Setting
Waves of persecution hit the church one after another. Stephen, one of the seven men chosen to serve in the church, did great wonders and signs among the people. But some from the Synagogue of the Freedmen opposed his message. Unable to withstand Stephen’s powerful words, they stirred up the people and the elders and scribes to arrest Stephen. Then they brought forth false witnesses to accuse Stephen of blasphemy.
In one of the longest recorded speeches in the Bible, Stephen delivered a powerful message before the council and his accusers. He drew from God’s redemptive history to defend the message of Jesus Christ and to demonstrate that God’s promise and His divine acts went beyond the land, the law, and the temple. He also reminded them of Israel’s persistent rejection of God’s servants and charged them with the sins of rebellion and murdering Jesus Christ.
Key Verse
(6:10)
Did You Know...?
1. The Synagogue of Freedman (6:9) was a group that probably consisted of Jews who had come from other parts of the Roman Empire after being released from some form of slavery and had formed their own synagogue in Jerusalem. They came from Cyrene, Alexandria, Cilicia and Asia.
Outline
General Analysis
Segment Analysis
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6:8-15
1. Record what this passage says about Stephen and his ministry.
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2a. What did those from the Synagogue of the Freedmen do?
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2b. What were the false charges made against Stephen?
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7:1-8a
3. Where did God appear to Abraham?
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4a. When Abraham arrived in Canaan, what did he not have?
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4b. What was the only thing that he received at that point?
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5. Where did God tell Abraham his descendants would dwell for four hundred years?
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6. The Jews took pride in the holy land and the holy place. How did Stephen use the history of Abraham to correct the misconceptions of the people about the holy land?
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7:8b-16
7a. How was Joseph, the deliverer of Israel, treated by his own?
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7b. How did history repeat itself?
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8a. Where was Joseph sold into? Where was God?
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8b. How does this point correct the mistaken view about the holy land and the holy place?
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7:17-36
9. Moses was one of the most venerated figures among the Jews (cf. 6:11). But how was Moses, the deliverer of Israel, received by his own people?
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10a. Where did the Angel of the Lord appear to Moses?
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10b. What did the Lord call the place where He appeared to Moses?
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10c. Is there any significance to this?
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11a. What did the one rejected by his own people turn out to be (35)?
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11b. What point do you think Stephen was making?