Doubter or Disciple? What a disciple does.

Doubter or Disciple? What a disciple does.  •  Sermon  •  Submitted
0 ratings
· 9 views

The seven things a disciple does.

Notes
Transcript
Handout

Introduction

Would you like to see hundreds if not thousands added to the kingdom?
Life Application New Testament Commentary The Believers Meet Together / 2:43–47

Books about church planting, church health, and church growth are popular. Seminars about the church abound, with pastors and church boards eager to copy the techniques of a successful pastor or a fast-growing congregation. The following paragraph is a snapshot of the church a few days old. At Pentecost, after the coming of the Holy Spirit, the gathering of 120 exploded! In one day three thousand people came to faith in Christ. Now what do they do? This handful of verses provides a concise summary of what the early church was about; it provides a model that can be applied to the modern church, as well.

Acts 2:42–47 NIV
They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.
Acts 2:42-47
Why would it be any different for us today
Why would it be any diffeernet for ust
Holman New Testament Commentary: Acts F. Purpose of the Spirit’s Coming (vv. 42–47)

At various times in Acts, especially in the early chapters, Luke gives summary reports of how the church is doing. Here we have the first. In it our author describes what a biblical church really looks like, not only in the first century, but in every century from the Lord’s ascension until his second coming.

Is this model good enough for the church today?
Holman New Testament Commentary: Acts F. Purpose of the Spirit’s Coming (vv. 42–47)

At various times in Acts, especially in the early chapters, Luke gives summary reports of how the church is doing. Here we have the first. In it our author describes what a biblical church really looks like, not only in the first century, but in every century from the Lord’s ascension until his second coming.

Holman New Testament Commentary: Acts F. Purpose of the Spirit’s Coming (vv. 42–47)

Unity affords the greatest identifying mark of the people of God. That’s why Luke emphasizes, all the believers were together and had everything in common.

Kenneth O. Gangel, Acts, vol. 5, Holman New Testament Commentary (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1998), 31.

The seven things a disciple does.

Studies and is devoted to the Word of God (42)
This is a person who commits to learning God’s word and being obedient to what God teaches. He can learn from self-study, studying in a small group and learning in a corporate setting; what is important is the obedience to the word.
Fellowships and communes with God and fellow believers (42, 44, 46)
Eating meals together, sharing in the Lord’s table together, communing with one another and with God.
Life Application New Testament Commentary Peter Preaches to a Crowd / 2:14–42

fellowship (koinonia) means association and close relationships.

Life Application New Testament Commentary Peter Preaches to a Crowd / 2:14–42

The fellowship (koinonia) means association and close relationships. This was more than just getting together, certainly more than just a religious meeting. It involved sharing goods, having meals together, and praying together.

Prays (42)
This was staying faithful to the formal prayers hours at the Temple but more so coming together in prayer in a small group setting as well as individual prayer time.
Uses their spiritual gifts to perform signs and wonders (43)
Every person that God has sealed with His Holy Spirit is given spiritual gifts to be exercised for His glory and the building of His kingdom.
Has all things in common, help each other and those in need (44 ,45)
Having things in common or sharing is hard to do. It easier to give away then to share as giving away releases ownership where sharing involves fellowship and commitment to one another.
Life Application New Testament Commentary The Believers Meet Together / 2:43–47

2:44–45 Of the thousands of Jews who had made the pilgrimage to Jerusalem for Pentecost, many may have come as early as Passover (fifty days earlier). Now they were extending their stay in Jerusalem even longer to learn the basics of this newfound Christian faith. Many would likely need financial or physical help from those who lived in Jerusalem to be able to remain this long. When a need arose, believers would sell their possessions to help those in need. This practice of sharing everything they had was likely a response to that specific need.

Worships God at both the Temple (church) and at home (small groups/house church) (46, 47)
We should never forsake assembling together () but not just in Church on Sunday. We should be working God and the many ways described to us in scripture
Grows and multiplies
In Christ (all verses)
Being conformed into the image of Christ as we grow in spiritual formation.
In unity and fellowship
Growing in relationship especially with the people you go to church with.
In multiplying himself/herself
Going back to the command God gave in “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it”

The Four Core Practices

Devotion to the whole council of the Word of God
Fellowship (association, communion, and close relationships)
The breaking of bread (sharing a meal with Christ in the Lord’s Supper)
John B. Polhill, Acts, vol. 26, The New American Commentary (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1992), 119.
Prayer (in unity of purpose)

The Two Significant Results

Favor in the community
A multiplication movement
Life Application New Testament Commentary The Believers Meet Together / 2:43–47

Two final statements reveal two significant results of the presence of this regularly meeting, money-sharing, miracle-working, Bible-studying, God-praising group:

1. The watching community was favorably impressed (the believers were enjoying the goodwill of all the people).

2. The watching community was coming to faith (and each day the Lord added to their group those who were being saved).

These are two measurable results of any church that is living like the early church. Note, too, that the credit for the salvation of souls is not given to Peter’s preaching, the apostles’ miracles, or the Spirit’s manifestations—it was the Lord who was adding to their number daily.

Life Application New Testament Commentary The Believers Meet Together / 2:43–47

Two

Holman New Testament Commentary: Acts F. Purpose of the Spirit’s Coming (vv. 42–47)

What happens to believers who worship, work, and witness for their Lord? The Lord grows the church. Let’s not miss the order—first godly relationships with each other, then growth.

Conclusion and Challenge

As individuals we must be practicing the seven things a disciple does and as a church we must be about the four core practices if we want to be affective in building God’s kingdom. There are two results that will come from our obedience to God’s word; a community that notices and a harvest for God’s kingdom. God does not need us but He wants us to join with Him in the work that He is accomplishing so that all mankind might be saved and none would perish. If this is where you are then sign-up and join us as we embark into the training on discipleship.
Related Media
See more
Related Sermons
See more