Acts 1:6-11 Step 1 Pray & Step 2 Survey

Acts 1:6-11 Step 1 Pray & Step 2 Survey

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Welcome back, I’m glad you’re here, my friend! I just want to remind you I’m sharing my answers in these posts to provide an example of the treasure that can be discovered through this process. If you’re working with the Holy Spirit and are seeing different results, know that you’re on the right track, even if your findings are different from mine.

That’s because He knows what each of us needs in our faith journey. How awesome is God that He provides our own personal Bible tutor—and the more we study, the more we will develop the skills to hear the Spirit’s voice. So, let’s keep studying!

Last Week’s Work

MY PRAYER
The first task from last week was to develop a prayer I promised to pray every time I sit down to study this section of Scripture. Here’s mine:

Father God, thank You for Your Word and for clear steps to help me see, understand, and apply it to my life now. Thank You for Your Holy Spirit, who opens my eyes, ears, and heart, and brings to mind all that you have taught me about Your Word so far. Bless this study of Acts 1:6-11 and all those who are studying with me. May we see You in all that we encounter here! In Jesus’s name I pray. Amen.

Because I’m still sometimes forgetting to pray before I start digging, I copied this onto a colored notecard I use as a bookmark in my study journal. It really is hard to teach this old dog new tricks!

HUH? and WOW! MOMENTS
Next, I slowly read through the study text, focusing on my reactions, and noting the parts that caught my attention. Here are my responses:

  • HUH? Verse 6 reads, “… they asked him, ‘Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom of Israel?’” What does the bold text mean?
  • WOW! Jesus told the disciples in verse 8, “… you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.”
  • WOW! Verse 9: “… he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight.”
  • WOW! and HUH? Verse 11: “This Jesus… will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.” What does the bold text mean?

I’m not sure what to think about this story. There isn’t a lot of detail: who is “they” with whom Jesus met as these things happened? The 11 remaining disciples? Others? Where did this take place? When did it take place? We have a lot of fact-finding to do in the next few weeks, and it appears we’ll have to look to the verses’ context to see if we can find any of this out.

I’m looking forward to it! I hope you are, too.

Dig-In Challenges

Next week, I plan to:

  1. Read my prayer bookmark each time I start studying this passage!
  2. MINE: Identify which aspect of this study I feel the Spirit leading me to dig deepest into right now. It could be one (or more) of the Huh? and Wow! Moments I wrote about this week, or some other item the Spirit hasn’t yet called to my attention.
  3. MINE: See if I can find out more about the setting of the scene in Acts 1:6-11 (who’s involved, where and when did the action take place), and note anything the Spirit emphasizes.

See you again soon!

GO TO WEEK 3 >

Acts 1:6-11 Step 1 Pray & Step 2 Survey

Acts 1:6-11 DISO Study Introduction

Welcome, and thank you for joining me for this Digging into Scripture Ourselves (DISO) study!

Let’s Study Acts 1:6-11! 

When I suspended our studies in October 2023, we were working through a select group of miracles of Jesus, and now it’s time to complete that series with Acts 1:6-11, which recounts Jesus’s ascension.

This week, I’ll work through two of the five steps in the new process using Acts 1:6-11. If you want to work along with me, here’s what I recommend you start with:

  1. A copy of Acts 1:6-11, plus access to the entire book of Acts.
    I copy the text from www.blueletterbible.org, paste it in a word processing program (Google docs or MS Word), change the formatting to suit my preferences, and print it out. If you want to use the ESV translation, here’s a copy I created that you can use.
  2. A study journal.
    I’m old-school and like the pen/pencil and paper method for journaling my studies, but you can do this any way you want. If you don’t think you have time to physically write or type your notes, consider recording an audio of your thoughts, or use your smart phone to dictate into a notes app.

But really, if you studied with me before, you know you’re welcome to just read the posts I publish here. They’ll help you become more familiar with the process and show you how the Spirit speaks to my situation. I’m praying that there will be enough similarities between my life and yours that you’ll find it worth your while to keep checking in with me, even if you can’t study along on your own yet.

Dig-In Challenges

So here’s what I’m going to do this coming week:

  1. PRAY: I’ll be creating a prayer that I can pray every time I study Acts 1:6-11. I’m going to write it in my study journal, so I’ll have it handy each time I study.
  2. SURVEY:  And then I’ll read Acts 1:6-11, noting anything that makes me say, “huh?” (as in, “I wonder what that means?”) or “wow” (as in, “that is so awesome!”). I’ll record these so I can come back and choose one I think the Spirit wants me to dig more deeply into right now.

I’m looking forward to sharing what I discover in this process with you—I hope you’ll stop by next week!

GO TO WEEK 2 >

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 5 Align

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 5 Align

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Welcome to the last blog in this series on Jesus’s resurrection! If you’ve studied with me online before, you might have noticed we’re finishing a little faster than we used to: eight weeks instead of nine weeks. Let me know what you think of the changes I’ve made on my contact page or via email.

And if this is your first study, I’d love to hear from you at either of those places, too.

Last Week’s Work

LESSON(S) LEARNED

Overwhelmingly, the lesson I’m taking away from this study is the reassurance that seeking Jesus is a strategy for overcoming fear. The divine messenger in this story clearly told the women (whom he’d charged with Christian communication—a similar calling to mine) not to fear because he knew they were seeking Jesus (v5).

CONVICTION

I felt convicted that I don’t always follow this strategy: often I allow our enemy’s seeds of doubt and fear to disable me. My struggle to finish writing the book I first mentioned in this blog more than a year ago comes immediately to mind, and though I am making slow progress toward a new and much improved version of it, I am still sometimes completely undone by feelings of inadequacy.

CORRECTION

As has often been the case in these studies of mine, I felt the Spirit correcting me in one of the cross-references. This time it’s from Matthew 14:

But when he [Peter] saw the wind, he was afraid, and beginning to sink he cried out, “Lord, save me.”  Jesus immediately reached out his hand and took hold of him, saying to him, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” (Matthew 14:30-31 ESV)

So many times, I relate to Peter! I want to try what I see others are doing, but part-way through I take my eyes off the goal, or Jesus, or both, and focus on the things that scare me. Even when I know—as I’m sure Peter did—that my Savior is in control of all those scary circumstances and will come to my aid when I’m doing what He commanded me to do. I still allow the demons of doubt and fear to weaken my faith to the point of giving up and going under.

ACTION PLAN

By memorizing these verses, I want to cement in my mind and heart Peter’s simple prayer seeking His help: “Lord, save me!” If, as Peter, I am doing what He’s told me to do (Matthew 14:29), I have every assurance He will come to my aid. Thank you, Jesus!

Our Next Study

I’m excited to begin the final posts of the 2023 Miracles of Jesus series next week. I hope you’ll join me to dig into Acts 1:6-11 and learn everything we can about Jesus’s ascension.

I’m also looking forward to uploading my older blogs from the other four studies in this series. They were lost late last fall when I had to change website providers, but I do have my drafts and should be able to start reconstructing them next month.

In the meantime, I hope you’ll join me next week to kick off Acts 1:6-11. See you then!

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 5 Align

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 4 Refine (Part 2)

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Hello again! I appreciate you dropping by! Isn’t God’s timing—that we are studying the resurrection of Jesus just weeks before Easter Sunday 2024—just amazing?! As part of my personal observance, I plan to revisit my steps here in the days leading up to my favorite holiday!

Last Week’s Work

In the meantime, though, let’s have a look at what I discovered this past week in other parts of Scripture and through other translations.

CROSS-REFERENCES

As I worked through the cross-references for vv5-7, I was again drawn to the angel’s statements do not be afraid, and I know that you seek Jesus. Remember a few weeks ago when we discovered the angel’s reason the women didn’t need to fear was because he knew they were seeking Jesus? That’s really good news! Friend, if we are seeking Jesus, we don’t need to fear, either.

My review of cross-references for verse 5 reminded me again of that truth when I read Matthew’s account of Jesus night-time water walk (Matthew 14:22-33). The vision so frightened the disciples, they cried out in fear. Jesus told them do not be afraid in v27. Then Peter wanted to walk on the water, too, Jesus invited him, and he went. Partway there, Peter saw the wind, became afraid, started to sink, and cried for help(v30). Jesus replied, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” (v31).

Throughout my studies of Jesus’s miracles last year (which I hope to make available here very soon), I observed a strong link between faith and miracles. Maybe that explains why the women in this text could act even though they were afraid (v8). Maybe their great joy was a byproduct of faith that Jesus had done what He said He would do (seven times according to Matthew 12:40, 16:21, 17:9, 17:22-23, 20:18-19, 26:31-32, 27:63)!

The second part of the angel’s statement in v5 mentions the women were seeking Jesus. I realized that, too, occurred in all the other miracles I studied. The cross-reference that resonated most there was from John 20:14-15. This is part of John’s resurrection account, where Jesus appears to Mary Magdalene, but she doesn’t recognize him. Jesus Himself asks her, Whom are you seeking? but she’s so distraught she can’t focus on his question, she just cries out, They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him. Of course, Jesus absolutely knew whom she sought before He ever asked. But His question made me, thousands of years later, sit up and take notice. Whom am I seeking? And why? Do I just want Him for what He’ll do for me? Or, like the women in our study passage, am I looking for Him so I can serve Him?

OTHER TRANSLATIONS

If you’ve studied with me in the past, you might remember I like to review at least a couple word-for-word (following most closely the original text and its arrangement) translations. Then I’ll look at least one thought-for-thought (more loosely following the grammar and vocabulary of the original) and paraphrase (less likely to reflect the actual words or phrases while trying to convey original meaning) translation each.

This time I felt led to include the Amplified Bible in my review. This Bible, published by the Lockman Foundation (which also publishes the New American Standard Bible), incorporates synonyms and clearly marked extra-biblical explanations to help us better understand the meaning of the text.

I didn’t find anything remarkably different in Matthew 28:5-7 among the translations I compared: the English Standard Version (ESV), the New American Standard Bible 2020 (NASB20), the Amplified Bible (AMP), the New International Version (NIV), and the Good News Translation (GNT). Nor did I perceive the Spirit calling my attention to anything in particular this time.

Dig-In Challenges

Wow, we’re almost to the end of another study already! This week, let’s

  1. Read the prayer we created in Step 1.
  2. ALIGN: Then review our study notes and other work, focusing specifically on what we’ve learned.
  3. ALIGN: As we consider those “lessons learned,” notice what the Spirit is using to convict us in this study. In other words, where is He showing us misalignment between what we’ve discovered and how we practice our faith?
  4. ALIGN: Next, we’ll think about a part of this study that offers us a way to correct that misalignment. For me, this has often—but not always—been a verse either from the study text or from one of the cross-references.
  5. ALIGN: And finally we want to reflect on how we can change our walk or talk (or both) to align more closely with God. To really make this work, I commit to changing something and do my best to act on that commitment everyday for at least three weeks.

That may seem like a lot to consider in one week, but my experience has been the Spirit often leads me through steps 2-5 very quickly (though sometimes I have to pray about it more than a couple of times during the week). If you’re working with me, just do what you can. Any study done with the Spirit is good study, my Friend!

Also, I’m looking forward to sharing what the Spirit reveals next week, as well as a preview of our next study text, the final one from our series on miracles of Jesus from last year.

GO TO WEEK 8 >

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 5 Align

Matthew 28:1-15 Step 4 Refine (Part 1)

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Welcome back! I’m a little overwhelmed by my research this week: it wasn’t as clear and succinct as I’d have liked. But I’m trusting the Spirit to work this all out for me!

Last Week’s Work

WRITING TYPES
To start, as I reviewed the literal context, I noticed it tells the story of what two Marys experienced upon returning to Jesus’s tomb after the Sabbath, and reports some of the guards were bribed to lie about what happened that day. From these observations and my previous studies of Matthew, I concluded the overall writing type is narrative.

In addition, I found two other types of writing in the verses I’m concentrating on:

  • instruction by the angel (do not be afraid, come see where [Jesus] lay, go tell his disciples in vv5-7) and by Jesus (do not be afraid, tell my brothers to go to Galilee in v10); and
  • prophecy by both the angel (v7) and Jesus (v10) that the women and the disciples will see Jesus in Galilee.

LITERAL CONTEXT

To understand the literal context of Matthew’s gospel, I read chapter 1, which contains Jesus’s genealogy (vv1-17), and a mention of another unnamed angel who appears to Joseph explaining Mary’s pregnancy (vv18-25).

Next, I reviewed chapter 27, detailing events leading up to and following Jesus’s crucifixion. Most notably, I discovered Matthew tells us these two women personally saw Jesus dead, buried, and risen! In 27:55-56, he reports Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee’s sons looking on when Jesus died on the cross. Then at 27:59-61, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary were present at the tomb when Joseph of Arimathea placed Jesus’s body in it and rolled the stone against its entrance. And in our study text, they were given a chance to verify his body wasn’t in the tomb (28:6), and later actually saw him alive again (28:9)!

In other background reading, I came across Matthew 13:53-58, where he describes Jesus’s teaching in his home synagogue in Nazareth and the people reacting with scorn. In 13:55, they ask each other, “Is not this the carpenter’s son? Is not his mother called Mary? And are not his brothers James and Joseph and Simon and Judas?” This makes me even more convinced “the other Mary” was Jesus’s mother. If so, she’d encountered another angel 30+ years before, who also said, “Do not be afraid” (Luke 1:26-30)!

I also read the remaining verses of Chapter 28 (16-20), which indicate the disciples did as the women told them, meeting Jesus on a mountain in Galilee. There he gave them what we know as the Great Commission.

Isn’t it awesome Jesus trusted two very different women—one who’d been possessed by seven demons (Luke 8:2) and one who’d been pure from childhood (Luke 1:26-30)—to relay such an important message!

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

Based on the book’s title and what I discovered from introductions to Matthew’s gospel online, this author is believed to be the tax collector formerly known as Levi. Jesus personally invited him to become a disciple (see Mark 2:14-17; Luke 5:27-32). His writing focuses heavily on fulfillment of the Old Testament. His purpose seems to be to prove Jesus of Nazareth was the expected messiah, evidenced by Jesus’s genealogy (1:1-17) and resurrection. Since it doesn’t mention the fulfillment of Jesus’s prophecy about the temple being torn down (24:2), scholars believe this book was finished before the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD, possibly 55-60 AD.

It’s thought Matthew wrote for early Jewish converts to Christianity located in Antioch (Acts 11:19, 27). After the stoning of Stephen in Jerusalem, persecution there began in earnest (Acts 8:1), and many Jewish people fled to Antioch in Syria to continue following Christ. Antioch was a strategic stronghold at the intersection of north-south and east-west trade routes. It had been annexed by Rome several decades before Christ’s birth and featured, among other things, magnificent pagan temples, as well as the headquarters of the Roman garrison in Syria.

Though their customs and daily life differed greatly from ours, I believe we share some similarities with Matthew’s audience, since we also live among a diverse, mobile population that tolerates many different religions and is governed by central authority.

ORIGINAL LANGUAGE TOOLS

As I looked over vv5-7 in their original language, I was drawn to a single phrase in each verse:

Do not be afraid (v5) is rendered from [G3361, negation] phobeō [G5399, “startled by strange sights or occurrences”]. This same phrase was also used by Luke when he described Gabriel’s announcement to Mary that she would bear Jesus.

He has risen (v6) was translated from egeirō [G1453, “to arouse from the sleep of death, to recall the dead to life”].

Go quickly (v7) comes from tachy [G5035, without delay] poreuō [G4198, go to do something]. This conveyed to me the idea of purposeful haste—don’t just stand there, do something! And that is exactly what the women did, even though they were afraid (v8). That’s a different reaction than I’d have probably had: I tend to put off what I’m afraid to do. I think their great joy must have at least somewhat counteracted their fear.

Whew! This has been a bit overwhelming, but I know the Spirit will help me understand it and put it to use by the time we finish this study. Till then, I hope you’ll keep studying and coming back to see what I’m digging up.

Dig-In Challenges

This week, we’re going to wrap up the second half of our Refine step by examining cross-references and other translations.

  1. Don’t forget to begin with your prayer from Step 1.
  2. REFINE: Then consult a concordance or cross-reference study tools online to find and read through the available cross-references for the verses you’re most interested in (I’ll be checking for verses 5-7). Note what the Spirit shows you.
  3. REFINE: Finally, compare at least a few other translations’ version of the same verses and write about what you find in your study journal. I’ll be comparing ESV, AMP, NIV, and GNT.

It’s hard to believe we’re almost through this study, my friend: just two more weeks! I hope the Lord has used it for your good and His glory! See you next week!

GO TO WEEK 7 >