Acts 4:1-12
The risen Christ’s name brings both healing and hostility, yet the gospel advances through Spirit-filled boldness and clear confession of Jesus’ unique saving authority.
Scripture Text
4:1 As they spoke to the people, the priests and the captain of the temple and the Sadducees came to them,
4:2 Being upset because they taught the people and proclaimed in Jesus the resurrection from the dead.
4:3 They laid hands on them, and put them in custody until the next day, for it was now evening.
4:4 But many of those who heard the word believed, and the number of the men came to be about five thousand.
4:5 In the morning, their rulers, elders, and scribes were gathered together in Jerusalem.
4:6 Annas the high priest was there, with Caiaphas, John, Alexander, and as many as were relatives of the high priest.
4:7 When they had stood Peter and John in the middle of them, they inquired, “By what power, or in what name, have You done this?”
4:8 Then Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, said to them, “You rulers of the people, and elders of Israel,
4:9 If we are examined today concerning a good deed done to a crippled man, by what means this man has been healed,
4:10 May it be known to You all, and to all the people of Israel, that in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom You crucified, whom God raised from the dead, this man stands here before You whole in Him.
4:11 He is ‘the stone which was regarded as worthless by You, the builders, which has become the head of the corner.’
4:12 There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven that is given among men, by which we must be saved!”
The risen Christ’s name brings both healing and hostility, yet the gospel advances through Spirit-filled boldness and clear confession of Jesus’ unique saving authority.
Even under arrest and interrogation, the apostles proclaim that the healing occurred by the power of the risen Jesus and that there is salvation in no one else.
The church must not be surprised by opposition, ashamed of Christ's exclusivity, or prayerless under pressure.
- Public Witness Meets Official Resistance The preaching of Jesus and the resurrection provokes opposition, yet the word continues to bear fruit.
- The Name of Jesus Defended Peter answers the council by identifying Jesus as the risen Christ, the cornerstone, and the only saving name.
- Threats Cannot Silence Witness The authorities attempt to suppress the message, but the apostles insist they must speak what they have seen and heard.
- The Church Prays for Boldness The gathered believers interpret hostility through Scripture and ask God not for escape, but for courage to continue speaking His word.
- Grace Creates Shared Life The Spirit-formed community continues in unity, resurrection witness, grace, generosity, and practical care.
The apostles are arrested for preaching Jesus, Peter boldly proclaims salvation in Christ alone, the authorities threaten them, and the church prays for greater boldness rather than safety.
Acts 4 argues that opposition to the gospel is real, but not ultimate. The same Jesus rejected by the rulers has been raised by God and made the cornerstone. His name alone brings salvation, His witnesses must obey God over men, and His church prays for boldness rather than retreat.
Theological logic
- The proclamation of Jesus and the resurrection provokes opposition from religious authorities.
- Human opposition cannot stop the word from bearing fruit, as many believe despite the apostles' arrest.
- The council's question about power and name gives Peter an opportunity to identify Jesus publicly.
- Peter's defense is Spirit-filled, fulfilling Jesus' promise that his witnesses would be given words under pressure.
- The healed man stands as embodied evidence of the living authority of Jesus.
- The leaders crucified Jesus, but God raised him, overturning their judgment.
- Jesus is the stone rejected by the builders but made the cornerstone by God.
- Because Jesus is the appointed cornerstone, salvation is found in no one else.
- The council cannot deny the sign but still attempts to suppress the name of Jesus.
- The apostles rightly refuse silence because God's command outranks human prohibition.
- The church interprets opposition through Scripture, especially the rebellion of rulers against the Lord and his Anointed.
- The believers ask not for safety or revenge, but for boldness to speak God's word.
- The Spirit answers by filling the church and empowering continued proclamation.
- The community's unity and generosity flow from great grace and resurrection-centered witness.
- Do not interpret exclusivity as hostility toward others; it is a theological claim about Christ’s unique saving work.
- Do not detach the miracle from resurrection proclamation; the sign points to the risen Lord.
- Do not overlook that opposition arises specifically because of resurrection preaching.
- Do not treat Spirit-filling as self-generated courage; it is divine empowerment.
- Do not reduce the cornerstone imagery to metaphor alone; it conveys foundational authority in God’s redemptive plan.
- Do not separate the miracle from its christological explanation; the sign serves the message.
- Avoid softening the exclusivity of Acts 4:12; Peter presents salvation in Christ as uniquely sufficient.
- Do not portray the Sanhedrin as merely political; their theological resistance to resurrection is central.
- Guard against assuming boldness arises from human courage alone; Luke attributes it to the Spirit's filling.
- Avoid minimizing the continuity between Jesus' rejection and the apostles' persecution.
- Faithful proclamation of the resurrection will provoke opposition in contexts resistant to Christ's lordship.
- Boldness in witness flows from being filled with the Holy Spirit, not from personality or position.
- Christian leaders must anchor their defense in Scripture, as Peter does with Psalm 118.
- The exclusivity of salvation in Christ must be proclaimed clearly even when culturally unpopular.
- Persecution does not halt the growth of the church; God advances His purposes through opposition.
- Speak of Jesus plainly when opportunities arise under pressure.
- Refuse to soften the exclusivity of Christ while maintaining humility and love.
- Obey God rather than human commands when obedience to Christ is forbidden.
- Pray Scripture back to God when threatened or discouraged.
- Ask for boldness before asking for ease.
- Encourage believers by remembering God's sovereignty over hostile rulers.
- Practice visible generosity as evidence that resurrection grace has reshaped the community.
Spirit-given boldness, Christ-centered clarity, reverent obedience, Scripture-shaped prayer, generous unity, and courage under threat.
- The rejected stone becomes the cornerstone : Peter applies the rejected-stone image to Jesus, showing that the leaders' rejection of Christ has been overturned by God's appointment.
- Rulers gather against the Lord's Anointed : The church reads its opposition through Psalm 2, recognizing that hostility against Jesus and His witnesses belongs to the wider pattern of rebellion against God's Messiah.
- The name of the Lord and salvation : Acts 4 intensifies the biblical theme of salvation in the Lord's name by declaring that salvation is given only in Jesus' name.
- Spirit-enabled witness under trial : Peter's Spirit-filled defense aligns with Jesus' promise that His disciples would be given words when brought before rulers.
- Resurrection proclamation : The apostles' witness centers on the resurrection, continuing the apostolic gospel pattern established at Pentecost.
- Covenant community care : The believers' shared resources reflect the covenant concern that need be met among God's people, now expressed in the resurrection community.
The Jesus who was crucified and raised is the cornerstone of God’s saving plan. There is no alternative path to forgiveness and reconciliation with God. Only through His name can sinners be saved.