Stephen's Defense, Part 3
Sermons on Acts
Acts chapter 7, Stephen's defense before the Sanhedrin. Remember that according to chapter 6, he was brought up on two specific charges, that he spoke blasphemous words against the law of Moses, and that he spoke blasphemous words concerning the temple of God. And so he traces redemptive history through Israel, specifically focusing on major characters in Israel's history to defend himself and to point his audience to the person and the work of the Lord Jesus Christ. So I'll begin reading in chapter 7 at verse 1. Then the high priest said, Are these things so? And he said, Brethren and fathers, listen. The God of glory appeared to our father Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Haran, and said to him, Get out of your country and from your relatives and come to a land that I will show you. Then he came out of the land of the Chaldeans and dwelt in Haran. And from there, when his father was dead, he moved him to this land in which you now dwell. And God gave him no inheritance in it, not even enough to set his foot on. But even when Abraham had no child, he promised to give it to him for possession and to his descendants after him. But God spoke in this way, that His descendants would dwell in a foreign land, and that they would bring them into bondage and oppress them four hundred years. And the nation to whom they will be in bondage I will judge, said God. And after that, they shall come out and serve Me in this place. Then he gave him the covenant of circumcision. And so Abraham begot Isaac and circumcised him on the eighth day. And Isaac begot Jacob, and Jacob begot the twelve patriarchs. And the patriarchs, becoming envious, sold Joseph into Egypt. But God was with him and delivered him out of all his troubles, and gave him favor and wisdom in the presence of Pharaoh, king of Egypt. And he made him governor over Egypt and all his house. Now a famine and great trouble came over all the land of Egypt and Canaan, and our fathers found no sustenance. But when Jacob heard that there was grain in Egypt, he sent out our fathers first. And the second time, Joseph was made known to his brothers, and Joseph's family became known to the Pharaoh. Then Joseph sent and called his father Jacob and all his relatives to him, seventy-five people. So Jacob went down to Egypt, and he died, he and our fathers. And they were carried back to Shechem, and laid in the tomb that Abraham bought for a sum of money from the sons of Hamor, the father of Shechem." Amen. Well, let us pray. Our God in heaven, we thank you for the written word. We thank you for this defense of Stephen and for the way that he continually points out the law and the temple all pointed to the Lord Jesus Christ. We thank you that Christ is that one who came in the fullness of the times, born of a woman and born under the law to redeem those under the law. We thank you that he is altogether lovely and chief among 10,000 and that you have shown us our sin. You've shown us his sufficiency. You have shown us grace and mercy and kindness. And God, we pray that wherever the gospel is preached today, more sinners would be called out of darkness into marvelous light to confess Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. To that end, we pray for the ministry of the Holy Spirit upon us now, that you would sanctify, strengthen, and edify your people, and God, that you would be pleased to save sinners, and that we would see in this passage the glory of Jesus Christ. And it's in His blessed name that we pray. Amen. Well, as I said, it's important for us to remember the specific charges laid against Stephen, because Stephen is defending himself before the Sanhedrin, or before the religious council here. He traces Israel's history, he focused already, or we saw last week in verses 1 to 8, he focuses on Abraham. And this morning we're going to take up verses 9 to 16, and this emphasis upon Joseph. Again, I'll try to connect the dots as to how he's making his defense, before the council in terms of the charges that he spoke blasphemous words against the law of Moses and against the temple of God. And I want to look at two things this morning in this particular section. First, the patriarchs in Egypt according to verses 9 and 10. And then secondly, the plan of God in verses 11 to 16. And I want us to notice in the first place the patriarchs in Egypt. The patriarchs are mentioned, that simply means the fathers, and those are the ones that Jacob begot. Look back in verse 8, we see that God gave Abraham this covenant of circumcision, and so Abraham begot Isaac and circumcised him on the eighth day, and Isaac begot Jacob, and Jacob begot the twelve patriarchs. These are the sons of Jacob, and Joseph was one of them. And we see in this particular account, referring to Joseph, that the brothers hated him. They despised him. Now, Stephen assumes a great deal of knowledge from his hearers. Stephen assumes that the council of the Sanhedrin understands the book of Genesis. I'd like to assume the same thing, but I'm not going to completely. I'm going to try to sketch for you, at least briefly, the history of Joseph as he's presented to us in the book of Genesis. We notice in the first place this reference. Verse 9 says, "...and the patriarchs, becoming envious, sold Joseph into Egypt." Now, this is recorded for us in the book of Genesis, in Genesis chapter 37. And they hated him for three particular reasons. In the first place, Joseph basically ratted out his brothers to Jacob. It doesn't tell us specifically what these four brothers were doing, but it does tell us that Joseph went to Jacob and essentially said that they perhaps weren't doing their job, or he had made some comment about them. That did not endear Joseph to them. Secondly, they saw that Jacob favored Joseph. Joseph was the favored among the twelve. Jacob loved him. Jacob esteemed him even higher. And as you might imagine, the brothers didn't like that. Parents, be very cautious. I don't want to moralize the text, but there's simply a lesson there for us. If you favor one of your children over and against the others, do not think that's going to facilitate good relationships between the siblings. They are going to despise and loathe and abhor the one that is favored by the parents. But in the third instance, in Genesis 37, Joseph had dreams. And in these particular dreams, his brothers would be subject to him. And then in the second dream, it was not only his brothers that would be subject to him, but it was also his father and his mother. This troubled Jacob at least to a degree, but nevertheless, he kept this in his heart. And so these brothers despised, and as we read in the narrative in verse 9, according to Stephen, they became envious and they sold him into Egypt. Now that's indicated in the latter part of Genesis chapter 37. And I think that what Stephen is doing... Remember that he's on trial for having spoken blasphemous words against Moses. He is showing that in their history, there were men chosen by God, sent to the nation, that were rejected by the nation. I think that Stephen's tactic and plan, ultimately, heading toward the end of this sermon, is to show that he's not anti-Moses, but rather the council is anti-Moses. He has not misread Moses, but rather the Sanhedrin has misread Moses because Moses testified concerning Jesus Christ. Later on, the narrative will move to Moses and Stephen will show effectively how Moses was opposed by the people of Israel as well. And so that's the emphasis in Stephen in terms of Joseph here. Joseph was a man chosen by God. Joseph was a man sent by God. And Joseph was a man rejected by the patriarchs. Sounds exactly like what is happening at the time of Stephen. Jesus was a man chosen by God. Jesus was a man set by God. And the council, the Sanhedrin, is functioning like the patriarchs. They were envious of him. They despised him. They sold him for 30 pieces of silver. Joseph was sold for 20 shekels of silver. The similarities there are obvious to anyone who has ears to hear and eyes to see. Unfortunately, they didn't hear it. Unfortunately, they didn't see it. And ultimately, they drive him out of the city and they stone him to death. But that's Stephen's tactic. He is not anti-Moses. He was not anti-Joseph, he is not anti any of these men in history that God sent, but rather it was the nation choosing rather to serve idols and reject the chosen men of God. That's his point. Matthew Poole says the holy martyr, that's Stephen, accommodates his apology so. I should define for you apology. The word that we often use today, apology or apologize, means when we say we're sorry for something. In Greek, apology means defense. Stephen is giving a defense before the Sanhedrin. That's what Matthew Poole is referring to. The holy martyr accommodates his apology so, as that they may yet have occasion to reflect on themselves. For as they had sold our Savior unto strangers, so had their fathers sold Joseph. Turn to Acts 7 at verse 52. This is going to be Stephen's point when he brings this to bear upon his hearers. Again, I want to keep this before us. As we move slower through the narrative, we nevertheless need to remember how it functions in terms of Stephen's defense. Notice in verse 51, you stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears. You always resist the Holy Spirit as your fathers did. So do you. There's the link, there's the comparison, there's the connection that he is making and asserting throughout his defense. Verse 52, which of the prophets did your fathers not persecute? And they killed those who foretold the coming of the just one, of whom you now have become betrayers and murderers who have received the law by the direction of angels and have not kept it. So we see back in chapter 7 at verse 9, Stephen successfully summarizes in brief compass all that Genesis tells us concerning their envy and concerning their selling him in to slavery. Now that wasn't the initial plan. And I think at times we have, as Bible readers, this idea that, you know, the Bible is simply a book of principles on how we ought to live our lives. Well, that's true to some degree, but that's not the main point of the Bible. The main point of the Bible is to highlight God's getting glory for Himself through the redeeming work of Jesus Christ. That's the main point of the Bible. And especially if we come to the Bible and say, I want principles for healthy interpersonal relationship with my siblings, certainly do not go to the patriarchs. They wanted to kill him. They wanted to destroy him. And they wanted to concoct a story that he had been ravaged by wild beasts. Reuben, the oldest, intervenes and says, no, let's not kill him. Let's rather throw him into a pit. And while they're eating, some Ishmaelite traders are coming by. And so they reckon, why kill him? Why bury his body? Why hide him? There'll be no profit in that. So they sell him to these Ishmaelites for 20 shekels of silver. They do take that multicolored tunic that Joseph possessed or owned. They put blood on it from a kid. and they bring it back to Jacob, and Jacob concludes that animals ravaged his son. These are terrible human beings. Again, we ought not to look at Scripture as simply a marching order on how we ought to or ought not to behave. It is that, but that's not the primary emphasis. The primary emphasis is upon the hero, the champion, the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. is the emphasis in scripture. So anyways, they sell him into Joseph, or sell Joseph rather into Egypt, but note the marked contrast. You see the patriarchs and Joseph, and now you see the Lord and Joseph in 9b and 10. It says, but God was with him. They were envious and they sold him into Egypt, but God was with him. Again, Stephen's defense. He's not anti-temple, but he knows that the temple is not the only place where God manifests himself to Israel. God is with Joseph in Egypt. Not in the temple in Israel, but he's with Joseph in Egypt. He's even with Joseph in a prison in Egypt, according to the book of Genesis. So you see, Stephen is answering the charges. He's not anti-temple. He understands that the temple existed to point men to the Lord Jesus Christ. Now that Christ has come, there is no reason why we go back to the temple. And the temple, as far as it was used properly by Israel, was a good thing. But it never was. They approached it as an empty ritual. They approached it in a formalistic fashion. At the time of Jesus Christ himself, they put more stock in the temple than the very one the temple pointed to. That's why Jesus pronounces in the Olivet Discourse that there's an end coming to their temple. They had trusted in it. They had confided in it. They had assumed that since there was temple, God must be pleased with us. They had misread it by a long shot. So Stephen says, God doesn't need a temple in Palestine in order to appear to his people. He's with Joseph in Egypt. So, when they said the only place that God can show himself to us is the temple in Israel, they were wrong. They missed the point. Stephen rather got the point, and he is educating and schooling them. It's unfortunate that they resist this. So, with reference to the presence of God with Joseph, you can turn to Genesis 39. Genesis chapter 39, just to highlight a few of these incidents. I thought that was going to be warm water. We had discussed the possibility of warm water to break up the phlegm, but it's cold water. Hopefully, that'll do the same thing. Notice in Genesis chapter 39, after he gets to Egypt, he goes to Potiphar's house, and the narrative is absolutely crystal clear. Verse 2 of Genesis 39, the Lord was with Joseph. Why is Joseph able to successfully resist the advances of Potiphar's wife, which verse 10 tells us was day by day? It's not because he had an intrinsic strength. It's not because he pulled himself up by the bootstraps. It's not because he had the willpower of a rhinoceros. It's because God was with him. Brethren, in our fight against sin, that's the component that is vital. Yes, discipline. Yes, willpower. Yes, resist. Yes, use the means of grace. But ultimately, our success in the life of sanctification, our ability to resist these types of temptations, it's because Yahweh is with us. And that's what's highlighted conspicuously here. And again, Stephen's point is clear. God doesn't need the temple in Israel in order to be with Joseph. He's there in Egypt. Notice, it's not only in Potiphar's house, but then he's thrown into jail because Potiphar's wife, woman of the year, basically lies and gets him thrown into jail. Now notice in verse 19 of Genesis 39. So it was when his master heard the words which his wife spoke to him saying, your servant did to me after this manner that his anger was aroused. Some wonder, who was his anger aroused at? I mean, the text assumes, or most people assume, that he's aroused in his anger toward Joseph. But maybe he knew Mrs. Potiphar a little bit better than the rest of us do. Maybe he understood that it wasn't Joseph necessarily, and his anger is aroused at her. Again, I simply throw that out there. We ought not to necessarily assume he's that man, but as king, as pharaoh, as ruler, he has to engage in this particular duty, and he throws Joseph into jail. Now, notice verse 20. Then Joseph's master took him and put him into the prison, a place where the king's prisoners were confined, and he was there in the prison, but the Lord was with Joseph. You see that? He doesn't need the temple in Israel to be with his people. He doesn't need the temple in Israel to dwell with Joseph. He's with Joseph, not only in Egypt, but he's with Joseph in a prison in Egypt. So verse 21, the Lord was with Joseph and gave him mercy, and he gave him favor in the sight of the keeper of the prison. And the keeper of the prison committed to Joseph's hand all the prisoners who were in the prison. Whatever they did there, it was his doing. The keeper of the prison did not look into anything that was under Joseph's authority, because the Lord was with him. And whatever he did, the Lord made it prosper. I've got to say, brethren, the Sanhedrin and the Council knew this passage. They knew the text. So that when Stephen moves from Abraham to Joseph, they understand the implication. Yeah, God appeared to him apart from Temple, apart from Israel. Stephen is making his defense. And then notice as well, God is with him even in the disclosure of dreams in chapters 40 and 41. He interprets two dreams, the Chief Baker and the Chief Butler. The Chief Baker gets hanged according to the interpretation of the dream, and then the Chief Butler promises to remember him but forgets him. It's not until later on, when Pharaoh has a dream, that the chief butler remembers, oh yeah, there was this Hebrew that was able to interpret a dream for me. Notice in chapter 41, at verse 14. Chapter 41, verse 14. Then Pharaoh, well, verse 13. It came to pass, just as he interpreted for us, so it happened. He restored me to my office, and he hanged him. Then Pharaoh sent and called Joseph, and they brought him quickly out of the dungeon, and he shaved, changed his clothing, and came to Pharaoh. Now again, I don't want to moralize, but if I did, I would say this. There's instances where we shave and we change our clothing. There's instances where we clean up. There's instances where we gussy up a bit. That is the world in which we live, and in order to properly present before Pharaoh, shave your face and put on some decent clothing. Thank you, that was very kind. So that's my moralistic rant. Be well-kempt when you're before the Pharaoh. Be well-kempt when you come before Yahweh. Be well-kempt and present when you're in the presence of dignity. That's what Joseph demonstrates here. Again, moralism, but it fits. But the point is, is that God is with him. John Gill says, God was with him and prospered him in Potiphar's house. He was with him and kept him from the temptations of his mistress. He was with him in prison and supported and comforted him, and at length delivered him from it, and promoted him as follows, and caused all the evil that befell him to work for good to him and his father's family. So going back to Acts chapter 7, this is Stephen's defense. Not only was God with him, but according to verse 10 it says, "...and delivered him out of all his troubles, and gave him favor and wisdom in the presence of Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and he made him governor over Egypt and all his house." It's an amazing story, isn't it? This is why you should read your Old Testament. I mean, the Joseph narratives are absolutely thrilling. It's great reading. It's stuff that makes you just praise God and honor God and glorify God. And as well, it highlights certain things and certain truths. Notice verse 10, "...delivered him out of all his troubles." You see, it's the health, wealth, prosperity fools that testify to believers that there's never going to be any trouble in your life. Oh yeah, there is going to be trouble in your life. Ask Joseph, when you came to Jesus, did all your problems go away? When you came to Jesus, was everything hunky-dory? Now, when I came to Jesus, my brothers wanted to kill me, and then they threw me into a pit. They were going to leave me for dead. But 20 shekels of silver allured them, and they sold me into slavery. But the point is, is that the Lord delivered him from his troubles. The Bible does not promise no trouble. The Bible promises a God who sees us through the trouble, a God who sustains us in the midst of the trouble, a God who walks with us through the valley of the shadow of death. David can say, I will fear no evil because you are with me. That's the blessed encouragement that these Old Testament narratives hold forth to us. Now, that's on the one level. But even more importantly, these Old Testament narratives point us to Jesus. This is Jesus point in John chapter 5 when he upbraids the Jewish leaders He says you search the scriptures for in them you think you have eternal life But these are they which testify of me and then he speaks to Moses and he says if you would believe Moses you would believe me because Moses wrote about me Stephen's doing that Stephen is essentially following the master in his use of the Old Testament. I have told you many times, with reference to the book of Acts, there is a shift happening, a transition happening. The council of the Sanhedrin is no longer the leadership in Israel, but it's the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ. It's not they who are gifted and skilled in the interpretation of the Old Testament, because by interpreting it the way they did, they miss Messiah. It's the apostles of our Lord. It's the men like Stephen who understood the Scripture. They had the proper hermeneutic. It was Christ. He is the one by which we interpret the Old Testament, and that's what he's evidencing in this point. And we need to appreciate that as we read the Old Testament, and don't just say, well, I should shave today, and I should put on fresh clothes. Again, moralism. A good point to remember. So back to our text. He delivered him out of all his troubles. He gave him favor and wisdom. Genesis 41, 37 and 38. The text says, So the advice was good in the eyes of Pharaoh and in the eyes of all his servants. And Pharaoh said to his servants, Can we find such a one as this, a man in whom is the Spirit of God? And what a great testimony from a pagan concerning Joseph. The presence of God was so conspicuous in the life of Joseph that Pharaoh, pagan king of Egypt, was able to see this in the life of this man. And then the last bit that Stephen tells us in verse 10 is that he made him governor over Egypt and all his house. Now, the text is a bit obscure, a bit vague or ambiguous in our rendering or in our translation. It might read that it was Pharaoh that stationed him as governor. And it was Pharaoh as a second cause. But it was God Most High who did this. It was God Most High who exalted him. It was God Most High who put him into this crucial position. Again, not for the sustenance of Egyptians, but for the sustenance of Israelites. The Lord is promoting Joseph into a position of authority, so that as this famine wreaks havoc upon the world, Joseph is there, loaded with grain, to be able to feed his brothers. Which, you know, props to Joseph. Would you give grain to your brothers? You guys wanted to kill me, and then you threw me into a pit, and then you sold me for 20 shekels of silver. I mean, if ever there's a great example of forgiveness, and of kindness, and of compassion, and of biblical charity, it is Joseph. that these wretches ate from his hand is a testimony to the grace of God, and it's a testimony to the kindheartedness of this man, Joseph. Because again, Joseph understood things theologically. Joseph understood, as we'll see at the end of the message this morning, that you meant this for evil, but God overruled it for good. Joseph was the biblical theologian, the systematician among them that understood the providence of God Most High. But in Genesis 45.8, Joseph said, so now it was not you who sent me here, but God. And he has made me a father to Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and a ruler throughout all the land of Egypt. So while the text indicates that Pharaoh made him governor, we know that Pharaoh was a second cause. We know that God is the first cause, and Joseph confesses that in Genesis 45, eight, it was God's doing, God's purpose, God's sovereignty that put me in this place. Now the rest of Stephen's speech concerning Joseph and the patriarchs, verses 11 to 16, tell us why God did that. tells us why the Lord exalted Joseph in the way that he did. So let's look at that plan of God in verses 11 to 16. In the first place, notice the famine. Verse 11, Now a famine and great trouble came over all the land of Egypt and Canaan, and our fathers found no sustenance. This is recorded in Genesis 41, Genesis 42. It was a comprehensive problem. It wasn't just Canaan where they were living. Remember, that's the promised land. That's the land given by oath from God to Abraham and to his descendants. So the famine affected Canaan to be sure, but it also affected Egypt. But see, God had revealed to Joseph that this was going to happen. So when Joseph interprets the dream for Pharaoh, Joseph also recommends the course of action to be followed. There's going to be this period of time of great fruitfulness in the land. There's going to be this time of plenty and abundance. And I think, Pharaoh, we ought to stockpile that stuff so that when the famine comes, we'll have the stuff and be able to dole it out to Egyptians. Now perhaps at that time Joseph was unaware of the reality that his brothers were going to come, but that's how he had, that's the wisdom that God gave him. There's going to be this famine, and we ought to prepare for it. So the Lord God is behind the scenes orchestrating all of this, again, not for the provision and the benefit of the Egyptians. They certainly were provided for and benefited, but what's God doing? God, through Abraham, is carving out His people. God, through Abraham, is producing a people that will ultimately produce Messiah. All of this happens so that, in the fullness of the time, God would send forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those under the law. Every step of the way, God is orchestrating for the glory of God and for the good of His people. And that's what we see in this passage. Notice the provision of God in verses 12 to 16. Jacob hears that there's corn in Egypt. It's the old King James rendering. It's grain. There's grain in Egypt. Jacob hears this. He understands this. And he knows that if we send you boys over into Egypt, you can gather enough grain and enough food to help us to provide or provide sustenance for us so that we can weather this storm of famine. And so the boys go. They go on that first visit. Joseph doesn't disclose himself to them. He treats them a little bit severely at times. And then there's a second visit. And at that visit, what does Joseph do? Joseph weeps. He breaks down. And he tells them that, I am Joseph. I'm your brother. I'm the man that you sold into slavery. And God has exalted me to this position so that I can look after you. So that dream that he initially had, you see how it's fulfilled? You see the connectivity of the narrative. It's not just a history lesson. It's theological history. God is on every page of the book of Genesis. Christ is on every page of the book of Genesis. See, when the biblical authors present to us history, they do so with an agenda. They want us to behold our God. They want us to see and marvel. They want us to realize that every single one of these events is for his glory and it's for the preservation and the provision and the good of those who love him to those who are the called according to his purpose." That's what Stephen is saying. But again, conspicuously, he highlights the reality God's with Joseph, even in Egypt, and God's with the patriarchs, even in Egypt. You know, I mentioned Joseph's kindness in doling out food to these boys. They weren't boys, they were men. God doled it out through Joseph, right? So I think at times we miss those sort of indicators that God is full of grace and mercy. I mean, we can't miss Ephesians 2 about God who's rich in mercy. That just smacks us right in the face. But the fact that God is providing food for these men is an evidence of God's grace and kindness. The fact that he's always been there in our lives in terms of food and provision is an act of God's kindness. The psalmist blesses God for loading us daily with benefits. Certainly, as New Covenant Christians, we rehearse Ephesians 1, blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ. But do we equally bless Him for the physical and the temporal? The psalmists do. The psalmist says, blessed be God who loads me daily with benefits. The psalmist David in Psalm 103 does. He highlights the forgiveness of sins, and then he highlights all the occasions and times that God spared him physically. You see, the Lord is comprehensively sovereign over every detail of our lives, and this is what Stephen is telling these men. And these men understand it. These men ultimately reject the reality of what Stephen is preaching, and they kill him. They murder him. They destroy him. So, it's obvious to any reader who's got the problem with the Old Testament. It wasn't Stephen. It was the Sanhedrin. It was the Council. They were corrupt. They were idolatrous. They were wretches. Now, I should alert you to two problems in the text. If you ever read commentary on Acts 7, you'll read commentary where some suggest that Stephen was wrong. Stephen got a couple of things wrong. He refers to 75 people. And if you look at Exodus 1 and you look at Genesis 48-ish, you will see that it's 70 people. Now, the Masoretic text, which is the Hebrew version, the sort of Hebrew Old Testament, that contains 70. What's called the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament, contains 75. So Stephen was not in error. He's working from the Septuagint. And there are ways to reconcile the numbers. I refer you to John Gill. I'm getting convinced that John Gill could have fixed a car. I mean, there's not much he couldn't do. He has an extended section where he deals with math and numbers, and a guy like me just falls asleep. I mean, my son is an accountant. I don't know where he got that. He certainly didn't get it from me. I can't follow John Gill's paragraph on reconciling the numbers. But suffice to say, they can be reconciled. Stephen wasn't wrong. Stephen wasn't mistaken. Stephen wasn't in error. That is simply unacceptable. The Septuagint contains the reading 75. One scholar well observed, if there's a problem at 8 with Stephen, it's a Septuagint issue. You need to take it up at that level. But then as well, the reference to Abraham purchasing this field. Notice in verse 16, they were carried back to Shechem and laid in the tomb that Abraham bought for a sum of money from the sons of Hamor, the father of Shechem. Now, I don't want to confuse you needlessly, but again, I want to simply say that Stephen is not in error. The reason why some suppose that Stephen is in error is because this particular transaction was conducted by Jacob. Abraham did not purchase the land from these particular people. But I suspect that what Stephen is doing is he's doing what's called telescoping the two events. And the point is simply this. I think Daryl Bock makes it clear. The point is simply that Joseph was buried at Shechem on land purchased by Jacob from the sons of Hamor. Stephen's key point is that burial took place in the promised land, although in Samaria, and the move was an act of faith that God would keep his word. That's why Abraham purchases the land in chapter 23 of Genesis. It's so that he owns it. He has title to it. Remember, God has said, I'm giving you this land. But at that particular time, the land was filled with Canaanites. And so when offered that piece or parcel, Abraham insists, no, I must pay. There must be a piece of the land that I possess, even if it's land where I'm going to bury people. And the same holds true with reference to Jacob. And I think Bach's point is accurate. Stephen's point is that they died in Egypt, but they didn't abandon the faith in Yahweh because they took those bodies and they buried them. in the land. That was an expression of their faith in the living God who had testified and promised that that land was going to be theirs. That's Stephen's point. Not that he got it wrong, not that he was mistaken, not that he doesn't know what he's talking about. I just think there's a basic rule of thumb that every Bible reader, especially in the 21st century, ought to adopt, is that when it appears that something is wrong in the Bible, the wrong is probably between our two ears. It's not a problem in the Bible, it's a problem with us. We need to reconcile, we need to work, we need to compare Scripture with Scripture, and when we do that, we will see and conclude, it's not the Bible, it's me. We confess an infallible and inerrant Word of God. And it's not only in matters of atonement and substitution, but it's in matters of burial and Canaan. It's in matters concerning patriarchs. It's in matters concerning 75 or 70. It's in all those matters, because if we can't trust the Bible when it comes to a basic presentation of historical fact, how can we trust the Bible when it comes to blood atonement through the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world? The problem is with us. It is never with God. And I think that's a good hermeneutical principle for all of us to adopt. Now, in terms of conclusion, some thoughts I want to end with. First, the defense of Stephen. I hope I've shown you that the apologist, or rather the evangelist here, Stephen, is not anti-Moses. He shows clearly that in the history of Israel, there are men chosen by God, sent by God, and ultimately rejected by Israel. I mean, anybody reading the narrative of Genesis would think, how dare these brothers do what they've done to Joseph? It's a terrible thing. But as well, how dare this council or Sanhedrin has done what they've done to Jesus? As well, Stephen is not anti-temple. He reiterates that God is not confined to temple in the land of Israel. Just like He appeared to Abraham outside the land. Just like He appeared to Abraham without temple, so does God appear to Joseph outside the land, even in Egypt, even in a prison. Stephen is tracing Israel's history, and the bulk of his defense is going to focus upon Moses. That shouldn't surprise us. He has been accused of speaking blasphemous words against Moses and the law. So it is natural that he's going to spend the bulk of his time with Moses. And he breaks up the life of Moses into three 40-year blocks, which is most likely how we will proceed in the coming weeks. But the patriarchs and this narrative is crucial. How'd they end up in Egypt? How do we get to the exodus in Egypt? Well, Stephen is sketching a biblical theology to inform them of that so that he can deal at length with Moses and ultimately their rejection of Moses, not his. Stephen continues to emphasize that the law of Moses, specifically the ceremonial aspect and the temple, pointed to Christ. Paul tells us that in Romans 10, the end of the law or the telos, the purpose of the law is Christ. The purpose for the temple was Christ. This is why Christ said, destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up. And they got so offended and they were so upset. But John the apostle tells us he was speaking about the temple of his body, this temple made without hands. The argument is clear. Now that that which the temple signified has come, there's no reason to go back to temple. It's the point of the book of Hebrews. The people of God are being tempted to go back to Moses, back to the Levitical system, back to the temple and the sacrifice. And Paul, I would argue, wrote Hebrews. He says, don't do that. All that stuff was types and shadows. It promotes us or points us rather to the Lord Jesus. And now that Jesus is here, don't go back to that sacrificial system. On a few occasions, I pointed out the fallacy of dispensationalism, the thought that they want to go back to temple, the thought that they want to reintroduce animal sacrifice. It is to go backward in redemptive history. And it holds more akin with these council members' interpretation of the Old Testament than it does with Stephen. Now, I'm not suggesting that dispensationalists reject Jesus Christ as the Messiah. They most certainly do, and for that we praise God. But this emphasis on temple, this idea of animal sacrifice in a future millennial kingdom, does not owe itself to the apostolic interpretation of the Old Testament. It just doesn't. We are not to go backwards, we're to go forwards in Jesus Christ. Secondly, we ought to appreciate in the passage, and again, these men would have got this, the sovereignty of God. The sovereignty of God. We dealt in the last hour, 9.30 to 10.30 this morning, we dealt with our confession of faith. Chapter 5 is of divine providence. Again, That chapter is fleshed out for us in the book of Genesis. We saw that on, you know, Wednesday night, Genesis chapter 14, that alliance of Eastern kings that sort of worked their way through Israel, and then they abduct Lot, and then Abram arms his 318 household servants, and he goes after them, and he liberates Lot, and he sends those guys back to Syria from whence they came. God's all over that. God's all over the Joseph narrative, even in the ill treatment of Joseph. Even in the ill treatment, brethren, Romans 8.28 is not kidding. God causes all things to work together for good. Now, I think it's common for us to say, yeah, he does. He works the good things for the good. I don't think that needs to be specified by the apostle. I think we all agree that finding bags of money is God working good things in our lives. I think we'd all agree that a house by the lake on a beautiful day is given to us by God. Paul's point in Romans 8, 28 is that the miserable, horrible, wretched afflictions that you and I suffer are worked out by God for His glory and our good. Isn't that evident in the Joseph narrative? Even his ill treatment. His brothers wanted to kill him. His brothers throw him into a pit. While they're munching their sandwiches, the Ishmaelites come along. They say, well, let's sell him and then we'll make 20 shekels of silver. You think, how in the world is God in that? Well, just read the rest of the narrative. God is in that in the exaltation of Joseph. God is in that in the provision laid up by Joseph. God is in that in the feeding of Jacob and his sons by Joseph. God is all over the book of Genesis, and we ought to be all over the book of Genesis as well. And then a third observation, and whether, you know, commentators sort of Question or wonder, are Stephen or Luke drawing out the typology here? In other words, is this typology legit? Whenever you deal with typology, you've got to be careful. There's got to be controls on types. You know, Paul tells us, for instance, that Adam was a type of Jesus. In Romans chapter 5, Adam was a type of him who was to come. A type is something in the Old Testament that points us forward to something in the New Testament. The temple is a type. It's the dwelling place of God and sinners. That's a type of Jesus Christ. Now, some suggest that Stephen is doing this. Others suggest that Stephen isn't doing this. I'm convinced that Stephen is doing this, and I'll tell you why. In the first place, the patriarchs failed to recognize that Joseph was chosen by God, and the council failed to recognize that Jesus was chosen by God. I could really go type crazy and say, you know, even Joseph's writing out his brothers is an illustration of Jesus and his holiness and, you know, making the religious leaders of his time uncomfortable. The fact that the father loved the son Joseph above the others. I mean, obviously, this is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased, but I don't think we even need to go that far. I think the specific things that Joseph or Stephen mentions A lot of names going on that Stephen mentions are conspicuously obvious that there is a typology going on. Notice, the patriarchs were motivated by their envy of Joseph. So was the council with Jesus. Remember Pilate, according to Matthew 27, 18, for he, Pilate, knew that they had handed him over because of envy. Again, one wonders, brethren, if the council followed this a little bit closer than we did, or do, because their dealings with Stephen indicate a great deal of animosity. They didn't possess lawful authority to execute Jesus, so they had to go to Pilate to get the kill order. When it comes to Stephen, not many years later, they kill him. block their ears, they gnash at him with their teeth, and they run him out of the city, and they stone him to death. Maybe they are connecting. Maybe they are following. Maybe they understand what he is saying. They reject it wholeheartedly, they despise it wholeheartedly, but they understand that Stephen's not just giving us a lesson or a history of Israel. Stephen's indicting us! Stephen's showing us to be the ones that reject Moses. Stephen's showing us to be the ones that are anti-temple. Stephen is showing us to be the guys with the problem. Exactly. That's what Stephen's doing. As well, the patriarch sold Joseph into Egypt for 20 shekels of silver. Genesis 37, 28. And these aren't accidents. You don't want to go too far with your typological approach, but you don't want to not go far enough. Jesus was sold for 30 pieces of silver. The same kind of people. That's Stephen's point. You're the same kind of people. You have solidarity with our fathers who persecuted the prophets. You have solidarity with our fathers who rejected the prophets. You have solidarity with our fathers who sold their brother into slavery, into Egypt. Because you betrayed and murdered the just and holy one. And as well, in both instances, Joseph and Jesus, the Lord had his purposes. Genesis 50-20, but as for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, in order to bring it about as it is this day to save many people alive. Acts 2.23, Him being delivered by the determined purpose and foreknowledge of God, you have taken by lawless hands, have crucified and put to death. You see, there were good ends in the ill-treatment of both Joseph and Jesus. There were great ends in the ill-treatment of both Joseph and Jesus. In Joseph's case, his brothers got to eat. In Joseph's case, the nation got to hold together. In Joseph's case, the people of God were complete and fed. In Jesus' case, his death on the cross, which was wretched and terrible and horrific, had as its purpose the salvation of guilty, vile, helpless wretches like us. We'd all say yea and amen, that that was a great and wonderful purpose. The glory of God in the salvation of his people by Jesus Christ the Lord. They echo this sentiment in Acts 4, 27 and 28. For truly against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, were gathered together to do whatever your hand and your purpose determined before to be done. There ought never to be a Christian who is presented with the truth of divine providence, who stumbles, or who has issues, or who has problems with it. In light of Genesis 50, verse 20, in light of Acts 2, verse 23, and in light of Acts chapter 4, every single one of God's people ought to realize God is comprehensively, absolutely, positively sovereign over all things, and He has as His purpose his glory, and the good of his people. Joseph is living testimony of that, and we are living testimony because we are the fruits of Christ's redemptive work. If you are not the fruits of Christ's redemptive work this morning, Then may I say to you, come unto the Lord Jesus Christ. The way of salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone in Jesus Christ alone. It's not going to come through morality. You can shave every day until Jesus comes and wear a three-piece suit and go to hell with a clean-shaven face and a three-piece suit. That morality does not commend you to God. Your reforming your life does not commend you to God. The only commendation to God is through the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. And the way of access is by faith in Him. Well, let us close in a word of prayer. Our Father, we thank You for Your Word. We thank You for Stephen's defense. And we thank you for its consistency and for its treatment in terms of the sovereignty of God, the efficacy of Christ's work, and the blessed reality that all of this was done for the saving of sinners. I pray that all over the earth today, as the gospel is preached, you would be pleased to save. As we sang in Psalm 67, we pray that you'd let the nations be glad. We pray that you would cause your face to shine upon the peoples. And we pray specifically for this place, any and all who are here that are unforgiven, those who are still dead in their trespasses and sins. May you resurrect them by the power of your Holy Spirit. May you grant them the graces of faith and repentance, and may they know the blessing of being found in Jesus Christ. Not having their own righteousness, which is from the law, but that righteousness which is from you. through faith in Christ Jesus the Lord. Go with us now. Father, help us to sanctify the day. Bring us together again tonight that we may worship you. And we pray through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Well, why don't you take your Trinity hymnal and we'll stand and close by singing the doxology in praise to our triune God. It's on page Roman numeral 16 in the Trinity hymnal.
