Chapter #14
Acts 4:32-5:11
In the Book of Acts the Holy Spirit gives us a detailed picture of
the early church. Like the church today, it was a mixed multitude. Tares
grew with the wheat. Goats were mingled with the Lord's sheep. Among the
people of God there were, even in those early days, covetous, idolatrous
hypocrites. Every Sunday school child has heard about Ananias and his
wife, Sapphira. Their story begins in chapter four, at verse thirty-two
and continues through chapter five, verse eleven. In this story the
Spirit of God gives us a striking contrast between true faith in Christ
and a mere hypocritical profession of faith. True faith surrenders all
to Christ. Religious hypocrisy merely pretends to surrender all to
Christ. If you will carefully read these few verses of Inspiration,
three things will catch your attention.
AN ATTITUDE OF GRACE - The first thing the Holy Spirit directs our
attention to in this passage is an attitude of grace among the people of
God (4:32-35). Believing hearts are gracious hearts. True faith really
converts sinners. The person who is born again by the Spirit of God is
no longer a selfish, self-centered, self-seeking, self-serving person,
but a grateful, thoughtful, generous, serving person. All who live unto
God die unto the world. The person who finds his life in Christ loses
his life to Christ (Matt. 10:39). These early disciples show by their
example that faith lives not for material gain, but for spiritual good.
Faith seeks not temporal riches. Faith loves not the things of this
world, which are passing away, but the things of that world which is to
come, which are eternal (II Cor. 4:18). Faith seeks the kingdom of God
and his righteousness, not the mammon of unrighteousness (Matt. 6:24,
31-33). Faith in Christ produces an attitude of grace in the heart.
Those who have experienced the grace of God are gracious. Is this not
the teaching of these four verses?
Faith unites the people of God. Luke tells us that "the multitude
of them that believed were of one accord" (v. 32). All of God's people
truly are one in Christ. We are one family (Eph. 3:14-15), a family of
sinners saved by grace. Our hearts love one Person supremely, the Lord
Jesus Christ (I Pet. 1:8; I John 4:19). We are devoted to one cause, the
kingdom of God (Matt. 6:10). We seek one thing above all other things,
the will of God (Matt. 6:6). We have one dominating, ultimate goal, the
glory of God (John 12:28). These things are true of all believers! Many
other things, regrettably, may divide us while we live in this body of
flesh and sin. But here we are one. Let every child of God endeavor,
therefore, to keep "the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace" (Eph.
4:1-6).
Faith in Christ makes men and women generous with their possessions
- "Neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed
was his own; but they had all things common" (v. 32). These men and
women were so taken up with the cause of Christ and with their love for
one another that they placed no value upon personal property, personal
wealth, or personal advantages. These believers were truly indifferent
to such things. They did not even look upon their own possessions as
their own. In their hearts' affection they had forsaken all to follow
Christ. They recognized that all earthly, material things are only
temporary. They were so thoroughly united to one another in love that
they each looked upon their own property as the common property of God's
people.
These men and women had learned what every child of God in this
world must learn - All that we have in this world belongs to God. God
has entrusted each of us with certain of this world's goods to use as
stewards in his house. We are responsible to use them wisely for the
advancement of his kingdom, the furtherance of his gospel, the comfort
of his people, and the glory of his name. These men and women were
willing to rob themselves of comfort, convenience, and personal
satisfaction for one another's good. Is it any wonder that the Apostles
preached with such power, "when such great grace was upon them all" (v.
33)?
True faith actually causes God's saints to prefer each other above
themselves. This is manifest in verses 34 and 35. These men and women
sold their possessions, their houses and their lands rather than allow
their brothers and sisters in Christ to be in need of the necessities of
life! The grace of God still produces this kind of graciousness,
mercifulness, and love (Phil. 2:1-8; James 2:14-17; I John 3:16-18).
Their gifts were free, voluntary sacrifices of love. No one told
them to give. No one told them how to give. No one told them how much to
give. In the church of God giving is not regulated by law, but by love
(II Cor. 9:7). The only constraint these people felt was the constraint
of love (II Cor. 5:14). They saw what the needs of the church were and
willingly met those needs, without the least pressure to do so. Notice
also that the people of God trusted the servants of God to distribute
their gifts under the direction of the Spirit of God (v. 35). Where the
Spirit of God rules the hearts of men there is trust and
trustworthiness! The Apostles of Christ were not (and his servants are
not) greedy men. They took only what they needed to sustain themselves.
Everything else was distributed as needs demanded.
AN ACT OF GENEROSITY - The Spirit of God inspired Luke to tell us
about one man specifically, who was an example of the rest. Barnabas
performed a great deed, an act of generosity (4:36-37). As one that was
ordained of God to be a preacher of the gospel, Barnabas disentangled
himself from the affairs of this world (II Tim. 2:4; I Cor. 9:6-14).
Perhaps Barnabas did not know it at this time, but God was preparing him
for the work of preaching the gospel. Indeed, all who are called of God
to preach the gospel are prepared, equipped, and qualified by him to do
so (I Tim. 3:1-7; Tit. 1:6-9). Barnabas was just the kind of man God
uses in the work of the ministry. God had made him such a man by his
Spirit and by his grace. He was a peaceful man, one who comforted and
encouraged the saints. He was a generous man, an example of Christian
charity. He was willingly submissive to the Apostles, the servants of
Christ (Heb. 13:7, 17). Barnabas was a man of good report, who in the
providence of God gained the love and respect of God's people. Then,
after God prepared him for it, he was made a preacher of the gospel
(Acts 13:2).
AN ACT OF GREED - There was a wicked, hypocritical couple in the
church, Ananias and Sapphira. When Ananias saw how greatly Barnabas was
admired by God's people, he was filled with envy. So he and his wife
agreed to lie to God. (Hypocrisy is lying to God!). They made a great
gift to the church, but their gift was an act of greed. They gave
because they wanted recognition. At first glance they appear to have
done a great thing. They sold a piece of property to help the church.
They gave a handsome amount of money, perhaps much more than Barnabas
had given. But God looks on the heart (I Sam. 16:7). The gift Ananias
and Sapphira brought revealed a graceless, greedy heart. They pretended
to give all, when in fact they had given nothing. No one asked them to
give anything. Theirs was an unwilling sacrifice, given only in a
hypocritical pretense, a sham, a show, a mockery. Their gift was an act
of covetousness and greed, not of grace and love. They hoped to gain by
giving, to gain the applause of men! Their gift was an abomination to
God (Lk. 16:15). Beware of covetousness and hypocrisy!
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