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Thursday February 28, 2008

They Had Been with Jesus

Roy Halladay is the kind of athlete that other players just want to be around. For many years now he has served as the ace of the Toronto Blue Jays’ pitching staff and he is consistently one of the top players in the game. He has achieved his success not only by having innate talent, but also (and primarily, I’m sure!) by working very, very hard. He drives himself relentlessly, training both his body and his mind so he can do his absolute best all the time. He expects no less. Other players on the team love to spend time with him. Just being near him and observing how he trains himself is valuable for other players. Many of the Jays would testify that being near him, watching him and copying him has made them better athletes. That’s often the way it is, isn’t it? Solomon knew this and said, “Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm.” We become like those around us.

I’ve been asked to speak a couple of times in the next few weeks on the book of Acts and I’ve been reading the book in my times of Bible study. Acts has long been my favorite New Testament book. I love it for its history, describing the earliest days of the church, and its theology, showing how early Christians began to work out Christian theology. There is something pure and inspiring in the early church and its something we’ve been trying to recapture ever since.

Whenever I read through Acts there are certain stories, passages or phrases that stop me every time. One of these is in the fourth chapter. Acts 4:13 reads like this: “Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that they were uneducated, common men, they were astonished. And they recognized that they had been with Jesus.” Hauled before the Jewish Council, John and Peter were asked by what power they had healed a lame beggar. Peter, though only a fisherman in a time of great rhetoric, was filled with the Holy Spirit, and went straight to the cross and to the gospel, speaking boldly and confidently. This left the religious authorities perplexed. How was it that ordinary, uneducated, common men could know so much and do so many great things. How could they speak with such authority? It seems it was right here that one of them had a little burst of inspiration and suddenly recognized that these men were two of Jesus’ disciples. They had gotten rid of Jesus, but now here were His followers, healing in His name and teaching men about their Master. Here they were speaking on behalf of Jesus. Matthew Henry says, “When they understood that they had been with Jesus, had been conversant with him, attendant on him, and trained up under him, they knew what to impute their boldness to; nay, their boldness in divine things was enough to show with whom they had had their education.” The authorities looked at these men and realized they had been with Jesus. This explained their behavior. Suddenly it all made sense. They weren’t happy.

I find that phrase such a challenge and such an inspiration. “They had been with Jesus.” It is inspiring to know that the source of the disciples’ boldness and confidence was not anything in themselves, but was a direct result of the time they had spent with Jesus. By living with Him and communing with Him, they became like Him. It was inevitable. For three years they sat at His feet, followed Him from town to town, and acted as His deputies. For three years He trained them and for three years they became increasingly like Him. They walked with the wise and became wise.

It is easy to be jealous of those disciples. There isn’t much most Christians wouldn’t give to be able to spend three years with Jesus. We can only imagine how that would change us, mold us, shape us. But there is reason to rejoice, nonetheless. God has given us His Word that we might learn to live as He would have us live. The Bible is perfectly sufficient for all matters of the Christian life. We, too, can be with Jesus by communing with Him in the Word. And this is the challenge for us. If we wish to be like Jesus, we need first to be with Jesus. Listen to Matthew Henry once more. “Those that have been with Jesus, in converse and communion with him, have been attending on his word, praying in his name, and celebrating the memorials of his death and resurrection, should conduct themselves, in every thing, so that those who converse with them may take knowledge of them that they have been with Jesus; and this makes them so holy, and heavenly, and spiritual, and cheerful; this has raised them so much above this world, and filled them with another. One may know that they have been in the mount by the shining of their faces.” Martyn Lloyd-Jones says something similar. “May we all learn the lesson of this old incident. Let us meet with this Jesus and listen to Him, and soon we, too, will become phenomena. We will become men and women who are enigmas to everybody else.”

Have you met with Jesus? This is the challenge for us. We are to study the Word and to learn from it, immersing ourselves in it, so that people will look at us and hear us speak and see and hear something other-worldly. They will only be able to conclude, “They have been with Jesus!”

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Comments (10) »


1. Jason McGibbon
February 28, 2008
11:24 AM

There is that word again…”ordinary.”
It is both humbling and yet comforting to know that it is the influence of Jesus on, in and through our lives that will make a difference in this world.


2. Tony
February 28, 2008
11:43 AM

Somewhat off topic … but those on SLICEof LAODICEA—who claim to have been with Jesus—are sure giving you a beating!
As for ACTS … the most important verse is 2:38!


3. Mike Reynolds
February 28, 2008
12:04 PM

Yeah, Josh Towers loved hanging out with Roy Halladay (sorry, I couldn’t resist - I’ll read the rest of the article now).


4. Truth Unites... and Divides
February 28, 2008
12:27 PM

I think this post of exhortation and encouragement is one of your best and most important.

Spend Quality Time with Jesus in His Word.

This will help you become more like Jesus. Nice segue from Acts to spending time in the Word as his faithful disciples.


5. Yogi Taylor
February 28, 2008
2:43 PM

Tim,
I thought that was a great start to your new series in Acts. I am not sure about the Acts 2:38 comment but, how you tied the Word in at the end is nice.

My comment is simply that many of us know the Scriptures and spend time in them but are forgetting to love Christ in the Scriptures, and though our theology should drive us to commune more with Christ, it often times puffs us up. But just like in your post today we see practically how these men have not just learned about Christ, but are living for Him.

There is always a constant need for us to have a sense about us, that everything we do should be driving us to intimacy with Christ. I do believe you are writing to this aim and I greatly appreciate the balance in your reviews and post. I, for one, enjoy the reads! Thank you!

Yogi


6. Glenn
February 28, 2008
2:45 PM

This is so fine! Thank you for sharing these thoughts today. What a glorious thought — “They had been with Jesus.” Would that one day someone might look and be able to say the same about me.


7. Tony
February 28, 2008
3:11 PM

Yogi … this is not my blog—and I’m not about to highjack it via the comment section—but what Acts 2:38 means is that you can’t be WITH Jesus until and unless you are first IN Jesus (repentance, water and Spirit baptism) … Acts 2:38 gets us IN Jesus so that we can be WITH Jesus.


8. Yogi Taylor
February 28, 2008
4:24 PM

Tony, are you saying baptism (water) is a requirement for salvation?

…And so that there is no high jacking Tim’s Blog, respond to me via e-mail yogitaylor(at)gmail(dot)com. I would love to chat more with you! Until then, God Bless you brother.

Yogi


9. David Porter
February 28, 2008
4:27 PM

I was out hiking in the mountains of Arizona this morning. It was a perfect day, the Mexican Yellow Poppies are ablaze on the slopes of the mountains.

As I was hiking along, I was thinking about what it must have been like to be shoulder to shoulder with Jesus for three years. Life changing is certainly an understatement.

I appreciated your words, and although I feel jealous from time to time that I just can’t go take a walk with Jesus, I certainly can through faith communicate with Him.

As I was walking through His creation today, he certainly spoke to me. Just to behold His creation brings tears.

Thank you for your heartfelt words.


10. Gordon Cheng
February 28, 2008
5:45 PM

I find that phrase such a challenge and such an inspiration. “They had been with Jesus.” It is inspiring to know that the source of the disciples’ boldness and confidence was not anything in themselves, but was a direct result of the time they had spent with Jesus.

By coincidence, I read this from
Martin Luther’s Table Talk yesterday:

I know nothing of Jesus Christ but only his name; I have not heard or seen him corporally, yet I have, God be praised, learned so much out of the Scriptures, that I am well and thoroughly satisfied; therefore I desire neither to see nor to hear him in the body.

(CCXXXII, “Of Jesus Christ”, Table Talk.

Like Luther I’m not persuaded that having been with Jesus in his incarnation is of any great spiritual advantage. I appreciate Matthew’s honesty when he records the disciples response to Jesus’ resurrection:

17 And when they saw him they worshiped him, but some doubted. (Mt 28:17)

this is possibly why Jesus appears to agree with Luther ;-) when he says

Jesus said to him, “Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” (John 20:29)

This, and some other passages, make me think that what made the difference for the apostles was not the time they’d spent with Jesus, but the coming and the indwelling of God’s Holy Spirit.