Acts 3:11-16. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on July 31, 2022.
The healing of the lame man at Gate Beautiful creates quite a stir on the temple mount as news of the healing spreads throughout the crowds. Peter and John end up under what is variously called Solomon’s Porch, or Colonnade, or even Portico. This puts them on the east side of the Temple mount under a roofed series of columns that was open towards the Temple.
The lame man is clinging to them. It appears that he is excited and no doubt there are levels of hugging and not wanting to be separated from them. Let’s say that he is most likely in a level of shock.
It is not clear how long this takes place after the Day of Pentecost excitement, but it seems to be a matter of days to weeks. Acts chapter 2 ended with several general statements about that first group of believers that sets up this healing and preaching. First, we are told that “many wonders and signs were done through the apostles,” and that they were meeting daily with each other in the temple.
Let’s look at Peter’s words to the crowd.
Peter walks through the events with Jesus, but you will notice there is a sense that follows this pattern. You did this and yet, God did that. Or, we could state it as, God did this, and yet, you did that. This will lead up to the reality that they need to repent and believe upon Jesus, but more on that next week.
The first focus is on the action of the crowd. We are told that they are “greatly amazed” and “marveled” while looking intently at Peter and John. They are giving more attention to Peter and John than they should be because they don’t understand the connection to Jesus. Peter is going to be very careful to turn their eyes back to Jesus by verse 16.
This is a classic error whenever God does something either miraculous, or simply changing the order of things within a group. We can become overly focused on the person or people through whom God is operating. In this case, God is using a righteous man to do a good thing. However, God can also use wicked people for discipline and to draw people to repentance.
We must not think that Jesus is inactive in heaven today. All authority and power on earth has been given to him. Just as we saw that it is he who was, and still is, pouring out the Holy Spirit upon believers, so too when history changes, it is by the authority of Jesus that it occurs. We must never forget this aspect. Whether great good, or great judgment, we must always humble ourselves and seek what the Lord Jesus is saying through the events, rather than obsessing on those through whom the events come. When good happens, he gets all the glory. When bad things happen (according to our perspective), we must humble ourselves before him in order to understand what he is saying, what his plan is through this.
Verse 13 points to the fact that God the Father had glorified Jesus before them. I believe that Peter is making a similar point as he did in chapter 2 when he said that God had attested Jesus to them through miracles, wonders, and signs. In this case, he uses the verb glorified. We can also add to this the angelic visitations that occurred around his birth. However, most of this was during the 3 ½ years of the ministry of Jesus. Notice that this is what God had done.
He reminds them that this is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The same God who spoke with them and did amazing things before them, was speaking to them now. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are commended because they believed God and followed Him in faith.
Jesus is also described as “His Servant.” All of the righteous of any age are in simplest terms, servants of God. Jesus had come to serve God’s purposes, and that purpose involved serving Israel, and then the Gentile nations. Jesus had come from God to powerfully serve them, and God the Father had been faithful to make it clear to them that Jesus was approved by Him. Yet, how did they respond to that?
They had delivered Jesus up and denied him before Pilate. God had given Jesus to them, and they in turn, handed him over to the Gentiles for execution. God had testified to them that Jesus was from Him, but they testified that he was not. The word “denied” has the sense of speaking against someone. They did these things over the top of Pilate deciding that Jesus should be released. This is not to say that Pilate is a righteous man.
Peter makes this point even more pointed by calling Jesus the Holy and Righteous One. Jesus had done no sin among them, was set apart by God for His purposes for them. Jesus was The Holy and Righteous One, but they refused to stand with him, as the Father was doing. This was not the actions of the Patriarchs!
Even worse, they had asked for a murderer to live and for Jesus to be killed. They would rather a wicked person live than the righteous Jesus. Peter gives Jesus the title Prince of Life to hammer home the horrifying nature of what they had done. The word “Prince” here is not a word that refers to a king’s son who has no power yet. It refers to the principal leader, and has connotations that go back to Daniel 9:25, which speaks of Messiah, the Prince (or “Leading One”). Jesus is the source of life due to the fact that he was the principal agent of creation. However, he has now become the principal agent of salvation, which offers life to those who have become entangled in sin and its resultant death, both in this life and the next. Jesus is not just dispensing life. He is both the source, and the only one who can lead us into true life!
Imagine having the One who is life and leads to life being killed while asking for a murderer who is his opposite. Also, imagine doing all this while claiming to be the righteous ones of this world. This is not a Jewish problem either. The irony is particularly heavy in the events Peter describes, and yet every generation that has ever faced the man Jesus must answer as well. Who are you really? What will you do with Jesus, his message, and his people? No matter how many moral cloaks the nations of this world put on, they one by one fall into the same pattern as Israel in the first century. However, we have the added guilt of having an example clearly set before us.
They had killed Jesus, but God raised Jesus from the dead. Peter and the other disciples were witnesses to this reality. Jesus is not dead. He is still alive! Their plan didn’t work then, and it won’t work today. God was overturning their decision. However, it is better put in this way. They had been trying to overturn God’s decision to send them Jesus the Prince of Life. You can’t kill the source of life. You will only end up destroying yourself.
The decision that this world is making, to ignore Jesus and make a better world without him, cannot overcome the decision of God the Father. He has installed Jesus as King over heaven and earth. Not only do we fight against this at our own peril, but ironically, we reject the only one who can lead us into life, and a better world. Rather, we build upon a foundation of murder and death. This cannot end well.
Are we not putting Holiness and Righteousness to death in our society? In fact, are not many religious leaders and people today joining in this through redefining what is holy and righteous? Can we not see ourselves in this mirror that the Lord Jesus has given to the world through Israel? Yet, the true question for all of us is this. What am I doing in my heart and in my mind? God help my heart to humble down and follow Jesus so that I might know true holiness, true righteousness, and the true life that only he can give.
This brings us full circle. In verse 16, Peter ties back to the crowd looking at him and John as if they had done this. This healing of the lame man can only be credited to this same Jesus they had crucified. What amazing grace. They had crucified him, but Jesus was now still performing miracles in their midst. Jesus had given this man the ability to walk, and to leap, and to praise God!
This sentence comes across into English a bit clumsily. However, Peter points to Jesus in three ways. First, the name of Jesus has healed this man. Peter does not mean this as if saying the name works like a mantra. This is the pagan concept of “words of power.” Jesus did not come to reveal some kind of hidden word of power that now heals people.
In Hebrew thought, a man’s name had the sense of his reputation, which Western culture has picked up through the Bible. We speak of a man having a good name in the community. However, it also included the power and authority of the person. Thus, Peter is saying that it is the power and authority of Jesus that has done this miracle. Let us never forget that any powerful work of God is completely by the power and authority of Jesus. This is foundational. Without Jesus authorizing it and empowering it, nothing can be done, even by a person who has been powerfully used by God in the past. No man should ever be given credit, or gazed at in amazement as if they had done it. This is a huge problem within any group. Pentecostals can be overly enamored with those whom they believe God is working powerful miracles through. However, even other groups can be enamored with leaders that they believe God is powerfully using in more natural things.
Let me repeat, no person should ever be given the credit. They cannot do anything without Jesus authorizing and empowering it. Also, let us dispense with the idea that Jesus gave a blank check authorization and empowerment to his people to do anything that they can have faith for. There are seasons in which God is doing different things. Even the most righteous must learn to walk in humility before God and cooperate with what He is doing. The Church has continued to fail in this whole category. We can blame it on the leaders, but the source of the problem is in the hearts of the people, which tends to elevate the wrong kind of leaders in their midst.
The second thing Peter says in verse 16 is that this healing was done through faith in the power and authority of Jesus. Yes, Peter was used by Christ to be an ambassador of the healing power of Jesus. But, more importantly, Peter represents those who still had faith in the power and authority of Jesus, even though he had been executed. Of course, the death of Jesus precipitated a crisis of faith for Peter. However, the resurrected Lord not only forgave Peter, but cured him of ever thinking that he could tell Jesus what needed to happen next. Jesus knew what he was doing. This group of believers were marked by their faith in the person and power of Jesus, not just what he did in the past, but also in what he is doing right now!
The third thing Peter says in verse 16 is that the faith that comes through Jesus had healed this man. In a sense, Peter is saying that even his faith in Jesus had come to him through Jesus. Peter is taking no credit for this. He knew himself. He knew that he would have not done anything if Jesus had given up on him, and hadn’t faithfully taught him. Without the grace of Jesus, Peter would still be on the Sea of Galilee fishing.
May we be a people who are letting Jesus teach us and give us faith in him, so that we might be a conduit of the power and authority of Jesus. Whether that is displayed in healings and powerful works is not our worry. Our only focus is faithfulness, courage, and keeping our eyes upon him.
Today, we might accuse Peter of not being sensitive to people. Yet, truth must risk offense, especially when eternity is on the line. Notice this contrast between what God is doing and what they were doing. This is the point today. Always the challenge is keeping in step with what God is doing, rather than following the figment of our imaginations in the wrong direction.