Acts 9:31
Then the churches throughout all Judea, Galilee, and
Samaria had peace and were edified. And walking in the fear of the Lord and in
the comfort of the Holy Spirit, they were multiplied.
A great persecution arose against the Church at the start of
chapter 8. Saul was slaughtering Christians as we started chapter 9.
But the battle is never forever.
Saul saw the Light, and changed his ways.
The Church found a place of peace and quiet rest, near to
the heart of God.
If we’ll receive it, there’s peace in the midst of the
storm.
Walking in the fear of the Lord, the storm doesn’t seem so
strong, and we come out, not shattered and shaken, but strengthened and
comforted by the Holy Spirit.
Walking in the fear of the Lord and the comfort of the Holy
Spirit is where we find the Church in our text; and we pray, where we will be,
and stay.
32 Now it came to pass, as Peter went through
all parts of the country, that he also came down to
the saints who dwelt in Lydda.
Peter once the bumbling fisherman who, after seeing the
greatest miracle of his life, a catch of fish so great his nets were breaking
and boats were sinking, said to Jesus, “depart from me for I am a sinful
man.” Luke 5:8.
Now, just as Jesus said, Peter’s become a fisher of men. He casts his net, the Word of God, and draws them from sinner, to saint.
Notice that word, saint.
Who are the saints?
Yes, the Church, Ekklésia, Christians.
According to the Bible, if you are a Christian, you are a
saint.
Saints, in the original text is: hagios (hag'-ee-os);
defined as, sacred, set apart. Translated, saint(s) 61 times in the New Testament.
However, translated, holy, 168 times.
The angel that announced the birth of Christ to the virgin
Mary, used the word, hagios, twice in Luke 1:34-35. “How can this
be,” Mary asked the angel, “since I am a virgin?” 35 The angel replied, “The
Holy (hagios) Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will
overshadow you. So the Holy (hagios) One to be born will be called the Son of
God.
Jesus used that word in Acts 1:8. But you will receive
power when the Holy (hagios) Spirit comes upon you…
If you are a
Christian, you are a saint, if you are a saint, you are to be holy.
Peter makes it abundantly clear using, hagios 4 times
in a row. As He who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do, 16 for it
is written: “Be holy, for I am holy.” 1 Peter 1:15-16.
Four times God Almighty makes it abundantly clear, for it is writtten:
Leviticus 11:44
For I am the LORD your God; consecrate yourselves, therefore, and be holy,
because I am holy…
Leviticus 11:45
For I am the LORD, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt so that I would
be your God; therefore be holy, because I am holy.
Leviticus 19:2
"Speak to the whole congregation of Israel and tell them: Be holy
because I, the LORD your God, am holy.
Leviticus 20:7
Consecrate yourselves, therefore, and be holy, because I am the LORD your
God.
If you are a
Christian, you are a saint, if you are a saint, you are to be holy.
No Doug, not me, I’m just an ol’ sinner saved by grace.
That sounds real nice, and spiritual, but not Scriptural.
If you are a Christian, you are a saint, if you are a saint,
you are to be holy.
If you’re not holy…? If you willingly continue
in sin, that’s the opposite of holy, if you’re not holy, you’re not a saint, if
you’re not a saint… you’re not a Christian.
If that’s the case, you need to remedy that, right now.
The net is cast, the Word of God is drawing you, to change
you, from sinner to saint.
If we
confess our sins, He
is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to
cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:9.
33 There he found a certain man named Aeneas, who
had been bedridden eight years and was paralyzed.
We’re not told if this certain man named Aeneas was sinner
or saint, all we know is that he was broken and bedridden, for eight long
years.
So, since we’re not told, that tells us, that’s all we need
to know.
If the Lord shows us someone whose fallen, we help them up,
as simple as that—we don’t need to know the details.
If the Lord shows us, leads us, is the key. We follow
the Lord, not the need. Peter found a certain man, not every man.
This takes discernment, which comes from walking in the fear of the Lord and
the comfort of the Holy Spirit.
34 And Peter said to him, “Aeneas, Jesus the
Christ heals you. Arise and make your bed.” Then he arose immediately.
Jesus the Christ, heals you. Arise…
Peter, sees the man, cares enough to learn his name.
The rest is all Jesus the Christ.
Notice, he didn’t beg, and plead and pray, he spoke a
command under the Authority of the Holy Spirit. Arise, take up your bed and
walk.
The Gifts of the Spirit are, Wisdom, Knowledge, Faith,
Healings, Miracles, Prophecy, Discerning of Spirits, Tongues, Interpretation. 1
Corinthians 12:4, 8-11, 28.
The Gift(s) working here are one or more of these: Faith,
Healings, Miracles.
It works like this: Pete saw and heard Jesus, (Holy Spirit
within) and simply repeated what he saw and heard.
Likewise, Jesus only said and did what He saw and heard from
His Father. John 5:19; 12:49.
Likewise, saints, (that should be you) are only to say and do what we see and hear from the Holy Spirit.
Do you remember a similar situation when Jesus found a certain
man, by the Pool of Bethesda? The man had been lame for 38 years.
Jesus said, “Rise take up your bed and walk.” John 5:8.
Now, Peter, found a certain man lame for 8 years, and
following the Holy Spirit, Peter echoes the Words of His Lord:
Jesus the Christ heals you. Arise…
Peter was simply the vessel from which the Holy Spirit
poured His Power.
You can be too.
Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today, and forever.
Hebrews 13:8.
He can flow through you, like He did him. Any vessel; sacred,
set apart, hagios, holy, in other words, any saint, is fit for the
Master’s use.
Then he arose, immediately. The man obeyed right away. He had to choose do it, he had to get up on his own free will. He had to be willing to change. He could’ve rejected the free Gift. He could’ve refused and said, “No, this is just the way I am.” But hallelujah, he didn't. He obeyed right away, got up and got healed.
35 So all who dwelt at Lydda and Sharon saw him
and turned to the Lord.
They saw him, but turned to, the Lord. Hallelujah!
That tells us that miracles weren’t so common that they were
taken for granted.
This was the Greatest miracle. That they turned to
the Lord.
The 1st miracle was for the purpose of this miracle.
The 1st miracle was temporary, for Aeneas.
The 2nd is Eternal, and for all willing to change from
sinner to saint.
By the way Lydda, (modern day Ludd) is about 30 miles NW of
Jerusalem, about 10 miles east of the Mediterranean Sea. If you fly to Israel,
you’ll land in Lydda, at the Ben Gurion Airport.
Sharon is the coastal plain surrounding Lydda.
36 At Joppa there was a certain disciple
named Tabitha, which is translated Dorcas. This woman was
full of good works and charitable deeds which she did.
Joppa is on the coast a dozen or so miles NW of Lydda.
Aeneas was a certain man; however, Tabitha is a certain
disciple. We know her spiritual status. She’s a saint.
Tabitha is Aramaic, Dorcas is Greek, both mean, gazelle, or
antelope.
She is complimented for her good works and charitable
deeds, which she had done.
She was a doer, not just full of good intentions but
full of good works, and charitable deeds. She got-er done. (James
1:22-25).
37 But it happened in those days that she became
sick and died. When they had washed her, they laid her in an
upper room.
Rain falls on the just and unjust. Sinners and saints, live
in this sickness and sin filled world.
They prepared her body for burial and laid her in an upper
room for mourners to say their goodbyes and weep.
38 And since Lydda was near Joppa, and the disciples
had heard that Peter was there, they sent two men to him,
imploring him not to delay in coming to them.
Since word spread about the whereabouts of Peter; probably
due to the healing of the Aeneas, they sent for Peter to come quickly.
39 Then Peter arose and went with them. When he had
come, they brought him to the upper room. And all the widows stood by
him weeping, showing the tunics and garments which Dorcas had made while she
was with them.
She left a legacy, not only of tunics and garments, but is
remembered as a disciple, a saint.
Are you leaving a legacy as a disciple? A saint? Holy?
40 But Peter put them all out, and knelt
down and prayed. And turning to the body he said, “Tabitha, arise.” And
she opened her eyes, and when she saw Peter she sat up.
Peter put them all out, not to be rude, but to hear from the
Lord.
You can pray, just you and Jesus, in a room full of people.
However, it’s hard to have a conversation with all kinds of
distractions.
At times, a Christian, a saint, set apart, must get apart,
get away, turn off the noise, and get alone with the Lord.
Sometimes in my house, if the noise gets too distracting and
I need to get away with Jesus; noise cancelling ear buds with Christian
instrumental music, works wonders.
Susanna Wesley, (1669-1742), was a preacher’s wife and
mother of 10, including; John and Charles Wesley. With that many kids, it was
hard to get apart with the Lord. They didn’t have noise cancelling earbuds back
then, but she found a way. She’d throw her apron over her head to let the kids
know—leave me alone, I’m meeting with Jesus. She promised God she’d spend as
much time in prayer and Bible study as she did in entertainment. She often
invested 2 hrs. a day in prayer.
Charles Spurgeon (1800s), is called the Prince of
Preachers. He was known far and wide, his sermons are still preached today. One
day some visitors came to the Church wanting to see the powerful preacher. A
man (some say it was Spurgeon himself) came and asked the visitors if they’d
like to see the heating system for the Church. They didn’t really want to, but
agreed. They were led down a hall, to a room and when the door was opened,
there were hundreds of saints in prayer. He said, this is where the
Power of our Church comes from.
Peter prayed, heard from the Lord, turned to the lady
and echoed what he heard. Tabitha, arise.
Very similar to what Jesus did in Mark 5:41. Jesus also put
them all out, then, He took the child who had died by the hand, and said, Talitha,
cumi, which is translated, “Little girl, I say to you, arise.”
41 Then he gave her his hand and lifted
her up; and when he had called the saints and widows, he presented
her alive.
Peter was simply the vessel from which the Holy Spirit
poured His Power.
You can be too.
Hebrews 13:8; Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today,
and forever.
He can flow through you, like He did him. Any vessel;
sacred, set apart, hagios, holy, in other words, any saint, is fit for
the Master’s use.
Modern day miracle:
I recently heard about this modern-day miracle.
As the Church folks walked to their cars after the service,
they noticed a car with a man slumped over the steering wheel. They called for
help.
After examining the body, the paramedics pronounced the man
dead from a drug overdose.
The Christians prayed.
The paramedics placed the dead man on a stretcher and pulled
the sheet over his face.
The Christians prayed.
As the paramedics prepared to load the dead man into the
ambulance.
The Christians prayed.
The dead man became a live man and sat straight up on the stretcher.
The paramedic screamed.
Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today, and forever. Hebrews 13:8.
42 And it became known throughout all
Joppa, and many believed on the Lord.
They saw her, heard about her, and believed on the Lord.
Once again, this tells us that miracles weren’t so common
that they were taken for granted.
Once again, this is the Greatest miracle. That many
they believed on the Lord.
Many dead were brought to Life, real Life, Eternal Life, in
Christ.
Many resurrected, changed, from sinner to saint.
43 So it was that he stayed many days in Joppa
with Simon, a tanner.
The tanner?
No, it’s not the guy who lays in the sun a lot.
It’s the man who made a living touching dead carcasses, tanning
hides, making leather. Which, according to Jewish, religious tradition, ranked
right up there with brothels and garbage dumps.
Which, made Peter ceremonially unclean, as long as he
stayed there.
The religious leaders would’ve rebuked him, shunned him.
But in God’s eyes, it deserved a great big, attaboy. It
ranked right up there with Jesus, befriending tax collectors, harlots, and
sinners.
God saw it as a blossoming opportunity to bless Peter, and
teach Peter, and the rest of the world, about something that effects every one
of us. His great, amazing, love for all; red, yellow, black, white,
Jew, gentile, all, every single one.
Which is unveiled in chapter 10, and Lord willing, what we’ll
see next week. It’s such an awesome story we wrote a little book on it. A
Soldier and a Fisherman Acts 10.
Let’s pray.
Lord Jesus, it’s comforting to know that You are the
same, yesterday, today, and forever. Lord, thank You for helping us to be who
You’ve called us to be; saints, sacred, set apart, hagios, holy. So, as vessels
fit for our Master’s use, You can flow through us and perform the greatest
miracle, changing sinners to saints.
We love You, forever.
Amen.
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Greatest Miracle, Acts 9:31-43
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Acts 9:31-43
This was feed for you to read. Now it’s Seed for you to
sow.
Thank you for sharing.
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