When you think about it in that context, teachers we have
had may come to mind. Or perhaps
preachers or evangelists who have impacted us in a profound way and helped
steer our journey. But in this light the
role of our parents is even more important for they must guide us every day. The role of our spouse becomes even more
important for they must encourage us every day and they see us more closely
than others do. And lastly the role we
play as parents to our own children cannot be overstated, for what parts of the
gospel we live out in front of them, become the lamp posts they remember as
they confront their own lives. But in
all of this there are choices we make, choices who we befriend, and what that
friendship will mean to us and to those we choose to be kind to. Sometimes in that group a best friend
arises. Someone who just seems to be
closer to us. Someone who just seems to
“get us” better than other folks do. And
while our friendships may form around many things, a friendship that forms
around trying to point each back to God, is perhaps the most meaningful of all.
In that context, I ask you to remember Theophilus. Theophilus was not my friend directly, but I
benefit from the friendship he formed with Doctor Luke of the New Testament
Biblical age. While Theophilus was never
famous, the churches he founded may never have carried his name. Theophilus was a believer, perhaps an infant
in the faith. Asking all the questions a
young child asks as he discovers life.
Why this, and why that. And
because of the beauty of faith and friendships, Doctor Luke set about to pen
two letters to his dear friend to answer those questions, to explain what we
believe and why we believe it. We know
those letters as the Gospel of Luke, and the book the Acts of the
Apostles. Luke writes to his beloved
friend the entire story, or at least the entire story as he knows it. Told by the witnesses who lived it. Relayed by those who spoke directly with
Jesus, and who felt the grip of the Holy Spirit in their lives.
For then and now the Holy Spirit is as real as the breath we
take. And we invite the Holy Spirit to
inhabit our minds, our hearts, and our bodies He answers with the gifts He
deems are the ones we need at the times we need them. Each of us different. Each part of the body of Christ fulfilling
its mission in order to benefit the whole.
But while each of us remains unique, the common mission we hold, is the
friendship we shower on those we choose.
In that we find the giving more meaningful than the taking. We find the encouraging we spend on each
other the substance of memories we cling to over time. We find the kindness we share the stuff of
legends. But in how we aid the
discipleship of others we leave our legacy upon the world, and in the next
one. That is the Holy Spirit’s highest
gift to us, His greatest offering, as to make us partners in the cause of God,
in the redemption of others. We are not
Saviors, only Jesus will ever be that.
But a word of encouragement can be the vehicle in which the tangible
love of God is shown to ones most in need of it, at times most critical in
their own journey, if not in ours.
We sometimes think of mission as something between one
person and many. The believer reaching
out to thousands or hundreds in need. Indeed,
that is mission. But mission is also the
one person reaching out to the other, a one-to-one relationship. Think of it this way, the person who knows
you, who you believe truly cares about you, you have more reason to trust that
person, to ask for help when you need it.
More importantly to accept help when it is offered. One-to-one relationships offer context. Luke writes to Theophilus with more than just
a casual knowledge of what his friend needs.
Luke has obviously taken an interest in him. He knows him.
We could know others better in a spiritual context if we chose to make
that aspect the more important one of our relationships. If we chose to make mission a thing of one to
one, perhaps with our spouse, or our children, or our parents, mission might
take on new meaning and new importance.
Do we have the courage to think this way? Perhaps in so doing the entire world benefits
from someone so personal as we collectively do from Luke and Theophilus.
In Acts chapter one and verse 1 it begins ...”The former
treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and
teach, [verse 2] Until the day in which he was taken up, after that he
through the Holy Ghost had given commandments unto the apostles whom he had
chosen: [verse 3] To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by
many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the
things pertaining to the kingdom of God:” Luke here talks about the contents of his
first letter, which we know as the Gospel of Luke. It is the story of Jesus while He was
here. It lasts all the way to after His
resurrection for the 40 days He spent appearing and visiting with His disciples
and followers. This was the time when
the Gospel was being sealed and finalized for the first evangelical ministry. Being certain of the living Jesus, was
something needed and received in those 40 days.
It was after that the power of the Holy Spirit would fall upon those
early believers. Jesus Himself had
predicted this and said it would be good for the believers because the Holy
Spirit would not be bound to a single person or region or place. The Holy Spirit could be in many places at
once, and in many different people at once.
Even without any more of the story, these few verses should
have been enough to stoke the fire of belief in Theophilus and in each of us. You will note there has never been a time
limit of the Holy Spirit. No end of Him
proscribed until the very end of time when He will stop striving with
mankind. But what the Holy Spirit did in
the days of Luke and Theophilus He could very well do in our days, and in our
lives and hearts. Luke and Theo would
have been looking for Him, are we? Or do
we read the pages and stories of the Bible as some sort of history lesson,
never to be repeated in our days, or our lives.
We know better than to believe “we” have the power of anything beyond
what normal men do. But do we lack the
Holy Spirit because we do not look for Him, or perhaps because we crave credit
for every good thing we do so much, that we might take credit for His power and
goodness reflected through our lives?
Luke continues in verse 4 saying … “And, being assembled together with
them, commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for
the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have heard of me. [verse 5] For John truly
baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days
hence.” Luke reminds us that
Jesus told of the coming of the Holy Spirit.
Again, in our day it is not about us gathering together in Jerusalem,
for the Holy Spirit is already here. But
it might well be about the gathering together in “unity” that we lack. Each of us thinks we hold to some unique part
of the gospel that no other one can see.
And instead of producing a blending outcome like that of a choir in
perfect unison of different voices and parts, we wait to sing a solo so that
every other one can appreciate the truth and beauty of what we alone have
discovered. But the beauty of the
choir’s anthem does not require that every member think and be alike, only that
every member is willing to sing and blend his own voice with that of his
neighbor.
And I do not believe the Holy Spirit will fall on only one
denomination signifying it alone has the composite of all truth. But instead, the Holy Spirit will fall on the
willing, the willing to be led, the willing to be taught. We are not meant to teach Him, or to affirm
what we already believe by His presence.
We are meant to learn from Him, and to begin to see truth our limited
minds have been to blind to see, before the Holy Spirit became a part of our
learning process and leader of it. And
we are not to obsess over when the final return of Jesus will be. We should obsess instead over being
transformed and living lives like we were already a part of the kingdom of
heaven, under its rules and freedom, and under its leader Jesus Christ. Heaven without transformation, would be to us
Lucifer repeated. Salvation then is not
something that can only happen at the end of all things, Salvation can happen
right here and right now, to be saved from … us. I need to be saved from me, from the “me”
that I am now. I need to be the version
of “me” that Jesus intends for me to be.
His version, not mine, not my ideas, but His.
Luke continues in verse 6 saying … “When they therefore were come
together, they asked of him, saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again
the kingdom to Israel? [verse 7] And he said unto them, It is not for you to know
the times or the seasons, which the Father hath put in his own power. [verse
8] But ye
shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall
be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto
the uttermost part of the earth.”
Even to the end, the disciples were still looking to find out when
Israel would be restored to the glory described about heaven. Jesus redirects them to not obsess about
“when” and instead focus on the Holy Spirit and taking the gospel to uttermost
ends of the earth. You will note the
Holy Spirit is not deterred by the presence of unbelievers. It is not the pagans that sends the Holy
Spirit away. It is believers who think
they don’t need Him. It is believers who
think they already know all the truth there is to know. It is believers who do not wish to be led by
anyone of anything, only by the dictates of their own minds and hearts. The American Dream reinforces all these
ideals. Work hard and earn your way to the
top. Whereas Christianity teaches, Jesus
Himself teaches, “wait” and receive the Holy Spirit first, and then be led,
don’t try to do the leading.
We are to be dependent upon God, and humble in our minds and
hearts. We are to be servants of all,
not because we are compelled to, but because it has become our highest desire
our highest ideal. The only “when”
important in that goal is how quickly we will let Him transform us into that
kind of creation. As for me and my
house, the quicker the better.
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