Last updated on November 14, 2024
The first five chapters of Acts fly by. There are so many stories that Luke crams in. Yet now he decides to take a full two chapters to tell the story of a man named Stephen. I honestly would love a bit more commentary on what had happened over the last few weeks, but apparently there is something important here that he wants to focus on. So who was Stephen?
We first meet Stephen during those early days when the Church was experiencing immense growth. People were being overlooked, so seven men known to be “full of the Spirit and wisdom” were chosen to help manage the beautiful chaos. Stephen was one of those.
When Stephen wasn’t bringing structure to chaos, he was telling people about Jesus. And he was demonstrating the kingdom through signs and wonders. He was a compelling presence, and people flocked to him. The religious leaders, yet again jealous, attempted to debate him but were no match.
So they convinced some men to say that they had heard Stephen speak blasphemous words against Moses and against God.
Stephen was brought before the Sanhedrin (a Jewish ruling body). The false witnesses testified against him. Those false witnesses said that Stephen was speaking against their law and saying that “this Jesus” wanted to change all of the customs that Moses had handed down to his people all of those many years ago.
I think the reason Luke includes such a long story is that, as we’ll see, this Jesus movement was about to expand past the Jewish people into the Gentile world. It would be good for those who enter this movement to understand the fuller story of the Jewish people.
So Stephen tells the Jewish people their own story. He begins with Abraham leaving everything he knew to go to a new place because he trusted God. He moved on to God rescuing his people from slavery in Egypt. Through both of these stories we see ordinary people placing their trust in a God who often invited his people to follow him in rather strange ways. But this God was over and over again revealed to be loving and faithful to his people.
Stephen then dives into the part of the story when God made them into a nation as they followed Joshua, and then into one of the greatest nations as they followed David and Solomon.
Throughout all of this, the crowd is nodding their heads. They like this guy. He knows his history, and he tells their history in such a compelling way. But then he turns. He calls them stiff-necked people. He says that their hearts and ears are still uncircumcised. He rebukes them for killing Jesus, who was sent by God, but also for killing those prophets who pointed to Jesus. He wants to remind them that throughout their history, their response to this faithful God was so often unfaithfulness. And so what they had done to Jesus was simply the culmination of their rebellious pattern.
This was too much for them. The members of the Sanhedrin were furious. In that moment, Stephen looked up to heaven and said, “Look, I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.” Without a true trial the mob took Stephen outside of the city, circled up around him and stoned him. Stephen died that day. He is the first Christian martyr. And that day persecution was unleashed upon the Church.
There is one final detail that Luke shares at the end of this story. There was a young man in the crowd named Saul. Luke tells us that he approved of the killing.