Title: Acts, Chapter 2
1Lesson 6
2The Baptism of the Spirit (vs. 1-4) 1
- The Day of Pentecost.
- Pente- (50) followed the feast of Passover by
50 days - Also called Feast of Weeks (Deut. 1610) (7
weeks following Passover) - Also called Feast of Harvest (Wheat harvest)
(Exo. 2316) - Also called the Feast of the Firstfruits (Lev.
2317)
3The Baptism of the Spirit (vs. 1-4) 2
- The Day of Pentecost.
- One of three feast days (Passover, Tabernacles)
the Jews were required to observe by traveling to
Jerusalem. - Day of Pentecost always falls on a Sunday, 7
weeks following the Passover Sabbath (Lev.
231-16, esp. 15) - The Day of Pentecost was a feast of Thanksgiving
for the harvest.
4The Baptism of the Spirit (vs. 1-4) 3
- The Manifestation of the Spirit.
- The Gift of the Holy Spirit was given to the 12
apostles - Context demands it the pronoun they (in accord
with English and Greek grammar) has as its
antecedent the nearest proper noun (apostles in
vs. 26, not the 120 in vs. 15) - See also Mark 1614-20 (the eleven)
5The Baptism of the Spirit (vs. 1-4) 4
- The Manifestation of the Spirit.
- The Sound from heaven (Like a wind) AUDIBLE
- The cloven tongues (Like fire) VISIBLE
- The tongues (languages) were unlearned and a
miraculous gift given by the Holy Spirit
6The Audience (vs. 5-13) 1
- The makeup of the audience.
- Were drawn by the sound from heaven
- Were confused by the ability of Galileans to
speak in tongues they had not learned - Were devout (careful to obey)
- Came from nations conquered by Romans (and even
from a few outside of the Roman sphere).
7The Audience (vs. 5-13) 2
- The explanation of the tongues.
- Though greek was a common language, each had
their own languages (ex Aramaic in Judea) - Scoffers attributed the tongues to drunkenness
(note it is self-evident that this explanation
is false). - Drunkenness can not explain coherent discourse in
an unlearned language
8Peters Message (vs. 14-36) 1
- Joels Prophecy (14-21)
- Peter first dismisses the claim of drunkenness
- Joels prophecy (228-32) is fulfilled with the
establishment of the kingdom - Christian age is the Last days
- No reason to limit Joels prophecy to this single
day, it is only the beginning of the last days
9Peters Message (vs. 14-36) 2
- Joels Prophecy (14-21)
- all flesh would seem to reference not only
Jews, but Gentiles (cf. Acts 10, the Household of
Cornelius) - Parts of the prophecy would seem to indicate the
end of the last days (vs. 19-20) - Calling on the name of the Lord Peter describes
how this is to be done in verse 38 of the text. - Shall be saved (Salvation from sin)
10Peters Message (vs. 14-36) 3
- The Testimony of David (22-31)
- First, Peter contends that the Jews were aware
(you know) of Gods testimony concerning His
Son Jesus - Jesus death was by design (23-24)
- Psalm 168-11 is quoted as a Messianic prophecy
of David - Peter attributes the words to a reference to the
resurrection of Jesus
11Peters Message (vs. 14-36) 4
- Eyewitness Testimony (32)
- Peter and the apostles were eyewitnesses to the
Lords resurrection (cf. 122 1 Cor. 151-11) - Ramifications (33-36)
- Verse 33 is a clear indication that Jesus is
presently reigning in His kingdom - The resurrection proves Jesus as Lord and Christ
12Response to the Message (vs. 37-41) 1
- The Jews Question (37)
- cut to pierce thoroughly. i.e. to agitate
violently - The Jews were stricken in conscience regarding
their guilt in crucifying Jesus - What shall we do? (Question motivated by guilt
in response to the part they played in the
crucifixion). - What to do to avoid Gods wrath (a question
indicating the desire for salvation).
13Response to the Message (vs. 37-41) 2
- Peters Answer (38)
- Told to DO two things 1) Repent to change
ones mind or purpose (Vines) 2) Be baptized in
the name of Christ immersion in water.
immersion, submersion and emergence (Vines) - Purpose of actions for the remission of sins.
In effect, forgiveness of sins is contingent
upon repentance baptism.
14Response to the Message (vs. 37-41) 3
- The Gift of the Holy Spirit (38)
- Greek ambiguous Either, 1) Holy Spirit as a
gift or, 2) A gift given by the Holy Spirit. - Many believe the reference is to Salvation itself
as a gift of the Spirit - If Spirit as a gift, does not require either
personal indwelling (rather a relationship, cf.
Col. 127 Gal. 124 1 Jn. 416 ) or miraculous
gifts (these given by the laying on of the
apostles hands, cf. Acts 814-17).
15Response to the Message (vs. 37-41) 3
- To Whom the Promise Pertains (39)
- Promise the remission of sins/ the gift of
the Holy Spirit - All in the last days until such time as Jesus
comes again, including the Gentiles those afar
off (cf. Acts 10 Eph. 213-17) - God calls through the gospel (cf. 2 Thess. 214
Rom. 1013-14)
16Response to the Message (vs. 37-41) 4
- 3000 Souls Saved (40-41)
- Verse 40 indicates that the preaching continued
- 3000 souls were added (to put to Vines to
join together, to gather with Reese) - Verse 47 indicates that those baptized are added
to the church or kingdom.
17Daily Life in the Early Church (vs. 42-47) 1
- Spiritual Fellowship (42)
- Zealous in their Christian practice
- Apostles doctrine (apostles given the
responsibility of imparting the truth, cf.
Matthew 2820) - Fellowship here indicates spiritual communion.
- Lords Supper the breaking of the bread
(article in both places in the original greek). - Prayer Continual prayer (cf. 1 Thess. 517)
18Daily Life in the Early Church (vs. 42-47) 2
- The signs from God (43)
- Note Miracles done through the apostles (not the
120) - Christian hospitality benevolence (44-47)
- Breaking bread here refers to common meals and
hospitality - Benevolence all things in common
19The Continued Salvation of Souls (vs. 47) 1
- Added to the Church
- Note It is God that adds one to the church
- One is added at baptism (vs. 41)
- One is added at salvation (vs. 47)
- This is a far cry from the denominational
practice that separates salvation from church
membership.
20The Standard Manual for Baptist Churches (Edward
T. Hiscox, 1890, p. 22)
- It is most likely that in the Apostolic age,
when there was but one Lord, one faith, one
baptism, and no differing denominations existed,
the baptism of a convert by that very act
constituted him a member of the church see Acts
247 1 Corinthians 1213, and at once endowed
him with all the rights and privileges of full
membership. In that sense, baptism was the door
into the church. Now it is different...