Peter's preaching to the Jewish leaders
Peter
and John are arrested
1) The
priests and the captain of the temple guard and
the Sadducees came up to Peter and John while
they were speaking to the people. 2) They were
greatly disturbed because the apostles were
teaching the people and proclaiming in Jesus the
resurrection of the dead. 3) They seized Peter
and John, and because it was evening, they put
them in jail until the next day. 4) But many who
heard the message believed, and the number of
men grew to about five thousand.
The
captain of the temple refers to the "police
force" of the temple precincts; the captain,
together with the priests, and the Sadducees,
all came together to arrest Peter and John.

The
Sadducees would be greatly disturbed that Peter
and John preached in Jesus the resurrection from
the dead; they did not believe in the afterlife
or resurrection at all.
In
the Gospels, the Pharisees were the primary
opponents of Jesus. Radical fundamentalists,
they claimed Jesus and His disciples violated
their rituals and traditions. Here in Acts,
however, the Sadducees are the primary opponents
of the Church. Materialists through and through,
they were upset with the Church because of the
stories of miracles and resurrection, angels and
healing which circulated throughout Jerusalem.
They
put them into custody until the next day because
it was illegal under Jewish law to have a trial
by night, though this is what the Jewish rulers
did to Jesus. From the Mishnah, Sanhedrin 4.1:
"Judgments about money may be commenced in the
day and concluded in the night, but judgments
about life must be begun in the day and
concluded in the day." There was nothing wrong
in the way that the Jewish leaders were
investigating the matter; it was their
responsibility to do so. What they did after
they found out the facts was wrong.
Despite the opposition coming against the
gospel, the number of Christians keeps
increasing; growing to 5,000 from 3,000 at last
count (Acts
2:41). Opposition is not slowing the
church down at all. In the Western world,
Christians rarely face persecution. Satan
instead has attacked us with wordiness, selfish
pride, a need for acceptance, and status. The
martyr can impress unbelievers with his courage
and faith; the self-centered, compromising
Christian is despised by the world.
Peter
and John are brought before the Sanhedrin
5) The
next day the rulers, elders and teachers of the
law met in Jerusalem. 6) Annas the high priest
was there, and so were Caiaphas, John, Alexander
and the other men of the high priest's family.
7) They had Peter and John brought before them
and began to question them: "By what power or
what name did you do this?"
These
Jewish rulers are the same one who recently
condemned Jesus to death. Peter and John,
standing before the Jewish rulers, must have
thought that the trial of Jesus was going to
happen all over again, and they would be
crucified like their Master. But it didn't seem
to matter.
The
ideas behind By what power and by what name are
virtually the same; in their thinking, the power
resided in the name, because the name
represented the character of the person.
Peter
boldly preaches to the Jewish leaders
8)
Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, said to
them: "Rulers and elders of the people! 9) If we
are being called to account today for an act of
kindness shown to a cripple and are asked how he
was healed, 10) then know this, you and all the
people of Israel: It is by the name of Jesus
Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified but whom
God raised from the dead, that this man stands
before you healed. 11) He is
”‘the stone you builders rejected,
which has become the capstone.’ 12)
Salvation is found in no one else, for there is
no other name under heaven given to men by whom
we must be saved."
He is
instantaneously filled with the Spirit again,
evident by his supernatural boldness and ability
to speak directly to the heart of the matter.
The filling of the Holy Spirit Peter experienced
in
Acts 2:4
(along with other disciples) was not a one-time
event; it was something God wanted to keep doing
in their lives.
Quoting
Psalm 118:22,
Peter made reference to the construction of the
Temple. He would later write that we as living
stones are part of a spiritual house (I
Peter 2:5). Sometimes we rub each
other the wrong way. That's what living stones
are supposed to do. That guy you married — the
one you thought would be such a rock — turned
out to be a blockhead. Why did you get stuck
with him? Because that blockhead is the living
stone who will knock the rough edges off you and
prepare you for heaven.
Tradition has it that in the days of the
construction of Solomon's Temple, although the
engineers at the Temple Mount searched and
searched, they couldn't find the cornerstone. A
message was sent to the quarry: `Where is the
cornerstone?'

Word
came back to the Mount: `We sent it to you
months ago.'
Then
someone remembered: `Oh, maybe it was that stone
we didn't know what to do with. It didn't fit
anywhere so we rolled it down the hill into the
Valley of Gehenna.'
The
Valley of Gehenna was the place of burning, the
place of rubbish, the place where babies were
sacrificed in the days of Ahaz, the place of
weeping and sorrow, refuse and stench. And the
rejected stone was indeed found in the Valley of
Gehenna.
The
tone of Peter's reply - especially when he says
If we this day are judged for a good deed done
to a helpless man show that he is not
intimidated by this court - though humanly
speaking, he should be intimidated by the same
court that sent Jesus to crucifixion. Peter's
logic is piercing: why are we on trial for a
good deed?
Peter
preaches Jesus; the Jesus they crucified, the
Jesus God raised from the dead, the Jesus who
healed this man.
The
quotation from
Psalm 118:22
is appropriate; Jesus was rejected by men but
exalted by His Father.
The
idea that there is no salvation in any other,
and that there is no other name under heaven
given among men by whom we must be saved is an
offensive one in our pluralistic, eclectic age;
but it is the plain teaching of the Bible. What
about the infant who dies? What about the person
who has never heard about Jesus? God will deal
with them fairly and justly, and those who are
saved will be saved by the work of Jesus done on
their behalf, even if they lacked a full
knowledge of Jesus. But what about you? If you
wish to believe that all are saved, and that
there are many roads to heaven, and that you can
take the best of all faiths and blend them into
one, fine - believe so and bear the
consequences, but please do not claim this is
the teaching of the Bible.
The
Jewish rulers react to Peter's sermon
The
evidence of Peter and John's character
13)
When they saw the courage of Peter and John and
realized that they were unschooled, ordinary
men, they were astonished and they took note
that these men had been with Jesus.
They
were uneducated and untrained men: indeed, Peter
and John were Galilean fishermen with no formal
education, but they had the one essential
qualification for ministry: they had been with
Jesus.
It
was as if the Sanhedrin said, "These guys are
just like Jesus! We thought we solved the Jesus
problem when we crucified Him, but now it is
worse than ever!" People should go to Jesus
directly; but often they won't. The only Jesus
they are going to see is what shines through us.
We must work to make the fact that we have been
with Jesus as obvious in our lives as it was in
theirs.
Because they had been with Jesus, they are
naturally bold; when you are a servant of the
omnipotent God, what do you fear from the courts
of man?
"It
is particularly striking that neither on this
nor on any subsequent occasion . . . did the
Sanhedrin take any serious action to disprove
the apostle's central affirmation - the
resurrection of Jesus. Had it seemed possible to
refute them on this point, how readily would the
Sanhedrin seize the opportunity! Had they
succeeded, how quickly and completely the new
movement would have collapsed!"
The
evidence of the man who was healed
14But
since they could see the man who had been healed
standing there with them, there was nothing they
could say.
They
could say nothing against it: this miracle was
examined by doubters, and stood up as a genuine
miracle. This was not a case where the healing
was "lost" in a few hours, as many claim today
happens.
Previously, this man was completely lame, having
to be carried wherever he went (3:2), and now he
was completely healed - in contrast to many who
get up out of wheelchairs at modern "healing
services" yet are somewhat able to walk, and can
do so much better because of the hype, emotion,
and adrenalin - yet they leave the arena in the
wheelchair, having "lost" their healing.
Taking counsel, the Jewish leaders respond to
Peter and John with a command to cease preaching
Jesus
15) So
they ordered them to withdraw from the Sanhedrin
and then conferred together. 16) "What are we
going to do with these men?" they asked.
"Everybody living in Jerusalem knows they have
done an outstanding miracle, and we cannot deny
it. 17) But to stop this thing from spreading
any further among the people, we must warn these
men to speak no longer to anyone in this name."
18) Then they called them in again and commanded
them not to speak or teach at all in the name of
Jesus.
The
corruption of their hearts is plain; they
acknowledge that a miracle has genuinely
happened, yet they refuse to submit to the God
who worked the miracle.
Their
fear of the preaching of Jesus was rooted in
their own sinful self-interest, not in any
desire to protect the people.
How
did Luke know the private discussions of the
Sanhedrin? In all likelihood, there was a
dynamic, brilliant young rabbi present among the
Sanhedrin named Saul of Tarsus - who later told
Luke. Even though Saul himself did not know it,
God was working in his heart through Peter and
John; they had no idea they were preaching to a
future apostle and the greatest missionary the
church would ever see. We have no idea how
greatly God can use us!
Peter
and John respond to the command to cease
preaching Jesus
19 But
Peter and John replied, "Judge for yourselves
whether it is right in God's sight to obey you
rather than God. 20) For we cannot help speaking
about what we have seen and heard."
It is
self-evident that they should listen to God
instead of man; the appeal to this fact is
effective.
They
did not originate this message; they merely
speak the things which we have seen and heard,
as reliable eye-witnesses.
Peter
and John are released with threats of future
punishment
21)
After further threats they let them go. They
could not decide how to punish them, because all
the people were praising God for what had
happened. 22) For the man who was miraculously
healed was over forty years old.
These
Jewish leaders are completely unmoved by God,
yet they are responsive to public opinion; they
obviously care far more about man's opinion than
God's opinion.
This
whole situation started out looking pretty bad:
Peter and John were on trial before the same
court that sent Jesus to Pilate for crucifixion.
Satan meant it all for great evil, but before it
is all over, look what God does.
-
Two thousand more people come to Jesus
-
Peter is filled with the Holy Spirit
-
Peter gets to preach Jesus to the leaders of
the Jews
-
A
miraculous healing is confirmed by hostile
examiners
-
The enemies of Jesus are confused
-
Peter and John are bolder for Jesus than
ever
-
God is glorified
The
early church prays for boldness
Introduction: they acknowledge their God
23) On
their release, Peter and John went back to their
own people and reported all that the chief
priests and elders had said to them. 24) When
they heard this, they raised their voices
together in prayer to God. "Sovereign Lord,"
they said, "you made the heaven and the earth
and the sea, and everything in them.
They
reported all that the chief priests and elders
had said: we can just picture Peter and John
saying, "They let us tell them about Jesus! The
realized we were like Jesus! They told us not to
tell others about Jesus!"
They
raised their voice: their prayer was vocal; it
is certainly possible for us to pray silently in
our minds, but we can focus our thoughts more
effectively when we speak out our prayers. It
isn't that they all prayed, speaking at the same
time; one person prayed, and all agreed with
that one, so that they were really praying with
one voice (voice is in the singular).
With
one accord: their prayer was unified; there was
no strife or contention among them.
Lord,
You are God: they begin by reminding themselves
who it is they pray to: the Lord of all
creation, the God of all power. This word Lord
is not the usual word for "Lord" in the New
Testament; it is the Greek word despotes - a
term used of a slave owner or ruler who has
power that cannot be questioned. When we pray,
we often forget just who it is we are praying
to, or worse yet, we pray to an imaginary God of
our own ideas.
They
pray in light of the Scriptures
25)
You spoke by the Holy Spirit through the mouth
of your servant, our father David:
”‘Why do the nations rage
and the peoples plot in vain?
26) The kings of the earth take their stand
and the rulers gather together
against the Lord
and against his Anointed One.' 27) Indeed
Herod and Pontius Pilate met together with the
Gentiles and the people of Israel in this city
to conspire against your holy servant Jesus,
whom you anointed. 28) They did what your power
and will had decided beforehand should happen.
They
understand what is happening to them by seeing
what the Bible says about it; they should expect
this sort of opposition, because this passage
from Psalm 2 (among others) prophesies it. When
we pray, we must see our circumstances in light
of God's Word. For example, when we are in
conflict, perhaps we need to know we do not
wrestle against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, against powers, against the
rulers of the darkness of this age (Ephesians
6:12).

Seeing our circumstances in light of God's Word
also means seeing when there is a sin problem;
if we could say with the Psalmist When I kept it
all inside, my bones turned to powder, my words
became daylong groans. The pressure never let
up; all the juices of my life dried up. (Psalm
32:3-4, Peterson), perhaps we are in
the same place the Psalmist was: in sin and
needing to confess that sin and get right with
God. We also use Scripture in prayer to pray the
promises of God; when we need strength, we can
pray according to
Ephesians 3:16:
that He would grant you, according to the riches
of His glory, to be strengthened with might
through His Spirit in the inner man.
Because they saw their circumstances in light of
God's Word, they could recognize that the wrath
of man never operated outside of the sphere of
God's control; these enemies of Jesus could only
do whatever Your hand and Your purpose
determined before to be done. This brings real
peace: to know whatever comes my way has passed
through God's hand first, and He will not allow
even the wicked acts of men to result in
permanent damage.
They
ask for more boldness, more power, and
(essentially) more trouble!
29)
Now, Lord, consider their threats and enable
your servants to speak your word with great
boldness. 30) Stretch out your hand to heal and
perform miraculous signs and wonders through the
name of your holy servant Jesus."
Grant
to Your servants that with all boldness they may
speak Your word: this request is consumed with
God's cause and glory, not the comfort and
advancement of the disciples; they ask for
things that will lead to more confrontation, not
less!
By
stretching our Your hand to heal: they do not
ask to do miracles themselves; they understand
that Jesus heals, by His hand - only He does it
from heaven, through His people. It is a snare
to long to be used to do miraculous things; it
is often rooted in the pride that wants everyone
to see just how greatly God can use me. I should
be delighted in the power of God, not because He
has used me to display it.
Their
prayer is answered
31)
After they prayed, the place where they were
meeting was shaken. And they were all filled
with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God
boldly.
The
place where they were assembled together was
shaken: they are given a unique emblem of God's
pleasure and presence: an earthquake; though
this shaking may have been confined to the house
itself. This earthquake is recorded in
Acts 4:31;
someone pointed out the that the significant
Northridge earthquake happened at 4:31 in the
morning!
They
were all filled with the Holy Spirit: they are
filled with the Holy Spirit, again. The idea
that we are "Spirit filled" only at an
experience known as the "Baptism of the Holy
Spirit" is wrong (though that may be a wonderful
and first yielded ness to the Spirit's power);
we must be continually filled with the Holy
Spirit, and make our "immersion" in Him a
constant experience.
They
receive the boldness they asked for; "The word
boldness means lucid and daring statement. In
the Greek the word is parresia, telling it
all.'" What we need to be doing is telling it
all. When we try to "hide" some of God's work in
our lives from others, we aren't walking in the
boldness the Lord would have us walk in. Their
boldness was a gift from God, received through
prayer; it was not something that they tried to
work up in themselves.
The
sharing heart of the early church
Their
attitude towards each other and towards material
possessions
32)
All the believers were one in heart and mind. No
one claimed that any of his possessions was his
own, but they shared everything they had.
Because of their unity, they regarded people
more important than things.
They
recognized God's ownership of everything; it all
belonged to Him and His people.
There
is a contrast between communism and koinonia;
"Communism says, 'What is yours is mine; I'll
take it.' Koinonia says, 'What is mine is yours,
I'll share it.'" "The Greek here does not mean
that everyone sold their property at once.
Rather, from time to time this was done as the
Lord brought needs to their attention."
Some
people think that this radical sharing of
possessions among the early church was a
mistake, based on the idea that Jesus was
returning immediately and leading to much
poverty in the Jerusalem church later on.
The
effective witness of the apostles
33)
With great power the apostles continued to
testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus,
and much grace was upon them all.
With
great power: this is both the result and the
root of the attitude in the previous verse -
putting God first, people second and material
things a distant third.
Gave
witness to the resurrection: notice again the
central place the resurrection of Jesus holds in
the message of the first Christians.
Great
grace was upon them all: God's favor - His smile
from heaven - was evident everywhere.
Examples of early giving
34)
There were no needy persons among them. For from
time to time those who owned lands or houses
sold them, brought the money from the sales 35)
and put it at the apostles' feet, and it was
distributed to anyone as he had need.
36) Joseph, a Levite from Cyprus, whom the
apostles called Barnabas (which means Son of
Encouragement), 37) sold a field he owned and
brought the money and put it at the apostles'
feet.
This
sort of radical giving was absolutely necessary
to meet the needs of this rapidly growing
church, of which many members came as "refugees"
from abroad, having responded to the gospel on
Pentecost.
People didn't wait for someone else to give;
when a need arose, they gave of their own
possessions to help someone else. Unfortunately,
this generosity of the early Christians soon
began to be abused, and Paul had to give strict
instructions to the churches on who should be
helped and how.
Paul's directions are that the church must
discern who the truly needy are (1
Timothy 5:3), that If one can work to
support himself, he is not truly needy and must
provide for his own needs (2
Thessalonians 3:10-12;
1 Timothy 5:8;
1 Thessalonians 4:11), that if one can be
supported by family, he is not truly needy, and
should not be supported by the church (1
Timothy 5:3-4), that those who are
supported by the church must make some return to
the church body (1
Timothy 5:5, 10), that it is right
for the church to examine moral conduct before
giving support (1 Timothy 5:9-13), and that the
support of the church should be for the most
basic necessities of living (1
Timothy 6:8).
Barnabas was a notable example of this giving
spirit.