Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener in his teaching on the book of Acts, this is session number 10. Acts 6:8 through 8:4.  


Dr. Keener - Chapter 6:8 through 7:1, Stephen is hauled before the authorities. Now, in 6:9, we read that the conflict is initially with the synagogue of the freed persons. Synagogues were community centers, they were also used as places of communal prayer, and the study of the Torah. There would be a readings of Scripture. This is reported to us not just in later Jewish texts, this  is reported to us in Josephus, and Philo writing in the first century. And of course, we have some excavated synagogues from this period. Although we don't have nearly all of them that existed. 


Freed persons. The term here is a Greek transliteration, basically, of the Latin libertine, these were freed persons. In the Roman sense, these were freed persons of Roman citizen who were Roman citizens. If you were a slave of Roman citizen, under certain  conditions, which were the usual conditions, under certain conditions, you could be freed and you yourself would become a Roman citizen, having been a  slave of a Roman citizen. Well, 1000s of Judeans were enslaved by Pompey, not Pompeii, like the city that was destroyed by Vesuvius. But this was Pompey  the Roman general, they were enslaved by Pompey in the first century BC, they were brought to Rome. And in Rome, there were there were some other Jewish people. And these Jewish people bought the freedom of their fellow Jews, which was a good thing to do. Well, they therefore became freed persons, and became  Roman citizens. Philo tells us that a number of Jewish people living in Rome, were Roman citizens, they were descended from these freed slaves.  Some of them left there, they came back to Jerusalem where they settled in other places, and from there, some of them migrated to Jerusalem. So we have a synagogue of freed persons in Jerusalem. 


Now, this would be a fairly high  status synagogue among Hellenist synagogues, because these people are  Roman citizens, which is something that most officials in the Greek East did the Greek Greek speaking part of the Empire, the Eastern Roman Empire,  didn't have that privilege. There is a synagogue inscription that's been found, of a synagogue from Jerusalem. And it's a synagogue, dedicated by one Theodotus, Greek name, son of Vettenus. Well, that's a Latin name. And Theodotus was son of a Jewish Roman citizen. It might even be the same synagogue that we hear about here. It was a synagogue with nice facilities, placed for ritual baths and place to take care of travelers and so on. This is a Hellenist synagogue that we read about in verse 9. So it's related to the same  group that the seven were mentioned in chapter 6:5 come from that the widows come from chapter 6:1. 


And apparently, some members of the Hellenist  community who had not become believers, were very unhappy about other members of the Hellenist community who did become believers. And particularly when Stephen is defeating them and debate after debate full of the Spirit and wisdom and doing signs and wonders that they can't refute full of the Spirit and  power, just like Jesus said back in Luke 21. I'll give you a wisdom that none of your adversaries can speak against or refute. I remember years ago with I had some wonderful professors, by the way, very supportive professors. But there were some other professors that I had a lot of debates with. And one of these  professors, we would sit for hours in his office debating, and the first time it happened, you know, I would concede, well, you know, okay, 


So let's say if you if you're gonna argue this, then how about this? But every time I would say something like that, I thought it was being polite. He would say, Oh, you see, you're wrong, you admit you're wrong. And like he didn't, he didn't play fairly in  terms of the rules of debate in the academy. And I was ashamed of myself. I was like, I could have given a better argument than that. But the way he twisted my  words, it made it sound like it wasn't the case. And so I began to pray that God would give me wisdom that nobody could refute. You know, I'm not, I don't like debates. But we would sit in his office for hours, which was very gracious of him with his time, by the way, most of us who are busy writing and so on, you know, there's only so many hours in the day, but we would debate for hours on end. And after I'd begun praying that he would be the one acting very nervous. And one day after, I'd given him so many different lines of evidence, and he would  just say, Well, I don't accept that kind of evidence. Finally, I said, if somebody were raised from the dead in front of you, would you would you believe? He  said, No. I said, Wait a minute, you're telling me I'm closed minded, because I'm a Christian. Even though I was an atheist, it was converted to Christianity through an encounter with Christ. You're telling me that I'm closed minded. But you wouldn't believe even if somebody were raised from the dead in front of you. That's right. Anyway, this happens sometimes where the Holy Spirit can give us  wisdom for this. And some people are, are more skilled at this than others. But  some people are given this gift of being able to do that mine. My gift usually works out in my writing. 


But in any case, he Stephen was full of Spirit and  wisdom. He was doing signs and wonders they couldn't refute this. And so they were getting upset with him in this Hellenist synagogue. Well, why were they so upset? This would become an internal issue in their community, their community was divided over this. Also, they may have been compensating for their foreignness, not everybody necessarily does that. But Agrippa I when you read Josephus, and you read Acts, 12, he seems to have competence tried to compensate for the fact that he wasn't from Jerusalem wasn't from wasn't from Judea at all. He'd spent most of his life in Rome, by trying to identify with the most conservative faction that he could have the Jewish community and he was  fueling Judea nationalism in so doing. Sometimes when people play to the  choir, they get more and more polarized as people on each side are appealing to the most conservative voice in their particular group. And dialogue becomes  less and less possible. 


Pharisees ranked first generation freed slaves just below proselytes. Because they said, if you were, if you were born of a slave mother, we don't really know that your father was Jewish. So they also had that against them. Although we don't know how many of them were first generation freed slaves, and how many were just descendants of freed slaves. And there  probably were some other people who attended the synagogue because of its prestige, who weren't even freed persons at all. 


The locations that are mentioned where these people came from, including Alexandria, Cilicia, and so on. Later sources, attest a synagogue of Alexandrians, and a synagogue of Cilicians, large Jewish communities in both places, Alexandria probably had the largest  Jewish community outside of Judea, and Galilee. But Cilicia is very important. In in, in mentioning the different where these people came from, in the synagogue  of of a freed freed persons, because the capital of Cilicia was Tarsus. And pretty much everybody in antiquity who knew anything knew that and so somebody who was probably a member of this synagogue was Saul of Tarsus. And you get more clues to that as the book of Acts goes on. But those freed in Rome often  made their way eastward and the probably constitute the synagogue. Since they can't get him any other way. Some are willing to not play by the rules. We have  no indication that Saul of Tarsus was that way. Probably they weren't all that  way. But some of them got some false witnesses and in chapter 6:11-15. They charge Stephen with blasphemy. 


Now, in the most technical way that this term was used later on by rabbis to be true blasphemy, you had to abuse the divine name. However, the Greek word blasphemio, and again, these are Hellenists, to probably saying all this in Greek to begin with these  diaspora Jews wouldn't, unless they were from Syria, they, or maybe some other places they, but not Hellenist Jews, and not the places that are mentioned they wouldn't they wouldn't be speaking of Aramaic they would be speakers of Greek. And the non technical general use of blasphemio mean any kind of reviling or mocking and associated with God, it could mean disrespect for God. So you don't go along with our traditions. You are blaspheming God. 


Ironically, the prototypical way of desecrating a divine name, was to swear a false  oath. You called a deity to witness or if it was the true God, the God of Israel, you called the God of Israel as a witness. And what you were saying was, you  know, this, God has seen that I'm telling the truth. And I'm calling on that God to witness that I'm telling the truth. And if I, if I'm not telling the truth, then that God will defend his honor speaking to the wider world, that god or goddess will defend his or her honor, by punishing me. And if it's the God of Israel, He will defend his honor by punishing me. Well, most people didn't want to swear a false oath. So that was somebody who would do that was somebody who really didn't have a very high respect for deity. And most people in antiquity did fear the gods, although some people, some people obviously feared them more than others, and some people feared the true God more than others. Well, this is the irony. 


They're accusing Stephen of the blaspheming, the divine name. But ironically, these are false witnesses. They give false testimony under oath, and thereby desecrate the divine name. Well, there was a pre Christian rhetorical manual, probably wasn't widely used, but in the Rhetorica ad Alexandrum sometimes falsely attributed to Aristotle. One of the rhetorical techniques that it addresses  in detail is how to lie under oath, and be persuasive. This was in a period when  rhetoric or professional public speaking, wasn't concerned about the morality of it, which was considered something philosophers dealt with. It was a matter of winning. You were defending a client, you know, you have to win your case. So they taught them how to lie under oath. And, apparently, well, these people probably have never read Rhetorica de Alexandrum. But there were people who lied under oath. And it was known that some people either Well, these people  were lying under oath, they were not pious, they were not God fearing.


According to the Torah, Deuteronomy 19:18-19. And also According to Roman  law, false witnesses and capital case where death where they they were to be  executed. These false witnesses, they got a good bribe. And so they do it. What are the charges against Stephen? Well, the charges are that he has spoken against God by speaking against the law and against the temple, or as they put it, speaking against this holy place. Now, this could stir up passion, it was not only a religious issue, it was a nationalistic issue. It was something in that culture, they were so closely intertwined. 


I know in my country, sometimes people have talked about God and country, and their nationalism gets bound up with their their religious commitment. It works really badly, like in World War I where you had countries that claim to be Christian, and many of the countries participating claim to be Christian. And yet it was nationalism that drove this war, and it was it had disastrous effects. You have this also in countries where  you have ethnic loyalties my wife was a refugee in a civil war in a country where 89% of the people claimed to be Christian. And yet, you had one ethnic group fighting against another ethnic group or one part of the country against another part of the country. Obviously, not all the people were genuine Christians. And obviously, people were put, some people were put in situations where they had to defend themselves. And obviously, most people were non combatants who were caught up in the war. But all that to say, sometimes  nationalism drives things too there in this country. There were, if somebody talks about God bringing judgment on the country, nationalism is such that people react against it. So you had someone I know, named Jeremiah Wright, who pronounced judgment in the country, because of its oppression of the poor, and because of its racism, and so on. And he was speaking from the  political left, and he was denounced. Pat Robertson, somebody was speaking  from the right about abortion and and other things in this country. And he said,  judgment is coming. And he was denounced. 


Well, it looks to me like whether you denounce it from the right or from the left, if you say, judgment comes in America, a lot of Americans will be upset. And so it's become such an issue that if you were a member of the congregation where somebody said that you will, they might use it against you someday. So probably, you don't want me to say the judgment is coming on this this nation, if you happen to live in this nation, because you might get in trouble for listening to what I said. 


But in any case, the Bible says that, that the Lord rises up to judge all the nations of the earth, no nation is perfectly virtuous. But in this case, it was it was both nationalistic and a religious issue. Because they thought, you know, we're God's people. You can't  be pronouncing judgment in the temple. Well, Jeremiah got in a lot of trouble for  pronouncing judgment on the temple. Jeremiah, 7, you treat this temple like like a den of thieves, text, the Jesus quotes in Luke 19. Like a den of robbers, that's where robbers would store their loot because they thought it was a safe place for them. Jeremiah said, you see the temple of the Lord, the temple of Lord the temple Lord is in our midst. God wouldn't judge his own house. But I will do to this house which is called by my name as I did to Shiloh declares the Lord, a  place where the apparently the tabernacle was even destroyed, or if it wasn't destroyed if it survived. In any case, the ark was captured in battle. And Shiloh, the place where the tabernacle had been, was destroyed. 


Prophesying  against the temple, led to punishment, Jeremiah was was put in the stocks he was beaten. In the in the first century, it was also punished a prophet by the name of Joshua Ben Hananiah, the generation after this, we don't know if he was a Christian or not. But he rightly said judgment is coming on the temple.  And he was going around pronouncing judgment of the temple, the the chief priests, that was that was in defiance of their honor. They had him arrested, handed him over to the Roman authorities, the governor had him beaten, Josephus says in Josephus is war, book 6 paragraphs 300, falling, beaten until his bones showed. And then he was released because they thought he was insane. They didn't think he was a further threat. And he didn't have a following. Because most people didn't believe him. But prophesying against the temple could be punished. You saw what happened to Jesus when He overturned the tables in the temple. 


So speaking against the law and the temple were  punishable offenses was Stephen speaking against the law. You look at his  response, Stephen affirms the law he doesn't even answer that church directly. He just cites the law all over the place, and shows that he upholds the law. In fact,  at the end, he is going to turn charges against his accusers and call them. Those who have resisted the law that was given through angels. He is going to speak of them as, as those who who climax the work of the prophets resisting the Holy Spirit who speaks through the prophets, and he's gonna call them stiff necked and uncircumcised and hardened ears, which means they're the ones not keeping the law. 


So what about the charge, though, that Stephen challenged the temple? Well, you know, the Christians were worshipping in the temple. They weren't against the temple per se. But Stephen is going to challenge the temple sort of in a way that maybe even the Jerusalem apostles would have been uncomfortable with, because the future didn't lie with Jerusalem in the  short run, and it didn't lie with the temple, in the short run. 


They see Stephen's face, like an angel. And sometimes you can see somebody's almost glowing  with, with glory, still their face, but just the way their faces lit up with, with the Lord. But probably this is evoking Luke 9. The transfiguration when Jesus, Jesus is glowing with glory. And the Old Testament model for that is when Moses was transfigured. There were a lot of people in antiquity, you talked about somebody glowing, or God glowing, or turning to lightning, or whatever. But the account with which most Jewish people, and most other people who knew that knew the Torah at all, would be familiar with the account of Moses being transfigured. And Moses also received the law, via the angels. So, you know,  Stephen is going to talk about that, about the Moses. at the burning bush, the  angel spoke with him. And in, in verse 53, the law was given through angels. The law, the angels also are with God's servants elsewhere in the book of Acts,  had just freed them. An angel had just freed them from prison. And chapter 5:19, chapter 8:26. And the angel is going to send Phillip on his way to bring the good news to the African court official chapter 10:3. An angel appears to Cornelius  chapter 12, an angel is going the angel Lord is going to release Peter from detention from from custody. And in also later on the chapter, this angel of the Lord is going to strike dead Herod Agrippa, for receiving Divine Honor, as if he is divine. So angels play in the narrative with here, Stephen looks to them like an  angel. He's, it's probably not a transfiguration in the kind of level that you have in Luke 9. But it gets their attention. And it's something they can't refute. 


Well, chapter 7, Stephen speech the two charges against him, or that he is against  the law is against Moses, and he's against the temple against this holy place. He gives two major responses to this. First of all, he's going to respond to the  temple by showing that God is not really limited to the temple, is clarifying what  he's actually been saying. And then secondly, he's going to return the charges, which was standard practice in antiquity. Somebody charged you with something if you were able to at all, you would charge them with the same offense. There was a one orator who said, you know, he had been that his client had been beaten by the accusers. And he said, you know, and they have the audacity to charge him because he's alive, which is not his fault. They liked to return it  against the accused. Cicero was was a master of this, and he could be venomous. This one woman, who was part of the one of the  prosecution witnesses, Cicero says, and the reason she's a widow, I don't want  to mention it, that she's the one who killed her husband. But you know, he  would, he would just venomous. But anyway, returning the charges. 


You climaxed the rebellion of our ancestors. Our ancestors rejected Joseph, who  was sent to be the deliverer. They rejected Moses, who was sent to be the  deliverer. And And Moses said that God would raise up a prophet like him. Well,  God has done that. And guess what? One of the ways he would be like Moses, he would be rejected, and you killed the prophets. And now you be the descendants of those who killed the prophets. You have killed the Holy and  Righteous One. You can see why he gets stoned at the end. I used to think when I first would read Acts 7. They stoned him because he gave them a boring  history lesson but no, he was giving them very important warning. 


People often would Jewish people often in many Jewish documents, you have something about history of Israel, that would be used some of the Psalms do that. But you have a recounting of different people through history. In the book of Sirach, you have that you have that. Also in some Maccabean literature, you have that inHebrews 11, which is very was exquisitely designed rhetorically, Stephen does that here. But always it was history with a point. History and antiquity, as we, as we mentioned in the introduction was meant to be told with a point. So Stephen is doing here, what Luke is doing, in in his two volume work with the history of Jesus and the history of the early Christian mission. The point is that if we want to learn what Luke does, like when he's paralleling different characters, is paralleling when Jesus, Peter and Paul, for paralleling Stephen, it is execution with Jesus, it is execution. Well, he's not doing that by making up things. He's doing that the same way that that Stephen does here,  with the Old Testament, linking different characters showing common features, and how God works in certain ways in history. He's highlighting certain parallels that are there. And that's seeing how Stephen does it gives us a clue to Luke's own hermeneutic. 


Well the outline of Stephen's message Abraham is addressed  in verses 2-8. And we see that God doesn't speak just in the Holy Land, God spoke in Mesopotamia to Abram, and Joseph in verses 9-16. Well, Joseph ends  up being exalted in Egypt, after being rejected by his own brothers. Moses is not only exalted somewhere outside the Holy Land, but when Moses worships God in Mount Sinai, Moses is told to bring the people to worship at Mount Sinai. Stephen quotes the language of the Old Testament. And God says to Moses,  take off your sandals, for this place, is holy. Why is it so significant? Because Stephen was charged with blaspheming, against this holy place. So now, Stephen responds, this holy place, this holy place, the temple is not the only holy place. A mountain in the midst of the Arabian Desert, can be a holy place.  Any place where God is, is a holy place. And it's God's presence that matters. It's the Holy Spirit that matters, it's not your traditional treatment, which  was conventional throughout the ancient world, the ancient Mediterranean and ancient Middle Eastern world of saying, we have holy sites, we have holy  places. What really made a place most holy, and you have that in the Old  Testament as well. But really, what really made a place most holy was, it was  sanctified by God's own presence. 


That's probably one reason why, you know,  Canaanites when you have one culture, supplanting another culture, they might destroy a place, but they would rebuild the temple on the same site. But  when the Israelites came in, they destroyed that they smash the temples, smash the idols, when they came in, because their god was different, and their holy  place would be would be different. 


So anyway, Moses was rejected by his  brothers who made you a ruler, a judge over us. And Moses, the holy place was outside the Holy Land, even though in the Mekhilta, from the early second  century, we read the Jewish tradition, that God only spoken the Holy Land. Well, what about Ezekiel? Well, that was by the river Kibar God can speak outside the holy land under certain conditions. So a holy place near water. And so they explained everything else, always exceptions. When you have too many  exceptions, there's probably something wrong with your rule. But this was a tradition. It was nationalistic. 


And so he goes on after talking about Moses and the prophet like Moses, he says, Your ancestors rebelled against Moses in the  wilderness, our ancestors, but he's going to focus on your ancestors because he's going to identify with Moses and the prophets. They're identified with the  other side in Israel's history. The ancestors rebellion, chapter 7:38-50 he does at length. Now, you don't want to get to the controversial things at the beginning of your message because if you get stoned at the very beginning, you won't get to talk about Abraham, Joseph, and Moses, you know he wants to make enough of his case. It said of Thomas Cranmer, that he managed to to say a few things before they actually pulled them off and decided he needed to be  executed because they weren't expecting it. So you can get away with a few  things for a while. But you don't want to put your most controversial things up  front, you want you want to get at least some hearing. Did anybody there ever convert? Well, we do hear of somebody later on. 


But anyway, he charges his accusers and verses 51-53. That's when they cut him off. He reverses the charges, which was the common method. Now Stephen's parallels in history that he makes some of these parallels already existed in the Torah, in the  Pentateuch, between between Joseph and Moses, it's not surprising that Stephen would link figures in history because you have some of these literary links already. Between the end of Genesis in the early part of Exodus, the stories were undoubtedly told together, Joseph's brothers sold him into slavery, Moses's family, who were slaves, saved him from slavery, the Midianites sold  Joseph in Egypt, Midianites welcomed Moses when he left Egypt when he fled  Egypt. Joseph became Pharaoh's father he became a father to Pharaoh, which was actually a title symptoms used by Egyptians. Moses became a son to Pharaoh's daughter, Joseph was abruptly exalted from slavery and made a prince of Egypt, Moses abruptly lost his Egyptian Princehood, his royalty by  defending slaves. Joseph made all of Egypt, Pharaoh slaves, Moses, through  Moses, God freed the slaves. Through Joseph God delivered Egypt during  famine, through Moses, God devastated Egypt's economy. Joseph exiled in Egypt, marries the daughter of an Egyptian priest, Moses exiled from Egypt, marries the daughter of Midianite priest. The name of Joseph's first son of two of his sons, who were named there seem to have been others evokes Joseph sojourn in a foreign land. The name of the first of two named sons of Moses evokes Moses's sojourn in a foreign land. The future deliver his leadership in the case of Joseph was initially rejected by his brothers who sold him into slavery. The future delivers leadership, in the case of Moses was initially rejected by his brothers, when they said, who made you ruler or a judge over us? So, what Stephen is doing with the Old Testament is following a pattern that's  already there in the Old Testament, including the pattern of the rejected  deliverer, which he's going to highlight in in these different cases. 


The judge, the high priest, who was the officiating leader of the Sanhedrin, offers Stephen the  opportunity to deny the charge. That's a merciful thing to do. But Stephen goes  ahead and builds this case. And Stephen take certain liberties as he's following the Old Testament. And these were liberties that were normally taken by Jewish teachers. Actually, he takes far less liberties than Jewish teachers  normally did is he retells the stories. The parallels, you know, you already see  that kind of patterning in the narratives that that Stephen is following. The fact  that he spent so much time in the pentateuch well remember the Sadducees  especially like the pentateuch, in fact, Philo of Alexandria, a Jewish philosopher,  basically, in Alexandria, he almost always keeps things just to the just to the  pentateuch. Which might make sense if you're if you're in Egypt, but in any case.


Stephen's liberties, he usually follows the Septuagint, the, the most common Greek versions of the, of the Old Testament in his day, he summarizes  his you know, he's not going to be speaking this for hours, like, maybe Acts 3 is  a summary of his speech for hours, but Stephen probably isn't going to have  that much time. So Stephen summarizes. So occasionally he telescopes, some  events blend some events together. Most of his speech is just biblical quotation from the Septuagint. Occasionally, he gives an inference like, like Moses has  Egyptian education, you know, he was educated in all the the wisdom and learning of the Egyptians. Well, that's what you would expect. If Moses was a  member of the royal courts, he would he would have gotten that kind of education. Just like Daniel did, and Daniel wasn't even a member of the royal  court. However, Stephen lacks most of the legendary embellishments that you  find even in Josephus, the Jewish historian, that Moses went and fought  Ethiopia. That's what he got his Ethiopian wife, and, and so forth. We have a lot of legends about Moses and Artepanus, who's writing from Alexandria, in Josephus, and so forth. Stephen doesn't waste time. With those kinds of embellishments. Pretty much he stays close to the text. I'm not going to do this  in detail, but I'm going to give you some details on some background  observations.


In Acts 7:25, talks about deliverance through Moses. The Greek  word here is sotiria. It's the same word used back in chapter 4:12, where Peter and John say, there is sotiria there is salvation through no one other than the  name of Jesus. God had granted deliverance before, not on the level of Jesus, but God granted deliverance before he granted deliverance through Joseph and here explicitly through Moses. And yet these were rejected deliverers. So why do you think that just because our leaders rejected Jesus, that means Jesus is not the Messiah. It fits the pattern. And it also fits as a 53. Although that doesn't get quoted here. The way it gets quoted in the next chapter.


Chapter 7:29. He  doesn't have to mention this, but he mentioned Moses inter ethnic marriage, Moses marries a Nubian and crosses cultures with this marriage, as mentioned  in Numbers, 12 The Nubians were were particularly known, and in the Old Testament to can an Ethiopian change his skin, or Cushite, a Cushi in Hebrew. They were particularly known for their very dark skin, they were known that way  for everybody to the north of them. However, some people to the far north were known for their very white skin. Everybody always consider themselves normal and people, the North is light, and people in the south is dark, no matter where they were on the spectrum. And we find that all over the place in ancient literature, Greeks calling Egyptians black sometimes, but the Egyptians, or Greeks in Egypt calling Nubians black but not themselves. But in any case, Moses inter ethnic marriage, Joseph also had one as we saw, so this is  something beginning to push beyond the culture. Because this was something  that was highly despised by the conservative Jewish community, you're not  supposed to marry a non Jew. Seven, of course, that's already in Deuteronomy  and so on in terms of, you know, you need to not intermarry with those who worship other people's gods, but it wasn't an ethnic issue. So, biblically.


7:35-38. You may not catch this in English translation. But in Greek, the term that's  translated this one comes five times this one, this this one, this, you know, it  drives home the the point it was used in rhetoric for for emphasis to drive home a point, this rejected, deliver this one whom you rejected. In 7:41, he speaks of  the calf idol. Now Greeks, even Greeks, despised Egyptians for worshipping,  among other things, animal figures, in part animal figures like Anubis, who has a human body and in a canine head. Greeks despised Greeks and Romans despised Egyptians, for having any kind of animal worship. So, you know, Jewish people would not be happy with this. This was this was often considered the most embarrassing episode in all of Israel's history. Jewish people were ashamed of it, later rabbis tried to explain it as well, you know, it was the, it was  the foreigners who came among us who, who really led the way in all this. And it was their fault. But Israel was ashamed of this, so much so that Josephus, who's tracking along following a lot of the the Old Testament actually admits the scene was just too embarrassing. 


7:42 He talks about how they worship the sun, and  the moon, and the stars. well Greeks thought that the sun and the moon and the stars were gods. Jewish people thought that they were normally thought that they were angels and astrology was very highly respected in this era. In fact, it was so highly respected that that actually by the time you get to the sixth  century, you know, we've excavated a number of synagogues from Galilee there's this Galilean synagogue with the Zodiac mosaic of the Zodiac as the is the central floor of the synagogue with a picture of Helios, the sun god in the middle. Well, it was meant to symbolize that God is over the sun and over all the stars. But the imagery that they used even in the first century, Josephus and Philo compare certain things in the temple to constellations. Astrological symbolism was pervasive by this period. Rulers were paranoid about astrologers predicting their death stirring unrest. It had spread from Babylonia from Parthia. And it was considered the science of the day. So, you know, Gentiles followed, it increasingly became more and more as time went on. Jewish people often would say, well, maybe it can predict the future for the Gentiles. But it doesn't control the future, the stars don't control the future, and they don't control our future. So this would again be something that they would not appreciate, being reminded that their ancestors worship the sun and the moon and the stars that had been done again by Manasseh, and others, but in  the wilderness. 


So then he speaks of houses made with human hands. Well, he's already used this language of made with hands back in verse 41, was often used by Jewish people for idols. Idols aren't real gods. They're not the God who made us. They're gods that are made by us, made by human hands. But now he uses that language to describe the temple. And the worst thing of all, the most  offensive thing of all is, he's not just making it up. He's got biblical precedent for it. He, in verses 49-50, he quotes the book of Isaiah. And often, an argument would conclude with a with a maxim. In this case with a scripture text, or a clinching point that drives home the point he's been talking about the temple. Well, now he's got his text about the temple. Isaiah 66:1-2. And this doesn't come from the time of the tabernacle, when God had earlier told David don't  build the house for him. Although Stephen mentions that as well. But Isaiah 66:1-2, Heaven is my throne, earth is my footstool, what house will you build  me. 


So in a sense, he confirms their suspicion that he's against the temple, but he's not really against using the temple. He's simply against centralizing the worship of God, only in the temple in a way that God isn't working elsewhere. And now with the coming of the Messiah, it's not even like, you know, the Old Testament, Deuteronomy, you know, in the in the place that God will choose. And then later on, you know, it has to be asked to be Jerusalem. That's the place that God has chosen. There was scripture for that. But with the coming of  the Messiah, now the law is going to go forth from Jerusalem, as Isaiah 2 says,  the message was to go forth, it wasn't to remain centered in one place, Stephen had the right theological vision, he lays the theological groundwork, he doesn't  live to see it. He doesn't live to carry it out fully. But he lays theological  groundwork, which is developed in the rest of the book of Acts, And ironically,  carried out by one of the very people who was responsible for his execution. 


Chapter 7:51-53. Well, he has come to the climax of his speech. Now he gives  what ancient orator is sometimes called in what we often call the day the Peroration. The Latin there was the peroratio the closing of the speech. It was often the most emotionally rousing part of the speech. He returns charges against his accusers. He didn't dare explicitly do that earlier in the speech. But he's been building towards it throughout the speech, and now he comes to it. It  was customary to return charges against your accusers, but not to return charges against your judges, which he does here. Because you returned charges against your judges, you know what's going to happen? There was a philosopher, stoic philosopher by the name of Epictetus. And he complains about this one guy, he says, you know, you don't have to make trouble for  yourself. The guy goes before the court, and he says, I'm like Socrates, and you were like Socrates judges. Well, of course the judge has condemned Him.  Epictetus says, you know, that's not being bold. That's being stupid. Well, Stephen's case I don't think he's being stupid. But he does know what's coming. He returns charges against the judges, verse 51, he's gonna have to get  this out quickly. Verse 51, your stiff necked and spiritually uncircumcised, uncircumcised in heart and ears you don't hear or heed the word of the Lord, will these these terms often appear with regard to Israel are prophetic language in the Old Testament, but they appear together in Deuteronomy chapter 10:16 where Israel in Moses' day complains that they're stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart. 


Then in verse 52, your ancestors persecuted the prophets. Well, I Kings 18:4, in Elijah's day, Jezebel had murdered many of the  prophets. Nehemiah 9:26 also gives a summary of how our ancestors killed the  prophets. Jeremiah 26, we have one of them named Jeremiah 26:20-23. Uriah,  the prophet. Jeremiah survives. But not all prophets did. Uriah was a true prophet. And he fled to Egypt, and they brought him back and put him to death. So in other words, Jeremiah was in real risk of being put to death too but God  protected him, including through the African court official, Ebed Melech, the eunuch Ebed Melech. 


And your ancestors persecuted the prophets, Jewish tradition had developed this even further. So for example, it was said that Isaiah had hidden in a tree. A tree opened and protected him. But Manasseh knew that he was in the tree, because the fringes of his will, a later, Rabbi said the fringes  of his prayer shawl were hanging out of the tree. So Manasseh had the tree, sawn in half and killed Isaiah that way. But that's also in the lives of the prophets another Jewish work. So this tradition had been amplified of our ancestors  killed the prophets. And they are not going to deny that, that tradition. It's in Scripture. It's part of the history of Israel. And it was actually excuse me amplified in this period. 


Another tradition, mentioned in verse 53, something that they wouldn't deny that the law was mediated through angels. He said, You  know, you receive this law mediated through angels, and that was meant as a way of exalting the law. Same that same as in Hebrews 2, Galatians. 3, it's kind of saying, okay, it was mediated it wasn't as direct as something else. But angels mediated the law. You know, the angel spoke to Moses in the bush. And Deuteronomy also speaks of many, probably angels present at Mount Sinai, it was certainly interpreted that way, by Jewish interpreters. I think Deuteronomy 32. So in Psalm 68, might imply something about that, the way it was interpreted by Jewish people as a reading on the day of Pentecost. Later on, in  any case. 


So he cites this tradition, the law was given through angels, and yet you have rejected it, you have disobeyed the law. And the Holy Spirit, as we mentioned earlier, was associated specially with the prophets with with speaking the prophetic message, he said your ancestors killed the prophets. And you, climax that by killing the Holy and Righteous One. You said, You always resist  the Holy Spirit. Present tense, they're still resisting the Holy Spirit. Stephen is speaking to them, just like an Old Testament prophet. And Stephen knows  what's coming. Because look, this is what they've been doing. This is what they do the Messiah. They're gonna do it to him too. And they prove his criticism by killing him. 


Stephen's death, we see parallels with Jesus in Stephen's death, in Acts 7:54-60. At Jesus trial before the Sanhedrin, Jesus declares that He is the Exalted Son of man. Well, it his trial before the Sanhedrin, Stephen declares that he sees the exalted Son of Man. Earlier they saw Stephen is an angel now. He sees into heaven he sees Jesus. Jesus in Luke 23:46 says, Father into your hands, I commit my spirit. Stephen. In Acts 7:59, says, Lord, I commit my spirit to you. Jesus in Luke 23:34, prays Father forgive them. They don't know what they're doing, Stephen, in Acts 7:60, says, Lord, lay not their sin to their charge. Well remember what we said earlier about parallel biographies. And also remember, the disciples imitate teachers. So it's natural. Knowing that Jesus did that. Stephen would want to do that at his death, too. We also see something  else in this narrative. And that's the ironic way that Luke narrates this, who's really guilty. Jesus is standing in heaven in verse 56. Normally, you would expect him to be seated at the Father's right hand, just like it says back in Acts 2. But a witness or a judge could stand the witness would stand when giving testimony, the judge could stand when rendering the verdict. Jesus is either Stephen's witness, or Jesus is portrayed here as the true judge. And it says  accusers, the false accusers who merit what they are saying he merits in this capital trial. It's his accusers who are really on trial. Normally, a person who is going to be executed should be stripped and maybe they did strip Stephen, but it's not mentioned here. Luke mentioned something else. Instead, they strip themselves. Well, normally Hellenists. would strip for exercise might not have  stripped all the way down. But they, you know, when it was warm, they would they would strip themselves you see this the same thing with Paul's accusers of the crowd, and Acts 22, when they're throwing their cloaks in the air.


An executed person was to confess their sins. But in verse 60, Stephen confesses, not his sins. But their's sometimes ancient writers would say explicitly, that unjust judges were the ones really on trial, before the truth, or before God. Gentiles often said that with Socrates, he wasn't the one that was on trial. It was his accusers who were on trial, or they were, they were trying the truth. And therefore they were the ones condemned.


Some background on  Stephen's stoning. It's done outside the city, they drag him outside the city. Well, you know, you don't want to desecrate the Holy City. And normally executions and burials were done outside the city. Customs, if, if Mishnah, Sanhedrin,  seven, and so on, if Mishnah Sanhedrin was being followed in this case,  Mishnah Sanhedrin, hadn't been written yet. But if it reflects rules that go back  this far, they may have followed these rules. Then again, since it's an lynch mob, and they're just killing him. Because they're angry, they may not have been thinking too much about rules anyway, the Sadducees wouldn't, and the Hellenists wouldn't be concerned with pharisaic regulations in any case, but this may give us at least a sense of how it would have been done. Normally, you throw the person over a cliff, or a large hill, the fall may not be enough to kill  them. Sometimes it was, but you throw them you throw them over over a hill or a rocky ledge may not be that far down. But then ideally, you'd have large stones. It's not like throwing these little stones, but there would be large stones. Technically, later rabbis said you aim for the chest, but I don't think people could  aim that well with these large stones with land where it would land. And they keep throwing the stones until the person died. 


According to Deuteronomy 17:7, the witnesses were to be the first to throw the stones.That probably was meant to be a deterrent against false witnesses because you knew you had to kill the  person yourself. But the false witnesses here, go ahead and do it. The Governor was in Jerusalem only during festivals. And we do know that mobs did stone people. That happened throughout the ancient Mediterranean world. But the  stoning is significant here for some other reasons. Stoning according Leviticus 24:16 was a penalty for blasphemy. But also, in the Old Testament a number of  times we see that people sought the stone God's servants Exodus 17. Numbers 14, where people were ready to stone Moses are ready to stone Joshua and Caleb, II Chronicles, 24. Zechariah was stoned. In the in II Samuel actually, David's own men, almost were ready to stone him, although the circumstances  there were a little bit different. And it says because of their, because of their own anguish of their families and David's strengthened himself and God was able to talk them out of it. 


But anyway, Saul is young man. They lay their their robes at  Saul's feet. Now, keep in mind the contrast here. Because earlier, when people  had been bringing resources, bring bringing their money, they were laying it at the feet of the apostles. And chapter 5, they were kind of in charge well Stephen at his stoning. Saul is now sort of in charge, and you say how can you been  charged he was a young man. The terminology that's used here for young man could be used for anybody from their teens to their 30s. Most often it was used for somebody in their 20s. So he's probably no longer a student of  Gamaliel. At this point, most people finish their tertiary education before they were 20. Although there were exceptions, especially if you had enough money, you could keep going but usually they finished by the time they were 20. But he would have he would have still been in Gamaliel's circle. 


Now, being a young  man, throughout ancient writings, was associated with a couple things. Positively, it was associated with strength, negatively it was associated with rashness and susceptibility to sexual temptation. That's why. II, Timothy talks about fleeing youthful lusts. And I Timothy 4, says, Don't let anybody despise your youth, but be an example of godliness. It was sexual, also anger, they  couldn't control their anger. You know, and there's some truth with when you're, when you're an adolescent, and your hormones are changing, you know, sometimes you have that. But you also can have a strength and zeal that can be devoted to God, which is probably how Saul viewed it. But in this case, it wasn't being used in the right way. And you know, sometimes in the New Testament, it's positive. But in this case, it's used in the wrong way. Galatians 1, tells us that  Paul was advancing beyond many of his age peers, is how the Greek wording probably should be understood. So even though he was young man, in his, in his zeal is proficiency in the Torah and so on. He had become a leader. 


You say, Well, how could he have gone is young man, before the before the high priest, he was probably still young man, when he got letters from high priest. His family probably also had a good bit of money. He probably was. It wasn't part of the  elite, maybe as high as Gamaliel. But if he could even study under Gamaliel,  probably his family had a lot of money. So we'll talk about that more in Acts 22.  


But in any case, he was he was a leader in the movement, and he was he was a leader. The text goes on to say in chapter 8, he was leader in stirring up  persecution against the the Christian movement. And he, this was this was one of the ways that he was excelling. That's when chapter 9, after after Paul  becomes a follower of Jesus. And after he's no longer preaching in that area. It says in line 31, that the church had rest. Paul was a major orchestrator of  persecution, although he wasn't the only one. And He Himself tells us, tells us that in I Thessalonians 2 well.


Acts 6:5, introduced Stephen, and then Philip in  and others. Acts 7 addresses Stephen, who lays the theological groundwork for  this movement, Acts 8, addresses Philip. Well, here's an outline of Acts 8, we  have Saul in 7:58-60, and also 8:1-4. And here through Saul, persecution  scatters the believers now this is an irony. He's he's trying to stop the movement and persecution just scatters it and spreads it so that ironically, you can't you can't fight against the goads. Ironically, Saul is responsible in a way for  spreading the movement even before he becomes a follower of Jesus. 


Acts 8:5- 25 narrate Philips ministry in Samaria, Acts 8:26-40 narrate his ministry to an African court official, you see why he has this big revival in this whole city? Why would God then lead him to one person afterwards? Isn't that anticlimactic?  Actually, it's not anticlimactic at all. It's it's a foretaste of going to the ends of the earth. God knows, we don't always know. But to the ends of the earth. Ethiopia was considered the southern ends of the earth. And so already, it's giving us a foretaste of where the mission is going. 


There's a careful structuring in a literal sense, in Acts 8, Acts 8:4, those who were scattered, preached, made proclamation wherever they went, Acts 8:5, Philip, who was one of them preached in Samaria, Acts 8:25, Peter and John preached good news and Samaritan villages on the on the route back to Jerusalem. And then we have the next section with the African court official and an 8:40, Phillip is carried  away. And then Phillip is preaching good news as he goes along his way in coastal towns until he gets to to Caesarea. 


Now, at this point, I need to say  something about chapter 8:1-4, before we talk more about about Philip, which  will be in the next session. But in 8:1-4. Notice it took persecution, to get the  church to begin to do what Jesus had commanded them back in chapter 1:8.  And yet God is sovereign God can use even things that to us look like disaster, God can sometimes use those things, to spread His gospel to people who don't have it. And sometimes they're suffering, people are more likely to listen to us, because they know that we've been through what they've been through or something like that, or they see our integrity through suffering. In any case,  ironically, Saul spreads the church before his conversion by persecuting them.  Those who suffer for Christ, often to those who count the cost and a more radical, you see that with the seven churches of of Asia Minor, in the book of Revelation. The two persecuted churches, the churches in Philadelphia, and in Smyrna are the ones who weren't reproved by the Lord for anything. The other  churches are one of them. Thyatira, or Pergamum, has at least a little bit of  persecution in 2:13. But but most of these other churches are compromising  with the values of the world system. And you see it often today too the those  who suffer for Christ and the places in the world where the church is suffering for Christ or with Christ. In those places, the church is often more committed. It doesn't mean nobody in other places is but you don't have something else stirring you up you better, stir yourself up for the Lord. 


Stephen's burial verse 2 dying and buried was a great dishonor and risking one's life to bury people was  considered honorable and heroic. To the extent that you have Sophocles talking  about this, this woman who was so intent and burying her deceased brother, that she was willing to die to make sure it happened. On the Jewish side, you have this popular apocryphal story of Tobit where he was burying people against the king's decree. And of course Tobias, his son very similar when Tobit dies, so it was considered honorable and heroic to do this. Adult sons are those closest to the deceased normally would bury a person. Public mourning, however, for condemned criminals was prohibited. Sometimes  they didn't want them to be buried, but Jewish people would, would have to allow burial in any case, the Torah commanded it, but public mourning for  condemned criminals was prohibited. 


But these pious people got together. Stephen's pious friends ignore the illegal ruling, and they mourn for Him. Verse  3, we read about Saul's zeal he was detaining even women as well as men. And in verse 4 as the churches scattered, the believers take the message with them, wherever they go. Most ancient religions actually were spread by travelers. They weren't some some places had something like missionaries, but for the most part, it was just people as they traveled, we took the message with them sometimes it was a merchant and they might think that they had a dream they  were supposed to start a temple somewhere in the they would do it as they  traveled but, but the focus in the book of Acts is on the apostles. But we have clues like this that show it wasn't just the apostles, it was all the believers, the apostles were leading this. But the Apostles stayed in Jerusalem. Most of the other believers were scattered. And that would probably include not just but perhaps most prominently, the Hellenists Stephen's peers, who were particular objects of hatred to the Hellenist Synagogue.  


Announcer - This is Dr. Craig Keener in his teaching on the book of Acts, this is  session number 10. Acts 6:8-8:4.



Last modified: Tuesday, May 16, 2023, 10:11 AM