Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: May 28th (Ezekiel 2 & Acts 5:12-42)
Episode Date: May 27, 2021Ezekiel called. The apostles before the council. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporting this project,... please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Ezekiel chapter 2
And he said to me,
Son of man stand on your feet, and I will speak with you.
And as he spoke to me, the spirit entered into me and set me on my feet,
and I heard him speaking to me, and he said to me,
Son of man, I send you to the people of Israel, to nations of rebels who have rebelled against me.
They and their fathers have transgressed against me to this very day.
The descendants also are impudent and stubborn.
I send you to them, and you shall say,
say to them, thus says the Lord God, and whether they hear or refuse to hear, for they are a rebellious
house, they will know that a prophet has been among them. And you, son of man, be not afraid of them,
nor be afraid of their words, though briers and thorns are with you, and you sit on scorpions.
Be not afraid of their words, nor be dismayed at their looks, for they are a rebellious house.
And you shall speak my words to them, whether they hear or refuse to hear, for the
they are a rebellious house. But you, son of man, hear what I say to you, be not rebellious like that
rebellious house. Open your mouth and eat what I give you. And when I looked, behold, a hand was
stretched out to me, and behold, a scroll of a book was in it, and he spread it before me, and it had
writing on the front and on the back, and there were written on it words of lamentation and mourning
and woe. In Ezekiel chapter one, Ezekiel saw the head.
heavens opened and four living creatures with the divine throne chariot, a glorious humaniform
manifestation of God's presence upon it. After seeing the vision of the throne chariot, Ezekiel had
fallen on his face and heard a voice, and in chapter two the account continues as we hear what the
voice had to say. Ezekiel is addressed as son of man, an expression that as Walter Eichrot observes,
is used on numerous occasions throughout the book of Ezekiel, almost 100 times, yet not that often
outside of it within the Old Testament.
Daniel chapter 8, verse 17, is one of those few other instances,
in a vision very similar to this one.
Psalm 8 verse 4 is another.
What is man that you are mindful of him,
and the son of man that you care for him?
Eichrot argues that he has addressed this way
as a reminder of his weak creatureliness
and the Lord's condescension.
Marsha Greenberg and Leslie Allen
suggest that it also serves to distinguish him
from the other divine beings in the scene,
the four living creatures.
and any others that might be there.
Alan writes,
Ezekiel is a human being and no God,
out of his league in the transcendent scene,
as his physical reflex has demonstrated.
Even as the voice underlines the difference,
it hints that this human being may have a role in the divine plan.
The vocative, human one, persistently prefaces the divine messages
in this passage of commission,
and in fact, throughout the book of oracles,
it serves to characterize Ezekiel as the prophet of divine transcendent,
marked by humble awareness of who God is and by a concern that his fellow exile should share his awareness.
Ezekiel is instructed to stand on his feet, at which the spirit enters into him and sets him on his feet.
In Chapter 1 the spirit animated the wheels. Presumably the same spirit is animating Ezekiel here.
Although he has been overwhelmed by the majesty of the glory of God,
he needs to be alert and in possession of his wits, as he is being summoned to intelligent action and attention.
The Hebrew prophet, unlike many of the pagan prophets, was not defined by being in constant ecstasies and losing his wits, but exhibited rationality and sobriety.
Daniel Block sees in the imagery and the language surrounding the commission the implicit context of a royal court.
Entering the royal presence, the servant prostrates himself.
He is then told to rise and given a charge in language typically found in a court, when a ruler would appoint and send a messenger to some third party.
as a prophet Ezekiel is like Isaiah a participant in the divine council he's commissioned and sent to bear its words to his people he can also speak on behalf of his people in the council his role is framed by the covenant bond that exists between the lord and his people and the terms of the covenant that the people have broken he is commissioned in the context of devastating and sustained apostasy apostasy so severe that the people were uprooted from the land and cast into exile
However, the remarkable thing is that even though they are now exiled on the far side of the River Euphrates,
having been returned to the land of the Chaldeans from which Abraham their forefather was first called,
the Lord has not utterly cast them off.
Here, in this foreign land, even while they are still in revolt against him,
he is commissioning another prophet to address them,
even after they had rejected all of his earlier overtures.
The people to whom Ezekiel is sent are identified as the people of Israel,
The northern kingdom of Israel was swallowed up by the Assyrians well over a century earlier.
The light of the southern kingdom of Judah is currently guttering and will soon be extinguished.
Their king Jehoiakin is currently in exile in Babylon, and they have a puppet king on the throne in his place.
However, the people continue to exist as a people, even though they are scattered and separated from the land,
in a precarious existence, in danger of being assimilated to other peoples in the lands of their exile.
The Israelites who had been taken by the Assyrians and the Egyptian exiles of Jeremiah's day
had both largely vanished in such a way.
The exiles in Babylon face a similar threat.
There's a yawning abyss of possible extinction as the distinct people opening up beneath them.
Is there still a way back from such a terrible fate?
To make matters worse, the people are obdurate and stubbornly resistant to the word of the Lord.
The Lord characterizes them as a rebellious house.
as block notes, stubborn both without, literally stiff of face, and within, hard of heart and mind.
As the prophet of the Lord, Ezekiel will face strong resistance from his people, yet he needs to be faithful to his mission in the teeth of their opposition.
Like other prophets, figures such as Moses, Isaiah and Jeremiah, the Lord strengthens, emboldens and steals him for his task.
A similar preparation of Jeremiah can be seen in Jeremiah chapter 1, verse 17 to 19.
But you, dress yourself for work, arise and say to them everything that I command you,
do not be dismayed by them, lest I dismay you before them.
And I, behold, I make you this day a fortified city, an iron pillar and bronze walls,
against the whole land, against the kings of Judah, its officials, its priests, and the people
of the land.
They will fight against you, but they shall not prevail against you, for I am with you,
declares the Lord, to deliver you.
Ezekiel is charged not to fear the people's opposition. He has the Lord on his side. He is like someone
surrounded by thorny and stinging plants. These may refer to the opposition that he will face,
or perhaps to the oppression of life in exile. However, Block advances the interpretation that these
things are the wall of protection that the Lord is establishing around his servant Ezekiel.
If Ezekiel faithfully performs his commission, his ministry will be so evidently a divinely proven one
that the people will have no choice but to acknowledge his legitimacy as a prophet.
The Lord will not let his words fall to the ground.
Ezekiel needs, however, to distinguish himself from the people surrounding him.
Like resistant toddlers stubbornly rejecting the food that their parents are feeding them,
they refuse to accept the word of the Lord.
Ezekiel, however, must receive the word of the Lord, ingesting it and taking it within.
The prophet seems to have a far closer relationship with the word of the Lord
than we see in relationship to the law or wisdom,
in the case of the priest or the king or sage.
The prophet ingests and embodies his message and its power.
The word of the Lord becomes the prophet's word.
Here Ezekiel is handed a scroll,
most likely a rolled-up papyrus document.
It's a complete message written on both sides
with judgments that will give rise to lamentation, mourning and woe.
We see something similar in Revelation chapter 10,
verses 8 to 11, where John is also given a book to eat. Then the voice that I had heard from heaven
spoke to me again, saying, go take the scroll that is open in the hand of the angel who is standing
on the sea and on the land. So I went to the angel and told him to give me the little scroll,
and he said to me, take and eat it. It will make your stomach bitter, but in your mouth it will be
sweet as honey. And I took the little scroll from the hand of the angel and ate it. It was sweet as honey
in my mouth, but when I had eaten it, my stomach was made bitter, and I was told, you must again
prophesy about many peoples and nations and languages and kings. It is likely that Luke is also
subtly working with the background of Ezekiel in Luke chapter 4, where Jesus is handed the scroll
in the synagogue in Nazareth, and the gracious words of the text of Isaiah proceed from out of his
mouth. A question to consider, looking at the prophetic commissioning of Moses in Exodus chapter 3,
and four, Jeremiah in Jeremiah chapter 1 and Isaiah in Isaiah chapter 6, what similarities and differences
do you notice between them and the account of Ezekiel's call and commission in the opening chapters
of his book. Acts chapter 5 verses 12 to 42. Now many signs and wonders were regularly done
among the people by the hands of the apostles and they were all together in Solomon's portico.
None of the rest dared join them, but the people held them in high esteem. And more than
ever believers were added to the Lord, multitudes of both men and women, so that they even carried
out the sick into the streets, and laid them on cots and mats, that as Peter came by, at least
his shadow might fall on some of them. The people also gathered from the towns around Jerusalem,
bringing the sick and those afflicted with unclean spirits, and they were all healed. But the high
priest rose up, and all who were with him, that is the party of the Sadducees, and filled with
jealousy they arrested the apostles and put them in the public prison. But during the night,
an angel of the Lord opened the prison doors and brought them out and said, go and stand in the temple
and speak to the people all the words of this life. And when they heard this, they entered the temple
at daybreak and began to teach. Now when the high priest came, and those who were with him, they called
together the council, all the senate of the people of Israel, and sent to the prison to have them
brought. But when the officers came, they did not find them in the prison, so they returned and reported.
We found the prison securely locked and the gods standing at the doors, but when we opened them,
we found no one inside. Now when the captain of the temple and the chief priests heard these words,
they were greatly perplexed about them, wondering what this would come to. And someone came and told
them, look, the men whom you put in prison are standing in the temple and teaching the people.
Then the captain with the officers went and brought them, but not by force, for they were afraid of being stoned by the people.
And when they had brought them, they set them before the council, and the high priest questioned them, saying,
We strictly charged you not to teach in this name, yet here you have filled Jerusalem with your teaching,
and you intend to bring this man's blood upon us.
But Peter and the apostles answered,
We must obey God rather than men.
The God of our fathers raised Jesus, whom you killed by hanging him on a tree,
God exalted him at his right hand as leader and saviour to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins.
And we are witnesses to these things, and so is the Holy Spirit whom God has given to those who obey him.
When they heard this, they were enraged and wanted to kill them.
But a Pharisee in the council named Gamal, a teacher of the law held in honour by all the people,
stood up and gave orders to put the men outside for a little while.
And he said to them,
men of Israel take care what you are about to do with these men
for before these days Thudus rose up claiming to be somebody
and a number of men about 400 joined him
he was killed and all who followed him were dispersed and came to nothing
after him Judas the Galilean rose up in the days of the census
and drew away some of the people after him
he too perished and all who followed him was scattered
so in the present case I tell you keep away from these men
and let them alone for if this plan or this undertaking is a
of man, it will fail, but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them. You might even be
found opposing God. So they took his advice, and when they had called in the apostles, they beat them
and charged them not to speak in the name of Jesus, and let them go. Then they left the presence of the
council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonour for the name. And every day in the
temple and from house to house, they did not cease teaching and preaching that the Christ is Jesus.
end of chapter 5 of the Book of Acts following the judgment of Ananias and Safara,
the apostles are once more brought before the leaders of the Jews. We discover that the apostles
had been meeting together in Solomon's portico. Solomon's portico was already mentioned back in
chapter 3 verse 11. The temple was a site where the early church met, and particularly the apostles.
Solomon's portico was a relatively public place where many people would see them as they came for
worship. Within the gospel, if we read of Jesus' teaching in the temple on several occasions,
in John's Gospel, chapter 10, we see that he also taught the Jews in the context of Solomon's
Portico. Having a vibrant new sect, drawing great multitudes to them in the context of the temple
would have been a threat to the authorities. They're performing many signs and wonders,
and signs on a greater scale than even Christ himself. There are many different types of miracles
and signs being performed here. There are sick people being healed of various types,
Exorcisms being performed, and even the shadow of Peter is effective to perform miracles.
While the woman with the issue of blood sought to touch the hem of Jesus' garment,
even being touched by the shadow of Peter is enough to heal.
In his farewell discourse in the Gospel of John, Jesus had promised his disciples
that they would perform greater signs than the ones that he had performed,
and here we see Jesus' word coming to pass.
That Peter was especially associated with the power to perform these miracles,
again suggests that he was seen and was the leader of the apostles.
None of the rest dared to join them.
Now who are the rest?
There are a number of different positions that have been put forward.
Some see it as the people more generally.
They've heard about the events with Ananias and Safara
and they are afraid of drawing near when God is so near to his people.
They know that God is a revealer of hearts
and also that he judges the unholy.
And so aware of their sin and their failures they do not want to come in.
the light of God's judgment. That is one possibility. Another possibility is that the people who
are gathering together in Solomon's portico were the apostles more particularly, and the rest were the
other disciples. They did not dare to join them because this was a place of great confrontation,
a place from which the authorities might take them and imprison them. Darrell Box suggests this
particular reading. The apostles are held in high esteem by the people. They are men of character
and clearly men of power as well. The Lord is with them. And so they are
are recognized as approved by the Lord by the rest of the people. And as a result of their public
ministry and the many signs and wonders that they are performing, a great multitude of people
convert. Considerable numbers of people men and women are joining the church and the church is
growing rapidly. This provokes the jealousy of the leaders. The apostles are gaining honor
and influence among the crowd. It may only be a few months after Pentecost, but huge numbers have
joined the church by this point, probably well over 10,000.
people. It's not surprising that the authorities will be jealous, seeing God's approval of the
apostles, the great power that they are wielding, and the influence that they have with the
crowd. They wish that they had the same thing, and because they do not, they strike out against the
apostles. The arrest and the subsequent trial of the apostles invites comparisons with the
trial that they had after the healing of the layman in chapter four. Craig Keener identifies 17 parallels
between the accounts of the two chapters.
The parallels invite us to consider
not just the similarities,
but also the developments in the second account.
All of the apostles are now involved.
Persecution is ramped up to a greater level.
They are now beaten, not just sent away with a threat.
There is also a reference back to the earlier gag order
that the apostles had broken.
This is the first of a number of prison break stories
in the narrative of Acts.
While these stories can be connected to each other,
they should also be connected back to the story of the resurrection.
The authorities find an empty cell guarded by soldiers,
and they also find an empty tomb.
And there's an angel involved.
They enter the temple at daybreak,
in the same way as Christ rose early in the morning.
Much as Christ disarmed principalities and powers by his resurrection,
so the authorities are proved powerless and disarmed by the way that God works with the disciples.
Their gag order proves ineffectual, their threats prove ineffectual,
Their sanctions prove ineffectual.
A large percentage of the population of the city of Jerusalem has now joined the apostles.
And what's more, the apostles and the disciples are undermining their authority
by claiming that they are responsible for killing the Messiah himself.
There is something of a comedic character to all of this.
God is outwitting his enemies, and doing so in a way that proves them to be utterly powerless to resist.
When they hear that the men that they threw into prison are standing in the temple and teaching the people,
they send the captain with the officers, seeking to bring them back to stand trial.
The men that the authorities send are afraid of bringing the apostles in by force.
They know that they will be stoned by the people if they do so.
The role played by the crowd in the gospel narratives and here in the book of Acts is a very important one.
In Acts as in the Gospels, the crowd is a great concern.
The authorities cannot control the crowd.
We read of crowds rioting, attempting to kill people,
and authorities doing whatever they can to calm the crowd.
crowds down. The crowds play an important part in the story of the crucifixion. First of all,
the authorities were wary of taking Christ join the feast because of all the crowds that would be
present. Then the Jewish authorities whip up the crowd to demand Christ's crucifixion, and Pilot
for his part gives up on trying to bring about justice, giving in to the crowd because he knows
that he is powerless to contain them. The authorities then are sitting on top of a volcano that
might blow up at any moment, and this new movement is a hugely distaste.
stabilizing influence. Societies are built upon a fragile religious order in this time,
and the gospel really shakes things up, not just here in Jerusalem, but later on also in the
Gentile world. A lot of this is about maintaining political control in volatile situations,
and the authorities are very concerned about their own legitimacy. The apostles are accused of
intending to bring the blood of Christ upon them, that is, to hold them guilty of crucifying an
innocent man. In Matthew chapter 27 verses 24 to 25 we also encountered this expression. So when Pilots saw
that he was gaining nothing, but rather that a riot was beginning, he took water and washed his
hands before the crowd saying, I am innocent of this man's blood, see to it yourselves. And all the people
answered, his blood be on us and on our children. The message of the apostles then is undermining
the authority of the council. And if they aren't careful, they won't be able to rule the people,
and they will lose many of the privileges that the Romans accord them.
And this isn't just some private teaching of these apostles.
They've filled all of Jerusalem with their teaching.
It is quite likely that 10 to 20% of Jerusalem has converted by this point.
Yet Peter here presents God's gift of repentance and forgiveness of sins to Israel and Christ.
It will occur as Jesus' blood comes upon them,
not in the sense of guilt, but in the sense of covering and cleansing.
The message isn't designed to threaten the nation,
nor even to overturn the authority of the rulers,
but rather to secure the peace and restoration of Israel.
The council remind the apostles that they had been charged not to teach in the name of Jesus,
but Peter and the other apostles once again respond by saying that they must obey God rather than men.
This is not willful rebellion, it's driven by obedience to the Lord.
Peter and the apostles immediately respond by summarizing the message of Christ.
The God of their fathers, the God of Abraham Issa,
Jacob, raised Jesus, the Messiah that they crucified, and exalted him to his right hand as
leader and saviour, in order that through him alone, Israel might receive the forgiveness of sins.
Jesus of Nazareth, the Messiah, is the one in whom Israel's story comes to its divinely intended
climax. It is easy to think of the early Christians over against Jews as a different movement
entirely, but the difference that we're seeing here is a difference within Judaism itself,
a fifth group alongside the Sadducees, the Pharisees, the Essines and the zealots.
This is a new way of understanding Israel's story and its destination,
a new way of understanding what it means to live out life as Israel,
a new way of thinking about the way that God is going to act
and has acted within Israel's history to bring about his kingdom.
The apostles are the appointed witnesses to the Christ,
and the Holy Spirit is bearing witness through signs and wonders that are accompanying their message.
The council find themselves in a difficult position to rule in their case.
While the majority may have been minded to use harsher measures,
a Pharisee in the council, Gamaliel stands up and gives a moderating position.
Whether his moderating position comes from a more agnostic stance relative to the movement
or a more cynical one is not entirely clear.
While the Sadducees seemingly dominated the council,
the Pharisees were a minority that could counterbalance them in certain cases.
Gamaliel, a Pharisee, was the former teacher of,
of Paul. Later on in the book of Acts, Paul speaks of himself as follows. I am a Jew born in
Tarsus in Solicia, but brought up in this city, educated at the feet of Gamaliel, according to the
strict manner of the law of our fathers, being zealous for God, as all of you are this day.
Gamaliel is also a character that is mentioned outside of the biblical text. He has spoken of in
the Mishner. He was also a grandson of Hillel, one of the most famous Jewish teachers of the period.
Gamaliel mentions people who had stood up and started movements.
Thudas and Judas the Galilean had both started rebellions, and both of them had come to nothing.
Judas the Galilean had resisted the Roman census and tax at the beginning of the first century.
However, the movement that he'd started had not entirely ended,
it would end up leading to the great Jewish war of the later 60s AD and the downfall of Jerusalem that followed.
Gamalal advises the council not to resist the movement.
They should rather wait and see what happened.
to it. If it is merely of man, it will come to nothing. But if it is of God, nothing will be able to
withstand it. Reading these words of Gamaliel about 2,000 years later, it might well seem that his
implicit question has been decisively answered. The apostles are called back in before the council,
beaten and then sent away with another gag order. They leave the council and they rejoice that they
are counted worthy to suffer dishonour for the name of Christ. We might think back to Christ's words
in the Beatitudes in Luke chapter 6
verses 22 to 23
Blessed are you when people hate you
and when they exclude you and revile you
and spurn your name as evil
on account of the son of man
Rejoice in that day and leap
for joy for behold your reward
is great in heaven for so their fathers
did to the prophets
receiving dishonour for the name of Christ
is actually a source of great honour
Despite the gag order
they continue to obey God rather than men
every day in the temple and from house to house they continue to teach and preach that the Christ,
the anointed and awaited Davidic Messiah, is Jesus.
A question to consider. Within the Book of Acts, authorities respond to the mission of the early
church in a number of different ways. What would be some of the considerations that would drive
the authorities to different sorts of responses to the early church and their message?
