Friends, if we are being completely honest, there is not one of us who has never felt the need to defend ourselves. So, when we go to defend ourselves, do we seek for God’s guidance? There are many places throughout the Word where God permits self-defense from both physical and/or spiritual danger, but His Word always guides us to defend with wisdom, restraint, and righteousness, through the Holy Spirit, Who does not harm others, but guides our souls (minds, wills, and emotions) and hearts with love and never with revenge.
Prior to today’s passage Stephen was falsely accused of blaspheming God, Moses, the Law, and the Temple. In today’s passage, Stephen begins his defense, as he is on trial before the Jewish council of approximately 70 Pharisees and Sadducees (High Priests). Stephen had been performing miracles, and most likely healings, and all in Jesus’s Name. Men were paid to spread lies about Stephen to stop him and to get him on trial. Our passage reveals how the Holy Spirit moved through Stephen to give a defense, and what better way than to walk them (the High Priests) through the early history of Israel. Stephen confronts the Jewish council (the Sanhedrin) and demonstrates how Jesus is their Deliverer Whom they rejected. He talks about God’s covenant with Abraham and how from the very beginning, Israel, was God’s chosen people who continued to be disobedient instead of remaining faithful.
Friends, Jesus is our Deliverer, and we need to remain faithful to Him, obedient to His Word, and be willing to defend His Holy Name.
Acts 7:1-8 (NLT)
Stephen Addresses the Council
1 Then the high priest asked Stephen, “Are these accusations true?”
2 This was Stephen’s reply: “Brothers and fathers, listen to me. Our glorious God appeared to our ancestor Abraham in Mesopotamia before he settled in Haran. 3 God told him, ‘Leave your native land and your relatives, and come into the land that I will show you.’ 4 So Abraham left the land of the Chaldeans and lived in Haran until his father died. Then God brought him here to the land where you now live.
5 “But God gave him no inheritance here, not even one square foot of land. God did promise, however, that eventually the whole land would belong to Abraham and his descendants—even though he had no children yet. 6 God also told him that his descendants would live in a foreign land, where they would be oppressed as slaves for 400 years. 7 ‘But I will punish the nation that enslaves them,’ God said, ‘and in the end they will come out and worship me here in this place.’
8 “God also gave Abraham the covenant of circumcision at that time. So when Abraham became the father of Isaac, he circumcised him on the eighth day. And the practice was continued when Isaac became the father of Jacob, and when Jacob became the father of the twelve patriarchs of the Israelite nation.
Prayer: Jesus, help us to remain faithful to Your Word, and to be willing to defend You. Holy Spirit, guide us to be more like Stephen, and to have faith and trust like Abraham. We ask all of this in Your Name, Jesus. Amen.