Acts 5:1-16

Acts 5:1-16

5 But there was a certain man named Ananias who, with his wife, Sapphira, sold some property. He brought part of the money to the apostles, claiming it was the full amount. With his wife’s consent, he kept the rest.

Then Peter said, “Ananias, why have you let Satan fill your heart? You lied to the Holy Spirit, and you kept some of the money for yourself. The property was yours to sell or not sell, as you wished. And after selling it, the money was also yours to give away. How could you do a thing like this? You weren’t lying to us but to God!”

As soon as Ananias heard these words, he fell to the floor and died. Everyone who heard about it was terrified. Then some young men got up, wrapped him in a sheet, and took him out and buried him.

About three hours later his wife came in, not knowing what had happened. Peter asked her, “Was this the price you and your husband received for your land?”

“Yes,” she replied, “that was the price.”

And Peter said, “How could the two of you even think of conspiring to test the Spirit of the Lord like this? The young men who buried your husband are just outside the door, and they will carry you out, too.”

10 Instantly, she fell to the floor and died. When the young men came in and saw that she was dead, they carried her out and buried her beside her husband. 11 Great fear gripped the entire church and everyone else who heard what had happened.

12 The apostles were performing many miraculous signs and wonders among the people. And all the believers were meeting regularly at the Temple in the area known as Solomon’s Colonnade. 13 But no one else dared to join them, even though all the people had high regard for them.14 Yet more and more people believed and were brought to the Lord—crowds of both men and women. 15 As a result of the apostles’ work, sick people were brought out into the streets on beds and mats so that Peter’s shadow might fall across some of them as he went by. 16 Crowds came from the villages around Jerusalem, bringing their sick and those possessed by evil spirits, and they were all healed.

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In the last passage we witnessed an idyllic community.  Everyone involved with everyone.  Then reality hits–sinful humanity asserts itself.  Peter’s words underscore the freedom this couple had, but in their prideful image of themselves, they lied to the Holy Spirit.  Why doesn’t the Holy Spirit respond to those who disobey that way today?  Several reasons I can think of:

1.)  This was the formative time for the church, so keeping the right focus was very important.

2.)  Perhaps the Holy Spirit does respond, but in a different way.  Maybe his response is to withhold His blessing.

I’m also struck by how the people wanted what would be the temporary healing–for the people still would die–but weren’t really interested in the real purpose of the miracles, which was the transformation of the heart.  The warning to me is to not get caught up in the temporal and miss the eternal.

 

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