Hi all,
In
last month's e-newsletter I briefly shared something the Lord gave me
for the body of Christ, and now I'd like to go into more detail, and
also share what Peter meant when he said*, "For the time is come that
judgment must begin at the house of God", because they are connected. *I
Peter 4:17
First, my understanding and what I was thinking
Context
is everything, so I need to share both my understanding of the early
church and what I had been thinking at the time when He broke in and
told me what the Spirit is saying to the body of Christ - so here is a
brief overview of my understanding and what I was thinking about:
When
we read Acts 2 through chapter 7 we wonder at the outpouring of those
days. Some 3,000 people heard Peter's explanation of them speaking
with languages they had never learned; this was the outpouring marking
the start of the last days as told by Joel.* They were a close-knit
group, the body of Christ all contained in Jerusalem, all Jewish, and at
this point faith in Jesus was considered just another aspect of
Judaism. *Acts 2:17/Joel 2:28-32
Even
back then the Jewish faith was multi-faceted, ranging from the
Essenes who strictly kept the law and were all about the end times and
Messiah, to the holiness-movement Pharisees with their own laws they
exalted above the Word, to the liberal Sadducees who didn't believe in
angels and spirits, to the political Herodians. At first, so what's
another sect of Judaism; believing this man Jesus was Messiah?
The first year and a half
Over
the next 18 months they met in homes, going from house to house and
praying, eating together, and learning from the apostles about this
faith, and they were so giving and united there were no needs among
them. Scripture doesn't say directly, but implies Peter's shadow*
falling on a sick person healed them. *5:15
But
their numbers continued to increase, with modern estimates of 10,000
believers - and the authorities had to act. In Acts 7 they arrested and
put on trial Steven, one of the leaders, with the whole chapter given to
his trial and execution. Chapter 7 closes with the statement that the
executioners laid their coats at the feet of a young man named
Saul, from Tarsus.
Acts 8 opens with these words: "And Saul approved of them killing him. And on that day a great persecution broke out against the church at Jerusalem, and all except the apostles were scattered
throughout Judea and Samaria." Let that sink in. 10,000 believers in
Jerusalem and everyone but the apostles moved out of town immediately to
neighboring Samaria and Judea because of the persecution inside the
city.
The
time from the giving of the Holy Spirit in Acts 2, to Acts 8:1 when
they all left town, was no more than 18 months to 2 years. Acts 8:1 says
all the believers moved to Judea and Samaria, where chapter 8 picks up
the fact Philip went to Samaria and preached Jesus, and so many people
were healed and delivered the whole city had 'great joy'. And whereas
Philip was strictly an evangelist*, the apostles Peter and John came to
Samaria to lay hands on the new believers that they would receive the
Holy Spirit. *Acts 21:8
Enter Saul of Tarsus - the future Paul, the sent one
Acts
9 is the telling of Jesus appearing* to Saul of Tarsus as Saul had
decided to expand his persecution of the believers to Damascus, Syria,
and how after his conversion Barnabus introduces him to the apostles**. *9:17, 26:16; **9:26-27
Acts
10 is informational about the Roman, Cornelius, seeing an angel who
tells him to look for Peter, who will tell him what he must do*. When
Peter arrives and is telling them about Jesus, just at the point of His
resurrection, which one must believe in order to be saved, the Holy
Spirit is poured out upon them for they all start talking in unlearned
languages, to the astonishment of the Jewish men accompanying Peter.
Peter would later say**, "God who knew their hearts, gave them the Holy
Spirit even as He did us...". **Acts 15:8
(*Angels
are not allowed to preach the gospel, which is why the angel had to
tell Cornelius to find Peter - for the simple reason Jesus died for
people, not angels, so they don't have the privilege of sharing the
gospel or using the name of Jesus. That is why Jude 9 says Michael, the
greatest of all angels, told Satan, "The Lord rebuke you". For a person
to say 'the Lord rebuke you', however, is an insult to Jesus, for unlike
angels, we have been given the name and even commanded to use the name
of Jesus against demons.)
Greeks believe - additional information 8:1 didn't tell us
In
Acts 11:19-26 we are told that when the disciples left Jerusalem in 8:1
because of Saul's persecution, some actually went beyond Judea and
Samaria to Phonecia on the coast and to the island of Cyprus, and some
Cypriats now born again, traveled to Antioch (Syria) and told Greeks
about Jesus.
The
apostles, upon hearing of Greek believers in Jesus, sent Barnabus to
Antioch to check on these Greek believers, which was a brand new issue
to consider, as up until now with the exception of Cornelius' household,
the church was Jewish and had never reached out to the pagan Greeks.
We
are told in 11:23-24 the new believers are relieved upon meeting
Barnabus, for he had the good sense to first see what the grace of God
had done*, and then responded to God's work by encouraging them all to
continue in the Lord. Barnabus also remembered Saul of Tarsus, and how
when the Lord appeared to him outside of Damascus, told him he was
called to the Gentiles**, so Barnabus left Antioch to find Saul in
Tarsus, and returned with him. Verse 26 says they stayed a year to teach
these new believers, and we were first called Christians at Antioch. *11:23, **26:17
What I was thinking about
Now
you are caught up in my understanding, which led me to think about the
changes the now apostle Paul brought to the body of Christ when he began
teaching during that year in Antioch. The time between Pentecost in
Acts 2 until Paul starts teaching in Acts 11:26, was about 10 years.
Over
those 10 years, up until Paul taught in Antioch, there had been no
formal teaching of what the faith meant. The first gospel stories of
Jesus were being written down and passed around, but no one was teaching
the people what it all meant. They knew Jesus, and they could draw from
what Jesus said, but no one had taught the specifics of how to apply
one's faith to daily life.
Paul
had not yet written the Romans about righteousness and the law and
being dead to sin. He had not yet written the Corinthians about the
gifts of the Spirit and how we are all members of one body of Christ. He
had not yet written the Ephesians about the new creation and growing up
in Christ and laying aside the old man to walk in the newness of the
Spirit. He had not written the Galatians about legalism and how there is
nothing but the new creation, all are equal in Christ and they could
fulfill the law by walking in love and the Spirit. He had not yet
written to the Philippians about how Jesus left heaven to become man and
having suffered death for us all, was given the name above all names.
All
those letters and all that massive revelation would come from his mouth
and pen over the next 20 years - but up to that point no one had those
revelations, there is no record of any teacher, until Paul.
The
things we take for granted had not yet been taught. Even Peter, in his
last letter, in his closing words* before his execution, acknowledged
that even then, some of what Paul taught was hard to understand. If
Peter said that at the end of his life, can you imagine the newness and
strangeness of Paul's teaching at the start? *II Peter 3:15-16
It
is no wonder during Paul's 1 year teaching at Antioch that such a
difference was made that we disciples in Jesus were first recognized as a
separate class of people - we are Christians.
Think
about those 10 years of no teachings, just people running around with
the Holy Spirit knowing nothing. If you lived through the 1970's
Charismatic renewal, you have a taste of what it was like - many who had
newly received the Holy Spirit needed to be locked up for awhile
because in their great zeal without knowledge, they did more damage than
they did good. For next week: What the Lord said about how those 10
years before Paul relate to the last 10 years in our time for the body
of Christ, and judgement.
Blessings,
John Fenn
www.cwowi.org and email me at cwowi@aol.com
New CD/MP3 Series
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This
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