Chapter 1
We know from the first three verses
of this book that this is volume two of the Gospel of Luke. Luke is the writer
of the third Gospel and the second volume deals with the book of Acts. The book
of Acts is actually the written history, the sacred history of the early church
before the canon of scripture was completed. There are many things in the book
of Acts which are doctrinal and which are just as true today as they were in
the day in which it was written, and there are certain things in the book of
Acts which would never occur again because these things actually look the place
of the Canon of scripture before the Canon was completed. The place of Acts in
the New Testament is to give us a history of the early church before it had a
Bible. Many of the New Testament epistles were already in circulation, most of
them were not. Many times when we read about the believers in the book of Acts
searching the scriptures they were actually studying the Old Testament
scriptures because as yet they did not have the New Testament. The style in the
Greek of Acts is exactly the same as the style of Luke. There is no question as
to the fact that Luke wrote both Acts and the third Gospel.
He wrote this somewhere between 61
and 63 Al). He was writing Acts while Paul was writing the four prison
epistles. Luke was with Paul and both of them were writing at the same lime.
Verse 1— a Classical Greek prologue.
This is actually the Attic Greek principle involved and it is not the same as
the usual Koine Greek. Luke, by the way, was one of the great educated men of
his day and this is quite obvious from the Greek of the first three verses.
“The former treatise” is a reference
to the Gospel of Luke; “have I made” is an aorist tense indicating the time
when Luke wrote the Gospel of Luke; “0 Theophilus” is a vocative referring to a
person in the Roman empire. We know exactly the status of this person because
of the phrase in Luke 1:3. “most excellent.” He was a knight of the Roman
empire. At the lime that Luke was writing the knighthood of the Roman empire
was made up of many hundreds of men who were not simply millionaires but who
had tens of millions of dollars, sometimes even hundreds of millions. Theophilus
was a knight because of the phrase “most excellent” found in the third verse.
“of all that Jesus began” — this is
the key to the Gospel of Luke as it relates to Acts. The completion is the
story of Acts. Notice the order here. With us it is teach, learn and do: but
with Jesus it was “do and teach.” Both of these are present active infinitives
and the order is extremely important. Before Jesus could teach He had to first
of all do. This refers to miracles, all of the acts of healing, to every supernatural
act performed in the power of the Spirit by Jesus Christ, and He had to do
these things in order to get a hearing. This is the principle which is given in
Isaiah. that the Messiah would come with signs to Israel. These signs are the
various miracles, acts of healing, and as He performed these signs then people
would listen to Him. In order to get a crowd, in order to get a hearing. He
first of all fulfilled the signs and the miracles. So first of all. with Jesus
it was do and teach. With us it is teach, learn, and do. The performance of
divine good is based upon understanding the filling of the Spirit, the
categories of doctrine, their application. When you have two infinitives
together the last one is the whole purpose. The purpose of doing was to get a
hearing. The great thing is the message, not the miracles. The miracles will
alleviate suffering for a few moments but it is the teaching of Jesus which
results in eternal life and great repercussion as far as time is concerned.
Verse 2 is a transitional sentence.
It is still a part of the prologue. “Until the day in which he was taken up.”
This transition is the transition between volume one and volume two of Luke’s
writings. “Until the day” is a reference to the ascension. This is the last day
covered in the book of Luke; this is the First day covered in the book of Acts.
Aorist tense: point of time of the ascension. Passive voice: the humanity of
Christ was lifted up by the power of God the Father, the author of the divine
plan. The passive voice indicates that He did not propel Himself in His
humanity.
“after that he had given
commandments” — there were many commandments that Jesus gave after His
resurrection. Remember that Jesus spent forty days on the earth after He had
been resurrected and during that time He briefed born again believers in the
vicinity of Jerusalem. But there were two commandments that were more important
than all of the others put together and these are the two that God the Holy
Spirit led Luke to discuss in Acts. The First is found in verse 5 and has to do
with the doctrine of the baptism of the Spirit. It is vitally important that
every believer understand the baptism of the Spirit because this is how the
Church is made, this is when the Church began, and this is the whole key to
positional sanctification. It is the ministry of the Holy Spirit at the point
of salvation to enter even believer into union with Christ. Therefore Jesus
made a specific promise with regard to the baptism of the Spirit. It is also
necessary to understand this because in 70 AD the Jews are going into the
fifth cycle of discipline, they will be scattered throughout the earth until
the second advent of Christ. Therefore, there must be someone or some
organisation to replace Israel as custodians of the truth and disseminators of
the gospel. So on the day of Pentecost the body of Christ will begin. The
secret to the body of Christ is the baptism of the Holy Spirit whereby every
believer, whether he is formerly a Jew or a Gentile, is entered into union with
Christ. So this as the First thing that was emphasised just before the
ascension.
The second factor which was
emphasised was the ministry of every believer on the earth, and this is found
in verse 8. This has to do with the fact that every believer is in full time
Christian service.
“through the Holy Spirit” — dia plus the genitive connotes instrumentality. It
reminds us that during the course of His earthly ministry the humanity of
Christ was sustained by the Holy Spirit. In other words, the humanity of Christ
was indwelt by the Holy Spirit and during His entire ministry Jesus Christ was
Filled with the Spirit. “Through the Holy Spirit” is a reminder, then, that all
the time that Christ was on the earth He was sustained by the Holy Spirit. He
did not depend upon His own divine attributes and He did not use His own divine
attributes independently of the plan of the Father.
The doctrine of the
sustaining ministry’ of the Holy Spirit in the life of Christ
1. The ministry of the Spirit was
prophesied in the Old Testament — Isaiah I 1:2.3. 42:1. 61:1,2.
2. The Holy Spirit was given without
measure to the humanity of Christ — John 3:34. This is another way of
describing the Filling of the Spirit. Not only did the Holy Spirit indwell
Jesus Christ but He Filled Him perpetually. The only thing that breaks the
Filling of the Spirit is actually sin in the life.
3. The Holy Spirit is related to the
baptism of Jesus in a special way — Matthew 3:16. This was the ministry of the
Spirit in the public ministry of Jesus Christ.
4. The Holy Spirit is related to the
earthly ministry of Christ. By comparing Matthew 12: 18; 18:28 we know that
every miracle He performed, every message He gave, every thing that He did, He
did in the power of the Spirit.
5. The ministry of the Holy Spirit
was discontinued on the cross. When Jesus Christ during the last three hours
was bearing our sins the ministry of the Holy Spirit was discontinued. Jesus
said. “My God, My God” — the second ‘My God’ is addressed to the Holy Spirit —
“why hast thou forsaken me?” The answer: Christ was made sin for us — 2
Corinthians 5.21. The Father can only judge sin, and He did at the cross; the
Holy Spirit can have no fellowship with sin, so the Holy Spirit forsook Jesus
Christ at the cross.
6. However, the Holy Spirit had a
definite part in the resurrection of Christ — Romans 8:11: 1 Peter 3:18. The
Holy Spirit actually raised Jesus Christ from the dead.
7. The present ministry of the Holy
Spirit in relation to Christ is different. Now, instead of indwelling the
humanity of Christ the ministry of the Holy Spirit is to indwell the believer
to glorify Christ — John 7:39 which tells us that, first of all, the Holy
Spirit was not yet given because Christ was not yet glorified. But after the
cross Christ was resurrected, He ascended, was seated at the right hand of the
Father, and in His humanity that is the beginning of His glorification. Ten
days after Christ was seated the Holy Spirit came to the Church on the day of
Pentecost and now the Holy Spirit actually indwells every believer — John
16:14. The ministry of the Holy Spirit at the present time is to glorify Christ
and He does this through indwelling of every believer — 1 Corinthians 6:19,20.
“unto the apostles whom he had
chosen” — who did the choosing? Jesus Christ. This is an aorist middle
indicative. The word to choose is an aorist tense and this means that the
appointment comes in a point of time which is divorced from time and perpetuated
forever. In this case the apostles are appointed by Christ and they are
perpetuated as apostles. The middle voice here is reflexive, and that means
that this is strictly the decision of Jesus Christ.
“Whom he hath chosen”
1. This verb emphasises the divine
prerogative in the selection of apostles and anticipates the great failure of
believers at the end of the chapter.
2. The selection of the twelfth
apostle to replace Judas is me prerogative of divine sovereignty and not the
privilege
of believers’ election. All of the elections in the world are not going to make
an apostle out of Matthias.
3. In other words, the election
of Matthias in Acts 1:24-26 is a farce.
4. Paul, not Matthias, is the
twelfth apostle — I Corinthians 15:7-10; I Timothy 1:12-16.
5. This verb, “he chose,” emphasises
the sovereignty of Christ in the selection of apostles.
6. An election cannot give Matthias
the gift of apostleship am more than calling a person [calling a pastor] can
make the person a pastor.
7. All spiritual gifts are the
sovereign decision of Jesus Christ [Ephesians 4:8.1 11 and given at the moment
of salvation today by the Holy Spirit — I Corinthians 12:11. Both the second
and the third persons of the Trinity are involved in spiritual gifts. Jesus
Christ makes it possible for spiritual gifts to exist in the Church Age by His
departure. In that sense He gives them. The Holy Spirit also involved because
He is said to actually distribute them at the point of salvation.
8. Jesus, in His departure from the
earth, made provision for spiritual gifts, including apostleship to the Church.
9. These gifts in the mechanics are
specifically distributed by the Holy Spirit — I Corinthians 12:11.
Verse 3 the post resurrection
appearances of Jesus Christ. “To whom also” — Jesus Christ is not only involved
in appointing apostles, He also is involved in briefing believers in Jerusalem
in those days before the Church began. We know the exact time. Jesus Christ
rose on the firstfruits. He died three days before on the Passover. In fact,
the whole schedule of the death, resurrection of Christ and the beginning of
the Church is given in the feasts. The firstfruits occurred on Sunday. It
bothered the Jews because Sunday was the first day of the week and the Sabbath
was their big day, and every Sunday once every year they celebrated the
firstfruits. It always occurred on the same day, Sunday. The next feast after
that was exactly fifty days away, and fifty days is simply the word
“Pentecost.” Fifty days away you have a Sunday again. The resurrection took
place on Sunday; the Church started on Sunday.
There was a doctrinal basis for all
of this. In six days in the days of the restoration of the earth God worked. He
provided in six days everything that man would need in innocence and He rested
on Saturday, the seventh day, simply because there was nothing else to do. This
is a picture of the work of Christ on the cross. On the cross Christ did the
work and we rest in that. Our rest is faith — “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ
and thou shall be saved.” Now Sunday is the first day of the week and we
worship or rest on the first day of the week, and this is a picture of
faith-rest in the Christian life. As a result, in the next six we produce, and
the point is that we produce on the basis of grace or we produce on the basis
of the faith-rest technique. Jesus Christ rose on Sunday. He was on the earth
after His resurrection forty days. Then He ascended. There were then ten days
before the Church began, and it was sometime during that ten days that they had
the election of Matthias.
“he showed himself alive” — this is
during the forty days. “Alive” is a reference to the resurrection and the word
is a present active participle. The present tense is linear aktionsart and that
means that He kept on staying alive in His humanity, in fact His humanity could
no longer die.
“after his passion” — the word
passion doesn’t mean passion at all, it means after His suffering and it refers
specifically to the cross; “by many infallible proofs” — these infallible
proofs are then given.
“being seen of them forty days” — He
was alive on the earth in His resurrection body for forty days, and being seen
reminds us of the resurrection appearances of Jesus Christ, many of which are
recorded in the scripture.
There are three categories of resurrection
appearances
1. We have the resurrection
appearances up to the ascension, eleven are recorded in the Bible. For example,
He appeared first of all to Mary Magdalene. His second appearance was to the
other women who learned Bible doctrine — Matthew 28:9.10. Then, finally on
Sunday afternoon He made His third appearance and that was to Peter. Later He
appeared to a couple of believers on the road to Emmaus, people whose names are
not known to us. In any generation there are many, many believers whose names
are not known; believers who learn doctrine, believers who keep their eyes on
the Lord, believers who apply doctrine to experience, believers who have great
unseen production. Then He appeared to the ten disciples. Thomas wasn’t there —
Mark 16: Luke 24: John 20. Then He appeared the eleven and then to seven
disciples by the Sea of Galilee, then to 500 believers at once, and then to His
step brother, James. James was an unbeliever until the resurrection — I
Corinthians 15:7 cf. Acts 1:14; Galatians 1:19. Finally, there was the
appearance at the ascension — Acts 1:3-11.
2. The post-acsension appearances.
There were five. He appeared to Stephen, to Paul on the road to Damascus, to
Paul in Arabia, to Paul in the temple, and He appeared to John on the island of
Patmos.
We are studying in Acts that period
of time just before the ascension. During that time Jesus taught many things
and two of the promises are recorded because they arc the two most important.
The first of these promises is found in verse 5 and it has to do with receiving
power to witness. It has to do with the ministry of the Holy Spirit for the
Church Age is executed entirely by the Holy Spirit. Since this is different
from any previous dispensation never before in the history of the human race
were all believers indwelt by the Spirit. Here is something new and therefore
Jesus must brief them on this particular operation. Only a very few people in
the past had the Holy Spirit for any reason whatever, and they could lose Him.
The doctrinal significance of the resurrection
When Christ went to the cross He was
the unique person of the universe, he was God and He was man in one person
forever. He is coequal with the Father and with the Spirit and yet He is
different from the Father and the Spirit in that he is true humanity. Yet he is
different from all true humanity in that He is perfect and He is God. So Jesus
Christ who hung upon the cross is unique.
When He hung upon the cross he was
deity. He had sovereignty, righteousness, justice, love. eternal life,
omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, immutability and veracity. He was also
true humanity and minus the old sin nature. He was indwelt by the Holy Spirit
for the First three hours and He also had a human spirit and a human soul. When
He hung upon the cross in the last three hours our sins were poured out upon
Him. Obviously now the deity cannot die. Deity cannot die because deity is
sovereign and sovereignty is not subject to anyone or anything. Deity cannot
die because deity is eternal life. Deity cannot die because of immutability,
deity cannot change. Deity could not hang upon the cross because deity is
omnipresence and omnipresence cannot be reduced to one point. So it is quite
obvious that the deity of Christ could not and did not die. That is what He had
to become true humanity. But during those last three hours the sins of the
entire world were poured out upon Christ and when they were the Holy Spirit
left. Jesus said: “My God [the Father), my God (the Holy Spirit), why hast thou
forsaken me?” The answer is 2 Corinthians 5:21 “For he hath made him. who knew
no sin. to be sin for us. that we might be made the righteousness of God in
him.” When He was made sin for us the Father judged Him. and therefore forsook
him [spiritual death. and the Holy Spirit forsook Him. So that our sins were
poured out upon Him and He died spiritually. All of our sins were judged at
that point, they can never be judged again. It was His humanity that died
spiritually.
Three hours later when all of this
had been accomplished then Jesus said. “It is finished.” Mission accomplished.
He came to save the world, he provided this salvation through dying for our
sins. and once this mission was accomplished He declared it. Then. after he
declared it was Finished, immediately He came back into fellowship with the
Father. While bearing our sins He cried. “My God.” but once it is over then He
says “Father.” “Father, into they hands I dismiss my spirit.” and he dismissed
His spirit. In other words. He died physically. So Christ died twice on the cross.
First He died spiritually, bearing our sins. Secondly, he died physically, and
when He died physically His spirit went into the presence of the Father. His
soul went to Paradise, and His body went into the grave.
Now from that particular point Jesus
Christ rose again. But when we are talking about resurrection we are talking
about the humanity of Christ. Deity did not die: deity is not resurrected. Then
we are talking about the humanity of Christ forty days on the earth, and then
we are talking about ascension. The humanity of Christ ascended into the
presence of the Father and this was the first time that any member of the human
race has ever been in the third heaven. Until that time all of the Old
Testament saints had gone to Paradise. Abraham’s bosom. and there they had
resided until this time. Once Jesus Christ ascends into the presence of the
Father then we have this very significant and wonderful fact. humanity as
represented by Christ is accepted by God. Christ is seated at the right hand of
the Father and this is higher than all angelic creatures. For the first time in
the history of the human race a member of the human race. a human being, is
higher than the angels. Jesus Christ coming into the world was created lower
than the angels and when he was seated at the right hand of the Father He was
made higher than the angels.
During the time that Christ is
seated there His enemies are being made His footstool, this is occurring all
the time that we are in the Church Age. Even time a person is born again it
resolves the angelic conflict and eventually the number of people in the Church
Age will equal the number of demons operating under Satan on the earth. When
that occurs then the Church will go to be with the Lord. The ascension is based
upon resurrection. Christ had to have a different body than the one with which
He came into the world.
“and speaking of the things
pertaining to the kingdom of God”— what is the kingdom of God? There are
actually three kingdoms on the earth at the present time. The first is the
kingdom of God. The second is any national entity divine institution #4. Thirdly,
there is the kingdom of Satan which takes many forms: religion,
internationalism, etc. The first two are recognised by God and the third is in
conflict with God. Divine institution #4 is made up of X number of believers
and unbelievers. The kingdom of God today is made up of anyone who is in union
with Christ. This is the Church universal, the invisible body of Christ. This
is what will be mentioned in verse 5 where it says, “John baptised with water:
but ye shall be baptised with the Holy Spirit.” This is the kingdom of God. and
during those forty days what Jesus was primarily doing was not making
appearances but teaching, he briefed. He taught them about the kingdom of God.
In other words. He taught the Church Age.
Verses 4-8 begins the
post-resurrection ministry of Christ.
Verse 4 “And being assembled
together.” Notice that whenever the Church was taught, even before it was the
Church, there was always an assembly. Jesus is teaching that assembly for forty
days. but after He leaves there will be a gift. He leaves one category of gift.
the pastor-teacher, and that is to carry on the principle that when believers
are assembled there are those who have the gift and can teach them.
“he commanded them” the Greek word
for command paraggellw.
Aggellw,
from which we get our word “angel,” simply means to announce or to tell. Par is para and is the preposition of
immediate source. So to announce from the immediate source is actually the word
here. This is a little more than simply giving a command, it means to teach and
command. The command comes from the immediate source of doctrine.
“that they should not depart from
Jerusalem” in all of this briefing He kept saying, “Stay here.” The Church has
to begin in one place and it will begin in Jerusalem. Jerusalem was the place
of cursing, the place of the crucifixion, and cursing is always turned into
blessing in God’s plan and cursing will be turned into blessing on the day of
Pentecost, the Church will begin in the place where the curse occurred, where
Christ was made a curse for us on the cross.
“but wait for the promise of the
Father” the word “promise” is in the singular even though it involves many
promises because they all pertain to the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit will do
certain things for them and thereafter when any person is born again that
person will receive five things immediately from the Holy Spirit. So “the
promise of the Father which ye have heard” takes into consideration all of the
teaching that Jesus did during that forty days. Why did Jesus stay that forty
days? Because during that forty days He covered the whole realm of doctrine
necessary for the beginning of the Church Age.
Two facets of this promise arc
given. The first is given in verse 5. the second in verse 8.
Verse 5 a contrast of baptisms. We
have here two categories of baptisms. We have ritual baptism, and ritual
baptism always involves water, in a ritual baptism water always represents
something. For example, in the baptism of Jesus the water represented the plan
of God for them incarnation. When Jesus went into the water he said in effect I
will go to the cross. In reality, water in the baptism of Jesus represents the
cross. Then in the baptism of John. John baptised with water. The water in the
baptism of John represented the kingdom of God and when people believed in
Christ they were entered into the kingdom of God. Then. thirdly, the baptism
for the believer in the Church Age. Here the water represents Christ. When you
go into the water it represents Christ in His death. Identification with air is
identification with Christ in His resurrection. So the water actually
represents current and retroactive positional truth.
We also have some real baptisms. The
Greek word to baptise means identification, and there arc four real
identifications found in the scripture. The first is the baptism of Moses in I
Corinthians 10:2. The Jews were identified with Moses. Moses was identified
with the cloud as they crossed the Red Sea. in Matthew 20:22 we have the
baptism of the cup in which we have the drinking of the cup. This cup is filled
with the sins of the world. At the cross Christ drank all of the sins of the
world and they were poured out upon Him and judged. It is a real baptism.
Christ really was identified with our sins. Then there is the baptism of fire
mentioned in Matthew 3:11 and Luke 3:16. and the baptism of fire takes place at
the end of the Tribulation. Finally, there is the baptism of the Spirit which
is mentioned in verse 5 and the baptism of the Spirit is one of the five things
that happens to every believer at the moment of salvation. At the moment of
salvation it is the ministry of the Holy Spirit to enter us into union with
Christ.
John is the herald of the First
advent and the only ritual authorised in John’s ministry was water baptism.
“For John truly baptised” aorist
active indicative The aorist tense indicates even act of baptism performed by
John. But lie baptised “with water,” water representing the kingdom
“but ye” here is the contrast now.
The word “ye” is you all, plural “shall be baptised with the Holy Spirit.” The
word baptise means identification, and this starts back in Homer’s Odyssey in
which baptised was first used in 900 BC. When Jesus said “but ye
shall be baptised with the Holy Spirit” he is referring to an actual
identification. This is in the future tense and means that the baptism of the
Spirit had not taken place as yet. This is very important because the Church
cannot begin until the baptism of the Spirit begins. There is no church unless
you are entered into union with Christ. Never once in the Old Testament
anywhere under any circumstances is the baptism of the Spirit mentioned. Then,
this is in the passive voice. Voice in the Greek always indicates the
relationship between the subject and the verb. In this case the subject
receives the action of the verb which means the moment we believe we receive
the baptism of the Spirit. We do not do something to get it, we do not work for
it, it is something that God does for us. Actually, it is something we cannot
feel even.
“with the Holy Spirit” is not with
the Holy Spirit, it is really “by means of the Holy Spirit” we have the
instrumental case here. The Holy Spirit is the instrument of the baptism. You
are not baptised into the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit baptises you into
Christ. Connect this with I Corinthians 12; 13. “For by means of one spirit are
we all baptised into one body.”
“not many days hence” was actually
ten days.
The doctrine of the baptism of the Spirit
1. The baptism of the Spirit did not
occur in the Old Testament or any previous dispensation future tense of baptizw in Acts 1:5.
2. The baptism of the Spirit was
prophesied by John in Matthew 3:1 I: Jesus in Acts 1:5. However. He prophesied
it in another way in John 14:20, “I in you. and you in me.”
3. The mechanics of the baptism of
the Spirit — I Corinthians 12:13.
4. The baptism of the Spirit is the
basis of unification among believers — Ephesians 4:3.
5. The implications of the baptism
of the Spirit are given in Galatians 3:26-28. Principle: All social
distinctions are destroyed.
6. The baptism of the Spirit begins
the Church Age. Cf. Matthew 16:18 says
the Church is future: Acts 1:5: 2:3 actually took place, doesn’t say so: Acts
11:15-17 — key verse, says the baptism of the HS took
place on the day of Pentecost — I Corinthians 12:13. “One body” is the body of
Christ Colossians 1:18.
7. The baptism of the Spirit is the
basis for positional truth Ephesians 3:1-6.
8. The baptism of the Spirit is not
an experience. Aorist tense of I Corinthians 12:13, once and for all, plus the
phrase “we all,” not just some.
At most there were 120 people who
saw the Lord Jesus Christ launched into space. Just before He launched Himself
into what we call the doctrine of the ascension He had several things to say
which are of extreme importance to us. In the pre-ascension briefing there are
only two things that are mentioned. One of them is found in verse 5 and that
deals with our union with Christ, the baptism of the Spirit. The second, also
connected with the Holy Spirit. “Ye shall receive power after that the Holy
Spirit is come upon you” is a reference to the indwelling of the Holy Spirit
leading to the filling of the Holy Spirit and this is the basis of witnessing.
Verse 6 — “Lord, wilt thou at this
time restore the kingdom to Israel?’’ This is ridiculous . Jesus has just
talked to them about the baptism of the Spirit, the means whereby a new kingdom
will be developed. The baptism of the Spirit forms a new kingdom. In the Church
Age we have a kingdom on earth but it is a kingdom made up of believers. These
believers all have one thing in common, they are all in union with Christ. This
is the body of Christ and so obviously this is a different kingdom. This
kingdom must exist because during the Church Age the Jews are under the fifth
cycle of discipline. They are scattered, they are not restored. The Church Age
is the age when the Jews are scattered, when they no longer have responsibility
for the Word custodianship of it or responsibility for its dissemination. So
they ask a silly question. At this time they are under the fourth cycle of
discipline in which they are under the domination of the power of Rome. They want
to get out from under the power of Rome, they want to go back to their
wonderful days when they were independent.
Verse 7 — “it is not for you to know
the times or the seasons.” The word “times” is xronoj
from which we get out English word “chronology,” and it means a succession of
events, one event after the other. Usually xronoj
is connected with the history of Israel under its cycles of discipline. The
Greek actually says “it is not from you to know the times.” “From you” is a
genitive of source and it indicates that the ignorance of the disciples to
understand the upper room discourse is hurting them now. In other words, you
don’t have this information in you. It is available but you don’t happen to
have it in you. It is “not from you to know.” Yet we have a detailed teaching
of this in Matthew chapters 24 and 25. There are detailed teachings of this in
the book of Isaiah. There are many passages of scripture, beginning with
Leviticus chapter 26, that teach the times. And they should know the times, they
should understand the times. They should understand that they are right here in
this transitional period and when this transitional period is over the Jews are
going to be scattered throughout the world. So “it is not from you to
know", which is another way of saying they are ignorant. They should have
this information, they should understand that the kingdom of Israel will not be
restored. They will be scattered throughout the earth and will remain scattered
until the second advent, and when Christ returns to the earth they will be
regathered. They did not understand the times and because of this they were not
oriented or prepared for the coming of the Church Age.
The second word is “seasons.” the
Greek word kairoj which means an epoch or a
period of time. Xronoj is a succession of events
but kairoj is dividing them down into
sections. The disciples should understand by now the four sections of time, or
the four dispensations: The Age of the Gentiles Genesis 1-11, the period when
there was one race in the world, the Gentiles; the Age of Israel which was
interrupted by the cross, resurrection, ascension and session; the Church Age.
By now the disciples should begin to understand the age of the Church because
for three years Jesus has been periodically briefing them on things pertaining
to the Church Age. But they didn’t get it and as a result they are not prepared
for it. After the Church is the Jewish Age is completed and then Christ
returns, and then we have the Age of Christ or the Millennium. They don’t
understand the Church Age, yet they should. They are going to start the Church
Age and will be the nucleus and have to know what they are doing.
“which the Father has put under his
own authority?” The word “power” is authority here.
Verse 8 — “But ye shall receive
power.” This power is actually inherent power, dunamij. They are going to receive inherent power. The power they are going to
receive is the omnipotence of God the Holy Spirit who will indwell them. “Ye
shall receive” is future tense indicating that this power and the reception of
it is ten days away.
“after that the Holy Spirit” is come
upon you: ye shall be witnesses unto me” — the impact for Christ comes from the
power of the Holy Spirit. They will be witnesses for the Lord Jesus Christ. The
area of witnessing is given and this is also an historical sequence. First it
will start in Jerusalem, and one of the purposes of the book of Acts is to show
us that the Church did not begin all over the world, the Church began in one
spot. With the beginning of the Church in Jerusalem there is a problem. In
Jerusalem from the day of Pentecost we have Church Age believers and throughout
the rest of the world we have Old Testament believers. And for awhile you are
going to have Old Testament saints and New Testament saints living in the same
world. The book of Acts shows how eventually what started in Jerusalem went
throughout the entire world and there are no longer any Old Testament saints,
they are phased out.
It starts out in Jerusalem. Then
this thing will spread “in all Judea,” the southern kingdom. Then it will go to
the hated place, Samaria. When we get to Acts chapter eight we see the gospel
going to Samaria. Then before too long we get into “the uttermost parts of the
earth” by the end of the book of Acts. So this is the historical sequence from
starting in one spot and moving the Church throughout the world.
Verse 10 — they stood there with
their eyes bulging: “two men stood by them in white apparel” two angels have
joined them. The words “two men” is actually “two persons.”
Verse I I — “Which also said.” Now
they bring them down to earth: “ye men of Galilee” — what stranger could walk
into a crowd and tell they were all from Galilee? How did they know they were
from Galilee? They were angels and they had been sent to brief them.
“this same Jesus” — Jesus is the
title of His humanity, it was the humanity of Christ which ascended: “which is
taken from you [ascension] into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have
seen him go into heaven.”
Verse 12 — they were standing on the
Mount of Olives looking up. Jesus will be returning to the same place Zechariah
14:4. He is not coming back today and they might as well get down and start
learning some of the things which are necessary so that they will know how to
operate during His absence. The Church Age is the period when Christ is absent
from the earth. Now, everything that Jesus wants us to know we have in the Word
of God. I Corinthians 2:16 says the Word of God is the mind of Christ. This is
our instructions during His absence.
Verse 13 – “where they abode” is in
the imperfect tense which means that they probably resided here. There is a
list of the people present, the eleven apostles to Israel and they are
appointed apostles to the Church. Peter is mentioned first because his leadership
is obvious. Thomas is mentioned, even though he totally failed 40 days before
in the matter of the resurrection. This did not keep him from being on the
roster of apostles. To each of these is given apostleship, the gift of absolute
dictatorship for the next 50 years or so while the Church is being established.
There are to be 12 apostles. Obviously someone had to take the place of Judas
and the big question is who is going to be the replacement. This is a sovereign
choice of God the Holy Spirit, according to 1 Corinthians 12:11. It is the
ministry of the Holy Spirit to appoint spiritual gifts. The twelfth one is not
even saved yet, and for five more years he will not be saved, but there is
going to be an attempt to elect a replacement.
Verse 14 – “These all continued with
one accord.” This means they were in harmony with one another and were all in
fellowship with God. There were 120 of them and they were well equipped to
spend the next ten days. The resurrection is on the feast of the firstfruits,
and there are fifty days between the firstfruits and the next feast which is
Pentecost. For forty days the eleven disciples and the others are gathered
together in the upper room and they are in harmony with one another, which
indicates that they stated out in fellowship. According to John 20:22 they were
given the Holy Spirit, so they are controlled by the Holy Spirit. Yet in spite
of that of that they get into a sin which is fantastic because it doesn’t
depend upon the filling of the Spirit or their walk with the Lord, it depends
upon their knowledge of doctrine. So there is an area of sin into which people
fall through ignorance of Bible doctrine.
“and his brethren” – the four
brothers of Jesus, mentioned in Matthew 13:55 and Mark 6:3.
Verse 15 – “Peter stood up.” Peter
is the presiding leader in the roster of disciples given in verse 13; “in the
midst of the disciples” – the word “disciples” is used for 120 people here.
Then there is a parenthesis which tells us how many people were involved in
this operation.
Verse 16 – Peter’s speech was based
on scripture. But when we start praying for the will of God and are ignorant of
doctrine we are going to wind up out of the will of God. There is no substitute
for knowledge of Bible doctrine. The will of God is declared through the Word
of God.
“Men and brethren” – because there
were ladies present and they were included in the “brethren.”
“this scripture” – there is going to
be a dissertation on the Word; “must needs have been fulfilled” – that is, it
is necessary to fulfill a scripture from the Old Testament.
“which the Holy Spirit by the mouth
of David spoke before” – this was a prophecy from David. David was a king but
he was also a prophet, and many of the Psalms which David wrote contained
prophecy.
“concerning Judas” – Peter is right
in this part of his interpretation; “which was a guide to them that took Jesus”
– the word “guide” is used in the sense that he guided the soldiers to where
Jesus was in order to betray Him, but the word means “traitor.”
Verse 17 – “For he was numbered with
us.” This is a foreshadowing of what we have today. Always among born again
believers there are a certain number of unbelievers numbered with them,
identified as Christians though they are not Christians because they have not
accepted Christ as saviour; “and obtained part of this ministry” – so that
Judas was actually identified with the twelve when they went to Israel as
apostles and he actually had a part of their ministry. This means that the
miracles performed in Matthew chapter ten were also performed by Judas.
Verse 18 – “Now this man purchased a
field.” This is what happened to the money that was used for the betrayal.
Judas became conscience stricken. Then he tells how Judas died. There are two
accounts: one that he hung himself and the other that the rope broke.
Apparently it was some time before it was known that Judas had hung himself and
the rope rotted, he had been hanging so long that he simply broke asunder. This
was one man who was never taken down, he had no friends, no loved ones, no one
who cared, he had the respect of no one.
Verse 19 – “And it was known unto
all the dwellers at Jerusalem.” Everyone knew about Judas but no one cared for
him.
“insomuch as that field is called in
their proper tongue, Aceldama [Aramaic], that is to say, The field of
blood.”
Verse 20 – Now Peter quotes the
scripture for which he has in mind for this message. “For it is written” – at
this point he cites scripture which is to be used in this regard, and he is
going to quote from two passages. The first is from Psalm 69:25—“Let his
habitation be desolate,” and the second is from Psalm 109:8—“and his office let
another take.”
“Let his habitation be desolate”
indicates that the Potter’s field was a place of desolation and no one has any
regard for Judas; “let no man dwell therein” means that there is now a vacancy
among the apostles, the eleven, there should be twelve.
Verse 21 – Peter suggests that they fill the vacancy right away. Peter gets
into error because the appointment of the twelfth apostle is strictly the
appointment of God. In 1 Corinthians 12:28 we see that the fact that there
would be apostles was the sovereign decision of God the Father. In Ephesians
4:8, 11 the sovereignty of the Son is involved in spiritual gifts. In 1
Corinthians 12:11 it is the sovereign ministry of the Holy Spirit to actually
select who is involved in apostleship.
The word “wherefore” means “Which of
these people.”
Verse 22 – “must one be ordained.”
There is no word for ordained in the
original, it is the word to become. It is “it is necessary for one to become a
witness with us with regard to the resurrection.”
Verse 23 – the nominating committee.
Everything is done decently and in order, and this is highly commendable. The
only problem with it is that the sovereignty of God is not in it at all. Now
there is a ballot and there are two men on it.
Verse 24 – the beautiful and useless
prayer.
“show which of these two though hast
chosen” – this is where they have gone astray. God hasn’t chosen either. They
recognize that it is God who does the choosing and yet they are voting to
choose themselves. In other words, they are superimposing their volition on the
sovereignty of God, and this is a most ghastly sin. They are out of fellowship
at this point and when people are out of fellowship they are tremendously
inconsistent.
Verse 26 – the futile election.
Matthias is numbered with the eleven apostles and said to be the twelfth. Note
1 Corinthians 12:11, “as he [the Holy Spirit] desires.” 1 Timothy 1:12—this
verse emphasizes the fact that Christ put Paul into the ministry. 1 Corinthians
15:7ff, all of the apostles had to be a witness to the resurrection.