How Christians Today Can Apply
Abstract
The Book of Acts records the history of the early church. Luke narrates to Theophilus the things that took place in the early church citing the power with which the apostles ministered; in spreading the good news and also the many miracles that happened as they ministered. In this article, I will be investigating two things, the main purposes of the healing miracles recorded and also how the Church of today can be fanned into action to the greater Missio Dei (mission of God or sending of God) that we have all been called to accomplish. This is the mission that was passed from Jesus to his disciples who in turn passed it to us in this generation. I will look at how we can fit into this mission and make it not only God’s mission but embrace it as our own by the empowering of the Holy Spirit.
Introduction
The book of Acts is a continuation of the mission of God through the Holy Spirit in the name of Jesus. Jesus makes clear what his mission was when he states in Luke 4:18 NLT “The Spirit of the LORD is upon me, for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released, that the blind will see, that the oppressed will be set free”. He invites the people back to God through the Good News he was bringing to them. In his book Acts An Expositional Commentary, R.C. Sproul states the reason Luke recorded the healing narratives was to bear witness to the reality of the kingdom of God in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and the uttermost parts of the earth (21). It was to continue where Jesus left. I will look at how the healing narratives in the book of Acts continued this mission of God.
Luke, in his opening statement of the book, tells Theophilus he had dealt with all that Jesus began to do and teach, until the day when he was taken up. He states that the reason for the book is to communicate to his reader what happened in the past and how the Spirit was moving among the disciple after his ascension to heaven.
Peter Wagner in his book The Book Of Acts: A Commentary says, communicating the gospel to the lost is the major theme, and the Gospels and Acts are designed to inform us how it happened in the past and, in most cases, how it should happen today.
The reality is that in this kingdom, God is present. This presence is evident with the disciples healing diseases and illnesses and also casting out demons in the name of Jesus. Dr Warrington in one of the week’s lessons in our course stated that Jesus does not just walk with us from a distance watching us from another world, but he touches us in ways that mean he and we can feel the difference.
Reasons for the Healings Narratives Recorded In Acts
Luke in recording the healings in Acts, purposed to point us to three important things. He wanted to show us that the healings were purposed:
1. To glorify God
2. To confirm the continuation and authority of Jesus’ ministry
3. To prove the presence of the kingdom of God
4. To Glorify God
The healings recorded in Acts were to give God glory and not to elevate the apostles to the same level as God.
The Lame Man Glorified God
When the lame man who used to sit at the gate called Beautiful received his healing, he jumped up with joy and praised God (Acts 3:8-9). He did not praise Peter but knew to whom praises should go. He praised God jumping up and down because from the culture he was brought up in, a sickness like his was a sign of punishment from God and He alone could grant him healing. He knew that it was God who had healed him and this was why Luke does not record him praising Peter but he says he praised God. He gave God the glory for having healed him of his lifelong illness.
Peter Glorified God
The people gathered to see the lame man as he jumped and praised God. Peter took the opportunity to tell them from whom the healing has come. He tells them ‘As though by our own power or piety we have made him walk?’ (3:12). It was only possible for the man to walk by ‘the faith that is through Jesus has given the man this perfect health in the presence of you all’ (3:16). Peter pointed to God who through Jesus had made it possible of the man to be of perfect health. In yet another incidence (9:32–35), Peter, in the name of Jesus, heals Aeneas who was paralysed and bedridden for eight years, Aeneas immediately stands up. Aeneas glorifies God for the healing as well but does not praise Peter for his healing because Peter told him, Jesus is healing you.
Jesus Too Glorified God
Jesus did lots of miracles in his ministry. And since he was God, the miracles were to glorify himself and save the lost as Mohler Albert says in the book Acts 1-12. The miracles were to glorify God and to make the people believe in Jesus whom the Father had sent (John 10:37-38).
Lessons for Us
The lame man reminds the believers of today what we ought to do when God moves miraculously. Many of us heap praises on the men and women God uses to do those miracles rather than directing our praise to God.
Peter’s words to the crowd teach pastors and preachers of today how we need to respond in the event God chooses us as agents of His signs and wonders. He separated himself from the glory that only belongs to God. In Isaiah 42:8, the Lord makes it clear that He gives His glory to no other nor His praise to curved images (ESV). Peter remembering these words and being full of the Spirit, told the people who had healed the lame man. As pastors, when God uses us to do such things, let us direct praise and glory to Him and not let people praise us. We risk attracting the curse that Herod got when
What was impossible for man, God could easily do. And thus all glory and adoration belong to Him (Revelation 7:12). The healing in this narrative returns glory to God through faith in Jesus. The church of today can learn that it is only God who is worthy of glory in our ministries. Whatever methods He chooses to use through us, we should not elevate ourselves to where we are not supposed to be. We are only but jars of clay that God decides to give extraordinary power (2 Corinthians 4:7). With such an understanding we will be humble and allow God to use us to work in His vineyard.
To Confirm the Continuity and Authority of Jesus’ Ministry
The ministry of Jesus did not end with his ascension. After his resurrection, he directed his disciples to remain in Jerusalem as they awaited the dwelling of the Holy Spirit. He said, “You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you” (Acts 1:8). The Spirit empowered them to do the things that he had done and they would do them with the authority He gives them.
Jesus is more than a healer
Jesus’ healing not only proved that he was not just a healer or a better healer than anyone else, or a prophet or even the best prophet there could be – he’s God and his healings demonstrate that he was God manifest in flesh. The Pharisees kept asking him with what authority he did the miracles he did. The message Jesus came with was different from what the people of his days were used to. He spoke with so much authority (Matthew 7:29) and healed even the most complicated diseases that people suffered from. Jesus was God in the flesh and many times he healed the sick by commanding and rebuking the disease as he did with Peter’s mother-in-law. The authority came from God and Jesus being God had the power to order the disease to leave the body of persons he ministered to. The same is recorded in various verses in Acts and cases such as raising the dead back to life such as Peter raised Tabitha or Dorcas, from the dead (Acts 9:36-43), Paul raised Eutychus from the dead after a terrible accident (Acts 20:9-12). We also see different diseases healed in Jesus’ name.
For Peter to invoke the name of Jesus in healing the lame man, he was invoking a name which is a source of power, under whose authority healing is performed. He was invoking more than a name, he was invoking the power that was behind that name. He was invoking the name that is above any other name and which at the mention of it, every knee shall bow (Philippians 2:10-11).
In The Name of Jesus
Peter too ordered the lame man to stand up and walk. We do not see him praying for the man but just telling him to get up in Jesus’ name. He had with him the name that carried all the authority he needed and so just spoke the word and it happened. When he was asked to validate with whose authority he was healing. He pointed to the more than a healer who did it.
Jesus came with the message of the Gospel, and Luke continues with this message in the Book of Acts. He shares how the apostles continued with this message. To them, it was the most important assignment and they carried it forth with zeal and commitment. They did not mind the beatings and the arrests they got. They were forbidden from teaching in the name of Jesus but Peter and the other apostles replied, “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29 NASB). To the apostles, this was important and no amount of intimidation could stop them. The missio Dei which had now become their mission was at stake at their silence. How could they afford to jeopardise the opportunity of reaching the lost with the good news of God’s salvation? The death and resurrection of Jesus bridged the gap between sinners and a forgiving God. This message needed to be spread and they were mandated to spread it. They had been empowered by the Holy Spirit and were now equipped to go and make disciples of all nations (Mathew 28:19)
Healings Authenticated the Gospel
The healings gave authenticity to the gospel being preached. In Acts 14:3 signs and wonders such as healings, confirmed the message that Paul and Barnabas spoke boldly about. The healings narratives confirmed that they were speaking on behalf of God who had sent them to share the good news. When they mentioned the Lord, they were mentioning Jehovah Rapha the Lord who heals Exodus 15:26. Signs and wonders authenticated the message being preached. Wagner calls this power ministry where supernatural healings, deliverances, miracles and spiritual warfare characterise the missions the apostles embark on.
Lesson
Believers of today should know that when they share the Gospel message, they are continuing with what Jesus was doing. They are also fitting into the office that the apostles of the early church once occupied and that office was characterised with signs and wonders. Signs to show that we are truly sent by God and that whoever we are talking about doesn’t change and is still healing people today.
To Prove the Presence of the kingdom of God
Salvation in the Kingdom
When Jesus was starting his ministry, in his opening words he said; “ repent for the kingdom of God is at hand”. Matthew 4:17 NKJV. This kingdom involved the healing of the sick, the delivery of the demon-possessed, and the resurrection of the dead. Salvation in the form of being set free from disease and sin was a representation of the gospel message. Just as Jesus had said, he came to set the captives free, this was freedom from both illnesses and also from sin.
Jesus is continuing his salvific work; for during his earthly ministry, it likewise astonished and attracted large numbers of people.
Inclusivity in the Kingdom
The kingdom of God does not alienate anyone. Male or female, young or old, Jew or Gentile, poor or rich, all are accepted in the kingdom as long as they recognise and acknowledge Jesus as the Lord. Peter Wagner in his book The Book of Acts states that,
The kingdom of God is present, first and foremost, wherever Jesus Christ is acknowledged and served as King.
When we acknowledge Jesus as Lord and Saviour as did Peter and John, we get to do signs as they did. The healing that happened to the lame man was after Peter called the authority that came with the name of Jesus. Stating that ‘in the name of Jesus rise and walk’, Peter was acknowledging and serving Jesus Christ. And by so doing, he was calling on his kingdom that comes with freedom from infirmities and diseases. A kingdom where the lame can walk and the blind get their sights restored to them.
A Kingdom with Power
Acts record in 1:8 the last words Jesus gave his disciple. Words to the effect of the work that was ahead of them the work that will be characterised by power. His kingdom will be one of power to deliver the bound to freedom. Freedom from infirmities both physically and spiritually. Wagner in his book highlights how the Book of Acts records the spectacular growth of the church necessitated by the power of the Spirit. Wagner states that from this church growth manual, we can today learn how to follow suit by discovering principles and procedures for spreading the gospel.
Lesson
Missio Dei is God’s mission transferred not fully to the church of today but we become coworkers with Him. We work alongside the Lord in spreading the good news to the lost. And because we co-work with Him, His Spirit empowers us to navigate those waters. We enter a kingdom that
Includes everyone for God loves all of us,
Brings both spiritual and physical salvation,
Operates in the power of the Holy Spirit.
These three things provide the solid triad that missions are involved in.
Conclusion
The healing narratives recorded in Acts give us directions we need to take as we continue with the work Jesus left us to finish. And until we complete it, we have with us a manual that will direct us in every step of the journey. As we read about how the early church grew, we are drawn to what the Spirit does to those who rely on Him to reach the lost. We get to understand the importance of the name of Jesus; it is not about us but about him that we go to the harvest list. And if it is about him he will wimpier us with the Helper.
Bibliography
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Kwon, Yon Gyong. ISG 48: A Commentary on Acts. SPCK, 2012.
Mohler, Albert. Acts 1-12 For You. The Good Book Company, 2018.
Robert H. Gundry. Commentary on Acts (Commentary on the New Testament Book #5). Baker Publishing Group, 2011.
Wagner C. Peter. The Book of Acts: A Commentary, Volume Two.Presbyterian Publishing Corporation, 2001.