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Text: Acts 1:7-8
Theme: Jesus has given His church everything needed to reach the world in his name — including a specific plan.
Date: 07/10/2022 File Name: Great_Commission_05 Code: NT05-01
This morning, I want to preach the fifth and last message on becoming a Great Commission Church.
Each sermon has been based on one of the five passages where the Commission is found.
It is recorded in each of the four gospels and also in the Book of Acts.
Each reading is just a little bit different, but in that difference we see the five priorities we must have as a church.
This morning we will examine the commission found in the Book of Acts.
Jesus has been risen from the dead.
He has appeared to the disciples and many others over a period of forty days, and — according to Acts 1:3 — offered many convincing proofs that it was really him and not a hallucinogenic figment of their imagination.
He has continued to teach them things concerning the Kingdom of God.
He promises them that in a few days they are going to be baptized by the Holy Spirit — the third person of the Trinity.
That spiritual baptism will embolden them and empower them to be witnesses of the Gospel.
That same Spirit will compel, and propel, and impel this infant church to take the good news of God’s redemptive act into all the world.
It is a story of courage and success without parallel in the annals of world history.
It is a commission that the church is to heed in every generation until Jesus comes.
Dr. L.R. Scarborough, second president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, once said, “ ... for the church to refuse to witness a saving Gospel to a lost world day by day is nothing short of high treason, spiritual rebellion, and inexcusable disobedience to His holy commands.”
Five versions of the Great Commission ... all of them similar, yet each with just enough difference to reveal five specific priorities:
The 1st Great Commission — Matthew 28:18-20 — teaches that we are to go in power, (of the Holy Spirit).
The 2nd Great Commission — Mark 16:15 — teaches that we are to go with a priority, (of preaching the Gospel).
The 3rd Great Commission — Luke 24:45-49 — teaches that we are to go to all people, (no one is to be excluded).
The 4th Great Commission — John 20:20-21 — teaches that we are to go at a price, (obedience to God).
The Fifth Great Commission — Acts 1:7-8 — We Are to Go With a Plan
I. GOD’S PLAN — THE GOSPEL TO ALL THE NATIONS
"He said to them, “It is not for you to know times or epochs which the Father has fixed by His own authority; but you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.”
(Acts 1:7-8, NASB95)
ILLUS.
The last words spoken by people just before their death can be interesting.
Revolutionary War general, Ethan Allen said, “Waiting are they?
Waiting are they?
Well — let 'em wait.”, in response to an attending doctor who attempted to comfort him by saying, "General, I fear the angels are waiting for you."
Lady Nancy Astor was on her death-bed and only semi-conscious.
At one point she became alert, and seeing all her family around her bedside asked, “Am I dying or is this my birthday?”
Showmen and entrepreneur P. T. Barnum’s last words were, “How were the receipts today at Madison Square Garden?”
“Die?
I should say not, dear fellow.
No Barrymore would allow such a conventional thing to happen to him.”
John Barrymore.
During the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, Civil War Union General John Sedgwick told his aid, “They couldn’t hit an elephant at this distance.”
That was just before a Confederate sharpshooter shot him out of his saddle.
1. unlike these men, who could not choose the times of their deaths nor predict which words would be their last, Jesus very purposely and memorably chose His final words on earth
a. they are found here in the final version of the Great Commission in Acts 1:7-8
b. in this verse, Luke presents the theme for the entire Book of Acts
2. it has been two thousand years since Jesus issued the challenge to take the gospel to all the world
a. Jesus’ last words on earth demonstrate God’s heart for gathering the harvest of His people
b. with His last words, Jesus gave His disciples the motivation and the method for reaping that harvest
A. OUR MOTIVATION FOR REACHING THE WORLD
1. Jesus is Risen
"To these He also presented Himself alive after His suffering, by many convincing proofs, appearing to them over a period of forty days and speaking of the things concerning the kingdom of God." (Acts 1:3, NASB95)
a. in his Gospel, Luke gives some examples of the convincing proofs that Jesus used to convince His disciples that there weren’t seeing a ghost
1) they touched him
2) he ate food in front of them
3) he spoke with them
4) he even kindled a fire and cooked some fish on the shore of the Sea of Galilee
b. hallucinations or figments of the imagination don’t do those things
c. folks, that a man died and returned to life three days later is a message worth sharing
ILLUS.
Vance Havner was a Baptist pastor, a voluminous author, and a sought-after evangelist.
He was famous for pithy quotes:
"Too many churches start at eleven o’clock sharp, and end at twelve o’clock dull.”
“Plenty of church members are shaky about what they believe, while not many are shaken by what they believe.”
“Some preachers ought to put more fire into their sermons, or more sermons into the fire.”
“The church is a hospital for sinners, and not a museum for saints.”
It’s what he said about witnessing, however, that we ought to remember and take to heart: “We do not have a secret to be hidden, but a story to be heralded ... The Gospel is not something we come to church to hear; it is something we go from church to tell.”
1) we have an incredible story to tell — that Jesus died for sinners and rose again that we might have abundant life and eternal life
2) the early church grew by leaps and bounds because they could not keep from telling the message
d. a risen savior motivated the early church to be a witness
2. Jesus is Reigning
"So when they had come together, they were asking Him, saying, “Lord, is it at this time You are restoring the kingdom to Israel?”
He said to them, “It is not for you to know times or epochs which the Father has fixed by His own authority;" (Acts 1:6-7, NASB95)
a. when the disciples ask Jesus if He will be restoring the kingdom to Israel when the Holy Spirit comes, it reveals that they are not thinking about a world-wide mission, but the restoration of Israel’s glory days under David and Solomon
b. when Jesus used the word kingdom, however, He had something very different in mind
1) Jesus was thinking about the reign of God in the hearts of men and His rule over His Body — the Church
c. every time we pray the Lord’s Prayer we end with: “For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever.
Amen.”
1) in that sentence we are acknowledging that though God’s Kingdom is not fully manifested in this world, we believe that He reigns providentially in the affairs of men, and we believe that He reigns spiritually in the life of every believe who calls Him Lord
2) in our obedience to His commands — and His commands are not burdensome — we advance His Kingdom each time a sinner hears the gospel, repents, and commits his or her life to the Christ
d. a ruling savior motivated the early church to be a witness
3. Jesus is Returning
"They also said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into the sky?
This Jesus, who has been taken up from you into heaven, will come in just the same way as you have watched Him go into heaven.”
(Acts 1:11, NASB95)
a. the message of the angel contains both a challenge and an incentive
1) Jesus has gone, and would not be appearing to them again
b. the work of advancing the kingdom was now up to them
1) but His absence was not permanent — He would come again
2) during the interval, the church in every generation must preach the gospel
“This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all the nations, and then the end will come."
(Matthew 24:14, NASB95)
c. a returning savior motivated the early church to be a witness
4. we have an amazing message and an incredible story to tell and share with everyone we know
a. the early 1st century church grew by leaps and bounds because they were passionately motivated to tell the story to everyone
b. the goal of the Spirit-filled life is to be so vitally connected to Christ that you can’t stop talking about Him
ILLUS.
The Institute of American Church Growth recently polled more than 14,000 Christians and asked them, “What or who was responsible for you coming to Christ?” Ninety percent of the responders stated that a friend or relative who cared for them and invested time in them was the primary factor in their decision to follow Christ.
B. GOD’S METHOD FOR REACHING THE WORLD
"but you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.”
(Acts 1:8, NASB95)
1.
The Book of Acts reveals six basic principles for reaching the nations for Christ
Principle #1 — Begin Where You Are At
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