North Anderson Baptist Church

On Mission: Acts 2, Message 3

37 min · 3 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio On Mission: Acts 2, Message 3

Descripción

In our culture, the word “church” can mean many different things—a building, a service, an institution, or even just another event on the calendar. But Acts 2 gives us a much deeper and more beautiful picture. After thousands respond to the gospel, they are not simply counted as converts; they are brought into a new kind of family—a community united by truth, shaped by the gospel, devoted to one another, and dependent on prayer. The early church was far more than a crowd gathered in one place; it was a people sharing life together on mission for Christ. As we look at this passage today, we are reminded that God did not design the Christian life to be lived in isolation, but in committed, gospel-centered community where truth is treasured, relationships are deepened, and Christ remains at the center of it all.

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109 episodios

Portada del episodio Chapter Six

Chapter Six

One of the greatest challenges any growing church will face is not persecution from the outside, but problems that arise from within. As the early church expanded rapidly in Jerusalem, new opportunities for ministry also brought new opportunities for misunderstanding, conflict, and division. In Acts 6, we find a congregation confronted with a legitimate complaint that threatened the unity of the body. Yet instead of allowing resentment, gossip, or cultural differences to fracture the church, the apostles responded with wisdom, godly leadership, and a commitment to God's priorities. This passage reminds us that faithful believers serve Christ wherever He places them, work diligently to protect the unity of His church, and recognize that prayer and the ministry of God's Word must remain at the center of everything the church does. Through the example of Stephen and the early church, we discover timeless lessons about servant-hearted leadership, gospel-centered priorities, and the kind of faithfulness God uses to accomplish extraordinary kingdom purposes.

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Portada del episodio We Must Obey God Rather Than Men

We Must Obey God Rather Than Men

There comes a moment in every believer’s life when obedience to Christ collides with the expectations of the world. In those moments, we must decide who will ultimately have our allegiance. In Acts 5, the apostles stand before the most powerful religious authorities in Israel and are commanded to stop preaching about Jesus. Their response is simple, courageous, and unforgettable: “We must obey God rather than men.” They knew that faithfulness to Christ would bring opposition, suffering, and rejection, but they also knew that Jesus was worth it. In a culture that increasingly pressures Christians to remain silent, soften the truth, or treat faith as a private matter, this passage reminds us that the Gospel was never meant to be hidden. The same Christ who empowered the apostles reigns today, and the same Holy Spirit who gave them courage lives within every believer. Acts 5 challenges us to examine our own hearts: When obedience to God becomes costly, will we seek the approval of people, or will we stand with conviction, proclaiming Christ regardless of the consequences? The apostles' example teaches us that true joy, boldness, and faithfulness are found not in avoiding hardship, but in surrendering completely to the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

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Portada del episodio Ananias and Sapphira

Ananias and Sapphira

Few passages in Scripture are as startling and uncomfortable as the story of Ananias and Sapphira. In a season when the early church was flourishing—marked by unity, generosity, and the powerful work of the Holy Spirit—we suddenly encounter a sobering reminder that God is not only loving and gracious, but also holy. At first glance, the punishment seems shocking. Why would God respond so severely to what appears to be a simple act of dishonesty? Yet this account forces us to wrestle with truths we often prefer to avoid: that sin is more serious than we realize, that nothing is hidden from the eyes of God, and that genuine worship begins with a right fear of the Lord. In a culture that often minimizes sin and elevates appearances, the story of Ananias and Sapphira calls us to examine our hearts and remember that God desires more than outward religious performance—He desires truth, integrity, and holiness in His people. And as we see the seriousness of our sin, we are also driven to marvel at the greatness of God's grace, for the question is not merely why they faced judgment, but why any of us continue to stand in need of—and receive—the mercy of God.

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Portada del episodio Holy Boldness

Holy Boldness

When pressure rises and opposition comes, our natural instinct is often to retreat, panic, or fight back. But in Acts 4, the early church responded differently. After Peter and John were threatened for preaching Jesus, the believers did not gather to complain, strategize, or hide—they gathered to pray. And their prayer reveals the source of true Christian boldness. They anchored themselves in the sovereignty of God, trusted the sufficiency of Scripture, and fixed their eyes on the supremacy of the risen Christ. These ordinary believers understood that if Jesus truly reigns, then no threat, suffering, government, or hardship can stop the mission of God. The same fearful disciples who once hid behind locked doors were now boldly proclaiming the Gospel because they had encountered the resurrected Christ and had been filled with the Holy Spirit. And in a culture increasingly resistant to biblical truth, Acts 4 reminds us that boldness is not personality, bravado, or fearlessness—it is the Spirit-empowered confidence that comes from knowing who God is, trusting His Word, and believing that Jesus is still on the throne.

24 de may de 202638 min
Portada del episodio Acts 4:1-12

Acts 4:1-12

In a world that celebrates tolerance and personal truth, one of the most offensive claims a person can make is that Jesus Christ is the only way to salvation. That is exactly why Peter and John were arrested in Acts 4—not for performing a miracle, but for boldly proclaiming that the crucified and risen Jesus alone has the power to save. The same Gospel that brought healing to a crippled man also exposed the pride, power, and unbelief of the religious leaders who opposed it. And nothing has really changed. The message of Jesus still confronts human pride, challenges self-sufficiency, and forces every person to respond. Yet the exclusivity of the Gospel is matched by the beauty of its invitation: anyone—regardless of background, failure, status, or past—can come to Christ and be saved. Acts 4 reminds us that the church is not called to soften the truth to avoid opposition, but to boldly and graciously proclaim the name above every name, trusting the Holy Spirit to open hearts and transform lives.

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