Acts

There Is Power In The Name Of Jesus

Acts 3:6-10

The lame beggar at the temple never expected to be healed or even asked to be healed. He would have heard about Jesus who healed but now that time had gone. So Peter's intervention was a total surprise. The apostle simply told the cripple to walk, 'in the Name of Jesus', because Jesus had authorised him to do so (John 14:13). Peter did not want the man to try to do the impossible but to trust in the power of Jesus Christ. If Jesus commanded him to walk, then he should obey.

Telling What God Has Done

Acts 3:11-16

The professional, unable-to-walk-from-birth, beggar was healed. He had walked and jumped around because he had been commanded to do so in the Name of Jesus (Acts 3:7-8). As a large crowd gathered in the temple courtyard, wanting to know why the once-lame man was walking, he made sure he was close to Peter and John. They could explain. And indeed that is just what God wanted to happen.

Repent And Be Forgiven

Acts 3:17-20

Following the healing of the lame beggar, the crowd wanted to know who did it. Peter and John were clear: it was not them but Jesus (Acts 3:12-13). It was a shock to the religious people, who had only recently demanded Christ's death, when they were told that they had killed the Author of life (Acts 3:15) but He was alive again and has great power.

Reactions to the Gospel

Acts 4:1-4

Peter and John had commanded a lame beggar to walk, in the Name of Jesus (Acts 3:6-10). Then they explained the good news about Jesus and how He still had power to change lives (Acts 3:12-26). However, not everybody happily praised God for what had happened. The religious leaders with the same temple guards who had arrested Jesus, now seized the apostles and put them in prison overnight.

Confidence with Jesus

Acts 4:13-15

There is something irresistibly appealing about people who are confident, despite overwhelming opposition. When Peter and John were being interrogated about how a lame beggar was healed, they simply explained that the man had trusted in the Name of Jesus. He had obeyed when he was commanded to walk, even though he had never walked before. Jesus had healed him (Acts 3:1-10).

Loyal to the Truth

Acts 4:16-20

The religious court had a problem. They could not deny the evidence that Peter and John had commanded a lame beggar to walk, in the Name of Jesus, and he was healed (Acts 3:6-10). Neither could they say that such healing was anything other than a good thing. But they still hated Jesus. They feared that even though they had crucified Jesus, His followers would be more troublesome than their Master, claiming that He is alive.