Acts 2:25-33. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on July 3, 2022.
We are continuing to look at Peter’s sermon to the crowd on the Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit was first poured out on the disciples of Jesus.
Let’s review his main points so far.
This last point that Jesus has been raised up from the dead leads Peter to point out another prophecy to Israel. Why would Peter say it was impossible for Messiah to remain dead in the grave?
Psalm 16 speaks to Peter’s point of the impossibility of Jesus being held by death. Peter will interpret this psalm in the next verses, so let me just point out some secondary points from these verses.
This whole psalm lays out the confidence that David has in the Lord to be his ultimate shepherd. David had confidence in the present because he knew that the Lord was at his right hand (Psalm 16:8; Acts 2:25) no matter what he faced.
Do you have confidence that God is by your side? That kind of confidence can only truly be ours if we are repentant of our sin before God and working to do His will in our life. This world needs Christians who have a confidence that is not just based on theory, but on the reality of a repentant, humble relationship with Jesus the Messiah who is our savior and Lord.
Yet, this confidence also had a forward-looking hope while he was in the present. God had given David a promise that was a secure hope that gave him rest, inner peace, in the now.
The world often argues that Christians are too focused on heaven and the future. They don’t do enough for the present. Whether that is true or not, the fault is not in having a future hope promised by God. Just like David, we have promises from God of a future glory that cannot be taken from us. This can enable us to have an incredible peace even when we face great obstacles and threats from the Goliaths of this world.
In Psalm 16:10-11, David brings up the hope of resurrection. The truth of the resurrection of the righteous filled David with the knowledge that he would one day be full of joy in the presence of God.
We are given a measure of joy in this life that can even reside with us in troubled times. However, David foresees a time of dwelling in God’s presence like we see pictured in Revelation 21-22. The joy of the Lord in this life is a foretaste of that eternal joy that will know no subsidence. What we have ahead of us can only be described as Life Eternal, of which we get a taste in the present.
May we become more like David in these difficult days that require us to be filled with the Holy Spirit. Yet, Peter is focused on why Jesus couldn’t stay in the grave, and that is found in Psalm 16:9, Acts 2:27.
In verse 29, Peter respectfully points out that David is still dead and buried. His flesh saw corruption, or the full process of decay. His tomb in Jerusalem stood as a witness to this. It would be easy to ignore the words and say that it is not clear what he means. Yet, Peter points out that David was not speaking about himself.
Now, I would point out that Peter clearly sees all of Psalm 16:10 as speaking about Christ. However, he doesn’t exactly explain the interpretive method that he is using. I am of the opinion that his “interpretive method” was simply witnessing the events and then learning from Jesus what it meant. Even without a special revelation from Jesus, there is something going on in this verse. David first says, “You will not leave my soul in Hades…” Yet, in the second phrase he speaks of “Your Holy One.” Though we can see this as pointing to David, it is quite possible that it is scoping out and David has in mind a greater being, the Holy One of God.
On top of this, the lives of the Patriarchs, and later men like David, were often prophetic enactments of things that pertained to God’s dealing with humanity. So, even David’s reference to his soul not being left in Hades can speak to a greater Son of David, the Messiah, (of whom David is a picture) not being left in Hades as well.
Peter points out in verse 30 that David was a prophet. Yes, his psalms were not collected and placed among the books of the prophets, but David was a prophet nonetheless. In fact, all three Hebrew sections of the Old Testament have prophecy. The Torah, or the Law, has plenty prophecies throughout it, even Moses pointing to “the prophet like me” in Deuteronomy 18:15-18 that Israel should listen to. Psalms is placed among the Writings, or Wisdom literature. However, not only are the psalms full of prophecies, but the book of Daniel, and even Job speaking of a time in Job 19:25-26 when his Redeemer will stand in the last days and, even though Job’s skin will be destroyed, he will see God “in my flesh.” Our categorization of Scripture can be helpful, but it can also get in the way of hearing what the Holy Spirit is saying.
David was a prophet and Psalm 16 is not just some quaint worship song to sing at the temple. It contains a prophecy about resurrection, yes of David, but even more so, of the ultimate Son of David, Messiah. Yes, David had the hope of his own personal resurrection, but he knew that this hope was pinned in the person, the One, who would come from among his descendants that would be the Anointed One of God. He foresaw that the Anointed King who would rule upon the throne of David forever, would also run into trouble just as he did. He recognized that the spirit of this world would come against Messiah and slay him too. Like Job, David knew that he had a redeemer that would come down into the grave and release him from its grip because it was impossible for the grave to hold Messiah, or to deny his plundering of its spirits.
Peter wants them to take David seriously. David stated that the Holy One would not be held by the grave or see decay, which means he must first be killed and then resurrected! Thus, in verse 32, Peter states that the 120 people that had been filled with the Holy Spirit were witnesses of all that Jesus had done, especially his resurrection.
I will point out that verse 24 and verse 32 use a word saying that God “raised up” Jesus. This word can also be translated as to set up, or to establish something above. In this sense there is a dual raising up. To his enemies, it looked like Jesus was down and out as he died and went to the grave, Sheol, Hades. However, he had been raised up from the dead and set, established, upon the earth. For 40 days, he interacted with his disciples. Yet, another raising occurs in verse 33.
Jesus has been exalted to a position at the right hand of the Father in the heavenlies. It wasn’t enough to just raise Jesus up out of the realm of the dead like Lazarus. He was raised up with an immortal body and further raised up into God’s heavenly domain, and further raised up to sit at His right Hand, the highest place.
This point is always difficult on our flesh. Like the disciples in Acts 1 speaking to the resurrected Lord, will you now restore the kingdom to Israel? Why didn’t he (doesn’t he even now) remain on earth and fix it? The point is that in our flesh, we will always have an enemy to fight due to the fact that the enemy of sin is inside of us all.
It is at this highest position that Jesus receives from the Father the Promise of the Holy Spirit. In a sense, this is talking about authority. It is given to him, or he is authorized, to pour out the Holy Spirit as he sees fit. In fact, that is exactly what Jesus was doing. He was in heaven pouring out the Holy Spirit on that very day (and today as well!).
Back in John 16:7, Jesus had told Peter and the disciples, “Nevertheless I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I depart, I will send Him to you.” The sending of the Holy Spirit is the same as the pouring out of the Holy Spirit. The first accentuates his personhood. The Holy Spirit is another comforter who is like Jesus, but different. The second phrase accentuates the water analogy. We need to be baptized, cleansed, by the Holy Spirit in order to be filled with Him to overflowing.
This is the same Spirit that we need in this hour. We need the same Spirit that David had when he faced Goliath (an uncircumcised Philistine), and later King Saul (an uncircumcised in heart Israelite). We need the same Spirit that Peter had as he spoke to the crowd that day and later gave his life in the Roman Colosseum. We need the same Spirit that Jesus had in all that he did while he was on this planet. This is the same Spirit that we can have as we daily open our hearts and minds to His leading and His purposes.
Let’s ask Jesus every day to fill us with the Holy Spirit in order that we may be his voice, his hands, and his feet in these the Last Days!