I. Main points of application or "So what?"
from Acts 10
- God will bring the gospel to those who desire to know it and to know
God. Cornelius, a God-fearer, demonstrates this truth.
- God sometimes trains his servants on the job. God taught Peter step by
step and had him ready for the ministry God prepared for him.
- God guides believers; divine guidance is a practical reality. God uses
prayer, his Word, thinking, circumstances, and the Holy Spirit to guide
believers into his will. See how God guided Peter to go to Cornelius’
house and deliver the right message.
- The good news of eternal life through faith in Jesus Christ is offered
to all mankind—Jew and Gentile. There are no restrictions as to who
may believe the gospel.
- All believers are equal members in the body of Christ, the church.
They have different functions, but they have equal position in Christ.
II. Summary Outline
1.
God sent an angel to instruct Cornelius, a God-fearer and a Roman
centurion stationed in Caesarea, to send for Simon Peter, who was staying
with a tanner in Joppa. Cornelius obeyed the Lord by sending two house
servants and a God-fearing soldier to ask Peter to come to Caesarea.
Cornelius wanted to know God—he was ready to hear the gospel of Christ
(Acts 10.1-8).
2.
While the men were traveling to Joppa, Peter went up to the
housetop at noon to pray. During his prayer time God gave him a vision: a
large sheet that contained unclean creatures—animals, insects, and
birds—descended from heaven; the Lord told Peter to eat from the unclean
creatures and Peter said that he could not eat because the Mosaic Law
forbade this activity; this happened three times and then the vision ended
(Acts 10.9-16).
3.
When the men arrived at the tanner’s house, Peter was wondering
about what he had seen. The Holy Spirit told him to go with the men even
though Cornelius and the three messengers were strangers to Peter (Acts
10.17-22).
4.
The next day Peter left for Cornelius’ house with the men. When
Peter arrived, he awed Cornelius, but Peter reminded Cornelius that he was
also a man and was not to be worshipped. Peter entered the house and found
a crowd had gathered to hear him speak from God (Acts 10.23-27).
5.
God had set the stage for a history changing meeting: Peter had his
Jewish frame of reference; he had just experienced the sheet vision; the
Holy Spirit had told him to go with the men; he had first hand knowledge
of Jesus Christ the savior; and a crowd of Gentiles awaited his message
from God. Cornelius told Peter and the crowd why he had sent for
him—God’s angel had told him to send for Peter (Acts 10.28-33).
6.
Peter realized that God set up this meeting. The purpose was to
explain to those present, mostly Gentiles, what Peter now understood: the
good news of eternal life through faith in Jesus Christ was not restricted
to Israel; it was the message for all people (Acts 10.34-36).
7.
Peter reviewed the main events of Jesus’ life—he gave a life of
Christ walk-through. John had
baptized Jesus; the Father anointed him with the Holy Spirit; Jesus
performed miracles; the disciples witnessed all these events; the
authorities crucified Jesus; the Father resurrected Jesus and presented
him alive to the disciples and many others; and Jesus had commissioned the
disciples to witness that Jesus is God, the Messiah, about whom the
prophets also testified “that through his name everyone who believes in
him receives forgiveness of sins” (Acts 10.34-43).
8.
Those whom Cornelius had gathered in his house believed in Jesus
Christ as savior. They immediately received the Holy Spirit. By causing
them to speak in tongues in front of the Jewish believers God demonstrated
that he accepted Gentiles as equal members in the body of Christ without
their having to become Jews. The Jewish believers marveled when they
realized that God accepted Gentiles on an equal basis with Jews. Peter then baptized the new believers with water (Acts
10.44-48).
III. Dictionary of Bible Doctrine
1.
Barnabas was Jewish, a
Levite, and a believer in Christ. He was originally from Cyprus; he was
generous; he had an active, varied, and wonderful ministry. His original
name was Joseph, but the apostles gave him the name Barnabas, which means
Son of Encouragement (Acts 4.36-37). He was the cousin of John Mark
(Colossians 4.10). About A.D. 37, at a time when
believers were still somewhat afraid of Saul, Barnabas took Saul in
hand and introduced him to the apostles in Jerusalem (Acts 9.26-27).
Later, when the Jerusalem church heard that a large number of Greeks at Antioch were believing in Christ, the leaders sent
Barnabas there to witness the ministry. After seeing the good ministry, he
encouraged the believers at Antioch. Luke records that Barnabas was a good
man and full of the Holy Spirit and faith (Acts 11.23-24). Barnabas then
went to get Saul, who was in Tarsus; Saul and Barnabas spent a year in
Antioch teaching the Word of God (Acts 11.19-30). Barnabas was Saul’s
partner on the first missionary trip (Acts 13-14, about A.D. 48-49) and at
the Jerusalem council meeting (Acts 15.1-5).
Barnabas served in evangelism, teaching, reconnaissance, financial
responsibilities, and encouragement of believers. Though he was a grace
oriented believer, even he gave in to the pressures of the legalists in
Antioch; these legalists objected to Peter sitting down to dinner with
Gentiles, and so Barnabas, along with Peter, separated from the Gentiles
until Paul corrected them (Galatians 2.11-19). Barnabas and Paul disagreed
on whether they should take John Mark with them on the second missionary
trip; Barnabas said yes, Paul said no. The two men separated; Barnabas
took John Mark to Cyprus and Paul took Silas and began the second trip
(Acts 15.36-40, about A.D. 50). Barnabas
illustrates biblical application for us: be flexible in the use of gifts
and training; the prepared believer has a variety of ministry
opportunities; no service is insignificant; spiritual failure does not
remove one from future ministry; be an encouragement to others, not a
discouragement; and beware of legalism.
2.
Roman Army:
The Roman army helped provide the stability and peace for the age
in which Christ was born, kept peace during the time of the early church,
and participated in both the persecution
and protection of believers. Jesus marveled at the faith of a centurion, a
non-commissioned officer, whom he met in Capernaum (Matthew 8.5-13). The
Roman army took part in the arrest and crucifixion of Jesus (Luke 23.47;
John 18-19); it both protected and arrested Paul (Acts 21.27-33;
27.31-42); a centurion sent for Peter in order to hear him give God’s
message, the gospel (Acts 10.1-2,22); the army arrested Peter on orders
from Herod Agrippa I (Acts 12.3,18); the Roman army was so well known that
Paul taught believers how to prepare themselves for spiritual battle by
comparing believers to Roman soldiers and their armor (Ephesians 6.10-17)
and by comparing the Christian life to a soldier’s life (1 Corinthians
9.6; 2 Timothy 2.3-4); and Paul lived with a Roman soldier during his
first Roman imprisonment (Acts 28.16) and ministered to the Praetorian
Guard and to Caesar’s household (Philippians 1.13 and 4.22). The largest
army group was a legion, which was four to six thousand men; six tribuni
commanded, in rotation, the legions. A legion had ten groups, called
cohorts, of 600 men. A cohort was manned by three maniples, each made up
of 200 men. Each maniple was composed of two centuries; a centurion
commanded a century. A century had from 70-100 men. The Roman army also
had independent or volunteer cohorts made up of 1000 men; Acts 10.1
mentions the Italian cohort and Acts 27.1 mentions
Julius, a centurion of the Augustan cohort.
3.
God-Fearer was the term
for Gentiles who were attracted by the monotheism and ethical standards of
the Jewish community; some practiced in a more limited way the Jewish
observance of the Sabbath and the dietary laws; some attended the
synagogue and prayed regularly. God-fearers
were respected by the Jewish
people (Acts 10.2,22; 12.6,26); they were often open to the gospel and
many God-fearers responded in faith to the gospel and became a strong
force in the early church (Acts 10.35). Cornelius, a centurion of the
Italian cohort who lived in Caesarea, was a God-fearer. God instructed
Cornelius to send for Peter, who would reveal the gospel to him.
Cornelius, along with other Gentiles, listened to Peter, believed the
gospel, received the Holy Spirit, and was baptized in water (Acts 10). A
God-fearer was, then, a Gentile who, influenced by the Old Testament, had
passed through God-consciousness and was ready to hear the accurate gospel
of Christ.
4.
Divine Guidance means
that God makes his will known to believers. Sometimes we know his will all
at once (Jude), and sometimes he reveals his will a step at a time
(Peter). God guided Peter in the Cornelius situation through a combination
of Peter’s prayer, the Word (the sheet vision), Peter’s thinking about
the vision, circumstances, and through the urging of the Holy Spirit (Acts
10. 9-22 and Acts 11.4-12). Peter did not fully know to what end God was
guiding him until he arrived at Cornelius’ house and heard Cornelius’
explanation as to why he had sent for Peter (Acts 10.34-35). Peter
followed God’s guidance step by step. God guided Jude to change the
subject of his letter from salvation to an appeal that believers earnestly
contend for the faith because of the surrounding apostasy (Jude 1-4). God
guided Jude through a combination of Jude’s knowledge of Bible doctrine,
the circumstances of apostasy, and a strong inner necessity produced by
the Holy Spirit. After the Scripture was completed, God stopped guiding by
visions or direct revelations; we now have his completed Word, Bible
doctrine. Therefore, we need to know the Word of God, walk in fellowship
with God, walk by the Holy Spirit, and listen to the Word and the Holy
Spirit.
5.
Water
baptism is the church age ritual that publicly
identifies a believer with Jesus Christ as savior and with the new eternal
kind of life in Christ Jesus. The Greek word “to baptize” is
baptizw,
which means to dip, immerse, plunge, overwhelm, and so to identify with
something. Israel, during the Exodus, was baptized into Moses, which means
that the nation was identified with Moses, their leader (1 Corinthians
10.2). Water baptism is not necessary for salvation; it points to
relationship with Christ, not to the person administering the ritual; it
ought to be done reasonably soon after receiving eternal life by faith in
Christ; the ritual is performed by immersion in water and in the name of
the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Water baptism is of secondary importance
to the gospel and to the baptism of the Holy Spirit. Any believer can
baptize another believer, though usually pastor-teachers or evangelists
administer the ritual (Matthew 28.19-20; Acts 16.33; 1 Corinthians
1.13-17).