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Hi, I'm Matt Henry, and I'm the
pastor at Missio Dei Fellowship in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Very thankful
that you found our sermons, and I hope that they are a way of
encouragement to you in your Christian walk. However, it's
important for you to understand that this sermon was given in
my church's context and for the people that God has entrusted
for me to shepherd. So if you're in the Kenosha area,
I would encourage you to come on a Sunday and worship with
the body of Christ here. And if you're not in this area,
these sermons are a great tool for supplementing your walk,
but they are by no means a substitute for the local church. So you
need to submit yourself to a faithful Bible teaching church and shepherd
in your area. Thank you. Well, if you haven't
opened your Bibles, please do so to Acts 10. If you don't have
a Bible, there would be one in front of you. And as I always
try to remind, if you don't have a Bible, take one in the seat
in front of you or down the row and then keep it. We just ordered
another couple cases of Bibles because apparently you're taking
my word and so we're starting to run low on Bibles. So we're
always happy to replenish them. We're in Acts chapter 10. We've
been there for quite a while, and we're coming near the end
of it, and I would ask that you would turn your focus to the
final part, verses 42 to the end, verse 42 to the end, as
I read. And he, being God the Father,
commanded us to preach to the people and solemnly to bear witness
that this is the one who has been designated by God as judge
of the living and the dead. And of course, he's speaking
of Jesus. Of him, all the prophets bear witness that through his
name, everyone who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins.
While Peter was still speaking these things, the Holy Spirit
fell upon all those who were listening to the word. And all
the circumcised believers who came with Peter were astounded
that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles
also. For they were hearing them speaking
with tongues and magnifying God. And then Peter answered, Can
anyone refuse water for these to be baptized who have received
the Holy Spirit, just as we did? And he ordered them to be baptized
in the name of Jesus Christ. Then they asked him to remain
for a few days. May the Lord bless his word. Now we have been talking about
the person and the work of Jesus Christ. And in this little chapter
about the salvation of Cornelius and all of those who are in his
household, what we really are seeing is a portrayal of who
is Jesus. And so I have labored every week
over the last several weeks to simply say, what does the scripture
tell us about Jesus? We've seen that there are 14
qualities about him. We've seen that he is a peacemaker,
the one who makes peace between you and God. He is the Messiah,
the one promise of the Old Testament. He is Lord of all. Whether you
believe that or not, changes that not one whit. He is historical. He existed. He lived, died, and
rose again. He is a focus of the prophets.
He was himself anointed by the Holy Spirit. He is our sacrifice
and our high priest, functioning in both roles. He was resurrected
from the dead. He was the focus of all New Testament
preaching, whether it's looking backward or forward. All of the
New Testament is really about Jesus Christ and what we do in
light of that. He is the sobering term, He is
the judge of all, and He is Savior. Well, today what we do is we
get to come to a key quality that has an effect on every single
Christian here, and that is that He is the giver of the Holy Spirit. Now, this is a key truth, and
you should hear this right up front. This is a key truth that
sets apart the Old Testament believer and the New Testament
believer. The function of the Holy Spirit in the life of the
believer is something that is very misunderstood. Now, both
the Old Testament believer and the New Testament believer, and
when I say New Testament, I mean from Acts 2 on, everyone prior
to that really functioned in the Old Testament sense of faith.
They believed in Yahweh, then they began to believe in also
that Jesus was sent by the Father and that he is the one promised
and all of that, but there are certain things that separate
the Old Testament believer from the new, and one of the key ones
is the Holy Spirit. It's a critical thing for you
to understand, and so we need to hear this. Both are saved
by grace through faith. Doesn't matter. Noah was saved
through faith. Abraham was saved through faith.
Isaiah was saved through faith. All of them came through faith,
but the benefits of that salvation are not the same. The Holy Spirit
is a unique gift to us as individuals and as a whole, and without the
working of the Holy Spirit, no Christian would ever persevere
to the end. This is a critical thing to understand
that there is an empowering and a care and a guidance of the
Spirit that works in our life. And this is why in my prayer
I said we don't even really grasp the way God's grace is functioning
in our life. We're just wandering around.
as silly little children most of the time, thinking that we're
really wise, right? Kind of like a teenager, thinking
we know so much, and yet the whole time, our Father in heaven
is faithfully, kindly, graciously guiding us, protecting us, spanking
us, and all the other things that are necessary in our life.
But the Holy Spirit is probably one of the most misunderstood
aspects of the Trinity, but also of the doctrines of the church.
And a lot of this comes from a very shallow presentation of
him in the church today. He is simply something where
we say, fall on us, Holy Spirit, fall on us. And we talk about
the Spirit. There's all kinds of people who
sing songs about the Spirit. But when you look at the content
of what is being said, you realize this is silly. This is just cotton
candy for the soul, and it doesn't ever really help us. But it sounds
good, and it kind of stirs up the emotions and whatnot. For
many people, actually, even Christians who are not well-taught, the
Spirit ends up being more like what the Jehovah's Witnesses
teach, and that is that the Holy Spirit is merely a force, a force
of God working in some way or another. Not sure, but he is
not a person. He is certainly not the third
person of the Trinity. Also, as I've already hinted,
there is this common misconception on how he operated in the Old
Testament. with those who believed in that
day as opposed to what happened in Acts chapter 2 and moves forward
to this day. This gets into the very nature
of various terms. These are all terms most of you
have heard if you've been going to any church at any length of
time. You are filled with the Spirit.
There's the baptism of the Holy Spirit, there is the indwelling
of the Holy Spirit, there is the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
there is the illumination of the Holy Spirit, and then there
is the new birth or regeneration or being born again by the Spirit. All of these are terms that if
you've been a Christian for any length of time, you've heard.
And for many people, they are very, very closely connected
to each other. Each of these is a distinct aspect
of the Spirit's work. And yet, instead of keeping them
distinct, we tend to blend them together into this very vague
concept that is, at best, unclear. and worse, they're false. Let
me make this very clear. Every term I said to you is a
distinct work of the Spirit. They are not the same, and yet
in our mind we tend to kind of push them together and make it
something very vague. My goal today is simply to first
work our way through verses 44 to 46 to see exactly what is
happening in the midst of this sermon Peter is preaching, and
then out of that develop what is going on behind it, because
behind it is something even more beautiful. So let's look at the
next quality of Jesus, and that is he is a giver of the Spirit.
But first, let's simply make observations from our text. The
first thing is that here he is in the house of Cornelius. And
in this passage, it's like many in Acts, it's unique. And if
you can keep this in your head, in fact, that's fruitful every
few chapters, or maybe when something strange happens in the Book of
Acts, that you might write in pencil in the margin, remember
that Acts is a transitional book. What's happening in the Book
of Acts is there is a transition from the reality of the Old Covenant
to the New Covenant. The old covenant was done with
Moses and the nation of Israel on Mount Sinai, the giving of
the law. And in that, God gave them the
terms of the covenant. And they, as a nation, said,
we will do this. And when they did, they came
under the standards of that covenant. If we obey you and follow you,
you will bless us and you will cause our nation to be secure.
If we disobey, you will curse us and our nation will be devoured. and a little bit more than that,
but that's just in its essence. And that's what you see unfold
in the entire Old Testament. But what a lot of people forget
is it also goes into the New Testament. The book of Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John are all still in the Old Covenant. The New Covenant
has not happened yet. Notice that when we take the
Lord's Supper, Jesus holds up the cup and he says, this is
my blood, which is the New Covenant. But the blood had not yet been
shed yet. It was only after he shed his
blood and he rose again that the new covenant began to become
inaugurated. And so all the way through the
Gospels, you still have old covenant in action. Now, if you don't
fully understand that, that's not real important right now.
But it is important to understand that. In the book of Acts, then,
there's this switchover that's happening. And you know in life,
just in your own life, that when you transition, let's say that
you're single and then you become married, there's some things
that just have to sort of be done, right? You have to get
your name changed. You have to get some other people's. Like maybe all of a sudden you
have to get your wife on the title of the car or whatever.
And in between, though, it doesn't mean you're not married. But
it does mean that you can still see the vestiges of your singleness,
right? But now you're married, and we
all know you're married, but you're still working out the
details. And that's what's going on in the book of Acts. So you'll
have people who are believers. They already believed, the disciples
certainly believed, but they had not yet received the Spirit,
and they were not yet under the new covenant while Jesus was
still there. And then, as time goes on, Christ
dies, rises from the dead, ascends into heaven, and the new covenant
is brought into its existence. And so you'll have people who
are lovers of God, they believe in Yahweh, and yet they have
not yet been told about the Messiah. A perfect example of that is
a guy named Apollos. And we'll see him coming up here
soon. in Apollos, who was a great preacher, and he was an evangelistic
man. But he was preaching to the people
about the Messiah, but he only knew about John the Baptist. That's all. He had not discovered
Jesus. So he heard that the prophet
John the Baptist had come, and he knew that if John the Baptist
was preaching what he's preaching, then the Messiah was going to
come. And so he's telling everybody the Messiah is coming, except
the Messiah already came. And so two believers, a husband
and wife, actually pulled him aside and showed him a more excellent
way. They unfolded for him. No, no,
no. He's here. He came. He died.
He rose again. And he didn't say, well, I don't
know if I agree with you. He immediately believed that.
Why? Because he was already a believer. He just didn't know the fullness
of the gospel. And so keep that in mind. When
you read the book of Acts, it's a transitional book from the
old covenant to the new. And as a result, you'll see some
weird things. And that's the best way. That's
a theological term for the day. It's just weird. Why did this
person do this? And what's going on here? Because
the process of changing over is taking place. And this is
one of them. It's a key thing to understand. Now I want you to notice in verse
44 how the Spirit fell. It says, while Peter was still
speaking, notice that, still speaking these things about Jesus,
the Holy Spirit fell upon how many? How many? All. All. An entire house that's
filled to the brim with humans that he walks into, they're all
Gentiles, All of a sudden, it falls upon
him. All of them. This is amazing. Notice there was no conclusion
to the sermon. That's what I would expect. Maybe
you were raised like I was in a church where about the last
20 minutes of the sermon, or in the times when I went to churches
that preach 20-minute sermons, about the last 5 or 10 minutes
of the sermon, you knew that you could put your Bible away
because the pastor is about ready to work the altar call, right?
And maybe if they had an organ, they would start playing quietly,
and there's a mood change, and he's starting to use a tearful
story or two. and he's trying to get it up
to him, and if you're ready, come forward to receive Jesus,
come to the altar, we have people waiting for you, et cetera, et
cetera. Some of you know this, and some of you are like, what's
up with that? Because we don't do that. But in all of that,
we tend to wait for the end of the sermon for the response,
right? But imagine this room filled,
filled, every seat filled, and I'm merely in the process of
talking, and all of a sudden, all of you start talking in other
foreign languages. right in the middle of it. Now,
I might say, well, wait, I'm not done. I haven't called you
to believe. I haven't done the altar call
yet, and I need you to, would you just shush? But that's not
what happens. While he is talking, every single
one of them have the Spirit come upon them. No call to repent,
no call even to believe, right? In the midst of him just saying,
here's who Jesus is, this happens. So what happened? Well, there's
a few options. Option one would be that they
were already believers. They're just now having the spirit
come upon them, and that's possible. It's possible. But it doesn't
say that. We do know that Cornelius may
have been that, because he was a man who feared God, and so
he was a devout man. So it could very possibly be
that Cornelius was already an Old Testament, if you will, believer,
and now he needs to hear about the fullness of the gospel, who
is Jesus Christ. The second option is we could
assume that in the process of him preaching this, that they
began to believe. because then the Spirit falls
upon them. And so we're like, okay, apparently
they all believed at some point. Every single one of them, which
would still be a really cool event. And this makes sense because
you are always saved by grace through faith. So we know that
through faith, salvation comes. In fact, it says so here in verse
43, we bear witness that through his name, Christ's name, everyone
who believes in him receives a forgiveness of sin. You are
saved by grace through faith, and that not of yourselves, it
is a gift of God, not of works, lest any one of you boast, right?
We all know those verses. So we can say, well, that's the
other option. Either they were already believers
and now they come to this unique event, or they all began to believe. A third option is possible in
that some, like Cornelius, were already believers while some
were not. but had been taught by Cornelius
and in the process of hearing. So maybe it was a 50-50. Some
of them were already believers and others were not, but ultimately
they all have the Spirit come upon them. There's even the possibility,
a fourth option, that's not in your notes, that they weren't
believers. The falling of the Holy Spirit
is not evidence that you're a Christian. It just isn't. In fact, in the
Old Testament, the Spirit will fall upon people. He even will
fall upon false prophets so that they're forced to prophesy truly.
But that doesn't mean they become a believer. So maybe this is
just a really cool event and they all walked away dead in
their sins. Maybe that's possible. I do want you to note, though,
that every one of them had the Holy Spirit fall upon them. Not
most of them, not some of them. Not a single person was left
out, and that makes it very unique. Again, the way Acts tends to
operate. Now, I think we have enough to
make at least an initial conclusion, and what we have here is really
simply a good example of what we talk about when we say that
God is sovereign in salvation. We have God being sovereign in
salvation. All that means is that unless
God works in our heart, we just don't believe, and we're not
converted, that salvation from beginning to end is a work that
God does in us. And we see it here. We see a
man walking in. They're an apostle. And he walks
in. He begins to simply preach the gospel. Nothing exciting
here. If you look back at what he said,
none of these things are powerful. None of them are filled with
wonderful rhetoric. They're just simply The simplicity,
the futility, the weakness of the gospel as we've talked about
over the many weeks. And yet, something happens that's
amazing. So what's at work? I think God
is simply at work. As Peter preaches the gospel,
the Spirit does something. He regenerates them. Now listen,
that's where you're going to go wrong, so track with me during
this part. If you want daydream somewhere,
don't do it here. And I know you daydream, because
I daydream. I'm the worst church member known to mankind. It's
good that I preach, because I would be somewhere else right now.
So I never judge you for that. I'm like, yeah, that's me. but
don't do it here. What's happened is that as he's
preaching the gospel, the Spirit regenerates him, makes him anew.
Regeneration, if you don't know, is simply the taking of a dead
heart, a man or woman dead in their sin, and giving them new
life through the Holy Spirit. This is described in various
ways, you've heard them. In John chapter 3, Jesus looks
at a Pharisee and says, unless you have been born, what, again,
you will not see the kingdom of God. You must be born again.
So back in the 70s, some of you are old enough to remember those
days, and people would always ask one another, Christians,
have you been born again to a person who doesn't know anything? Have
you been born again? You need to be born again. And
that was just kind of the evangelistic technique that people did. I remember in my church in Nampa,
Idaho, they had this, thing called the I found it movement. And
they gave all of the members an I found it, that's all it
was, bumper sticker. And it was done in the 1970s
cool font that looks like you're on drugs. And it said, I found
it. And what it was supposed to do
is you were supposed to drive around town with your I found
it sticker and then other people say, what'd you find? And then
you would of course say, I found Jesus. And Really what happened
was a counter movement started up, new bumper stickers, and
it said, I lost it. And ha, ha, ha, that never did
anything. But all of that was designed for you to move toward,
you need to be born again, you need to be born again. Jesus
then says later on in that same chapter, he renames it and he
says, being born again is to be born of the Spirit. In Ephesians
2, Paul says it a different way, but it's the same thing. It's
that you have been made alive in Christ. You were dead in your
sins, but now, because of God's rich mercy and love, he made
us alive together with Christ. We are now in Christ, not alive
by Christ, but in Christ. How did we get in Christ? How
did we now move from the life around that we lived in of sin
and death into Christ, where life is, the Spirit? And he makes
you alive. And that's what you can testify.
You can say, I don't quite know when it happened. I don't quite
know how it happened. But I do know I believe this
stuff now. I now rest in this. This is my hope, my joy. What's
happened? The Bible would simply say that
regeneration has happened. A soul dead in sin now is alive
in Christ Jesus. What's important for you to know,
though, is that if you believe the gospel, if you're a Christian,
then the reason you are is because the Spirit, in his mercy, gave
you new life and a new heart. And that new life and new heart
is just like the old life and the old heart. The old life and
heart rejected Jesus. The new life automatically, naturally
receives Jesus. Now, back in our passage, we
also notice then that all of them had the Spirit fall upon
them. Now, there's a lot going on in
this simple verse, so you have to listen with care. So reading
that, you might think that it is speaking of this new birth,
right? Because I just talked about it. Oh, so when the Spirit
fell on them, that was the new birth. No, it wasn't. The new
birth happened or they wouldn't have believed, but it's not described
here. We just know it because the rest
of the scripture make it clear that no one will see the kingdom
of God unless they've been born again. Jesus said so. So we know
they had to have been born again, but that's not what happened
here. All we know is that the spirit fell upon them. So the
new birth is assumed Because ultimately, they were all baptized
as believers in the next few verses. And the only way you
can believe is through that regenerating new birth of the Spirit. So this
is something other than that new birth. So then some of you,
if you're like most today in America, you're saying, oh, so
this maybe is the baptism of the Holy Spirit. This is where
they got baptized with spirit, because look, they're speaking
in tongues. And so it looks like we have, if my controller will
work, I just give up. Now it just. Are you making it
move? Because if so, I'll tell you
so. Wave your hand. Thank you. Okay, then I'll just
move the controller and give up. Last week, last service,
we had nothing. So this, we're upgrading. There's something other than
the new birth. So I said, as I said, it's possibly
the spirit, the baptism of the spirit, but that's not it. Baptism
of the Spirit is only spoken of, really, as what happens in
this passage, 1 Corinthians 12, 13. For by one Spirit, we were
all, what? Baptized into one body. Whether
Jews or Greeks, Greeks meaning Gentiles, whether slaves or free,
we're all made to drink of one's spirit. Now understand what is
meant by baptism of the spirit is not some ecstatic, miraculous
moment where all of a sudden you do strange, weird things. The baptism of the spirit is
something that happens and you don't even know it. No person
knows they got baptized with the Spirit. Why? Because what
happens is it's a spiritual work where Jesus himself places you
in the Spirit, which puts you in his body, in the church. So
anybody who believes in Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior
has been baptized with the Spirit. It's that simple. And this was
a promise that the Gospels say over and over again, that John
was one who baptized with water, but there is one coming who will
baptize, what? With the Spirit. In fact, that's
what Jesus said in Acts chapter 1. He's like, look, don't worry
about I'm going away, but you go and wait in Jerusalem and
I will baptize you with the Spirit. And that's what happened. But
also what happened was the Spirit fell upon them. And this is very
important to keep in mind. They believed because they were
born again by the Spirit. And with that faith, Jesus baptizes
them, spiritually speaking, with the Spirit into his body, making
them now part of the church. But when it speaks of the Holy
Spirit falling upon you, it's not having anything to do with
salvation. It's not salvific, is the fancier
way of saying it. We're not talking salvation.
Here, it's not talking about, oh, when the Spirit fell, they
believed. When the Spirit fell, they were now regenerate. No. All of that is happening
here, but none of it's being described. All it's describing
is this moment then with the falling of the Holy Spirit that
something unique happens. Now, we can see this in both
the Old and New Testament. In Judges, that's the next slide.
In Judges, it says here in 1514, when he came to Lehi, the Philistines
shouted as they met him, and the spirit of Yahweh, a spirit
of Yahweh, came upon him mightily. This is Samson, who's an idiot,
right? I mean, he was. And here, the
spirit of God falls upon him mightily, So that the ropes that
were on his arms, he was bound, became as flax that is burned
with fire. His bonds dropped from his hand,
and he found a fresh jawbone of a donkey. And so he sent forth
his hand and took it and struck down 1,000 men." Now, do you
think a normal, average man, anybody in military, you think
you could kill 1,000 people with the jawbone of a donkey? No.
But if the Spirit of God falls on you, guess what? You can.
Every time, anytime. Then the next one, 1 Samuel 19.20,
here King Saul sends messengers. The messengers are just that,
messengers. They're just people to take David. He wants to have David killed.
But they saw the company of the prophets prophesying, with Samuel
standing presiding over them. So the messengers are just you
and I. They're just, okay, we gotta
go talk to David and get David. But they see the prophets, even
the chief prophet, Samuel, prophesying, and then what happens? And the
Spirit of God came upon the messengers, just normal people, and what
did they immediately do? They prophesied. Why? Because the Spirit fell upon
them. Luke chapter 1, verses 15 and 16, here talking about
John the Baptist. And it says, for he will be great
in the sight of the Lord. He will not drink any wine or
strong drink. He will be filled with the Holy
Spirit while in his mother's womb. That even before he had
been born, before he would believe, before he is anything, he is
literally still inside his mother's womb, the Spirit falls upon him. and he's filled with the Spirit.
Pretty cool. Luke 1.41, the mother of John
the Baptist does a prophetic blessing over Mary and the baby. So Mary shows up and she's, of
course, carrying Jesus. And so it says, and it happened
that when Elizabeth heard Mary's greeting, that the baby, John
the Baptist, who's filled with the Spirit, leaps in her womb.
So it was more than just those little kicks at whatever. I have
never experienced it, but I've seen them. And it blew me away.
I remember watching the knuckles of one of our kids go right across
my wife's stomach. I'm like, whoa. That's not what
happened here. This was a pretty big deal where
it just, wow. And the baby, John the Baptist,
leapt for joy within the womb of Elizabeth. And she cried out
with a loud voice. Oh, and then Elizabeth was filled
with the Spirit. So what does she do? She then
cries out with this prophetic blessing of Mary and Jesus. Then in Luke 1.67, His father,
John the Baptist's father, Zechariah, was filled with the Holy Spirit.
And what does he do? He prophesies. Now, these are
only a few. We could literally fill the whole
hour with me just quoting verse after verse after verse of the
Spirit came upon, the Spirit fell upon, the Spirit filled.
And all of it is simply miraculous, powerful moments, most of the
time prophesying, but other times doing great acts of power. But then in Acts chapter 2, you'll
see that the same event we have in Acts 10. In Acts 2, What is
happening is these believers are waiting in what's called
the upper room, just a room upstairs, and they're waiting for the coming
of the Spirit. And then we find out that while
they're praying on the day of Pentecost, the Spirit comes,
remember, like tongues of fire, and settles upon each of them.
And they immediately began to speak in other tongues. Now, they were already believers,
so this wasn't a regeneration. What this is is the coming of
the new covenant, and there's this unique empowerment. And
because of that, they automatically begin to do something unique.
They begin to speak in other tongues. So we have a lot of
things actually going on here, but only one thing, hear me,
only one thing is described. A lot of things happening. They're
being regenerated, they're being baptized with the Spirit, but
the only thing that we are actually being described is that they
had the Spirit fall upon them. So my question to you is why?
Now remember in the past, I told you that writing in that day
was expensive. You had papyrus, not even paper. And papyrus is a bunch of reeds
that would be stitched together. And you would write very close.
You wouldn't even do spaces or anything like that. And you would
jam all of your words on that paper. I'm calling it paper. Flip it over and do it on the
other side as well. And it was expensive. So everything
you wrote had to have a purpose. And so one of the things I've
told you is, when you read the Book of Acts, which is a historical
document, you should ask yourself, why did he decide to stick this
little information in there? Why? I mean, sometimes you're
like, wow, of all the things he could talk about, that's what
he decides to point out. And that's exactly what's happening
here. Why does he mention that? Why didn't he say, and they all
believed? Why does he instead say, and the Spirit falls upon
them? Well, verse 45 tells us why.
And all the circumcised believers who came with Peter, now the
circumcised believers mean Jews, who came with Peter were astounded
that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles
also. That's why, that's why. The man who came with Peter,
remember when Peter decided to go up to visit? He was in Joppa,
and he went up to Caesarea. And it says that men went with
him. Jewish men went with him. Why? They were going to function
as witnesses. Now, these men are blown away.
They're simply blown away with what they see happening. They're
in the house. They're probably very uncomfortable
just being Jews among Gentiles so close. They didn't get the
vision that Peter had of the sheep coming down from heaven
or the voice of the Lord telling him, go up and speak to this
household of people. They're just along for the ride.
And so they're probably feeling very awkward there. And the next
thing you know, they're hearing them talk about Jesus. And they're
like, yeah, preach it, preach it. And the next thing they see
is that all of these people are speaking in tongues. And so they
know that they have been given the gift of the Spirit. This
is amazing. Now, why then does he say it? Well, this is the same thing
that happened to the Jews in Acts 2. In fact, it's very possible
that these men were part of them. They may have been in the upper
room and experienced it themselves, or they could very easily be
men who were in Jerusalem at the temple at the time that happened,
and they were some of the guys that thought that the people
talking in tongues were drunk. And then Peter preached, and
then they were saved. All I know, and you know, is
that they were amazed that the same thing has now happened to
these Gentiles. The emphasis is on the word Gentiles.
Now you may remember in Acts 8, in Acts 8, this same thing
happened to the Samaritans. Philip went down into the capital
city Samaria, preached the gospel, and the Holy Spirit came upon
them. This was so mind-blowing that
the apostles actually traveled down to Samaria to verify it. Because here's the way we all
are. I mean, even the apostles, they
couldn't believe it happened. It blew them away. What do you
mean the spirit came upon the Samaritans? We hate the Samaritans.
Everyone hates the Samaritans. Because the Samaritans were half-breeds.
But they come down, and they witness it. And they're like,
yeah, it's happened. Wow. Same thing happened to us. But you can also, if you're honest
with yourself, you can say, well, they would rationalize that,
right? Well, they're half-breeds. I mean, they're half-Jews, so
that's probably why it happened. But it's not gonna happen to
those Gentiles. Nothing good happens to Gentiles.
At best, they'll be halfway there. Remember that if you went to
the temple in Jerusalem in that time, if you were a Gentile and
you had come to believe in Yahweh as the only true God and you
converted, if you were male, you had to be circumcised and
you had to then follow the law and offer the sacrifices. But
how far could you go into the temple? Only to the outermost
part. It was called the Court of the
Gentiles, and that's all you could do. You couldn't go further
because you were still a Gentile. Now, were you a believer? Yes,
but you stayed out there. You were still separate. You
were one of them. And now what's happening is these
people who are circumcised believers, Jewish in other words, they had
experienced this gift, and now they're seeing it happen, and
their mind is being blown away. And that's why it's here. In fact, many people will call
this the Gentile Pentecost. So what's happening? Well, if
you tell me, Here's what goes on now for me. You come to me
and say, well, I believe the gospel. I want to be baptized. What proof do I have that you
really do believe? What are you going to show? Well,
I'm going to listen for this, and it's very simple. I'm going
to listen for your ability first to tell me what the gospel is.
Christ's death, burial, and resurrection for my sin, for my life, and
that in Him alone my salvation is secure. That's what I wanna
hear. So write that down if you're hoping to talk to me, but I'm
gonna quiz you on that so that I can find out if you're just
reading what you wrote down right now. But the other thing I wanna
see is, is your life showing it? In what way is this impacting
your life? How does this manifest itself
in your life? Well, in the early church, these
things were true, but there's this additional wrinkle, and
that is that you would become a Jew. You would have to be circumcised. You'd then come under the law
and all these other things, and you would say, this is a believer.
But now, it's no longer found at the temple. Your whole life
is no longer built around the Jewish world. It's built around
Jesus Christ. How, then, can we know that you
belong to Jesus Christ? How can we know that you follow?
And in the early parts of Acts, and that's all you see it, is
in the early part of Acts, it's this coming of the Spirit and
this work of power in which you end up speaking in tongues. And we'll talk about that in
a moment. So first, it's Jews in Jerusalem in the temple. Then
it went further out to the half-Jews, the Samaritans, in chapter 8.
Now we're in full-blooded Gentiles in chapter 10. The Spirit falls
on them all, and they all do the exact same thing. And so
it's this world-tilting, life-altering event, and you will see the struggle
to get their minds around it for the next several chapters.
Now in verse 46, so turn your eyes there, we see what it meant
for the Spirit to be poured out. So if you're like, OK, so what's
it mean when the gift of the Spirit is poured out? For they
were hearing them speak with tongues and magnifying God. That's
what it means. And you say, okay, that doesn't
help me. Well, that's because we keep translating the word
as tongues, because in the common use today, it means that ecstatic
utterances or babbling, however you wanna say it. I don't try
to be a jerk here. But that, if you've ever seen
people supposedly speak in tongues, you know what I'm talking about.
And so they just keep translating it that way. The word literally
means language. That's all it means, nothing
more. and it is a foreign language. In Acts chapter two, we see it
explicitly stated that the people began to speak in other tongues,
and all of the Jews who had traveled from other countries, and so
they spoke all these different languages, it says that they
were amazed because they were hearing the person speak in the
dialect of the Macedonian. or of this, Pamphylia, wherever
it was that they came from, that these people who were Jews born
in Israel, so they would speak Aramaic and they would speak
Greek, but they would not speak these dialects. And all of a
sudden, they're all speaking fluently in these different languages.
And guess what they're all saying? They're all speaking of the glory
and the majesty of God. And it's the same thing here.
These people immediately start speaking, probably in the dialects
of the various Gentiles in this room. All of them have their
own unique language. Even here right now, we have
some of you from other countries, and you speak fluently, those,
right? And I don't know, I don't wanna
get myself into too much trouble about my linguistic lack of skill,
but even, Spanish has multiple dialects. I remember that because
my sister-in-law was born in Mexico, but she spoke, I can't
remember what it's called right now, it doesn't matter, but she
spoke a very highbrow type of Spanish that Spain would speak. and she would be there talking,
and she didn't look Mexican, or what I would call a Mexican,
and at the bakery where I worked with her and my brother, Mexicans
would come in and start talking in Spanish, and first of all,
they didn't know that she knew what they were saying, and then
she would reply and they'd kind of get shocked. But sometimes
I'd say, so what did they say? And she's like, I'm not really
sure. I'm like, I thought you spoke Spanish. She's like, that's
not Spanish. And I'm like, well, what is it? She's like, that's
Mexican. I'm like, well, what? I thought it was the same thing.
And she's like, no, they're not. And she's like, they actually
throw in other words and they borrow. Puerto Rico is the same
way. You go all around where it's
spoken Spanish and there's different dialects and it can be hard.
It's the same thing in Croatia and Serbia, very similar languages
and yet not similar. And that's what you have here
is this sudden ability to speak these people's language. And
what do they hear? the Jews hear them speaking and exalting God. That's what's happening. Now,
the modern concept of an ecstatic language, sometimes you'll hear
them call it an angelic language or a private spiritual prayer
language, really is not known in the Bible. Now, if that's
you and you say, I disagree, that's fine, you can disagree,
but you ultimately will not be able to make that argument out
of the scripture. A nonsensical, and again, not
saying this in a bad way, it's a nonsensical babbling where
you release your emotions and your tongue starts to make these
sounds, is not make it a language. No matter how hard you practice
it or how much you believe it. It may be loved, you may practice
it, but it doesn't change what it is or is not. But at the same
time, if you're one who agrees with me, it also doesn't make
it sinful, so don't do that either. A lot of people then call it
sinful, and it's like, look, if they do it, and it makes them
happy, I guess fine, but just don't call it biblical tongues,
because that's not what it is. So what we have here, though,
is this. Now, here's my point in all of
this rambling. What we actually have here is
a good example of how people who don't believe the power to
save is in the gospel rather than in us. These are Jews who
are believers, who are hearing the gospel preached, and what
is their reaction? They're amazed. They're amazed. Why? Because they don't believe
it would really save these people. I don't know what they were thinking
when they went into the house with Peter. I don't know what
they were thinking, but what happens is that they realize
that the power of the gospel has in fact happened. These people
are converted, and the way they know they have been converted
and regenerated and baptized with the spirit is that they
are also experiencing the spirit upon them, and they're uttering
things in other languages. In fact, I would argue that I'd
be surprised if Peter, I would not be surprised that if Peter
had not been told by God to go to this household and preach,
I doubt he'd ever go. because he really didn't believe,
just like you and I, we don't really believe the power of salvation
is in the gospel. Even after I talked about it
a couple weeks ago, I think we're still there and you'll struggle
with all the time. The gospel is necessarily weak
to our ears, but it's the power of God to salvation. And we keep
thinking it's gonna be up to our ability to persuade. But
all you see here was a simple, proclamation of the gospel, and
a group of people are converted, and the proof of it is their
ability to do this act. Kim and I were on a motorcycle
out in the country yesterday, and we were up in Racine County,
and I saw a church that I thought belonged to somebody else. As
we got closer, I saw it was an apostolic church. And I said,
oh, it's an apostolic church. And she asked something like,
well, what do they believe? And I said, well, they're the
ones that believe in Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection, but
you can only be baptized in the name of Jesus, nobody else. If
you are baptized in the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, like
Matthew 28 says, you're not a believer. And second, you have to speak
in tongues. If you don't do those two things,
you're not saved. And it's actually a false teaching,
very serious false teaching that's very common. And so that's what
you have, and a passage like this is where they'll take you
to. But what they're doing is they're confusing a lot of different
doctrines and putting them together and ultimately coming up to the
wrong conclusion. What you have here is simply
the preaching of the gospel, the conversion, and then the
evidence, because at this point, the Jews still didn't believe
the gospel would go to the Gentile. Now, with that in mind, go to
John 14. John 14. And the last 13 minutes I want
to spend in chapter 14, 15, and 16 of John. And yes, we will
get through that easily. John, remember this, that the
whole thing of the book of John, the gospel of John, is so that
you might know that Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ. And
in believing in him, you would have life. That's the purpose.
That's at the end of John. And so all of the events that
he writes are all designed to show you that he really is the
promised one from the Old Testament that God promised he would send.
But when you come to John chapter 13, everything slows down. So the first three years of his
life of his public ministry is going quick. But when John 13
hits, it slows way down because now he is talking only to his
disciples and it's only for a couple of hours and it's right before
he goes to the cross. And so it's a time where he is
talking to his disciples. In John 13, 14, 15, and 16, 17,
he has that wonderful long prayer to his father. And then 18 on is his trial,
his crucifixion, and the resurrection. And so we're right here with
his disciples. Now, We've talked about this
in John 5, the father-son talk, I call it. Remember that Jesus
says, I do nothing in accordance to my own will, right? All that
I do is the will of the father, always. That's all. Whenever
you see the son work, it's because it's what the father wills. He
says nothing on his own. It's always what the father wills.
So it should not be surprising that the one who gives us the
Holy Spirit is the father. So if you can bring the next
slide up in Luke 11, 13, it says, if you then, this is Jesus talking,
being evil. Notice how casually he just calls
everyone evil. If you then, being evil, know
how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will
your heavenly father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask?
And so he's even saying, it's the father who's going to give.
But notice John 14, verse 16, and we'll see that again. Jesus
says to his disciples, I will ask the Father, and he will give
you another advocate. For what purpose? So that he
may be with you forever. Because he's leaving, so he's
like, you need someone to be with you forever. Well, who is
this advocate? Verse 17, the spirit of truth,
whom the world cannot receive because it does not see him or
know him. You know him because he abides
with you and will be in you. So it's Jesus here asking the
Father to give the Spirit. and that this giving of the Spirit
is good because he will be with us forever. And notice that though
he is with them after he is given, he will also be in them. This
is something utterly unique in the world of theology. Notice it at the very end of
verse 17. You know him because he abides,
notice the preposition, with you right now. So the Spirit's
there right now, but he says, but he will be in you. And this
is a unique doctrine of what's called the indwelling of the
Spirit. And the indwelling is not the same thing as a baptism.
It's not the same thing as regeneration. It's not the same thing as any
of those others. This is a unique moment where
only the church has. The Old Testament believer did
not have the Spirit in them. In the New Testament, the Spirit
rests in the Christian, in the church. And he is promising,
this is something that is to come. Then in verse 26, again,
we see Jesus pointing to the Father while also showing why
it's good for him to leave and what the Spirit will do. He says,
but the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in
my name, he will teach you all things and bring to your remembrance
all that I said. This is why after the Spirit
falls upon them and everything else happens with the Spirit
in Acts 2, all of those apostles are different. They're just incredible. They're bold. They know things.
Why? Because the Spirit is working
in them. The next thing you want to remember
is that the Father does His works through the Son. And so the way
the Father gives the Spirit is not on His own, but through His
Son. We see that in chapter 15, verse
20 to 27. So now we're in chapter 15. Remember,
verse 20, the word that I said to you, a slave is not greater
than his master. If they persecuted me, they will
also persecute you. If they kept my word, they'll
keep yours also. But all these things they will
do to you, not because of you, but for my name's sake, because
they do not know the one who sent me. So he tracks it all
the way back to the father. And if I had not come and spoken
to them, they would not have sinned, but now they have no
excuse for their sin. He who hates me hates my father
also. If I had not done among them
the works which no one else did, they would not have sinned, but
now they have both seen and hated me and my father as well. But
this happened to fulfill the word that is written in their
law. So he's talking about Jews. They hated me without cause.
So he's saying, all of this stuff that's going on, he would not
hold it against them, except for the fact that he did come
and they did reject him. Why? Because the word of God
had to be fulfilled. And then he brings the Spirit
in. When the Advocate comes, whom I will send to you from
the Father. So do you see how it started?
First it's the Father's going to send. Now in chapter 15, it's
I'm going to send from the Father. the Spirit of truth who proceeds
from the Father, he will bear witness about me, and now you
will bear witness also. Why? Because you have been with
me from the beginning. So now we have Christ bringing
the Spirit. Then in John 16, in verses five
through 11, but now I am going to him who sent me, that's the
Father, and none of you asked me, where are you going? Why? Because they're too busy feeling
sorry for themselves. He says, but because I have said
these things to you, sorrow has filled your heart. But I tell
you the truth, it's actually to your advantage that I go away.
For if I do not go away, the Advocate will not come to you.
But if I do go, I will send him to you. And he, when he comes,
will convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment,
concerning sin because they do not believe in me, concerning
righteousness because I go to the Father and you no longer
see me, and concerning judgment because the ruler of this world
has been judged." So here now we see that it's good for Jesus
to leave, because then he would send the Spirit, and the Spirit
will now work upon humanity. For you and I, the Spirit convicts
us and guides us and leads us into righteousness, but also
the Spirit convicts the world in their sin. In fact, not one
person here came to faith without a level of convicting work of
the Spirit. And those who are non-believers,
that will judge them. The Spirit of God is here to
judge them and bring that conviction upon them. And this is all why
it's good. He's like, I am, as a man, He's
God in human flesh. I'm limited. But I will leave,
and I will send the Spirit, and now He will do this upon the
whole world. Then in verse 13, the Spirit
will take that realm of truth and cause us to walk and grow.
And I remember preaching this sermon many, many years ago.
He says, but when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide
you. Unfortunately, they translate
it into. It would be better to translate it as in. He will guide
you in all truth. for he will not speak from himself,
but whatever he hears, he will speak. He will disclose to you
what is to come. Why is it important to say in
versus into? Well, into, that preposition
in English is a preposition of motion, right? You're moving
into something. If I say you need to go in to
the house, that means you're where? Outside, and you gotta
go into. There's a movement, whereas if
I say, You are in the house where you are already. in the house,
you're not outside. In the same sense, what he means
by this is that the Spirit's not gonna keep unfolding new
truth to you, but in fact what the Spirit does is in this big
world or realm called truth, every Christian is being guided
in that. You're already in it, you're
in the truth, and what the Spirit is doing is continuing to show
you that truth that you're in already. It's really a cool doctrine
if you'll just think about it. that he just is faithfully working
in our lives. And that's why some of you, you'll
read your Bible, and all of a sudden you're like, I never noticed
that before. Well, it's not like he brought you into it. You're
already there, but now he shows you it. And you're like, oh,
cool, neat. And that's just the ministry
of the Spirit. That's all of what's going on
in Acts 10. These Gentiles hear the gospel
as they listen Their hearts are changed, regenerated by the Spirit. They're baptized into the church
because they believe. And yet, the only thing being
described for us is then to show the Jews that they too are fellow
heirs to all of the promises. they have the Spirit fall on
them, and they speak in these other languages. And so what
you really have is just another example of the centrality of
Christ, because who sent the Spirit to them? Christ did. None of this would have happened
unless Christ hadn't operated. And it's the same reason why
you came to faith. Why? Because the Spirit of God
came upon you and regenerated your soul. You speak in tongues?
No. Why? Because the Spirit didn't fall
on you, but you were certainly made new in Christ by the Spirit. Why? Because the Spirit was sent
by the Son. And as always, Jesus can mean
many things to many people, but He will not be ignored. He is
Lord of all, He is Judge of all. My hope is that if you do not
yet see Him this way, is that the Spirit of God would show
you that He is also Savior of all. So let's pray. So Father,
I ask that you help us to that task, that we would be men and
women who walk in truth. You place us in it, that we would
therefore be men and women who utter that truth, live in the
truth, grow in the truth, all by the work of your Spirit, that
you would convict our hearts of sin, that we might put them
away. I pray for any here not in Christ,
that you would draw them to yourself through the Spirit. that we would
understand again that the power of God is the gospel and the
working of salvation is you, the triune God, and that we are
just simply called to be witnesses. Let us be bold in that. Strengthen
us to that task, I ask in your Son's name. Amen.
Who is Jesus? Part 7
Series Acts
Peter is now ready to address the house of Cornelius, filled with friends and family of this Centurion. But what is his message? It begins and ends with the person and work of Jesus. In this short series we walk through his words to see the many qualities that belong to Jesus and see the utter centrality of Him in all things. In this message we will reflect on the wonderful gift of the Holy Spirit.
| Sermon ID | 715242112453010 |
| Duration | 59:10 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Acts 10:36-48 |
| Language | English |
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