During the Advent season, the church is called to remember some key gifts that God has given to us through the coming of the Messiah. They are hope, peace, joy, and love. Each Advent season, there is a focus on these wonderful gifts. These are some of the most basic necessities of our souls.

As we look around our world, we see the need for these gifts. It seems every direction we turn there is more and more fighting, division, and depression than the day before. The sin that plagues our world brings these things that make our hearts long for hope, peace, joy, and love.

Sadly, many people look to different things to bring these. Some look to substances and find a temporary relief that crashes into a worse situation. Others look to relationships, which are good things in our lives until we expect those people who are just as broken as we are to fulfill us and make us whole. We end up frustrated and pushing away when others do not meet all of our expectations.

What we come to find out is that our hearts are seeking someone or something to make us whole… to fulfill us… to give us meaning and purpose. The problem we run into too many times is that we don’t realize what that someone or something must be in order to do what we need. They need to have the ability to be present when needed. They need to have the power and authority to be able to do what we need to do. They need to have unconditional care for us and will seek our best at all times.

When you look at that list of qualifications for the One who can bring hope, peace, joy, and love to our lives, you begin to realize the qualified list is very small. In fact, there is only one name on that list: Jesus.

‌Pentecost

When we look at the Bible, we find accounts of people who lived many years ago, but their needs are not so different from our own. Take Acts 2 for example. In this chapter, we read about the beginnings of the New Testament church. The events of this chapter take place about 50 days after the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. (Pentecost comes from the Greek word meaning ‘fiftieth’.) Pentecost was, first, a Jewish festival called the Festival of Weeks/Harvest. You can read about it in Numbers 28:26-31. This festival was to celebrate God’s providence by bringing gifts from the first harvest of the year to Him.

During the Pentecost festival recorded in Acts 2, God provides a new gift: the indwelling of the Holy Spirit within each believer. This gift brings about what we know as the New Testament church. There were different opinions about what was going on that day. Some people were amazed at what God was doing through His people (2:7-11). Some people were confused (2:12). Others thought Jesus’ followers had just gotten drunk (2:13).

Because of the confusion that was taking place at Pentecost, Peter stepped up and delivered a sermon that changed history forever. In this sermon, Peter is quick to show there is no drunkenness happening, but God was doing a great work and fulfilling what was prophesied through Joel in the Old Testament.

In this sermon, Peter points to King David from the Old Testament to help explain what is going on. King David is the poster child of the Jewish religion. He was known as a man after God’s own heart. By mentioning King David, Peter was relating to the Jewish people who had gathered for this festival.

While David had been a great king, the fact that he was not ruling anymore was evident. The Jewish people, at the time of Acts 2, were living under the reign of the Roman Empire. They were desperately awaiting the Messiah to come and restore the kingdom as they thought it should be. As the old Christmas hymn talks about weary souls rejoicing, these people were weary souls indeed, but there was little rejoicing going on.

Peter takes a strange turn with King David in Acts 2:29-31

“Brothers and sisters, I can confidently speak to you about the patriarch David: He is both dead and buried, and his tomb is with us to this day. 30 Since he was a prophet, he knew that God had sworn an oath to him to seat one of his descendants on his throne. 31 Seeing what was to come, he spoke concerning the resurrection of the Messiah: He was not abandoned in Hades, and his flesh did not experience decay.

Acts 2:29–31 CSB

While King David may have been a great king who oversaw the glory days of the Jewish Empire, he was dead. Those days were gone. It is interesting how similar people are. Sometimes we can hold on to things of the past that we thought were so great. We can long for the glory days of old. When we do that, typically two things happen:‌

  • We don’t give a clear picture of what the “glory days of old” were.
  • We miss out on what is happening right before us.

‌Peter recalls a promise

In Peter’s mention of King David, he recalls a promise God made to King David in verse 30. God had promised David that He would establish the throne forever with one of David’s descendants ruling over God’s people. We can see this in 2 Samuel 7:11-16 and Psalm 132:11. While many people thought God was referring to a lineage that would always sit on a throne ruling, God had a different idea in mind. This promise was not about a lineage but a Person. This promise was a prophecy about how the Messiah would come through David’s line.

Peter explains how this all comes about in verses 32-36.

32 “God has raised this Jesus; we are all witnesses of this. 33 Therefore, since he has been exalted to the right hand of God and has received from the Father the promised Holy Spirit, he has poured out what you both see and hear. 34 For it was not David who ascended into the heavens, but he himself says: The Lord declared to my Lord, ‘Sit at my right hand 35 until I make your enemies your footstool.’ 36 “Therefore let all the house of Israel know with certainty that God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Messiah.”

​Acts 2:32-36 CSB

Peter wastes no time in showing that Jesus, whom many of the people had seen crucified, had risen from the dead and sits as Ruler over all creation, especially those who place their faith in the one true God. It is Jesus who is the promised Messiah. It is through Jesus that the hope, peace, joy, and love we all so desperately need comes.

As you look at the remainder of Acts 2, you see God use Peter’s sermon to draw people a point of asking what they needed to do. When God speaks to us, it is an invitation to join Him in something. He may be calling us to a decision that changes the direction of our lives. He may be calling us to share with someone His good news. To hear God speak through someone is not something given to us to just share on social media. It is a call to repentance, faith, following, and knowing God more.

What does this mean for us?

As we look at what God did on that Pentecost in the first century and how He worked through Peter, what can we take away from this for our lives today?

‌1. God keeps His word

We’ve been seeing this message pop up all during this Advent series. God’s word is true. If God has promised or said something, you can count on it coming true at the perfect time. God has perfect integrity.

2. God is able

We may hear this phrase and be quick to shout, “Amen!”, but do we really understand what that means? When we say, “God is able,” we are saying that He has the full ability to work all things together in order to accomplish His purposes. There is nothing that He cannot do. Even when everything around us is going crazy and we don’t see how it can possibly get any better, He has everything under control.

28 We know that all things work together for the good of those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.

​Romans 8:28 CSB

‌3. Jesus is the caring, Eternal King

This is the main point Peter shared in Acts 2 with his audience, but it is just as relevant to our lives today. Jesus is the Eternal King. This means that Jesus has all power and authority in the palm of His hands.

18 Jesus came near and said to them, “All authority has been given to me in heaven and on earth.

​Matthew 28:18 CSB

Jesus being the Eternal King also means that He is able to be present with us at all times. Do we understand that Jesus is not bound by time and space? He is omnipresent – in all places at all times. This means that while we worship here this morning, He is here. When we go to work or school tomorrow, He is there. When we go to our homes in the evenings, He is there. When we are hanging out with friends or doing our favorite hobby, He is there. When you are going through that difficult time, He is there. When it feels like no one around you sees you, He is there.

Jesus is present, but more than that, He cares about us. He not only sees us where we are, He loves us enough to come to us and help us get where we need to be. How do I know that? I know that is true because we are celebrating this season called Christmas right now. Jesus saw our need and came to us who were hopeless, miserable, and feeling abandoned to bring the gifts we talked about earlier: hope, peace, joy, and love.

‌Conclusion

At the beginning of our time, I said that far too many people look to things and/or people for the wonderful gifts of Advent. They look for hope, peace, joy, and love in places that cannot bring those. I mentioned that there was only One who could meet all the qualifications to bring these wonderful gifts into our lives. Hopefully, through Peter’s sermon in Acts 2, we can see that the Jesus, whose first coming we celebrate during this season, is the only One who can bring us hope, peace, joy, and love. These are gifts He longs to give to us if we will receive them. We do that by coming to Him in faith and following Him.

Where are you looking for hope, peace, joy, and love to come from today? I would encourage you to turn your heart towards Jesus. It is only through Him you will find these wonderful gifts.