Summary: What a great message we find in the early chapters of Acts. This is our history as followers of Jesus Christ. Our call is to faith and confession in the Name of Jesus.

(Read Acts 3-4 with slides)

Lesson:

Sharing the gospel is part of the churches identity. It doesn’t matter what the world says we should do, we answer to a higher authority and we must not be silent. Let me see if you agree with me or not here: A church that does not confess its faith is not the same church we read about in the Bible. Romans 10:9-10 tells us that if we confess with our mouth, “Jesus is Lord” and believe in our heart that God raised Him from the dead, we shall be saved. It is with the heart one believes and is justified and with the mouth one confesses and is saved.”

What happens to a Christian if he or she stops believing that God raised Jesus? Is that not an abandonment of the faith? What happens to a Christian if he or she stops confessing that Jesus Christ is Lord? Is that not also a departure from the faith?

This raises difficult questions for us, does it not? As the early church spread across the Roman empire opposition to the faith also arose against Christians. Eventually, the Roman government got in on the persecution and Christians were subjected to terrible pressure to abandon their confession, or at least compromise by silence and even submission to the Roman emperor as a god. Those who would not compromise were not simply fired from work or spoken against, they were sometimes tortured and put to death.

Here’s a slide that I copied from Bryan Moynahan’s book: The Faith.

(Picture of a martyr broken on a wheel in a carving on the south portal of Chartres Cathedral in France. Many methods were used. In Macedonia, Christians were slowly asphyxiated over fires; at Alexandra, noses, ears and hands were severed; at Antioch, they were roasted over braziers. Yet it was often easy to avoid such fates by burning a stick of incense on a pagan alter or sipping a sacrificial offering of wine.

(Read p. 81 last paragraph). During the first two hundred years of the church the Roman games were especially dangerous for Christians who were rounded up to provide fresh blood for the crowds. On August 1, 177 at Lyons in Gaul Christian immigrants from Asia Minor were gathered and charged with belief in the “name” of Christ and sent to the arena. First, they were clawed with iron scrapers “so that their bowels were exposed to view,” Eusebius recorded. “Then they were laid on conck shells from the sea, and on sharp heads and points of spears on the ground and were at last thrown as food to the wild beasts.” Ironically, several onlookers, inspired by the martyrs’ refusal to give up their faith, joined them in the arena. Instead of crushing the Christian community, this seemed to merely strengthen it.

Paul told Timothy to proclaim the word of God, in season and out of season. In other words, preach the Christian confession whether it is welcome or not.

Can you think of places where talking about Jesus Christ will get you into trouble today? Isn’t it amazing that the same message that brings life and faith also brings hostility and oppression. What does freedom of religious expression really mean in our nation?

What do we learn from Acts about our Christian duty and responsibility to confess the name of Jesus Christ?

We discover that our confession of Jesus Christ has two responses: (slide) CONFESSION OF FAITH PRODUCES FAITH IN OTHERS

What we saw in Acts three is the desired response to confession of faith. Peter and John are going up to the temple at 3 p.m. the time of prayer. Jesus Christ came first to Israel, God’s chosen people, the children of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. They of all people should listen!

God has invested centuries of inspiration into this nation. He has given them Moses, David, the prophets, the covenants and promises through Abraham. Israel is THE nation that God chose, called and guided, and through whom He sent the Messiah. They are to hear the gospel first. To the Jew first, and also the gentile…

(Chapter 3) Here in Acts 3 the Holy Spirit empowered Peter and John to heal this lame beggar who has been coming to sit at the entrance to the temple for years. Today is his blessed day!

When the people heard Peter’s witness to Jesus as the Christ, many were moved to faith. The message of Peter’s confession was simple: Acts gives it to us in 16 verses.

The wonder of the miracle, the word of the gospel, and the witness of Peter and John inspired the faith of the multitude.

Wouldn’t it be great if everyone could hear the gospel and believe! Imagine if everyone you spoke to about Jesus became a Christian. Wouldn’t that be something?

But faith is not the only response to the Christian confession, is it? (slide) CONFESSION OF FAITH PRODUCES OPPOSITION FROM OTHERS

(Chapter 4) We see that it also produces resistance and even persecution.

Peter later says that our faith is tested and refined like gold when we face opposition. It seems that God works both to encourage us when others respond in faith but also God uses trials to prove and condition us when others respond negatively.

This first time of testing will not be the last. In fact, Acts 3-4 give us a pattern that is followed throughout the New Testament and indeed throughout Christian history.

Confessing Jesus Christ as Lord and sharing the gospel of God’s grace will still produce the same resulting responses.

We are Christians. The story of Acts is our story. Will we follow the examples of the early Christians? Will we continue to carry the torch of faith and confess the name of Jesus Christ as Lord when the opposition arises?

May God help us be faithful to the cause of Christ in our generation.

(last slide) CONFESSION OF FAITH IS NOT OPTIONAL

Confession of our faith is not optional, if we would follow Jesus Christ. Romans 10:9-10 states it well:

If we confess with our mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in our heart that God raised Him from the dead we shall be saved, for it is with the heart that we believe and are justified, and with the mouth we confess and are saved.

If we stop believing in our hearts that God raised Jesus from the dead, we stop being Christian. We leave the faith. We are worse off than if we had never known the way of righteousness.

But what happens if we stop confessing Jesus is Lord? Is that not just as dangerous spiritually? Is that not what Jesus warned us about when He said, “Whoever confesses me before man, him will I also confess before my Father in heaven, but whoever denies me before men, him will I also deny before my Father in heaven.”

If we would be followers of Jesus Christ and enjoy eternal salvation we must CONTINUE to believe AND confess our faith in Jesus Christ.