A Known Sign. Acts 4:4-22
Acts 4:16 NASB “saying, ‘What shall we
do with these men? For the fact that a noteworthy miracle has taken place
through them is apparent to all who live in Jerusalem, and we cannot deny it.’” The word
“noteworthy” is the same Greek word as in Romans 1:19 where it talks about the
knowledge of God being made “evident” to us—gnostos
[gnostoj]—and it simply refers to that which is
known, that which has familiarity; and therefore it came to mean referring to
that which was familiar or a friend. But the core idea is gnostos which is related to gnostis, epignosis,
the verb ginosko, and it has the
idea of that which is known. So what they are saying is that there is a known
miracle. But it is not the word dunamis
[dunamij] which is the normal word for miracle,
which has the idea of a dynamic or a power, it is the word semeion [shmeion]. That is interesting. Here are these
unbelieving members of the Sanhedrin and they look at what has happened with
this lame man and they don’t reject it. The unbelieving mind doesn’t have to
say, I don’t believe that Jesus rose from the dead; it can say, I believe that
Jesus rose from the dead, it just doesn’t mean what you think it means. It
doesn’t mean that Jesus is God, it doesn’t mean that the Bible is true; it just
means that something happened we can’t explain. So here they make this
admission: “What shall we do with these men? … a noteworthy miracle has taken
place through them is apparent to all who live in Jerusalem, and we cannot deny it.” They can deny
the interpretation of it. Why? Because they don’t want to believe that that is
what is true. It comes back to volition.
Jesus performed tremendous
miracles that the rabbis knew only the Messiah would perform—like giving sight
to the blind. Ultimately it is not a matter of giving the right argument and it
is not a matter of the right evidence, it is a matter of the individual’s
volition.
On the other hand, that
doesn’t mean we just do some drive-by evangelism and shoot them with the gospel
gun and quote Acts 16:31. That is not giving a reasoned presentation of the
gospel, which is what apologia [a)pologia] means; that is just simply throwing a verse out
there and avoiding the responsibility of entering into a dialogue with people.
Up until the Damascus road many of us would have given up on witnessing to
Saul of Tarsus because we would have assumed by all of his actions that he was
negative. But that is because we don’t know all the facts. We don’t know how
many times it is going to take to witness to somebody before they eventually
trust in Christ. It may be ten, twenty, thirty or forty times before the truth
of God’s Word finally chips away at their suppression mechanism. We can’t just
make those assumptions.
Examples of how different
people have handled the same sign of a miracle or resurrection. In John chapter
twenty Jesus has appeared to ten of the eleven disciples. Thomas wasn’t
present. John 20:24 NASB
“But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them
when Jesus came. [25] So the other disciples were saying to him, ‘We have seen
the Lord!’ But he said to them, ‘Unless I see in His hands the imprint of the
nails, and put my finger into the place of the nails, and put my hand into His side,
I will not believe.’” He is an
empiricist; he has to see the evidence himself. Thomas is already a believer;
he is not a believer in the resurrection at this point. [26]
“After eight days His disciples were again inside, and Thomas with them. Jesus
came, the doors having been shut, and stood in their midst and said, ‘Peace
{be} with you.’ [27] Then He said to Thomas, ‘Reach here with your finger, and
see My hands; and reach here your hand and put it into My side; and do not be
unbelieving, but believing.’” Thomas did
do that, he just instantly recognized that Jesus had been raised from the dead.
[28] “Thomas answered and said to Him, ‘My Lord
and my God!’” That is the response of the
believer, the positive person who is not suppressing truth in unrighteousness,
who sees the evidence. The evidence has its confirmatory value to them, and
they interpret it within the grid of Scripture and accept it instantly.
On
the other hand we have the case of the apostle Paul. In Acts chapter seven we
have the stoning of Stephen. Acts
8:1 NASB “Saul was in hearty agreement with putting him to death.
And on that day a great persecution began against the church in Jerusalem, and they were all scattered throughout
the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the apostles.” It was during this
time that Saul continued to feed his hostility to the Christians. Acts 9:1 NASB
“Now Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the
Lord, went to the high priest, [2] and asked for letters from him to the
synagogues at Damascus, so that if he found any belonging to the Way, both men
and women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem.” Is this a picture of
somebody who was positive? No, so he is going to have a little something extra
in the way he is witnessed to. Here we have a person who at some point in his
life is positive at God consciousness. But then he is covering that up with a
lot of suppression, just as all of us do at different times. We just don’t want
God’s way to be right at times and are in rebellion against Him. Then Jesus
appears to him on the road to Damascus, and again he knows it is true, he can’t
continue to deny it; now he accepts the interpretation that Jesus is the
Messiah. So we have Thomas on the one hand who immediately responds to the Lord
as a believer, and then we have the example of Saul. In both cases there is a
use of evidence that Jesus rose from the dead but it is not a use of evidence
that is setting it apart as something unique and distinct among other aspects
of creation. It is a confirmation of the message; it is not overcoming a
deficit of knowledge or a deficit of evidence. The evidence has been there all
along.
In Acts 4:16 the Sanhedrin says, “the fact that a
noteworthy miracle has taken place.” They can’t deny it; everybody knows that
this healing has taken place. Nobody questions it or raises an issue, they all
knew and had no doubt whatsoever. It was called a known sign. A sign is simply
a confirmation or validation of something; it is not evidence in the sense of
proof that something is right or wrong, it confirms that it is.
Matthew 12:38 NASB “Then some of the scribes
and Pharisees said to Him, ‘Teacher, we want to see a sign from You.’ [39] But
He answered and said to them, ‘An evil and adulterous generation craves for a
sign; and {yet} no sign will be given to it but the sign of Jonah the prophet;
[40] for just as JONAH WAS THREE DAYS AND THREE NIGHTS IN THE BELLY OF THE SEA
MONSTER, so will the
Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.’” The sign
here was the sign of the resurrection. Jesus condemns them and chastises them
for asking for a sign rather than saying Oh, you really just need a little more
evidence.
Matthew 16:1
NASB “The Pharisees and Sadducees came up, and testing Jesus, they
asked Him to show them a sign from heaven.” He has already given them numerous
signs, they always want something else. They are asking for proof on their
terms, and this is the problem; and they have already been given objective validation
for the claims of Jesus. [2] But He replied to them, ‘When it is evening, you
say, ‘{It will be} fair weather, for the sky is red. [3] And in the morning,
‘{There will be} a storm today, for the sky is red and threatening.’ Do you
know how to discern the appearance of the sky, but cannot {discern} the signs
of the times? [4] An evil and adulterous generation seeks after a sign; and a
sign will not be given it, except the sign of Jonah.’ And He left them and went
away.”
1
Corinthians 1:22 NASB
“For indeed Jews ask for signs and Greeks search for wisdom.” Again what he is
pointing out is that the human viewpoint of the Jewish mentality is asking for
something on their agenda in terms of proof, not a confirmation in terms of a
sign. The Greeks want to have wisdom. They are going to validate on the basis
of human wisdom. They already know God exists (Romans 1) but in their
suppression technique they are saying: You don’t exist and you have to prove
yourself to me on my terms. But they are still not going to accept it because
they are already suppressing truth in unrighteousness.
In John 20
the context has been that Thomas wanted to see that physical evidence. John 20:29 NASB “Jesus said to him,
‘Because you have seen Me, have you believed? Blessed {are} they who did not
see, and {yet} believed.’” Then John inserts his comment, the doctrinal
teaching point. The Gospel of John is well known as having eight signs. The
eighth and final sign is the sign of the resurrection. John 20:30 NASB
“Therefore many other signs Jesus also performed in the presence of the
disciples, which are not written in this book; [31] but these have been written
so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that
believing you may have life in His name.” The purpose of the signs isn’t to
provide truth in the sense of appealing to a higher authority or as if these
are of a higher nature of demonstrating the existence of God and the claims of
Jesus and every aspect of creation. What does a sign do? It points to something.
It doesn’t prove that something exists, it identifies something that it claims
what it claims to be; it is confirmatory. So these signs confirm the claims
that Jesus is making that He is the Son of God and that He is the Messiah as
promised in the Old Testament.
Evidence is
not neutral. Any fact, any event, is going to be immediately interpreted based
on the presuppositions of the person there. If the person is an unbeliever and
their presupposition is that God can’t work this way because that would be
grounded in arrogance. Arrogance is tenacious; arrogance doesn’t want to give
up. When one is operating on arrogance it doesn’t matter how much evidence
there is. We live in a time when nations all over the earth have been operating
on models of economic theory that have brought us to the brink of worldwide
economic collapse. They are not going to believe that the problem is their
whole approach to money and to then economy because to admit that means that
everything that they believe is false, and they can’t accept that. That version
of their pagan arrogance is tenacious. In the conflict between Christianity and
non-Christians is that the non-Christians are committed in arrogance to a
position of suppressing the truth in unrighteousness. You can’t change that by
evidence if that is their decision.
When it
comes to witnessing the bottom line of all of this is that it gives us
tremendous freedom to be able to simply know the gospel, understand all the
aspects of the gospel to the best of our ability, and to the present it clearly
to the person who needs to hear it. We don’t have to have a Master’s degree in
theology; we don’t have to control all of the data in Josh McDowell’s Evidence that Demands a Verdict. That
doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be familiar with some of these things but that is not
the ultimate issue. We are going to try to convince the reason the unbeliever
is an unbeliever is because he doesn’t have enough evidence and it hasn’t been
presented to him correctly. No, the reason the unbeliever is an unbeliever is
because he chosen up to that point in his life to not believe the gospel. He
has chosen to suppress the truth in unrighteousness, and that is exactly what
we see exhibited by the Sanhedrin in Acts chapter four. Acts 4:16 NASB “saying, “What shall we
do with these men? For the fact that a noteworthy miracle has taken place
through them is apparent to all who live in Jerusalem, and we cannot deny it. [17] But so that
it will not spread any further among the people, let us warn them to speak no longer
to any man in this name.” That is, we have no rational case anymore, all we can
do is get angry and threaten them because we are suppressing the truth in
unrighteousness. We stuff God down into a box and we put the lid on and nail it
down. They are trying to take the top off the box and let God out, and we can’t
let that happen so we just have to threaten them. That’s all that is left.
Acts 4:18 NASB “And when they had
summoned them, they commanded them not to speak or teach at all in the name of
Jesus.”
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