EARLY CHURCH HISTORY 101 (Lesson 6)
The 120 were gathered together in the Upper Room. The apostle Peter took his place as spokesman for the group. Keep in mind that this assembly was the entire Early Church, from the Greek Ekklesia, which is defined as “the Community of the Called-Out Ones.”
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INTRODUCTION LESSON 1 LESSON 2 LESSON 3 LESSON 4 LESSON 5
LESSON 6
ACTS 1:16-20
16 “Brethren, the Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit foretold by the mouth of David concerning Judas, who became a guide to those who arrested Jesus. 17 For he was counted among us and received his share in this ministry.” 18 (Now this man acquired a field with the price of his wickedness, and falling headlong, he burst open in the middle and all his intestines gushed out. 19 And it became known to all who were living in Jerusalem; so that in their own language that field was called Hakeldama, that is, Field of Blood.) 20 “For it is written in the book of Psalms, ‘LET HIS HOMESTEAD BE MADE DESOLATE, AND LET NO ONE DWELL IN IT’; and, ‘LET ANOTHER MAN TAKE HIS OFFICE.’
This was Luke’s first recorded post-Ascension message of the followers of the Lord Jesus. They had a safe place at Mary’s house. Though the Lord was no longer physically present in the environs of Jerusalem, His small group of disciples was still considered a dangerous heretical faction. From the limited perspective of the non-believing Israelite religious leaders, however, with the Lord finally out of the way, there remained a consensual relief not presently threatened by the existence of His small band. But this would soon change.
Regarding the traitor, the greatest villain known to history, he did have second thoughts. He was assisted in his dastardly deed, however, by the devil himself along with the murderous and conniving chief priests which assisted in pushing him over the edge.
And Satan entered into Judas who was called Iscariot, belonging to the number of the twelve. [Luke 22:3]
One wonders at the arguments Satan may have made that at last convinced Judas to act. It was more than the man’s love of money. In essence, though, he was simply deceived. His bad spirit, bad attitude, constant grumbling and complaining, and refusal to adhere to real discipleship caused the man’s unregenerate flesh, his sinful human nature, to remain forever on display. This condition is common to all and without self-imposed restrictions wreaks havoc. It is why all real Christians must at the onset deal strongly with this spiritual enemy and defeat it if they hope to have any chance at serving the Lord.
When Judas saw the Lord condemned and that he had been deceived by the priests and elders he felt great remorse. He tried to return the money but they wouldn’t take it.
“I have sinned by betraying innocent blood.” But they said, “What is that to us? See to that yourself!” And he threw the pieces of silver into the temple sanctuary and departed; and he went away and hanged himself. [Matthew 27:4-5][1]
According to tradition, the Field of Blood was located just beyond the southern edge of the old city of David on the other side of the Hinnom Valley.
This had otherwise been known as Gehenna, the allegorical destination of the wicked.
© 2020 by RJ Dawson. All Rights Reserved.
[1] Unless otherwise noted all Scriptures are taken from the New American Standard Bible, © 1960, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
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Posted on February 1, 2024, in Teaching and tagged Apostle Peter, Community of the Called-Out Ones, Early Church, Judas Iscariot, Lord Jesus, Price of Betrayal, Real Christianity The Nature of the Church, Sin, The Book of Acts, The Great Awakening, The Sentence of Hell, The Upper Room. Bookmark the permalink. 7 Comments.



Thanks for this. Saw a video online today which spoke about the Apostle or Judas where he positions himself as being important and helping to ‘release Jesus into his purpose.’ I thought, what a load of mess and right into the sort of dribble that the devil would contrive. Bless you. 😊
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Thank you, Anneta. That sounds like the same deception Judas received. It is hard to understand how a man in such close proximity to the Lord refused to get right with God. This obviously made him greatly vulnerable. We are so blessed to have the Word of God to assist us in differentiating between the real and the unreal. Without His Light it is so easy to be deceived, especially in these days. Have a blessed rest of your day.
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I use Judas as an example when people say they can’t attend church because of hypocrites. Being in a church doesn’t make us any closer to God than Judas who sat next to him. There are people who know the truth and choose to follow a lie. Look at satan who was in heaven and saw God in all his splendour, yet he chose to rebel. Bless you. 😊
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Surely this is one of the most tragic stories in the Bible. I have often wondered of any of the other disciples had any reservations about Judas. He was different in character from the rest of them. Did they just chalk it up to his background, his own quirks of personality? Did any of them distrust him?
I have also found it interesting that the price the Pharisees gave Judas, 30 pieces of silver, was the exact price of a slave. Jesus was certainly a slave to the Father; He was also a slave to our need.
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And Judas, sadly was a slave to money. This seems to be the final arbiter regarding those Christians who will actually serve the Lord and those who will not. The Lord said it is impossible to serve God and money which means one must choose between the two. Like Judas, there are many sellouts in Christianity and many “ministers” who are only in their position due to a paycheck, which means they would not be in “ministry” otherwise. The Lord obviously knows His children must be compensated for their labor but also set the example of what that entails as did the members of the Early Church.
The Lord said to store our treasure in the bank of heaven. His perfect example proved He did this because He only used the bare minimum of ministry funds for Himself. Of course, He also supplied the initial bulk of ministry funds through His hard work earning money before ministry. He had to supply the needs of His original twelve and their families. Therefore, in an approximation using whole numbers it is likely that the Lord spent 1% of His treasure for His needs on earth and put the other 99% in the bank of heaven. He instructed His disciples to do the same. This means His real followers actually invest in heaven. They also know it is where they will get the absolute best return. Their treasure will not erode there or lose value there are be stolen there. On earth His disciples may not look like much or have much beyond their needs (though the Lord loves to bless!) but they are rich spiritually and will have great treasure in heaven when they get there.
Remember how the Lord said there are many dwelling places in heaven (mansions KJV) and that He would go to prepare a place for us there? It could be that He is using our own funds for building materials! This is also why the Early Church never built church buildings but met in existing homes (for three centuries). They always kept material necessities to a minimum. Their chief investment was in people and it is people who comprise the actual Church.
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Having spent some time visiting the huge cathedrals in England, France, and Germany, some of which took literally centuries to build, I see fabulous, richly ornate, EMPTY buildings. The tourists are the only regular visitors to some of these buildings, which certainly were not the results of laying up treasures in heaven. Rather, they increased the power of the Church over the people who were taxed to provide materials; the people who labored; and the people who came to worship God there and spent a lot of their meager income on useless ritual.
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LOL: “which certainly were not the results of laying up treasures in heaven.”
The greater the material outlay and money spent for Christian “earthly” showy stuff the greater the likelihood that a higher elite class is controlling and using for their own benefit a lower poor class often by keeping them in fear and ignorant of Scripture. Of course, even the devil uses Scripture for his purposes but does so in a very limited way for ulterior reasons, using certain selections that he twists for his benefit. False Christian leaders do the same.
Thanks Linda
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