Hello. This is Unit 2 of our course, The Early Church, NT2. And last week, we walked through the text of the book of Acts, covering Pentecost to persecution, the beginning of that persecution. And that’s where we’re going to pick up. So we’re going to pick up in Acts 8 and, arguably,
So let’s begin. If you would please open your Bibles to Acts 8. What we read first off is “And Saul approved of his execution.” That is, Saul agreed with the stoning death of Stephen. He was standing right there. If you look back at
He says in Galatians 1:11-14 and following. He says, “For I would have you know, brothers, that the gospel that was preached by me is not man's gospel. For I did not receive it from any man, nor was I taught it, but I received it through a revelation of Jesus Christ. For you have heard of my former life in Judaism, how I persecuted the church of God violently and tried to destroy it. And I was advancing in Judaism beyond many of my own age among my people, so extremely zealous was I for the traditions of my fathers.” So what we see there is he tried to destroy the church. That was his intent. And as a result of this zeal, he was advancing in Judaism beyond many of his contemporaries, which would explain
But here at the early stage of this period of persecution, back to Acts 8, there’s a great persecution against the church, and so the people of the church are scattered outside of Jerusalem, because at this point, they are concentrated in Jerusalem. They’re all going to temple. They’re all still ensconced within the cradle, the tradition that we call Judaism. They look just like any other Jew. There is cultural uniformity, sameness of outlook and aspiration. It’s just a new thing that these folks are doing. But with the death of Stephen, given that Stephen is one of the first, if not the first, to realize the ramifications of the gospel and to begin to explicate that with respect to the meaning and significance for the Law of Moses and what that means in terms of Israel’s history infuriating his contemporaries in a Hellenistic synagogue that caters to Hellenistic Jews, leading to his execution outside of the city.
So right now, up until this moment, they all look the same, just different teaching. There was room in Judaism for that, certainly, but not to this extent. And now, that has been proved. So they are scattered outside of Jerusalem now into the countryside of Judea, into the hill country, into other towns that surround Jerusalem. There’s an outbreak of persecution. They have to go into hiding, some of them, I’m sure. But they also scatter beyond Judea. They are driven into Samaria, which is the center part of Palestine, which is where those Samaritans lived, that the Jews have a longstanding argument, quarrel with. They’re driven into Samaria. Only apostles remained in Jerusalem. And we read in
And of course, what he will also say later on in the book of Acts, and I would like to take you there briefly, just to add color and depth to the story, the narrative. Please come with me to Acts 26 where Paul tells of what he did against the church. He has another dimension, another feature, another aspect of the story line. If you look at Acts 26:9, he said, “I myself was convinced that I ought to do many things in opposing the name of Jesus of Nazareth. And I did so in Jerusalem. I not only locked up many of the saints in prison after receiving authority from the chief priests, but when they were put to death I cast my vote against them.” What’s interesting about this historically is that the Sanhedrin really had no authority to put anyone to death. That was left to Rome. So there were executions that were unsanctioned by Rome as near as we can determine, given the historical context in the 1st century as it relates to Palestine. That is why Jesus was taken before Pilate. That was done quasi-legally, one might suppose, but it did have the legal aspects to it. He was tried by the Sanhedrin, but they didn’t put him to death. They beat him. They ripped out his beard, but they did not kill him.
But here, the outbreak of persecution is so severe. It is furious. It is intense. And what Paul is basically admitting to here is that he cast his vote against people, believers, early believers, Jewish believers, to die. So in that respect, one might suggest that Paul may have broken Greco-Roman law. That’s Paul. He’s just one individual. The Sanhedrin, in particular, broke the law, which would mean that these believers were killed undercover. It wasn’t something that was done in the open. It wasn’t broadcast. They were simply put to death and no one was the wiser. Rome could have cared less, one might suppose. But that’s what Paul is saying here. “I cast my vote against them.” They were sentenced to death. “And I punished them often in all the synagogues and tried to make them blaspheme, and in raging fury against them I persecuted them even to foreign cities.” Of course, to be fair, it is also possible to read the text as though Paul cast his vote against them that they were worthy of death but that, in fact, they weren’t put to death. That is a possible reading, to be sure, of this particular passage in Acts 26:9 and following.
Back to Acts 8. So Paul drives off men and women. He commits them to prison (
So Philip proclaims the Christ to the Samaritans.
So
So there was a man named Simon. He had practiced magic in a particular city in Samaria. He said he himself was somebody great, and everyone considered him to be great. They called him a power of God. He had amazed people with his magic. So this is an individual who is a practitioner of what is expressly forbidden in the Old Testament: the practice of magic, the practice of sorcery. So this individual, Simon, is a sorcerer. He is in touch with powers that he has no business being in touch with. And he has amazed the people of his city. But then when he hears Philip, he believes and he is baptized. And he sees Philip work these signs and he is utterly amazed. Probably amazed because Philip doesn’t have to ‘wind up’ the way he, Simon, does. Philip simply works by faith. He declares something to be so, and because he has apostolic authority conferred upon him, he is basically a representative of the twelve at Jerusalem. Signs of wonders are done through him because it has been sanctioned through them. I’ll say more on that in a few minutes.
So, “The apostles at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of God (
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