All Tied Up
What sort of book is the Acts of the Apostles? We have occasionally referred to it as a history of the early church, but of course it is not a comprehensive history: there are so many things it does not include that it is clearly not the full story of early Christianity. Instead, it is a selective story, drawing attention to those people and movements which Luke believed to be especially significant. In writing his gospel, Luke had adopted exactly the same procedure, selecting those aspects of the life and teaching of Jesus which would be most relevant to the concerns of his readers, and in Acts he covers those incidents which for him typified the trend of events among the first generation of Christians. He wanted to show how Christianity spread from Jerusalem to Rome, and everything that he included was intended to illuminate that transition. In the process, he omitted many things that today’s readers might have wished to know about. What happened to Peter? How did James get on in the church at Jerusalem? What became of Jesus’ other disciples? Luke simply ignores these questions because they were not relevant to his purpose.
This means that his story is also an interpretation of the progress of the early church. All history, of course, is an interpretation of past events
Text:
Subject: All Tied Up
Introduction:
I. Keep Praying
II. Keep Praising
III. Keep Ministering
Conclusion
Prayer, Asking in Jesus’ Name
A father took his children to the county fair one day. Since they were obviously not interested in the prize pig or calf, the father bought a whole roll of tickets for the various rides at the fair. As each of the children approached a ride, they would hold out a hand to get a ticket from their father. At one ride, after all his children had received tickets, a strange boy whom the father had never seen came up and held out his hand, obviously expecting a ticket.
The father drew back his roll of tickets. He wasn’t about to give this boy a ticket. Upon seeing this, the man’s son Stephen turned and said to his dad, “It’s okay, Dad, this is my friend. I told him you would give him a ticket.”
Do you know what the father did? He gave the boy a ticket in Stephen’s name. That boy had no right to a ticket, but since his son had said he would do it, the father honored the name of his son by giving that strange boy a ticket.1019