Acts 1:1-8. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on April 24, 2022.
Today, we begin a journey through the book often called Acts. We will take our time to go verse by verse, which will make this a long journey. From time to time along the way, we will pause the series for special occasions.
First up, let’s talk about the setting and situation that gave rise to this book of our New Testament.
The author is not identified, but there is basically no dispute that the author is Luke the physician. This is attested within the 2nd century and there is no dispute from anyone at the time.
We should note that even the Gospel of Luke does not identify the author in its verses. However, the oldest copy of the Gospel of Luke that we have dates back to the 2nd century (AD 100’s) and has written on it in Greek “According to Luke.”
In verse 1, the author refers to a former account, “The former account I made…” He explains the subject matter of the earlier account. It was about “all that Jesus began both to do and teach, until the day in which He was taken up…” This clearly describes a gospel account, and makes Acts a second volume that essentially starts where the Gospel of Luke leaves off.
As for the title of the book, there is no title given by the author. It is simply an account describing what happened from the ascension of Jesus forward. Thus, it is historical with a theological emphasis throughout it, much like the gospel. Since the Gospel is about what Jesus did and said, so this book has been referred to as The Acts of the Apostles, and the shorter form Acts. Of course, we should recognize that Jesus is still acting through his disciples by the help of the Holy Spirit.
Both the Gospel of Luke and the book of Acts are addressed to an individual named Theophilus. The name means “friend of God,” and is used only in Luke 1:3 and Acts 1:1. It is a Latin name, so the person is most likely a gentile convert. I say this because Luke states that he wants Theophilus to be certain of the things in which he had been instructed (Luke 1:4). Also there, Luke states that he had a perfect understanding of all things from the very first that he was writing about.
All of the Gospels portray a transitional period after the Resurrection of Jesus. There are 50 days between the feast of Passover and the feast of Pentecost (called the feast of Weeks in the Old Testament). Note that Pentecost is a Greek word for 50. During the first 40 days, Jesus appeared on multiple occasions giving them commands, proving that it was really him, and that he was not just a spirit. Luke states in Acts 1:3 that Jesus gave them infallible proofs of his resurrection to establish its reality beyond a doubt. We see this with Jesus having them touch him and eating food in their presence and yet appearing and disappearing within locked rooms.
These first appearances happened in and around Jerusalem. Then, there was an appearance in the area of Galilee. This seems to be the situation that Paul speaks of in 1 Corinthians 15:6 in which he mentions Jesus appearing to “over 500 brethren at once.” The end of the Gospel of Luke places the ascension of Jesus on the east side of the Mt. of Olives near Bethany. This is a short distance from Jerusalem towards the east.
Verse 3 also tells us that Jesus used this transitional time to speak of things pertaining to the Kingdom of God. This would be particularly important to the disciples because they were perplexed at how the crucifixion, and now resurrection, of Jesus would connect to the awaited Kingdom of God.
This opens with the last appearance to them in this transitional period. Jesus is giving them his last instructions before going into heaven. Jesus commands them to wait in Jerusalem for the “Promise of the Father.” This idea of waiting may seem strange or unimportant to us. However, the followers of Christ (and even the followers of God throughout history) are to be characterized first as a people who have waited on God the Father. Isaiah 40:31 reminds us that those who wait upon the Lord will renew their strength and be able to fly, run, and walk without growing weary. We are not an inactive people, but we are not driven by the mission or task itself. We wait upon the Lord and follow His leading like the righteous of every age.
The Promise of the Father is a reference to the prophecies regarding the pouring out of the Holy Spirit. In Joel 2, the Father promises that a time will come when He will pour out His Spirit upon all flesh. This is as opposed to being poured out on a few individuals hear and there, which was how it was experienced before then.
If there is any doubt about what promise Jesus means, it is put to rest in verse 5. John the Baptist baptized people in water, but they were about to be baptized in the Holy Spirit. We should remind ourselves of Matthew 3:11 at this point. John himself said, “I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance, but He who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.” (NKJV).
Salvation is sometimes pictured as the Spirit of God putting or baptizing a person into Christ. The disciples present were all saved members of Christ and his body. Here the picture is reversed and Jesus will immerse his disciples into the Holy Spirit. Notice that this picture shows a person being completely surrounded by the Holy Spirit.
There is another picture that is used of the Holy Spirit and that is being filled with the Spirit. At salvation, Christ dwells in the believer through the Holy Spirit. However, being filled with the Spirit pictures the Spirit flooding forth and filling our whole inner being until it overflows. Both these inner and outer pictures are pointing to the same idea.
Of course, salvation and Spirit baptism can happen simultaneously or separately. The reason the disciples had to wait was mainly about the fact that the coming of the Holy Spirit in this new outpouring needed to coincide with the feast of Pentecost. Just as the death of Jesus happened on Passover and conceptually tied to the sacrifice they made in Egypt, so the coming of the Holy Spirit conceptually tied to Pentecost. This was a celebration of the harvest that God had given up to that point and the further harvest that would be realized in the months ahead. The baptism of the Holy Spirit is connected to the harvest of believers who would come into the Kingdom of God through the work of the apostles and the Early Church. They would be like a rock in the pond causing ripples down through history to our very hour.
We see in verse 6 that the disciples are more concerned about Israel and what Jesus was doing in regard to reestablishing the kingdom. Old Testament prophecy pointed to a time when the Anointed One of God (Messiah/Christ) would: break off the Gentile dominion over Israel, bring back those of Israel who had been dispersed to Gentile lands, fix all that was wrong with Israel, and bring the world under his righteous administration. They believed that this would happen up until the cross, where their hopes were dashed. Yet, these hopes were now restored since the Resurrection of Jesus. They are like kids often are, asking the Lord, “Are we there yet?”
Jesus tells them that it is not for us to know the times or seasons that are under the Father’s authority. The Father would determine when that would happen and He was not giving the disciples more information. It is important that Jesus expects it to happen. He doesn’t berate them for not understanding that the Kingdom was only a metaphor and would never happen literally. This is the approach that many liberal Christians take with such prophecies. However, Jesus refocuses them. Our focus is not to be on the “when” of God’s Kingdom restoration of Israel.
Instead, their focus is to be on receiving power to be witnesses of Jesus to the ends of the earth (verse 8). This power would come when they were filled with the Holy Spirit. We will talk more about this when we get to chapter 2. However, we must always remember that the power behind our activity must always be the Holy Spirit. We must not let the lesser power of institutional momentum and pride of a brand fuel the task of taking the gospel to the ends of the earth. The pouring out of the Holy Spirit would essentially be about giving a witness to the world of who Jesus is, what he did, what he has made available to us presently, and what he will do in the future. We can be filled with the presence of God because of what Jesus has done.
In verse 8, Jesus highlights the concentric circles of the expansion of this witness. It would start in Jerusalem, move to Judea and Samaria, and then to the ends of the earth. Imagine, here we are today at the ends of the earth from Jerusalem talking about Jesus! Yet, there are still many who need to hear about Jesus, and they also need to see Jesus in us.
May God help us not to run ahead without the help of the Holy Spirit in doing this work. Without Him we will fail, but with Him we will succeed at doing the work! That said, neither do we want to hang back when the Spirit of God begins to move. May God help us to walk in step with His Spirit, and to stop in sync with His Spirit.