Acts
If you liked the story of Jesus, you’ll love the sequel. The author of Luke’s gospel continues his account to show what happened after Jesus’ physical presence was swapped for an outpouring of his Spirit. This changes everything, including the minds of believers, and empowers the church to be Jesus’ body across the earth.
Is this the story of a perfect church? You’ll have to read it to see. There are certainly lots of things we can learn from how this church lived. But we will also see the roots of some long-standing disagreements, the constant challenge of change, and how the people who followed Jesus the most closely kept encountering stretches and surprises.
So if we are looking for a picture of how faith-filled life should look today, this might not give us all the answers, but it is a great starting point for a life-changing journey God wants for us.
Introduction
Our Boxset Binge the Bible podcast
Covering Luke’s gospel and Acts of the Apostles together.
Our notes on this book
Written in 2020
Our talks on Acts
How far would this revolution go? Owen Lynch looks at the way scattered believers in the early days of the church encountered new believers who looked like they would not fit in. While the law, as people understood it, seemed to put them on the margins or outside the boundaries of acceptability, an African eunuch had not only found status in a royal household, but also found scripture which pointed them to Jesus. Why was their baptism so remarkable? How could it revolutionise religious people’s understanding - and ours - of the Kingdom of God?
Do we get that there’s a massive movement building? Owen Lynch looks at the growing expectation among Jesus’ followers early in the book of Acts that their world would change. Believers were living in revolutionary ways which changed how they saw and handled possessions, hoped and worked for equality, and fought and dealt with corruption.
There began to be deadly consequences, both for a couple whose corruption undermined the integrity of the movement, and for man inspired by God to share the movement’s story as part of the history of Israel.
These stories might be familiar to us, but we might have read wrongly or applied them unhelpfully if we haven’t understood their context. What can we do to understand and learn from them better today?
What if you expected a power struggle in your life? Owen Lynch looks at Jesus’ followers soon after his resurrection and ascension to heaven, and the giving of his Holy Spirit, which came with power. Peter and the other disciples expected a new Kingdom to come which would challenge the ruling authorities, political and religious. These authorities would not react well. But what did each party want and believe, and how would they handle their conflicts?
How did Jesus give his followers power after he went up to heaven, and what was this for? Owen Lynch looks at what happened at Pentecost, a Jewish celebration of the founding of their nation, and how Jews who had grown up in many different cultures heard Jesus’ disciples in their own languages. A community of hope was gathering around one story which was including and uniting a diversity of people without destroying their origins, and it had the signatures of God at work among them. What would it do?
What would you want and expect if you were promised power? Owen Lynch looks at the situation of Jesus’ first followers and the ways they were desperate for their country to be run differently and better. When Jesus overcame execution by the authorities, rose from death and promised the arrival of the Kingdom of God, what did the people closest to him expect? What would their promised power look like, and what they want to do with it? And for us, what are wanting, expecting and hoping to see God do in our lifetimes?
After a life-changing encounter with God, what do we do? Rebecca Kishtainy looks at what Jesus’ followers did after receiving the Holy Spirit at Pentecost and shares her own experiences of God knowing her “no”s and leading her forwards anyway. How can we get to know God better over time, and how can that help us to know what he wants to do with us, together and individually, especially when we aren’t feeling holy?