September 21, 2025 – It’s Just Another Miracle— Acts #14
Acts 5:12-16
As we continue our study of Acts, we last saw the early church get its first threat from the Temple leaders. They were told to stop talking about Jesus or there would be consequences. But this didn’t slow down most of them. They went right back to the temple, preaching Jesus and healing people. We pick up the story in Acts 5:12
Acts 5:12-16 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.
Picture the scene: people are milling around the temple area when a few of the apostles walk in. Someone cries out, “Hey, there they are!” and the crowd rushes over. People want to see the miracle workers. They have come from all around Jerusalem just to have a chance to see this. They have brought their sick to be healed. And this is not just a one-time thing. Luke tells us, “signs and wonders were regularly done. This is the natural rhythm of the early church, overflowing with the power of God. So let me ask you, “Is this the world you live in?”
You may ask yourself, “Why don’t we see signs and wonders regularly done?” If you are walking down Broad Street and see someone suddenly stand up from their wheelchair and start jumping up and down, what would you do? Would you be skeptical? What if you then saw this same person walk over to someone you recognize, a blind girl you have seen many times downtown? And suddenly she drops her cane, exclaiming that she can see? You know this girl. She was blind, but now she can see. Miracles of healing are happening around you. What would you do next? You would likely pull out your phone and call someone to tell them about it because signs and wonders are not “regularly done” in your world every day. So, you may ask, why aren’t they done now as they were then?
At this particular time, the apostles and the early followers of Jesus experienced miracles that were commonplace. However, there is a misconception that frequent miracles occurred throughout the Bible, but that is not the case. There are many miracles, but they are concentrated in a few pockets of time. We can see this in the words of Asaph the psalmist in Psalm 77:11
Psalm 77:11-12 I will remember the deeds of Yehovah; yes, I will remember your wonders of old. I will ponder all your work, and meditate on your mighty deeds.”
Asaph sounds like us, looking back at the good old days when all the miracles were done. He would have asked the same question we ask, “Why were there so many miracles back in the days of Moses, or Elijah, and not today? And miracles are indeed concentrated in specific periods of time. Fast forward to the New Testament times, and numerous miracles are occurring.
Matthew 9:35 And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction.
Jesus certainly performed frequent and regular miracles. However, it’s worth noting that all the miracles of Jesus occurred within a remarkably short period of his ministry, spanning just over a year. And the miracles in the rest of the New Testament took place over the lifetimes of the disciples and Paul. This explosion of miracles was for a specific purpose and was predicted by the scripture. We need to be careful to understand why all of these healing miracles happened at this time.
Think back to when Jesus had just started his ministry, and John the Baptist was sitting in prison. John had proclaimed that Jesus was the coming Messiah. He pointed out to his disciples that Jesus was the Lamb of God who would take away the sins of the world. But in Herod’s prison in Macherus, John keeps hearing how Jesus is hanging out with sinners and having parties with tax collectors, and he starts having second thoughts. “That doesn’t sound like things I thought the Messiah would be doing. Could I have misunderstood God about this guy?” Remember what John had said about these days of the Messiah:
Matthew 3:7 You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?
Matthew 3:12 His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.
Matthew 3:10 Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.
Wrath — Unquenchable fire — an ax to the tree — throwing in the fire. John was expecting Jesus to show up in this sinful world with a chainsaw and a flamethrower. John saw a Messiah who would clean house, like Jean-Claude Van Damme or Chuck Norris. To kick butt and take names. But that was not the report he was getting about Jesus. So he sends his disciples to ask Jesus if he is the Messiah.
Matthew 11:2-3 Now when John heard in prison about the deeds of the Christ, he sent word by his disciples and said to him, “Are you the one who is to come, or shall we look for another?
John was having a real problem. He told everyone that Jesus was the Messiah, but he doesn’t think Jesus looks very Messiah-like. What do you do when the Messiah doesn’t look like what you’d thought he’d look like? Or for us today, what do you do when God doesn’t do what you thought He would? How do you respond when you read all about God healing all these people in the Gospels and in Acts, and then God doesn’t heal you, or your loved one? Ask John. The Messiah is here to fix everything. Finally, the good guys should be winning. And Jesus is out partying while John is chained to the wall of a prison. You do what John did. You seek Him out. So John sends his disciples to ask Jesus.
Matthew 11:4-6 “And Jesus answered them, ‘Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them. And blessed is the one who is not offended by me.’
Jesus is directing John back to the scriptures to understand what the Messiah was really all about. In other words, Jesus says, “Here is how you know that the messiah has come: the blind are receiving their sight, the lame are walking, and people are being healed.
Now, there are some healings in the Old Testament, but did you realize that nowhere in the Old Testament was there someone born blind who was healed? Nor was there anyone born mute who was healed. This type of healing Jesus was doing was different. Now, you may not have known this, but everyone in Jesus’ day knew this, because they knew their Scripture. And Isaiah was a favorite book among many people.
The book of Isaiah is a book of both bad news/good news. Half of it is Isaiah telling the people that they are about to be judged for their sins. God is going to let the nation be destroyed by Assyria, and later by Babylon. Devastation is coming. But then he gives them the good news. There is hope. Yes, your city will be destroyed, but God will give you a new city, a new Jerusalem, where everyone prospers, and there is no danger from enemies anymore. And guess which sections of Isaiah were read the most? The good news parts.
It is harder to read about the harvests failing, the crops all dying, the vines withering, the cities laid waste and becoming deserted, the enemies at the door. Let’s skip all that judgment, fury, wrath, and destruction and go right to the good part when God’s mercy breaks forth. Let’s focus on the love, grace, and compassion, rather than the warnings of destruction. (They are a lot like us today in what we want to read and talk about in the Bible. Let’s sing about heaven, not about the judgment here on earth. There aren’t too many hymns about God’s punishment on us.) So, guess which parts of Isaiah they knew the best? Let’s skip to the good stuff. Let’s re-read chapter 35.
Isaiah 35:1-6 The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad; the desert shall rejoice and blossom like the crocus; It shall blossom abundantly and rejoice with joy and singing. The glory of Lebanon shall be given to it, the majesty of Carmel and Sharon. They shall see the glory of Yehovah, the majesty of our God.
Strengthen the weak hands, and make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who have an anxious heart, “Be strong; fear not! Behold, your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of God. He will come and save you.”
Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; Then shall the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute sing for joy.”
And the people say, “Yeah, that’s what I’m talking about. Even the desert lands grow crops. The days of living in fear are over. And the blind see and the mute talk.” This is what will happen when God brings his Messiah.
Well, if you were living in Jesus’ day, you would have had access to 39 scrolls of Scripture. Thirty-nine books in our Old Testament, and not once do you have someone born blind regaining sight or someone born mute being able to talk. It has never happened. But God promises here in Isaiah 35 and elsewhere that these things will happen when his kingdom breaks forth on the earth and the Messiah arrives.
That is why Jesus answered John that way. Jesus says, “Tell John that the blind see, the lame walk, and the mute talk.” Tell John that Isaiah 35 is happening right now. These healings are the sign of the Kingdom of God busting out. So John has to accept that his view of what precisely the messiah would do —the view that most of the people had then — was wrong.
When we don’t understand what God is doing, we need to seek God out and ask Him about it. We don’t just say, “Well, God didn’t do what I thought he would, so there must not be a God. I have seen people have a major faith crisis and quit on God when a family member is not healed. They, like John the Baptist, had a misconception about how things would be when Jesus came. Some preacher (probably on TV) told them that God would heal everyone if they prayed hard enough, had enough faith, or sent them money. Like John, they misunderstood the Bible, and when it didn’t work the way they understood it, they quit.
God didn’t heal my friend, so I am leaving the church.” No, if God is not doing everything the way you think He should, then guess who is wrong? Not God. You don’t throw your beliefs out the window; you go back to the scriptures and see where you misunderstood. John the Baptist had it wrong; it is okay if you are sometimes mistaken about what God is doing, also.
So these healings that Jesus was doing were not just compassionate deeds, but proof that the Kingdom of God was breaking forth just as John said. And these healings that Jesus does and the disciples do here in Acts, and the healings we see today, are just a taste of what is coming. They are like the first buds of spring. When those daffodils bloom in early spring. They are nice, but they get me excited because they are just the heralds of hundreds of flowers of all kinds that will soon bloom in my yard. Jesus’ healings and sermons preached the same sermon: The Kingdom of God is among you. Each of these healings here in Acts shouts out the same message. The Kingdom of God is here, now. Each healing we see today is another whisper to the hearts of those who have ears to hear. See, God’s Kingdom is still breaking forth in this sinful world and is a promise of a future with no sickness and no death.
But throughout history, God has only done a few large-scale interventions. Creation, the deliverance of the children of Israel from slavery, and the conquering of the land, as well as the ministry of Elijah/Elisha. The ministry of Jesus and the apostles. Other than these few times, large groupings of miracles are rare. And even though 1 Corinthians talks about believers with gifts of healing, they weren’t doing miracles to the same degree as Jesus and the apostles.
So while I think we overestimate the frequency of miracles in the Bible, I think we underestimate the number of miracles happening today. I stand before you as a witness today that God is still in the miracle business..
I have told you before of some of the miracles I have seen — of medicine multiplied, appearing where it didn’t exist, of rain that started and stopped at the moment of prayer, of God placing a very rare but desperately needed item in a cigar box in a mud house in Mexico, or in a box of medical junk in Ghana. I have seen children with rampant cancer be told there was nothing the doctors could do, only to see their following scan be clear of any disease. I have seen lives turn around from the brink of disaster. There is no way anyone could ever convince me that God is not doing miracles all around us. I have seen them with my own eyes.
But some people would say they haven’t seen any miracles. Perhaps they are from Nazareth.
Why do I say that?
Mark 6:1-6 “He went away from there and came to his hometown, and his disciples followed him. And on the Sabbath he began to teach in the synagogue, and many who heard him were astonished, saying, “Where did this man get these things? What is the wisdom given to him? How are such mighty works done by his hands?
Most of the people in Jesus’ hometown didn’t see many miracles either. Mark is clear that their lack of belief prevented Jesus from doing many mighty works there. That fits well with the gospel emphasis on faith for healing. You remember Jesus saying several times, “Your faith has made you well.” What he is saying is that because you have faith in me, I am able to do miracles for you. No faith, no miracles.
The Greek word for unbelief (apistia) is used in the Gospels for people who totally reject Jesus, like these people in Nazareth, who don’t believe who he is. A similar Greek word, oligopistia, is usually translated as “little faith,” and it refers to people who accept Jesus, but their faith is so small that they do nothing with it. They don’t act on their faith. We see this in the story of the disciples in the boat in the storm. They were scared because they had no faith that Jesus would protect them. They accepted who Jesus was, but that didn’t make a difference when they thought their boat would sink. They were ruled by fear, not by faith. So Jesus says, “Oh, you of oligopistia. You of little faith.” A faith that just sits there and doesn’t do anything, that makes no difference – that is “little faith.”
It says that Jesus marveled at their unbelief, their rejection of him. “Marveled” means astonished or surprised, taken aback. You see that word 43 times in the New Testament. Most of the time, it is about people who are shocked when Jesus does something. Jesus calms the sea, and the disciples marvelled. The mute man speaks, and they marvel. The crippled man walks, the fig tree withers, and the disciples marvel. Twice, it is Jesus who marvels. Two times, Jesus is surprised by others. What astonishes Jesus?
The first instance occurs when the centurion requests Jesus to heal his paralyzed servant, stating that he doesn’t need to be present for the healing.
Matthew 8:10 When Jesus heard this, he marveled and said to those who followed him, “Truly, I tell you, with no one in Israel have I found such faith.
The second time is in the passage we just read, he is astonished by the unbelief of the people in Nazareth.
So what astonishes Jesus? Jesus is shocked by one Gentile man’s unexpected deep faith and by the lack of faith of his Jewish hometown people. Jesus couldn’t do many of the things he hoped to do in Nazareth because of the unbelief he encountered in that place. This is our story. Jesus hopes to do many incredible, miraculous things in our lives. But he can not do them because we prevent him. Oh, we say we believe. But belief is not what you think in your head, but what you do. Belief is how you act. You can have all the Bible knowledge in the world, but what you know does not matter unless it changes how you act. Again, it is like the disciples in the boat in the storm. They believed who Jesus was, but that didn’t change their reaction to a storm. If they had faith and trusted in Jesus to protect them, then there would be no fear. Their fear revealed their lack of faith. And if you surrender your life to Jesus and don’t give it all to him, if you keep parts of your life under your control instead of His, then you don’t believe.
I marvel at a lot of things. I am overwhelmed by the beauty of the clouds at sunrise, by the immensity of the ocean. I am at times surprised and taken aback by the majesty of nature, of glaciers calving, of waterfalls, and mountain views. I am astonished at times by how mean some people can be, and how some devote their whole lives to taking advantage of others. I marvel at a lot of things.
But Jesus in Nazareth is only surprised by one thing: that God himself would come and give his life as a ransom for people who did not deserve any mercy. He would die to remove our sin burden and grant us forgiveness that we could not otherwise obtain. Despite this, many people would choose not to follow Him or do what He says. That leaves Jesus astonished.
The God who spoke this entire universe into existence says, “Do you want to join my family and come live with me in this incredible place where no one ever gets sick or dies?” And people say, “No, I don’t think so.” That astonishes Jesus. This God who says, “Hey, I can work all things so they turn out the very best for you if you follow my ways.” And People say, “Nah, I think I know better than you, I’ll do it my way.” That astonishes Jesus. Jesus offers life instead of death, forgiveness instead of condemnation, and eternal joy instead of eternal misery. And still some reject him. That blows my mind, too, Jesus.
That is the situation in Nazareth in Jesus’ day, and that is the situation that we live in today. We may go further than the people in Nazareth and believe that Jesus is who he says he is. That is good. But that is not faith. It is only faith when we step out in obedience, trusting Him to lead us and equip us for any task He calls us to. It is faith when we are not afraid of any storms of life because we trust in him. It is faith when we aren’t scared of disease or cancer or natural disasters because we have complete trust in him.
And when I look at the miracles I have witnessed in my life, Most have happened when I stepped out in faith, being obedient to whatever he calls me to do. Most of the miracles I have seen happened when I was doing something out of my usual routine or schedule. Many on mission trips.
Following his call one summer, I found myself again working in a hospital in Ghana, Africa. I saw a man in the clinic who had a horrible infection in his hand. It had been going on for weeks and was getting worse. He had been treated by some person in his tribe whose position was translated to me as a ‘witch doctor.’ And his hand was horribly swollen and red and hot and draining. He could not move a finger. When I saw him, he needed immediate surgery so he wouldn’t lose his hand. He needed an orthopedic specialist, a hand surgeon.
What he got was me. Both of the Family physicians who performed all the surgeries in that mission hospital were involved in a lengthy case. I was it. I have never felt so underqualified in my life.
I remembered from anatomy class many years ago that there were 10 or 11 potential spaces in the hand that would all have to be drained. And if they weren’t all drained appropriately, then the infection would worsen. The anatomy is very complex there. That’s why hand surgery is a specialty and should never be attempted by any other surgeon, and certainly not by a pediatrician. So I prayed and said, “God, you put me here, and you gave me this to do, so I am going to trust you to empower me to do it. So I found the surgical anatomy book and had a nurse hold it and turn pages for me as I did the procedure. And God guided my eyes and my hands. And the man recovered with full use of his hand. God did that because I couldn’t have done it without Him.
I am convinced that God is waiting to do many miracles if only we would let him. But we have to be obedient enough to step out and follow him. If we don’t display that kind of faith, then we will see no miracles. He often leads us into situations where we lack the proper resources or feel we lack the right skills. If we only attempt to do things that we can do without God, we never leave room for Him to show out.
This should be our prayer: God, please call us to do things that we can’t do. Please call us to do things that are impossible. Please lead us to the uncomfortable places. Give us goals that we can’t possibly reach. Put us in situations where we will fail without your help. We must follow Him and attempt things that are impossible for us to do without Him. Only then can He step in and do the impossible for us and with us.
