But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come
upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the end of the earth.
Joining God’s Plan
God doesn’t need us to save anyone because salvation is fully a work
of God (John 6:44), but He does allow us the privilege of participating
in the Great Commission (Matt. 28:19-20). Matthew 28:19-20 and Acts 1:8
are some of the few places where God provides the power but wants to
include us as part of His plan in taking the Gospel to a lost and dying
world. In Acts 1:8 Jesus says that we can receive the power of the Holy
Spirit, and then with this power of God’s Spirit, we can be witnesses in
our own Jerusalem, wherever it is that we live, even to the ends of the
earth. That might start with your next-door neighbor. The Spirit
quickens and gives life to those who are dead in their sins (John 6:63),
but they still need someone to tell them about their sins and their
need for the Savior to take away those sins. How will they ever believe
in Him if they’ve never heard about Him, and how will they hear about
Christ unless one of us tells them (Rom. 10:14)? The fact is, they must
be sent, and God wants you and me to join Him in this great mission
(Rom. 10:15).
Joining Jesus’ Plan
When Jesus came to earth, He said that He was sent to the lost House
of Israel, God’s lost sheep (Matt. 15:24), but this doesn’t mean that He
preached the Gospel only to Jews. He witnessed to a Roman Centurion,
the Samaritan woman at the well, and many others. But did Jesus use
others in His plan? Yes, as you can read for yourself where He sent 70
of His disciples out by twos, not to the Gentiles or the Samaritans but
only to the House of Israel (Matt. 10:5-6). He would later send Paul as
the apostle to the Gentiles (Acts 22:21; Rom. 15:19; Gal. 2:8). Could
God have done this without human effort? Of course He could. He could
have written the Gospel in the sky or sent angels, but the fact is that
He has chosen to use frail, feeble human beings. The point is that we
don’t have the power, save for the Spirit of God (Acts 1:8), because the
real power is the Gospel itself (Rom. 1:16).
The God-glorifying Plan
For many years, I just didn’t get this part of God’s plan, but truly
it is a huge part of the plan of God that He be glorified. The heavens
are already doing their part by declaring His glory (Psalm 19:1-4), so
we need to do our part. Peter truly states that when we teach or speak
the Word of God and we serve in the name of God, He is glorified (1 Pet.
4:11). In our daily life, even in eating, drinking, or whatever it is,
we should glorify God (1 Cor. 10:31). Even near the cross, Jesus
declared that the Son would be glorified and God the Father will be
glorified at Calvary (John 13:31-32). God seeks to be glorified, and we
can be part of this plan, but, importantly, we must not share in His
glory by trying to glory in ourselves because we have no reason to glory
about anything but God (Isaiah 42:8). God does not need us to fulfill
His glory or to rescue the perishing, but He does allow us to
participate. Will you join Him in this?
A Closing Prayer
Father God, You are such a good God, and I thank You for allowing me
to be part of Your wonderful plan to seek the lost so that You will be
glorified. Please forgive me when I have tried to rob You of Your glory,
and thank You for Your patience with me. In Jesus’ glorious name I
pray.
Amen
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