The early church didn’t set out looking to be persecuted, but persecution found them nonetheless. If you live your life according to the Gospel and obeying Jesus is your singular goal, in time, persecution will find you as well. Jesus said as much, and even though this present generation is doing its utmost to ignore that particular reality, pretending as though Jesus never said the things He did, eventually, His words in this regard will be proven true, as were all the other things He said.
At some point during Peter’s discourse, the powers that be
realized they’d bitten off more than they could chew. They’d hoped this mock
trial, because that’s what it was, would remedy the situation, Peter and John would
be cowed, and they could go back to business as usual.
It’s not that they didn’t put effort into it. Arranging for
an overnight trial in which the highest ruling religious class in the land
would be in attendance was no small feat. Schedules had to be reorganized,
meetings had to be canceled, and high-ranking individuals who were shown
deference in all things had to be put out, all because two fishermen had
performed a miracle they could not explain or hide from the public eye. At
least, that’s how they saw it. They could not allow this to continue, and
pressure had to be brought to bear.
They never once considered the substance of what Peter had
said or allowed for the idea that he might be correct, and they’d crucified the
Son of God, who later rose from the dead. They were too set in their ways for
any of that, even with all the anecdotal evidence pointing to the veracity of
Peter’s claims. They knew of the empty tomb; the once lame man was standing
before them in full health; those responsible for his healing, at least in
their eyes, were simple men of low status, yet their singular concern was how
to keep the message of a risen Christ from spreading to the masses.
Acts 4:13-14, “Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and
John, and perceived that they were uneducated and untrained men, they marveled.
And they realized that they had been with Jesus. And seeing the man who had
been healed standing with them, they could say nothing against it.”
It’s not so much that they denied Jesus; they didn’t want to
acknowledge Him. Jesus leaves a mark. You can’t be with Jesus and remain the
same as you were before you knew Him. They realized they’d been with Jesus by
the sheer fact that the things they said could not be said outside of some
event taking place in Peter and John’s lives to make them more than the sum of
all they’d been prior to it.
We have two guys who smell like fish, who are neither
educated nor trained, yet here they stand, boldly declaring that save for the
name of Jesus, there is no salvation in any other. Those who had put Peter and
John on trial were astute enough to understand that it was not of themselves
that they possessed such wisdom but that they had been with Jesus, and that
makes all the difference. To complicate matters, the man who had been healed
was standing with them, and as the adage goes, the proof is in the pudding.
In our modern age, we’ve somehow managed to disassociate from
reality and pretend as though what we’re seeing really isn’t there, but they
hadn’t mastered that particular skill during the time of the early church. The
undeniable reality that two simple men were speaking profound truths and that a
once lame man was standing before them was too much for those judging Peter and
John to ignore or disregard.
Although we can’t draw any conclusions about John, we know
that boldness was not characteristic of Peter. This man who now stood before
the most influential people of his time and declared unequivocally that they
had crucified Christ and that the lame man was healed by His name had denied
Christ no less than three times months prior.
The source of their boldness was twofold. First, the presence
and indwelling of the Holy Spirit that they’d received in the upper room, and
second, they’d sanctified the Lord God in their hearts, and would no longer be
swayed by any external forces.
Acts 4:15-17, “But when they had commanded them to go aside
out of the council, they conferred among themselves, saying, ‘What shall we do
to these men? For, indeed, that a notable miracle done through them is evident
to all who dwell in Jerusalem, and we cannot deny it. But so that it spreads no
further among the people, let us severely threaten them, that from now on they
speak to no man in this name.’”
Even though it was evident that a notable miracle had been
done, and they could not deny it, not one of them desired to know the truth of
it. Jesus, it turns out, was right again, and some people will not be persuaded
even if someone was raised from the dead.
In the aggregate, it would be difficult to envision someone
seeing another come back from the dead and not be moved to repentance, but here
were men, admittedly religious, who’d just witnessed a bonafide miracle done to
a man known to have been born lame from birth, and they were not moved. Their
only concern was covering it up and preventing it from spreading any further
among the people.
The gravy train must keep chugging forward, the biscuit
wheels must remain on the track, and if they had to severely threaten men whom
they knew to be innocent in order to achieve their goal, so be it.
One would think we’ve grown past such things, but the selfsame self-serving actions are being undertaken today in many churches, ministries, and denominations the world over. Men will ignore egregious sin in the lives of figureheads just to protect the brand, and anyone who would call it out is summarily ostracized and cast out. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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