King's Church Edinburgh Blog | Transforming lives and displaying God's glory.

Archive for November 2011

Getting to know the Holy Spirit Part 3

Receiving Power

Acts 1:8 “8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

It’s a free gift

The thing about Christianity that’s different to any other religion is this- it’s all about receiving. Receiving mercy from God, grace from him, forgiveness for all your sin, a new start, a new nature.

But even Christians can get it wrong after that point.  Gal 3:3 3 Are you so foolish? After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort?

It makes impossible things possible

Luke 1   37 For nothing is impossible with God. It requires us to activate in order to see the fruit of it.  E.g. David and Goliath.    God wants to propel us into power.   Psalm 18 29 With your help I can advance against a troop; with my God I can scale a wall.

It Brings Personal Transformation

e.g. Gideon in Judges 6.   Our “personality” should never be constrained by character flaws!  We should believe the Spirit will give us power.

Powerlessness is poverty. An inability to effect change.    Whereas Christians are called to be changed themselves and to change the world

A vital Question:

Hence Paul’s question in Acts 19:2 Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?

We tend to answer that question defensively (“I  got it all at conversion” or “a day back in 1983”).  Actually Paul’s concern on that occasion was with the (lack of) fruit/ power he saw in them.

All Christians have the Holy Spirit from conversion (Romans 8:9) but in the new testament also were baptised in the Spirit as soon as possible after that event.  All Christians old or young are instructed to go on being filled:  Ephesians  5:18. Jesus encouraged us to ask to be Filled with the Spirit in Luke 11:13

Why do we need the power of the Spirit?

1) Because this is what we were made for.  Jesus who models perfect humanity is described as a man who was empowered by the Spirit.  E.g. Luke 3:22 Luke 4:1, 4:14 , 4:18, 10:21

2) To overcome our many weaknesses:

  • Inhibition.  2 cor 3:16 where the Spirit of the Lord is there is freedom.  Free to be yourself.   Not squeezed into culture’s mould.
  • Passion in prayer and worship.Rom 826 In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.
  • Knowing God’s Fatherly love. We’re weak in relating to God as Father.  We’re unsure how he feels about us.  We hear scriptures that tell us he loves us which are reassuring, but we have no experience of that.   Rom 8 14 because those who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. 15 For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we cry, Abba, Father.    16 The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children.
  • In gifting The Father gives gifts to you and me.  Supernatural gifts.  Healing, prophesy, tongues-  one day these will cease.   1 cor 14:26 What then shall we say, brothers? When you come together, everyone has a hymn, or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue or an interpretation. All of these must be done for the strengthening of the church.
  • In character Gal 5 19 The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery;    20 idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions    21 and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the kingdom of God.    22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,    23 gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.
  • In longing for Christ’s Kingdom Rev 22:  17The Spirit and the bride say, Come!

How much do we need the Spirit?

Lots.    God’s plan is for us to be baptised (immersed, dipped, drowned, drenched) in the Spirit.   Luke 3:16.  He gives the Spirit without Limit (John 3:34)

In the bible it looked different for each person and even different on each occasion!

The Spirit is frequently ministered through the laying on of hands (e.g. Acts 8:17), which was often a key to people receiving.

Spurgeon “Few of us have participated in the Spirit’s  operations as we might have:  we have sipped where we might have drunk; we have drunk where we might have bathed; we have bathed up to the ankles where we might have found rivers to swim in.”

Questions

It would be better to apply this teaching by talking about our need for the Spirit and then praying for one another (it’s something for everyone!).  So some simple discussion questions towards that might be:

1) Free gift.  Acts 1:8/ Gal 3:3 The Holy Spirit is something we receive as a gift, not earn as a reward.  Do you find it easy to believe that God wants to fill you with the Spirit regardless of your performance? Why do we battle with that?

2) Can you think of a recent time when you felt God helped you to do something that you couldn’t have done in your own strength?  Share around the group

3) Think through the list of weaknesses we can face (Dan mentioned some- there’s others too).  Which area(s) do you feel is your biggest battle?

4) Read Luke 11:9-13.  What encouragement does Jesus give to:

  • Those who are unsure that God loves them enough to give them something good
  • Those who have been asking/ praying for a while with no obvious result
  • Those who feel they are in a different category to all other Christians when it comes to receiving.

5) Pray for one another, lay hands on and receive God’s power afresh.

No tags Hide

Nov/11

22

Heaven

Many of us can have an over-spiritualized view of Heaven and how we will be like, Greek thought has had a huge influence on our perceptions Plato in particular, who taught that our bodies are seen as shabby and shameful .The startling truth is that this idea finds little support in the Bible.

Tom Wright says “ we know that bodies decay and die; that houses, temples cities, and civilizations fall to dust; and so we assume that to be bodily to be physical is to be impermanent, changeable, transitory, and that the only way to be permanent, unchanging and immortal is to become non-physical .Paul’s point is that this is not so”

The Real you, is not just your personality, but the whole of you, Jesus came that the whole of you might be saved, in full bodily form.

Clearly when Jesus came back from the dead he was in bodily form, Mary clung to him Jn20:17; He eats breakfast with his disciples John 21; and challenged Thomas to put his hand in his side. In Phil 3:20 Paul says: our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ;  who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory.

Paul is not saying by ‘humble state’ demeaning because we are physical, but because our bodies are affected by sin, we get ill, wear out and die. We look forward to a physical body that is not compromised by any of these things.

1.       Talk about why you think it is that we struggle to see that the physical is in fact something God said was good.

2.       Name some of the things that sin has corrupted that was good , but that God wants to  redeem

3.       Read 2 Corinthians 5 and draw some points that Matthew was making out of this passage.

God could destroy the world and start again, but this is not His plan. Heaven is stored up, hidden, waiting to be brought down to new Earth. Herman Bavinck says “According to scripture the present world will neither continue forever nor will it be destroyed and replaced by a totally new one. Instead it will be cleansed from Sin and re-created, reborn, renewed, made whole ..The rebirth of human beings is completed in the glorious rebirth of all creation, New Jerusalem whose architect and builder is God himself”

1.       Why would it be a cataclysmic defeat for God to scrap totally planet Earth?

2.       Are you grateful that God showed his love for you and me in John 3:16 and it wasn’t the other way round?

3.       Look at Romans 8:20-22 about creation

4.       Talk about what life might be like in New Jerusalem, what do you think we will be doing, creating, exploring?

5. Finally why did Christ actually not spend a huge amount of time talking about Heaven, but actually most about himself? Look at the “I am” scriptures in the gospel of John.

No tags Hide

Nov/11

1

Philip the Evangelist

Chris Frost spoke to us on Sunday in preparation for our Front Edge Weekend (12th & 13th Nov), when we will be inviting friends and family along to our Encounter guest service.  The sick will be healed and the gospel clearly presented by Adrian Holloway.

Chris did a character study on Phillip, the Evangelist in the book of acts.

Look at each of the passages again and discuss in your group the role of the evangelist v the role of the whole church.

Acts 6:3-5

Acts 8:4-13

Acts 8:26-33

Acts 21:8-9

1) What did you find most encouraging about Chris’s preach on Sunday?

2) Have you booked into the Frontedge conference yet?  (Small group leaders please lead by example in this!)

3) Go around your group and think of people you know who need healing or salvation- who could you invite in 2 Sundays time?

No tags Hide

Find it!

Theme Design by devolux.org