Saturday, October 11, 2025

Sundy Worship Service October 12, 2025

Prelude
Call to Worship Leviticus 18:5
Hymn JBC # 268 There’s within my heart a melody
The Lord’s Prayer
Hymn JBC # 146 Thou didst leave Thy throne
Offering
Scripture Acts 7:37~50
Prayer
Sermon “Receiving Living Words to Pass on”
Prayer
Hymn JBC # 521 Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!
Doxology JBC # 674
Benediction
Postlude
Welcome & Announcements

We continue reading the scene from Acts chapter 7 in the New Testament, where the evangelist Stephen is being interrogated before the Sanhedrin (the court) on charges of “blaspheming God.”
Stephen begins his discourse with Abraham, called the “father of faith” for the Jews, and proclaims how God chose the Israelite people and revealed His salvation through them.
In today's passage, Stephen continues his account concerning Moses, who delivered the Israelites from slavery in Egypt.
At the beginning of today's passage, Stephen quotes Moses as saying the following:

37 “This is the Moses who told the Israelites, ‘God will raise up for you a prophet like me from your own people.’

Through Moses, God told the people of Israel He will raise up a prophet like Moses for them.
This is God's promise recorded in Deuteronomy 18 of the Old Testament.
The phrase “a prophet like me” here also refers to the other Old Testament prophets who followed Moses.
However, now that Jesus Christ has already come into the world as a human being, died on the cross for the redemption of human sin, and was resurrected, Stephen here asserts that the prophet spoken of by Moses is Jesus Christ.
Through the Scriptures, we can believe that God had been continually revealing—from before the creation of the heavens and the earth, and also through Abraham and Moses—that Jesus Christ would come and speak God's word, and that Jesus Christ would come into the world and redeem humanity's sins.

Stephen quoted Moses' words because he desperately wanted to convey to the Jews accusing him that Christ is the Prophet spoken of by Moses, and He is the Savior.
Verse 38 from today’s passage states the following:

38 He was in the assembly in the wilderness, with the angel who spoke to him on Mount Sinai, and with our ancestors; and he received living words to pass on to us.

Here, “He” refers to Moses. Yet even here, through Moses, Jesus Christ who was to come and what Christ would do are prophesied.
That is, to receive the word of life and convey it to us. Prophets like Moses received God's word on behalf of the people and conveyed it to them.
In that sense, pastors today also have the role of prophets. But human prophets are not perfect. Human prophets make mistakes and sometimes speak incorrectly.

But Jesus Christ is the perfect prophet. He never erred; He was completely correct, conveying God's life-giving word to people. Jesus Christ Himself was the Word of life.
Word of life means the word that truly gives us life.
Words truly have power. Even words devised by humans can possess the power to greatly encourage or comfort people.
All the more so, God's word possesses such power that it can be called life itself. Thus, we live by God's word.
The most crucial aspect of Moses' work was receiving the words of life and conveying them to the people. Having received the words of life—that is, God's Word—from God, Moses conveyed them to the people of Israel.
The words of life, the words of the Bible, are passed on to others by those who receive them and believe.

The words of life that give us life are not something humans devised or created. Humans are incapable of such a thing. God's words of life are given to us as His gift.
And after this word of life was fully revealed to the world through Jesus Christ, it began to spread as it was passed from person to person.
Receiving and passing on the word of life—this is the mission of the church, those who believe in God, are forgiven of their sins by God, and are saved.

Let us be used as vessels for this purpose: to receive abundantly the life-giving word and pass it on to others
In verse 39, it is recorded that the ancestors (the Israelites in Moses' time) refused to obey Moses and said to Aaron, Moses' brother, as follows.

I will read verses 39-40.

39 “But our ancestors refused to obey him. Instead, they rejected him and in their hearts turned back to Egypt. 40 They told Aaron, ‘Make us gods who will go before us. As for this fellow Moses who led us out of Egypt—we don’t know what has happened to him!

This story is based on the account found in Exodus chapter 32 of the Old Testament.
There, Moses had ascended Mount Sinai and received the Ten Commandments from God.
God commanded Moses to convey the commandments he had received to the people of Israel.
It is said Moses remained on Mount Sinai for forty days and forty nights at that time. And the Israelites grew increasingly impatient as Moses did not come down.
Having lost patience, the people pleaded with Aaron, Moses' brother, saying, “We don't know what has happened to Moses. Make us gods to go before us.”

Aaron then responded to the Israelites by fashioning a golden calf, which they worshipped as their god.
To us, it seems utterly foolish that the Israelites, unable to wait for Moses to come down from the mountain, turned to worship something that was not God—something made by human hands—engaging in idolatry.
Yet, are there not times when we too struggle to wait patiently, seeking God's will?
We too may find ourselves unable to wait, or so eager to solve a problem quickly or break through a situation that we hastily make our own judgment and easily decide, “This must be God's will.”

We humans find it difficult to wait. There are times when we struggle to be still and pray, to listen humbly to God's word, His guidance, and the opinions and advice of others.
We must remember that we are fully capable of committing the same mistake the Israelites made—worshipping things made by human hands as if they were God.
I pray that we are able to cultivate our faith daily, that we are able to remain calm and humble as we listen attentively to God and others, so that we avoid repeating such mistakes.

Let’s read verse 44.

44 “Our ancestors had the tabernacle of the covenant law with them in the wilderness. It had been made as God directed Moses, according to the pattern he had seen.

The Tabernacle of Testimony, or simply the Tabernacle, was a portable tent sanctuary erected for the Israelites to worship in during their journey through the wilderness.
God instructed Moses, Aaron, and the priests to construct the “Tabernacle” so that the Israelites could worship and hear God's word even while moving through the wilderness. He thus provided them with a place for worship.
Eventually, the Israelites settled in the land of Canaan, and David became king over all Israel.
David desired to build a temple for God—not a tent-like tabernacle, but a temple with a solid foundation and base—a place for worship.
By God's command, it was David's son, King Solomon, who actually completed the temple.

 The completed temple surely served as a spiritual and faith-based anchor for the people of Israel. For us today, too, the church is a place of profound spiritual importance.
The church is where we gather and worship together.

Still, let us look closely at what Stephen has to say in today’s passage.

Let’s read verses 48-50.
48 “However, the Most High does not live in houses made by human hands. As the prophet says:
49 “‘Heaven is my throne,
and the earth is my footstool.
What kind of house will you build for me?
says the Lord.
Or where will my resting place be?
50 Has not my hand made all these things?’

 The temple, or what we now call our church, becomes a special place when people moved by God gather there and offer worship in spirit and truth from their hearts.
Yet at the same time, we must always be careful not to become arrogant. Stephen warns us in today’s passage.
It is not we humans who build a dwelling place for God. That is something we could never do.
 It is not we who create anything for God; rather, God prepares everything we need.
God creates everything necessary for us—physical space, the church, everything.
 By God's permission, mercy, and grace, we are given a variety of things through which we can create even more.
However, we cannot create anything out of nothing, not a single thing.
Yet, if we are not careful, we can easily become proud of our own strength or even our faith as we boast that “We are doing all this for God.”
All good things are created and given by the God who created heaven and earth.
 And that faith also gives us hope and peace, assuring us that God will surely provide us with all that is good and necessary, and that God sustains us with the word of life.
Let us live out our faith daily in humility and gratitude, remembering that every blessing, and the word of life that sustains us, is given to us from God