.
Psalm
16 appears at first glance to be David talking to the Lord. But in verse 10, he makes a statement about
“my soul,” there’s the first person, talking about me, I, “my soul,” but then
he talks about “Thy Holy One,” if you were to say my Holy One, my soul, and
then it’s God’s Holy One, doesn’t that kind of strike you as a little arrogant.
In other words there’s a statement that’s said here in Psalm 16 that just
doesn’t quite fit with David personally.
Here
we’re introduced to this strange thought, strange to our western minds, not
strange to the Bible, of how David saw himself merge into the Messiah, and it’s
that phenomenon that I mentioned a couple years ago, remember when we were
talking about Old Testament history, here’s a time line, here we have Saul,
here we have David, here we have Solomon and then we had all these kings and
they progressively got more and more gross, and we said what happened to the
kingly line. The monarchy was having to
be there as the leadership of God’s kingdom, but what does Old Testament
history show about the monarchy historically?
It corrupted out. Just like in
the book of Judges the people corrupted out.
Judges is an eloquent argument you can never have a democracy that’s
totally correct. The rest of the Old
Testament tells you that you can never have a civil government ran by fallen
men that’s going to be correct.
So
here you have David as this king who is looking down the line. Why is he looking down the line, let’s
think. What is one of the great
covenants of the Old Testament? The
Davidic Covenant. What does the Davidic
Covenant say? The descendants of David
will one day rule the Kingdom of God.
So when David says “my soul,” how can we interpret that; this is an
interpretation question. How do we
interpret his use of the term “my soul” such that Psalm 16 refers to the
Messiah and not David? We’ve got to do
something with this. As a matter of fact the apostles did something to this,
Jesus’ interpreted it this way, “my soul” is interpreted to be larger than the
individual David; “my soul” is interpreted to mean the continuity of all the
souls in the Davidic line, culminating in the One who would never see death. David, when he gets in a prophetic mode of
writing these Psalms doesn’t separate himself from the whole end of his
dynasty. He speaks as David and he speaks for the entire David dynasty. And that’s what happens in the Old
Testament.
For
example, a few Psalms later, what do you notice in Psalm 22? Who wrote Psalm 22? Psalm 22 was written by David, and he
quotes, “My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?” Wait a minute, that’s what
Jesus quoted on the cross; it’s a prophecy of what Jesus quoted. Look at verse 5, “To Thee they cried out and
were delivered; in Thee they trusted, and were not disappointed.” Look at verse 14, “I am poured out like
water, and all my bones are out of joint; [My heart is like wax; it is melted
within me.”] Look at verse 17, [“I can
count all my bones, they look, they stare at me;”] Look at verse 18, they cast
lots for my garments [“They divide my garments among them, and for my clothing
they cast lots.”] But David wrote this,
not Jesus, David wrote it a thousand years before Jesus.
What’s
going on here, how do we properly interpret Psalm 22? There’s only one way, that David envelops himself prophetically
in this whole dynasty, all the way down to Jesus. So when David speaks prophetically in the Psalms, he is speaking
all the way to the Messiah. Why is that? Because what is the purpose dynasty vis a vis the Kingdom of God. You can’t have a kingdom without a king,
and you can’t have a righteous kingdom that is eternally secure without a
sinless king, perfect king, one who will not be corrupted, a perfect government
that is upon His shoulder. So that’s
the source of the Kingdom, so that’s why the Davidic Covenant is there, to
secure the King of the Kingdom.
There’s
one other place Peter is going to cite, Psalm 132 so let’s take a peek at it
because it’s going to come up. See what
I mean about listening to these guys and how lost half of us would be today if
Peter were to give a sermon like this. We’d have a hard time following it. Do you know why? What does that show about us relative to Peter? Duh!
Psalm 132:10, “For the sake of David, Thy servant, do not turn away the
face of Thine anointed. [11] The LORD has sworn to David,” by the way, what’s that referring to, “sworn to
David?” Davidic Covenant. “The LORD has sworn to David, a truth from which He will not turn back; of the
fruit of your body I will set upon your throne.” [blank spot]
Before
we go to Acts 2 let’s check out another one, Psalm 110. This is heavy stuff,
four major Old Testament passages in a matter of minutes in Peter’s
address. Psalm 110, one we studied when
we studied the ascension of Christ.
Who’s the author of Psalm 110?
David again, aha, things come together here a little bit. Notice again verse 5, “The Lord is at Thy
right hand; He will shatter kings in the day of His wrath. [6] He will judge
among the nations, He will fill them with corpses, He will shatter the chief
men over a broad country. [7] He will drink from the brook by the wayside;
therefore He will lift up His head.”
Verse 4 is the Lord talking to David, second person but it’s the Lord
talking to David. “Thou art a priest
forever according to the order of Melchizedek.
Verse
5, “The Lord is at Thy right hand,” and in most of your Bible translations
notice L-O-R-D is capitalized in verse 4,
L-o-r-d is not capitalized in verse 5.
Why is that? Because the first
one refers to Jehovah, the second one is the word for Lord and Master, and the
difference is in verse 1, “Jehovah says to my Lord: Sit at My right hand,”
there’s an expose of what we’re talking about, how David somehow prophetically
intermingles Jesus and himself, because now it all hangs out loose and clear in
Psalm 110:1, “The LORD” that’s clearly God, who
does the possessive pronoun “my” refer to in verse 1. It must be David, “my,” David. Well then who is “the LORD?” If David were the highest authority and above him was no else than
God, who’s this intermediate one that is being addressed by God, but yet is
over David? See what I’m saying?
Here’s
an example of what goes on. It’s mind
boggling. This is not easy, and if you’re struggling with it, hey, join the
club. But I’m telling you, this is how
the Holy Spirit worked in real history.
If we were there, I would imagine he himself would have had a problem
telling us about how all this fits together because he was clearly buoyed on by
the Holy Spirit, probably not knowing completely what he was writing. But he wrote it nevertheless.
Back
to Acts 2 and watch how Peter puts all the pieces together. Peter is going to make the point that Jesus
Christ has risen; he’s going to say, after they killed Him, verse 24, Jesus
Christ rose. Here’s his first point,
Jesus Christ rose. Now he’s going to
support that with precedent from the Old Testament, that this isn’t a miracle
that just sort of happened in a grave outside of Jerusalem, gee, you know,
strange things happen. No, it was part
of the structure of the Old Testament prophesies. So that’s why in verse 25-28 he goes into this extensive quote
from Psalm 16 that we thought at first glance was referring to David and we
were wrong; Psalm 16 actually was looking further down the Davidic Dynasty to
the end person who would be Jesus Christ.
Verse
29, Peter understood that because he was able to distinguish Psalm 16 from
David and say that Psalm 16 doesn’t literally apply to David. Psalm 16 though written by David is
prophetically enlarged to include the person of Jesus Christ. Now verse 30 is an explanation of how Peter
saw this. He says the reason is because
David was not just an ordinary author, he was… what does the text say, “he was
a prophet,” and he “knew that God had sworn to him with an oath,” there’s the
citation from Psalm 132, that He would sit “one of his descendants upon his
throne.” Well if he knew that one of his descendants would sit upon the throne
and the throne was the throne of an eternal kingdom, then the guy that sits on
the throne couldn’t be subject to death.
So
Peter says this resurrection thing is not something strange, it’s the warp and
the woof of the whole Old Testament issue of who’s the Messiah. This must have blown people’s circuit’s
right here. This was tough stuff, and if you read contemporary Judaism at the
time Peter preached this, they missed it.
This was not a popular idea here, this is brand new out of the box,
because who poured out His Spirit?
Jesus Christ sitting at the Father’s right hand pours out the Spirit;
all of a sudden things begin to click.
All of a sudden these guys say yeah, this is how the Old Testament
fits. They probably got a lot of it,
you know, the Emmaus Road, etc., people heard Jesus say this, but it was like
they didn’t hear Him say it.
So
in verse 30 he says the reason David could write the way he wrote was because
he wasn’t writing as a poet, he was writing as a prophet, a prophetic poet if
you will. And that’s why verse 31…, see
verse 30-31 is Peter’s explanation for the dilemma we just found ourselves in
when we read Psalm 16. We say how does
Psalm 16 apply to Jesus? Well, Peter
says, verse 30, because first of all Psalm 16 was written by a prophet who knew
something; he knew first Psalm 132, the Davidic Covenant, that’s all Psalm 132
is. Verse 31 Peter goes on now, he tries to show us what David was
thinking. He looked ahead. See, that’s what’s going on. These Psalms
aren’t just talking about David’s personal life; he looks ahead down the
dynastic line of the Davidic Covenant.
He’s always looking down the dynastic line of the Davidic Covenant.
Verse
31, “he looked ahead and spoke of the resurrection of the Christ,” and then he
quotes again Psalm 16. Why is he quoting Psalm 16? Because he’s exegeting the text.
See what the apostles did, they taught from the text, they exegeted the
text, it wasn’t three points and a poem; it was verses out of tough stuff and
Messianic passages of the Old Testament.
“Therefore,” look at the “therefore,” now he gets to the logical
conclusion of his point. After he talks about Christ rising he is able to
conclude something. He is free to put a
“therefore” in verse 33. Why? What has
he just got through that laid the basis for making this logical
conclusion? That Jesus Christ fulfilled
the whole dynastic picture. “Therefore
having been exalted to the right hand of God, and having received from the
Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, He has poured forth this which you both
see and hear.”
Verse
34, “For it was not David who ascended into heaven,” see again, notice in verse
34 and verse 29 he’s so ever careful you can’t make David do that, that’s not
literal interpretation. David did not ascend into heaven, “but he himself says,
The LORD said to my Lord,” there’s
Psalm 110 being quoted, “Sit at My right hand, [35] until I make Thine enemies
a footstool for Thy feet.” The next
“therefore,” verse 36, now here’s his grand conclusion, “Therefore let all the
house of Israel know,” and by the way, are Gentiles in view here? This is not an evangelistic sermon of the
Church Age. This is a special address
to the nation Israel with Jewish Scriptures, with Israel’s destiny. “Therefore let all the house of Israel know
for certain that God has made Him both Lord and Christ—this Jesus whom you
crucified.”
And
as you can tell by verse 37 this walloped the people that heard this, these
people were really laid open by this thing, this is a pretty hairy, shocking
indictment of their sin. And that’s why
he says in verse 38, “Repent, and let each one of you be baptized in the name
of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the
gift of the Holy Spirit. [39] For the promise is for you and your children, and
for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God shall call to Himself,”
and where did he get that phraseology from?
He got it from Joel 2:21, that’s where it came from, “those who call on
the Lord.” So he’s not only quoting
directly these Old Testament prophetic Scriptures, he’s making allusion after
allusion after allusion, not illusion, allusion, that is a reference, he takes
whole phrases out of the prophets and uses them in his teaching.
The
text goes on, people were baptized, they were [42] “devoting themselves to the
apostle’s teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer,”
and people had “a sense of awe.” What
two words do you see in verse 43 that reappear, that were part of the Joel
quote. [“And everyone kept feeling a
sense of awe; and many wonders and signs were taking place through the
apostles.”] Wonders and signs. Who were doing the wonders and signs in
verse 43, not every Christian? Who was
doing the wonders and the signs? The apostles were doing the wonders and the
signs, they were His special spokesman.
To
get the mentality and put ourselves in the house of Israel, standing there in
rapt attention, listening to this guy in the fishing business talk about all of
a sudden people talking in supernatural languages, you would say what is going
on here, I’ve been coming to Jerusalem for this Feast of Pentecost for a number
of years, I never heard this before. What is going on? We want to put ourselves in this mentality
so in conclusion go back to Luke 1. We’re going to look at how the ordinary Jew
was thinking about David and the Kingdom, lest we get too sloppy in our
interpretation and begin to think that this is just a general sermon and he’s
talking about the Church.
Remember
I introduced this section between chapter one and chapter two with the appendix
where I distinguish Reformed theology from Dispensational theology, and what
was my point about Dispensational theology, why it advanced further from where
Reformation theology left us as a Church, and that is the dispensational
approach to Scripture looks carefully at the historical context and a literal
interpretation of the text. One of the
issues that we haven’t got time to deal with, Reformed theology interprets
Peter’s sermon to refer to the fact that when Jesus sat at the Father’s right
hand, that was the throne of David. That’s how they interpret it, they
mish-mash two thrones into one. There are two thrones here. What are they? “The LORD said to my Lord, sit” where? “At My right hand.” But then David is talking about somebody
that’s going to sit on his throne?
Where is David’s throne? On
earth, two distinct thrones; not the same.
That’s
what we want to conclude with. Look at
Luke 1:30, here’s the angel coming to Mary, here’s a Jewish teenage girl, an
angel talks to her, they’re not doing any kind of slippery exegesis of any
Scripture, they’re not trying to worm around things, just look at the natural
way if you were Mary how would you interpret this. Here you are, you’re learning you’re pregnant, you have never had
sex with any man and you’re pregnant, right away you have an unusual situation. So you’re sitting there in rapt attention of
what’s going on over here. What’s the
angel got to tell me about this little thing?
Verse 30, “And the angel said to her, ‘Do not be afraid, Mary; for you
have found favor with God. [31] And behold, you will conceive in your womb, and
bear a son, and you shall name Him Jesus. [32] He will be great, and will be
called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of
His father David.” Now if you were
Mary, would you think of that throne as in heaven or would you think of that
throne as on earth? On earth.
Let’s
go further in Luke 1, verse 54, here is Mary’s magnificat, by the way, this
girl was a tiger, she wasn’t some little floating flower. Mary was grounded theologically; I don’t
know where she got her education. This
also refutes the idea the women’s lib has, oh, the Bible was written in a
patriarchal culture and women didn’t count.
That’s reading back Islamic culture or something, into the Old
Testament, a screwball idea. Where did
this teenage girl get all this theology from if women weren’t trained and
educated in the Scripture? Come on, get
real. This magnificat has so much
theology in it that theologians have a problem with it. They would even come to this little 15-16
year old Jewish girl, hey honey, would you please explain what you just said. That’s basically where we are theologically,
she was so far advanced.
So
she says in verse 54, “He has given help to Israel His servant, in remembrance
of His mercy, [55] As He spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and his offspring
forever.” The Abrahamic Covenant she’s
talking about, “offspring” the dynasty concept again. Finally look at what Zacharias says further on in this chapter,
verse 67, “And his father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Spirit, and prophesied,
saying” and look at what he is prophesying, “For He has visited us and
accomplished redemption for His people,” verse 69…In the house of David His
servant.” Verse 71,” Salvation from our
enemies….” Verse 72, “…And to remember His holy covenant, [73] The oath which
He swore to Abraham our father,” the Abrahamic Covenant, [74] “To grant us that
we being delivered from the hands of our enemies, …. [76] “And you,, child,
will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go on before the Lord
to prepare His ways, [77] To give to His people the knowledge of salvation by
the forgiveness of their sins,” [79] “To shine upon those who sit in darkness
and the shadow of death.”
Would
this be conceived in those people talking this way, Zacharias and Mary, do you
think these people are talking about something in heaven, or do you think
they’re talking about something right there in the city of Jerusalem? It’s obvious; these people are thinking in
terms of an earthly kingdom, there’s no question about it. So that’s why when we understand and go on
further in Acts 2 and 3 with Peter and Pentecost, we want to think like a
Jewish person would have thought at that time in that place.
----------------------------------
So
far in the Pentecost issue you just want to grasp what the overall event was
and why you have to take a lot of care in understanding what was going on here
in Pentecost. It’s the coming of the Holy Spirit upon people in ways that were
absolutely without precedent in Biblical history. So it’s a major event, and
the doctrine I’m going to associate with Pentecost is the doctrine of the Holy
Spirit. We never have dealt with that,
we’ve dealt with the essence of God, we’ve dealt with the person of Christ, but
we’ve never dealt with the person of the Holy Spirit. So that’s coming up and that’s going to be the doctrine connected
to Pentecost.
Question
asked: Clough replies: That’s exactly
right, the pouring out of the Spirit is connected to the New Testament
revelation, and this gets, shall we say it’s a subject that you have to be precise
in how you discuss it because there has come in church history some weird ideas
here. And just kind of like a fore view
of things, one of the questions of all time is, were the “signs and the
wonders” that showed up on the day of Pentecost, are those signs and wonders to
be normative throughout all church history in every person’s life. And the answer is no, they were foundational
signs and wonders. Does that mean God can’t do miracles today? No, God can heal people today. It’s just that when God heals people today
it’s not of this kind of healing that we observe in the book of Acts.
In
the notes I’m starting to pick this up.
That’s one of the controversial things about Pentecost because we have a
whole denomination called Pentecostal who believe in the perpetuation of these
gifts. Classic Protestant theology is
cessationist. What’s cessationist? “c-e-s-s,” cessation, it’s ceasing. So classical Protestant theology is
cessationist in that apostles don’t occur throughout church history; speaking
in languages doesn’t occur throughout church history; the miracle healings that
we see Paul doing with his handkerchiefs is not continued down through church
history, so what’s going on. Why? The
answer is going to be because the revelational job of these gifts was
completed. When you build a house you don’t lay a foundation upon a foundation
upon a foundation. You let the
foundation, you pour it, the foundation is made and then what do you do? Now you build a house on the
foundation.
Eph.
2:20 says upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets the Church has been
built, so when the apostles and prophets finished their job, the foundation was
finished and the Church could get on with business. There are plenty of things
to do in church history besides pour concrete every century. That’s the major
controversy that’s going to happen with Pentecost. It’s a major issue.
Pentecostals insist upon propagating all gifts for all Christians
throughout all time. The Mormons insist
that the apostles go on and on and on and on.
The Roman Catholic Church believes in the continuing apostolic oral
tradition, and the fact that Pope acts as sort of an apostle, one Pope after
another. So this is a major parting of
the ways here and Pentecost sets it up.
That’s
why I’m spending all this time trying to get this clear as to what is happening
at Pentecost and what is not happening at Pentecost. Pentecost is a unique event, just like the cross. Jesus doesn’t get crucified time after time
after time, and the Holy Spirit doesn’t come and do His thing like He does at
Pentecost time after time after time.
In fact, He does it three times, He does it in Acts 2; He does it in
Acts 10; He does it in Acts 19 and that’s it.
You’ll see a chart in the notes where those are all documented and
you’ll see if you line up one after another, lo and behold, guess what, you see
that Acts 1:8 is fulfilled. What is
Acts 1:8? “You shall be witnesses in Jerusalem,
Samaria and to the uttermost parts of the world. Three areas and you have three of these little mini-Pentecost’s
that happened. First it was in
Jerusalem, the next one was in Samaria, you have Acts 10, Cornelius and
Cornelius was a Gentile, he was part of the Roman army, so now you have the
gospel going forth into all the world, touching the whole Roman Empire. So
there’s a structure there and we’re going to look at that and we’re going to
cover verses that support cessation, that is that these things were done,
completed and we’re to get on with life by paying attention to what the Holy
Spirit poured out, which was the canon of the New Testament. That becomes the focus point.
Question
asked: Clough replies: It doesn’t
really matter because Eph. 2:20 is talking about something that’s already
finished, so it’s talking about an end to the process. Don’t worry about
whether the prophets there are Old Testament or New Testament prophets because
both Dispensational and Reformed theology look to the prophets for truths. I
know what they’re talking about; they’re talking about, well, that shows you
the Church was in the Old Testament.
The point is that the Church is defined and again, this is in the notes,
something called the “baptism of the Spirit,” and the baptism of the Spirit is
what puts you in union with Christ.
Could you have been in union with Christ in the Old Testament? No, because Christ hadn’t come yet. Could you have been in union with Christ
during His earthly ministry? No,
because He wasn’t ascended and seated yet.
What’s the first time in history you could be in union with Christ?
After the ascension and session. So the
Church had to start after the ascension and session. That’s why we say it’s
this big dividing point.
The
reason that classical Reformed theology does what it does is because redefines
the word “Church.” They’re using the
word “Church” differently than the way we’re using the word; we’re both using
the same word, spelled the same way, but we mean totally different things. They’re using the word “Church” as a synonym
for all saved people. We are not using
the word “Church” to refer to all saved people. We’re using the word “Church”
to refer to those people saved since Pentecost. That’s again these two things. That’s why I covered that whole
thing, not that you’d understand all the details but I wanted to expose you to
the fact that when you start getting into these things in the New Testament,
here’s where it comes up now. Here we
are in Pentecost and here we are, two different roads, and we’ll see that time
after time. We do share, by the way,
with Reformed theology cessationism though; they agree and we agree, and it’s
funny that they do in one sense because if the Church is nothing more than
Israel, Israel had a continuing line of prophets, why not the Church. That’s
sort of interesting. The Church is not Israel.
Question
asked: Clough replies: Pentecost is
“Pente,” fifty, so it’s fifty days later.
People could come again to Jerusalem for that feast, that’s what was
going on in Acts 2. That’s where all the tourists came from all those different
places that heard the languages in their own national origin points.
Question
asked: Clough replies: They were
there…Pentecost came ten days after Jesus ascended. First you have the
Passover, that’s when Christ was crucified.
Then you have a space of time until Pentecost. It just turned out during those days Jesus was showing Himself,
remember, for several weeks He appeared, and then Jesus departed ten days
before Pentecost. When Pentecost came
these people came. It’s interesting, if you study history, Josephus reports
something interesting. Do you know how
many people came to Jerusalem? Josephus
gives us an account, that when these holidays showed up lots of people were
there. Josephus reports, we don’t know
because we don’t a census to check him, but Josephus argues that there was
between 1.5 and 2 million Jews that were in that city to come to those
feasts. I don’t know where the motels
were in those days, but I would imagine that there were tents all over the
place. This was big stuff—and good
Jewish boys, good business… these holidays, I mean, you could make the national
economy sing on those three holidays, Passover, Pentecost and the Feast of
Tabernacles. We’re not talking small stuff here; this is BIG, big time
business.
That’s
why it’s interesting, who designed Pentecost originally? The Lord.
So all these people had no consciousness of it and they just came
because it was the Feast, the thing to do, go back to see Grandma, she’s
sitting around Jerusalem and I’m a businessman out in the Mediterranean and
I’ve got to go Jerusalem and I’ll see Aunt So and So and Grandma So and So and
have a good time at Pentecost, parties around, that kind of thing. It was a holiday. And it was deliberately structured that way, centuries before, so
that when the Holy Spirit came there’d be 1.5 to 2 million people sitting
there. Beautiful timing.
Next
week we’ll go further. Next Thursday
we’ll have Tommy Ice here and I’ve asked Tommy to address you advanced students
with the history of prophecy in the Church.
So he’s going to go through Church history and go through some the
different views of prophecy, so it should be a pretty good lecture.