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Ingredients for a Gospel Meeting

Acts 2

The PowerPoint sermon can be viewed here.

The PowerPoint sermon can be downloaded here.

INTRODUCTION

A.	In 1925, the only written copy of its formula Coca-Cola admits to having was retrieved from a New York bank 
	and laid in a safe deposit box in Woodruff's Atlanta bank.
	1.	But, that was only the first step.
	2.	That same year the company established a policy whereby no one could view the formula without written 
		permission from the Board, and then only in the presence of the President, Chairman, or Corporate 
		Secretary.
		a.	Furthermore, the rule dictated that only two company officials would be allowed to know the recipe at 
			any given time, and their identities were never to be disclosed for any reason.
		b.	In keeping with the spirit of things, company policy was amended once air travel became the norm to 
			preclude those two officers from ever flying on the same plane.
B.	Why would the Coca-Cola Company go to such lengths to protect their recipe?  Simply because they understood 
	the value of that recipe.
C.	Next Lord's Day, our Gospel Meeting begins, and Acts 2 presents us with a quite valuable recipe to have a 
	successful meeting.
	1.	There is much work we have to do to make this recipe work.
		a. 	We have prayers that need to be prayed:
			1)	We need to pray for the lost.
				a)	Speaking of his fellow Israelites, Paul says, "Brothers, my heart's desire and prayer to God 
					for them is that they may be saved" (Rom 10:1). 
				b)	Take a look around you.  Who is not here whom you would like to see come to Jesus?  Why 
					not spend some serious time in prayer this week for that person?
			2)	We need to pray for our speaker.
				a)	Paul often asked brethren to pray for him.
					1)	"Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving.  At the same 
						time, pray also for us, that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the 
						mystery of Christ, on account of which I am in prison-that I may make it clear, which is 
						how I ought to speak" (Col 4:2-4).
					2)	"Brothers, pray for us, that the word of the Lord may speed ahead and be honored, as 
						happened among you" (2 Thess 3:1).
				b)	If an inspired apostle asked others to pray for him that he might make the Word of God 
					clear, how can we not pray that for men who are not inspired by God?
		b.	We need to invite our friends & family to come with us.
			1)	Paul asks the rhetorical question: "How are they to hear without someone preaching?" (Rom 
				10:14).
			2)	In the same spirit, we can ask the question: "How are they to hear without someone inviting 
				them?"
			3)	Will you seek, this coming week, to invite the lost to come & hear the words of Jesus?
		c.	We have schedules that need to be cleared.
			1)	I understand that some of you work late, and others of you will have unavoidable events that you 
				cannot miss.
			2)	But, we really need to do a better job when it comes to supporting the preaching of the Gospel 
				here.
				a)	Far too many times we've had meetings & so few from the church here bothered to support 
					them at all.
				b)	Someone aptly wrote these words about "The Empty Pew": "I am an Empty Pew. I vote for 
					the world as against God. I deny the Bible. I mock at the preached Word of God. I rail at 
					Christian brotherhood. I laugh at prayer. I am a witness to solemn vows broken. I advise 
					men to eat drink and be merry, for tomorrow they die. I join my voice with every atheist and 
					rebel against human and divine law. I am an Empty Pew. I am a grave in the midst of the 
					congregation. Read my epitaph and be wise."
				c)	Will you heed the warning of the empty pew & be wise?
	2. 	Are we prepared for the work we have to do this very week?
C. 	If we work hard & diligently, the recipe outlined in Acts 2 will cause a powerful Gospel Meeting.
	1.	What is that recipe?
	2.	AN ASSEMBLY, AN ADDRESS, AN ANXIETY, & AN ASSURANCE.

AN ASSEMBLY, vv 5-13

A. 	When the Holy Spirit came upon the apostles, extraordinary events occurred, vv. 1-4.
	1. 	A sound like a mighty wind came from heaven and filled the house where the apostles were, v. 2.
	2. 	Tongues as of fire appeared and rested above each apostle, v. 3.
	3. 	The apostles were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues, as the Spirit gave
		them utterance, v. 4.
B. 	These extraordinary events caused a great crowd to be assembled, vv, 5-13.
	1. 	When people heard these extraordinary events, a great multitude assembled in bewilderment, v. 6.
	2. 	Luke makes it very obvious that a great multitude was assembled when he names the various countries 
		from which this multitude came, vv. 9-11.
	3. 	Because this great multitude assembled, Peter was able to proclaim the Word of God.
C. 	If we are to have a successful Gospel Meeting today, a crowd must assemble.
	1. 	In that first Gospel Meeting, the Holy Spirit worked in mighty fashion to assemble the crowd - the mighty 
		noise, the tongues as of fire, and the tongue-speaking caused people to go see what was taking place.
	2. 	The Holy Spirit will not work in that way in this age; therefore, it is up to us, the people of God, to produce 
		that crowd.
		a. 	"Go out to the highways and hedges and compel people to come in, that my house may be filled" (Lk. 
			14:23).
		b. 	You well remember the evangelism that took place at the beginning of John's Gospel:
			1)	When Andrew had encountered Jesus, "he first found his own brother Simon and said to him, 
				'We have found the Messiah'" (Jn. 1:41).
			2)	"Philip found Nathanael and said to him, 'We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and 
				also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph'" (Jn. 1:45).
			3)	Why not copy that evangelistic style, and say to friends, family, and neighbors, "We have 
				found the Messiah. Come and see"?
D. 	The last thing LaShanda Calloway saw before she died was people literally stepping over her to continue 
	shopping as if nothing had happened.
	1.	Calloway had stopped to shop in a convenience store in Wichita, Kansas, when she was stabbed in an 
		altercation.
		a.	As she lay dying, a surveillance camera recorded no less than five people stepping over her to 
			continue down the store's aisles.
		b.	Only one stopped briefly-to take a picture of Calloway with a cell phone camera.
	2.	"It was tragic to watch," police spokesman Gordon Bassham said.  "The fact that people were more 
		interested in taking a picture with a cell phone and shopping for snacks than helping this innocent young 
		woman is, frankly, revolting.
	3.	I pray to God that we would never step over someone in a store who was bleeding & dying.
		a.	But, every day we step over people who are dead in sin & bound for an eternity in hell!
		b.	How can we merely step over the dying?
	4.	Shall we work this week to see an assembly in this place to hear the Word of the Lord?

AN ADDRESS, vv. 14-36

A. 	Because they heard the apostles speaking in tongues, the crowd assembled at that first Gospel Meeting believed 
	that the apostles were drunk. Peter stands to defend the apostles.
	1. 	He quotes Joel's prophesy about the pouring out of the Spirit, and declares that that event had just
		occurred, vv. 16-21.
	2. 	But, he goes on to proclaim the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
		a. 	He quotes from David to establish the resurrection, vv. 25-28.
		b. 	He quotes from David to establish Jesus' exaltation vv, 34-35.
	3. 	Peter used Scripture to establish what he taught.
		a. 	He didn't stand before his audience and say something like, "Well, let me tell you how I feel about 
			this." No, he pointed people to Scripture.
		b. 	Modern preachers need to point people to Scripture.
			1)	When Micaiah was told to go and tell Ahab what he wanted to hear, Micaiah responded, "As the 
				LORD lives, what the LORD says to me, that I will speak" (1 Ki. 22:14).
			2)	Paul told Timothy, "Preach the word" (2 Tim. 4:2)-not preach your feelings, preach your 
				opinions, preach what's popular, but preach the Word.
B. 	Peter then convicts his audience of guilt - "Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has 
	made him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified" (v. 36).
	1. 	Peter didn't tell his audience, "What you did isn't your fault; it's no big deal; don't worry about it."
	2. 	He wasn't shy about pointing out the sins of his hearers; modem preachers cannot be shy about pointing 
		out people's sins.
		a. 	John the Baptist told Herod concerning Herodias, "It is not lawful for you to have her" (Mt. 14:4).
		b. 	Paul told Timothy, "Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and 
			exhort, with complete patience and teaching" (2 Tim. 4:2).
	3. 	Preachers shouldn't intentionally aim to make people feel bad, but if sins aren't pointed out and
		confronted, what good has been done?
C. 	Charles Spurgeon, the well-known Baptist preacher, said, "I cannot help feeling that the man who preaches the 
	Word of God is standing, not on a mere platform, but on a throne. We cannot play at preaching. We preach for 
	eternity.  Life, death, hell and worlds unknown hang on the preaching and hearing of a sermon."
	1.	If a man who taught error believed so strongly about preaching, how can we not feel that strongly about 
		preaching?
	2.	Shall you listen to the preaching of Scripture this coming week?

AN ANXIETY, v. 37

A. 	When the assembled crowd heard that they had crucified the Messiah, they were cut to the heart.  They had 
	great anxiety.
	1. 	In Greek, the verb "cut" with "the heart" as its object refers to strong emotion.
		a. 	The meaning is that this crowd was stung to their core when they realized that they had crucified the 
			Messiah for whom they were waiting.
		b. 	They were deeply convicted of their sin.
	2. 	In order for true repentance to take place, there must be a conviction of sin.
		a. 	Jesus had prophesied that when the Spirit came that he would "convict the world concerning sin and 
			righteousness and judgment" (Jn. 16:8)- Now, through the preaching of Peter, we see that prophecy 
			fulfilled.
		b. 	David confessed, "My iniquities have gone over my head; like a heavy burden, they are too heavy for 
			me" (Ps. 38:4).
B. 	If we want to bring people to Jesus, they must be convicted of their sin.
	1. 	We cannot merely preach a "feel-good" Gospel; before people can come to Jesus, they need to
		understand that they have wronged God, they have sinned, and they are responsible for Jesus'
		crucifixion.
	2. 	Without such a realization there will never be true conversion or true dedication to the Lord Jesus.

AN ASSURANCE, vv. 38-41

A. 	When the crowd had been cut to their core, they cried out to Peter and the other apostles, "Brothers, what shall 
	we do?" Peter replied, "Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness 
	of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit," v. 38.
	1. 	The crowd's dismay quickly turned into an assurance.
		a. 	Just imagine being in their shoes - they had just learned that they were responsible for the death of 
			the Messiah.
		b. 	They had to be wondering, "If we've done that, what can we do?"
	2. 	Peter gives them an assurance of having that guilt removed when he says, "Repent and be baptized."
		a. 	Repentance is essential to one's salvation.
			1)	Repentance is far more than simply being sorry for one's sins, as this text shows; the crowd was 
				already sorry for their sins, but Peter told them to repent.
			2)	Repentance means to change one's mind about sin, and then change one's actions.
			3)	If you want to be saved, you must repent of your wrongdoings.
				a)	"Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish" (Lk. 13:3, 5).
				b)	"The times of ignorance God overlooked, but now he commands all people everywhere to 
					repent" (Acts 17:30).
		b. 	Baptism is also essential to one's salvation.
			1)	Many in the religious world debate whether or not one needs to be baptized in order to be saved, 
				but Peter here declares that baptism is "for the remission of sins"; in other words, one is baptized 
				to have his sins forgiven. 
			2)	Baptism is essential to salvation.
				a)	"Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved" (Mk. 16:16).
				b)	"Baptism, which corresponds to this, now saves you, not as a removal of dirt from the body 
					but as an appeal to God for a good conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ" (1 
					Pet. 3:21).
B. 	"Those who received his word were baptized, and there were added that day about three thousand souls," v. 41.
	1. 	This crowd gladly received Peter's word. What word was it that they gladly received?
		a. 	It could not be the preaching about Jesus, for after the sermon they were cut to the heart.
		b. 	This must be the message that there was an assurance of the forgiveness of sins & salvation from hell.
	2. 	This crowd was so happy to hear that there was hope, and they obeyed that message of hope.
		a. 	Gospel Meetings today must offer assurance
			1)	Sin must be confronted, but if we never give hope in light of their sin, what good have we done?
			2)	Jesus gave us hope, and we need to give that hope to others.
		b. 	Do you have that assurance this day? Do you need to come this morning and repent and be baptized?

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The Ingredients Of A Meeting
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