📘 LESSONS LEARNED
Acts 3:1-16 shows that the risen Jesus continued His work through Spirit-empowered witnesses as Peter and John pointed a healed man and an amazed crowd to the power, name, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
❌ Sins / Failures
- People can become so accustomed to human suffering that they walk past the needy without compassion or spiritual concern (Acts 3:2-3; Isaiah 58:6-7; James 2:15-17).
- The crowd had rejected Jesus even though God had glorified Him as His servant (Acts 3:13; Isaiah 52:13; John 1:10-11).
- Israel’s leaders and people disowned the Holy and Righteous One while asking for a murderer to be released (Acts 3:14; Proverbs 17:15; Luke 23:18-25).
- The people killed the Author of life, showing the terrible blindness of sin toward the Son of God (Acts 3:15; Psalm 2:1-3; Colossians 1:15-17).
- Religious people can be amazed by God’s power while still needing to face their guilt and repent before Him (Acts 3:10-12; Isaiah 29:13; Matthew 15:7-9).
✅ Successes / Spiritual Growth
- The healed man responded to Peter’s word with faith-filled action and received strength from God (Acts 3:6-8; Isaiah 35:6; Hebrews 11:6).
- His first response to healing was public praise, proving that mercy received should become worship returned (Acts 3:8-9; Psalm 103:1-5; Luke 17:15-18).
- The man’s visible transformation drew others to see and hear what Jesus had done (Acts 3:9-11; Psalm 40:2-3; Matthew 5:16).
- Peter refused personal glory and made it clear that the miracle came from Jesus, not from human power or godliness (Acts 3:12; Psalm 115:1; 1 Corinthians 1:29-31).
- Faith in the name of Jesus became the means through which complete healing displayed the authority of the risen Christ (Acts 3:16; John 14:13-14; Philippians 2:9-11).
🧭 Leadership Dynamics
- Peter and John were spiritually alert enough to stop for one overlooked man while going to the temple for prayer (Acts 3:1-4; Exodus 3:7; Luke 10:33-34).
- Peter acted with bold obedience because Spirit-filled leadership follows God’s prompting rather than human caution (Acts 3:6; Acts 2:4; 2 Timothy 1:7).
- Peter used public attention as an opportunity to exalt Jesus rather than promote himself (Acts 3:12-13; Deuteronomy 18:15; 2 Corinthians 4:5).
- Peter connected the miracle to the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, showing that gospel leadership anchors present events in God’s covenant story (Acts 3:13; Genesis 22:18; Luke 24:44-47).
- Peter’s courage after denying Jesus shows that restored leaders can become powerful witnesses when empowered by the Holy Spirit (Acts 3:12-16; Luke 22:61-62; John 21:15-19).
