Acts 2:14-41 · Peter Addresses the Crowd
Confidence, Joy, and Hope
Acts 2:14a, 22-32
Sermon
by King Duncan & Angela Akers
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Have you ever been the bearer of bad news? It’s tough, isn’t it? Nobody wants that job. You may have heard of the saying, “Don’t shoot the messenger.” It means, “Don’t take out your anger on the person delivering the bad news. It’s not their fault.” Did you know there are variations of this saying in countries all over the world? And that some form of this saying was found in writings from 446 BC—almost 450 years before the birth of Jesus Christ? The great playwright William Shakespeare was the one to coin it in the English language. He used this phrase in two of his plays, Hamlet and Antony and Cleopatra. (1)

But how do you protect the bearers of bad news? In medieval England, kings would hire men who could read to serve as town criers. The majority of citizens were illiterate, so town criers stood in public places and loudly read the news of the day, which might include new laws and ordinances passed down by the king. And sometimes this included bad news, such as tax increases. So it was the law in England that harming a town crier was an act of treason, a crime which was punishable by hanging. (2)

Former President Ronald Reagan earned the nickname “The Great Communicator” because he was a master at expressing ideas and using images that inspired people. But he may also have gotten this nickname because he rarely shared bad news with the public.

According to authors Dave Yoho and Jeffrey Davidson, President Reagan made it a point to deliver good news at his press conferences. If there was any bad news to announce, he left that job to a representative from the State Department. This was a brilliant way to reinforce his image as a positive leader. (3)

I’m glad to know the desire to not pass on bad news is universal. And that’s why I think Peter’s speech in Acts 2 took so much courage. A little over 40 days prior, Peter had denied he even knew Jesus. There is no evidence he was present at Jesus’ crucifixion. It appears he was more concerned with protecting his own life than following Jesus to the cross. Who can blame him?

Yet on this day, the day of Pentecost, when Jerusalem was filled with Jewish believers from every nation, Peter stands up and makes this speech. And what a speech it was! There were no public relations agencies back then, but if there had been, the disciples’ PR rep never would have let Peter make this speech.

“So you’re telling these guys that they killed the Messiah? Yeah, I’d scratch that entirely. No way they’re going to listen to you after that.”

But Peter’s message was not a message of judgment. It was a message of hope. It sounded like the worst kind of news, but it was actually amazingly good news. In Jesus’ resurrection, Peter had discovered the unshakable hope of God. And that hope was the source of his courage.

Look at what Peter actually said about Jesus in vs. 23-24: “This man was handed over to you by God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge; and you, with the help of wicked men, put him to death by nailing him to the cross.  But God raised him from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him.”

“By God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge.” Let those words sink in. God had a plan from before the foundation of the world to let Jesus offer his life as a perfect sacrifice for humanity, to destroy the power of death and heal our separation with God. To open the way to eternal life for us. Life was always God’s plan. Victory was always God’s plan. So it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him.

And to prove his words, Peter reveals to them that King David’s vision of a future Messiah—prophesied almost 1,000 years earlier—was about Jesus of Nazareth, the man they had put to death. This vision filled David with confidence, hope and joy. If we understood the plan of God, if we understood the truth of the resurrection, it would fill us with confidence, hope and joy too.

The truth of the resurrection fills us with confidence in the future. That’s the first insight we get from today’s Bible passage. Peter and the disciples had only recently seen Jesus ascend to heaven. He left them behind. They didn’t have a leader. They didn’t have a plan. They were still in danger of persecution from the religious and political leaders in Jerusalem. But they weren’t living in fear anymore. They had seen God’s plan for humanity. They had seen the resurrected Jesus. That’s the source of our confidence too. We are not serving a dead prophet, but a living God. And our living God has been working throughout human history to bring justice and peace and eternal life to humanity. This is the hope we live in.

In 1852, six years before the Civil War, when slavery was entrenched in American society, abolitionist Frederick Douglass spoke at a public meeting in Ohio. He wanted to provide words of hope, but he just couldn’t see any way to obtain freedom and justice for those who were forced into slavery.

But there was a woman attending the meeting that day named Sojourner Truth. Sojourner had escaped slavery and become a powerful speaker and social activist. And as she listened to her friend Douglass struggling for hope, she stood up and asked one question, “Frederick, is God dead?”

And that one question instantly changed the mood of the meeting and filled Frederick Douglass and his listeners with hope. In fact, this question was so powerful that it is inscribed on Sojourner Truth’s gravestone.

Is God dead? We aren’t facing the enormous and painful struggles of slavery and systemic injustice that Douglass and Sojourner Truth and so many African Americans faced back then. But we face our own challenges and fears and an uncertain future. How do we live with unshakable hope? By remembering that we serve a living God, and that God has always had a plan to save us and ensure our eternal life with Him. This life is not the end.  

The second insight we get from this passage is the truth of the resurrection fills us with joy in the present. There are two forms of joy listed in verse 26: my heart is glad and my tongue rejoices. “My heart is glad” is expressed by a compound Greek word that refers to having a cheerful perspective because of a sense of inner triumph. And the Greek word used to express “my tongue rejoices” actually means “to jump for joy.” This is not a happiness that is based on comfortable circumstances and easy living. This kind of joy is a choice. It is a transformative joy that changes our internal perspective on life so completely that we have to tell somebody about it! Imagine your tongue jumping for joy! That’s hilarious! Now imagine how the world’s image of Christians would change if we were all known for our inner attitude and outward expressions of joy.   

It is our fear of decay, loss and death that is at the root of our hopelessness and violence and dysfunction in this world. What is the point of loving anyone or striving for anything excellent if everything that is precious and loved in this world will eventually decay and die? But Jesus defeated death once and for all. It was impossible for death to keep its hold on him. His sacrifice bought us restoration and eternal life with God. If we keep that truth in mind, it makes every challenge and heartbreak we experience in this life more bearable.  

Rev. Kenneth Kovacs shares a story he heard about a woman from Indiana who was volunteering at a refugee camp in El Salvador. As this woman witnessed the suffering of the refugees, sadness covered her like a black cloud. She couldn’t see any hope for their future. Until a refugee woman asked her why she looked so troubled. She pointed to the challenges the refugees were facing. The woman said that every time the refugees had to move to a new camp, they created three committees: “a construction committee, an education committee, and a committee of joy.” This third committee had the job of celebrating what is good in the present moment and pointing the refugees toward a hopeful future.

The refugees made a choice to trust God and to live in hope. (4)

And the final insight we get from this passage is that the truth of the resurrection motivates us to live in hope. Let’s look at verse 26 again. It reads, “Therefore my heart is glad and my tongue rejoices; my body also will rest in hope . . .” The Greek word used here for “rest in hope” can be literally translated as “to pitch a tent in hope” or “to dwell in hope.” This word is only used four times in the Gospels. The other three times it is used, it refers to birds building their nests. In essence, it’s saying, “Because I know the Messiah, I can make my home in hope.”

You may remember a man named Terry Waite. Terry Waite is a British man who once worked as an envoy of the Church of England. He negotiated for the release of British hostages being held by hostile governments around the world. In 1987, while negotiating for the release of hostages in Lebanon, Terry was taken hostage and forced into solitary confinement in a Lebanese prison. He spent almost five years in solitary confinement. He was beaten and barely fed enough to stay alive. He says that he kept his sanity by praying ancient texts from the Book of Common Prayer and celebrating the Eucharist, or Holy Communion, every day with a tiny scrap of bread and water he saved from his meals. Imagine that. He found a way to worship God under the worst circumstances.

In an interview after his release, Terry was asked what he had learned from those years of suffering. One comment stood out to me particularly. He said, “. . . if you have faith, you will not be destroyed, and you will find that you can live in hope; not just for this life, but for dimensions that lie way beyond this life.” (5)

“If you have faith, you can live in hope.” That is the vision God granted King David almost 1,000 years before the birth of Jesus. That is the vision God granted Peter and the disciples that changed them from timid men and women hiding away from the Roman authorities to men and women who gave up their own lives to joyfully spread the message of Jesus across the Roman Empire.

God had a plan from the beginning of creation to conquer death and give us eternal life with Him. And He fulfilled that plan through the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ. Death is defeated. We have nothing left to fear. If we understand this truth, we can live in unshakable confidence, joy and hope in this life and forever.


1. Pastor Donald Peterson III, http://lakeviewemmanuel.com/multimedia-archive/jesus-the-perfect-prophet-luke-1331-35/.

2. “The Town Crier” by Ellen Castelow, https://www.historic-uk.com/CultureUK/The-Town-Crier/.

3. How to Have a Good Year Every Year by Dave Yoho and Jeffrey P. Davidson, Berkley Books, New York, 1991, p. 196.

4. Clothed with the Sun:  Biblical Women, Social Justice, and Us, (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1994), p. 225.  Cited in the Christmas Eve sermon of Rev. Tim Hart Anderson, Westminster Presbyterian Church, Minneapolis, MN (www.ewestminster.org). Join in the Celebration! © Reverend Kenneth E. Kovacs, Catonsville Presbyterian Church, http://www.catonsvillepresb.org/sermons/2004/20040201.html.

5. “Terry Waite: Faith Held Hostage” by Sheridan Voysey, Open House April 24, 2013. https://hope1032.com.au/stories/life/inspirational-stories/2013/terry-waite-break-my-body-bend-my-mind-but-my-soul-is-not-yours-to-possess/.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Second Quarter, by King Duncan & Angela Akers