Scripture: Acts 6:3–5 (ESV)
“Therefore, brothers, pick out from among you seven men of good repute, full of the Spirit and of wisdom…” — Acts 6:3
Think:
Most of us imagine that if God were going to use us in a significant way, it would start with something significant.
A platform.
A title.
A microphone.
A moment everyone notices.
But Acts 6 tells a different story.
The church is growing rapidly. People are being saved. The gospel is spreading across Jerusalem. And when a need arises, the apostles begin looking for leaders.
What qualifications do they seek?
Not influence.
Not talent.
Not charisma.
They look for people who are full of the Holy Spirit.
And what are these Spirit-filled men being asked to do?
Serve food.
If we're honest, that's where many of us would struggle.
We want God to use us, but we often want Him to use us somewhere else.
After the promotion.
After the opportunity.
After the recognition.
Yet God so often meets us in the ordinary.
Stephen didn't begin by preaching to crowds.
He started by faithfully serving widows.
No spotlight.
No applause.
No stage.
Just quiet obedience.
And maybe that's why this passage feels so personal.
Because most of life is lived there.
Not in the big moments everyone sees.
But in the daily faithfulness no one notices.
The prayer nobody hears.
The meal you prepare.
The volunteer role that feels unseen.
The child you disciple.
The person you encourage.
The burden you carry.
The world says significance comes from being known.
Jesus says significance comes from being faithful.
Stephen's story reminds us that God does some of His deepest work in the hidden places. Before He entrusts us with influence, He forms our character. Before He uses us publicly, He shapes us privately.
And perhaps the most challenging question in Acts 6 is this:
Would I still serve Jesus if nobody ever noticed?
Would I still be faithful if there were no recognition?
No title?
No applause?
Because the measure of spiritual maturity is not how many people know your name.
It's whether Jesus can trust your heart.
Stephen never knew that one day his story would be recorded in Scripture and read by millions of believers. He simply said yes to the assignment in front of him.
And that ordinary yes became part of an extraordinary story.
The same is true for us.
God is not asking you to be famous.
He's asking you to be faithful.
Application:
Where are you tempted to overlook the assignment God has placed in front of you because it feels small, ordinary, or unseen? Ask God to help you see your daily faithfulness through His eyes.
Prayer:
Father, forgive me for measuring significance the way the world does. Help me trust that You are at work even in the hidden places. Fill me with Your Spirit and teach me to be faithful with whatever You place in my hands. Amen.
Scripture:
“But they could not withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which he was speaking.” — Acts 6:10
“For I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which none of your adversaries will be able to withstand or contradict.” — Luke 21:15
Think:
Years earlier, Jesus made a promise.
Not from a throne.
Not after the resurrection.
But while walking dusty roads with ordinary disciples who had no idea what was coming.
They would be opposed.
They would be hated.
They would stand before rulers and authorities because of His name.
And when that day came, Jesus said:
"I will give you a mouth and wisdom."
Now fast forward to Acts 6.
Stephen is standing in the fire.
Surrounded by powerful men. Religious experts. Leaders with influence, authority, and the power to destroy his life. The accusations are mounting. The pressure is building.
And suddenly Luke wants us to see something extraordinary.
Jesus is doing exactly what He said He would do.
Stephen is not merely speaking.
Christ is keeping His promise.
The council cannot withstand the wisdom flowing from this Spirit-filled servant. They cannot defeat his argument because they are not ultimately arguing with Stephen. They are confronting the truth of a risen Savior.
And this is where the passage begins to breathe.
Because every believer eventually finds themselves standing in a moment where their own strength is not enough.
A diagnosis they didn't expect.
A grief they cannot carry.
A conversation they don't feel prepared for.
A season where the future feels uncertain and faith feels costly.
In those moments, we discover whether Jesus' promises are merely words on a page or anchors for the soul.
Stephen discovered they were true.
Not before the trial.
In the middle of it.
That is often God's way.
We want strength before we need it.
God usually gives it when we step into the moment.
We want courage before the battle.
God often provides it in the battle.
We want answers before the valley.
God frequently reveals Himself inside the valley.
Stephen's story reminds us that God's faithfulness is rarely experienced from a distance. It is discovered when we take the next step and find Christ already there.
The council saw a man standing before them.
Heaven saw a promise being fulfilled.
And maybe that's the encouragement some of us need today.
The same Jesus who strengthened Stephen still strengthens His people.
The same Savior who gave wisdom then still gives wisdom now.
The same Lord who stood with Stephen still stands with His children in every trial, every loss, every hard conversation, and every impossible season.
Because Jesus does not merely make promises.
He keeps them.
Application:
What situation in your life feels bigger than your ability right now? Instead of focusing on your weakness, focus on Christ's faithfulness. Ask Him to help you trust His promises one step at a time.
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You that Your promises never fail. When I feel weak, remind me that You are strong. When I feel inadequate, remind me that You are enough. Help me trust that You will meet me in every trial and provide exactly what I need when I need it. Amen.
Scripture:
“And the patriarchs, jealous of Joseph, sold him into Egypt; but God was with him and rescued him out of all his afflictions…” — Acts 7:9–10 (ESV)
Think:
Stephen is standing before the same religious leaders who handed Jesus over to be crucified.
And instead of defending himself, he tells a story.
The story of Joseph.
At first, it seems strange. Why go back hundreds of years to talk about a man sold into slavery by his brothers?
Because Stephen wants them to see something they have missed.
Joseph's brothers looked at him and saw a problem.
God looked at him and saw a deliverer.
They stripped him of his robe.
Threw him into a pit.
Sold him for silver.
Then they walked away believing they had gotten rid of him forever.
Years later, famine struck the land. Suddenly, the brothers who once rejected Joseph found themselves desperate and starving. They traveled to Egypt looking for food, only to discover a shocking truth:
The man they rejected had become the man who could save them.
The brother they pushed away was the brother they needed most.
That is Stephen's point.
Joseph's story was preparing the world for Jesus.
When Jesus came, many people wanted a Messiah who would destroy Rome, increase their comfort, and fit their expectations. Instead, God sent a humble Savior who came to deal with something far deeper than politics or circumstances.
He came to deal with sin.
And just like Joseph's brothers, many people looked at God's chosen Deliverer and rejected Him.
The tragedy wasn't that Jesus failed to reveal Himself.
The tragedy was that people wanted salvation on their terms.
Before we're too hard on them, we should ask ourselves a difficult question:
How often do we do the same thing?
We want God to remove the struggle.
He wants to transform us through it.
We want answers.
He offers Himself.
We want a changed situation.
He wants a surrendered heart.
The truth is, Jesus is often not what we expect—but He is exactly what we need.
And that is the good news of the gospel.
The One humanity rejected is the very One God sent to rescue us.
Application:
What are you asking God for right now? Take a moment to ask a deeper question: Am I seeking God's solution, or am I simply asking Him to bless mine?
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for being the Savior I need, even when You're not the Savior I expected. Help me trust Your wisdom above my own and recognize Your hand at work in my life. Give me a heart that surrenders to You completely. Amen.
Scripture:
“Yet the Most High does not dwell in houses made by hands, as the prophet says, ‘Heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool.’” — Acts 7:48–49 (ESV)
Think:
It is possible to be deeply religious and still miss God.
That is the terrifying reality underneath Stephen's sermon.
The men listening to him knew the Scriptures. They could quote the prophets. They had devoted their lives to worship, sacrifice, and religious tradition. They spent their days in the Temple—the very center of Jewish faith.
Yet Stephen confronts them with a devastating truth:
They had become so attached to the Temple that they missed the God the Temple was meant to reveal.
The Temple was a gift from God. It represented His presence among His people. But over time, what was supposed to be a window became a wall.
The symbol became more important than the Savior.
The structure became more important than surrender.
The traditions became more important than truth.
And standing before them was Jesus—the fulfillment of everything the Temple pointed toward.
The sacrifices pointed to Jesus.
The priesthood pointed to Jesus.
The Holy of Holies pointed to Jesus.
The Temple was never the destination.
It was the signpost.
But they loved the signpost so much they missed the Savior.
And before we shake our heads at them, we should pause.
Because we can do the same thing.
We can know Christian language and miss Christ.
We can attend church and neglect intimacy with God.
We can defend traditions, preferences, and programs while our hearts slowly drift from Jesus.
We can become experts in religion while remaining strangers to His presence.
That is why Stephen's words cut so deeply.
The issue was never the building.
The issue was the heart.
The religious leaders thought they were defending God, but they were actually resisting Him.
And that remains one of the greatest dangers for every believer—not open rebellion, but subtle substitution.
Replacing a relationship with Jesus with religious activity.
Replacing surrender with routine.
Replacing awe with familiarity.
The gospel is a constant invitation to return.
To remember that Christianity is not primarily about a place, a tradition, or a system.
It is about a Person.
Jesus Christ.
The One whom heaven cannot contain, yet who came near to rescue us.
Application:
Ask yourself honestly: Have I become more familiar with Christianity than I am with Christ? Spend time with Him today—not merely learning about Him, but speaking with Him, listening to Him, and enjoying His presence.
Prayer:
Jesus, guard my heart from settling for religion without relationship. Keep me from becoming so familiar with the things of God that I lose my wonder of You. Draw me close again and help me love You more than the traditions, routines, or comforts that surround my faith. Amen.
Scripture:
“You stiff-necked people, uncircumcised in heart and ears, you always resist the Holy Spirit. As your fathers did, so do you.” — Acts 7:51
Think:
When we read these words, it's easy to hear anger.
But Stephen isn't angry.
He's heartbroken.
By this point, Stephen knows the outcome. The crowd is furious. The religious leaders are enraged. The tension in the room is unbearable.
He is not trying to save his life.
That opportunity has already passed.
Stephen has settled something in his heart.
Jesus is worth dying for.
What breaks his heart is not what they are about to do to him.
It's what they have already done to Jesus.
For an entire chapter, Stephen has been pleading with them.
Joseph was rejected.
Moses was rejected.
The prophets were rejected.
Again and again, God sent messengers to His people, and again and again they pushed them away.
Now Stephen finally says what has been underneath the entire sermon:
"You are doing it again."
The tragedy is not that these men are about to kill Stephen.
The tragedy is that they are still resisting God.
Think about that.
The Messiah they prayed for had come.
The Savior they needed had come.
The One who could forgive their sins, heal their hearts, and reconcile them to God had come.
And they rejected Him.
Stephen's heart is breaking because he sees what they cannot see.
He sees Jesus.
He sees the glory of Christ.
He sees the mercy they are refusing.
He sees the forgiveness being offered.
And he knows that the greatest loss in the room is not his life.
It is their souls.
That is what makes this passage so piercing.
Most of us fear losing comfort.
Stephen feared people missing Christ.
Most of us are consumed with protecting our lives.
Stephen was consumed with pointing people to Jesus.
The closer you get to the heart of God, the more your priorities begin to change.
You begin caring less about winning arguments and more about people finding Christ.
Less about protecting your reputation and more about proclaiming the gospel.
Less about what happens to you and more about whether people see Jesus.
And perhaps that is the question beneath Acts 7:
What breaks my heart?
Am I most concerned about my comfort, my plans, and my preferences?
Or do I carry any of the burden Stephen carried for people who are far from God?
Because Stephen's final sermon wasn't the speech of a man trying to save himself.
It was the plea of a man desperate for others to see Jesus before it was too late.
Application:
Ask God to give you His heart for people. Pray for someone in your life who is far from Christ. Don't just pray that their circumstances improve—pray that they encounter Jesus.
Prayer:
Father, give me a heart that reflects Yours. Help me care more about people knowing Jesus than about my own comfort and security. Break my heart for what breaks Yours, and help me live with an eternal perspective. Amen.
Scripture:
“But he, full of the Holy Spirit, gazed into heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. And he said, ‘Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.’” — Acts 7:55–56 (ESV)
Think:
Stephen's life is ending.
The crowd has stopped listening. Rage has taken over. Hands are reaching for stones. In a matter of moments, his body will be broken beneath their violence.
And Stephen knows it.
There is no escape.
No rescue.
No miracle coming to stop the execution.
Yet there is not a hint of panic in him.
Why?
Because Stephen sees something the crowd cannot see.
Heaven opens.
And there, in the middle of the chaos, Stephen sees Jesus.
Not a memory of Jesus.
Not a doctrine about Jesus.
Not a distant idea of Jesus.
He sees the risen, reigning, glorified Christ.
And what he sees next is one of the most moving moments in all of Scripture.
Jesus is standing.
Throughout the New Testament, Jesus is described as sitting at the Father's right hand. Sitting signifies that His work of redemption is complete. The battle has been won. The sacrifice has been accepted.
But here, for the only time, Stephen sees Him standing.
The early church fathers loved this image. Some said Christ stood to welcome His faithful servant home. Others believed He stood as Stephen's advocate, publicly identifying Himself with the one who was identifying with Him on earth.
Perhaps both are true.
What we know is this:
As Stephen stands for Christ before men, Christ stands for Stephen before heaven.
And suddenly the entire scene changes.
The crowd sees a condemned man.
Heaven sees a victorious saint.
The crowd sees a life ending.
Jesus sees a son coming home.
The crowd thinks they are taking something from Stephen.
In reality, Stephen is about to receive everything.
That is the great secret of Christian courage.
Stephen is not brave because death isn't real.
He is brave because Jesus is more real.
The stones are real.
The pain is real.
The loss is real.
But Christ is greater.
This is what Stephen has been preaching his entire sermon.
Joseph was rejected, but God was working.
Moses was rejected, but God was working.
The prophets were rejected, but God was working.
Jesus was rejected, crucified, and buried—but God was accomplishing salvation.
Now Stephen is being rejected too.
And even here, God is working.
In fact, standing nearby is a young man named Saul.
He is approving of Stephen's death.
He thinks he is witnessing the end of a movement.
Instead, he is watching a sermon that he will never forget.
The blood of Stephen will become seed for the Church.
The man holding the coats will one day become the Apostle Paul.
Even in Stephen's death, Jesus is still building His kingdom.
That is why this passage reaches so deeply into our lives.
Because all of us face stones.
Some are physical.
Some are emotional.
Some are disappointments, betrayals, diagnoses, fears, or losses we never asked for.
And in those moments, the question is not whether the stones are real.
The question is whether we can see beyond them.
Can we see the Christ who reigns above them?
Can we trust that He is working even when life feels unfair?
Can we believe that our story is not defined by the stones thrown at us but by the Savior who stands for us?
Stephen's final glimpse reminds us that heaven is not distant.
Jesus is not absent.
And no suffering, no loss, no trial has the power to separate God's people from the glory that awaits them.
The last thing Stephen saw was not the faces of his enemies.
It was the face of Jesus.
And in the end, that made all the difference.
Application:
What "stones" are you facing today? Instead of focusing only on the pain, ask God to lift your eyes to Christ. The circumstances may not change immediately, but your perspective can.
Prayer:
Jesus, when life feels overwhelming, help me see You more clearly than I see my circumstances. Remind me that You are reigning, You are present, and You are working even when I cannot understand what You are doing. Give me the faith to keep my eyes fixed on You until the day I see You face to face. Amen.
Scripture:
“And there arose on that day a great persecution against the church in Jerusalem, and they were all scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria...” — Acts 8:1
“Now those who were scattered went about preaching the word.” — Acts 8:4
Think:
Stephen is dead.
The church is under attack.
Homes are being abandoned. Families are being separated. Believers are fleeing Jerusalem to save their lives.
If you had been there, it would not have looked like revival.
It would have looked like defeat.
Just a few chapters earlier, Jesus had told His followers:
"You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria..." (Acts 1:8)
The disciples heard the promise.
Then Pentecost came.
The Spirit fell.
The church exploded.
Thousands were saved.
And if we're honest, they may have been perfectly content to stay right there in Jerusalem.
After all, God was moving.
Lives were changing.
Why leave?
Because Jesus had not only called them to Jerusalem.
He had called them to Judea and Samaria too.
And what the church would not do voluntarily, persecution would accomplish providentially.
The believers were scattered.
But they did not scatter as victims.
They scattered as witnesses.
This is what makes Acts 8 so powerful.
The people running from Jerusalem were not merely refugees trying to survive. They were Spirit-filled men and women carrying the message of a risen Christ everywhere they went.
Imagine it.
A family arrives in a new town.
Someone asks why they left Jerusalem.
And suddenly they begin telling the story.
The empty tomb.
The risen Jesus.
The coming of the Holy Spirit.
The hope of the gospel.
The persecution that was supposed to silence the church only multiplied its voice.
Because you cannot stop people who have encountered the risen Christ.
The same Spirit who filled them in Acts 2 was still empowering them in Acts 8.
The same Jesus who commissioned them was still leading them.
The same gospel that changed them was still spreading through them.
And maybe that is the challenge for us.
Most of us pray for God to use us.
But what if some of the very circumstances we are asking Him to remove are the places He intends to use us most?
What if the job change isn't merely a disruption?
What if the move isn't merely an inconvenience?
What if the unexpected season isn't simply something to survive?
What if God is scattering you into the mission?
Throughout Scripture, God often does His greatest work through people whose lives did not go according to plan.
Joseph was scattered into Egypt.
Daniel was scattered into Babylon.
The early church was scattered into Judea and Samaria.
And through every one of those stories, God was advancing His purposes.
The believers in Acts 8 lost their homes.
But they carried the gospel.
They lost their security.
But they carried the Spirit.
They lost what was familiar.
But they did not lose Jesus.
And because they were filled with His power, what looked like defeat became one of the greatest missionary movements in history.
Application:
Where has God "scattered" you lately? Instead of asking only, "How do I get back to normal?" ask, "Who might God want me to reach right here?"
Prayer:
Father, thank You that no circumstance is wasted in Your hands. Fill me with the same Spirit who empowered the early church. Help me see every season, every disruption, and every unexpected turn as an opportunity to be a witness for Jesus. Amen.
Scripture:
"Philip went down to the city of Samaria and proclaimed to them the Christ. And the crowds with one accord paid attention to what was being said by Philip, when they heard him and saw the signs that he did. For unclean spirits, crying out with a loud voice, came out of many who had them, and many who were paralyzed or lame were healed. So there was much joy in that city." — Acts 8:5–8 (ESV)
Think:
“So there was much joy in that city.”
That may be one of the most beautiful sentences in the book of Acts.
Because Luke isn't simply describing a happy crowd.
He's describing a miracle.
To understand why, you have to understand Samaria.
For nearly 700 years, Jews and Samaritans had lived with deep hostility toward one another. The division stretched back to the Old Testament when Israel was conquered and scattered. Over generations, political conflict, racial prejudice, religious disagreement, and bitterness hardened into something that seemed permanent.
Jews avoided Samaria.
Samaritans resented Jews.
The wounds had become part of their identity.
Children inherited the hostility of their parents.
Entire generations grew up believing separation was normal.
In many ways, Samaria was a city defined by old scars.
Then Jesus arrived.
Years earlier, Jesus had intentionally walked through Samaria when most Jews walked around it. He sat beside a well and spoke to a Samaritan woman everyone else ignored. The disciples were shocked.
But Jesus wasn't.
Because He had come for Samaria too.
Now in Acts 8, after Stephen's death and the persecution of the church, Philip enters the very place many Jewish believers would have naturally avoided.
And he preaches Christ.
Not politics.
Not revenge.
Not who was right and who was wrong.
Christ.
And something extraordinary happens.
People begin believing.
Chains begin breaking.
Demons flee.
The sick are healed.
But don't miss the greatest miracle.
Luke doesn't say there was much amazement in the city.
He says there was much joy.
Why?
Because joy is what happens when Jesus restores what sin has broken.
For centuries, Samaria had been carrying division, shame, confusion, and spiritual darkness.
Then the gospel arrived.
The same gospel that reconciles sinners to God began reconciling people to one another.
The same Jesus who forgives sin began healing old wounds.
The same Spirit who filled the believers at Pentecost was now bringing life to a place many people had written off.
And that's why this passage resonates so deeply.
Because all of us have a little bit of Samaria in our lives.
Places marked by old hurts.
Old disappointments.
Old failures.
Relationships that seem too broken.
Habits that seem too entrenched.
Wounds we've carried so long that we've stopped believing healing is possible.
But Acts 8 reminds us that Jesus specializes in entering places others have given up on.
The city had not changed in centuries.
Yet one encounter with Christ began accomplishing what generations could not.
That is the power of the gospel.
Not merely to improve people.
But to make all things new.
And maybe the reason this verse has survived for two thousand years is because every believer knows what it feels like when Jesus enters a place of darkness and joy returns.
The marriage isn't perfect.
The grief isn't gone.
The struggle hasn't completely disappeared.
But suddenly hope is alive again.
Because Jesus is there.
And where Jesus is truly welcomed, joy has a way of returning.
Application:
What area of your life feels like Samaria—a place marked by old wounds, old disappointments, or lingering pain? Invite Jesus into that place today and ask Him to restore what you've stopped believing can change.
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You that no heart, no relationship, and no situation is beyond Your reach. Bring Your healing into the places that have carried pain for far too long. Let Your presence restore hope, peace, and joy where they have been missing. Amen.