Lectionary Texts: Acts 2:1-21 or
Genesis 11:1-9; Psalm 104:24-34, 35b; Romans 8:14-17 or Acts 2:1-21; John
14:8-17, (25-27)
Sermon Text: Acts 2:42-47
The Church at Its Best
I remember a week when I was preaching a
revival in Battle Creek, Michigan. The pastor suggested we take a tour of
Battle Creek’s major industry. After lunch we got in his little yellow Toyota
and drove over to the major industry.
We parked and walked up the stairs to
the main entrance. An enthusiastic hostess and tour guide greeted us. She
grinned ear-to-ear and welcomed us to the plant. Then she opened her hand,
disclosed the “hidden treasure” on her palm, and said, “Folks, this is how it
all begins.” She showed us a kernel of corn. I tried to act impressed as we
began our tour of Kellogg’s.
The tour guide cautioned us not to
deviate from the canary-yellow adhesive tape stripes secured to the tile
hallway. We followed her for an hour through the plant. Every once in a while
she would halt our procession and provide some heavy insight. The first time
she stopped us she said, “Folks, this is what it looks like when it’s cooked.”
We tasted a sample; it reminded me of chewing a rubber band. The next time she
stopped us she said, “Folks, this is what it looks like when it goes through
the rollers.” It was completely flat, and we were shocked! The last time she
stopped our parade she said, “Folks, look through this window. See those
flakes?” They were predestined for a unique anointing, called “sugar-frosted,”
and were headed for “Tony’s box.” We all applauded enthusiastically.
Later that afternoon I returned to my
room and meditated on the insight of the day. I concluded Kellogg’s is in
business of making cereal. It got me thinking about the Church, wondering why
are we in business and what do we make? Then I remembered the Lord’s words,
“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19-20). The
Church develops disciples as Kellogg’s creates cereal.
When an employee at Kellogg’s gets in
his truck and drives home, he has a sense of fulfillment. He goes home feeling
like he got the job done today. As he leaves, a railroad track full of boxcars
is loaded with hundreds of palates of freshly boxed cereal.
How do we know in the Church if we’re getting our job done? Jesus said, “Go
make disciples.” How do you make a disciple? The purpose Jesus gave the
Church, “Go make disciples,” stands on two legs. One is to reach the lost. The
other is to teach the believer. We are to reach them and teach them.
Obviously, we can’t teach them until first we reach them. But after we reach
the unsaved we must teach them and help them grow.
I’ve seen some churches that had these
two components of the mission out of balance. Some churches place all the
emphasis on reaching people and very little on teaching and helping the new
believer grow. Other churches place all the emphasis on teaching people with
very little effort given to outreach and evangelism of lost people. Happy is
the church that has “reach them and teach them” in a proper balance.
Then I began to wonder who’s done the
best job of making disciples? Where’s the high-mark of effectiveness in making
disciples? The Lord turned my attention to Acts 2:42
42They devoted themselves to the
apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to
prayer.
Luke gives us the characteristics and priorities of a group
of believers, freshly filled with the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost.
Luke writes, “They devoted themselves to
the apostles’ teaching, and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to
prayer” (v. 42). Here “devoted” means permanent adherence, welded,
super-glued, or riveted. To be devoted was to have a premeditated, prioritized
commitment.
It makes us ask how devoted are we? In a
day when there is a consumerism and spectator sport mentality in the Church,
it’s good to review the question of devotion. The early Christians devoted
themselves to the apostles’ teaching. When teaching, training, and equipping
ministry was available folks showed up--growing deeper in faith. Following the
apostles’ ministry was a priority.
These early Christians devoted
themselves to fellowship. There was inter-related and inter-dependence in
their relationships. Community was lived out in their lives. They devoted
themselves to the breaking of bread, giving attention and priority to the
Lord’s Supper. Prayer was also a priority in their devotion to Christ. How
often do we spend time in prayer? We have twenty-four hours every day and we
choose what we do with our time. The Christians in Acts devoted themselves to
prayer.
In Acts 2: 43
-Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done
by the apostles. we learn “everyone was filled with awe.” I’ve been in
churches filled with “ahhh”--the sound of yawns from bored listeners. But the
scripture passage refers to “mind-blown-amazement, shock, serendipity, and
unanticipated surprise!” The apostles did wonders and miraculous signs. The
followers saw, participated in, were changed by these miracles. How else could
they respond but in “awe”?
What ever happened to the wonder and
miraculous signs? Some preachers have taken the wonder and miracles way out of
bounds biblically. It does not mean we need to neglect the wonder and miracles
altogether. I’ve often wondered if there are answers to prayer and miracles
sitting on heaven’s warehouse shelves with our name on them, just waiting for
us to pray for in faith, believing. Acts 2:44 All the
believers were together and had everything in common.continues the
description of the Early Church, “all the believers were together and had
everything in common.” It’s one thing for folks to leave their house, drive to
church, and sit in their pew and be “together” in the same sanctuary. But it’s
something significantly different to be “together” in unity, oneness, harmony,
and peace. The truth is we either add to unity or we subtract from the unity
of the Church. We’re either a part of the answer or we’re part of the problem.
Besides the unity that characterized the early believers.
We learn these early Christians also had
everything in common. They had a loose grip on their material possessions and
shared generously with each other. This is a good lesson for us who live in a
day where we see so much materialism and aggressive pursuit of assets. Life is
more than what we can collect.
The loose grip on material possession
meant they were “selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as
he had need”Acts 2: 45 Selling their possessions and
goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.
Have you ever had a garage sale? The believers had a garage
sale and gave to anyone as he or she had need. The only requirement for the
recipient of their generosity was a need.
Many of our churches could develop a
significant ministry today determining the needs in our community. There’s
someone within reach of our church with a material need. Compassionate,
humanitarian benevolence is a wonderful ministry we are called to as
Christians “making disciples.”
Notice Acts 2: 46,
“Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts.” They
met for daybreak devotions. These newly Spirit-filled believers gathered in
the courtyard outside the temple to pray, read Scripture, sing a hymn,
encourage each other, and share information of mutual concern. Why did they do
that? You can trace it back to devotion (v. 42).
Their relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ and with each other became a
life-changing priority.
We must us face the question, “How
devoted are we?” There is an ever-encroaching tendency to become apathetic,
stagnant, and mediocre in our dedication to Christ and our neighbor.
If we continue to look at
verse 46 we see “they broke bread in their homes
and ate together with glad and sincere hearts.” Here’s one thing we do very
well in the church. We have the potlucks down perfect! This passage concludes
with Acts 2: 47 stating they were, “Praising God and
enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily
those who were being saved.” As Luke documented what was happening with
these Spirit-filled believers, he noted the Lord’s working in their lives
resulted in new believers being added daily. Health and obedience work in
harmony with the Lord’s movement in the heart and lives of those around us.
In many churches evangelism and outreach
is absent. How long has it been since someone outside your local church was
reached, saved, baptized, and joined your church?
I remember a summer when my wife,
daughter, and in-laws drove from southern California to Huntington, West
Virginia. On Sunday afternoon we returned to grandma and grandpa’s house to
enjoy dinner. After dinner the phone rang. My mother-in-law said, “Norman, the
phone’s for you.” Who is calling me here in Huntington, West Virginia?
Uncle Don called, “Norman, I heard you
were in town and thought you’d like to know about my neighbor, Belvie. He had
terminal heart disease and doesn’t know anything about God or the Church. I’ve
tried to witness to him the best I could. I think he’s ready to listen to
someone like you, if you wouldn’t mind visiting.”
I answered, “We’ll be right there.”
My wife, daughter, in-laws, and I got in
our car and drove out the country road to the park where Uncle Don and Aunt
Dorothy lived. He met me at the driveway and we walked across the street to
Belvie’s front porch. I knocked on the screen door. Belvie, a tall man, about
6 feet 4 inches and thin at about 180 pounds, answered the door. His hair was
messy and he hadn’t shaved that day or the day before. In one corner of his
mouth he had a cigarette with the ashes ready to fall on the floor. He was
wearing polyester pajamas and no shoes.
Belvie said, “Howdy boys, come on in.”
It was obvious he left his teeth on the sink. We stepped inside and I was
immediately attacked by a Doberman-poodle. The room was full of Sunday
afternoon visitors, tobacco smoke, and beer cans.
I knew I wouldn’t get anywhere in that
situation, so I suggested we go out on the front porch where we could be
alone. We sat down on the front porch swing and got acquainted. Then, an inch
at a time, I bent the conversation to the Lord and the Gospel.
I said, “Belvie, God loves you, and even
at this stage in your life He has a plan for you.” He found this hard to
believe. I explained we were all sinners, “all have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). He admitted
he’d been “quite a sinner in his day.” I told him about Jesus, born of the
Virgin Mary, and about His life, ministry, and miracles. I explained how He
was crucified, dead and buried, and raised on the third day. Belvie stared at
me like it was the first time he heard this in his whole life.
Then I explained confession (admitting
our sins to God) and repentance (being sorry for our sins and turning from
them). After twenty minutes I asked, “Belvie, can you give me a good reason
why you wouldn’t want to pray and receive Jesus right now?” He broke eye
contact with me, and for a long time he just stared at the indoor-outdoor
carpet on his front porch. Then, after a long silence, he raised his head. I
noticed a tear squeeze out of the corner of his eye and slowly crawl through
the stubble of his unshaven cheek before it disappeared into his wrinkles. His
tear left a shiny trail in the afternoon sun.
He said, “Nope.” I replied, “Would you
like to pray right now?” He responded, “Yep.”
So we bowed our heads to pray. Belvie
repeated the “sinners prayer” after me just as sincerely as anyone ever prayed
at a church altar. He was saved just as genuinely as anyone had ever been
saved.
A few weeks later I was home at my desk
reading the mail and there was a letter from Huntington, West Virginia. Out of
the pages of the letter fell a newspaper clipping. It was from the Huntington
Daily. Belvie had moved from Huntington to heaven, less than three weeks after
we sat on his front porch. I heard the Lord whisper, “and the Lord added to
their number daily, those who were being saved” (v. 47).
And He would like to do it again through
you and through your church.