This week, we have been looking at a section of letter
that is recorded for us in the New Testament of our Bibles called the book of
Acts. The book of Acts records how early followers of Jesus engaged in the
mission that they had been given by Jesus after He had been raised from the
dead and returned to Heaven.
Wednesday, we discovered that as part of God’s
community called the church, we are called to gather together corporately in
community with one another to experience and encounter God through the
preaching of His word, through the celebration of communion and through times
of group and corporate prayer. God grows, equips, and empowers His followers to
live on mission to be the vehicle that He uses to reveal His Son Jesus to the
world through preaching, communion, and prayer as we gather together in
community with one another as His followers. Today we see Luke reveal for us
several additional practices that these early followers of Jesus embraced in
community together as part of this new movement called the church in Acts
2:44-45:
And all
those who had believed were together and had all things in common; and they began selling their property and
possessions and were sharing them with all, as anyone might have need.
Luke continues by revealing for
us several timeless practices that these early followers of Jesus embraced as
they lived out their lives in community with one another. Luke states that these followers of Jesus were gathered
together in community and were selling their property and possession and were
sharing with them all as they had a need.
Now many people have taken this
passage and used it to promote communism or socialism. There is a significant
problem with that view, however. The problem with that view is that no one was
forcing people to redistribute their possessions and property. This was a voluntary action by these early
followers of Jesus that focused on meeting the pressing and practical needs of
those who were in need.
What Luke is revealing for us
here is that the church recognized the needs of the poor and marginalized in
their midst and took the necessary steps to minister to those needs. The early
church recognized that everything that they had was a gift from God and they
chose to respond to that gift by investing their time, talents, and treasure
towards meeting the needs of others and advancing God’s kingdom mission. These
early followers of Jesus responded to God’s generosity by reflecting that
generosity to others and became the vehicle that God used to reveal His
generosity to the world.
And in the same way, as
followers of Jesus living on mission requires investing
our time, our talents, and our treasure that God has so generously given us
into His kingdom mission by ministering to the needs of those around us. And
this investment is not simply to be focused inward toward other followers of
Jesus. We are to invest our time, talent, and treasure outward in a way that
engages and invests in the lives of those who are in the community, but not a
part of the community called the church.
That is why we invest in meeting practical needs of
our community through the Emergency Assistance Window. That is why we are so
passionate about our Saturday of service that we recently participated in as a
church. We are to be a “city in a city” that is loves and serves our city in
real and practical ways to meet pressing needs in a way that opens
opportunities to reveal a profound need for Christ as we reveal and reflect
Christ. Luke then gives us an additional glimpse into the life of this new
community called the church in Acts 2:46:
Day by day continuing with one mind in the
temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals
together with gladness and sincerity of heart, praising God and having favor
with all the people.
Here we
see Luke reveal for us the reality that these early followers of Jesus not only
to gathered together corporately once a week in a community that was marked by
genuine and authentic unity. These early followers of Jesus also scattered
throughout their community to experience community with one another. Notice
what Luke says in verse 46. The church was day by day continuing with one mind
in the temple and breaking bread from house to house.
The church is to gather and scatter. The
church is to gather for large corporate times and is also to scatter into
smaller groups within the community. And as these early followers of Jesus
scattered into their communities, they continued to connect with one another in
the areas of influence that they had throughout the community. These early
followers of Jesus were doing life together in community with one another.
In the
culture of Jesus day, as it often is today, having people over for a meal was a sign of connection and community with one another.
And as they scattered into smaller groups within the community of Jerusalem,
these smaller groups were marked with gladness and sincerity of heart. The word
gladness here refers to a sense of a fullness of joy. There was just an
overflowing sense of happiness and peace that was unmistakable.
And these scattered groups of early followers of Jesus
were also marked by a sincerity of heart. Now the word sincerity, in the
language that this letter was originally written in, literally means to have a
sense of simplicity and generosity. These scattered groups of early followers
of Jesus were characterized by transparency and generosity. There were no
fronts; there was no need to put on airs or a false impression. These were groups
of people who lived authentic and generous lives that invested in one another
and those around them.
This is
why we believe so strongly in community groups here at City Bible Church.
Community groups afford the opportunity for us as followers of Jesus to scatter
into the community and develop intentional environments where people can grow
in their relationship with God while developing encouraging relationships that
foster accountability and spiritual growth in the community. Community groups
bring us into the areas of influence that God has placed us that are outside
the four walls of the church. We are called by God to scatter into our
communities so that we can be in a position to invest and invite people to be a
part of what God is doing.
Luke
then explains that these early followers of Jesus were praising God. These
early followers of Jesus were responding to who God was, what He had done, and
what He had promised to do by worshipping the Lord. And in the same
way today, we are to respond to God’s transformational activity in our lives
through Jesus Christ by living in a way that, whether we are gathered together
corporately in community, or scattered into the community, is worthy of God as
an act of worship to God that is pleasing to God.
You see, worship, simply put, is a response. Worship is a response
that is focused on who God is, what God has done, and what God has promised to
do. Worship is not simply singing, reading your Bible and prayer, although it
can involve singing, Bible reading, and prayer. Worship is a lifestyle; worship
is a life that is lived in a way that is focused on and that responds to God’s
character and activity in the world.
But not
only were they praising God; Luke tells us that these early followers of Jesus
were having favor with all the people. The word favor here conveys the sense of
winning the respect of others. These early followers of Jesus were respected by
all the people; by believers and nonbelievers; by religious and irreligious; by
seekers and skeptics. Regardless of whether they bought into the claims of
Christ and the message of the gospel, this new movement called the church was
respected by all the people.
And the
respect that these early followers of Jesus had earned by being the good news
in the lives of those who were far from God resulted in the opportunity for
these early followers of Jesus to share the good news and be the vehicle that
God uses to reveal His Son Jesus and His message of rescue through the claims
of Christ and the message of the gospel so that they would have the opportunity
to experience forgiveness and the relationship with God that they were created
for. We see this reality revealed for us in verse 47:
And the Lord was adding to their number day
by day those who were being saved.
Luke records for us that the Lord was adding to
their number daily those who were being saved. As these early
followers of Jesus gathered together in community to hear the word of God, to
pray for one another and to proclaim the message of the gospel through the
celebration of communion; as these early followers of Jesus invested their
talents and treasure serving God by serving others in community with one
another; as these early followers of Jesus scattered throughout the community
into smaller groups that invested their time living life together in supportive
and encouraging relationships that fostered spiritual growth and
accountability, God’s transformational intervention and activity was impossible
to ignore.
Hearts were captured, lives were changed and transformed,
and the number of people who became followers of Jesus grew. And these early
followers of Jesus that became a part of this new movement called the church
lived on mission, they were being used by God to accomplish the mission that
they had been given.
And it is here that we see God
reveal for us a timeless truth when it comes to living on mission. And that
timeless truth is this: Living on mission requires that we invest in others as we live in community
with one another. In order to embrace and engage in the mission that we have
been given by God to be the vehicle that He uses to reveal and reflect Christ
to others, we must invest in community with one another. Just as the Lord used
the healthy community that existed amongst the early church to reveal and
reflect Jesus and advance His kingdom mission, the Lord uses healthy community
that is marked by unity to reveal and reflect Jesus to others and advance His
kingdom mission.
The early church experienced
explosive growth as a result of early followers of Jesus investing their time,
their talent, and their treasure in others in community with one another. Early
followers of Jesus invested their time in a community that gathered and
scattered in a way the revealed and reflected Christ. Early followers of Jesus
invested their talents serving God by serving others in ministry to others in a
way the revealed and reflected Christ. Early followers of Jesus invested their
treasure generously to meet the needs of others in a way the revealed and
reflected Christ.
And in the same way today, living
on mission requires our investment. When followers of
Jesus are investing their time in a regular worship gathering and a community
group that reveals and reflects genuine and authentic community; when followers
of Jesus are investing their talents serving God by serving others by being a
part of a ministry team in community with one another; and when followers of
Jesus are investing their treasure in order to help create environments where
people can explore and grow in their faith while experiencing community, we
create a healthy community that reveals and reflects the community that the
members of the Trinity have with one another as we live on mission.
So here is a question to consider: Are you living on
mission by investing in community with one another? Are you investing in
community by investing your time in a community group? Are you in community by
investing your talents serving in a ministry? Are you investing in community by
your treasure through regular and proportional giving?
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