Acts 5:40-42. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on October 23, 2022.
There are many things in life that cause people to rejoice. We rejoice at weddings and at the birth of children. We rejoice at graduations and getting that first job as an adult. Of course, there are many similar things of lesser caliber that we rejoice over as well.
However, it is not common for people to rejoice when they are being persecuted by others for the sake of following Jesus Christ. Yet, if we are truly following Jesus, we should be growing in our ability to do so, and far more Christians should be spiritually mature enough to do it. I do not mean in theory, or in pretense. I really do mean that we should internally and externally rejoice when we are persecuted for our faith in Jesus.
Today we are going to see the Apostles of Jesus rejoicing because they were being persecuted. May God bless us with even half the joy that they had on that day!
Let’s get into our passage.
The Apostles of Jesus were in a tough spot with the council angrily planning their death right in front of them. It seemed that the same thing that happened with Jesus would now happen to them. Yet, something unexpected happens. Gamaliel, a rabbi with a lot of clout on the council, stands up and gives a speech strongly cautioning the group against putting the men to death. This is where we left off last week.
In verse 40, we are told that his speech “persuaded them.” He is a very learned man who knows this assembly well. He cannot easily be dismissed by the high priest and the Sadducees on the council. It is also possible that he has caught them off guard, and the are persuaded more out of a lack of preparation to resist his logic.
All this notwithstanding, Gamaliel is not the hero here. It really is God who has turned them from this path of executing the Apostles. God often works through people, both the righteous who are willing to be used of Him and the unrighteous who are used unwittingly by Him. Thus, it is God who has set them free.
We should remind ourselves of how God protected Daniel in the lion’s den. He sent an angel who was clearly unseen by others. How many times was Israel outnumbered by their enemies, but God sent an angel, or stirred them to fight one another, or pummeled them with hailstones, etc. Many are the methods that God employs to help the righteous, and sometimes it involves using those who are unrighteous. Yes, I am saying that Gamaliel is unrighteous. He is resisting and standing against the clear leading of the Spirit of God in his day.
However, God does not always set His servants free from the hands of those bent on persecuting them. Everyone of these Apostles would be heavily persecuted by their fellow Jews, and by the Gentiles. Most of them would be executed for the sake of Jesus as martyrs down the road.
Jesus himself had warned Israel that he was sending them prophets and that they would persecute them.
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you build the tombs of the prophets and adorn the monuments of the righteous, and say, ‘If we had lived in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets.’
“Therefore you are witnesses against yourselves that you are sons of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up, then, the measure of your fathers’ guilt. Serpents, brood of vipers! How can you escape the condemnation of hell? Therefore, indeed, I send you prophets, wise men, and scribes: some of them you will kill and crucify, and some of them you will scourge in your synagogues and persecute from city to city, that on you may come all the righteous blood shed on the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, son of Berechiah, whom you murdered between the temple and the altar. Assuredly, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.” Matthew 23:29-36 (NKJV)
They would become guilty of all the righteous blood shed on the earth because they were doing this over the top of the powerful light of God given in their generation. Cain is the primary, or original, type of this. He slew his brother even though he had been warned by God Himself. He had great light and sinned against it. There is a rejection of God and truth, and an embrace of wickedness. We see the same thing with Mystery Babylon in the book of the Revelation of Jesus. Revelation 18:24 says, “And in her was found the blood of prophets and saints, and of all who were slain on the earth.”
The light and the glory of Jesus Christ has spread across this world, and many who would speak of Jews as Christ-killers will themselves become the greatest persecutors of his true followers. It has been figured that, from AD 1540 to 1580, papal Rome had over 900,000 Protestants killed. However, those numbers pale in comparison to what can be done today. Perhaps we will see the days when Protestants themselves call for the death of those they disagree with. I pray not. Yet, the rise of Pentecostalism in the early 1900’s received much social persecution from the Protestant churches they were being kicked out of. Perhaps even Pentecostals will join in the fray of persecution. This is always the challenge. Will we allow ourselves to make the institution an idol and persecute those who refuse to do so? Or, will we allow Jesus to lead us along the path that he has chosen?
Friend, hear me. You had better flee to Jesus and deliver yourself from this wicked and perverse generation. No denomination can save you. No church can save you, only Jesus can! I pray that you as an individual, and this church as a local body, and the Assemblies of God will hold the line in standing with Jesus. However, our faith is anchored in Jesus, and not in an institution.
We are told that they are beaten and ordered not to speak in the name of Jesus, but it would not stay that way for long. God had a certain work that they had to accomplish, and no one could stop them, until they had accomplished what He had sent them to do. Yet, they were able to make the apostle’s lives difficult.
In our generation, we do not like it when sinful people, even sinful “Christians,” make our lives difficult. However, this is the call to all who would follow Jesus. Following Jesus is not easy because he is headed to a cross, and he tells you to pick up and carry your own cross in following him. Praise God that there is coming a day when Christ will come in his glory, and the sons of God will be manifested to a world that is not worthy of those whom God has sent! It is not yet clear who we are, but God Himself declares that we are His children. He will manifest it on that day!
We should now turn our attention to the response of the Apostles.
Imagine how you would respond to being hauled before the Snohomish County Superior Court judge, or the supreme Court of the State of WA, or the House of Representatives of these united States of America. What if you were unlawfully detained, questioned, beaten, and then told to quit talking about Jesus or you would get worse? I know that it seems an impossibility and hard to fathom. Yet, this is what had happened to these men. How did they respond? Maybe we had better focus more on how we would respond?
We are told that they responded by rejoicing in their suffering. No, they were not rejoicing that they were released, but that they had suffered for Jesus! Why would they do such an odd thing? We could chalk it up to the fact that they had failed before the cross to stand with Jesus. Perhaps this was an opportunity to prove their devotion and love to their Lord after having failed so miserably before. However, I believe it is more than that.
Jesus had prepared them for this moment as a part of their discipleship. The Gospels record several places where Jesus addressed this.
“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely for My sake. Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.” Matthew 5:10-12 (NKJV)
Blessed are you when men hate you, and when they exclude you, and revile you, and cast out your name as evil, for the Son of Man’s sake. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy! For indeed your reward is great in heaven, for in like manner their fathers did to the prophets.” Luke 6:22-23 (NKJV)
They were not suffering because of living a sinful lifestyle, and rejecting the Word of God. They were suffering shame for the name of Jesus and doing righteousness!
Public humiliation, or public shame, is one of the ways that societies and governments have kept people in check through the years. However, these men were more interested in pleasing Jesus than they were in pleasing people. Leonard Ravenhill said it similar to this. If we displease God, then it doesn’t matter if we please men, and if we please God, then it doesn’t matter if we displease men. God help us to quit being people who are trying to please others at the expense of pleasing God. God give us enough backbone to follow Him even when other Christians become our greatest persecutors and call us heretics, or accuse us of perverting the faith.
This was the shame that these Apostles were suffering. They were treated as traitors to Israel and to God. They would be excommunicated and cut off as heretics accused of working for the devil.
I have saved the phrase “counted worthy” for last. They were rejoicing, but Luke adds a sense of being counted worthy to suffer.
Do we have this whole issue of suffering backwards? Do we think that the more we know God the less persecution we will encounter? This is not an accurate understanding of a man like Daniel. Yes, the lions did not eat him, and he was restored to his position. However, Daniel was not protected from suffering persecution. These men had laid in wait and used their power, position, and craft against him. Martyrs are clearly suffering, but my point is that even the great examples of those who were protected by God (remember David?) suffered great persecution for standing with Him.
We may think that there is not as much persecution against Christians in America because we are far more civilized than those other nations. We are somehow better and more righteous than they. But what if we are not living lives worthy of suffering for Christ? Maybe us pastors are living lives that do not have enough faith to preach the truth in the face of opposition? Perhaps believers are afraid of what may happen if they get serious about warning others around them about a future without Jesus. Or simply, maybe we are consumed with the lusts of our flesh instead of the eternal work of the Lord Jesus that the Spirit of God is calling us to? O, friend, if you have ever sensed the Spirit of God before, then sense Him now. Jesus is looking for workers in the fields, and those workers will encounter persecution to varying levels. Will you answer His call?
We are told by Luke that the Apostles never stopped teaching and proclaiming the Gospel, that Jesus is the Messiah! They did not surrender for even one minute! They did not obey the unlawful command from the lawless authorities. Rather, they continued to do what Christ had told them to do. They preached Jesus as Christ to the people in his power and authority. They declared him to be the Anointed one promised by God the Father. This anointed one would be the savior of mankind, and he would have authority over all in heaven and on the earth. He is the King of kings, and the Lord of lords!
I believe that Jesus is removing the middle ground here in America. To our flesh, it is a scary day, just as the night of betrayal was to the Apostles. But when you get on the other side of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit gives you a vision of what lies ahead! May God help us to be a people who are seeking to be fille with His Spirit. May we be a people hearing the Holy Spirit, repenting of lethargy, and exercising faith in him through loving obedience. In short, may we truly be his disciples and take on the image of Jesus Christ!