Sunday, April 25, 2010

Acts 5 :: Can't Let It Go

Acts 5 in The Message and TNIV Translations

On Friday, I left everyone with a few questions, but didn't really give much thought.  The Ananias and Sapphira story leaves me with a mixed bag of emotions.  I have a hard time reconciling this with what I've seen of Jesus.  Peter seems to be going off-course from the way Jesus led.  Jesus didn't even come down this hard on Judas Iscariot, when he was betrayed.  I can do my best to clean this up and make it make sense, but this weekend I didn't feel like doing that.  I just wanted to let the tension exist in my soul as I asked God to work the truth into my soul.

I dug into the story and discovered something interesting.  There is a phrase that bridges this story to one in the Old Testament book of Joshua.  Luke uses the Greek word, nosphizo, which means "kept back" or "put aside for oneself."  This is not that unique except that in the Greek version of the Old Testament, the Septuagint, Joshua also uses this phrase in Joshua 7:1 when giving account of a man named Achan, who kept back some plunder when God said to destroy everything.  Luke, being a Gentile, would have been accustomed to the Greek version of Joshua's account, and it is widely thought that he intended to draw a parallel to this story.

Interesting note:  While the story of Ananias and Sapphira is about not giving, Achan's story is about not destroying.  Both ended with a smiting.  The issue does not seem to be a giving issue or a destroying issue, but a deception issue.  Both parties were guilty of assuming something was their's that was not.  Selfishness moved both Achan and the couple to deception.  This selfish deceit had not place in the establishment of God's kingdom in the Promised Land, nor in the New Kingdom that Jesus had established with the establishment of the New Testament Church.

This is important because I do not believe Luke is giving us a lesson about giving - "If we don't give our money to the cause, then God will smite us."  I have heard teachers use this story to get people to dig into their wallets and pull out more - all of what they have.  What crap!  Not the intent here by Luke...in my humble opinion.  I believe that Luke is carrying on the theme he began to develop in chapter one.  This new way of life was going to involve 100% of us - not 50, 75 or 99, but 100%.  We cannot present ourselves to God and to each other as being all in when we are withholding.  The reaction of Peter in response to this sort of deception is not so far removed from Jesus' reaction to the Pharisees who confessed one thing with their mouths, but something very different with their lives.  Ananias and Sapphira had a much larger problem than simply wanting to keep the money.  This is not something that the early church could afford to take lightly, either.  Peter is setting precedent that this sort of deception is completely unacceptable and leads to death (sounds eerily familiar to the story of Adam and Eve, too).

In order for us to be the Church that God intends for us to be and make the impact He intends for us to make, we must not hold back - our hobbies, our jobs, our families, our thoughts, our online habits, our reading, our watching, our...whatever!  We cannot pretend to be all in and not be.  God may not strike us down cold, but don't mistake that for Him condoning this sort of pretense and deceit.  Can you imagine being part of a church where people were completely honest about their pursuit of the Christ-life, not pretending to be one thing while living out another?  What would that look like?  Would that be as refreshing to you as I think it would be for me?

Anyway, thank you for allowing me the time to process this weekend.  I hope that you found something helpful in your readings this past week.  Remember to read with an eye toward application.  If our reading doesn't change us, we aren't reading it the way God wants us to.  Get into the story and let the story get into you.  Pray, seek and find!

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for the insight Brad. Was the punishment so severe because of the thought they had that they could "get away with it"? When I know that I have been selfish and acted as if what God says and asks me to do means less than what I want, I tend to want to run away and hide from Him. This is because I know that He knows and I am embarrassed and ashamed of what I've done or not done. As I've grown in my walk with God, I've learned to run to Him in confession and request forgiveness and help with repentance; at least alot more than I used to.

    The question is: is the difference between no. 1 - a couple that lied about what they had kept.... and no. 2 - essentially murdering Jesus (as I also essentially did) - the fact that one assumes God can be fooled? I think I know the answer...

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  2. I think the punishment was so severe for the same reason (as we've discussed) that everything else seems so intense during this time. The church is being born. The stakes are extremely high. God was not going to let anything compromise the establishment of the church. I don't know that I'd call this "punishment," as much as getting pulled out of the game. As a believer in grace, I don't see this as condemnation. I see God taking them out before they screw everything up. I've seen people get taken out even today, and it's not pretty but it's in the interest of the church in the long run.

    You can sense in your gut it's not about the money, but it's hard to put your finger on what exactly the main issue is. Here is my take: they wanted the prestige and recognition that Barnabas got (see 4:36-37), without having to actually make the sacrifice he made. They are the church's first hypocrites, who want to put on a certain face to gain prestige in the church, while living a different life in the real world. The one thing God was not going to allow at this time was for His people to become known as people who didn't really mean it, who were just playing a game. I wince as I write it, knowing how common it is in the church today.

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