When Luke described the practices of the early church in
Acts 2:42-47, the first thing he mentions is that “they devoted themselves to
the apostles’ teaching.” I don’t think this is an accident. When we look at
what the church did in these verses, we see actions that arise out of an
understanding of God’s Word. The fellowship, worship, and outreach of the first
century church are built on the foundation of God’s revelation of truth to
them.
What was the content of the apostles’ teaching? It began
with the proclamation that Jesus was the fulfillment of the hope of the Old
Testament. The Law, Prophets, and Writings of the Jewish Scriptures looked
forward to the coming of the promised Messiah and to a salvation that would
reverse the curse of sin. The apostles believed and taught that this Messiah
was Jesus of Nazareth.
The Bible of the early church was what we call the Old
Testament today. The earliest books of the New Testament wouldn’t be written for
another 15-20 years, although some of the gospel accounts probably started
circulating almost immediately. Since they still considered themselves faithful
Jews, the apostles would have gone to their Scriptures to teach about the
meaning of the coming of Jesus. Jesus Himself had gone to those Scriptures to explain
to the two on the road to Emmaus the OT teaching about the Messiah.
Over about the next 60 years, the apostles’ teaching was
written down in the recognized Gospels, Acts, Epistles, and Apocalypse we now
call the New Testament. This teaching explained and filled in the details about
the person and work of Jesus and about the role of the Holy Spirit. As a result,
we are able to read and study the apostles’ teaching today. When we read and
study the Bible, both Old and New Testament, we find ourselves in the same
place as those early Christians who based everything they did on that teaching.
If we want our modern Christian fellowship, worship, and
outreach to have power and lasting effects, we need to follow the example of
the first Christians. What we do in the name of Jesus must be founded and built
upon what He reveals to us in His Word. A church may meet together, go through
some defined worship practices, and speak a message, but if those are done in
human power and wisdom rather than in the power of God’s Word the results will
not have eternal value.
Christians and churches today must worship the Lord in
Spirit and truth, fellowship with and build up each other, and reach out to our
world with the good news of Jesus Christ. We can’t do this unless we hear what
God says in His revelation, and put what we learn there into practice. As we
continue to dig into the Word individually and as a group, we will find that
all we do as Christians will be honoring to Jesus and will draw us closer to
Him.
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