Acts 4:13, "Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, they marveled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus."
It had been almost two months since the crucifixion of Jesus,
but in the eyes of the world, Jesus’ birth, life, and death on the cross was no
more than a momentary blip on the screen of time. He was just another religious
fanatic who had come and gone. Pilate washed his hands of him. The Pharisees
were glad to get rid of him. The people no longer cared because he was not the
political Messiah they hoped for.
But when Peter and John came to town, it did not take long
for the people to see that there was something different about these two
disciples. They weren’t just religious fanatics or insurrectionists against the
Romans or rebellious Christians fighting against the religious establishment.
People sat up and took notice that there was something real about them. The
Bible says that even the doubters and sinners had to take note that Peter and
John “had been with Jesus."
When you got around these men, you could sense the love of
Jesus, who had given his life for the sin of the world; you could see the
radiance of Jesus as the glory of his power shone through, and you could feel
the very presence of Jesus, as the Holy Ghost moved upon the heart of men.
Let’s look at some of the characteristics of someone who has been with Jesus!
The first characteristic is that of Compassion.
Acts 3:1-8; "Now Peter and John went up together into
the temple at the hour of prayer, being the ninth hour. And a certain man lame
from his mother’s womb was carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the
temple which is called Beautiful, to ask alms of them that entered into the
temple; Who seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple asked an alms.
And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us. And he gave
heed unto them, expecting to receive something of them. Then Peter said, Silver
and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus
Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk. And he took him by the right hand, and
lifted him up: and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength. And
he leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple,
walking, and leaping, and praising God."
Peter and John had traveled this path many times before. I
wonder how often they had passed by this same lame man and never noticed him.
They were too consumed with their own plans and concerns to see their
fellowman's needs. But now, something has happened! Now they had been with the
Lord, and the power of the Holy Ghost had come over them and filled them with a
greater love for people. God had interrupted their plans and changed their
plans to fulfill the calling of God upon their lives, and now they had compassion
and took the time to show this man the love of God.
You cannot help but be compassionate with people when you
have been with Jesus because Jesus was a man of compassion. We aren’t Peter and
John; maybe we haven’t walked face-to-face with Jesus as they did. However, we
have been saved by the Blood of the Lamb, baptized in the name of Jesus, filled
with the power of the Holy Ghost, and the Love of God, which has constrained us
to do His work.
God’s love is a love that is ever reaching out to those in
need. He wants to supply their need and use you and me, as much as possible, to
be His hands and feet in this world.
I read a story once about an orphanage with a superintendent
who would always pray with his children. When he asked for the blessing, he
would bow his head with all the little children in this orphanage, saying,
"Lord Jesus, we thank you for the food you have provided. We want you to
come and be our honored guest at this meal."
Well, one little fellow had heard that prayer many times and
finally said, "Why doesn’t Jesus ever come? You always invite Him to be
our guest. Will He ever come?"
This superintendent said, "Well, He will come if we want
him to." This little fellow said, "Well, I’m going to put a chair out
for Him." He put a chair right next to his chair and said, "This
chair is for Jesus if He comes."
Well, that same day, there was a knock at the door, and they
went to the door. There was an older man in rags who was hungry, shivering, and
cold. The superintendent said, "Sir, come and share a meal with us. We’d
be glad to have you. Just come in here and sit down and warm yourself. We even
have a chair for you. Sit right here." He put the man in the chair set
aside for Jesus.
After this was over, the little fellow looked at the
superintendent and said, "I see it all so clearly now. Jesus couldn’t come
Himself, but he sent this man to take his place." Jesus said, "If you
have done it unto one of the least of these, my brethren, you have done it unto
Me."
When we show compassion to others, it is as though we are
offering it directly to Jesus, and, as I stated, the most significant
indication of a disciple of Jesus is that we have a love for one another and
that love cannot stop in the church. It must reach out to a lost and dying
world.
The Second Characteristic is that of Courage –
in the 4th chapter of Acts, we see Peter and John at work again under the
direction of the Holy Ghost.
Acts 4:1-3, "And as they spake unto the people, the
priests, and the captain of the temple, and the Sadducees, came upon them,
Being grieved that they taught the people, and preached through Jesus the
resurrection from the dead. And they laid hands on them, and put them in hold
unto the next day: for it was now eventide."
Peter and John were arrested for preaching that Jesus was
raised from the dead. They had been warned to stop preaching, but they had a
higher calling from God Almighty. As they preached to the Jews about the
crucifixion and resurrection, their message became a stumbling block that made
the Jews look like murderers. They knew that the Jews would be angered, but
that didn’t stop Peter and John from preaching. They dared to speak the truth
even though they were surrounded by opposition.
The week before September 11, 2001, 32-year-old Todd Beamer
and his wife, Lisa, had spent a romantic getaway in Italy. The couple returned
home Monday rested and relieved to be reunited with their boys, David, 3, and
Andrew, 1.
But extended family time would have to wait. The following
day, Todd, an executive with Oracle, had to attend a sales reps meeting in
Northern California. He kissed Lisa, who was five months pregnant with their
third child, goodbye and headed to the Newark, New Jersey, airport, where he
boarded United Flight 93 for San Francisco.
About 90 minutes into the westbound flight, the Boeing 757
was approaching Cleveland when three hijackers onboard identified themselves to
the 34 passengers and seven crewmembers and proceeded to take control of the
cockpit and cabin. The plane, now piloted by the would-be terrorists, made a
sharp turn to the south.
Todd reached for the GTE Airphone in the back of one of the
seats and was connected to a GTE supervisor on the ground. He explained to her
what was happening and indicated that he and the other passengers would not
likely survive. He presumed the pilot and co-pilot were already seriously
injured or dead.
The GTE employee explained to Todd what had already happened
at the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Upon hearing this news, Todd must have
realized that the hijackers were intent on crashing the plane into another
prominent building near Washington, D.C. (the direction they were now headed).
Even though the hijacker nearest to Todd had a bomb belted around his waist, he
told the GTE representative that he and a few others were determined to do
whatever they could to disrupt the terrorist’s plan.
He then asked the person on the other end of the phone to
call his wife and report their entire conversation to her (including how much
he loved her). Before hanging up, this committed Christian and devoted family
man, who taught Sunday school each week, asked the GTE employee to pray the
Lord’s Prayer with him. With the sound of passengers screaming in the
background, she complied. When they concluded the prayer, Scott said,
"Help me, God. Help me, Jesus."
The GTE employee then heard Todd say, apparently to the other
three businessmen he’d alluded to earlier: "Are you ready, guys? Let’s
roll!" With that, the phone went dead. Within a few minutes, Flight 93
nose-dived into a rural field 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, leaving a
crater 40 feet deep as it disintegrated upon impact.
Because Todd Beamer was committed to Jesus Christ and his
Kingdom, he was willing to do whatever was necessary to put the needs of others
above his own fear of danger and imminent death. Thanks to him and the three
other businessmen who joined him, the intended target in the nation’s capital
was not reached, and who knows how many lives were saved because of that? No
one on the ground was killed. According to Todd’s wife, Lisa, "His example
of courage has given me, my boys (and my unborn baby) a reason to live."
Satan has hijacked thousands of people, intending to crash
their lives. We need the courage that Todd Beamer and the others had. We need
to take back the plane. We need to rescue those folks before it is too late.
But where can we get the courage to lead people out of darkness and show them
the light?
Acts 4:13, "Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and
John, and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, they marveled;
and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus."
Peter and John possessed the strength they needed to stand
courageously, and Todd Beamer possessed that same strength because they had
been with Jesus. One of the most noted preachers who ever lived, Charles
Spurgeon, said, "There is something in the very tone of the man who has
been with Jesus, which has more power to touch the heart than the most perfect
oratory.”
Do you know what the source of that power to speak is? It’s
the power of the Holy Ghost within you, speaking through you and giving you the
power to overcome the enemy and speak with boldness as you share the message of
the cross with others.
The third characteristic is that of Commitment.
Peter and John were sold out lock, stock, and barrel to Jesus. They were
committed to Jesus. No one, not family nor friends, and nothing of this world
meant more to them than Jesus. They were committed to preaching the gospel of
Jesus Christ at all costs.
If a law were passed today that would make it a crime to talk
about Jesus, it wouldn’t bother some people because some of us never speak
about Jesus anyway. It might even make a few nervous Christians feel better.
They could blame their lack of witnessing on the new law and remove the guilt
that they carry now because they don’t share Jesus.
Their lives would have been much easier if the disciples had
not preached the gospel. Nobody would have ever been upset with them. They
would never have been in danger of persecution or imprisonment. They could have
lived a nice, quiet life and died of old age instead of the torture and torment
that they had to endure for the gospel’s sake. All of them except John, who was
boiled in oil but lived, gave their lives for the gospel message.
I believe that the reason most Christians don’t talk about
Jesus to other people is that we are afraid of what people will say about us,
and we are so scared of what people will speak against us. But if you have ever
indeed met the risen Jesus or have ever really been with Jesus, you will have
to say what these disciples said: "We cannot but speak the things which we
have seen and heard."
Peter and John were not only committed to preaching about
Jesus….they were also committed to pleasing Jesus. They didn’t care about
pleasing men. All they cared about was pleasing God. In Acts chapter 5, we have
a re-run of this same thing that occurred in chapter 4.
Acts 5:25-29, "Then came one and told them, saying,
Behold, the men whom ye put in prison are standing in the temple, and teaching
the people. Then went the captain with the officers, and brought them without
violence: for they feared the people, lest they should have been stoned. And
when they had brought them, they set them before the council: and the high
priest asked them, Saying, Did not we straitly command you that ye should not
teach in this name? and, behold, ye have filled Jerusalem with your doctrine,
and intend to bring this man’s blood upon us. Then Peter and the other apostles
answered and said, We ought to obey God rather than men."
Here they
were, Peter and John, in prison again. How many of our church world today would
shun them for having been criminals in lock up? It seemed that in those early
days of the church, and even now in some of our mission fields, preachers spend
more time witnessing from the jail than from the pulpit in a church.
They had been commanded to remain quiet by the law of the
land. The religious leaders didn’t care whether they walked the streets or not,
as long as they didn’t preach about this Jesus!
But Peter and John couldn’t keep silent. They had a higher
calling and were committed to that calling in God. When a man has been with
Jesus, all that matters is obeying God.
Truett Cathy, the founder of Chick-fil-A restaurants, is a
successful businessman. Still, for many, he is even better known—and
respected—for letting his faith guide his business operation. Even though his
restaurants are found in malls and shopping centers where every other business
operates every day of the week, Mr. Cathy’s restaurants have been closed on
Sundays since 1948. He doesn’t care whether he loses millions of dollars of
business. His first commitment is to honor the Lord’s Day.
Many people have begged him to open Chick-fil-A on Sundays,
but he says No. Public opinion doesn’t drive his decisions…God does!
Looking around at churches all across America, we don’t see
that kind of commitment much anymore. In fact, we see Christians among those
who stay in the shopping centers, forcing businesses to remain open to get
their money.
Think about it. Our little towns once honored Sunday as the
Lord’s Day, but no more. Now, we have our sporting events, festivals, and
anything else we can come up with on Sunday because we know that’s when we will
draw the biggest crowds and the most money. The love of money and pleasing the
flesh is vastly more important than honoring the Lord’s Day for most
Christians.
We should be so close to Jesus that we always strive to
please Him, not man.
There is a valuable lesson to learn here. These disciples
were uneducated. They were untrained. They didn’t have a lot of influence,
power, or intellectual brilliance, but they were mighty servants of God because
they had been with Jesus.
How can you tell if someone has been with Jesus? If you see
compassion, courage, and a commitment to Christ…then you can tell someone has
been with Jesus. Think about your own life. When people look at you, what do
they see? Do they see a lukewarm, half-hearted, professing Christian? Or do
they see something different? Do they see a Christian who is on fire for God?
Do they see someone who has been with Jesus?
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