Bible Commentaries

Expositor's Dictionary of Texts

Acts 7

Verses 1-60

St. Stephen's Death

Acts 7:55

Stephen is the first of whom we read that he died after the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, and entered into his glory. The first martyr was now to obtain his crown of life. Now it is a remarkable thing that, with the exception of the death of our Lord Jesus Christ, the death of St. Stephen is the only death about which we have any details in the New Testament Scriptures. We read that Stephen was filled with the Holy Ghost. Now what did the Holy Spirit do for Stephen?

I. It enabled him to see Jesus. This is the precious eye-salve which will enable us to see our Lord. The natural man understandeth not the things of the Spirit of God, but God reveals them to us through His Spirit. When Stephen looked up above all the sorrow and the suffering that was gathering round him, what was it that the Holy Spirit enabled him to see? (1) In the first place, you are told, he saw "the heavens opened". (2) He saw Jesus. (3) He saw Jesus "standing". (4) He "saw the glory of God". This was what a man filled with the Holy Ghost saw. Can we see it when we have to suffer?

II. The Holy Ghost enabled Stephen not only to see Jesus, but to pray to Jesus. It is always when we are most suffering and most tried that we lay firmest hold of the sympathy and love of the Incarnate Christ of God.

III. The Holy Spirit taught Stephen to trust Jesus. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." Acts 7:55

Let us note one or two lessons for ourselves.

I. We are to see the same Jesus Standing at the Right Hand of God—standing with eyes fixed on His servants in their conflict below, ever ready, when need comes, to show Himself to them, to inspirit them by the vision of Himself, to fill them with His own courage, His own calm, His own mind, His own peace. Christ has not gone away from where St. Stephen saw Him. Christ did not do anything for St. Stephen, or in St. Stephen, which He will not do for you, and in you.

II. A Miraculous Calm, a real Supernatural Peace, amid the most Outrageous Catastrophes, Troubles, and Violences, is a Thing which a Servant of God may Pray for in his soul, as much as ever men of old came and asked Christ to work miracles on their bodies. Stephen's dying body lay mangled and smashed on the hard earth; yet his soul was passing away as peacefully as our consciousness fades out in our falling asleep. That was a miracle if ever there was one; a miracle wrought by the power of Christ on the mind and soul of Stephen. And it was written for our admonition, that we may know what miracles Christ is standing ready to work still upon the minds and souls of His people now.

III. Observe how Christ Timed this Visible Manifestation of Himself in His active working and supply of supernatural strength to His suffering servant. Up to this moment, Christ had not openly manifested Himself in His glory and His exaltation. Now, at the outbreak of persecution, He lets Himself be seen. The violent death of the first Christian departure opens heaven, and we see the exalted form of the Victor over death.

The Vision of Christ

Acts 7:55

The appeal of our faith is not to feeling, but to fact. The Crucifixion, the Resurrection, the Ascension of our Lord are facts of history attested by evidence as complete and as satisfactory as can be adduced in support of any other facts of history on record. No more striking illustration of them is afforded in Scripture than by this story of the death of St Stephen, the first on the roll of "the noble army of martyrs "of the Christian Church. Here, indeed, was a practical result of the ascension in St. Stephen's vision of his Lord.

I. How did Christ Appear to St. Stephen?

(a) Suddenly. The veil that hides the unseen world was in a moment lifted.

(b) Sublimely. The vision was glorious, the manner of it was glorious. Christ was glorified, and Christ was at the right hand of power. St. Stephen saw the glory of God, he saw an open heaven. If we did but know it, it is the grace of the glorified Christ that we are made partakers of, and it is the privilege of every Christian to live under an open heaven. Blessed is he who can rise above circumstances and trials and see that the living Christ is on the throne. In those dark hours when sorrow and suffering darken your pathway, and when the shadow of death falls upon your home, at such times if you would endure you must see Him who is invisible. To see Him is to be strong.

II. Christ was "Standing on the Right Hand of God".—Standing is the attitude of—

(a) Interest. All heaven was standing up that day. Angels were straining their eyes to gaze. It was the attitude of interest.

(b) Respect and Honour. If we may so express it, Christ stood to welcome His brave warrior to his reward. It was to say, "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord".

(c) Intercession. Christ stood to plead. Luke 23:34). And what do we read here? "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge" (ver60). St. Stephen forgave his murderers. That is the highest round in the ladder. There is nothing higher in Christian life than to love your enemies. When we have come to that, we have reached the only Christian perfection which is attainable here.

(d) Calmness. Then there was calmness. "When he had said this he fell asleep" (ver60). If we are Christ's then death is not death; it is sleep.

Martyrdom of St. Stephen

Acts 7:55

The life and death of St. Stephen, whom we commemorate today, are full of lessons for those who would be faithful, loyal, and true Christian workers.

I. The Qualification for Service.—St. Stephen could bear his witness to the Lord in the midst of an ungodly and unbelieving world, where everything seemed against him, because he was "full of the Holy Ghost". The great need of the Church today is of men and women who are so filled with the Holy Ghost that they must testify for Christ in whatever circumstances they find themselves placed. No one needs to pray more earnestly than the Christian worker, "O God, for Jesus Christ's sake give me thy Holy Spirit". No real effective service for Christ can be done by any of us unless we have the Holy Spirit dwelling in us. That is the first and greatest qualification for service.

II. The Inspiration for Service.—And as we go on bearing testimony for the Master we need to get fresh strength, fresh inspiration every day. Whence may it be obtained? St. Stephen "looked up stedfastly into heaven," and there he saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. No wonder, with that precious vision before Him, he testified more potently than he had ever done, and that when he was stoned he could pray for his murderers. If we want to feel an inspiration for service, if we want to be strengthened for our work, let us always "look up" even to Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith. It is those who keep their eyes on the ground, and contemplate the difficulties and trials of service, who become weak and ineffective. Ever look up! That is one message St. Stephen gives us today.

III. The Reward of Service.—St. Stephen had his reward, even though his life seemed a failure. To him was granted the blessed privilege of being the first Christian martyr, and so long as the world lasts so long will his name be honoured. But the greatest of all rewards was that just when the last stone killed his body he "fell asleep," and awoke in the Paradise of God. There he saw the King in His beauty. And that reward may be ours. And, oh, the glory and the joy of it! "The sufferings of this present time," says St. Paul, whom we may well believe was more or less prepared for the vision that overtook him as Saul on the way to Damascus by what he had seen of the constancy and faith of St. Stephen, "are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us". May it be ours so to work for Christ and so to suffer with Him that we may hereafter reign with Him.

Reference.—VII:65 , 56.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xiii. No740.

Supreme Moments

Acts 7:56

I want to ask three questions about this declaration. They are questions that can be answered broadly, definitely, and to those of us who want healing they can be answered most healingly, so as to recover us from the plague of unbelief and send us forth, after, it may be, some deep dipping in God's own river, with our flesh as the flesh of a little child.

I. The first question Acts 7:59

St. Augustine dwells on the significance of this festival occurring on the day after that of our Lord's Nativity, alluding to the martyrdom of a saint being called his birthday. "The birthday of the Lord," he says, "when He put on the clothing of our flesh, that of His servant, when he laid that clothing aside; that of the Lord when He was made like unto us, that of His servant when he was brought most near unto Christ. For as Christ being born was united unto Stephen, so Stephen by dying was united unto Christ." Why has the Church assigned to St. Stephen the first place among the three festivals that immediately follow Christmas? Not simply because he was the first martyr. There are other reasons, and they are significant.

I. As an Encouragement to those in the Lowest Station and Office.—St. Stephen was a deacon only, a newly-made deacon, and therefore the very lowest in ecclesiastical degree.

II. As an Encouragement to All Believers.—Having never known Christ in the flesh, but coming to view as it were after the days of the Son of Man upon earth were ended, St. Stephen may be considered to represent the whole body of believers who have lived since the Gospel.

III. He was the First Believer in Christ who Sealed his Faith with his Blood.—He reminds us that the sufferings of Christ's martyrs are very precious indeed in Christ's sight; that the crown of martyrdom brings him who wears it very near indeed to his Lord.

IV. St. Stephen was a Martyr both in Will and Deed.—The Holy Innocents underwent martyrdom in deed but not in will, and the Evangelist St. John in will but not in deed.

The Martyrdom of Stephen (St. Stephen's Day)

Acts 7:59

The early martyrs were affectionately revered by the members of the early Christian Church because of their sincere and lasting devotion to the cause of their glorified Lord. Hence, among others, the anniversary of the martyrdom of St. Stephen, which occurred in the thirty-fourth year of the Christian era, was duly and meetly observed. Some have spoken of him not only as the first of Christian martyrs, but as the greatest of all Christian martyrs.

I. His Character.—He was a man of good repute. This is evident from the office he sustained in the Apostolic Church. He was elected to be a deacon in it; and, according to the Fathers, he held the primacy over the other deacons. He was also a man of strong faith. It is Divinely said that he was "full of faith". This kept the eye of his soul fixed on Jesus, fitted him for earth, and matured him for heaven. He was likewise a man of deep piety. St. Luke affirms that he was "full of the Holy Ghost". Full of light and love because full of Deity, his peace flowed like a river. He was a man of great courage. The advocacy of the truth as it is in Jesus exposed him to fierce persecution, but he stood up nobly for it. And when he exclaimed with rapture, "Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing on the right hand of God," they stopped their ears, and with one accord fell upon him, cast him out of the city, and stoned him.

II. His Martyrdom.—The tragic punishment they inflicted upon him was one legally denounced against notorious criminals. This was the punishment of a blasphemer, and to this awful kind of death St. Stephen yielded himself. Yet how fiendish the conduct of the men who accomplished it! But this death, albeit inhuman and diabolical, was met with prayer. No better proof could be given of the power and goodness of the religion of Jesus Christ. Death, though it came to Stephen in this merciless way, was but a sleep. This beautiful representation is indicative of rest and peace. Stephen had done his work, had accomplished his warfare. "Absent from the body," he was "present with the Lord."

Acts 7:59

In the midst of the acute bodily pain which he endured during that night and the succeeding morning, he expressed his resignation and confidence chiefly in the language of Scripture, and often repeated favourite sentences from the Psalm in Hebrew.... Perceiving nature to be nearly exhausted, his friends requested him to give them a token that he departed in peace; upon which he repeated the last words of the martyr Stephen, and breathed gently away.

—McCrie's Life of Andrew Melville, vol. ii. p440.

References.—VII:59.—J. Hartill, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlix. p116. R. W. Hiley, A Year's Sermons, vol. iii. p155. S. Baring-Gould, Village Preaching for Saints" Days, p26. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xlv. No2644. VII:59 , 60.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xx. No1175. VII:60.—H. J. Wilmot-Buxton, Notes of Sermons for the Year, pt. i. p33. VIII. —Expositor (6th Series), vol. vi. p118. VIII:1.—Ibid. (7th Series), vol. v. p203. VIII:1-4.—Ibid. vol. ii. p388. VIII:2-5.—R. F. Horton, The Hidden God, p127. VIII:4 , 5.—F. D. Maurice, The Acts of the Apostles, p96. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxxiv. No2044. VIII:5.—E. J. Boyce, Parochial Sermons, p143. VIII:8.—R. H. Baynes, True Revival, p42. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xl. No2352. VIII:10.—Expositor (5th Series), vol. vii. p276. VIII:12.—Ibid. (6th Series), vol. v. p45. VIII:14.—Ibid. vol. iii. p351. VIII:16.—Ibid. (4th Series), vol. x. p249; ibid. (6th Series), vol. v. p43. VIII:17.—E. A. Stuart, His Dear Son and other Sermons, p145. VIII:18.—Expositor (4th Series), vol. ix. p83. VIII:21.—B. Fay Mills, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlix. p378. H. Allen, Penny Pulpit, No1592 , p131. VIII:22.—W. Forster, Penny Pulpit, No1649 , p233. Expositor (7th Series), vol. vi. p274. VIII:26.—A. G. Mortimer, The Church's Lessons for the Christian Year, pt. iii. p55. T. F. Crosse, Sermons, p9. VIII:26-38.—J. Bush, Joseph Bush: A Memorial, p138. VIII:26-39.—E. Bersier, Sermons in Paris, p152. VIII:26-40.—C. Perren, Sermon Outlines, p375. Expositor (6th Series), vol. ix. p127. VIII:27 , 28.—H. Jones, Christian World Pulpit, vol1. p92.

Comments



Back to Top

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first!

Add Comment

* Required information
Powered by Commentics
Back to Top