Acts
6:1-7
Act 6:1 And in those days, when the number of the disciples was multiplied, there arose a murmuring of the Grecians against the Hebrews, because their widows were neglected in the daily ministration.
Act 6:2 Then the twelve called the multitude of the disciples unto them, and said, It is not reason that we should leave the word of God, and serve tables.
Act 6:3 Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business.
Act 6:4 But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word.
Act 6:5 And the saying pleased the whole multitude: and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost, and Philip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolas a proselyte of Antioch:
Act 6:6 Whom they set before the apostles: and when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them.
Act 6:7 And the word of God increased; and the number of the disciples multiplied in Jerusalem greatly; and a great company of the priests were obedient to the faith.
And in those days … there arose a murmuring of
the Grecians against the Hebrews.
Trouble the lot of the Church
The Church on earth has always trouble; if it is
not persecuted from without, disorders arise from within which is still more
dangerous. (Starke.)
The poor the treasures of the Church
1.
They stir up its spiritual gifts.
2.
They exercise its brotherly love.
3.
They are its ornament before the world.
4.
They bear interest to it in eternity.
When Laurentius the martyr was commanded by the
Roman governor to bring out the treasures of the Church, he led forth the poor
of the congregation. (K. Gerok.)
The ancient bond between poverty and Christianity
a blessing to both
I. To poverty. Only in Christianity, in the kingdom
of Him who became poor that we might become rich—
1.
Is the Divine right of the poor recognised.
2.
Has the Holy Ghost awakened a genuine care of the poor.
II. To Christianity. In the care of the poor.
1.
It has from the beginning developed its most Divine powers—Love,
compassion, patience, self-denial, contempt of death, and trust in God.
2.
It has proved before the world its right of existence in the world. (K.
Gerok.)
Dissatisfaction in the primitive Church
There never has been a perfect Church, and never
will be this side the Lord’s coming. There is much here which has been
reproduced in modern times. Consider—
I. The occasion and character of this dissension.
The local association of believers was composed of men separated by various
nationalities and degrees of culture. There was much freedom and simplicity,
for under the influence of a first creative enthusiasm the need of order and discipline
had hardly become apparent. Whenever that declined, dissension was inevitable.
Christianised human nature is long before it shakes itself free from petty
ambitions and other ignoble sentiments. That the outbreak came soon need awaken
no surprise. Men need to be trained for a life of free self-government. The
causes were here ready to manifest themselves whenever the occasion presented
itself. There were two chief parties—Jews, born in Palestine, of narrow views
and restricted sympathies; and Jews or proselytes born in other lands, who had
been affected by the refinement, art, poetry, and beauty of Greek culture, and
who spoke the Greek language. These differences were sure to provoke collision.
But the predominating influence was Jewish, and the Jewish officers were blamed
by the Grecian portion of the community for neglecting Grecian widows in the
daily administration. A small thing suffices for a great disturbance when
latent differences already exist. Sectarianisms and divisions of Churches have
often arisen from matters of the smallest importance. Watch the beginnings.
Church dissensions are created by wrong feelings much more than by the
maintenance of great principles and sacred interests. But few will bear looking
at from the Saviour’s Cross or in the light of the Saviour’s throne.
II. The expedient resorted to.
1.
This was a new stage in the development of a complete Church life.
What was demonstrably lacking was supplied. The Lord did not furnish His Church
with an apparatus of government already complete. But He gave His Holy Spirit
by whom it was to be guided according to the emergencies and needs of the
times.
2.
Here is a plain manifestation of apostolic initiation and of Church
co-operation. The apostles proposed a plan which the members freely accepted, a
procedure natural, seemly, orderly, and most efficient. This may be regarded as
the charter of Church rights. The apostles consulted the laity to ascertain
their opinions and desires. At the same time there is nothing of lawlessness
here. Power was not wholly in their hands. The apostles actually appointed and
ordained the seven Hellenists whom the people selected. The principle is of the
first importance, for it is exactly what we know as constitutional government.
3.
Here is the principle of division of labour, as essential to Church
efficiency. As those already engaged in the daily administration were not equal
to all the work, others were associated with them. It was enough for apostles
to do their proper work in founding churches, preaching the Word, praying,
seeking the supply of the Spirit, exercising spiritual and miraculous gifts,
leading the Church in the ways of the Lord. Other men could and must do what
was merely secondary and secular. In free Christian society the specialty of
each is needed and is to be employed. There is room for all who have a mind to
work; but none for idlers. Division of labour in this case prevented schism. A
Church active and consecrated will keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of
peace.
4.
What a solemnity was attached to even the meanest work for the Lord in
His Church! The deacons are presented to the apostles, who pray for them, and
lay their hands on their heads, setting them apart to such duties. Prayer
sanctifies all Christian endeavour. Work for Christ is never to be thought of
in a mean spirit. It should be associated with what is best and highest in
Christian life, and be done ever “as under the great Taskmaster’s eye.” (W.
H. Davison.)
Hellenist and Hebrew
From the first the Church had held within its
bosom two opposed tendencies. So long as its numbers were not too large, and
its enthusiasm had not spent itself, this underlying division created no
difficulty. A moment, however, was reached when the jealousy of Hellenist and
Hebrew began to give promise of that deep schism which ended only by the
extinction of one of the divisions (the Hebrew) altogether.
I. The distinction between Hellenist and Hebrew. Its
origin goes back to the captivity. Previously to this the Jews had dwelt as far
as possible alone, but through that catastrophe they were scattered through all
the huge empire which stretched from India to the AEgean. The numbers that
returned under Zerubbabel, and again under Ezra, fell far short of the number
of the dispersed; and it was impossible but that prolonged contact with pagan
nations should greatly modify their customs and modes of thought. Especially
was this the case during and after the wars of Alexander. 4. new spirit of
commercial enterprise awoke within them as a new world opened to their
wandering feet, and the ancestral faculty for acquiring wealth which their
Palestine life had crushed, developed itself. While the home Jews recoiling
from defiling contact with foreigners grew prouder and more narrow, their
foreign brethren took on a strong tinge of Greek culture, and the spirit of
secular gain broke down the feeling of separatism which had been the very
kernel of ancient Judaism. All this tended to modify their religion, and for
the better. Cut off from the temple ritual, they carried with them neither
priest nor sacrifice; they carried only the Septuagint and the synagogue. What
they retained was just what was portable, and what was most portable was most
spiritual. When at last Christianity arose it found everywhere in the
synagogues its first base of operations. It was from Hellenised Jews that
Christianity obtained its first and best missionaries, and it is to them we owe
it that the Church grew out of all risk of continuing a Judean sect and became the
religion of civilised mankind.
II. The murmuring of the Hellenists against the
Hebrews. Being men of higher average intelligence and energy than the villagers
of Judea or the small traders of the capital, the former were not likely to
acquiesce silently in any neglect on the part of the other. There was always a
tendency amongst the Palestine Jews to pride themselves on retaining the purest
type of orthodoxy, and to suspect as well as dislike their countrymen who had
taken on Greek manners. On the other hand, it came very naturally to the
foreign Jew to look down on stay-at-home and old-fashioned Hebrews as bigoted
and ignorant. A grave danger threatened the young Church if her members
imported into her communion such mutual jealousies as these; and the slight
“murmuring” about the widows’ rations meant nothing less.
III. How the murmuring was allayed. The apostles took
alarm, for the murmurs reflected on them. The work had evidently grown beyond
their power of personal supervision, and now that one side of the Church
grumbled about an unfairness some new arrangement was clearly called for. Even
the apostles were no autocrats; the Church was an oligarchy which rested on a
democratic basis. The supreme legislative power was felt to reside in the
“crowd of disciples.” What the apostles did at first was to initiate measures,
and at the last to confirm appointments. But the adoption of the measure and
the election of the officers were the work of “the whole multitude.” This act—
1.
Established certain principles—the right of the Church to transact
under Christ its own business; the ministerial, not lordly character of even
its highest offices; the subordination of all material interests to its
spiritual work; and the ultimate seat of Church authority in the whole body.of
believers. Any Church system whose arrangements flatly contravene these
principles must be held to have departed from primitive order.
2.
Began the severance between the spiritual and temporal work of the
Church. It became impossible to combine the serving of tables with the ministry
of the Word. A division of labour was called for, and the apostles could not
hesitate which side of their double office they should abandon. To bear witness
to the saving work of Christ is not a secondary function of the Church, but its
one task for which all other things must minister. The Church, however,
declined to treat even its secular work as wholly unspiritual, and lifted it
out of the atmosphere of mere business into that of worship. The candidates are
to be full of the Holy Ghost as well as wisdom, and are set apart with solemn
services. The only two among them of whom we know anything are known for the
zeal and success with which they preached Christ. Stephen and Philip were a
good deal more than almoners.
IV. With the ordination of these seven men a new page
of Church history opened.
1.
It marked a stage in the Church’s progress towards separate existence.
2.
It was the first step towards permanence. The apostles cannot live for
ever; but if the new society has the power, under Christ, of founding new
orders of office bearers, then it carries within itself the conditions of
self-preservation and self-adaptation to changed times and perpetual progress.
3.
It brought a new element to the front. The seven bear Greek names,
which affords a presumption that they belonged to that section of the Church
whose complaints had led to the election. The result, therefore, was this,
that, through the murmurs of a few widows, those members of the Church were
lifted into office who represented its most free, spiritual, un-Hebrew, and
catholic elements. One man especially was thrust forward who was destined to
rouse the narrow and ultra-national party of the Pharisees to persecution, as
Peter had already roused the Sadducees, and whose death was to be a signal for
the scattering of the Church. It was even to lead to the conversion of another
man who should one day become an apostle himself and vindicate as an
inheritance for Christendom that larger and more spiritual view of Christianity
of which Stephen was the first exponent.
V. The story rebukes our short-sighted alarms at the
small dissensions and apparent disasters of the hour. We see the divided
congregation; we hear its murmuring voices, but we forget to see the hand which
guides the Church’s destinies, and causes all things to work together for its
good. (J. Oswald Dykes, D. D.)
The first disunion in the Church
I. Its occasion.
II. Its adjustment.
III. Its blessing. (Langbein.)
A picture of early Church life
I. The murmuring in the Church.
1.
When it arose. With multiplying numbers, new dangers arose. It was
more difficult to keep the unity for which the believers had been
distinguished. Many a Church that has withstood adversity has been wrecked by
prosperity.
2.
How it arose. By the jealousy of the Grecians. If that was not
stopped, there was a great disaster before the Church. How it came about that
the Grecian widows were neglected, the record does not say. It may have been
unintentional oversight, or the result of a feeling against the Greeks as being
foreigners. It is worthy of note that the first two dangers to the early
Church, hypocrisy and schism, arose from the distribution of its charities.
II. The harmony of the Church. How was it restored?
By the prompt, wise, and magnanimous action of the apostles. They did not wait
for the “murmuring” to become a pronounced disaffection. They did not rebuke
the murmurers, nor try to justify themselves. They simply asked that the work
might be put in the hands of others who could properly attend to it.
1.
They made a protest against doing the work at all. They were chosen of
Christ to be His witnesses—not to dole out alms. The lower work was encroaching
upon the higher. They were liable to be so much engaged in caring for the
bodies that they could do nothing for the souls of men.
2.
They showed to whom the work should be committed. They directed the
disciples to look out seven men among them.
(1) “Of good
report”—so that, to begin with, they would receive the approval of every one.
The apostles went upon the principle of never putting a doubtful man into aa
important office.
(2) “Full of
the Spirit”—so that their godliness might be apparent. Men full of the Spirit
would not be likely to do injustice through partiality—or become defaulters.
(3) “And of
wisdom”—so that the funds would be wisely disbursed. The Church that has a
charity fund has to look out that pauperism is not encouraged, that dead-beats
are not supported, and that the really needy are generously cared for.
3.
They declared what their own work should be. The world was famishing
for the gospel more than the disciples for bread. Others could give the bread,
but the apostles were chosen especially to give the gospel. First they would
get from God, and then they would give to men. There is no giving without first
getting. No water can be poured from an unfilled pitcher.
III. The growth of the Church.
1.
The choice of the seven. The seven were chosen in accordance with the
recommendation of the apostles. Their Greek names show how generously the
Church acted in giving “the daily ministration” largely into the hands of the
element from which the murmurs had arisen. That made it impossible for Grecian
Jews any longer to complain. The suggestion of the apostles “pleased the whole
multitude”; for they saw that it not only would do away with dissensions, but
would result in the greater efficiency of the apostles. The seven finally were
inducted into office with as much solemnity as though they were to preach the
Word instead of to serve tables! In those days no work for Christ, it would
seem, was unworthy of a consecration.
2.
The increase of the disciples. That, naturally, was the result of the
increase of power resulting from the new state of things. The Church was a
greater power, because in it there no longer was any division. The apostles
were a greater power; for now there was no obstacle to giving their whole
strength to prayer and the ministry of the Word. Notable among the accessions
was the great company of priests that became “obedient to the faith.” The new
faith demanded of them so much that in their case obedience meant a great deal
more than with others.
IV. The witness for the church. Among the chosen
seven there was one especially prominent from the first, Stephen. Observe that
he was a witness for the Church—
1.
In his endowments. He was “full of faith and the Holy Spirit”—“full of
grace and power.” The mere fact that a man is so endowed is a great testimony
for the Church.
2.
In the exhibitions of his power. He “wrought great wonders and signs
among the people.” He showed apostolic power, though he was not an apostle. The
layman may be as full of the Holy Spirit and of the power of the Spirit as the
minister.
3.
In his encounters with adversaries. “They were not able to resist the
wisdom and the Spirit by which he spake.” They were cunning, but he was wise.
They were learned, but he was inspired.
4.
In his appearance before the council. (M. C. Hazard.)
On deacons
I. The origin of the office.
1.
We are introduced to a class of people here called Grecians, who were
proselytes to the Jewish worship, and Jews born and bred in foreign countries,
whose language was Greek. In Act_2:1-47.
a long catalogue is given us of the countries from which they came. The home
Jews, or Hebrews, looked down upon their foreign brethren as having contracted
contamination by their long contact with the heathen. As a natural result,
considerable jealousy sprang up between them. The Church did not create the
division; on the contrary, its direct influence was to merge the two factions
into one—they were all of “one accord.” But in process of time the old spirit of
rivalry manifested itself. The world often taunts the Church with having within
its fold contentious and hypocritical people. But where have they come from?
The Church has black sheep; but they were black when they first came in from
the world, and remain black in spite of the cleansing influences around them.
2.
The Grecians murmured. There was no open hostility, or any unseemly
ebullition of temper. You place a shell by your ear, and hear the subdued
murmur of the air as it winds its way through the intricate convolutions. That
is the comparison of St. Luke—there was a low, half-articulate mutter. This
disposition to grumble formed the gravest danger the Church had yet had to
encounter. The earth is exposed to two perils—from storms without, and volcanic
fires within. Of the two, the last is the most dangerous. Let the winds beat as
they will, the earth continues firm. But when the internal fires burst forth,
the earth quakes to its foundations. In ,like manner the Church is exposed to
persecution in the world. This has attacked the Church repeatedly; but it did
not fall, because it was founded upon a rock. But the gravest danger arises
from within—the spirit of discontent in the members.
3.
The Grecians “murmured because their widows were neglected.” It appears
that only the “ widows” received charitable relief, and of course those who
were disabled by age or decrepitude. Men able to earn a living doubtless had to
go and work. Who were the almoners? The text seems to hint that the apostles
had partly delegated their power to certain members of the Hebrew party. The
“widows” were overlooked probably by accident, arising from defective
organisation. But the Grecians insisted that there was a set purpose in it, and
inquired for sinister motives, and, as is always the case, found them! Jealousy
always distorts facts to suit its own morbid fancies.
4.
The murmurings of the Grecians induced the apostles to “call the
multitude of the disciples unto them,” in order to confer together. The Jewish
Church was constituted on mechanical principles. God Himself elected His own
officers, and the nation was expected loyally to submit. But the Christian
Church is a living organism; its functionaries are therefore dependent on the
vote of the members. Governments are of two kinds—the parental and
representative. The government of the Jewish Church was on the parental
principle, the members being, in the language of the apostle, under age. But
the government of the Christian Church is representative; it is
self-government—its members having attained their majority. And in calling “the
multitude of the disciples unto them,” the apostles acknowledged the principle
of manhood suffrage. But we must not forget the promise that the “Spirit of
Truth” should guide the Church into all the truth of government not less than
the truth of doctrine. This promise holds good for us as for the age of the
apostles. No doubt precedent has its value, and no conscientious Christian will
speak lightly of the past history of the Church. But if webs be woven of it to
tie the hands and bind the feet of the Church now living, we make of it a bad
and unjustifiable use. The Church of to-day is as free as the Church of the
first century, and is in as close communion with its Head as ever it was. But
there is a distinction between the scripturalness of a doctrine or usage and
the ecclesiasticalness thereof. What is taught by the apostles is not subject
to alteration or capable of improvement. What St. Paul taught the Corinthian
Church I accept without cavil or objection; but what the Corinthian Church
practised I feel at liberty to adopt or reject.
5.
Having summoned the “multitude of the disciples together,” the
apostles proposed “they should choose from among themselves seven men of honest
report” to supervise the distribution, which instantly quelled the discontent.
In verse 1 they murmur; in verse 5 they are pleased. Were many in the place of
the apostles they would have stood upon their dignity, and ignored the
complaint; and the low “murmuring” of verse 1 would have grown into loud and
fierce denunciation in verse 5. But kindness, straightforwardness, and
discretion at once surmounted the difficulty. Evil had always better be
grappled with in its incipient stage. A small injustice is more easily remedied
than a great one, and the facility makes the duty more imperative. Thus we are
taught that the Church is a growth. It was not launched upon society with all
its organisation perfected. Herein again it contrasts strikingly with Judaism.
Moses was commanded “to do everything according to the pattern shown him in the
mount”—by Divine revelation. The people had to originate nothing—they had to
receive everything. But the Christian Church is a living organism—it gradually
unfolds from within. It began on the day of Pentecost without any regulations
or offices except the apostolate. It was simply a germ, but a germ which had
within it the “power of endless life.” By degrees the germ grew and threw out
new offices, just as the tree shoots out new branches. Its functions are the
healthy outgrowth of its life. The diaconate is instituted when the temporal
requirements of the Church urgently demand it, and not a day before. It is,
therefore, idle to endeavour to give the Church a rigid, cast-iron shape for
all countries and ages. The exigencies of time and place are to determine its
outward form.
II. The duties of the office.
1.
The “seven men” were elected to “serve.” The noun “deacon” is not
used, but the corresponding verb is—“they diaconised.” Is there not a quiet
hint to their successors to be more covetous of discharging the duties than of
wearing the name? In the Acts we find only the verb; in the Epistles we find
the noun. Here we perceive the fundamental law of language and of life; for
language and life are at bottom one—first get the thing, next get the name. The
probability is that these men were not officially styled “deacons”—they were
simply known as the “seven.” Gradually, however, the Church felt a need for an
official title, and from the verb it developed the noun. Living in an age noted
for its appearances, we go about in the first place to invent names, and care
but little about things. All our goods are electro-plate. But the primitive
Church was living face to face with stern realities. If it could procure the
thing, it let the name take care of itself. A deacon is one who ministers or
serves. The same words are used to describe the work of deacons as that of
apostles, the object only being different. In each case it was “serving,”
“ministering.” A deacon etymologically means one who waits at table, who runs
to do service. The very word signifies that diaconal work should be
characterised by docility and alacrity. People of imperious temperament are
scarcely fit to act as servers of the Church; instead of running themselves,
their disposition is to bid others run.
2.
“They were elected to “serve tables,” to attend to the temporalities
of the Church. It was not, however, absolutely necessary that they should
confine themselves to this; hard and fast lines are not known in the kingdom of
God. Their chief duty is to manage the finances of the kingdom; but, that done,
they may extend the sphere of their usefulness. The public mind is confused
upon this subject. Preachers are supposed to have no right to meddle with the
service of tables; the right they indisputably have, but the expediency may be
questioned, except in very rare cases. On the other hand, deacons are supposed
to be guilty of presumption when they preach. But they are guilty of nothing of
the kind; for Stephen and Philip “preach the Word” with irresistible power and
success. Everywhere in the Apostolic Church are traceable the liberty and
elasticity of life. “The tools to him who can use them.”
3.
The deacons are to “serve the tables” of the ministers. We may rest
assured that, whilst waiting on the tables of others, they did not leave the
apostles’ table empty. One important object was to relieve the preachers of
anxiety and distraction in their own peculiar work.
4.
They are to “serve the tables” of the poor. This was about the most
impoverished period in Jewish history. Mendicants everywhere flocked the
highways. “The poor ye have always with you.” Many of them joined the Church,
and the exceptional poverty called forth exceptional liberality. Many, “having
land, sold it, and brought the money and laid it at the apostles’ feet.” At
their feet. Money should always be kept at people’s feet. Many keep it in their
safes, and, alas I many in their hearts. In this institution we discover the
first germ of the philanthropic efforts of modern civilisation. Judaism
doubtless stood alone among ancient religions for the humane feeling pervading
it. Nevertheless, its highest result was negative—not to oppress or defraud.
Being the first stage of religious culture, Judaism consisted in not doing evil
rather than in doing good. The Old Testament dealt in prohibitions rather than
in positive injunctions. But the gospel bids you do something. Christ went
about doing good. In the text a committee of seven is organised to supervise
the distribution of the doles. Occasional outbursts of benevolent impulses were
witnessed in previous ages and other countries; now for the first time was a
deliberate effort made to reduce impulse into system, and benevolence into an
organisation. The “seven men of honest report” constituted, I believe, the
first “board of guardians” in the world. Modern civilisation is replete with
“boards”—Poor Law Boards, School Boards, Boards of Guardians, and Boards of
Health. But they are all natural developments of the board or “table” of which
the text speaks, to “serve tables” being precisely the same as to serve boards.
In the Gospels we witness the conception, in the Acts the birth of
philanthropy.
III. The qualifications for the office.
1.
Integrity “Honest report”—men of uprightness and straightforwardness.
The funds being entrusted to their care, it is of prime importance that they be
men above suspicion. Judas once “kept the bag”; but he was a thief. It is
therefore of great consequence that men of strict integrity be put into this
office.
2.
Piety. “full of the Holy ghost.” The judicious management of money
requires the special aid of God’s Spirit. Pecuniary interests occupy the middle
ground, and are peculiarly liable to corruption. It is popularly imagined that,
if a man is “full of the Holy Ghost,” he cannot attend to temporal duties; that
he is only fit to sing and pray. But it strikes me you do not want a very great
deal of the Spirit to do that; but you want a great deal of Him to give and
collect money. Show me a Church’s collection books, and I can estimate pretty
nearly how much of the Holy Ghost that church has. A Church of one hundred
members giving fifty pounds a year towards the support of the gospel at home
and its propagation in foreign parts, has not much of the Spirit. Wolff
elaborated a system to reduce all truths of philosophy into truths of
mathematics; and, if I had the leisure, I could invent a system to reduce the
truths of theology into truths of arithmetic. A man says, “I have faith.” “Show
me thy works,” urges James; the works are the measure of the Faith. You say,
“We have had a powerful revival.” I answer, “Show me your collection-books.” A
small collection means baptism by sprinkling; a large colleclection—well, baptism
by immersion.
3. Wisdom.
That a man is honest and pious is not enough. Without wisdom his administration
will do incalculably more harm than good. Wisdom is a right application of
knowledge (gnosis). But this implies two things. (First, that he possess
the knowledge, to be applied. A deacon should be “mighty in the Scriptures.”
Ignorance should never hold office in the Church. God does not need our
knowledge to carry on His kingdom; but He can do without our ignorance. Second,
that he possess tact to apply his knowledge in the pursuit of his official
duties. Men require to be managed with great delicacy and discernment. They are
very sensitive instruments to play upon; a rude touch may snap the strings, and
in vain you afterwards endeavour to get them to “discourse sweet melody.” You
have heard of Phaeton, the son of Sol; he was desirous of driving the chariot
of the sky. Many persuaded him against the attempt, as he had not the necessary
practice to guide with a steady hand its fiery steeds. But he insisted on
driving; and he broke his own neck and sent horses and chariot spinning through
infinite space. His intentions were good, but his skill was defective. And we
have known men taking into their hands the reins of Church govern°
recur—upright, pious men enough, no doubt; but for lack of tact they drew upon
themselves no end of personal discomfort, drove the Church over the precipice,
and plunged it into inextricable confusion. (J. Cynddylan Jones, D. D.)
The election of deacons
There is nothing concealed in the action of the
New Testament Church. The case of Judas is not covered up nor made the least
of. Ananias and Sapphira are not names Withdrawn because of the lies they told.
And the murmuring of the Grecians against the Hebrews is not passed over
without reference. The Church is not a secret institution, and was never meant
to be a concealed force in society. Christianity abhors all official secrecy.
It is a religion which lives in the daylight. Its registers are not hidden away
in iron safes; its writing is written as with a pencil of the sun. Who would
publish an expurgated edition of the Bible! We undertake to adapt our poets to
modern tastes and readers. It is refreshing to belong to a Church that is so
open and fearless.
I. How was this difficulty of the early Church
adjusted?
1.
To-day it would surely terminate in many instances with a secession;
but the spirit that guided the Church aright; was the spirit of love. There can
be no permanent difficulties where this is supreme. If a Church is only a
religious debating society, then we shall determine: many issues merely by
numbers.
2.
The apostles argue the question out, from the standpoint of a clear
conception of apostolic work. Your first conception will generally determine
the whole course of your argument. Starting with a noble conception, a man will
naturally fall into a noble course, and reach a useful conclusion. The apostles
magnified their office. “We will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to
the ministry of the Word.” And the apostles could pray! Just lately, in this
very story, we heard them pray, and the place where they were assembled was
shaken! And the apostles could also preach. They divided their hearers into two
classes—friends and enemies. The mere critic could not play his little game at
pedantry under the apostolic sermon. It was one of two things—repentance,
surrender, crying to Heaven for pardon, or gnashing of teeth, and malignant
hatred, the very fire of hell!
3.
The apostles, conceiving their work to be of this high and supreme
kind, were rather anxious than otherwise to escape the daily ministration of
the tables, and gladly seized the opportunity of leaving this necessary routine
to others who were ready to undertake it. This supreme conception of apostolic
service was itself ennobled by the trust which the apostles reposed in the
people. Christianity is the people’s religion pre-eminently. There are those in
the ministry of Christ who can testify that they owe all their comfort,
prosperity, and influence to their trust in the people. The apostles did not
select certain notables; but having to deal with a people’s question, they
consulted the people’s instinct, and therein they have set an example to all
Christian associations.
4.
Whilst this was the case at the outset, it was impossible that the
whole Church could constitute a committee of action, therefore the apostles
said, “Look ye out seven men,” who shall really be yourselves condensed. Such
men as shall themselves be equal to the whole multitude. Large-minded, generous
men, who can see every aspect of a case, and deal with noble wisdom with the
practical difficulties of life. The qualifications of the seven are plainly
stated. They were to be “men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and
wisdom.” There are no merely secular duties in the Church. Church matters are
not merely matters of political system. There is nothing done in Christ’s
Church—whether the opening of a door, the lighting of a lamp, or the preaching
of the everlasting gospel—that is not to be done under the inspiration of the
Holy Ghost. A door may be so opened as to affront the Spirit of God; a visitor
may be so shown to a seat as to manifest a truly Christian spirit on the part
of the indicator. There is no part of our work in any section that is not holy
unto the Lord. The ministry is one. I have no doubt that the men chosen in this
text were better able to serve tables than the apostles. We have not all the
same gifts. We must rid ourselves of the mischievous sophism which teaches us
that some kinds of service are menial. There is no menial service in the
Church, unless you make it menial by an unworthy spirit.
5.
Looked at as a piece of Church statesmanship, can you suggest a single
amendment to this policy? Do not the apostles vindicate their apostleship by
their noble wisdom and practical sagacity? It is not every man in the
apostleship who could have settled a case so. The ancient proverb tells us that
“every fool will be meddling.” The reason why some ministers are uncomfortable
and unsettled is that they will meddle with things that they really cannot
arrange. Impose a duty upon a friend, and show by your manner of doing it that
you mean him to reveal his best quality. When this spirit seizes us, all
distribution of labour will not be a division of front, but will rather show
that the front is more united because the labour is wisely divided. Jealousy
kills us all to-day.
II. What was the effect?
1.
The Word of God increased (verse 7). A united Church means a world
impressed by the noble scene. The Church of Christ is not united to-day. The
noble purpose of Christ is marred by certain geographical distinctions and
ecclesiastical arrangements, in the making of which Providence had neither part
nor lot. The Church must be united before the world will be redeemed. Hence
Christ’s great prayer, “May they all be one, that the world may believe.” We
want the apostle now who can bring men together, who can magnify points of
union, who can show that the Church, though divided on many minor points, ought
to realise its vital union, magnify and display it, and thus Christ’s soul
would be satisfied.
2.
Stephen was brought out (verse 8). They made him a minister of tables,
and he became the first martyr. Stephen was developed by circumstances. Being
put into this office, he developed his true quality of mind and heart. There
are those who cannot be kept in obscurity, and who cannot be limited to merely
technical publicity. What if this man had been unintentionally neglected? (J.
Parker, D. D.)
The first election of deacons
I. The reason of their election.
1.
The temporal necessities members of the Church. “Widows” are
especially mentioned, in all communities the most deserving of aid. The Bible,
therefore, particularly commends them to the compassion of the benevolent.
“Pure religion and undefiled,” etc. It is the duty of the Church to attend to
the temporal as well as the spiritual necessities of its members. In this
Christ has left us an example. The gospel is more a record of His beneficent
acts than of His doctrinal ideas.
2.
The absorbing work of the gospel ministry. This the twelve referred to
as a reason. The deacons were elected not to rule, as some arrogant modern
deacons fancy, but to relieve the preachers; so that, undistracted, they might
give themselves wholly to their proper work.
II. The method of their election.
1.
The Church had its part—to look out the seven most suitable men, a
work requiring inquiry, good judgment, and responsibility.
2.
The apostles had their part.
(1) They
originated the election. The suggestion for new officers came from them, not
from the members; and they, not the members, called the Church together for the
purpose.
(2) They
directed the election, describing the character of the men to be elected.
(3) They
confirmed the election. The men the Church elected were set before the apostles
for ordination. Had they not, however, been up to the standard, the apostles
had assuredly the right of rejection.
III. The qualification for their election.
1.
Unblemished reputation.
2.
Eminent godliness.
3.
Practical sagacity.
IV. The result of the election (verse 7). The
election operated—
1.
By quelling the spirit of contention, which would obstruct the
advancement of the Church.
2.
By the augmented agency of the Church. Seven noble men set to work.
3.
By enabling the apostles to give themselves entirely to the preaching
of the gospel. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
The first deacons chosen
In the beginning of the preceding chapter, we had
a sad account of an act of fraud and falsehood on the part of some that
contributed to this common fund among the disciples in Jerusalem; and now we
have an account of the murmuring of some of those who received it. The first
was the offspring of great depravity; this is the result of human
imperfections. The one was met by a very strong measure; this is met by
conference, by advice, by calling into exercise the principles of common sense
and the feelings of their common Christianity.
I. The narrative. Notice—
1.
The increase of the disciples. In spite of the persecution which the
Church was continually meeting with, we have continual statements of its
prosperity and increase. I have no doubt that by this time the number of
Christians in Jerusalem was ten thousand.
2.
When you think about these ten thousand people, you see at once that
this common fund cannot mean that all these people had given up all their
property, and that there was a distribution made to every one of this whole
multitude. What! had they given up their trades? had they left their workshops,
their farms, and merchandise? No; they were going on, I suppose, fulfilling
their daily duties. Then did they bring all their wages and profits, throwing
all this into a common fund, and taking back every day what was required, more
or less according to their circumstances? You cannot suppose any such thing.
Why, if they were to call the whole ten thousand together every morning, and
give them only a shilling each, there would be five hundred pounds wanted every
day. We must look at this fund as just a provision for those who were in
necessitous circumstances.
3.
Now things went on for some time, till at last “there arose a
murmuring,” a dissatisfaction. Some began to feel that there was not proper
attention paid them, and it reached the ears of the apostles, who proceed to
make the arrangement here mentioned. You will see at a glance that previous to
this somebody must have done this work. The thing had been done before. In Act_2:44-45, it is said, “All that believed were
together, and had all things common, and sold their possessions and goods, and
parted them to all men, as every man had need”—i.e., each one at first
distributed his own benevolence. The advance upon that you have at the end of
the fourth chapter. The first rude idea was for every man to act for himself,
and come with his hands full and his heart full, and just dispense according to
the impulse of his feeling; and the first modification of that was, for all to
bring what they had to give, and lay it down at the apostles’ feet, and so there
would be something like regularity in the distribution, and investigation, and
examination of the particular case and circumstances; whereas in the other way
it could not be done, and one might be receiving from many. And that goes on,
the apostles (I suppose) trying to do it. But not, I apprehend, without
assistance from the hundred and twenty, who would probably all be Hebrews. But
here were the Grecians; and there might be a feeling rising up, with no
foundation, that there was a neglect of their widows in the daily ministration.
So difficult it is, you see, even under the guidance of the Divine Spirit, and
with the first love and strong affection of the early Christians, to get rid of
all those party prejudices and suspicions which rise up in society and array
class against class. But the murmuring comes to the ears of the apostles, and
something must be done to meet it.
4.
“Then the twelve called the multitude of the disciples unto them,”
Does that mean the whole ten thousand? Supposing there were not ten thousand?
Could five thousand men transact business? Any of you that know anything about
business, know how difficult it is to get anything done even in a large
committee. In order to get through business, you must have a few heads, with
strong hearts and hands connected with them, that will really do something. I
cannot, therefore, feel myself warranted in stating that this is really to be
taken positively and literally. I do not know where they would meet in
Jerusalem—so many of them. I know that, afterwards, when Peter was in prison,
“prayer was made without ceasing of the Church,” meeting in a private house—in
the house of the mother of John Mark; and I dare say there were little knots of
such all over the city. I think, in this case, the principal part of those they
would call together would be Grecians—the principal persons of that party—and
it would be a full meeting, and open for any to attend who felt interested in
the matter; but we cannot suppose that there was the whole, or anything like
the whole, of the mass of Christians in Jerusalem. When they were come
together, the apostles said, “It is not reason that we should leave the Word of
God and serve tables,” which may mean, “The thing does not work well, does not
give universal satisfaction; we are doing the best we can, but it is not
reasonable that we should be exclusively devoted to this thing; we have had our
heads and our hearts full of anxiety about this matter, and we find it is not
reasonable that we should ‘serve tables,’ for we feel that in doing so we must
‘leave the Word of God,’ and we must not do that; and therefore, as we have
already made one departure from the first rude idea to a better, we must try
now to get a best, and we propose now that seven men be looked out for this
duty.”
5.
“And the saying pleased the whole multitude; and they chose Stephen,”
etc. It is remarkable that all these names are Greek; and this was probably
done to satisfy the Grecians. Or if, in “the multitude of the disciples,” there
were included some of the principal persons among the Hebrews, then this marks
also the kindly and liberal feeling among them, arranging that from that party
and that class that complains, every individual of the seven was chosen. “Whom
they set before the apostles.” We do not know how they chose them. There was
some meeting of the brethren—the more distinguished and influential, I think;
and these individuals were fixed upon, and they were presented to the apostles.
6.
“And when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them.” I think
this was just the solemn and public representation before the eyes of the
people that they parted with so much of that power which they had hitherto
exercised in relation to this business, and that henceforth these men were to
be held responsible for the exercise of it.
7.
There was peace restored to the Church; no longer divisions, or
heart-burnings, or jealousies; and then, as the result, one might think, we
immediately read again that “the number of the disciples multiplied greatly.”
Just as you find in the beginning of the fifth chapter, that when purity was
restored, then as the result there was a great increase of the Church, so now
peace and purity are favourable to all those affections and feelings and
activities by which an increase of the body may be expected. The Word of God
increased and prevailed in two ways.
(1) With
respect to the number of the disciples.
(2) With
respect to a particular class of person; so that some of the most unlikely
men;—“a great company priests, Were obedient to the faith.” Some people can
hardly believe this; but “why should it be thought a thing incredible with us,”
that in those days of miracle and the pouring down of the Divine Spirit, there
should be manifested the power of the faith and grace of Christ upon these men?
II. The lessons. Now see—
1.
How difficult it is, even when men’s hearts are in the right place and
in a good state, to prevent jealousies and misunderstandings among a large body
of people.
2.
How a liberal, open, manly, common-sense pilicy, under the blessing of
God, may meet and allay this sort of thing; when men will calmly look at it,
and observe that something must be done, and endeavour in an open and honest
spirit to do it.
3.
What an admirable opportunity this would have been to mention something
about priesthood! There are some men that are very fond of getting priests into
the Christian Church; but here was a great number of real priests actually
brought into the Church, and we hear nothing about them. They stand as simple
disciples. Standing there upon the common floor of the Christian temple, they
had a greater, purer, more elevated priesthood than that which they had
sustained as the offspring of Aaron.
4.
Have we the origin of the office of deacons here? They are not called
deacons. The word, indeed, from which “deacons” comes, is used in the account
two or three times. It is used with respect to the apostles’ “giving themselves
to the deaconship of the Word”; and then these men to “the deaconship of
tables.” The word “deacon” is a very general term, signifying ministry or
service, occurring a great many times in the New Testament. It is applied to
the apostles, to Timothy, to Jesus Christ. But yet it did come to a technical
and an official sense, and to signify a particular officer in the Christian
Church, as the Church began to grow. And I think that this was the origin of
the office of the deacon; though, perhaps, that office, in the course of time,
took some degree of modification, as distinct from the one thing for which
these men were appointed; for they were chosen with a very limited duty with
respect to this particular thing. (T. Binney.)
Dissensions and precautions
I. The inner life of the primitive church.
1.
The election sprang out of the multiplying, and the multiplying begat
a murmuring. Increase of numbers does not always mean increase of happiness and
true spiritual life. God has made all things double one against another; and
when He bestows such notable increase, He adds some counterbalancing
disadvantage to keep His people humble.
2.
The distribution of alms is always attended by jealousies and
disputes, rendering the work one of the most unpleasant tasks which can be
undertaken. Fretting and worry, weary days and sleepless nights, are often the
only reward a Christian philanthropist receives. But here comes in the Acts of
the Apostles to cheer. The apostles themselves did not escape the accusation of
favouritism, and we may well content to suffer what they were compelled to
endure.
3.
The primitive Church was no ideal communion, but a society with
failings and weaknesses and discontentent, exactly like those which exist in
the Church of our own times. The apostolic Church did not disdain a mere
economic question.
II. What lay at the basis of this murmuring, and of
the jealousies thereby indicated? If we wish to understand the course of events
in the Acts, we must refer to the books of Maccabees, where is told the
romantic story of the struggle of the Jews against the Greek kings of Syria,
who tried to force them into conformity with the religion of Greece, which then
was counted the religion of civilisation and culture. The result was that the
intensely national party became bitterly hostile to everything pertaining to
Greece and its civilisation. “Cursed be he who teacheth his son the learning of
the Greeks,” was a saying among the Hebrews; while again, we hear of Rabban
Simeon, the son of Gamaliel, who used to embody his hatred of the Grecians in
the following story: “There were a thousand boys in my father’s school, of whom
five hundred learned the law., and five hundred the wisdom of the Greeks; and
there is not one of the latter now alive, excepting myself here and my uncle’s
son in Asia.” Heaven itself was supposed by the Hebrews to have plainly
declared its hostility against their Grecian opponents. Hence, naturally, arose
the same divisions at Jerusalem. The bitter dissensions which racial and
linguistic differences have made in the Church of every age are here depicted
in miniature. The quarrels between East and West, Greeks and Latins, whites and
negroes, European Christians and Hindoo converts, all turn upon the same points
and embody the same principles, and may best find solution upon the lines laid
down by the apostles. There are diversities of function and of work in the
Church—a ministry of the Word, and a serving of tables. One class should not
absorb every function.
III. The people nominated, while the apostles
appointed. They took the most effective plan to quiet the trouble which had
arisen when they took the people into their confidence. The Church has been
often described as the mother of modern freedom. The councils of old time were
the models and forerunners of modern parliaments. How many a quarrel in life
would be avoided, how many a rough place would be made smooth, were the
apostolic example always followed. Men naturally resist a law imposed from
without, without any appearance of consultation with them or of sanction on their
part; but men willingly yield obedience to laws, even though they may dislike
them, which have been passed with their assent and appeal to their reason. (G.
T. Stokes, D. D.)
The division of work
Some kinds of work are easier to learn than
others. Some callings and professions require a long and special training,
others are more easily acquired. All cannot teach, all are not called to the
higher offices of the Church. The work of the Church may be compared to that of
some extensive manufactory. Do not we seek from the raw, or at any rate from
the unrefined material, to produce the perfect fabric? The material upon which
we work is in every stage of refinement; it is of every class of texture. All
have not to pass through the same process; what may refine some would surely
damage others. We do not place the message in the same words before the
uneducated and the highly cultured. And just as there are degrees of know]edge
in the learners, so there may be in the teachers. Because we are not fitted to
explain Christian truth to those who have learnt much, we have no right to
conclude that there is no sphere in which we may teach. In a manufactory there
are workers of every degree of skill and capacity, from the hewers of wood and
drawers of water, to those by whose brain power, knowledge, thought, and
foresight the working of the great concern is directed. The opportunities of
the Church worker to-day are manifold indeed; and they vary according to the
local conditions. Think how musical gifts and abilities may be devoted to the
service of God, by making more beautiful, more devotional, the services of the
Church, the mission room, the Sunday school, the cottage lecture! Think how
financial and business capabilities may be employed in the careful management of
various philanthropic agencies! How a knowledge of elementary science and the
laws of life may be directed towards improving the conditions under which the
ignorant and careless live! I might go on to speak of the work on behalf of
temperance, purity, thrift. Then, again, a band of earnest district visitors is
among the clergyman’s very greatest helps. The abilities necessary for the
successful performance of this work are within the reach of many. The first
requisite is sympathy, the next a knowledge of human character. (W. E.
Chadwick, M. A.)
Acts
6:3-6
Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven
men.
The work of the Spirit in the deaconship of the
Christian Church
I. The reasons assigned.
1.
That the apostles might be relieved of secular duties. This did not
arise out of any idea of superiority. They were the servants of all, ready to
be, do, or suffer anything that might be for the glory of God and the good of
men. Nor did it arise from any low estimate of the temporal interests of the
Church. They were no ascetics. Temporalities were important in themselves, and
in their influence on spiritual concerns. It arose out of their higher office
and its absorbing claims. With these nothing must be allowed to interfere.
However valuable the bodies of men, their souls were more so. What reproof is
here administered to modern ministers and laymen! How many ministers are
serving tables! And the offence is aggravated when this is the result of lay
neglect. Both are sufferers—the minister whose mind is secularised, and the
people who are less effectually instructed.
2.
That the apostles might give themselves wholly to their proper duties.
This is “reason.” The duty of a minister is to aim at the conversion of
sinners, and to employ all means to secure that. And the danger is lest his
mind should be brought under any influence that would disincline or disqualify
it. These ends are only to be gained by an entire devotion to the sacred
calling. Paul says to Timothy, “Give thyself wholly to them.” The philosophy is
as sound as the sentiment is heavenly. The physician who would be successful in
his profession must be devoted to it. So must the merchant and the labourer.
The apostles were to give themselves to prayer in secret, and the Word in
public. Without prayer there will be no heart for the Word—no success in it.
Without the Word prayer will be a pretence and a mockery. Together they are
omnipotent through grace. Let all the arrangements of the Church be such as to
cherish and encourage their union. Let its temporalities be so managed by the
members that the ministry may be relieved.
II. The manner. Church officers in the apostolic age
were chosen by Church members. Matthias was so chosen. The voice of the Church
is essential to the validity of the ministry. Members have an interest in the
minister they have chosen which they can never have in one placed over them
without their approval At the same time guards are necessary.
1.
The purity of the Church. Its membership must not be a promiscuous
community. Men of the world are incompetent to elect a Christian minister.
2.
The sanction of the existing ministry. As these deacons were elected
by the people, they were appointed by the apostles. Both had their rights and
their duties. Either might refuse consent. And thus the one was a wholesome
restraint on the other. What a consummate knowledge of human nature was
manifested in the organisation of the Church! Its Author truly “knew what was
in man.”
III. The qualifications (Act_6:3;
Act_6:8). Note that these are the qualifications
required for the management of temporal concerns. It must not be supposed,
then, that mere business men can manage such. They have a sacred bearing; they
must be conducted on holy principles, and be directed to holy ends. The meanest
duties may be elevated by high motives. The deacons were to be—
1.
Men of honest report. Their conduct must be such as to command
respect. The public seldom err in their judgment of men. They may dislike their
piety and persecute them, but secretly they will honour them, especially if
they are, as they ought to be, useful and amiable as well.
2.
Full of the Holy Ghost. Not only should they be men of piety, but
eminently so.
3.
Men of wisdom. Piety, although the first requisite, is not the only
one. There are men of whose godliness we may be persuaded, but in whose ability
for the direction of affairs we have not confidence.
4.
Full of faith.
5.
As a result of all this there will be power—mighty influence for good.
IV. The appointment.
1.
The disciples set the elected deacons before the apostles.
2.
The apostles prayed over them. Without God it was felt that the whole
procedure was vain. We must do nothing in the Church on which we may not ask
His blessing.
3.
Then they laid their hands upon them. The Spirit was sought for men
who already had the Spirit, and this was to be a token of the increase of His
gifts and graces for their new duties.
V. The effects.
1.
Many evils were prevented of which no mention is made.
(1) The
discontent was silenced, for the cause was removed.
(2) The
apostles were not hindered or distracted by misunderstandings in the Church.
2.
Better than this, much good was done.
(1) The Word of
God increased. It was preached more generally and powerfully, and a greater
blessing rested on the preachers.
(2) The most
prejudiced, “the priests,” were persuaded. The bitterest enemies were won to
friendship, and so far the greatest barrier to the gospel was thrown down.
“When a man’s ways please the Lord, He maketh his enemies to be at peace with
him.” Conclusion: Note the connection between a right ecclesiastical polity and
a successful ministration of the Word. Of course God can bless His Word under
any polity; but there is a polity that hinders and a polity that promotes the
truth. (J. Morgan, D. D.)
Suitable men to be sought out by the Church
A radical mistake has been committed in supposing
it is necessary in all cases for the desire after the sacred office to rise up
first of all and spontaneously in the breast of the aspirant. In consequence of
this, many have thrust themselves forward who were altogether unfit for the
work; while many, as eminently qualified for it, have been kept back by
modesty. Does it not seem to be the work of the pastors and the churches to
call out from among themselves the most gifted and pious of their members for
this object? Should this matter be left to the inflations of self-conceit, the
promptings of vanity, or the impulses, it may be of a sincere, but at the same
time of an unenlightened zeal? Nothing can be more erroneous than that this
call of the Church would be an officious intermeddling with the work of the
Spirit in calling the ministry—for it may surely be conceived to be quite as
rational a notion to suppose that the Spirit calls a person through the medium
of the Church and its pastor, as to imagine that the commission from above
comes direct to the heart of an individual—especially as the Church and the
pastor, or at any rate the latter, is usually applied to, as a judge of the
candidate’s fitness for the work; and thus, after all, the power and the right
of pronouncing a judgment upon the alleged call of this Divine agent are vested
with the pastor and the Church. To affirm that an individual cannot be supposed
to have a very great fitness for the office, unless his love of souls has been
strong enough to prompt him to desire the work of the ministry, and that he is
not likely to be very earnest in it, if he be thus sent, instead of his going
of his own accord, is assuming too much; for on the plan here recommended, it
is supposed that the individual who attracts the attention of the pastor is one
who, in addition to true piety and competent abilities, has manifested an
active zeal in the way of doing good. It is only on such an one that his eye
would light, or to whom he would venture to make the suggestion. In nil the
official appointments recorded in the New Testament, from an apostle down to a
deacon, the people were requested to look out for suitable men, and not to wait
till they presented themselves. (J. A. James.)
Why seven deacons
Some have asserted that it was so determined
because seven was a sacred number, others because there were now seven
congregations in Jerusalem, or seven thousand converts. Perhaps, however, the
true reason was simply that seven is a very convenient practical number. In
case of a difference of opinion a majority can always be secured on one side or
other, and all blocks avoided. The number seven was long maintained in
connection with the order of deacons, in imitation of the apostolic
institution. A council at Neo-Caesarea, A.D. 814, ordained that the number of
seven deacons should never be exceeded in any city, while in the Church of Rome
the same limitation prevailed from the second to the twelfth century, so that
the Roman cardinals, who were the parochial clergy of Rome, numbered among them
merely seven deacons down to that late period. The seven chosen by the
primitive Church were to be men of good report because they were to be public
functionaries, whose decisions were to allay commotions and murmurings; and therefore
they must be men of weight, in whom the public had confidence. But, further,
they must be men “full of the Spirit and of wisdom.” Piety was not the only
qualification; they must be wise, prudent, sound in judgment as well. (G. T.
Stokes, D. D.)
We will give ourselves continually to prayer, and
to the ministry of the Word.—
Prayer and preaching
Alternate or simultaneous, are the right and left
side of a living ministry. The preaching work may be laboriously and
conscientiously performed without comfort or success if the other side be from
any cause paralysed. I watched once the operations of a brick-maker in a field
of clay. There was great agility in his movements. He wrought by piece, and the
more he turned out the higher was his pay. His body moved like a machine. His
task for a time was simply to raise a quantity of clay from a lower to a higher
level by means of a spade, lie threw up one spadeful, and then he dipped his
tool in a pail of water that stood by. After every spadeful of clay there was a
dip in the water. The operation of dipping occupied as much time as raising. My
first thought was, if he should dispense with these apparently useless
baptisms, he might perform almost double the amount of work. My second thought
was wiser: on reflection, I saw that if he should continue to work without
these alternate washings, the clay would have stuck to the spade, and progress
would have been altogether arrested. I said to myself, Go thou and do likewise.
Prayer is the baptism which makes progress quick. (W. Arnot, D. D.)
Ministers should give themselves to prayer
“I was lately in company of one of our older
ministers,” said a young minister the other day; “one who has laboured long and
with much success in some of the most difficult fields of the Church. The
object of my interview was to learn from him the secret of success with which
it had pleased God to crown his ministry in positions and places where others
had failed. Instead, however, of directly giving me the information I desired,
he told me with great sorrow the reason why he had accomplished so little, and
said with unaffected sadness, ‘My young friend, the mistake of my life has been
that I have not prayed more. I fell into the error of most ministers—I studied
and preached. I worked and worried too much, and I prayed too little. Could I
live my life over again, I would be more with God and less with men. I see it
all now—what wasted years of unrest I have passed, how much of my life was my
own doing, and how little of God has been in my active ministry! I can now, in
the evening of my days, only ask God to forgive my shortcomings, and to aid me
in spending my few remaining years differently from the imperfect way in which
I have served my Master.”
Prayer and power
A friend who knew Mr. Spurgeon many years ago,
and who heard him preach on many occasions, says that he once heard him preach
in one of our large towns in the afternoon and evening on a certain day; and
that at the close of the afternoon service Mr. Spurgeon spoke of the
consciousness that the service had not been what it should have been. His
friend (then a student) admitted that he thought the preacher had not been
himself in the preaching. Mr. Spurgeon, with a remark to the effect that it
would never do to repeat the failure in the evening, went out into the woods to
pray. Indeed, he spent the whole interval between the afternoon and evening
services in prayer. The latter meeting was one of great power, and different in
all respects from that of the afternoon. Many preachers of to-day might imitate
Mr. Spurgeon’s example with great advantage to themselves and their
congregations.
Prayer and ministerial success
A minister observing a poor man by the roadside
breaking stones with a hammer, and kneeling to get at his work the better, said
to him, “Ah, John, I wish I could break the stony hearts of my hearers as
easily as you are breaking these stones!” The man replied, “Perhaps, master,
you don’t work on your knees?”
They laid their hands on them.—
Imposition of hands
This action was of frequent use among the ancient
Jews. The apostles must have remembered that it was employed in the designation
of Joshua as leader of Israel in place of Moses (Num_27:18-23;
cf. Deu_34:9), that it was used even in
the synagogue in the appointment of Jewish rabbis, and had been sanctioned by
our Lord’s practice. They naturally, therefore, used this symbol upon the
solemn appointment of the first deacons, and the same ceremonial was repeated
upon similar occasions (see Act_13:3; 2Ti_1:6; Heb_6:2).
This ceremony was also employed by the apostles as the rite which filled up and
perfected the baptism which had been administered by others (Act_8:17). The ceremony of imposition of hands
was so essential and distinguishing a point, that Simon Magus selects it as the
one he desires above all others effectually to purchase, so that the outward
symbol might be followed by the inward grace (Act_8:19).
Again in chap. 19. we find St. Paul using the same visible ceremony in the case
of St. John’s disciples, who were first baptized with Christian baptism, and
then endued by St. Paul with the gift of the Spirit. Imposition of hands in the
case of ordination is a natural symbol, indicative of the transmission of
function and authority. It fitly indicates and notifies to the whole Church the
persons who have been ordained, and therefore has ever been regarded as a
necessary part of ordination. (G. T. Stokes, D. D.)
A man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.—
Stephen’s faith and its source
I. Stephen’s faith. From the speech he made in
defence we may gather some of the leading features of his faith.
1.
Stephen believed that God’s hand was discernible in history. He gives
a rapid survey of the Scripture story from the call of Abraham to the death of
Jesus, and shows how all had been overruled by God. The common notion is that
kings and statesmen make history. Stephen believed that God made it. To him the
value of history was not merely that it told succeeding generations the things
that had happened to their fathers, and the deeds their fathers had done, but
that it revealed God, made known His character, principles, and relationship to
man. The life and soul of history is God. It is noticeable that Stephen’s
speech is far from exact in its statements. Dean Stanley points out no less
than twelve differences from the Mosaic history. But mere precision of record
was not his aim. He desired to show the purposes of God. There may be the most minute
exactitude of delineation, and yet no life. The true artist will sacrifice the
rectitude of a line that he may express the soul of his subject.
2.
Stephen believed that the most noticeable way-mark of the universal
march had just been passed. It was the Cross of Jesus. So far the race had been
journeying on and on to Calvary.
3.
Stephen believed that Jesus, after His Cross and passion, had risen
from the dead, and ascended to the right hand of the Father.
4.
Stephen believed that the exalted Jesus still cared for, and could
help His servants in all their labour and suffering upon earth. He beheld Jesus
“standing on the right hand of God,” as if ready to assist him, and he prayed
to Jesus.
II. Stephen’s possession of the Holy Spirit.
1.
It was this that gave life to his faith. It is not the correctness of
the creed that makes a man a Christian, in the highest sense, but the
quickening power of the Holy Spirit.
2.
If we would be useful as servants of God among men we must be baptized
in the Holy Ghost.
3.
Nay, we cannot live aright without this.
4.
The most important question we can be asked is, “Have ye received the
Holy Ghost?” (J. Kirk Pike.)
The character of Stephen
I. The spiritual endowments by which he was
distinguished. “Full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.”
1.
The high and honourable office to which he was elected would demand
the continual exercise of a simple affiance in the power, the faithfulness, the
love of Jesus Christ—in the stability of that religion to which he was self-devoted—in
the fulfilment of that promise (Mat_28:20).
2.
Stephen was also full of the Holy Ghost. As the Shekinah, the bright
emblem of the Divine presence, descended from heaven and filled the holy of
holies, so did a sacred influence from above fill the heart of Stephen, and
make his body the temple of the Holy Ghost.
II. The earnestness of his labour in the cause of
Christ. He who is full of faith and of the Holy Ghost, proves the power of
religion as a practical principle by abounding in every good word and work. His
obligations to the Fountain of Mercy are so great, his deliverance so gracious,
his hope so animating, his responsibilities so awful, that one master-feeling
will occupy his mind—a desire to walk worthy of God, who hath called him to His
kingdom and glory.
III. To these qualifications of St. Stephen must be
added his boldness in confessing Christ. A. Christian should indeed charge it
upon his conscience to abstain, as much as in him lieth, from religious
controversy. Unnecessary disputes, and oppositions of theological science, are
most unfriendly to the love and power of Divine truth in his heart. But when
his faith is assailed; when the foundation of every hope on which the soul
rests is attacked by the daring impiety of the blasphemer, or the more covert
insinuation of the secret infidel, let him remember that silence and
indifference are treason against the Saviour who bought him with His blood.
IV. Considering the closing events of St. Stephen’s
life in the order of the sacred narrative, we next remark his support in the
hour of trial. He had such a view of his risen Redeemer’s power and glory as
strengthened him to abide unshrinkingly the fate before him; and such a
foretaste of the bliss which awaited him as made him desirous to depart, and to
be with Christ.
V. The charity with which St. Stephen prayed for his
murderers: “Lord, lay not this sin to their charge.” In this spirit of charity
we must live and die if we hope for heaven. Never let us address God with a
prayer for our own pardon, if we cannot unfeignedly pardon others their wrongs
against us.
VI. The confidence with which St. Stephen resigned
his soul into the hand of Christ. (R. P. Buddicom, M. A.)
The Christian full of faith and of the Holy Ghost
Here is an example. How simply is the character
sketched! and how distinctly is it stated whence it was that this man was what
he was! Happy is that Church which has many such among its laity, “men full of
the Holy Ghost and of wisdom.” How shall we know such? What is it that we are
to seek when we wish to be such?
I. Who and what is that man who is full of faith and
of the Holy Ghost? Faith which believes the promise respecting the gift of the
Holy Ghost, which relies upon His presence and help, which looks to Him
continually, leans on His assistance confidently, is necessary to an
individual’s being full of the Holy Ghost: “full of faith” and “full of the
Holy Ghost” are inseparably united: they twine together, they grow up each into
their fulness together. The Holy Ghost is the author of faith: it is by His
gift and operation that the faith of believers “groweth exceedingly.” He
reveals the truth “from faith to faith.” And faith opens wider and wider the
door of the heart for His reception; and faith, acting upon the promises, draws
a larger and a larger indwelling of that blessed visitant. It is almost
needless to say that the expression “being full of the Holy Ghost” must mean
being under the influence of the Holy Ghost—His influence exerted over the
whole man, in all his powers, under all circumstances, at all times. It is by
the Holy Ghost that he is guided. He is continually under the Spirit’s
teaching. That blessed Spirit is acting, with all his trials, by them to
sanctify him. The influence of the Holy Ghost is upon the man in all that he
thinks or does: this is the “being full of the Holy Ghost.” Hence Christians
are said to walk in the Spirit, to pray in the Spirit, to live in the Spirit.
We go on now to the effects produced—those which others see visible in our
disposition and conduct. The indwelling of the Spirit must be manifest to
ourselves. In true Christians—for it is of them that we are now especially
speaking—one of the chief and most evident of the operations of the Holy Ghost,
where His influence is richly imparted, is the shedding abroad a love to God
and a love to all real Christians. In close connection with love is hope, a
confiding trust in God. “And, because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the
Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father” (Gal_4:6). With these, and perhaps springing out
of these in a measure, love and hope, are conjoined joy and peace, the work of
the Holy Ghost. “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace” (Gal_5:22), says the apostle: “joy of the Holy
Ghost” (2Th_1:6), he says again. There
are also exhibitions of Christian excellence—these come from the Spirit: there
are works done by Christians—these are originated by the Spirit. Scripture is
very clear and definite in its language. We must observe it where it is so
marked and positive in its expression: it does not speak of goodness, charity,
temperance, etc., as our own virtues, which we are to follow; but it calls them
“fruits of the Spirit.” “But the fruit of the Spirit,” says St. Paul, “is love,
joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance.”
These, if really Christian graces, come from the Spirit’s operation. He
commences them; He nurtures them; He gives them their growth; He will bring
them out to their full completion in another world. I would observe, too, that
all these fruits of the Spirit must be sought by the Christian. Our Saviour
denounces the breaking one of His least commandments. These graces of the Holy
Ghost differ, in many respects, from those excellencies which the unchanged
heart of man can exhibit. We may notice one of these graces in St. Stephen,
that man “full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.” Christian graces have their
opposites, but both appear. Where the Spirit of God works it will be so. See in
St. Stephen the lion and the lamb united: he is the lion in courage, as he
meets his persecutors, as he stands up valiant for the truth: he is the lamb in
meekness, as he kneels down and prays for his murderers, “Lord, lay not this
sin to their charge.”
II. Our sinfulness in coming short of this, or it may
be even, solemn and painful as is the thought, in some instances, the not
possessing it at all. Think how often His good influences have been quenched,
His work upon the soul interfered with, and more or less marred! Be humbled on
account of these things. Endeavour to see them rightly. Confess them. This is
the only way to obtain blessing from God.
III. The encouragements to our seeking this character,
and, in dependence upon God, making it our object to be men full of faith and
of the Holy Ghost. (J. E. Dalton, B. D.).
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