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Who Needs Miracles?
Contributed by Alison Bucklin on Apr 11, 2023 (message contributor)
Summary: Would you rather have a faith that is based on eye-catching, headline-grabbing miracles, or a faith which doesn’t need them?
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I preached my first sermon from this pulpit on January 19, 1997. It’s been well over a year now, although sometimes it seems much longer because I am so very much at home. But as much as one can think of that as a time of beginning, it was also a time of ending.
I expect that only those of you who were on the Pastoral Nominating Committee - or are married to someone who was - really has any idea of how much work it is to get a new pastor. But you know, even with all the work, all the frustration, all the resumes read and sermons listened to, your side of the process - the church’s side - is only a small part of the whole, only a year and a half. Do you know, I started going to seminary in 1988? Nine years, from the time I started to the time I came here, and only God knows how many committee meetings. Only God knows how many jokes there are about Presbyterians and committee meetings, too. But it’s really a necessary process. It protects everyone. It protects the church as a whole from getting someone who shouldn’t be a pastor at all, and does its best to make sure that each church is matched with the right pastor. And personally, I think that all the committees that had a part in getting me here did a pretty good job. But oh, there were a lot of meetings.
Wouldn’t it be simpler if we did it the way Peter did it?
Now, mind you, my situation in Minneapolis was nowhere near as bad as Peter’s was in Jerusalem back then. I left town because there weren’t any openings there for someone of my theological views, and although the last meeting, when I was examined for ordination in front of the entire Presbytery, was unusually grueling, it couldn’t be called actual persecution. Peter left town under much more dramatic circumstances.
This chapter that we’re looking at comes right after the martyrdom of Stephen - the beginning of the systematic persecution of the Christians by the Jewish authorities - and, as it says back in chapter 8, “all except the apostles were scattered throughout the countryside of Judea and Samaria.” And because of that persecution, people like Philip started proclaiming the good news in all the places they had fled to, like north to Samaria and Galilee and south toward Egypt.
You see, up until this time the Christians had stayed in Jerusalem, waiting for Jesus to return. It took the persecution to shake them up and send them out to fulfill the Great Commission. But God has a way of shaking things up so that he can put things back together the way he wants them, doesn’t he? God used the Apostle Paul’s zeal as a persecutor of the early church just as surely as he used his post-conversion zeal in taking the Gospel to the Gentiles.
But anyway, by the time the apostles were able to go about openly again, there were quite a number of thriving Christian communities in the area, and so Peter went down to the coast to encourage and build them up, in effect doing what Jesus had told him to do that morning by the Sea of Galilee: tending the sheep, fulfilling his pastoral call.
And the first thing that Luke, who wrote the book of Acts, tells us about Peter’s ministry is two miracles. In the passage just preceding the one we just read, Peter heals a man named Aeneas who had been paralyzed for eight years. And then when he goes on to Joppa, where apparently he had been heading for all along because he stays there, he raises a local women named Dorcas, who had just died. The accounts of these miracles are strikingly similar to accounts of Jesus’ miracles. And later on Luke recounts tales of Paul doing the same things during the course of his ministry.
And it’s clear that at least one of the reasons these miracles are performed is to establish the apostles’ credentials, to certify them as the genuine article, the real McCoy. The people had heard enough about Jesus to know what to expect of the apostles, and at least in the case of Tabitha they had sent for Peter specifically expecting that he would raise her up. But these miracles served another function as well. When people heard of these miracles, and saw them being performed, they put their faith in Jesus Christ by the dozens and the hundreds and probably even the thousands. And of course we must not forget the basic function: to minister in the name and the power of Jesus to the poor and the sick and the hungry and to the bereaved and - yes - to the dead.