Rio Vista Church

For the week of November 8

Welcome to Week 2 of Awaken and to Acts chapter 8. This week we will be reading about Philip the Evangelist and the Ethiopian eunuch. Despite its many supernatural elements there is a lot about sharing the gospel that we can learn from it.

(By the way, Philip the Evangelist is not Philip the Apostle. They are often confused, but are two different people.)

Let’s get started!

Prayer guides authored by Tracy Lautenschlager.

Index to Days 2 through 5

 Day 1 
Go Where?
Observe

Philip receives an angelic visitor who sends him on a journey down from Jerusalem to Gaza.

Philip is leading a very successful ministry among the Samaritans. Many miracles and healings were accompanying his witness, and it says that “multitudes” believed. Then God comes to him and tells him to head south, into the desert, and does NOT tell him why. Philip recognizes that it is God directing him and he goes. It’s very important that we are able to discern when it is God telling us to do something, because it won’t always make sense from the circumstances.

Ethiopia in those days was much larger than that region is today. It’s the area where the Queen of Sheba would have come from. The fact that a very important official in the court of the present queen had come to worship at Jerusalem seems to indicate that some of what the Queen of Sheba saw at Solomon’s court had stuck with her and traveled home to her people. The message of the gospel can find its audience even in places we don’t expect.

  1. How does God communicate with you? What form does it take and how do you discern that it’s him?

  2. How do you handle it when something you believe God is telling you to do doesn’t make sense, at least to you?

Heavenly Father, It is so challenging to discern and follow your voice in this age of science and certainty, when following the voice of one unseen is ridiculed or feared.  Help me to step away from that and quiet my mind on you. Help me to focus on your character and your eternal word, the source of your constant guidance.  Send me clear guidance, Lord, and then give me the courage to follow your direction. Amen.

 Day 2 
An Invitation to Explain

Observe

Philip approaches the chariot, hears him reading, and asks a question that results in being invited to join the journey.

13 When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. 14 He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you.

13 For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

14 How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? 15 And how are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”

The Ethiopian official invites Philip to come up and sit with him, so Philip could explain what was being read from Isaiah. To approach the chariot at all took some real courage and boldness on Philip’s part. This was no lone man riding on an ox cart. He was a VIP and would be traveling with an entourage, including plenty of personal protection. Clearly God provided access for Philip, much like God had directed Philip into the area, so we should also be looking for God to prepare the way. Philip didn’t come in the door preaching, he asked a question. The sign of fertile soil where God has prepared the heart to receive the gospel is when that question is received well and an invitation to talk more is extended. We must not let fear restrain our boldness but we must also temper our boldness to match the Spirit’s direction and preparation for us.

  1. How can someone be bold and gentle at the same time?

  2. It’s not uncommon to experience “the freeze,” where you know you should speak up but you don’t. Why do you think that happens? What are you afraid of or worried about?

Dear Lord, I confess that I’ve remained silent when I knew you were providing an opportunity to speak of you. And at times I’ve spoken, but done so with judgment or unkindness. Now I ask that you would tune my eyes and ears to you.  Let me hear your direction and see the needs of the people who cross my path. Show me where you are at work in the lives around me, because I desire to join you in that work. Help me to ask, and to listen and, then, to introduce them to you. Amen.

 Day 3 
Know the Word

Observe

Philip connects the words of the prophet Isaiah with the good news about Jesus.

It says that Philip BEGAN with the scripture from Isaiah and then preached Jesus to the Ethiopian official. There can be little doubt that Philip introduced other scriptures as well. When the moment happens, after we follow God’s direction and find the path he has prepared for us to walk, we should be ready to share about Jesus from the scriptures. John 3:16 is a wonderful verse, but most of the time you’re going to need a little more for people to get the big picture.

  1. If the opportunity arises, could you share the plan of salvation from the scriptures?

  2. What scriptures were instrumental in your decision to put your full faith and trust in Jesus as your Savior?

Dear Jesus, I’ve listened to many sermons, and I’ve sat through Bible studies, but I retain so little from these wonderful opportunities. I see now that knowledge of your word  must be higher among my priorities. I need to be prepared to give an answer. Thank you Lord for our pastors and teachers and for the abundance of knowledge they provide. Help me to take it in, to talk about it, to listen to it, to study it and remember, for such a time as this. Amen.

 Day 4 
Ask the Question

Observe

Philip doesn’t stop with simply explaining the gospel, but he invites the Ethiopian eunuch to take the next step on the path to becoming a disciple (in this case, water baptism).

(You will notice that the ESV translation skips verse 37, moving right from verse 36 to 38. This is an example of a manuscript difference between the ESV and some other English translations. In the King James or New King James versions, which use the Textus Receptus instead of the Critical Text, verse 37 has Philip answering the Ethiopian official’s question about whether he could be baptized, saying “If you believe with all your heart, you may.” The Ethiopian official responded “I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.” Is that verse actually part of the New Testament? That’s a very long discussion about Bible translations and why they’re different, so the best answer here is “maybe.” There is certainly nothing wrong about the verse, so whether the Holy Spirit inspired Luke to write it or whether some scribe copying the text added in what he imagined was said, it doesn’t change the story.)

Philip didn’t just stop with preaching Jesus, he led the Ethiopian official through the process of water baptism, a public declaration of his faith. It is important to remember that the Great Commission is to go and make DISCIPLES, not simply converts. We must always be ready to invite them to the next step.

  1. What are the four steps in our Growth Track at Rio?

  2. Which of them do you find easiest to invite people to join? Why?

Father Lord,  As if sharing the gospel and inviting people to church wasn’t hard enough, it’s become even more awkward in a pandemic. But there has probably been a “perfect” excuse for every age and time and every society, so I’m laying that excuse down right now. Lord, help me to genuinely, humbly invite people to meet you, to know you through study and fellowship, and to proclaim you as Lord. Amen.

 Day 5 
Believe in Teleporters Miracles!

Observe

God supernaturally whisks Philip away, which is a miracle in its own right, but every bit as miraculous is the legacy of this encounter.

In a remarkable conclusion, the Holy Spirit appears to supernaturally transport Philip to his next destination. It isn’t very likely he will do that to us today. For one thing, we have cars and planes, and we get from one place to another rather well on our own. But what we can glean from this is that the more attuned to the Spirit we are and the more faithfully we carry out his instructions, the more we can expect him to move in power through us and around us. Will we get teleported somewhere? No, probably not. Yet don’t be surprised when you see God use your faithfulness in ever-increasing ways.

So what’s the legacy of this encounter? Tradition tells us that this Ethiopian official took this message and his sincere faith back to his homeland and today’s Coptic Christians, greatly persecuted for their faith in Egypt today, trace their beginnings back to him. In the power of the Spirit, if we just rise up and go, miracles can happen!

  1. When has God opened doors for you to be a witness for him? What happened?

  2. What is the most crucial characteristic of an evangelist?

Dear Lord, I admit that the end of this passage leaves me thinking, “sure, Phillip gets whisked away so he doesn’t have to face this guy at the office the next day.”  He got to skip the awkwardness, the pressure to keep being nice, day after day, and he got to avoid messing  up the message. But you know what each day will bring for me. You know who will see my actions and hear my words, and still, you say that I should go and make disciples. So here I am, a broken vessel, but use me Lord. Amen.