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Set Apart For Service! Series
Contributed by Gordon Curley on Jan 2, 2022 (message contributor)
Summary: ‘Set Apart For Service.’ Acts chapter 13 verses 1-3 sermon by Gordon Curley (PowerPoint slides to accompany this talk are available on request – email: gcurley@gcurley.info)
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SERMON OUTLINE:
(1). God changes lives (vs 1)
(2). God’s general call to service (vs 1-3)
(3). God’s specific call to service (vs 2)
SERMON BODY:
Ill:
• January is the first month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars.
• In ancient Roman mythology, Janus was the god of beginnings and transitions.
• He was usually depicted as having two faces looking at opposite ways,
• One towards the past and the other towards the future.
• From his name we have in the English language Janus-words,
• They are words with two meanings that seem to contradict each other.
• Examples of Janus words are:
• CLEAVE:
• To divide by or as if by a cutting blow or to cling firmly.
• DUST:
• To make free of dust or to sprinkle with fine particles.
• OVERLOOK:
• To look past, to miss or to look over: INSPECT
• WEATHER:
• To endure or to erode.
• TRIP:
• To dance, skip or caper with light quick steps or to stumble.
• OVERSIGHT:
• Watchful and responsible care or an inadvertent omission or error.
• BUCKLE:
• To fasten or to bend and then break.
• CHUFFED:
• When you’re chuffed, you can be either pleased or displeased.
• FAST:
• To move quickly (as in "running fast") or not moving (as in "stuck fast").
• TRANSITION: I think as we start a New Year,
• I would like to apply those examples of Janus words to our Church fellowship,
• e.g., CLEAVE:
• I hope we can say that in 2022 we will ‘cling firmly.’
• Or in application deepen our fellowship, friendship with each other!
• DUST:
• To make free of dust or to sprinkle with fine particles.
• The gathering of dust is an idiom meaning,
• ‘To be unused or forgotten, especially for a long period of time.’
• I hope we can say that in 2022 that our baptistry will not fit that description!
• OVERLOOK:
• I am going for the positive meaning, which is INSPECT,
• Inspect the Christian faith and respond accordingly.
• It was Jim Elliot the American Christian missionary & martyr who said,
• “Wherever you are - be all there.”
• And if this gospel, faith, book is true then it deserves everything!
• WEATHER:
• To endure or to erode.
• In 2022 you don’t have to endure Church; you are allowed to actually enjoy it!
• But I would suggest that the attitude you bring along with you when you enter the building,
• Will determine your experience while you are in the building!
• TRIP:
• To dance, skip or caper with light quick steps or to stumble.
• One of the four meanings of the word trip is,
• ‘A device that activates or disconnects a mechanism, circuit, etc.’
• God calls us all to be switched on, and to walk in the light,
• So that we do not spiritually stumble!
• OVERSIGHT:
• Watchful.
• That we will show care for one another,
• This is the responsibility of all the believers and not just the leaders,
• In fact, members looking after members is always the best support a person can have.
• BUCKLE:
• To fasten,
• We live in an age of false teaching, Biblical heresy,
• Sadly, you can find it in a few minutes on YouTube or stations like God TV.
• May God give us discernment to buckle down to the historic Christian faith.
• CHUFFED:
• I hope in 2022 we will all be chuffed, be pleased to be here, to meet together
• God is in the place how should we ever leave disappointed?
• FAST:
• I hope we will move forward i.e., make progress love to see us grow.
• Grow numerically as folks come to faith,
• Grow deeper personally in our walk with God.
• Grow stronger in love as we enjoy fellowship together.
• So, as we start a New Year, I hope those few Janus words might encourage us,
• To look back and also to look forward.
• Quote: Hymn, “We’ll praise him for all that is past, and trust him for all that’s to come.’
Ill:
• The Danish existentialist philosopher Soren Kierkegaard,
• My favourite philosopher, once said,
“Most people don’t understand that while life must be understood backward, it can only be lived forward.”
• We are looking back at the early Church in the book of Acts,
• To understand and to learn, but this is more than a history lesson.
• The principles and the lessons we can discover are very much applicable for today.
Note:
• Chapter 13 marks a turning point in the book of Acts.