You can go!

You can Go!

Acts 16: 36 The jailer told Paul, “The magistrates have ordered that you and Silas be released. Now you can leave. Go in peace.”

You are free!

The enemy has declared it!

So why did God send the violent earthquake? It wasn’t to release Paul and Silas because they would obviously be released the morning after. The earthquake and the prison door flying open was for the jailer and the household.

God moves for those who don’t know Him.

Within only a few hours the jailer is using the language of the early church, ‘Go in peace.’

God moves hugely for the smallness of humanity. There is nothing God wouldn’t do to rescue us. God goes big for us who are really small!

Amen!

 

 

 

The power of love that hurts.

The power of love that hurts.

Acts 16:35

“When it was daylight, the magistrates sent their officers to the jailer with the order: “Release those men.”

Paul and Silas were in prison twice.

They went there the night before after being severely flogged. Thrown into the inner cell, bruised and bleeding, they could have sulked but they praised and pandemonium broke out because God broke in.

The jailer brought them out of the prison into his home and during the night he and his household heard the gospel, were baptised, washed their wounds and gave them a meal.

Before daylight Paul and Silas went back into the prison voluntarily.

They did this to protect the jailer’s life.

Here we see a most amazing fundamental truth of love and friendship.

Love will cause you to willingly be contained so that your friend can be free.

Love is not self-seeking. Love is the cross. Love is painful as it promotes your friend. Love lays down. Love means you go back in to the darkness of the prison and you are fastened into the stocks so that you cannot move and once again there is no hope. Love means you don’t get your dream so that your friend gets theirs. Grief is not only for loss but it is for love.

There is nothing more powerful than this love, a love that hurts the one who loves.

Let’s eat!

Let’s eat!

Acts 16:34 “The jailer brought them into his house and set a meal before them; he was filled with joy because he had come to believe in God—he and his whole household.”

Once their wounds had been washed they were ready for something to eat.

They had been severely flogged, with many injuries they had been fastened into stocks in a dark inner cell of the prison. Eating a meal was not on their agenda. When you are hurt your appetite leaves.

There are times when you have to minister whilst you are hurt and hungry. But God has a plan to wash your wounds and He will have even the most unlikely of people ready to do this. With your wounds washed then you will be ready to eat.

I realise this is a generalisation, however …

Hurting people eat junk food or no food making things worse.

Healed people eat meals that satisfy their bodies.

  • If Jesus referred to food as doing His Fathers will then we can certainly say this:

The reason why some have shallow discipleship and do not grow in the purposes of God is because of the hurts that they still carry in their lives.

  • If Jesus told us that those who hunger and thirst after righteousness will be filled, then we can certainly say this:

There are many who today long for justice in an unfair world or justice from within the battles of their own soul, these are targets for the grace of God which will fill their searching lives.

  • If Jesus told his disciples he wouldn’t eat the supper again until he returns and the angel in John’s revelation announces the great end-time supper of the Lamb, then we can certainly say this:

There are people whose life is one knock after another, their world seems cruel, they are attacked at every turn, but if they hold on to their Saviour then they will sit down with Him to eat, it is our guaranteed promise.

Today get your wounds washed and let’s eat!

God knows your need

God knows your need

Acts 16:33 “At that hour of the night the jailer took them and washed their wounds; then immediately he and all his household were baptized.”

So let us first look at what has happened since the severe flogging that Paul and Silas had received:

Thrown into the inner cell of a prison.

Their feet fastened in stocks.

Singing hymns and praying at midnight.

Testifying to the other prisoners.

The violent earthquake.

The prison is shaken at its foundation.

Prison doors fly open and everybody’s chains came loose.

The prisoners remain in the prison, influenced by Paul and Silas, they do not run away. That point saves the Jailer from killing himself.

The jailer and his whole household hear the gospel for themselves.

 

There is so much activity. God is at work, Paul and Silas are working and the Jailer is also active, along with the other characters, the prisoners and the household.

Yet through it all Paul and Silas are still bleeding, hurt and wounded.

Friends, this is a simple truth for you today. God knows about your wounds. Your world may have so much activity in it. People may have forgotten what happened to you. Some may simply not know because on the surface you may look strong and full of joy. But God knows. He does not forget. He can see your wounds.

There is no guarantee on the time. You may have to continue for weeks, months or many years. Yet God has a plan. He has someone who will wash your wounds. They are in the story of your life. You may hurt today but tomorrow someone will bind up your wounds. God knows you cannot do life alone. He is with you and will bind up the wounds of your heart and body and He has someone perhaps very unlikely ready to do just this.

 

NOW!

NOW!

Acts 16:32 Then they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all the others in his house.

They spoke the word of the Lord there and then.

They didn’t wait till morning.

They didn’t wait till their wounds were healed.

They didn’t wait till the prison was secured.

This was an opportunity not to be missed or to be put off by inconvenience.

The jailer had asked and they responded with the gospel story. He had heard some of it before as they had shared with the other prisoners. But he needed to have the gospel given to him. Everyone needs to see how the gospel story weaves into their own story of life. They also need to know from the beginning that this is a shared gospel. It is not for them to keep, it has to be given away. So the jailer gathered his bewildered household together, they had never experienced a night quite like this one and there was more to come!

The time for sharing the gospel is never convenient. There are times when the light shines only during the night, just ask Nicodemus.

The time for sharing the gospel is never pain free. There are times when you have to forego your own need for healing and relief to bring eternal peace, just ask the thief on the cross next to Jesus.

The time for sharing the gospel is never in the perfect circumstance. Mayhem can be all around, prisons can be wrecked by earthquakes and yet this can be the perfect moment, just ask the jailer!

The response to the gospel is simple

The response to the gospel is simple

Acts 16:31 “They replied, “Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved—you and your household.”

The jailer asked them for something to do and their reply was ‘pisteuson’. Luke uses the word previously when Jairus was told to do the same thing over the announced death of his daughter. Jairus, only believe. Jailer, only believe. There is nothing to do, only believe. I had many texts yesterday of accounts of people from around the globe doing just that! On Easter Sunday they found that Jesus had done it all! I was in my church and saw many run to the front announcing that they now believe.

The jailer had addressed them as ‘Kyiori’ which in English means sirs, masters or lords and they reply saying there is only one Kyiori, it is Jesus. Immediately the focus is clear as it always has been. It is not about the Missions team, the church or dealing with the situation that is important. It is Jesus, He is everything.  He is the sir, the master, our Lord.

The jailer had given a sigh of relief. He thought he was saved because his prisoners were still in the prison. But that was an earthly, momentary salvation, it wasn’t eternal. He had heard of Jesus in their hymn singing and their gospel presentations to the other prisoners, he knew there was another, higher, deeper and far more reaching salvation and he didn’t have it. They promise him, ‘you will be saved’. Believe, trust, cling on to Jesus and you will be saved. Grace alone. The jailer was being told that in this prison of power, of sentence, of penalty, of the condemnation of man here and now he could be saved. The environment was indicative of the nature of the jailers own soul and condition before God but he could be saved from this, he could be lifted out from this because of Jesus.

The jailer is being instructed what to do next. He asked about what he must do ‘to be saved’. The reply was not only about him but about his place of influence, his household. They too will be saved. How? The answer is obvious, through him speaking to them, shaping them, influencing them as he always did as the sir, the master, the lord of the house.

This is the simplicity of the response to the gospel:

Your task: Believe in the Lord Jesus.

God’s task: He saves you.

Your task: Influence others to copy you.

Simple and refreshingly so!

Nothing can stop the gospel

Nothing can stop the gospel

Acts 16:30 He then brought them out and asked, “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?”

THE LIGHT SHINES IN THE DARKNESS AND THE DARKNESS HAS NOT OVERCOME IT. This is the heart of the gospel.

This Easter Sunday I pray for the Elim churches reaching the Fulani people. It is very difficult to spread the gospel amongst these people, the people walk in darkness, but the gospel is spread! One of our church planters will baptise 4 Fulanis today and the prayer of the church will be the same: that they be a good witness of Christ, that the gospel will spread even more. Last night one church planter texted me this: “Our nearest Fulani neighbours asked about our celebration but they aren’t believers. The wives are interested but one was beaten after they came to our Christmas celebration. She told me again yesterday that she wants to hear the sweet news, but I have to be cautious with their family. I had a small opportunity yesterday to share about Christ’s death and resurrection. Pray for more opportunities.”

Nothing can stop the gospel shining through.

Put the gospel on a cross and let thick darkness come all around and it will shine through!

Put the gospel in the darkness of a tomb and roll a huge boulder over its entrance and it will shine through!

Put the gospel in the darkness of an inner cell in a secure jail and it will sing hymns at midnight and shine its message of light to the prisoners already there.

And presumably, put the gospel under a life-or-death outcome of the jailer himself and it will continue to do its powerful work.

You see the prison doors did not fly open that night to get Paul and Silas out. They flung open so that all those who were in, including the jailer, would have an opportunity for salvation.

The stone didn’t roll away so that Jesus could be free. The stone rolled away so that mankind could realise that the gospel is not encased in a tomb of decaying bones.

The aim of the gospel is to get every human being to the point of asking a simple question: what must I do?

Whether the jailer of a bust jail or standing in an empty tomb or a Muslim witnessing the love of Christ, what must I do?

An expert of the Jewish law asked Jesus that question which led to the parable of the Good Samaritan.

The rich man asked Jesus that question and ended up very sad as he faced the task of selling all he had to give to the poor.

The early church grew at a fast rate because the crowd asked that question after Peter’s Pentecost sermon.

May today herald a global move of people asking that one question, ‘what must I do to be saved?’ May it happen in the church service you attend!

For nothing can stop the gospel.

How to see more trembling.

How to see more trembling.

Acts 16: 29 “The jailer called for lights, rushed in and fell trembling before Paul and Silas”.

Darkness is now going as lights are coming. As in the physical prison so it was in the jailers heart. An earthquake had taken place in his life. He had come so close to ending his life because of waking to the prison doors flung open and to find that none of the prisoners had escaped was beyond him. Why? How? What does he do now? Actually though you may think securing the doors would have been the first thing, it wasn’t. The jailer was beyond common sense. He was in the response state towards a God he didn’t know, worship or believe in. He was being shaken to the core and he threw himself down at the feet of the Church, of Paul and Silas.

The death and the resurrection of Jesus caused our very earth to tremble. There was an earthquake at the cross and also at the resurrection.

It also caused people to be equally terrified and to shake with fear. In fact the centurion and the guards who exclaimed “Surely he was the Son of God!” did so as they were terrified.

The two Mary’s, Salome and the other women fled from the tomb trembling as they had encountered the unexplained resurrection.

When God moves there is a shaking: “The Lord reigns, let the nations tremble; he sits enthroned between the cherubim, let the earth shake.” Psalm 99.

May people tremble again at the feet of the Church, at the unexplained, the impossible workings of God that occur through the body of Christ.

Just before you groan because you think what we need is more power for that to happen. Let me remind you that the jailer didn’t tremble because of the prison doors flying open miraculously but because the Church had managed to convince all the prisoners to remain in situation. The point being is we cannot miraculously open prison doors but we can be a people of huge influence! Now that, the Church can do. If we did, then maybe we would see people trembling on the floor and about to ask a really important question!

The big important shout!

The big important shout!

Acts 16: 29 “But Paul shouted, “Don’t harm yourself! We are all here!”

Matthew and Mark say that about the ninth hour Jesus cried out in a loud voice and quoted Psalm 22.

Matthew and Mark then also say Jesus cried out again in a loud voice then gave up his spirit.

Luke says that when the curtain of the temple had been torn in two, Jesus called out with a loud voice and quoted Psalm 31.

The picture I see on the cross is that of our Saviour shouting to the world, “It’s okay, it is in the Scripture!”. The Word of God shouting the Word of God!

As we wake to this Good Friday I don’t see a defeated man on a cross, a failure, dying in a defeated whimper. No! I see a victorious Son of Man who takes his last breath to shout as loud as he could Gods eternal truth!

Perhaps you can still hear that shout today?

Maybe it was like the shout of Paul to the jailer ….

“Don’t do it! We are all here! Don’t condemn yourself and no one can condemn you! God has found a way. It is not over for you! There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus!”

That shout of Paul saved the jailer his life.

In the same way the shout of Jesus saved you your life!

 

 

 

Wait, it may not be over!

Wait, it may not be over!

Acts 16:27

“The jailer woke up, and when he saw the prison doors open, he drew his sword and was about to kill himself because he thought the prisoners had escaped.”

 

It’s an incredible thing but some people will wake today and never be the same again.

The jailer woke and his world had collapsed. How could he have not heard any commotion? How could the prison doors be open and he sleep through the whole debacle?

He was ready to fall on his sword. The jailer knew he was in trouble. He was afraid and ashamed. He knew with the prisoners having escaped under his watch that he would be probably killed. Do I be killed or do I kill myself? Do I come under judgment or do I pass judgment on myself?

And we are left hanging in this moment of decision. “He was about to…” What will he do?

We all know what it is like to be at the edge of giving up.

The reason Jesus died on the cross was to make another way for us.

The jailer only thought there was 2 ways but there was another way he had not thought of. We will see that tomorrow!

The next time you are about to finish everything just pause and wait. There may be a way you haven’t seen if you just wait a moment in time. The Jailer ‘thought’ with the evidence before him. He thought wrong. God’s best work can leave you thinking the wrong thought.

During Jesus’ holy week his disciples’ thinking was often confused and wrong.

At the washing of their feet: “You do not realise now what I am doing, but later you will.”

At the betrayal when Jesus told Judas to go and act quickly: “but no one at the meal understood … some thought Jesus was telling him to buy food for the Feast or to give money to the poor.”

Thomas said: “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?”

The disciples were saying together continually, “What does he mean ‘by a little while’? We don’t understand”

Today you may have many thoughts, just wait, be open to the fact that you may be confused and wrong even though evidence is before you. Just wait, it may not be over.