| A Sermon Outline By
Jimmy Chapman
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SOME THINGS JESUS LEFT HIS CHURCH
Acts 1:1-11
Acts 1
records for us the ascension of the Jesus Christ after His
resurrection. Can you imagine a man in a human body defying the law
of gravity and slowly but surely ascending upwards to the sky?
The
spiritual significance of that ascension must not be overlooked. It
means as a believer we have now an advocate with the Father, a
mediator in heaven, a great High Priest, touched with the feelings
of infirmities, able to minister on our behalf.
With
His ascension Jesus took some things with Him:
* The prints of His sufferings
* The authority to send the Spirit
* The plans of our heavenly home
* The desire to come again.
Now
though He took some things with Him, He also left some things. He
left some things for His church. Things that should be precious to
us.
I.
Jesus left His church an unquestionable passion (love)
- 3
Ephesians 5:25 states that
Christ “loved the church and gave himself
for it.”
Ephesians 5:2 States that that
Christ ‘hath loved us and hath given
himself for us”
At Calvary,
Jesus expressed His love to us and for us.
Romans 5:8
Jesus
gave Himself up for the church.
Acts 20:28
It was love
that took the Son of God from the heights of Heaven and the throne
of the universe to that cross of shame and woe, on a skull-shaped
hill called Calvary, to die on our behalf. We never know how much
one loves till we know how much he is willing to endure and suffer
for us; and it is the suffering element that measures love. The
measure of God ‘s love for the church is seen in the suffering of
Calvary.
Gaze
upon the cross and speaks of substitutionary love. The whole
environment of Calvary if filled with vicarious suffering. The heart
of Christ bleeds in death to cleanse us; the hands are wounded to
heal us; the feet of Christ are nailed to release us; the side of
Christ is pierced to assure us; the body of Christ is stripped to
clothe us; the lips of Christ are parched to bless us; the head of
Christ is cursed with thorns to crown us; the cross of His love is
shameful to enrich us; and Christ’s death is awful to quicken us.
If there is one subject that I enjoy preaching on more than any
other, it is the love of Christ. However, if there is one subject
that baffles me and makes me ashamed of my poor feeble words, it is
this same subject.
The
great demonstration of love in the whole universe is the death of
Jesus Christ on the cross.
“Hereby perceive we the love of God, because He laid down his life
for us,” (I John 3:16). There is no greater proof of love
than for a person to lay down his life for the object of his love.
Once
there was a young soldier who had committed some offence and was
condemned to die. The time of his death was fixed “at the ringing
of the curfew.” This would naturally be a great disappointment to
some who was young in years, but it was a double sorrow because he
was soon to marry a beautiful young woman whom he had loved for a
very long time. The young woman who loved him tried several ways to
save his life, but her efforts seemed to fail. She even tired to
bribe the old sexton so that he would not ring the bell but to no
avail.
The
hour for his death drew near. The preparations were made. The
prisoner was brought forth. They waited for the signal, but to the
astonishment of everyone, the bell did not ring. Unknowing to all,
the girl who loved the young man so much had rushed unnoticed to the
belfry and seized the tongue of the bell. At the fatal moment when
the old sexton threw his weight upon the robe and the bell reeled to
fan from in the tower, the brave girl kept her hold although her
position was dangerous. Old and deaf the sexton had not noticed
that the bell gave no sound.
The
brave girl hurried from the church to the place of execution and
arrived just as someone was being sent to demand why the bell did
not ring. The young girl who only a day ago was white with sorrow,
glows with hope and courage now. She falls down on her face and
tells her story as her hands all bruised and torn are seen. Touched
with sudden pity, the general says, “Go, your love lives. Curfew
will not ring tonight.”
The
Bible tells us of the greatest story of Love. Christ died for us so
save us from our sins.
II. Jesus left His church an unlimited power
- 8a
He did
not leave His church without power. The Holy Spirit is the power by
which the church is to operate. There is no power in us apart from
the Holy Spirit.
Observe Romans 15:19
- “the power of the Spirit of God”
Micah 3:8 -“Truly I am full of power by the spirit
of the Lord”
Compare Acts 6:5 with
6:10.
The
greatest used power in the world is the power of the Holy Spirit of
God.
Ephesians 3:16
“strengthened with might by his Spirit”
A.
Substitutes for power
1. Some
have tried separation – negative holiness
2. Some
have tried organization
3. Some
have tired exertion (busyness and activity)
4. Some
have tired attraction
B.
Source of Power
It cannot be separated from the Holy Spirit. It is foolish
to attempt to do anything without the power of the Holy Spirit.
The word translated power here is the Greek word “dunamis.”
The Greek word “dunamis” entered the English language in the late
1800's when the Swedish chemist and engineer Alfred Bernhard Nobel
made the discovery that became his fortune. He asked a friend who
was a Greek scholar what the word for “explosive power was in the
Greek. His friend answered, “Dunamis.” Nobel said, “Well, I am going
to call my discovery by that name.” So he called his explosive power
“dynamite.”
C. Secret
of power
S-U-R-R-E-N-D-E-R
Queen Victoria once questioned General Both, “Sir, you are
not the most educated preacher in my realm nor the most talented.
You do not have the largest church. Why is it then that you are
being used so mightily of God?”
Bowing before her majesty, the general said, “Your majesty,
I guess, it is because God has all there is of me.”
D. L. Moody once said,
“Pentecost is simply a specimen case of what God can do when people
are controlled with the Holy Spirit.”
III. Jesus
left His church an unchanging program - 8b
The
very last words Jesus spoke before He left for heaven were these:
“the uttermost part of the earth.” This is the Great
Commission. The church is to tell the gospel story to the untold
millions.
We are
not called to be lawyers, not called to argue the case before the
minds of men. That is the work of the Holy Spirit. We are called
to be witnesses. A witness simply tells what he has seen and
heard.
A. In
Jerusalem – evangelize their own community
B. All
Judea - evangelize their own country
C. In
Samaria - evangelize their own continent
D.
Uttermost part of the earth - evangelize all creation
Note the word “both” – means
at the same time.
“GO ye into all the world, and preach the
gospel to every creature.”
We are
to be witnesses unto Him!
IV. Jesus
left His church an unfailing promise - 11
Christ
promised He would come (John 14:1-3)
Angels
promised that Jesus would come in our text.
Paul
promised Jesus would come (I
Thessalonians 4:16)
A.
It is a certain promise
May not now when He will come, but we can rest assured He
will come
B. It
is a comforting promise
I Thessalonians 4:18
When
He comes there will be no more sickness or suffering, no more tears
or trials, no more wants or worries, andblue no despair or
death.
C. It
is a cleansing promise (I
John 3:2-3)
D. It
is a constraining promise (I
Thessalonians 1:9,10 .....
turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God; and to
wait for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even
Jesus.....”)
Ulysses was returning from Troy, but he experienced
discouraging delays. Then years passed before he returned. In the
delay many men tried to win his wife’s hand in marriage. They
gathered at her home an insisted that her husband was dead. They
begged her and attempted to persuade her to marry one of them.
However, she refused courageously. Ulysses’s wife was true to him.
She waited and watched for his return. When Ulysses did return, he
dealt harshly with those who tried to seduce his beloved wife.
The
church, the bride of Christ, is in just the same position. Our Lord
is absent, but He has promised to return. The world seeks to win
and woo us. Are you keeping yourself unspotted from this world while
you wait for His return.
Conclusion:
Jesus
died, was buried, and arose the third day. For forty days, those of
the early church were taught some valuable truths of the kingdom of
God. Afterwards he ascended into heaven for His task on earth was
finished; however, before he did He left His church several valuable
things. What are you as a member of His church doing with those
valuable things?
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