Persecution Strikes the Church, continued
Hebraic and Grecian Jews (6:1)
Luke turns away from the conflict between the Sanhedrin and the church leaders
to introduce two groups within the Jerusalem church. They were the "Grecian"
Jews (Greek, Hellenistai, or "Hellenists") and "Hebraic" Jews. We may
be surprised that subgroups exist within the first church. But these groups
are crucial to the story of Acts. It’s important we identify these Hebraic and
Hellenistic Jews, for it will help us understand the situation of the Jerusalem
church, and how the gospel message is being preached.
Most commentators divide the Grecian and Hebraic Jews along linguistic and
geographic lines. The Hellenistic Jews are those who speak mainly Greek, and
formerly lived outside of Palestine. But they had settled in Jerusalem—retired,
as it were, to the homeland. Nevertheless, they still have affinities with lands
of the Jewish dispersion from which they came. The Hebraic Jews are those who
speak mainly Aramaic, and were born in Jerusalem or Judea. A parallel in modern
Jerusalem would be the distinction between Jews who were born in Palestine (sabras)
and those who emigrated to Israel from other nations.
The Hellenistic Jews in the church probably attended Greek-speaking synagogues
before they became Christians. The Hebraic Christians attended synagogues in
which Aramaic was used.
Defining these two groups solely by their language and place of birth lacks
some precision. Paul called himself a "Hebrew of Hebrews" (Philippians 3:5)
and classed himself among the Hebraioi (2 Corinthians 11:22). But he
was fluent in Greek and came from Tarsus in Asia Minor, not Jerusalem. In that
sense, Paul was a Hellenist who spoke Aramaic like a native. While Paul had
been born a Diaspora Jew, it’s probable that he lived since his youth in Jerusalem,
where he was immersed in Judaism.
Clearly, we must go further when trying to understand the difference between
Hebraic and Hellenistic Jews. Some commentators feel that the Hellenistic Jews
are more devoted to the ancestral religion and culture than the Palestinian
Jews. Why would they have returned to Judea, whose culture and economy were
less attractive than those of other regions of the Roman Empire? As a more recent
example, we can think of European Zionist Jews around 1900 who had a fierce
desire to return to their Palestinian homeland, or the Orthodox Jews who flock
to Jerusalem.
Further, we can probably assume that Diaspora Jews who settled in Jerusalem
may have been looked upon with dislike and suspicion by the natives. The immigrants
would have had different languages (Greek and native tongues), values and culture.
We can see this suspicion and resentment
in many nations today by native-born people against immigrants.
According to the Talmud, Pharisaism made little secret of its contempt
for Hellenists and, unlike those from Syria or Babylonia (regions that are
often considered extensions of the Holy Land in Talmudic discussions), they
were frequently categorized by the native-born ... populace of Jerusalem as
second-class Israelites (Richard N. Longenecker, "Acts," The Expositor’s
Bible Commentary, page 329)
As the church in Jerusalem grew larger, more and more Hebraic and Grecian
Jews came into the church, and some of the prejudices between the two groups
carried over into the church. As the case of Ananias and Sapphira showed, all
was not well with everyone in the church.
One of the difficulties is that the Greek-speaking Jews feel that they are
being discriminated against in the Jerusalem church. Perhaps the slight is not
intentional, but it is nonetheless felt. Luke implies that the Hellenists are
a somewhat neglected minority, and for a time, not well served.
Widows neglected (6:1)
The problem is that the Hellenistic widows of the Jerusalem church are "being
overlooked in the daily distribution of food" (6:1). That is, the church apparently
has an organized charity, such as a daily "soup kitchen" for the needy, including
widows. But the immigrant widows are not getting an equal share.
This is a blight on the church. Both the Torah and the example of Jesus mandate
that the community pay special attention to helping widows (Deuteronomy 10:18;
14:29; 16:11, 14; 24:17, 19-21; 26:12-13). The law even specifies a curse for
those who neglect the poor (Deuteronomy 27:19).
The prophets stress the responsibility of "doing justice for widows" (Malachi
3:5; Isaiah 1:17, 23; 10:2; Jeremiah 5:28; 7:6; 23:3; Ezekiel 22:7; Psalm 93:6).
In the New Testament, the epistle of James reflects the importance of such justice,
insisting that true religion includes looking after orphans and widows in their
distress (1:27). Mechanisms for aiding widows had long been promoted in Judaism.
Jews had developed a system of aid to the poor and those in need. Religious
communities such as the Essenes had a kind of social security system that provided
for members’ needs. But here Christians are neglecting their own.
As in the case of Ananias and Sapphira, this neglect of church widows is
no incidental problem. Although Luke presents the situation without condemnation,
the affront threatens the spiritual integrity of the Christian community.
It’s possible that the inequity in the distribution of food was merely the
surface issue. This may be part of a larger conflict between two groups who
had different cultural backgrounds. (We will eventually see doctrinal differences
become more evident between the two groups.)
Earlier, we saw the Christian community taking care of the needy. Believers
were freely sharing their possessions with the less fortunate among them (2:44-45;
5:32, 34-35). But as the church grows, so does the number of widows who need
help. To make matters worse, widows from the Diaspora would probably be especially
in need. They would be less likely to have relatives nearby to help them. And
if they do not speak the local language very well, they may be missing out on
some of the information.
They are the ones with the most need, but the church is neglecting them.
Almost certainly, discrimination is involved in the inequity, but Luke tends
to downplay controversies in favor of showing how problems were resolved. The
distribution of food is probably in the hands of the Hebrews, and they unthinkingly
take care of their own, and the Greek-speaking widows cannot communicate their
needs to the people doing the distribution.
Ultimately, the apostles are responsible, because they administer the common
fund (4:34-35), but they have more work than they can handle. Since they are
Hebrews, it is easy for them to be unaware that the Greek-speaking widows are
being neglected. As soon as they learn that the immigrant widows are being neglected,
they immediately take steps to correct the problem.
"Choose seven men" (6:2-6)
When the neglect comes to light, the Twelve gather the church together and
tell the members that they can no longer manage the food distribution program.
They simply lack the time to do it right. The apostles are too occupied with
evangelism to "wait on tables" (6:2). They ask the group to chose seven men
to handle the daily distribution. The apostles will turn the responsibility
of the "soup kitchen" over to them (verse 3).
The apostles do not ignore the problem, nor chastise the widows for complaining.
Nor do they try to hold on to this important responsibility, because they can
do it only if they neglect their duty to preach. Members of the Jerusalem congregation
are therefore asked to choose seven people who can take over the social-service
work of the church.
The Twelve obviously have great stature and power in the church community
and could have chosen the leaders on their own. But on this critical decision
they are willing to give up their authority and ask the community to decide.
The apostles turn the authority for working out the solution of the problem
to those who feel it most acutely, for they are probably the best ones to solve
it.
The apostles give one requirement. The men are to have both wisdom
and the Spirit, or we might say, a wisdom inspired by the Holy Spirit
(6:3). Clearly, the apostles are no longer jockeying for power, as when they
were unconverted (Luke 22:24; Matthew 20:20-28).
The seven men chosen are Stephen, Philip, Procorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas,
and Nicholas, a Gentile convert to Judaism from Antioch (6:5). The men have
Greek names, and it is likely that they all come from the Hellenistic wing of
the Jerusalem church (though many Palestinian Jews also have Greek names).
Stephen and Philip (6:5)
Stephen, introduced here almost as an aside, will become an important figure
in Luke’s story. (Luke often casually introduces important characters a short
time before they become important.) His activities in the next chapter
link the Jerusalem church to the Christian movement beyond Judea. He is a pivotal
character whose death ends Luke’s story of the Jerusalem church. Luke mentions
Stephen later in Acts, and his book shows how Stephen provides a turning point
for the spread of the gospel (11:19; 22:20). In particular, Stephen’s speech
is the catalyst that sparks a great persecution. This causes Christians to flee
to other areas, bringing the gospel with them (8:2). What looked like bad news
at first, turned out to be good in the long run.
Of the other six individuals Luke mentions, only Philip plays a further role
in Luke’s account. And it is an important one. Philip became a prophet-evangelist.
Luke shows him doing signs and miracles (8:6, 13) and being empowered by the
Spirit to preach the gospel (8:29, 39). Even his seven daughters prophesy (21:9).
Philip carries the gospel to Samaria (8:5); proclaims salvation to the Ethiopian
(8:29); and takes the message along the Judean coast from Azotus to Caesarea
(8:40). Some years later on his final trip to Jerusalem, Paul visits Philip
in Caesarea (21:8). It’s possible that Philip was one of Luke’s sources for
the story of Acts, especially for the events narrated in chapters 6-8.
The interesting thing about Nicolaus, the last-mentioned of the seven, is
that he is a convert (proselyte) to Judaism from paganism. Only full converts
are called proselytes. They are instructed in Judaism, baptized and circumcised.
The God-fearers only worship and study in the synagogues; they are not circumcised.
Luke notes that Nicolas comes from Antioch in Syria. This is the first reference
to the city that will soon become the launching-point for the Gentile mission.
Laying on of hands (6:6)
The church community as a whole, or perhaps the Hellenistic part, selects
the men it wants to handle the daily distribution. They are taken to the apostles,
who officially place them in office. The apostles give a community prayer and
"laid their hands on them" (6:6). This is the first mention of this practice
in Acts. In Acts it accompanies several events—baptism (8:17, 19; 19:6); healings
(9:12, 17; 28:8) and a commission to ministry (13:3).
The practice has ties with the Old Testament, where the laying on of hands
is mentioned in a variety of contexts (Genesis 48:13-20; Exodus 29:10; Leviticus
1:4, 3:2; 4:4; 16:21; Numbers 27:23). In general, it symbolizes a conferring
of office and responsibility (Numbers 8:10). In the Old Testament, it was the
community of Israel that placed hands on the individual, though it would have
been impossible for the entire community to do it. People representing
the community laid on their hands. The same thing is true in Acts as the
apostles lay hands on the seven men on behalf of the whole community. This ritual
signals that the church as a whole approves the men to supervise the daily distribution.
It is not quite as clear as NIV makes out who prayed and laid their hands
on them. If the grammatical agreements of the Greek are any guide, then it
was done by the whole church acting "in the presence of the apostles".… By
this act the people made them their representatives, as the Israelites had
once made Levites their representatives by laying hands on them (Numbers 27:18;
Deuteronomy 34:9. (David J. Williams, Acts, page 123.
It is often assumed that the Seven are appointed to the office of deacon.
However, Luke does not refer to them by this term. He uses the ordinary verb
for service, diakoneo, but not the noun diakonos. When Philip
is described by a title, he is called "Philip the evangelist" (21:8), not "Philip
the deacon." (The first New Testament mention of deacons is in Romans
16:1 and Philippians 1:1.)
Actually, the Seven are not in an office, and are not given a title — they
are simply in a service role. Their responsibility is similar to what deacons
later did (1 Timothy 3:8-13), but over time, it becomes apparent that these
men are appointed by God to serve in a special ministry. Stephen and Philip,
the two of the Seven about which we know something, seem to have no further
connection to the daily distribution or "waiting on tables." They are prophets
who preach the word, do signs and wonders, and extend the work of the apostles.
They are formally named as the Seven (Acts 21:8), even as the original apostles
are called the Twelve. In effect, the office of the Seven is as unique as that
of the original apostles.
While not minimizing the importance of the apostles to the whole church,
we may say, that in some way Stephen, Philip, and perhaps others of the appointed
seven may well have been to the Hellenistic believers what the apostles were
to the native-born Christians. (Richard N. Longenecker, "Acts," page 335)
Jerusalem church grows (6:7)
Luke ends the account of the Seven with a summary statement of the progress
of the gospel and church: "So the word of God spread. The number of disciples
in Jerusalem increased rapidly, and a large number of priests became obedient
to the faith" (6:7).
This is one of Luke’s regular pauses to summarize the state of the church’s
growth in Jerusalem (2:41, 47; 4:4; 5:14). Six of these general reports have
been noted in Acts, each one showing a further outreach of the gospel from Jerusalem
(6:7; 9:31; 12:24; 16:5; 19:20; 28:31. (One commentator estimates that each
of the six panels covers on average about five years.)
The events of the first panel probably take place in the first year or so
after Jesus’ resurrection. The second panel occurs in the mid-thirties A.D.
The second panel (6:8-9:30) focuses on the work of three Hellenists whose ministries
were essential for spreading the gospel beyond Jerusalem—Stephen, Philip, and
Saul (Paul). Stephen had a brief career. He was martyred after giving a scathing
speech to Jews who were members of one or more Hellenistic synagogues in Jerusalem.
Luke records only a brief ministry for
Philip in Samaria and the coastal area of Palestine. However, he probably continued
to preach, and is still part of the community about 20 years later (21:8-9).
Also in the second panel, Luke records Saul’s conversion and early ministry.
He is, in a sense, the third "Hellenist." (Though Saul is a Hebraic Jew in some
respects, he is also a man of the Diaspora and the Greek world.)
In the second panel, Luke’s interest moves from Peter and the Twelve to focus
more on the Hellenistic Seven and Paul. The church in Jerusalem has expanded
among Jews who are connected with the world at large—the Hellenists. They may
be "Hellenists" because of one or more characteristics—language, place of birth,
custom or psychological orientation. This means that the preaching of the gospel
has begun to go beyond the traditional preoccupations of Jewish culture—its
land (especially Jerusalem), the temple and the Law.
The church has resolved some of its major potential problems—especially injustice
and disunity. Now, in a spirit of prayer and with the power of the Holy Spirit,
it is ready to move on— "So the word of God spread" (6:7).
Luke has successfully portrayed a restored people and the authority of
the Twelve over it. Now, he prepares for the second stage of Jesus’ programmatic
prophecy in Acts 1:8, that the Gospel would move out from Jerusalem to Judea
and Samaria and to the ends of the world. (Luke Timothy Johnson, The Acts
of the Apostles, page 110)
Luke informs his readers that a large number of priests are converted and
become part of the church (6:7). One commentator estimates that as many as 8,000
priests and 10,000 Levites serve at the temple. We should distinguish these
ordinary priests from the high priestly families. The working priests are a
marginalized group—far removed from the world of the enormously wealthy high
priestly families—and perhaps even disaffected from them (Josephus, Antiquities
20:181; Wars 2:409-410). It is from the ranks of the common priests
that many were converted to faith in Jesus as the Messiah.
The preaching of Stephen (6:8-10)
Luke next turns to give an account of Stephen’s ministry. The apostles are
teaching mainly at the temple, and in front of the Sanhedrin. Now we see a subtle
shift in audience, as a leader of the Hellenistic Christian community brings
the gospel to the Greek-speaking synagogues in Jerusalem. In particular, he
evangelizes among members of the "Synagogue of the Freedmen," composed of Jews
of Cyrene and Alexandria in North Africa and from provinces in Asia Minor—Cilicia
and Asia (6:9).
"Freedmen" were former slaves (or their children) who had been emancipated
by their owners. During Pompey’s conquest of Judea in 63 B.C., for example,
many Jews were taken captive to Rome, and many others probably ended up being
sent to various parts of the Empire. Many of these slaves were later freed.
The descendants of such slaves, the Jewish freedmen, begin to argue with
Stephen. But they cannot "stand up against his wisdom or the Spirit by whom
he spoke" (6:10). Jesus told his disciples that the Holy Spirit would teach
them what to say when they came to trial (Luke 12:12). They will be given "words
and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to resist or contradict"
(Luke 21:15). Luke shows that another prophecy had come to pass.
In essence, Stephen speaks as a prophet, as one of the witnesses predicted
by Jesus. He is filled with the Holy Spirit and wisdom (6:5, 10; 7:55) and he
does "great wonders and miraculous signs." For Luke these are the marks of a
prophet (2:19, 22, 43; 4:16, 22, 30; 5:12). Stephen is "full of God’s grace
and power" (6:8). The comparison with the apostles, who also spoke "with great
power," is clear (4:33). Stephen speaks with the same spiritual might as the
apostles, and should be recognized as one who brings a true gospel message.
False accusations (6:11-14)
After hearing Stephen speak, Jews from the Synagogue of Freedmen organize
a smear campaign. They persuade some people to say, "We have heard Stephen speak
words of blasphemy against Moses and against God" (6:11). To blaspheme or slander
Moses is to say something thought to be disrespectful about the Torah, "the
law of Moses." What Stephen is probably doing is challenging the centrality
of the law in God’s plan of salvation — he is saying that Jesus, not the law,
is the center of God's plan.
To "speak words of blasphemy...against God" refers to contempt for the temple
and its rituals. By saying that salvation comes through Christ, Stephen seems
to say that the system of worship centered on the Jerusalem temple is not needed.
But the temple is the foundation and focus of Jewish national life, worship
and salvation. This does not set well with a pious Jewish group that centers
its religious life around its institutions. The temple is the very reason these
people had moved to Jerusalem.
The Synagogue of Freedman take their campaign of slander to the streets,
to the city fathers and religious leaders. With mounting support in their favor,
the Freedmen are emboldened to grab Stephen and drag him before the Sanhedrin.
They bring false witnesses who lay an ominous charge against Stephen: "This
fellow never stops speaking against this holy place and against the law" (6:13).
Similar charges are later leveled against Paul (21:20-21, 28; 24:7; 25:8).
Stephen is charged with religious innovation. The witnesses claim: "We have
heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and change
the customs Moses handed down to us" (6:14). Although Luke says this accusation
comes from false witnesses, there is truth in what they are saying. Even if
Stephen was not preaching it, they were able to see that if what Stephen is
preaching is true, then it does render the temple and the ancestral customs
obsolete.
Temple obsolete (6:11-14)
Jesus did predict the destruction of the temple (Luke 21:5), and that people
did not need to worship there (John 4:21). Jesus is God's replacement for the
temple – a hard saying for unconverted Jews (Mark 14:58; 15:19; John 2:19).
God is not to be found in a place, or a system of worship, or a time. Rather,
he lives within all believers, wherever they were, through the Spirit.
Jesus declared the temple to be obsolete as a place where one must go to
worship and have sin atoned. True spiritual cleansing comes through Jesus’ death
and resurrection (Mark 15:38; John 4:21; Ephesians 2:20; Hebrews 10:20; 1 Peter
2:5). Stephen is probably echoing these thoughts, insisting that with the coming
of Christ the temple order is finished. The book of Hebrews explains this, and
discusses the same general points Stephen probably makes. As F.F. Bruce points out, "In a number of respects Stephen blazes
a trail later followed by the writer to the Hebrews (The Book of Acts,
revised edition, page 132).
If the book of Hebrews contains the kinds of spiritual realities Stephen
is speaking about, it’s not surprising that the Jews are angry at him. In their
view, these ideas support the notion that he is speaking against Moses and God.
Stephen had a vision of a world for Christ. To the Jews two things were
specially precious—the Temple, where alone sacrifice would be offered and
God could be truly worshipped, and the Law which could never be changed. Stephen,
however, said that the Temple must pass away, that the Law was but a stage
toward the gospel and that Christianity must go out to the whole wide world.
(William Barclay, The Acts of the Apostles, revised edition, page 53)
With such volatile issues at stake, the antagonistic Freedmen merely need
to put a subtle but deadly twist on what Stephen is saying. There is no need
for wholesale fabrication.
We have no account of Stephen’s preaching to the Greek-speaking Jews, so
we don’t know exactly what he told them. But we can infer the drift of his teaching
from the criticisms leveled against him, and from his later speech before the
Aramaic-speaking Sanhedrin.
Stephen’s speech is unusual in that it attacks the very basis of Jewish life,
something that the Twelve, so far as we can tell from Acts, don't do. They don’t
minimize the temple —they worship there, as does most of the church (2:46; 3:1;
5:13). But Stephen is doing more than insisting that Jews must accept Jesus
as Messiah. He is telling them that their faith in the law and temple is totally
misplaced and of no particular value.
From the accusations and from his defense, it is clear that Stephen had
begun to apply his Christian convictions regarding the centrality of Jesus
of Nazareth in God’s redemptive program to such issues as the significance
of the land, the law, and the temple for Jewish Christians in view of the
advent of the Messiah. This, however, was a dangerous path to tread, particularly
for Hellenistic Jewish Christians! It was one that the apostles themselves
seem to have been unwilling to explore. (Richard N. Longenecker, "Acts," page
336)
Stephen’s frontal attack on Jewish institutions has far-reaching repercussions
for the church in Jerusalem. His speech alienates the Jewish community from
the church, and unites its disparate parties against the believers. The entire
city of Jerusalem is infuriated (6:12).
The chief-priestly party knew that they need have no fear of popular disapproval
this time in prosecuting a leading member of the Nazarene community; on the
contrary, the people would support and indeed demand the severest sanctions
of the law against the man. (F.F. Bruce, The Book of Acts, revised
edition, page 126)
From the Sanhedrin to "the man on the street," it turned into enemies those
who had until now at least tolerated the believers. This in turn removed the
one thing that had restrained the Sanhedrin from a thoroughgoing persecution
of the believers, namely, their popularity (cf. 2:47; 5:13, 26). (David J.
Williams, Acts, page 125)
Facing the Sanhedrin (6:15)
Chapter 6 describes the background of Stephen’s missionary work, which leads
to his arrest. The next chapter, the longest in Acts, is devoted to Stephen’s
speech before the Sanhedrin —the longest speech in Acts. Taken together, the
two chapters complete Luke’s discussion of the preaching of the gospel in Jerusalem
and his description of the church in the city. After this, Luke begins reporting
on the church’s expansion beyond Jerusalem.
The last verse of chapter 6 sets the stage for Stephen’s long speech before
the Sanhedrin. Luke says that to the Sanhedrin members Stephen appeared to have
"the face of an angel" (6:15). Luke probably means to tell us that Stephen is
being led by the Holy Spirit (6:3, 5), and that the speech we will read is inspired
by God. The high priest asks Stephen if the charges brought against him are
true (7:1). This high priest was probably Caiaphas, who held office until A.D.
36. As president of the Sanhedrin, he was the chief judge in Jewish trials.
To commentary on chapter 7
Paul Kroll, 2002

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