Jesus Is With You Every Step of the Way

Acts 6:1ff

In those days when the number of disciples was increasing, the Hellenistic Jews among them complained against the Hebraic Jews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food. 2 So the Twelve gathered all the disciples together and said, “It would not be right for us to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to wait on tables. 3 Brothers and sisters, choose seven men from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom. We will turn this responsibility over to them 4 and will give our attention to prayer and the ministry of the word.”

5 This proposal pleased the whole group. They chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit; also Philip, Procorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas from Antioch, a convert to Judaism. 6 They presented these men to the apostles, who prayed and laid their hands on them.

7 So the word of God spread. The number of disciples in Jerusalem increased rapidly, and a large number of priests became obedient to the faith.

8 Now Stephen, a man full of God’s grace and power, performed great wonders and signs among the people. 9 Opposition arose, however, from members of the Synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called)—Jews of Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and Asia—who began to argue with Stephen.

To this he replied: “You stiff-necked people! Your hearts and ears are still uncircumcised. You are just like your ancestors: You always resist the Holy Spirit! 52 Was there ever a prophet your ancestors did not persecute? They even killed those who predicted the coming of the Righteous One. And now you have betrayed and murdered him— 53 you who have received the law that was given through angels but have not obeyed it.”

54 When the members of the Sanhedrin heard this, they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him. 55 But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. 56 “Look,” he said, “I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.”

57 At this they covered their ears and, yelling at the top of their voices, they all rushed at him, 58 dragged him out of the city and began to stone him. Meanwhile, the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul.

59 While they were stoning him, Stephen prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” 60 Then he fell on his knees and cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” When he had said this, he fell asleep.

Jesus Is With You Every Step of the Way

Stephen is an interesting character in Scripture. We really don’t hear much about him. As suddenly as he appears on the pages of Scripture, he’s gone. But what we learn from him lasts quite a bit longer.

When Martin Luther wrote his commentary on these verses, he said, “You have pictured here in this story the entire Gospel – faith, love, cross, death, and life.” I think that would be a fitting way to process what we just heard.

Faith

Luke tells us that when there was an issue in Jerusalem of widows being overlooked in the daily distribution of food, seven men were chosen to make sure that never happened again. They were supposed to be men who were “full of the Spirit and wisdom.” So, before we hear his name, we know that Stephen was full of the Spirit and wisdom. And then, when he’s introduced two verses later, Luke doubles down; he calls Stephen, “a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit.”

This is the first time in the Bible that Stephen’s name is mentioned. About the only thing we can guess about his past is that he was Greek, because his name is Greek, not Jewish.

So, how does a Grecian come to be full of the Holy Spirit and faith? The same way anyone does. “Faith comes from hearing the message, and the message is heard in the word about Christ.”

We’ve talked about this in the past – seeing is not always believing, but believing always comes from hearing. Stephen heard the Word. Whether it was from Jesus’ mouth or the disciples’ preaching, it doesn’t matter. The Holy Spirit worked in his heart when that Word was spoken, and Stephen believed.

He didn’t look to Jesus to be an earthly king, a lucky charm, or a sage on a stage. He saw Jesus as he rightly was – our Savior from sin and our reason for the hope of heaven. That faith made an impression on Stephen. It wasn’t just an intellectual knowledge that he tucked away into a tidy little compartment in his mind only to be taken out when it was convenient. That faith guided his whole life, and, as Luther would observe, it inspired him to love.

Love

There was a distinct lack of love being shown in Jerusalem. There’s nothing to suggest that it was anything malicious, but people with needs were being overlooked nonetheless. It seems like it was a cultural thing. The believers from Greece were being overlooked by the believers from Israel. So, there were the locals who all knew each other and took care of each other but who often lost sight of the newcomers, the outsiders, the people who didn’t necessarily fit in.

That’s where Stephen, and the six other men mentioned in Acts 6, step in. They were eager to serve. They weren’t Apostles. By their Greek-sounding names, they were probably outsiders themselves. But there was still a way for them to make a difference. They could “wait on tables,” as the Apostles called it, which makes it sound bad, but It wasn’t demeaning work. It was necessary and it was an expression of their love and compassion for fellow believers.

That’s why the qualifications for these men were faith and wisdom. The Apostles could have pooled their resources and hired out the care of their widows, but this wasn’t just about putting food in mouths. It was about showing Christ-like love. It was about putting others’ needs ahead of their own. It was a matter of equipping believers for acts of service.

Stephen’s faith enabled that kind of love. But it also put a cross on his shoulders.

Cross

Jesus once told his disciples, “You will be handed over to be persecuted and put to death, and you will be hated by all nations because of me,” and again he said, “If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also.”

That’s exactly how it played out in Stephen’s life. He was a good guy! He helped out old ladies. He was a good citizen in the community, but opposition arose against him anyway. It wasn’t popular to be a Christian back then. Many people saw it as being rebellious, anti-patriotic. Imagine living in Alberta and campaigning against gas and beef and why not hockey while you’re at it? That’s about how popular Christians were in this heavily Jewish community.

But what really irked people about Stephen was that he was unafraid to talk about Jesus, and you can’t talk about Jesus without talking about sin. Jesus is our Savior from sin. We’ve done things that deserve punishment. We’ve disobeyed God’s Commandments. We haven’t lived up to God’s expectations or standards. And that’s a problem, but the people didn’t want to listen.

You’ve been there, haven’t you? Someone calls you out for something you’ve done wrong and your gut reaction is to deny it and then secretly hate that person. It’s embedded in our human nature to be defensive. Our first instinct is not to admit and ask forgiveness; it’s to accuse and attack, even when the person opposite us is trying to help us.

That’s what happened to Stephen. The Jews didn’t want to hear it. What Stephen had been saying was 100% true. They were stubborn. They resisted the Holy Spirit. They didn’t listen to God’s law. In fact, they persecuted the people who proclaimed God’s Word to them, and even killed the promised Savior.

They didn’t want to hear it, so like 5-year-olds, they covered their ears and yelled at the top of their voices, and then rushed at Stephen to stone him. The cross of opposition was quickly turning to death.

Death

Luke records for us that the Jews dragged Stephen out of the city to stone him. They killed him in one of the most violent ways possible. They threw rocks at him until he died.

But even in that moment, Stephen showed how rooted he was in his faith. His last two statements are almost word for word what Jesus said from the cross. He bore these men no ill will. He didn’t hate them. He calmly entrusted his soul to Jesus’ care and prayed that God would forgive them.

Stephen got what Jesus promised. He became the first Christian martyr – the first person to die specifically because he believed in Jesus. To Christians Stephen is a hero, someone to look up to. I look at him and in each of the four categories we’ve talked about so far, I have to admit how far I fall short.

I have faith, but that’s God’s gift to me. He sent someone to preach his Word to me, e.g. my parents, my pastors. I can’t claim any credit for that. Where my cooperation with the faith God gives me is where the wheels start to come off. Unlike Stephen, my faith doesn’t always show itself in love. To my shame I overlook the needy and lose sight of those I am able to serve. I’m far from angelic all the time in the way that I treat people and I’m rarely as bold as Stephen was. And while I can make that admission now in a prepared statement that I’ve worked on all week long, if you were to accuse me of those things, I’m sure I’d act like the Jews did, ready to cover my ears and yell at the top of my voice rather than listen to another second of how I fall short.

Stephen was a pretty good believer, someone you could really look up to. But it’s not his actions that give me any hope for myself. I don’t think I have the strength of will to just become a better person, and even if I did, it wouldn’t change a single thing about my past. No, it’s not Stephen’s actions that give us hope. It’s what he says, even as he’s dying: “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.”

Do those words sound familiar? Jesus said something very similar as he was dying on the cross. “Father forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” With one of his last breaths, Jesus prayed for your forgiveness. With his last breath, Jesus earned your forgiveness.

Jesus was so selfless that he was willing to be convicted of crimes he didn’t commit and take on himself a punishment that you deserve in order to forgive your stubbornness and defensiveness. Jesus was so committed to you that he boldly walked to Calvary to forgive your fear and lack of courage. Jesus loved you so much that he was willing to die on a cross for you, to forgive your lack of love.

Jesus died so that God would not hold your sin against you, and so that you can have the same confidence that Stephen had.

Life

Does it strike you as odd that the theme for our worship this morning is The Good Shepherd Guards His Messengers and yet we’re reading a passage in which one of God’s messengers gets murdered? Some shepherd that is who stands idly by while his sheep get slaughtered. But that’s not exactly the scene here, is it?

In his final moments, God showed Stephen a glimpse of heaven with Jesus standing at the right hand of God. He’s not sitting back, sipping on a cocktail with his feet up on a recliner unconcerned about what’s going on in the world. He’s standing; he’s ready to act. And though he didn’t step in to prevent Stephen’s death, he did answer Stephen’s prayer: “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.”

That’s what shepherds do. They lead their sheep to green pastures beside quiet waters. This is the ultimate promise that our Good Shepherd makes to you. Your life could feel like it’s completely out of control. You may feel like the world is against you, but Jesus is standing at the right hand of God even now. He’s not distant or disinterested in what’s happening in your life. He’s watching over you and taking care of you, and even if your life should come to a tragic end, he’ll be there ready to take you home to heaven.

That’s why after a horrible death, the last words of our text are so gentle: “When he said this, he fell asleep.” Death is only temporary. Because of Jesus we have the promise of life after death. Even after we die, we’ll wake up in our heavenly home with Jesus sitting bedside, smiling to see us and ready to show us the paradise he has prepared because he loves you.

While our lives may not unfold the same way Stephen’s did, all Christians follow the same path and we have the same promise that’s portrayed here. Jesus is with you every step of the way, from faith to love to cross to death to life. That’s your confidence in Jesus, our Good Shepherd. May we be like Stephen, i.e. full of faith and the Holy Spirit. Amen.


The Resurrection Gives You Reason for Hope

Acts 24:10-21

10 When the Governor motioned for him to speak, Paul replied, “I know that for a number of years you have been a judge over this nation; so I gladly make my defense. 11 You can easily verify that no more than twelve days ago I went up to Jerusalem to worship. 12 My accusers did not find me arguing with anyone at the temple, or stirring up a crowd in the synagogues or anywhere else in the city. 13 And they cannot prove to you the charges they are now making against me. 14 However, I admit that I worship the God of our ancestors as a follower of the Way, which they call a sect. I believe everything that is in accordance with the Law and that is written in the Prophets, 15 and I have the same hope in God as these men themselves have, that there will be a resurrection of both the righteous and the wicked. 16 So I strive always to keep my conscience clear before God and man.

17 “After an absence of several years, I came to Jerusalem to bring my people gifts for the poor and to present offerings. 18 I was ceremonially clean when they found me in the temple courts doing this. There was no crowd with me, nor was I involved in any disturbance. 19 But there are some Jews from the province of Asia, who ought to be here before you and bring charges if they have anything against me. 20 Or these who are here should state what crime they found in me when I stood before the Sanhedrin— 21 unless it was this one thing I shouted as I stood in their presence: ‘It is concerning the resurrection of the dead that I am on trial before you today.’”

The Resurrection Gives You Reason for Hope

What does hope look like? I see it every day in my dog’s eyes whenever I go anywhere near the front door. The eyes bulge. The muscles tense. She’s ready to go. So hopeful that this will be the time that I take her outside.

You’re not a dog, but physiologically I don’t know that our reactions to hope are much different. Our bodies mirror our emotions. Our hearts start to flutter. Maybe there’s an extra spring in your step, a glint in your eye. Your attitude changes so that you’re more patient or kind or joyful. Hope changes you.

Hope will let you spend all day walking 12 kilometers to Emmaus, sit down for dinner, find out good news and then run the 12 kilometers back to Jerusalem so that you could tell that good news to your friends.

Hope will let you stand on trial for your life and not be afraid. Even with false witnesses lying about you and the jury stacked against you, hope allows you to be happy as you give your defense.

Hope has a way of taking a bad situation and making it feel like nothing, because you know something that no one else does. You have this secret that changes everything.

Oh, to be a fly on the wall while Paul was on trial. Earlier in Acts 24 we find out why he was there. A man named Tertullus made an embarrassingly flattering case to the Roman governor Felix claiming that Paul was the leader of a rebellion and should be punished. And he wasn’t the only one to speak. The other Jews who were there joined in the accusation too. (By the way, the penalty for rebellion is death, so this is kind of a big deal.) But Paul calmly stands up and confidently says to Felix, “I gladly make my defense.”

Paul knew something that no one else did – or, at least, that no one else was willing to admit. After presenting his iron-clad case for innocence, Paul says, “I have the same hope in God as these men themselves have, that there will be a resurrection of both the righteous and the wicked.” The reason Paul could be so calm is because he believed in the resurrection of the dead.

Imagine what life would be like if you didn’t believe in the resurrection, i.e. if this life were all there was. How unlucky would you be to live through a global pandemic? If this life is all there is, is this how you’d like to spend it – confined, cramped, cabin fever, constant fear that this quarantine might not be enough to keep you and your loved ones alive while so many others worldwide are dying?

Or, is the cure worse than the disease? Will we ever recover from the quarantine? What does that mean for the rest of my life post-COVID? Am I just going to be trying to make up for or catch up to my former life trajectory?

I turned 33 a week ago. That’s how old Alexander the Great was when he conquered the known world. What have I been doing with my life? If there is no resurrection, then every minute of my life is another grain of sand pouring out of an hourglass that’s getting emptier and emptier and I only have a limited amount of time left to make a name for myself or make the most out of life.

That’s a really sad and depressing way to live. If we only have hope in what might possibly happen in this life, not only are we buckling ourselves into an emotional rollercoaster and subjecting our emotional health to the whim of every piece of breaking news, but as Paul says in his letter to the Corinthians, “we are of all people most to be pitied.”

You can’t control what happens in this life. There are no guarantees for you to put your hope in. Even those things that we’ve treated as automatic in the past have been put on hold now, e.g. high school graduation ceremonies; haircuts; hiking; hoedowns that haven’t been canceled in 100 years!

If our only reason for hope is the prospect of a promotion, what happens when your company goes under because of a global pandemic? If you’re just working hard now so that you can retire in 20 years, what happens when your savings get wiped out or health gets snatched from you prematurely? If your hopes are even simpler than that and all you need to be happy is time with friends or a springtime BBQ, what do you do when the government instructs you to be socially distant?

“You overcome! You get creative! It’s a testament to the indomitable human spirit when we persevere and adapt!”

That’s what the world would have you believe.

While there is truth to that - it is good to be creative - there is a limit to human ingenuity, and, more importantly, there’s a better answer. God gives you a hook to hang your hat on – a guarantee to give you hope. It’s the resurrection of the dead, i.e. the promise of life after death. This life is not all we have to look forward to. We can place our hope in the promised future that is ours in Christ Jesus.

Just three weeks ago we celebrated his resurrection from the dead. Like Paul, he had been put on trial, falsely accused, and threatened with death. But unlike Paul, Jesus didn’t speak a word in his defense. It wasn’t because he wasn’t innocent; he could have proven that easily. Jesus didn’t speak up because it wasn’t his life he was trying to save; it was yours.

That’s why Jesus went to the cross, because this life isn’t all there is. The first time Paul speaks of resurrection here, he doesn’t call it the resurrection of the dead; he calls it the resurrection of both the righteous and the wicked. In other words, what we do in this life matters. You can’t escape sin just by dying. It clings to you even in the afterlife.

Or, at least, it would, had it not been for Jesus’ death and resurrection. When Jesus died, he paid for your sin. He forgave you for all the wrongs that you have done. He cancelled all your debts; he removed all your guilt. He took them all on himself and died with them as if they were his own, claiming them so that they couldn’t cling to you.

So, when Jesus rose from the dead three days later unencumbered by your sin anymore, he gave you a promise, that because he lives you too will live. In the resurrection, you will be considered righteous – not because you have always done everything right, but because he did; not because you made the most of every moment, but because Jesus redeemed every minute of your life – good, bad or ugly – and washed it clean in his own blood. As your substitute, when he took your place on the cross, he gifted you his perfect righteousness.

So that Paul – and everyone who believes in Jesus – can speak of the resurrection of the righteous and the wicked confident that in God’s eyes we are considered righteous because of Jesus’ sacrifice.

Jesus is the way that we are considered righteous. Jesus is the way that we will be on the right side of the resurrection. Our hope for salvation and eternal life in heaven has nothing to do with what we do here on earth. It has everything to do with Jesus, and as a result your hope is guaranteed. It doesn’t depend on you. It’s already been taken care of by Jesus. Hang your hat on the resurrection to heaven. That is your hope as Christians.

And as I said before, hope changes you.

Because I know that there is a resurrection from the dead – and that because of Jesus, I’m on the right side of that resurrection – I don’t have to worry that I’m 33 and haven’t conquered the world yet. I am not defined by my occupation, nor is my life the sum of all my accomplishments. The life that God has given me here and now is for coming to know Jesus and for causing him to be known. My life now is freed to live in thankfulness and praise for the eternal life that is mine forever in heaven. Because of the resurrection, I can flip burgers and clean toilets and bag groceries for forty years and not feel ashamed for a second, because from the lowliest task to the greatest achievement, everything I do in this life only serves to prepare me for the life that is to come – the life that is guaranteed me by Jesus.

Because I know that there is a resurrection from the dead – and that because of Jesus, I’m on the right side of that resurrection – I don’t have to try to milk every moment of my life for fear that I might miss out. I have heaven to look forward to. That’s what I put my hope in.

Because I know that there is a resurrection from the dead – and that because of Jesus, I’m on the right side of that resurrection – I don’t have to fear, e.g. global pandemics, economic recessions, cancer, fire, even my own sinful weakness. God promises me and you and everyone who believes in Jesus eternal life where all the problems of this world are ancient history, and we get to look forward to living with our God for a life without end.

The resurrection gives you hope. Hope changes you. How is that hope going to change your life today? Pray on that, and let me know.

Amen.