The believers
[Acts 5:12-16]
Do you know William Carey, the
Father of Indian Missions (1761-1834)? William
Carey went to India with a dream of mission work after studying Greek, Hebrew,
Latin, and other languages. He received
his commission from the Baptist Missionary Society in England. He studied the Indian languages, compiled an
English-Indian dictionary, and then introduced a printing press from England to
publish the Bible in Indian languages. However,
while Carey was away on a missionary tour, a fire broke out, and the printing
press and manuscripts were completely burned. Nevertheless, Carey did not lose hope. He knelt on the ashes and offered a prayer of
thanksgiving. He sought faith, patience,
and courage to start again. Finally,
starting with the Bengali Bible in 1801, the Bible was translated and published
in 24 Indian dialects. Success and
failure depend on the attitude with which we face the problem. The greatness of a believer lies not in never
failing, but in rising every time he falls. We call those who believe that God is with
them Christians (Internet).
Today, in Acts 5:14, the Bible
says, " Nevertheless, more and more men and women believed in
the Lord and were added to their number." With this verse as the focus, I want to
meditate on what it means to be a believer in four aspects, desiring to receive
God's grace.
First,
the believers are all with one accord.
Look at Acts 5:12 – “At the hands
of the apostles many signs and wonders were taking place among the people; and
they were all with one accord in Solomon's portico.” In Acts 4:30, we see one of the prayers of
the apostles was, " while You extend Your hand to heal,
and signs and wonders take place through the name of Your holy servant Jesus."
We can see that this prayer from Acts 4
was answered in Acts 5:12. Because of
this response to prayer, many people gathered together in Solomon's Portico
with one accord, while the rest dared to associate with them (v. 13). These "rest" were likely hypocrites
among the believers, like Ananias and Sapphira. Due to the fear generated by the events
involving Ananias and Sapphira, they couldn't dare to join those who believed,
even after witnessing God's signs and wonders.
Christians who gather
with one accord receive praise and commendation from people in the world. In
Acts 5:13, the Bible says that when the believers gathered with one accord in
Solomon's Portico, even though there were some who dared to associate with them,
however "the people held them in high esteem." We can also see from Acts 2:47 that the early
church saints received praise from all the people. What a beautiful image of the early church
community, being a church praised by people in the world.
However, look at the churches
nowadays. Are they truly receiving
praise from people in the world? How
about our church? Are we receiving
praise from people in the world? The
decline of a church often starts with the scattering of the hearts of believers
(Park). What do you think about the
statement that when the hearts of the saints are scattered, the church weakens?
A church that does not pray with one
accord will scatter. A church that does
not pray together in faith has double-mindedness (Jam. 1:6-8). In the end, it can only be unstable (verse 6).
In Ephesians 4:5, the apostle Paul
says, "one faith." Like the
early church saints, when we pray in faith, we can come together with one heart.
However, if we pray in doubt, we can
only scatter in the midst of church instability. We must remember: God is not only a God who
gathers, but also a God who scatters. Look at Deuteronomy 28:64 - " Moreover,
the LORD will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the
other end of the earth; and there you shall serve other gods, wood and stone,
which you or your fathers have not known." When God scatters, it leads to the sin of idol
worship. This is especially true when
one makes money an idol and lives for money. Consequently, churches end up divided,
fighting, and scattered over money matters. Therefore, as believers in Jesus Christ, we
must strive to gather together in one faith.
Second,
the believers are constantly added to their number.
Look at Acts 5:14 – “And all the
more believers in the Lord, multitudes of men and women, were constantly added
to their number.” As God answered the
united prayers of the early church saints and performed many signs and wonders
through the hands of the apostles, believers came together with one accord,
receiving praise from the people. This
is a clear work of God. We already know
from our meditation on Acts 2:47 that the Lord was adding to their number day
by day those who were being saved.
Think about it logically. In which church would people gather? In a church where everyone is united in faith,
where people are praised, or in a church where doubting saints keep scattering?
On the internet, I found a post titled ‘What
Makes a Church Attractive and Appealing?’ and I'd like to share it: ‘The church
as the body of Christ possessing the spirituality of community, and every saint
experiencing this, is also the essence of the church. We often find Paul referring to the church as another
family. Yes, the church is like another
family. Men and women, old and young,
the poor and the rich, masters and slaves, sometimes people of different races. They all come together to form a family. Of course, love is the force that bridges the
gaps between them, the consciousness of brotherhood among people who look to
God as their Father. The attractiveness
of the church comes from here. Once you
experience the irresistible charm, you can't leave. It's like savoring something intensely rich,
just like the saying blood is thicker than water. Community, it is the power of being one with
diversity’ (Internet). In this community
of love, coming together with one heart and one mind, there is a work of the
Lord adding believers.
In such a community, the work of
believers coming out to the Lord takes place. We earnestly pray that our church becomes such
a church. A church where it is not by
human effort, but by the saving work of the Lord, a church where those being
saved are added every week, a church where people come out to the Lord just as
He is. This is the kind of church I
dream of and pray for.
Third,
the believers hope.
Look at Acts 5:15 – “to such an
extent that they even carried the sick out into the streets and laid them on
cots and pallets, so that when Peter came by at least his shadow might fall on
any one of them.” Because God enabled
the apostles to perform many signs and wonders, many people gathered in
Solomon's Portico from the surrounding villages of Jerusalem. They even brought the sick out into the
streets, laying them on beds and mats, hoping that Peter's shadow might fall on
some of them (v. 15). Why did they do
this? Professor Sang-seop Yoo explained,
‘They did this because they thought that when the shadow of Apostle Peter
passed by the sick, they might receive healing’ (Yoo). The early church saints had already witnessed
and heard of the miraculous power of God manifested through Peter, who had
raised up a man lame for 40 years, and so they had the expectation that perhaps
even Peter's shadow could bring healing. In the time of Jesus, people in towns, cities,
and villages where Jesus entered would lay the sick in the marketplaces, hoping
to touch even the fringe of His garment, and all who touched it were healed (Mk.
6:53-56). Additionally, when Paul
preached the gospel in Ephesus, people would take handkerchiefs or aprons that
had touched Paul's body and place them on the sick, and their diseases left
them (Acts 19:11-12).
I'm reminded of Hebrews 11:1 -
"Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things
not seen." The believers hope. The believers have faith. The believers are those who, even in the midst
of the seemingly impossible, continue to hope. Just like our faith forefather Abraham, who in
hope believed against hope (Rom. 4:18). Look
at verse 3 and chorus of hymn “My Hope is Built on Nothing Less”: “His oath,
His covenant, His blood, Support me in the whelming flood; When all around my
soul gives way He then is all my hope and stay.
On Christ, the solid Rock, I stand; All other ground is sinking sand, All
other ground is sinking sand.” Living a
life where even when all we once held dear is severed and gone, our hope in
Jesus only grows stronger is the essence of a life of faith.
Fourth
and last, the believers receive healing.
Look at Acts 5:16 – “Also the
people from the cities in the vicinity of Jerusalem were coming together,
bringing people who were sick or afflicted with unclean spirits, and they were
all being healed.” The original meaning
of the phrase "they were all healed" here is "whatever kind of
disease, all were cured." This
means that there was no ailment that the apostles couldn't cure (Park). Grosheide remarked, ‘The ability of the
apostles to heal all diseases shows that the work of Christ continued through
them. Their ability to do such work was
due to Christ's resurrection and the giving of the Holy Spirit, and it was a
fulfillment of the mission and promise given by Christ. It is clear that God was with them’ (Park).
The
first verse of the hymn “Heal me now, my Savior, Jesus! Touch and mend my ailing frame. I will heal
all thy diseases. That promise, Lord, I
claim. See me, Lord, expectant kneeling,
Confident in faith appealing. Now, Thy
mighty pow'r revealing, Lord, Heal! in Jesus' name!” This healing ministry is available to the
believers.
The
believers come together with one accord. The believers are constantly added to their
number. And the believers hope. In other
words, the believers have faith and hope. In the midst of such, the believers receive
healing. I hope and pray that this
ministry of healing will be present in your life as you believe in Jesus.
In
faith and hope,
James
Kim
(Only
by faith!)
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