Class Handout
Acts 5,6,7 Chapter Review
·
The young church experienced growing pains that caused dissention
among the body. Some of the
Greek-speaking (Hellenists) Jewish widows were overlooked in the food
distribution. Complaints of neglect and
discrimination surfaced. The solution
was to enlist more hands to help the Apostles with the work load. (Acts
4:34-5:2; 6:1-4)
·
Seven spiritually mature, wise men were chosen from among the Grecian
Jews to oversee the food distribution to the needy and to aid the apostles in
caring for the expanding body of the church.
The apostles prayed and laid hands on the men entrusting the Holy Spirit
to empower them. Their service was
called Diakoneo (today = deacons) (Acts 6:5-7)
·
Stephen, one of the seven, was passionate about proving to others that
Jesus was the Messiah. His preaching and testifying in the temple about Christ
enraged some Jews entrenched in their religion and a plot was hatched to bring
Stephen before the Sanhedrin using false accusations and trumped up charges.
(Acts 6:8-14)
·
As he defended himself, Stephen’s face took on an other-worldly glow,
just as Moses’ had when he met with God on Mt. Sinai. Stephen preached an incredibly all
encompassing sermon reminding the Sanhedrin of God’s involvement in Israel’s
history and His never ending covenant love for them that was culminated in
Christ’s work on the cross. He tried to
tie the rich traditions of the forefathers to Jesus. (Acts 6:15-7:45)
·
David wanted to build a house for God, but God told him “NO” because
of His sins, so Solomon, David’s son built the Temple. But building a house to contain God is
impossible! (Acts 7:44-50).
·
Stephen ended his sermon with an indictment of the Sanhedrin’s
treatment and rejection of Christ. When
Stephen described his vision of Jesus at God’s right hand, infuriated council
members dragged him out and stoned him for blasphemy. As Stephen died, he as the Lord to forgive
them. (Acts 7:51-60)
·
The day Stephen was murdered; Saul launched a crusade to destroy the
church. Men and women were jailed for the crime of following Jesus. (Acts
8:1-3)
· Molech- Pagan god whose worship involved child sacrifice.
·
Remphan- Babylonian god of the planet
Saturn used to symbolize Israelite apostasy
·
Saul- pre-conversion
name of Apostle Paul, a Jewish Roman citizen from Tarsus from
the tribe of Benjamin, "a Pharisee & the
son of a Pharisee. Paul studied in Jerusalem with Rabbi Gamaliel.
·
Jacob- Later renamed by God: Israel. He is the son of Isaac and Rebekah,
the grandson of Abraham & Sarah and the younger twin brother of Esau. He had twelve sons
and at least one daughter by his two wives, sisters Leah & Rachel, and by
their maids, Bilhah & Zilpah. The children named in Genesis were Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, Joseph, and Benjamin
as well as daughter Dinah. These 12
brothers became the original 12 tribes of Israel.