Outline Part 2
Acts 8:1 NASB “Saul was in
hearty agreement with putting him to death.
And on that day a great persecution began against the church in Jerusalem, and
they were all scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except
the apostles.” They were all split up, except for the apostles who stayed in Jerusalem which
then became the center of apostolic action and authority in the early church.
Saul [8:3] becomes extremely self-righteous in his arrogance and hostility
toward Christianity and he “{began} ravaging the church, entering house after
house, and dragging off men and women, he would put them in prison.” He takes
it upon himself to destroy this new work. He sees it as a threat to Judaism and
he becomes a one-man hit squad to go out and arrest and charge anyone who was a
Christian and many of them were killed as a result of what he was doing. But we
are told [4] “Therefore, those who had been scattered went about preaching the
word.”
Notice as we go through this section, down
into chapter eight, we will constantly see the word “preaching,” most of the
time is the Greek word euaggelizo
[e)uaggelizw].”
aggelizo is the word to announce or make an announcement; the
eu [or ev] means something
good. So it is the proclamation of good news or the preaching of good
news, it is not the word kerusso [khrussw] which is often
translated “preaching.” This is a key word in the gospel.
Now
we are told about Philip. Two of those who were chosen in Acts chapter six are
now being highlighted; Stephen first of all and now Philip. Philip goes to Samaria, we are told, and
there he is going to preach the gospel. The Samaritans were looked down upon by
the Jews as not being pure-blood because they had a mixed ethnic background.
Notice the order of events that take place. As he begins to proclaim the gospel
there are many who are saved. Many signs and wonders accompanied his preaching
to authenticate what he is saying, and in verse 12 we are told, “But when they
believed Philip preaching the good news about the kingdom of God and the name of
Jesus Christ, they were being baptized, men and women alike.” The word
“believed” is the key word for those who are saved, those who have believed
what has been preached to them. So there is the order of faith in Christ first,
then they are baptized in water, and in verse 14 the apostles are brought in.
“Now when the apostles in Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of
God, they sent them Peter and John, [15] who came down and prayed for them that
they might receive the Holy Spirit.” The word “down” is used in terms of
elevation; Jerusalem was up high. The
Samaritan believers don’t automatically get the Holy Spirit at salvation. Why?
It is because there were different ethnic groups—Jews, Samaritans and Gentiles—and
if they had been saved and had a completely autonomous Pentecost, as it were,
arrival of the Holy Spirit, it might have led to a fragmentation in the church.
They don’t receive the Holy Spirit except at the hands of Peter and John, which
shows that they are now unified with the leadership in Jerusalem, they are not a
distinct group but now are one with the church is Jerusalem.
But
what doesn’t happen here? There is no speaking in languages. That will happen
in chapter ten when we get to Cornelius and there wasn’t a need for the
evidence of speaking in languages to take place here. So we have the expansion
of the gospel there and when that was done they continue to take the gospel
throughout the many villages of the Samaritans. But God is not through with
Philip yet. Acts 8:26 NASB “But an angel of
the Lord spoke to Philip saying, ‘Get up and go south to the road that descends
from Jerusalem
to Gaza.’
(This is a desert {road.})” Philip is going to meet this Ethiopian who is high
ion the administration of the Queen of Ethiopia. He is the treasurer for the
Ethiopians and he is riding along in his chariot when the Holy Spirit tells
Philip to go up to him and see what he is reading. He is reading in Isaiah
chapter fifty-three, verses seven and eight, and he doesn’t understand what its
significance is. Philip then explains to him that Isaiah 53 relates to the
Messiah and His death for sin, and explains that this applies to Jesus and that
Jesus is the Son of God. Acts 8:37 NASB “[And Philip said,
‘If you believe with all your heart, you may.’ And he answered and said, ‘I
believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.’]” At that point there is belief
and the Ethiopian is baptized in water. Nothing else happens in terms of the
baptism of the Holy Spirit and the Ethiopian is just going to go on back to Ethiopia
and start spreading the gospel. He is just one of many people who aren’t
mentioned who were saved, and then they are going to go back to their home
towns taking the gospel with them. Then Philip is caught away in verse 39,
and that is the same word we have for the Rapture in 1 Thessalonians chapter
four. Acts 8:40 NASB
“But Philip found himself at Azotus, and as he passed through he kept preaching
the gospel to all the cities until he came to Caesarea.” All of this
happens in Samaria and in Judea, so we are still
in that second section of the book talking about how the gospel is expanding.
Chapter
nine brings us to the apostle Paul and his conversion. He has received a letter
of authorization from the synagogues and the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem to go to Damascus and to seek out,
arrest and imprison Christians in Damascus. Acts 9:3, 4 NASB
“As he was traveling, it happened that he was approaching Damascus, and
suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him; and he fell to the ground and
heard a voice saying to him, ‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?’” Those
who were with him see the light and heard someone speak but they can’t hear the
details. So this shows that there was an objective revelation, it was not
something going on in Paul’s head. The evidence here is that those who went
with Paul were not supposed to hear what the Lord was going to say to him, but
they did see something and they heard something which tells us that it was not
just something Paul was imagining. Acts 9:5 NASB
“And he said, “Who are You, Lord?” And He {said,} “I am Jesus whom you are
persecuting.” The word “lord” is often used in Greek [kurioj] as we would
say “sir.” [6] “but get up and enter the city, and it will be told you what you
must do.” Paul had been blinded by the light and after three days the Lord
appears to Ananias and directs him to go to where Paul is located and there he
would heal him and restore his sight.
Ananias is just appalled at the idea that
he has been asked to go heal Saul because he is the sworn enemy of all
Christians. He follows orders, goes to Saul and restores his sight, and in
verse 17 we read: “Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on the
road by which you were coming, has sent me so that you may regain your sight
and be filled with the Holy Spirit.” We see this phrase again and again in Acts
and, as we have seen, it is not the same filling as Ephesians 5:18. It is a
different word, pimplemi [pimplhmi], not pleroo [plhrow], and it uses a genitive clause
“full of the Spirit,” not “filled by means of the Spirit.” So this has to do
with a special kind of enduement and it is more related to the Old Testament
enduement than New Testament filling of the Spirit for the spiritual life. Paul
recovers his sight and is baptized, and then he spends almost two years in Damascus. During
that time he is debating the Jews, “proving that Jesus is the Christ,” the word
there meaning that he is presenting logical, rational, historical arguments and
evidence to show that Jesus is the Messiah.
Then he angers the Jews so much they plot
a way to kill him. The Christians have to hide him and secretly get him out of
town, and so they lower him over the walls by a basket at night. This all takes
place between 35 and 37 AD. He escapes from Damascus and goes
to Jerusalem
but people there are afraid of him because they remember his reputation and
have come to understand who he is. But Barnabas is a key player here, he is one
of these people who is always putting people together and resolving conflicts.
He brings Paul to the apostles and gives evidence that Paul has become a
believer, so they relax. This is the first of five visits by Paul that we know
of to Jerusalem
in Acts. Acts 9:29
NASB “And he was talking and arguing with the Hellenistic {Jews;}
but they were attempting to put him to death.” Verse 30 is interesting: “But
when the brethren learned {of it,} they brought him down to Caesarea and sent him
away to Tarsus.”
He needed to calm down a little bit because he was causing too much trouble.
[31] “So the church throughout all Judea
and Galilee
and Samaria
enjoyed peace, being built up; and going on in the fear of the Lord and in the
comfort of the Holy Spirit, it continued to increase.”
Then the emphasis shifts to Peter. We are
told about a couple of miracles performed by Peter, the paralyzed Aeneas in v.
33, and then he restores Dorcus, also known as Tabitha-she dies and he raises
her from the dead, vv. 36-43. He stays in Joppa with Simon who is a tanner. At that
time we are told that there was a Roman centurion up in Caesarea and he is going
to send some men down to Joppa to seek out Peter. Cornelius is a man who feared
God and he has been consistently been praying to God. He sees a vision; an
angel appears to him and tells him to send some men down to Joppa and to bring
Peter back to him.
The next day as Peter is praying up in
Joppa up on the roof top he receives a vision from the Lord of a huge table
cloth coming down from heaven, and he sees all kinds of food there. They are
all kinds of things that he hasn’t been able to eat because it was prohibited
by the Mosaic Law. Acts 10:13 NASB “A voice came to
him, ‘Get up, Peter, kill and eat!’” This tells us, once again, that there is
nothing wrong with killing animals for food, God authorizes it and there is
nothing wrong with eating meat. Peter, though, based on his rigid observance of
the law, says, “By no means, Lord, for I have never eaten anything unholy and
unclean.” God tells him that what he has cleansed he must not call common. At
this point it is okay to eat all this food. It shows that the basic reason that
God gave the dietary laws didn’t have anything to do with health or because
they didn’t know how to cook it right. The issue here is a dispensational
shift, not suddenly discovering how they are supposed to cook meat so they
don’t get disease. All this food is now clean.
What he also understands is that what this
means is that what God has called unclean before, the Gentiles, are now clean.
So when these men appear who tell him that they have been sent by Cornelius he
knows then they he is to follow them. He goes back with them, meets with
Cornelius, witnesses to him, and they believe in Christ. Acts 10:43
NASB “Of Him all the prophets bear witness that through His name
everyone who believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins. [44] While Peter was
still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit fell upon all those who were
listening to the message.” So he preaches the gospel and the Holy Spirit falls
on them, and those who were of the circumcision who believed were astonished
“because the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles also.”
Then they heard them speaking in languages. Notice the different order than
with the Samaritans. Here there was speaking in tongues [languages] which
didn’t happen with the Samaritans, showing that there is not a set order for
these things (in contrast to what is taught by Pentecostals).
In chapter eleven Peter goes back to Jerusalem to
defend his actions. He reiterates what he saw in the vision and how God was
working in the situation, and that God was bringing the Gentiles in as part of
the church. Peter was there at the day of Pentecost, he was there at the
Samaritan Pentecost, and now he is there for the Gentile Pentecost with
Cornelius showing that all of these groups are now one in the body of
Christ.
Peter was the dominant player in the last
part of chapter nine, chapter ten and the first part of chapter eleven. Now we
shift back to Paul, starting in chapter nineteen, and we are talking about Antioch. We are
told that as the church there is being established and is growing Barnabas, who
has been working with the church at Antioch,
realizes that they need some help. He thinks back to Paul and it has been about
four years or so since Paul went back to Tarsus, so he
retrieves him and brings him to Antioch to help
with the ministry there. This is in the spring of 43. By verse 27 we shift
forward a year to the spring of 44, a time when there has been a famine in Jerusalem. There
has also been some hostility and persecution and this is the same time when
James the brother of John is going to be martyred by Herod Antipas [12:2].
Then we shift back to Peter in 12:5. This
is the last we see of Peter here. He is arrested and put in jail. Then
everybody in the church is praying for him, an angel comes and releases him and
he goes to the house of Mary the mother of John Mark. Then we see the church
continue to grow and be protected by God. Peter goes to Caesarea and stays
there, so he is out of the limelight for a while. This is about the time that
Herod has a serious bout with some worms and he dies. Apparently he had
messianic aspirations and so this is divine discipline as God takes him out.
We are told in verse 25 that Paul and
Barnabas return from Jerusalem
back to Antioch
and they took John Mark with them. When they get back to Antioch in
chapter thirteen this is about 47 AD, and April of
48 they are going to be sent out, commissioned by the church at Antioch, to take
the gospel to the Gentiles. Paul is going to go on three missionary trips and a
fourth journey. After the first missionary trip he is going to write one
book—Galatians. After the second missionary journey he is going to write two
books—I and II Thessalonians. After the third missionary trip he is going to
write three—I & II Corinthians and Romans. Then there is the fourth trip
when Paul is taken as a prisoner from Jerusalem to Rome, including spending two
years imprisoned in Caesarea, after which he is going to write four
books—Ephesians, Colossians, Philemon and Philippians. He is still in his first
imprisonment when the book of Acts ends. He will leave after that first
imprisonment, going back to Greece,
to Macedonia
in the north, to Ephesus,
and then we believe he went to Spain
and possibly as far as England
(There is some tradition to support that but nothing in Scripture to support
that). At which time he comes back to Rome, is arrested
again the second time and this ends during the time of Nero with his execution.
The rest of Acts, chapters thirteen through twenty-eight, just takes us through
these four journeys.
It was always Paul’s procedure to take the
gospel first to the Jews and then to the Gentiles. What happened in a number of
places was that after there was a positive response by the Gentiles there was a
reaction of jealousy among the Jewish community that did not respond positively
to Paul’s message, and they began to persecute him and to follow him.
When we come to the end of the book of
Acts we find that Paul is under house arrest and his first imprisonment in Rome and it is the
spring of 62. It is eight years before Jerusalem will
fall and it has been 29 years since the crucifixion. By this time the gospel
has been taken out pretty much through the known world or the Roman Empire as we know from
Acts. But what we know from tradition and from other sources is that actually
the gospel went to many other places. For example, Thomas went to India,
Matthew and others went into North Africa,
the gospel was taken into Arabia.
Others took the gospel into Persia
and Babylon,
so the gospel spreads out over most of the known world in the first
century.
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