The Church – Amazing! – 3

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Scripture References: Acts 2:1-12

II. The Right Appeal from the Church – Continued

A. Anointing – Continued

From last lesson: God was with us when Jesus Christ was born and placed in the cradle at Bethlehem. Supernatural events surrounded Bethlehem. There was the new star in the heavens. There was the virgin birth. There was the angelic chorus, and when Jesus was born, He was given the name Emmanuel, which interpreted means “God with us.” None of these miracles need to be repeated, but aren’t you glad for Bethlehem?

At Calvary we are taught that God is for us. The Bible says that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures (1 Corinthians 15:1–4). He died once and for all. Aren’t you glad there’s not going to be another Calvary? Wouldn’t it be a terrible thing if every time the church were to come together, we would say, “We are going to repeat Calvary. We are going to crucify Jesus again.” That would be most blasphemous.

At Calvary a number of miracles took place. There was the earthquake, the darkness, the graves were opened, and the souls and bodies of saints came out of the graves. We can’t repeat that. We don’t want to repeat that, but we surely can be blessed by it.

B. Action

When the Day of Pentecost began, there were 120 dedicated Christians in an upper room praying. When the day ended, 3,000 new converts had been added to the congregation. How did this occur? The Bible tells us in Acts 1:14 that the disciples prayed. Their prayer was followed by witnessing. In the second chapter, we read: “They were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.” These were not angelic languages. The Jewish Christians spoke in their native Galilean tongue (Acts 2:7). The Holy Spirit performed a miracle, and the people present heard the message of salvation in their own language (Acts 2:8).

When there was a question about the miracle that had taken place, Simon Peter began to share his witness. He related to them how Joel had prophesied that God would send the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:15–21). He then told them how the works of Jesus proved He is the anointed Messiah sent from heaven prophesied by King David (Acts 2:22–31). Finally, Peter said the resurrection of Jesus Christ proves He is both Lord and Christ (Acts 2:32–36).

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Here Christ’s church makes the right appeal to the unsaved. It is an appeal anointed by the Holy Spirit and put into positive action by the witnessing of the people and the preacher. The results were miraculous. We too can witness miraculous results anointed by the Holy Spirit. We need to put our faith into action by sharing God’s message of redemption through faith in Jesus Christ.

C. Authority

When the anointing power of the Holy Spirit was called into question by the people at Pentecost, Peter appealed to the authority of the Word of God. The Bible indicates that some of the people present that day mocked the church (Acts 2:13). Their mocking was turned to repentance when Peter quoted the prophet Joel (Acts 2:17–21). Peter also quoted Psalm 16:8–11, written by David, and beautifully related this psalm to the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.

The Bible tells us that “faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” – Romans 10:17. The sword of the Spirit is the Word of God. This is the weapon that God uses to free men and women, boys and girls from the shackles of sin. The right appeal from the church is always based on the authority of the Word of God.

III. The Right Attitude from the Lost

When the right atmosphere exists in the church and the right appeal is made from the church, the unsaved usually respond with the right attitude. On the Day of Pentecost, the hearts of the unsaved were stirred. They asked Peter and the rest of the apostles, “What shall we do?” Peter’s response was that they needed to turn from their sins and to give evidence that their sins had been forgiven by following Jesus in New Testament baptism. He went on to promise them that they would receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:37–38).

When Jesus gave the Great Commission, He said that we are to make disciples, baptize them, and teach them to observe all things that He has commanded (Matthew 28:19–20). At Pentecost, the disciples carried out the Great Commission, for Luke recorded, “Then those who gladly received his word were baptized; and that day about three thousand souls were added to them. And they continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in prayers.” – Acts 2:41–42.

Here is the amazing first-century church carrying out the Great Commission of our Lord. We need to get back to that example and start doing what we have been called to do for the Lord.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 5/05/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, we come because we have heard you calling. We have heard you in the noise and the rush of life, in the responsibility of home and work, in our times of strength and in our moments of weakness. We have heard you in our doubts and uncertainties. We have heard you and known we are unworthy, but still we have come. We have come because you have called and we are accepted. We have come to praise you for your call.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 5/05/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Friday Reflecting

“Surely in the LORD I have . . . strength.” – Isaiah 45:24.

A believer’s watchfulness is like that of a soldier. A sentinel posted on the walls, when he discerns a hostile party advancing, does not attempt to make head against them himself, but informs his commanding officer of the enemy’s approach, and leaves him to take the proper measures against the foe. So the Christian does not attempt to fight temptation in his own strength; his watchfulness lies in observing its approach, and in telling God of it by prayer.
~ W. MASON

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Matthew 11:28

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Friday May 5, 2023

Matthew 11:28
“Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

Many of God’s children have grown weary.

Their Christianity has become a burden and a drudgery; they have become restless and anxious.

They strive with their worldly minds, their hard and unemotional hearts. They dishonor God by their daily lives. Instead of growth and progress there is retrogression on every hand. Oftentimes they feel weary unto death. Tired of themselves and their self-seeking hearts. Listen now as Jesus calls to you: “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

Why do not the children of God come to Jesus and find rest?

Our worst hindrance is that which the Scriptures speak of as “the sorrow of the world.” What is that? It is that sorrow for sin which is vexed at itself and its own weakness and foolishness. That is, it is a rebellious sorrow.

We have a great deal of this kind of sorrow in our daily lives. It arises from our old pride. The right kind of sorrow for sin yields and humbles itself instead of becoming vexed.

It submits to the humiliating fact which I myself and my daily life constitute. It concedes that the Spirit of God is in the right when He points out all my wretchedness. And, instead of becoming surprised, or vexed, or dismayed, prostrates itself quietly and gives thanks to the God of grace for conviction.

And thereupon it gives thanks for the fact that salvation is for the lost, that the physician is for the sick and not for the well.

Thus my weary soul finds rest again.

It has now humbled itself beneath the mighty hand of God; now it agrees with God that in me there is nothing that can stand before God. Now it rests again upon the firm foundation of grace. And beholds the wounds and stripes of my Substitute, praising and thanking God for them.

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O. Hallesby, God’s Word for Today: A Daily Devotional for the Whole Year, translator Clarence J. Carlsen (Augsburg, 1994)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 5/05/2023

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Light a Candle to See the Sun?

The public has a deep respect for the amazing scientific advances made within our lifetime. There is admiration for the scientific process of observation, experimentation of testing every concept to measure its validity. But it still bothers some people that we cannot prove scientifically that God exists. Must we light a candle to see the sun?
~ Wernher Von Braun

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Spiritual Nuggets 5/05/2023

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Revenge Isn’t Sweet

It’s easy to revel in vigilante justice, be joyful in the irony of someone getting “what’s coming to them,” or feel satisfied when “bad Karma comes back around” to others. The colloquialisms around the subject alone demonstrate our infatuation with justice. Joseph is similarly impassioned; he schemes against his brothers who sold him into slavery. At the beginning of Genesis 43, Joseph’s brothers must go back to Egypt to request food from him—their younger brother, whom they do not recognize. Joseph waits for the youngest, Benjamin, to join them. What Joseph intends to do when he does, we’re not told.

When Benjamin and the other brothers arrive, Joseph is either moved with empathy or chooses to act upon his original plan of revealing himself in front of all his brothers (Genesis 43:16, 29). Joseph even helps them financially, signaling that he somehow still cares for them. Yet it doesn’t seem that Joseph has forgiven them yet, because in Genesis 44, more evil schemes emerge.

The thought of others feeling the same kind of pain they have inflicted can cause us to feel remorse. But we’re always aware of the choice; we can choose to fight our instincts. We can recognize that instead of lashing back, the best answer is turning the other cheek. This may be easy for some, but for others—especially those who have been deeply hurt—abandoning the urge to inflict injury will require spiritual strength, prayer, and self-control.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Show Me Your Ways Lord ~

*Pastor’s Note: Here is an inspirational poem from our Sister-in-Christ, Deborah Ann Belka. Please remember that Sister Deborah has her own website and you can find her links below. As always, Glory to God for all of the creative gifts He gives so bountifully for us to share with one another. God Bless!


Friday 5-5-2023
Deborah Ann Belka

CHRISTian Poetry by Deborah Ann – Home

dab show me your ways lord
Lord, show me Your ways,
reveal them to me
lead and guide my steps
to where they should be.

Grant me Your mercy,
always be by my side
for the road is too rough
and the path is so wide.

Instruct and teach me Lord,
in the way I should go
for the hills are too lofty
and the valleys so low.

Encourage me daily,
to hold on to Your hand
for the canyons are too steep
and the mountains so grand.

Lord, show me Your path,
teach me in Your ways
let Your light lead me . . .
for the rest of my days!

~~~~~~~~

Psalm 32:8

“I will instruct thee and teach thee
in the way which thou shalt go:
I will guide thee with mine eye.”

King James Version
Public Domain

Copyright 2013 Revised 2022
Deborah Ann Belka

~ to GOD be the GLORY ~

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The Church – Amazing! – 2

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Scripture References: Acts 2:1-12

From last lesson: God is just as powerful this moment as He has ever been. We can still have Pentecostal power today because God has not changed. How could God change? He is God!

Second, not only is our Master the same, but humankind is basically the same. Humanity has not changed. Human nature has not changed! I hear people say, “Today men are more wicked than they used to be.” I disagree because Adam and Eve were totally self-centered. They didn’t believe a word God told them. One can’t get any worse than that. Cain, their first son, was a murderer. He killed his own brother, Abel.

People have always been wicked. God has never had good people to work with. Don’t think that in the first century there were suddenly an unusual number of nice people, and God took these nice people and did something wonderful with them. The people in the first century nailed Jesus to the cross. Yet, in the first century the church ministered with great power, and souls were saved.

Third, our methods should not change. God has given us the message of the gospel and the blueprint for success in the Great Commission. Our Master has not changed, humankind has not changed, and our methods should not change. God teaches us in Acts 2 what the church ought to do. I believe that God has a well-defined plan for what the church is to do. What is God’s method, blueprint, plan, and design for the amazing church?

I. The Right Atmosphere in the Church

The golden characteristic of the New Testament church was unity, oneness, and accord. Luke stated: “When the Day of Pentecost had fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.” – Acts 2:1. These people were not rusted together by tradition, nor wired together by organization, nor frozen together by formalism. They were melted together by a common Spirit, the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of love.

“Blessed are the peacemakers, For they shall be called sons of God.” – Matthew 5:9. Jesus taught that in His sermon on the mount. According to the writer of Proverbs, among the six things that God hates is someone who sows discord among the brethren (Proverbs 6:19). How good it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.

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Some said concerning the first-century Christians, “Behold, how they love one another.” Jesus said, “By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” – John 13:35. We may have differences; but, if we are to do what Christ wants us to do, we must bury these differences between ourselves and love one another, by not just saying, “Jesus is Lord,” but by acting as if we truly believe it. There are not enough demons in hell to stop a church bonded together in love.

It’s small wonder that the world was amazed at the first-century church. The believers were assembled together, and they were in accord, they were united. This church had the right atmosphere. It was a spiritual atmosphere!

II. The Right Appeal from the Church

The amazing first-century church was led by Almighty God to make the right appeal to the unsaved. This is a threefold process. First, there is the anointing of the Holy Spirit. Second, there is the action of personal witnessing. Third, there is the authority of the Word of God.

A. Anointing

These first-century Christians were all filled with the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4). The work of God can only be done through the power of the Holy Spirit. It is every believer’s privilege and responsibility to be filled with the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 5:18).

It was not just the preacher that was filled with the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Peter told the audience that the promise was unto them, their children, their sons, their daughters, and as many as the Lord our God shall call (Acts 2:17–18).

At Pentecost, the Bible says there was a sound like a cyclone, “a mighty rushing wind,” then there appeared cloven tongues as of fire. Following that, as the Christians opened their mouths in praise and witnessing, the speech that came out was not in their own language but in various foreign languages. You and I do not need to repeat the miracle of Pentecost any more than we need to repeat the virgin birth of Christ or the vicarious death of Christ. Pentecost was a once-and-for-all event. We cannot repeat it, but we surely can experience the same power today, just as we celebrate the birth of our Lord and rejoice that He died to cleanse us of our sins.

God was with us when Jesus Christ was born and placed in the cradle at Bethlehem. Supernatural events surrounded Bethlehem. There was the new star in the heavens. There was the virgin birth. There was the angelic chorus, and when Jesus was born, He was given the name Emmanuel, which interpreted means “God with us.” None of these miracles need to be repeated, but aren’t you glad for Bethlehem?

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 5/04/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, we have come to praise you because you are worthy. We have come to give you thanks because you renew our hope. We have come to worship you because you walk with us everywhere and every day of our lives.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 5/04/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Thursday Reflecting

A just God and a Savior. – Isaiah 45:21.

When the Son of God was made of a woman, and made under the law, there was heard the most awful voice that ever was heard in the universe yet: “Awake, O sword! against the Man that is my fellow, and smite the shepherd,”—smite him! When there was a man in the world that was Jehovah’s fellow, there was some one who could magnify the law, in smiting whom justice could obtain its demands. The sword of justice smote him, struck him, cut him. The sword of justice had a commission to smite the Man that was Jehovah’s fellow: it smote Him in Bethlehem; it smote Him all along the highway of His life, even to Calvary. On Calvary, the strokes of the sword fell heavy; the glances of that sword then darkened the sun; the strokes of the sword shook earth, shook hell; it kept smiting and smiting the Man that was God’s fellow, till at last He cried, “It is finished!” Then the sword fell down at the foot of the cross, hushed, lulled, pacified: and it lay there till the third hallowed morning, when it was found changed into a scepter of mercy; and that scepter of mercy has been waving among mankind ever since.
~ BEAUMONT

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Vicarious Intercession

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Thursday May 4, 2023

Hebrews 10:19
Therefore, brethren, having boldness to enter the Holiest by the blood of Jesus.

Beware of imagining that intercession means bringing our personal sympathies into the presence of God and demanding that He does what we ask. Our approach to God is due entirely to the vicarious identification of our Lord with sin. We have “boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus.

Spiritual stubbornness is the most effectual hindrance to intercession, because it is based on sympathy with that in ourselves and in others that we do not think needs atoning for. We have the notion that there are certain right and virtuous things in us which do not need to be based on the Atonement, and just in the domain of ‘stodge’ that is produced by this idea we cannot intercede. We do not identify ourselves with God’s interests in others, we get petulant with God; we are always ready with our own ideas, and intercession becomes the glorification of our own natural sympathies. We have to realize that the identification of Jesus with sin means the radical alteration of all our sympathies. Vicarious intercession means that we deliberately substitute God’s interests in others for our natural sympathy with them.

Am I stubborn or substituted? Petted or perfect in my relationship to God? Sulky or spiritual? Determined to have my own way or determined to be identified with Him?

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Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest: Selections for the Year (Oswald Chambers Publications; Marshall Pickering, 1986)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 5/04/2023

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Lindbergh’s Musings in the Air

When his trusted plane, Spirit of St. Louis, was midway on its transatlantic flight between New York and Paris, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh began to think of the smallness of man and the deficiency of his devices, and the greatness and marvels of God’s universe.

He mused, “It’s hard to be an agnostic here in the Spirit of St. Louis when I am so aware of the frailty of man’s devices. If one dies, all God’s creation goes on existing in a plan so perfectly balanced, so wondrously simple and yet so incredibly complex that it is beyond our comprehension. There’s the infinite magnitude of the universe, the infinite detail, and man’s consciousness of it all—a world audience to what, if not to God.”

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Spiritual Nuggets 5/04/2023

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A Little Folly

Like dead flies in perfumer’s oil, the writer of Ecclesiastes aptly proclaims that a little folly outweighs wisdom and honor. Sometimes fools are elevated to positions of power, while those who are fit for the position are given no influence. The Preacher says, “I have seen slaves on horses, and princes walking on the ground like slaves” (Ecclesiastes 10:7).

It’s not difficult to nod our heads and say “Amen” when we come to this example of an “evil under the sun.” We probably all have a story to tell about a leader who wasn’t fit for a position and about the injustices we endured under their authority. When a fool is set up as an authority figure, everyone suffers.

The Preacher gives a suggestion, though: “If the anger of the ruler rises against you, do not leave your place, for calmness will lay great offenses to rest” (Ecclesiastes 10:4). This doesn’t just tell us we should have a posture of humility and obedience before bad leaders. We should also teach them by responding with love and humility—something that may calm even the worst of fools.

In Hebrews, we find the context for this. We stand naked and exposed to God, who judges our thoughts and the intentions of our hearts. On our own, sin and guilt would condemn us. But we have a high priest in Jesus Christ. He intercedes for us, just as the Old Testament high priests interceded for the people of Israel. Our confidence is not in our own wisdom and righteousness, but in Him.

We can’t credit ourselves for our own wisdom. We stand before God on account of His Son’s righteousness and obedience. Jesus is the one who is able to withstand our folly. We stand in His righteousness, and we can learn from His obedience.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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God Is My Superhero

*Pastor’s Note: Here’s one from our dear Sister-in-Christ, Kathy Boecher. Remember, the link to her site and to the individual poem used will be linked in the post. She has years of poetry and Paul, her husband, has many, many wonderful paintings showcased on her site. Please visit them and let them know you stopped by. As always, Glory to God for all of the creative gifts He gives so bountifully for us to share. God Bless!


Thursday 5-04-2023
Kathy Boecher

atimetoshare.meHome

kb God is my superheroART & POETRY BY PAUL & KATHY BOECHER©

Do we place upon a pedestal the heroes of our time?
We sometimes make them idols. Do we think they are divine?
When they show that they are human, they quickly tumble down.
They lose that place of honor and they no more wear a crown.

They thought they were invincible – that they could do no wrong.
They took the road most traveled on – they sang out their own sweet song.
The accolades enticed them. Their greed did overcome.
They tested all the limits. To their pride they would succumb.

There is just one super hero that answers our every need,
It is Jesus, Christ our Savior. For our souls His wounds did bleed.
He gave His life to save our own – from our sin He set us free.
He conquered death to give us life, now and through eternity.

The superstars and champions may give everyone a thrill,
The Son of God outshines them all. Our every need He will fill.
So look to Him for lasting peace. The victory he has won.
He is our true redeemer God- Role Model and Number One!

Kathy Boecher © 5-04-2021 – Used with permission.
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The Church – Amazing! – 1

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Scripture References: Acts 2:1-12

What an amazing service they had on the Day of Pentecost! One hundred and twenty disciples had been praying and waiting ten days. Suddenly there was a sound like a cyclone. It was a mighty, rushing wind. Every believer was filled with God’s Spirit. Resting upon each of them was a cloven tongue like a fire. They looked like human candles!

Then a marvelous miracle took place. As these disciples witnessed in their native Galilean tongue, those present heard their own language. Something exciting was happening! Three thousand people became Christians that day.

Luke recorded that the people present “were all amazed and marveled.” Two questions began to be asked by the unbelievers. The first was, “Whatever could this mean?” The second question recorded in Acts is the result of the first question. Pierced in their hearts, they said to Peter, “What shall we do?” (Acts 2:37). These people wanted their hearts made right with God. They wanted to be saved and be certain they were going to heaven.

Today’s church has been trying to get the unsaved to ask the second question “What shall we do?” before they ask the first question: “Whatever could this mean?” We have been trying to get the unchurched to want what we have without first being amazed at what we are. We are trying to get them saved and into the church, but we have not shown them anything different in our lives.

It is a tragedy that the unsaved people coming to church often are not amazed. They do not wonder, nor are they perplexed. They do not see anything different in the average church today. They are not asking, “What does this mean?” and then, following that with the question, “What must we do to be saved?”

I believe our Lord wants the church today to be like that first-century church at Pentecost. Billy Graham preached a crusade in a certain city as he often did. Often in his sermons, Graham would state: “The Bible says.” One man remarked, “Billy Graham is going to set evangelism back fifty years.” When Graham heard that, he responded, “Oh, I didn’t mean to do that. I don’t want to set evangelism back fifty years. I want to set evangelism back 2,000 years.”

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That is exactly what we need to do. We need to move back to the first-century church at Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost and do what they did. If we prayed as they prayed, believed as they believed, witnessed as they witnessed, evidenced enthusiasm as they were enthusiastic, were filled with the Spirit as they were filled, we can achieve what they achieved. Our God hasn’t changed, so what did?

I believe there are three reasons we can do as those first-century Christians did. First, our God is the same. God has not changed. His Holy Spirit has not changed. He still loves the lost. His mercy, grace, goodness, and love abound. He is still seeking the unsaved. He still is not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.

Do you remember a few years ago when almost everyone was declaring that God was dead? Aren’t you glad that the “God is dead” movement is dead! I like what one wonderful black minister said. “They are talking about how God is dead. Of course, God isn’t dead! In the first place, you have to know the deceased well enough to identify the corpse. These reporting God is dead do not know Him.”

“In the second place, when a death occurs, they always notify the next of kin. I am a son and an heir. Nobody has notified me.”

Then the minister said, “In the third place, what if God did die? Why, all He would do is resurrect Himself and start over again!”

No, God is most certainly not dead. He is alive and well! But some of us act as if God were sick or on vacation. There was a time that God could rescue the perishing, care for the dying, and snatch them in pity from the sin and the grave. But, we are the ones that act as if God can’t do that any more.

God is just as powerful this moment as He has ever been. It’s an insult to God to say we cannot have revival and a harvest of the unsaved today. We can still have Pentecostal power today because God has not changed. How could God change? He is God! This false assumption that it was just to get the church started then it wasn’t needed anymore is the biggest travesty perpetrated on the church!

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 5/03/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, we come because you have made us. We come because in Christ we have been made new. We come because you have given us life. We come because through the risen Christ we have received new life. We come as your sons and daughters, to be filled with the Spirit, to hear your promise of eternal life, to worship and be sent out for your glory.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 5/03/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Wednesday Reflecting

“You will not be forgotten by Me!” – Isaiah 44:21.

He may leave you long without succor. He may allow you to toil against a tempestuous sea until the fourth watch of the night. He may seem silent and austere, tarrying two days still in the same place, as if careless of the dying Lazarus. He may allow your prayers to accumulate like unopened letters on the table of an absent friend. But at last He will say: “O man, O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt.”
~ F. B. MEYER

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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John 14:27

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Wednesday May 3, 2023

John 14:27
“My peace I give to you.”

Here lies the secret of abiding peace—God’s peace. We give ourselves to God and the Holy Spirit takes possession of our breast. It is indeed “Peace, Peace.” But it is just then that the devil begins to turn us away, and he does it through our thoughts, diverting or distracting them as occasion requires. This is the time to prove the sincerity of our consecration and the singleness of our heart. If we truly desire His Presence more than all else, we will turn away from every conflicting thought and look steadily up to Jesus. But if we desire the gratification of our impulse more than His Presence, we will yield to the passionate word or the frivolous thought or the sinful diversion, and when we come back our Shepherd has gone, and we wonder why our peace has departed. Failure occurs often in some trifling thing, and the soul failure has occurred in some trifling thing, usually a thought or word, and the soul which would not have feared to climb a mountain has really stumbled over a straw.

The real secret of perfect rest is to be jealously, habitually occupied with Jesus.

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A. B. Simpson, Days of Heaven upon Earth: A Year Book of Scripture Texts and Living Truths (Christian Alliance Pub. Co., 1897)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Food For Thought 5/03/2023

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Astronaut’s Observation

Astronaut James A. McDivitt, who orbited the earth 62 times with Edward H. White II aboard Gemini 4, said in a talk at the Foreign Press Club in Rome: “I did not see God looking into my space-cabin window, as I do not see God looking into my car’s windshield on earth. But I could recognize His work in the stars as well as when walking among flowers in a garden. If you can be with God on earth, you can be with God in space as well.”

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Spiritual Nuggets 5/03/2023

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Radiance

When I was a boy, my dad took me to his construction site, and told me, “Don’t look directly at the welding light; it can blind you.” But a welding flame is cool and dangerous. As my father was talking with the foreman, I fixated on the light. I saw spots for the rest of the evening, but didn’t tell anyone. I secretly feared that the radiance had actually blinded me.

The radiance of Christ is blinding—it was for Paul (Acts 9:1–31). In an epic hymn about the work of God’s Son throughout history, the author of Hebrews calls Jesus “the radiance of [God’s] glory and the representation of his essence, sustaining all things by the word of power” (Hebrews 1:3). It’s easy to wonder if sustainability is possible, if the world will one day crumble and fall. But in Christ, there is hope.

Jesus is much like the sun. You don’t always notice its power, warmth, or even that it’s there. That is especially the case for the cloudy days. We forget that without the sun, there would be no life. It’s easy to forget that it is warming us even through rain and clouds.

The same is true for Jesus in our lives. It’s easy to forget Him until we desperately need Him. It’s easy to overlook the daily miracles, such as life itself, when searching for something extraordinary. But the extraordinary is always present. It’s here in the work of Christ, every day. His radiance shines upon us, even when we don’t realize it.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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