Based on Pastor David Jang’s sermon on Acts 1, this faith-based reflection explores how the kingdom of God and the age of the Holy Spirit begin to take shape in the lives of believers today.
John
Milton once mourned humanity’s lost world in Paradise Lost. What he
grieved was not simply the loss of Eden, but the loss of fellowship with God,
the fading of glory, and the deep ache of the human soul longing to be
restored. When we come to Acts 1, it feels as though we are standing at the
dawn after that long night of loss. The disciples had seen the risen Christ,
yet they still did not fully understand what it all meant. Their eyes were
lifted toward heaven, but they had not yet grasped what they were now called to
live out on earth.
And
yet, it is right there, in that uncertain in-between moment, that a new era
begins. What looked like the end of the gospel story was in fact the beginning
of its movement into the world. The cross was not the final word of tragedy,
but the doorway through which the kingdom of God entered human history. The
resurrection was not merely comfort for grieving hearts. It was the beginning
of God’s new work in the world. That is why Acts 1 is far more than a
transitional chapter. It is the great turning point where the tears of the
Gospels become the footsteps of the Church. It is the threshold where the story
of loss begins to give way to the story of restoration through the Holy Spirit.
The
Disciples Between Heaven and Earth
Acts
1 shows us that after the joy of the resurrection comes a deeper question. For
forty days, Jesus spoke to His disciples about one central theme: the kingdom
of God. Yet their question still revealed how much they were focused on
visible, earthly restoration. They asked whether this was the time when Israel
would be restored. Their question carried the weight of national pain and
historical longing. But Jesus did not give them a timeline. He gave them a
promise: wait for the Holy Spirit.
The
gospel is not fulfilled through anxious speculation. Grace comes not to those
who try to pry into God’s calendar, but to those who learn to trust His
promise. Pastor David Jang brings this point out clearly in his preaching on
Acts 1. He reminds us that faith is not ultimately about when God
will act, but about how we are called to obey in the present.
The kingdom of God is not a political program to be seized by human effort. It
grows wherever people and communities are transformed by the presence of the
Holy Spirit.
So
what the disciples needed was not secret knowledge about the future, but the
kind of faith that is refined through waiting. There is nothing wrong with
looking toward heaven. But when we stop there, faith becomes abstract. Jesus
redirected their gaze toward the mission that would carry the gospel to the
ends of the earth. In that moment, the Church was being prepared for birth.
The
Kingdom Begins in an Upper Room
What
is striking is that this new work of God did not begin in the temple courts or
among the powerful. It began in a small gathering of praying believers. The
upper room, filled with ordinary people, fragile hearts, and unanswered
questions, became the birthplace of the Church.
By
the standards of the world, there was nothing impressive about that room. There
was no platform, no influence, no visible power. And yet Scripture tells us
that it was there, in that place of dependence and prayer, that the wind of the
Spirit would soon begin to blow. Pastor David Jang often emphasizes that the
church is not defined first by its size, but by its direction. Where the Holy
Spirit is welcomed, where people gather in prayer, where hearts are joined for
the sake of the gospel, that is where God begins His work anew.
A
sermon, then, should not leave us with inspiration alone. It should become a
spark that renews a community. The true church is remembered not for polished
words, but for holy obedience. The upper room may have been small, but the
gospel that began there would reach the ends of the earth. That is one of the
great beauties of Acts 1: even weak and trembling faith, when placed in the
hands of God, becomes the seed of something world-changing.
The
same remains true for the church today. When prayer matters more than
programming, when love matters more than appearance, and when obedience matters
more than speed, people begin to catch a glimpse of heaven’s order in the life
of the church.
The
Kingdom: Already and Not Yet
Here
we come to one of the deepest truths in Acts 1: the kingdom of God is already
here, and yet it is not here in its fullness. The seed has been planted, but
the harvest is still to come. The light has broken in, but noon has not yet
arrived.
That
is why meditation on Scripture is not an escape from the real world. It is what
gives us strength to live faithfully within it. The continued presence of
suffering and injustice in the world does not mean the gospel has failed. It
means that we have been called to bear witness in the midst of a world that is
still waiting for final renewal.
Pastor
David Jang does not leave this tension at the level of theology alone. He
brings it into daily life. His insight is deeply relevant: unless the human
heart is renewed by the Holy Spirit, no structure, system, or institution can
bring true restoration. Before the church speaks about changing the world, it
must first be changed itself. That is where the authenticity of the gospel is
revealed.
Those
who believe the kingdom has already come are not swallowed by despair. Those
who know it has not yet come in fullness are kept from pride. In this tension,
faith deepens. Grace becomes more than sentimental comfort; it becomes the
power to endure, to hope, and to remain bold. Faith is not a hiding place from
the brokenness of the world. It is a calling that sends us back into it with
courage. Those who believe in the kingdom of God do not collapse under the
darkness of the age. Instead, they feel even more deeply their calling to shine
within it.
Before
the Gospel Is Heard in Our Words, It Is Seen in Our Lives
In
the end, the new beginning in Acts 1 is not about some distant future dream. It
begins with obedience today. Just as the early church began in Jerusalem and
moved outward to the ends of the earth, our homes, churches, and workplaces
must become our first Jerusalems.
When
love reshapes relationships, when generosity changes the way we hold our
resources, when holiness reorders our habits, and when the comfort of the Holy
Spirit transforms the way we speak, people begin to see the reality of the
kingdom of God among us. This is where Pastor David Jang’s message lands with
grace and clarity. He calls us not to remain in a faith that only looks upward,
but to live as people who have been entrusted with the gospel.
The
resurrection is not the end of the story; it is the beginning of our sending.
The ascension is not simply farewell; it is Christ’s commissioning of His
people. That is why true preaching does not end in a moment of emotion. It
changes the way we pray. It changes how we see the church. It changes how we
live in the world.
The
gospel is often seen in a changed life before it is heard in a spoken
testimony. And when those changed lives gather together, the church becomes a
living witness of hope in the middle of a weary world. What we need today is
not a bigger slogan. We need hearts that wait for the Holy Spirit, a community
that prays together, and the courage to bear witness to Christ in the ordinary
places of life.
One
small act of kindness. One honest moment of repentance. One patient decision to
bear with another in love. These are the very places where the kingdom of God
becomes visible. And over the sorrow of a humanity still longing for
restoration, God once again opens the door to a new beginning.
Then,
standing at that threshold, we will no longer be people who merely stare into
heaven. We will be witnesses who carry the will of heaven into the world.


















