Acts 2:14-41

Take a moment to read Acts 2:14-41 before reading the devotional below.

When your first sermon ever involves zero schooling and a total lack of time to prepare and it wins over 3,000 people, you know the Holy Spirit is involved. Just three short years before, Peter was a smelly fisherman discouraged from a night of no fish. When Jesus overloaded Peter’s boats that day and invited him to become a “fisher of men,” he probably had this very moment in mind. (A few hundred fish practically sinking two boats doesn’t seem like such a giant miracle in comparison to 3,000 souls being saved by a single sermon.)

Peter’s sermon is so classically sermon-y: it starts with a joke, addresses the specific context of the Jewish audience, and goes on way too long. Remember that the crowd is murmuring rumors about drunkenness, which created a need for someone to step forward and make a claim about what was going on. Point #1: 9am is way too early for us to be this drunk. Point #2: The Old Testament (or the Jewish scriptures) directly prophesied about this exact moment. Point #3: We’re in the “last days” that we’ve been waiting for, so turn to God while you have time. (Side note: since time has continued on for 2,000 years since this sermon, we can safely say that we are still in the “last days” and these prophecies about the Holy Spirit remain true for us now.)

Peter had enough knowledge of the Old Testament and training from Jesus to speak with discernment, but his sudden boldness in leadership and his ability to publicly address a crowd in a compelling manner were provided on the spot. All Peter did was step forward in a moment that needed clarification. The Holy Spirit did the work to cause the crowd to believe.

Acts 1

Take a moment to read the entire chapter of Acts 1 before reading the devotional below.

Today we begin our series through the book of Acts. The author, Luke, wrote both the book of Luke and Acts, with the end of the book of Luke and the beginning of Acts both containing the story of Jesus’ return to heaven. We continue on to find out what happened to the disciples after Jesus left them to begin the church.

Jesus’ first instruction for their task of spreading the good news of his resurrection is to go hang out in a room and do nothing. As a driven, type-A person, I really do dislike how often the Bible encourages waiting. And yet here we sit with the disciples, waiting in a room in Jerusalem for the promised Holy Spirit.

In the meantime, they are working to come to terms with the complete betrayal of Jesus on the part of Judas, who has since committed suicide. It’s an ugly and gruesome start, that’s for sure. So they’re down one person, and they have to find a replacement on the team. “When in doubt, flip a coin” is the lesson at the end of this chapter. Yes, that’s right, the early church was founded on a divinely ordained coin toss.

You know you’ve been called to giant mission and have no idea what to do first? Just wait in a room with a bunch of people who are going to do it with you and let the Holy Spirit show up when he’s ready. Not sure how to decide between two great options? Pray and flip that coin. There is so little God actually wants us to wrack our brains to try to figure out. He’s leading you, one step at a time. Most likely it’s a lot slower than you’d expect. When you have eternity in mind, time isn’t really of the essence.