Carry The Fire - Week 6

Acts 1:8 July 16, 2025 Pastor Joe Alcantar Jr.
Thesis God gives us the power of the Holy Spirit not for impressive personal experiences, but to make us bold and faithful witnesses to the gospel of Jesus Christ in our neighborhoods and to the ends of the earth.
Series
Carry The Fire
Type
Topical
Tone
pastoraldidacticevangelistic
Method
redemptive-historicalapplicatory
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

29 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #21
"The pastor introduces the concept of 'divine appointments' — opportunities created by the Spirit where someone asks a spiritual question or expresses spiritual need. He defines the term and sets up the illustration that will follow. The application invites the listener to pray for and recognize these Spirit-orchestrated moments."
Doctrinal loci· 11 surfaced
Pneumatology · 13 Ecclesiology · 9 Soteriology · 7 Providence / Sovereignty · 6 Doxology / Worship · 4 Bibliology · 2 Christology · 2 Pastoral Theology · 2 Sanctification · 2 Ethics / Moral Theology · 1 Hamartiology · 1
Bible citations· 19
Psalm 63:4 | 1 Timothy 2:8 | Psalm 134:2 | Acts 2:4 | Matthew 5:14-16 | Acts 1:8 | Matthew 28:19-20 | John 14-15 | 2 Timothy 1:6-7 | Matthew 5:14 | Acts 2 | Joel 2:28-32 | Acts 4 | Acts 2:14-41 | Matthew 26:31-35, 69-75 | Acts 7
Illustrations· 10
  1. personal story · unit #1 — The pastor recounts his first encounter with charismatic worship among Catholics who lifted hands and spoke in tongues. The illustration establishes his initial disorientation and desire for the freedom these believers exhibited. It serves the larger argument by showing that Spirit-empowered worship can look radically different from inherited religious forms and can awaken hunger for spiritual freedom.
  2. personal story · unit #2 — The pastor describes seeking biblical validation for what he witnessed in the prayer meeting. The deacon's affirmation that the practices are biblical transitions to the exposition that follows. This moment captures the pastor's hunger for theological grounding and sets up the scriptural justification for charismatic worship practices.
  3. personal story · unit #4 — The pastor continues his personal story, describing his journey from self-conscious restraint to freedom in worship. He prayed for the ability to worship without concern for others' opinions, and the Lord granted it. The illustration demonstrates the Holy Spirit's work in setting believers free to worship authentically and shows the pastor's experiential movement from inhibition to liberation.
  4. personal story · unit #7 — The pastor narrates receiving the gift of tongues, then transitions into the story of praying for reconciliation with his first wife for three and a half years, only to have her remarry. He recounts the pastoral support he received and God's eventual provision of his current wife Kim, with whom he now has a large family. The illustration demonstrates God's faithfulness through seasons of unanswered prayer and disappointment, ultimately resulting in a greater blessing than originally sought.
  5. personal story · unit #13 — The pastor narrates a 20-year faithful witness to his friend Rick, who eventually came to faith. The illustration demonstrates perseverance in witness over decades and reinforces the point that we are messengers, not the ones who save. The emotional payoff ('yes, yes!') models the joy that comes from seeing God bring someone to salvation through faithful, long-term witness.
  6. personal story · unit #15 — The pastor recounts a car accident where a hit-and-run driver was only caught because of a faithful witness who followed the car, documented the evidence, and reported it to police. The illustration serves as an analogy: just as a witness was crucial for justice in the accident, so believers are crucial witnesses for the gospel. The story is vivid, detailed, and emotionally engaging, making the abstract concept of 'witness' concrete and memorable.
  7. personal story · unit #22 — The pastor recounts a board dinner where a man expressed feeling lost as an empty nester, and Kim signaled to Joe that this was a divine appointment. The illustration demonstrates how the Spirit orchestrates opportunities for witness and emphasizes that the Lord opens these doors — we don't force them. The pastor also corrects the approach: faithful witness is not obnoxious but marked by a life that attracts rather than repels.
  8. personal story · unit #23 — The pastor recounts his neighbor Reuben, a doctor, being critically ill and prayed for by the church. After recovery, Reuben ran to Joe, hugged him, and testified that he was healed because of prayer — a doctor acknowledging divine healing. The illustration demonstrates how prayer for neighbors and visible answers to prayer create powerful witness opportunities. The story reinforces the theme that being a good neighbor opens doors for gospel witness.
  9. personal story · unit #24 — The pastor uses Kim's ministry of baking banana bread for neighbors as an example of how serving and blessing neighbors adorns the gospel and creates relational capital for witness. He then applies it directly: our neighbors are our mission field, and if we're not good neighbors, we should repent. The illustration is both commendation of faithful witness through service and concrete instruction on neighbor evangelism.
  10. personal story · unit #26 — The pastor recounts Kim's conversion at 18 through a neighbor's witness, followed by her friends confronting her that her life didn't match her profession. Kim repented and prayed for transformation, and the Lord changed her. The illustration demonstrates that witness involves both verbal profession and visible life change, and that inconsistency between the two undermines witness. It also shows the Spirit's power to transform behavior when believers sincerely pray for change.
Theological claims· 2
  1. Our mission is to shine the reality of Jesus — who saves, delivers, and transforms — from one end of our neighborhood to the other. unit #12
  2. We do not save; Jesus saves. We are messengers and witnesses of what He has done. unit #14
Quotations· 4
"He says, so I bless you as long as I live. In your name I will lift up my hands." — Psalm 63:4 (unit #3)
"I desire that in every place that men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling." — 1 Timothy 2:8 (unit #3)
"Lift up your hands in the holy place and bless the Lord." — Psalm 134:2 (unit #3)
"God has not given us power so that we can perform impressive magic feats. But so that we can be powerful and faithful witnesses to the Gospel of Jesus." — Ricky (unit #15)
Read it

Full transcript

39,584 characters 29 units ~44 min reading time Listen instead →

0 · The pastor opens by locating himself in a narrative of personal brokenness and redemption

Time in my life when I was lost, my first wife left me for another man, and then Jesus saved me. He revealed his gospel of grace and mercy to me, and my life was transformed. I went from hopeless to hope-filled.

1 · The pastor recounts his first encounter with charismatic worship among Catholics who lifted hands and spoke in tongues

Sometime after that, My mom, who was definitely saved, she was a charismatic Catholic. She loved Jesus. And so she invited me to come to this prayer meeting. She says, "Hey, mijo, we have this prayer meeting with other Catholics that love Jesus, and it's on Friday night, and you need to come to this thing." I said, "Okay, all right, sure, Mom." I mean, I need all the help I can get. All right, so I go to this prayer meeting of these charismatic Catholics, and I walk into this thing, and they are in there, and they're lifting their hands up. They're worshiping Jesus. They're praying in tongues, and I just thought, what in the world is going on? I mean, I'd never seen anything like this in my life, but I could just— I mean, these people were happy. They had smiles on their face. They were— I mean, listen, I was raised Catholic, and if you were raised Catholic— anybody here raised Catholic? Yeah. So, you know, I mean, as Catholics, we're kind of, you know, we're in church, you're quiet, you know, you don't make noise. If somebody's making noise or the baby's crying, you kind of look at him like, you know, be quiet. Quiet. And so this was like, this was like, what is going on here? What's happened to these people? Why are they so jazzed up and fired up about Jesus? This is just— they were absolutely unashamed. I was— men, it was women, and I was blown away.

2 · The pastor describes seeking biblical validation for what he witnessed in the prayer meeting

And I remember talking to the leader. He was a, he was a deacon. It was a Catholic deacon. He was filled with the Spirit. I said, man, what is this? He says, is this— is this— is this— I mean, is this biblical? And so he said, yeah, this is biblical.

3 · The pastor provides biblical texts supporting the practice of lifting hands in worship

So he took me to some scriptures, you know, in the Psalms where it talks about Psalm 63:4. He says, so I bless you as long as I live. In your name I will lift up my hands. I like Psalms 134:2, "Lift up your hands in the holy place and bless the Lord." Or 1 Timothy 2:8, "I desire that in every place that men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling." Lifting hands was this act of worship. I had never seen it in my life.

4 · The pastor continues his personal story, describing his journey from self-conscious restraint to freedom in worship

But these people were doing it. They were lifting hands, and I was just like, well, I'm not going to do that. I mean, but I thought, I want that. I want to be able to worship the Lord and not be concerned. I mean, look, as a Catholic, I was just like, you know, I didn't want to sing too loud because I didn't want to upset anybody next to me, and I was always self-conscious. And so, but I thought, I want what these people have. I want to be able to worship the Lord the way they worship the Lord. They have freedom to worship Jesus, and I want that. I need that. And so I prayed. I said, Lord, would you do that for me? Would you just set me free so I can worship you? And so I remember just going to— you know, some Protestant church, and people are doing it. And I just remember lifting up my hands and just worshiping Jesus. And I just thought, "This is what I'm supposed to do. This is what I was built to do. This is what God created me to do, to worship Him, not be concerned about anybody else, not think about anybody else, but thinking about Him." and Him only. And kind of, you know, as you're lifting your hands, you're kind of, you're just kind of surrendering. I'm yours, Lord. I am yours.

5 · The pastor applies the preceding exposition and illustration directly to the congregation, inviting those who feel inhibited in worship to pray for the freedom to lift hands

So, so lifting hands. So I just want you to know, if you ever wonder, if you're in our church, you think, why do some people lift their hands? What's up with that? I just want you to know it's biblical. And if you want to be able to do that, just say, Lord, help me to do that. Help me be set free to worship you. Not be concerned about who's on my left or my right, but just to be concerned about you, Jesus. I want to worship you.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Jan 2, 2022
True biblical giving is measured not by the size of the gift but by the proportion given and the heart behind it—sacrificial giving that flows from gratitude for what God has done for us in Christ.
Mark 12:41-44
Jan 1, 2023
If you are in Christ, you are called to put off the filthy garments of your former life and put on the new clothes of righteousness that Christ has purchased for you — not to earn salvation, but as the fruit of salvation already received by grace.
Ephesians 4:25-32
Jan 5, 2025
Because heaven is the real home Jesus is preparing for us—where we will see his face, receive new bodies, and experience endless joy—we must live now in light of eternity, stewarding our talents and treasures for his kingdom rather than this passing world.
Hebrews 11:10
July 16 · This sermon
Carry The Fire - Week 6
God gives us the power of the Holy Spirit not for impressive personal experiences, but to make us bold and faithful witnesses to the gospel of Jesus Christ in our neighborhoods and to the ends of the earth.
Acts 1:8
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. What does Jesus mean when He tells the disciples in Acts 1:8 that they will receive 'power' after the Holy Spirit comes upon them? What specifically are they being empowered to do?
    Acts 1:8
    → How is this power different from other kinds of power—political, physical, or personal—that people typically seek?
  2. Look at what happens in Acts 2:14-41 when Peter stands up and testifies about Jesus. What do you notice about Peter's boldness here, and what changed in him between his denial of Jesus (Matthew 26:31-35, 69-75) and this moment of witness?
    Acts 2:14-41
    → What does this transformation in Peter teach us about what the Spirit's power actually accomplishes in a believer's life?
  3. The sermon argues that the Holy Spirit is given 'not for impressive personal experiences, but to make us bold and faithful witnesses.' Where do you see evidence of this connection between the Spirit's power and mission in the opening chapters of Acts?
    → Can you think of a time when you witnessed someone's faith in Jesus change how they lived or spoke? What did you observe?
  4. According to Matthew 5:14-16, believers are called to be 'a city on a hill' and to 'let your light shine before others.' How does the power of the Holy Spirit enable us to live in such a visible, testimony-bearing way in our neighborhoods?
    Matthew 5:14-16
    → What obstacles keep us from shining visibly for Christ where we live, and how does the Spirit's power address those obstacles?
  5. The sermon identifies a fallen condition focus: many of us struggle with self-consciousness or fear that prevents us from openly confessing Christ. Where do you feel this struggle most acutely—in conversations with family, coworkers, neighbors, or somewhere else—and what would it look like for the Spirit to give you boldness there?
  6. Paul writes in 2 Timothy 1:6-7 that God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind. How does the gospel—that Christ has already won our salvation and secured our identity—free us to bear witness without being controlled by others' approval or rejection?
    2 Timothy 1:6-7
    → What would change in how you speak about Jesus if you truly believed that His work is complete and that your identity is secure in Him?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we trace how the Holy Spirit's power—given at Pentecost and promised to us today—compels bold witness to Jesus across our neighborhoods and to the ends of the earth.

Monday Acts 2:4

On Pentecost, the Spirit filled the disciples and immediately they spoke with boldness (Acts 2:4)—not to enjoy a private ecstasy, but to declare the mighty works of God to the crowds. We receive the same Spirit for the same purpose: to open our mouths and testify to what Jesus has done. The power of the Spirit is always tethered to mission.

Tuesday 2 Timothy 1:6-7

Paul reminds Timothy that the Spirit dwelling in him is not a spirit of fear, but of power and boldness. This is the antidote to self-consciousness and shame in witness. When we pray for the Lord to set us free from fear of others' judgments, we are asking Him to activate the very power He has already given us through the Holy Spirit, so that we speak Christ's name with clarity and conviction.

Wednesday Matthew 5:14-16

Jesus does not call us to hide the light of gospel transformation; He calls us to let it shine visibly in our neighborhoods so that others see our good deeds and glorify our Father. Witness is not merely words spoken in isolation—it is the radiant display of Christ's work in and through our lives, lived out where we live, work, and belong. Our transformed neighborhoods become the evidence of the gospel's power.

Thursday Acts 4

When Peter and John are arrested for healing and testifying, they boldly declare to the rulers that there is salvation in no one else but Jesus (Acts 4:12). Their power lies not in their own eloquence or authority, but in their humble, urgent witness to what Christ alone accomplishes. We are freed from the burden of converting anyone—that is the Spirit's work—and freed to simply bear faithful witness to the One who does all the saving.

Friday Matthew 28:19-20

Jesus commands us to go and make disciples, teaching all nations—then assures us that He is with us always, to the very end of the age. This is the promise of the Spirit's empowerment: as we step into the Great Commission, obedience itself becomes the trigger for divine power. We need not wait for feelings or perfect readiness; we move into witness, and God meets us there with the boldness and wisdom we require.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

For Boldness to Witness

Father, we come before you in awe of your sovereign plan to entrust us with the gospel of Jesus Christ. You have given us not merely comfortable experiences of your Spirit, but the power of Pentecost itself — the very boldness that transformed terrified disciples into fearless witnesses. We confess that we often shrink from speaking of what Christ has done in our lives. Self-consciousness, fear of rejection, and the weight of our own inadequacy silence us when neighbors, coworkers, and friends need to hear the good news. We minimize the reality of Jesus' saving, delivering, and transforming power as though it were too precious or too strange to share.

Yet in the gospel we have everything we need. Jesus Christ, through His death and resurrection, has accomplished our salvation and made us witnesses to His power (Acts 1:8). The same Holy Spirit who filled the disciples at Pentecost and gave them boldness to testify now dwells within us, ready to empower our witness. We are not the saviors — Jesus alone saves — but we are the messengers, and the Spirit is our courage (2 Timothy 1:6-7).

We ask you to set us free from self-consciousness that we might lift our hands in worship and our voices in witness without shame. Give us eyes to see our neighborhoods as mission fields ripe for the gospel, and grant us divine appointments — moments when your Spirit opens doors for us to declare what you have done. Strengthen us to demonstrate gospel transformation in our daily lives, so that others see Christ's reality shining through us (Matthew 5:14-16).

Make us bold, gracious, and faithful witnesses. We commit ourselves to pray for opportunities to speak of Jesus and to trust that you will supply all the power we need. To your name be all the glory.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Who Did You Tell About Jesus This Week?

For the parent

This prompt invites your family to reflect on real, everyday moments when they've mentioned Jesus or their faith to someone else — not to shame anyone, but to normalize witness as ordinary conversation. Listen for both what they've done and what held them back; that's where the Spirit's empowering work becomes real.

This week, did you tell anyone about Jesus — maybe a friend, a neighbor, someone at school or work? What happened? If you didn't, what made it hard?
Works for ages 7+; younger children can share simple examples (telling a friend Jesus loves them), while teens and adults can reflect on deeper conversations and barriers to witness.
Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Power for Witness — Together

  1. What did you hear in this sermon about how the Holy Spirit's power shows up in everyday witness — and what stirred your heart about that?
  2. How might God be calling us, as a couple, to be bolder witnesses to Jesus in our neighborhood or daily rhythms — and what fears or hesitations do we sense in ourselves?
  3. What is one specific way we could pray for each other this week to grow in courage and faithfulness as witnesses to the gospel?
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

Acts 1:8

But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.

Why this verse: This is the sermon's primary text and crystallizes its central claim: the Holy Spirit's power is given explicitly for the purpose of witness, not for personal experience. Memorizing this verse anchors believers in the truth that Spirit-empowerment and gospel testimony are inseparably linked.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Cross of Grace Church
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# Cross of Grace Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [The Greatest Giver (Mark 12:41-44, 2022-01-02)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2022/01/the-greatest-giver)
- [New Year, New You, New Clothes (Ephesians 4:25-32, 2023-01-01)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2023/01/new-year-new-you-new-clothes)
- [In Light of Eternity (Hebrews 11:10, 2025-01-05)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/01/in-light-of-eternity)
- [Carry The Fire - Week 6 (Acts 1:8, 2025-07-16)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/07/carry-the-fire-week-6)

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- [About the church](/about)
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