March 9 - Jesus Will Destroy the Temple
The Destroying of the Temple
Acts 6:8-15
March 9, 2008
This morning we’re going to look at the book of Acts and the story of Stephen. First, a quick lesson in history to give you a thumbnail sketch of who Stephen was. After the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus the disciples, who were scattered when Jesus was taken, banded together to spread the good news that Jesus was risen and that salvation was through the Christ. The book of Acts documents the rise of the Christian church. As you know, the disciples who were the early church fathers were constantly under some form of attack. The appointment of Stephen and six others arose out of such an attack. They came out of a complaint that the disciples were neglecting widows (Acts. 6:1) Because the disciples did not think it desirable to leave the preaching of the word to wait on tables, additional ministers were chosen (Acts 6:2-7), Stephen among them. Stephen is described as “a man full of faith and the Holy Spirit” who did great signs and wonders among the people (6:8). This is the background of our key passage this morning. Let’s look at it together now, starting at Acts 6:9.
And Stephen, full of grace and power, did great wonders and signs among the people. Then some of those who belonged to the synagogue of the Freedmen (as freed slaves and their descendents were called), and of the Cyrenians, and of Alexandrians, and of those from Cilicia and Asia, arose and disputed with Stephen. But they could not withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which he spoke. Then they secretly instigated men, who said, "We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses and God." And they stirred up the people and the elders and the scribes, and they came upon him and seized him and brought him before the council, and set up false witnesses who said, "This man never ceases to speak words against this holy place and the law; for we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place, and will change the customs which Moses delivered to us." And gazing at him, all who sat in the council saw that his face was like the face of an angel.
There are three questions I want to try to answer from this text.
1. The first comes from verse 14. They accuse Stephen of saying, "This Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place [i.e., the temple in Jerusalem], and will change the customs which Moses delivered to us." My first question is: Did Jesus say this? Did Jesus say that he would destroy the temple?
2. The second question is: Did Stephen mean what Jesus meant? We will see that there is a difference in the way they talked about the destruction of the temple?
3. Third, did Luke agree with what Jesus and Stephen had said? If so, why did he say in verse 13 that the people set up false witnesses to say that Stephen said these things?
Before we tackle those three questions, I have question one other, namely, Does any of this matter? Is this a vital issue? Should you care about the rest of this message?
I will let you answer that. But as you think about it, consider these three things.
1. Stephen died for the truth that I am about to tell you. In fact he chose to go on speaking this truth when he knew that it would cost him his life. So he chose to die rather than not speak about Jesus' destruction of the temple and his changing the customs of Moses. And verse 10 says that Stephen spoke with wisdom and with the Spirit. So he was no fool to choose to die for this truth. We would be fools to say ho-hum about this matter and tune out. It is at least 10,000 times more important for your life than NHL Hockey.
2. The Jewish leaders killed for this truth. They saw it as so threatening that it was better to kill a good man than to let this truth about the destruction of the temple be spread.
3. The third signal that this is very vital for us is that when Luke recorded Stephen's defense in chapter 7, he gives it more space than any other speech or message in the whole book of Acts. All of chapter 7 (60 verses) comprises Stephen’s speech to the council and his subsequent martyrdom. We don’t have time to read it now, so please make a note of it and read it on your own later.
I pray that the Lord will give you a heartfelt assessment of the utter importance of what we are about to see. So let’s look now at:
Question 1: Did Jesus Really Say These Things?
Did Jesus say that he was going to destroy the temple?
Matthew 26:61 and Mark 14:58 tell us that at Jesus' trial false witnesses came forward and said, "This fellow said, I am able to destroy the temple of God, and to build it in three days." When the high priest asked him to make an answer to the charge, Jesus said nothing.
Matthew 27:40 and Mark 15:29 tell us that the crowds who passed by the cross while Jesus was dying mocked Jesus by saying, "You who would destroy the temple and build it in three days, save yourself! If you are the Son of God, come down from this cross."
Most importantly, John 2:19 tells us about one situation when Jesus actually spoke words like these. He had just driven the sellers out of the temple. And the Jews asked him, "What sign have you to show us for doing this?" And Jesus answered, "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up." They come back, "It has taken 46 years to build this temple, and will you raise it up in three days?" And John comments, "But he spoke of the temple of his body" (John 2:21).
Here Jesus says, "You destroy the temple, and I will build it again in three days." But since we know that destroying the temple referred to his death and we also know (from John 10:18) that he was laying down his own life voluntarily, it is very likely that he would also say, "I will destroy this temple, and in three days build it again"—which is what he was accused of saying.
Now what did Jesus mean? Did he simply mean that he would die and then rise again—his body would be destroyed and then raised up in three days? If that's all that he meant, then why did he refer to himself as the temple? And why would he say words like this in the temple itself, knowing that most people would take him literally to refer to the temple building and all that goes on there?
I think the answer is both. For those who had ears to hear, and for those who thought this through after his resurrection (like Stephen did!), Jesus meant: When I die, the temple dies. When I am destroyed, the temple is destroyed. This whole system—all these sacrifices, all this blood flowing to make atonement for sins, all this priestly activity surrounding the holy place where God's presence dwells—it all ends when I die. You destroy me and in dying I destroy the temple.
This is why the curtain in the temple tore from top to bottom in two as Jesus died. It was a token of destruction. The walls were coming down. Jesus himself was taking the place of everything in the temple.
Jesus became our one and only high priest who lives forever to make intercession for us (Hebrews 7:25). So the temple priesthood was "destroyed."
Jesus offered himself and his own blood once for all to make an eternal redemption (Hebrews 9:12, 25–28; 10:10–12). So all the animal sacrifices of the temple are "destroyed."
When Jesus made himself the mercy seat of the temple (Romans 3:25), and made his own blood the blood of the covenant (Mark 14:24), the glory of God—the old shekinah glory of the temple—came down and rested on him and raised him from the dead (Romans 6:4). Peter says, "God raised him from the dead and gave him glory" (1 Peter 1:21). He is, as James says (2:1), "the Lord of glory." And so the temple is no longer the place where you go to see the glory of God. Jesus is that place. Destroyed and in three days raised up—Jesus is where we go to see the glory of God.
And so the temple in Jerusalem is "destroyed." We have a new temple, a new priest, a new sacrifice, a new access to glory and fellowship with God. So when John the apostle has a vision of heaven in Revelation 21:22–23, he says, "And I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the almighty and the Lamb. And the city has no need of sun or moon to shine upon it, for the glory of God is its light, and its lamp is the Lamb."
What Jesus meant when he said, "Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up," was that he himself was taking the place of the temple—by dying for sin once for all, and by rising from the dead to reign as the everlasting priest and Lord of glory. When I die, the temple system dies. And when I rise, I am the temple. I am the sacrifice for sins. I am the priest and go-between with God. I am the presence and radiance of God’s glory. The earthly temple is finished.
So my answer to the first question is Yes, Jesus said that he would destroy the temple. Now let’s look at:
Question 2: Did Stephen Mean What Jesus Meant?
Did Stephen mean what Jesus meant when he carried this teaching into the early church?
The reason I ask this is because verse 14 seems to imply that Stephen was saying that the destruction is still future, but Jesus had said the destruction would happen immediately and the rebuilding would take place in three days. Verse 14: "We have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place." Stephen is saying that it will happen. Jesus said it did happen: past tense..
How shall we understand this? It's not difficult. What Jesus meant was that the basis of the Old Testament sacrificial, priestly, worship system, which focused on the temple, was destroyed when he died—destroyed the way a shadow is destroyed when the reality lies down on it and takes its place. Jesus removed the whole basis of the temple system by laying himself down as the reality that all the shadows were representing. In that sense the destruction was complete in three days, and he rose as the new temple for all who trust him.
But what Stephen had to deal with was that the dismantling of the old temple system did not happen overnight. It would happen gradually. This puts a whole new slant on Acts 6:7 where it says, "A great many priests were obedient to the faith." What that really means is: a great many priests came to believe that they were out of a job. A great many priests came to believe that Jesus is the one and only high priest now, and will never die, and all Christians are priests in his service.
So what Stephen meant when he said that Jesus "will destroy" the temple, is that, just as Jesus took away the old system, now he will go on to dismantle its practices until they are no more. Stephen and Jesus are in perfect harmony on this great issue. The temple is done for. Jesus has destroyed it and will destroy it until it is clear to all that he alone is the one and only sacrifice for sins, the one and only high priest to God, and the one and only habitation of the fullness of the glory of God. So Stephen and Jesus agree.
Now, question 3: Did Luke Agree?
Did Luke agree with what Jesus and Stephen said and are saying?
I ask this because Luke says in verse 13 that the people set up false witnesses to say that Stephen said these things: "And they set up false witnesses who said, 'This man never ceases to speak words against this holy place and the law." In what sense were the witnesses false? Did Luke not think Jesus and Stephen said Jesus would destroy the temple and change the customs of Moses?
Luke Knew Jesus Was Changing the Mosaic Customs
The evidence from the book of Acts is that Luke knew very well that Jesus was changing the customs of Moses. Just a couple examples.
In Acts 15:1 he reports the controversy over circumcision. Some were teaching, "Unless you are circumcised according to the custom of Moses (same word as in 6:14), you cannot be saved." But the decision of the apostles was that this custom belonged to the old system (Acts 15:10–11).
Another example is found in Acts 10 where Luke tells us about the vision Peter had just before he was called to go minister to Gentiles—whom he considered unclean according to the Mosaic food laws. The vision showed "unclean" animals and a voice said, "Kill and eat." And Peter said, "No, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean" (Acts 10:14). But the voice came back, "What God has cleansed, you must not call common." In other words, just as Jesus had already shown in Mark 7:19, the customs about unclean foods were being changed.
So I conclude that Luke knows very well that Stephen and the others were preaching change and telling the Jewish people that the temple system is gone by the way of the dodo and with it some of the customs of Moses. They belong to the past. They have served their purpose in making Israel distinct. But now the people of God is no longer Israel. It is people from every tribe and tongue and nation—all who trust in Jesus.
What then did Luke mean in Acts 6:13 by saying the witnesses were false when they said that Stephen spoke against the temple and the law, and that Jesus would destroy the temple and change the customs of Moses?
What he meant was that the witnesses were putting a false turn to a true statement. It is true that Stephen was saying that Jesus would destroy the temple and change some of the customs of Moses. But it is not true that this was "against this holy place and the law," or, as verse 11 says, that this was "blasphemous words against Moses and God."
What the false witnesses did not grasp at all was that the kind of destroying that Jesus was doing was a fulfilling of everything that God and Moses promised in the law—the forgiveness of sins, a personal priestly advocate with God, the presence and accessibility of his glory. Stephen was not against Moses and God. He was not against the temple and the customs. He was for their fulfillment in Jesus the Messiah.
Jesus destroyed the temple the way a soldier’s homecoming from Afghanistan destroys the need for letters. He destroyed the temple the way the rising sun destroys the need for streetlights and headlights. He destroyed the temple the way a descending reality destroys its shadow.
If the Messiah is coming down from heaven, with forgiveness and advocacy and glory, and the light of God shining upon him, then the first thing that will be seen is his shadow on the earth. And so it was in the sacrifices and priestly service of the old temple. But as the reality gets closer the shadow becomes smaller, and when the reality lands on its shadow, it swallows it up entirely and it is no more. But that does not mean that the reality was against the shadow, or that it blasphemed the shadow. It fulfilled the shadow. And in that sense destroyed the shadow.
And so today we have the reality. Jesus Christ has come into the world to forgive sins once and for all, to be our go-between forever and ever, and to reveal the glory of God.
This is what Stephen died for. May God help us to see it the way he saw it, and cherish Jesus, our new temple, more than anything in the world.