A Gospel for All the Nations. Acts 10:1-48. Introduction: 1) In the book, What In The World Is God Doing?, Allen Fleece

Similar documents
October 1, 2017 AM Passage-Acts 10; PM-No Worship Acts 10 NIV

PETER AT CORNELIUS HOUSE Acts 10:1-11:18

ACTS CHAPTER 10 CROSSING THE BIGOT LINE

A Study of the Book of Acts Sermon # 20. A Vision that Changed the World Acts 10:1-33

Overview CORNELIUS WAS A ROMAN CENTURION

Acts Chapter 10. Act 10:1 Now there was a man at Caesarea named Cornelius, a centurion of what was called the

Sermons in Acts: No Partiality

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Peter are you ready for what is next. Peter is not ready for what is next and God is going to have to make him ready for his next ministry adventure.

Acts 10:1-48 Cornelius calls for Peter Gentiles receive the Holy Spirit Cornelius a Righteous Gentile. Peter Vision of the Sheet of Creatures

Week 16, Acts 10:1 48 Hook

Acts 10, Cornelius Jerry Arnold

God is No Respecter of Persons!

The Conversion of Peter, Part I

THE EXTRAORDINARY CASE OF CORNELIUS

The Gentiles Receive the Gospel

Acts 10 Acts 10 Tape #8099 Pastor Chuck Smith

WEEK OF PRAYER AND FASTING- DEVOTIONAL

Do You Hear What I Heard? Scripture Text: Romans 10:14 17

(Romans 2:1-11) A. Every generation past and present has had its share of false teachers. Jesus said:

Guidelines for a Rooftop Experience in your Community

The Acts of the Apostles

"REASONS TO REJOICE" "Your Words were found and I ate them, and Your Word was to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart." Jeremiah 15:16 RIDING THROUGH

Jesus told his followers that they were to make disciples of all the nations. The Christians were still only a new and marginal faction within

The Book of Acts LESSON TEN. Acts 10:1-47*

International Sunday School Lesson Study Notes October 25, Lesson Text: Acts 11:1-18 Lesson Title: Trusting the Spirit.

God Loves Mankind. When a Jew, any Jew, became a Christian, much less a priest, there was a certain amount of religious baggage that came with them.

The sermon this morning is a continuation of a summer sermon series entitled, The Hope of Heaven. Last week we considered a parable of Jesus which

Cornelius and Peter Acts 10

Pastor Search Prayer Guide

CAPITAL BIBLE CHURCH June 28, A.D. the Series. The First Roman Pygmy. Acts 10

Session 1: Introducing Israel and the Great Commission

WHY YOU SHOULD GO TO THE MISSION FIELD

Grace Bible Church of Auburn, Ca.

THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST

Knowing Jesus - Philippians 3:1-11 February 26, 2017

Book of Acts Chapter 10. Theme: Conversion of Cornelius

The Church of the Servant King

Vision, Mission and Values

Peters Vision of the Sheet with UNCLEAN Creatures on it.

Peter Speaks Up for God s Gift!

The Holy Spirit Comes to Cornelius. Acts 10 by Patty Friesen (July 8/18)

The Way to Love 1 John 5:1-12 SS Lesson for 03/25/2007

19. WHAT ARE RIGHT AND WRONG KINDS OF RIGHTEOUSNESS?

Introduction. The Challenge Of Breaking New Ground.

The second detail that would have been a heads up to any Jew 1

Adult Sunday School Lesson Summary for March 6, 2011 Released on Wednesday, March 2, Instructions About Worship

Matthew: The King Has Come. General Introduction. Author: Matthew; undisputed in early church tradition

THEN JESUS SAID TO HIS DISCIPLES

90 Day Challenge II: The Acts of the Holy Spirit By the Spirit We Are Diverse Acts 10

DEFINING MISSIONARY Romans 15:14-24

Sermon : Paul A Saved Instrument Page 1

Jesus Crucifixion Lesson 1.20

Lessons From CORNELIUS

Acts Chapter 10 Part 2 Peters Dream Of The Sheet Full Of Animals

The Vindication of Jesus Acts 2:22-36

THE BOOK OF ACTS: LESSONS FOR CHURCH PLANTING

Sermon Transcript November 1, 2015

The Gentiles Receive the Gospel

Peter And Cornelius Acts 10:1-8, 24-48

Transcending Barriers

The Old Paths Monthly

James 4:7-10 Submit, Resist, Draw Near, Cleanse, Lament, and Humble Yourselves

Advancing. In Power. Warren W. Wiersbe, The Bible Exposition Commentary, vol. 1 (Wheaton, IL: Victor Books, 1996),

Jesus Will Demonstrate What Matters Most

WHAT IS THE GREAT COMMISSION?

Our Father s Indescribable Gift of Love Notes by Franklin

CHRISTIANITY WITHOUT THE RELIGION BIBLE SURVEY. The Un-devotional. ACTS Week 2

TEACHER NOTECARDS LEVEL 4, QUARTER B POWERFUL MESSENGERS

The Gift of the Holy Spirit

The Good News to the Gentiles a 7 scene drama. 1 Scene s. v1-8 Cornelius s Vision Cornelius a gentile, a Roman army officer commanding 100 men

40 AD HOLY SPIRIT DESCENDS ON HOUSE OF CORNELIUS

Peter and Cornelius. Bible Text: Acts 10:1 48,11:1 The story of Peter and Cornelius and the Holy Spirit coming on the Gentile believers in Caesarea

Shall We Continue In Sin?

BIBLE READING PLAN: 40 DAYS WITH JESUS

The Holy See APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION FOR THE FAITHFUL OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF NEWARK

On Mission with God Acts 10:1-48

FALL SEMINAR 1955 Examination

Sermon : Living in Repentance Page 1

TRANSFORMATION. Step-Up Bible Study - Lesson 1. I. God's Transforming Plan. 1. Romans 8: Romans 12:2. II. God's Transforming Tool

Go and Make Disciples of All Nations

Do All Roads Lead to God? The Christian Attitude Toward Non-Christian Religions

from the dead. 122 Peter comes and does as they ask, resulting in the conversion of many of the people who live in the area.

Jesus Is Authority and Judge John 5:19-29 SS Lesson for 01/14/2007

The Souls of Hell s Eternity

I. The Call of Great Commission Cooperation

Peter and Cornelius Acts 10:1-11:18

God wants righteous people.

Gentiles in the Church?

The Holy Spirit Arrives

Acts 11:1-18 (NIV) 1 The apostles and the believers throughout Judea heard that the Gentiles also had received

Philippians 2: (Revised ) Stanly Community Church

The Ultimate Use of the Tongue

Biblical Basis for Missions

Who Do You Say that I Am? Pastor Jonathan Scheffrahn

Who we are here. Introduction. Recommended Process. What is this tool?

Love Your Enemies. Series on Prayer & Holiness

Survey of Romans & Introduction to Biblical Interpretation

by Brett Hickey In addition, the prophets indicated a day when the chosen people would include Gentiles. #811 Conversion of Cornelius Part 1

Elpis Israel. for Young People. The Judgment. Class 36

Transcription:

1 A Gospel for All the Nations Acts 10:1-48 Introduction: 1) In the book, What In The World Is God Doing?, Allen Fleece says, This is the decision we do not make, because it has already been made. Whether we spend our lives for the purpose of reaching all men with the gospel is not optional. Christ has commanded every Christian to do just this. Now there are many different ways of accomplishing this one purpose but regardless of the particular work God has for each of us to do, the one aim of us all in doing our particular job for the Lord must be the evangelization of the whole world. (Quoted in Expect Great Things, 22). 2) Allen Fleece is right. We have been commissioned and commanded by a Heavenly King to evangelize the whole world. Every single person of the 7.2 billion people on planet earth is to be the object of our evangelizing passion. Every single person of the 11, 168 people groups in the world is to be the focus of our mission strategies. Every single person of the 6, 544 unreached people groups, a population of 4.83 billion, is to be the assignment of our 44,000 plus churches. And, every single person of the 2, 982 unengaged people groups (no gospel presence at all) must not be left out of our pleas to the Father to send forth laborers into his harvest (Matt. 9:37-38).

2 3) The gospel of Jesus Christ is a gospel for all the nations. It is for all peoples! Acts 10 makes this perfectly clear. Here God gets directly involved to overcome the bigotry, prejudice and spiritual near-sightedness of the apostle Peter, the one He, as Matthew 16:19 says, gave the keys of the kingdom. The big fisherman was not using the keys as Christ intended. Our Lord gets personally involved and in the process, provides a pattern of world missions for every one of us, our churches, our Convention. This is a rich text theologically, missiologically, personally. May our Lord give us ears to hear. I. Those who seek the Lord will be found by Him 10:1-8 Proverbs 8:17, I love those who love me, and those who seek me diligently find me. Jeremiah 29:13, You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart. The importance of this event is indicated by the amount of material Luke dedicates to telling it (10:1-11:18). Actually he tells the story twice. Record of the gospel going to the Gentiles: the nations! Sea coast town of Casarea we meet a Roman soldier, a modern army captain, who commanded probably 100 men (Hughes, 300-600; p. 144). He is described as 1) devout, 2) one who feared God, 3) a generous giver and 4) a man who prayed (v. 2).

3 Main point: he was a Gentile. He was one among the nations. Jews saw them as inferior, unclean, unworthy of table fellowship, even entering their houses. Curtis Vaughn says the chasm between Jew and Gentile was worse than the Hindu caste system and the racial divide in our nation (p. 67). And yet God, looking on the heart (this is where our God is color blind), sees a soul in search of salvation and provides a vision (v. 3-6) telling him how he may find that salvation. Note: his obedience was immediate (v. 7-8). He was ready to hear the gospel! Cornelius represents, is an example, of unsaved people among unreached peoples who are seeking the truth, who want to know the One true God. They are everywhere among the nations and Luke tells us God sees their heart and honors their search. Indeed he will go to extraordinary lengths to get the gospel to them. Respond to the revelation you have and God will give you more. Cornelius was a good man, but he was still a lost man! That is why God moved Peter to take him and his family the gospel. Indeed he could not be saved without the gospel. But hear the promise of Lamentations 3:25, The Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the soul who seeks Him. Those who want to know the Lord, living up to the light they have in creation

4 (Rom. 1) and conscience (Rom. 2), God promises to give them more light. He will find them and get the gospel to them. II. God will raise up missionaries to get the gospel to those who seek Him 10:9-23 The greatest hindrance to the advance of the gospel worldwide is the failure of the lives of God s people (Stott, EGT, 27). People who focus on and have a passion for the Great Commission are seldom troublemakers, ethnocentric, self-centered, focusing on little things that are silly things and sometimes even sinful things. This was a lesson the Lord had to teach the apostle Peter directly. Like Cornelius, God comes to Peter in a vision as he was praying around noon time, also lunch time (vs. 9-10). The vision included a command (v. 13) to eat the unclean animals one would find in Leviticus 11. Peter is horrified by what is now a daytime nightmare and vehemently protests, By no means, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclear (v. 14). Resisting the Lord s commands was something familiar to Peter (Matt. 16:22; John 13:8). So was a 3-fold lesson (His denial/ Do you love Me? )! John Piper captures well the essence of this heated dialogue when he says, God gave Peter a vision of animals that the Jews regarded as unclean

5 because of the ceremonial law of the Old Testament. The voice from heaven said, Rise and eat. But Peter protested that they were unclean. And the voice came back with these decisive words in verse 15: What God has cleansed [made clean, ESV] you must not call common! In other words, with the coming of Jesus into the world and with the final cleansing sacrifice of Christ now offered and with the command to take the gospel to all ethnic groups in the world now given, the old ceremonial laws about foods are lifted and that barrier to the Gentile world is removed. And so Peter s vision has two points: the food laws are fulfilled and ended in Jesus (Mark 7:19), and the people they kept you separate from (the nations, the Gentiles) are not to be considered unclean or common. ( What God has cleansed do not call common, 10-21-91). The vision inwardly perplexed (v. 17) Peter. He still wasn t clear what God was saying. The Spirit follows up (something we all often need) in vs. 19-20 with a 3-fold command [Read]. Peter is beginning to get it as vs. 21-23 make clear [Read]. A missionary heart is being birthed! He even invites them in! Platt, What happens here is God, starting with Peter, begins to bring about a conversion from deep-seated prejudice to divinely-ordained openness the

6 heart begins to change here. [God says], You need to be open to what I am doing among the people groups, among the nations around you. And note: Peter was in Joppa (9:43). Might God have, used the story of Jonah too! Running from God seldom works out well! III. God seeks the salvation of all nations without partiality 10:23-35 When Jesus arose from the grave, He created a whole new race of people not defined by color but defined by His blood. Pastor Derwin Gray. Tony Merida: We judge by appearance. We discriminate on these factors: 1) appearance, 2) ancestry, 3) age, 4) achievement, 5) affluence ( Grace For Every Race: Joining God s Global Purpose ). Peter obeys the Lord s command (v. 20) and makes the 30 mile journey from Joppa to Caesarea (vs. 23-24). Upon meeting Cornelius, Peter exhibits both appropriate humility (vs. 25-26) and brutal honesty (vs. 27-29). He is just a man like any man. And is a sinful man that needed God to straighten him out. Cornelius recounts the events that led them to this point (vs. 30-33). Peter then opened his mouth (v. 34) and makes one of the most important statements in all of the Bible: Truly I understand that God shows no partiality. HCSB: Now I really understand God doesn t show favoritism.

7 AMP: Most certainly and thoroughly I now perceive that God shows no partiality and is no respecter of persons. Eugene Petersen in The Message captures well the massive significance and theological import of what Peter says and now understands: Peter fairly exploded with his good news: It s God s own truth, nothing could be plainer: God plays no favorites! It makes no difference who you are or where you re from if you want God and are ready to do as he says, the door is open. Our God is no respecter of persons when it comes to seeking the salvation of human beings made in His likeness and image. Racial barriers come crashing down. Ethnic barriers come crashing down. Cultural barriers come crashing down. Social barriers come crashing down. Economic barriers come crashing down. All barriers come crashing down. Anyone who says otherwise calls God a liar! God s salvation plan has a laser-beam pointed at all peoples anywhere and everywhere. The question: whose voice are you listening to?

8 Had I cared for the comments [and opinions] of people, I should never have been a missionary. C.T. Studd IV. The good news of the gospel is the only means whereby God saves anyone 10:36-43 The gospel is good. You know it s good. We know it s good. It s a divine message, but it requires a human messenger we are God s instruments to do this. Our responsibility is urgent. His power is available to us. When we speak this Word, He will bless it. He will bless it to lead people to Christ. His power is available to His people, and His plan is aimed at all peoples (Platt, The God Who Holds The World In His Hands, 2-6-11). Peter refused to be treated as a god or to treat the nations as unworthy dogs! He has been called by God to be a gospel heralding missionary and that is exactly what he does in vs. 36-43. Peter s sermon actually begins in verse 34. God shows no favoritism (v. 34). Those who fear Him and pursue Him will be found by Him and given the gospel (v. 35) a gospel first given to the Jews but now sent to the nations because he is Lord of all (v. 36). All nations are under His lordship. Peter presents the gospel in 3 movements: 1) The life and ministry of Jesus (vs. 37-39). 2) His saving act of crucifixion and resurrection (vs. 39-41).

9 3) The promise of salvation to all ( everyone ) who believes (vs. 42-43). The exclusivity of the gospel message is affirmed (John 14:6; Acts 4:12; 1 Tim. 2:5). The universality of the gospel offer is affirmed ( everyone how believes). The missionary imperative of the gospel mandate is affirmed (v. 42). Carl F.H. Henry, The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time. John Piper, We will be worshiping and praising God for eternity, but we have only a limited time upon earth to engage in missions so that the nations would rejoice and sing for joy. V. God gives the Holy Spirit to all who respond to the word of His gospel 10:44-48 The Spirit is sent to make Christ real to people and to show us who He really is in His glory so that we come to love Him and trust Him and obey Him and show Him to the world.the Spirit loves to come and take the truth about Jesus and turn it into an experience of Jesus (John Piper, Exalting Jesus so the Spirit Falls, 11-17-91). Verses 44-48 record the happy results of Peter taking the gospel to the nations. As Peter preached the Holy Spirit fell on all who heard the word (Word & Spirit). (v. 44).

10 The Jews were amazed that God would save Gentiles (v. 45). There was still heart work that needed to be done as 11:1-18 makes clear. Their speaking in tongues and praising God was an undeniable evidence that a Gentile Pentecost was taking place (v. 46). [cf. Acts 2]. The falling of the Spirit on Gentile believers mandated their inclusion into the community of faith, the church, the family of God, by the initiatory rate and celebration of baptism (vs. 47-48). The Lord had baptized them by His Spirit into His family. Peter would then baptize them with water into the visible fellowship. Barriers of race, ethnicity and nationality have come crashing down thru the power of the cross. The church would never be the same. Afterall, sameness was never God s goal to begin with! Conclusion: We have an indiscriminate, all-inclusive gospel to proclaim to the nations near and far. Our God has placed no limitations on those He longs to save, bring to Himself, and glorify His Son. John Stott says it so very well, If God desires every knee to bow to Jesus and every tongue to confess him, so should we. We should be jealous (as Scripture sometimes puts it) for the honour of his name troubled when it remains unknown, hurt when it is ignored, indignant when it is blasphemed, and all the time anxious and determined that it shall be given the honour and glory which are due to it. The highest of all missionary motives is neither obedience to the Great Commission (important as that is), nor love for

11 sinners who are alienated and perishing (strong as that incentive is, especially when we contemplate the wrath of God), but rather zeal-burning and passionate zeal-for the glory of Jesus Christ. Before this supreme goal of the Christian mission, all unworthy motives wither and die. (Quoted in EGT, 184).