Acts 1:1-11 · Jesus Taken Up Into Heaven
Man Proposes; God Disposes
Acts 1:15-17, 21-26
Sermon
by Ron Lavin
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In one way, this is a strange text for a sermon. It gives us an interesting group of facts about the early church, but at first glance, it seems to have little or no relevance for today. A good sermon must not only be true, but must answer the question, "What difference does it make?" What difference does it make that Matthias was chosen to replace Judas so that the apostles would still number twelve? As far as we know, once chosen, Matthias was never heard from again. At least we have no historical record of him.

In other words, we have some interesting historical facts here in the text, but at first glance that's all there seems to be. Let's look at the facts first, then again ask the question of relevancy.

Interesting Historical Facts

Fact one. According to Acts 1:12-14, after Jesus' ascension, the eleven apostles met for prayer in the upper room (of John Mark's house) with certain women including Jesus' mother, and with his brothers. Note that they met in the same place where Jesus had instituted the Lord's Supper. Note, too, that there were women in this important prayer meeting. Women, as well as men, were considered leaders in the early Christian church. That's a break from the Jewish tradition of relegating women to the margins of religious life. In addition, note that Jesus' brothers were in this prayer meeting. These are the same brothers who were estranged from Jesus during his life according to Mark 3:21. Apparently, the death and resurrection of the Lord had turned them into disciples.

Fact one has to do with why they met -- for prayer; where they met -- in the upper room; and who met there -- the eleven apostles plus Mary, certain women, and Jesus' brothers.

Fact two: This was the first business meeting of the early church. The task before the leaders was to choose an apostle to replace Judas who had betrayed Jesus. They prayed about this important decision. Then they acted on the task to replace Judas.

Judas probably never meant Jesus to die. It is likely that he betrayed the Lord with the intention to force his hand and show his power. Judas' plan went frightfully wrong. His plan was ill conceived. In bitter remorse, he hung himself. Judas' plan was not God's plan. Jesus had told all of the apostles, including Judas, that God's plan was that he would go to Jerusalem to die and then be raised again to life. Judas stubbornly clung to his own plan that apparently was that Jesus should conquer the Romans and become the new Jewish king. It was the wrong plan, but Judas wouldn't listen.

Fact number two was that Judas had betrayed the Lord and a new apostle was needed.

Fact three: Twelve was an important number to these early Christians. It was important because Jesus himself had made it important. Jesus chose twelve apostles to show that he was establishing a new Israel called the church. The old Israel had twelve sons of Jacob (Israel). The new Israel should have twelve leaders on whom the church would be built.

Who should be number twelve? The apostles proposed that the new apostle should either be Matthias or Barsabbas (Acts 1:23), both of whom had been disciples from the beginning. Both had also been witnesses to the resurrection. That was good practical thinking. They didn't just use their reason to determine their decision; they prayed about this matter. Then they cast lots to determine which of the two God was choosing, using a method that was used in the Temple to determine offices and duties of the priests.1 Matthias was thus chosen to be apostle number twelve. The trouble was that Matthias was not the man that God had in mind to replace Judas.

Interesting facts, but what difference do they make for today? Christians today need to know their Bibles and their Bible history. The book of Acts is a history of the early church. We need to know what happened after Jesus died and was raised from the dead. How did the early Christians act? What did they do? How did the message of the gospel spread? What good decisions were made? What bad proposals proved to be wrong?

Christians today need to be biblically literate and well informed because most of us are about as well informed to deal with an atheist or agnostic as a boy with a pea-shooter facing a fanfare of machine guns.

But isn't there something more in our story than information? Isn't there inspiration as well? Is there a preaching point in this story we may have initially missed? Isn't there a principle in this text that we can apply to our lives today? Yes, there is.

Man Proposes; God Disposes

To propose means to form or put forward a plan or intention. To propose means to recommend something or someone to fill a place or vacancy. The proposal of the eleven apostles and the other leaders was to fill the Judas vacancy with Matthias (Acts 1:23). It was a good plan, based on solid reasoning and graced with prayer, but God had someone else in mind.

Our business as Christians today is to propose, plan, and act on the best plans we can make, reasoning together and praying together. But like the early Christians, we must realize that the best-laid plans of human beings sometimes go astray. We are called to propose, but to recognize that it is God's business to dispose.

To dispose means to put in place, to settle a matter finally, to deal with something conclusively. That's God's business.

Matthias was the choice of the early Christian leaders. Saul, later named Paul, was the choice of God to replace Judas. There would be twelve apostles, but the timing of God was seen later, not immediately, and the man God wanted as his apostle was not Matthias, but Saul.

Saul was a ruthless Pharisee who witnessed and approved the stoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyr. Saul sought out Christians to put them in jail and stop the budding Christian movement before it could get off the ground. Saul, who thought he was doing the right thing for God, was deceived by the evil one. He was filled with illusions about right and wrong. On the road to Damascus to persecute Christians, Saul heard a voice from heaven: "Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?" It stopped him in his tracks. He realized how blind he had been.

The preaching point in this story is a principle for all times and places: Man may propose, but God will dispose.

That principle was operative in the lives of the early Christian leaders. They made a mistake. It was well intentioned, but it was a mistake. God had a different timetable and a different person in mind. At the time no one could have imagined that Saul, the persecutor of Christians, would become Paul, the great missionary apostle for Jesus Christ.

Saul had made a big mistake. He mistook his will for the will of God. People suffered greatly and some died as a result of Saul's wrong thinking. In the name of God, Saul proposed to rid the world of what he considered the Christian menace. He played right into the hands of the evil one.

Today, the principle that man proposes, but God disposes is the biblical corrective for our mistakes and serious immoral actions. In the name of God, some strange and terrible things based on self-deception have been proposed and acted upon.

The inquisition is an example of evil illusions leading to suffering and death. Jews were ruthlessly persecuted by so-called Christian leaders. The promotion of and support of slavery by some Christian groups is another example. So is prejudice in all its ugly forms. At times prejudice has crept into churches and the personal lives of otherwise good Christian people like the shadowy, ugly monster it is. In other words, Christians, as well as non-Christians, have made serious mistakes thinking they were doing God's will. Man proposes; but God disposes. This is serious business.

Church rules have sometimes been mistakes. God's rules (such as the Ten Commandments) are absolute. Church rules are not. The story is told about John Smith, the only Protestant to move into a large Catholic neighborhood. On the first Friday of Lent, John was outside grilling a big juicy steak on his grill. Meanwhile, all his neighbors were eating cold tuna fish for supper. This went on each Friday in Lent.

On the last Friday of Lent, the neighborhood men got together and decided that something had to be done about John. He was tempting them to eat meat on Fridays and they couldn't take it any more. They decided to try to convert John to be a Catholic.

They went over and talked to John and were happily surprised that he was willing to join the Catholic church. Sprinkling water on his head, the priest said, "You were born a Baptist, you were raised a Baptist, and now you are a Catholic."

When the first Friday in Lent rolled around the next year, the neighbors were sitting around eating their cold tuna fish dinners when they smelled the wafting smell of steak cooking on the grill. They decided to confront John. They arrived just in time to see John sprinkling some water over his steak on the grill, saying, "You were born a cow, you were raised a cow, and now you are a fish."

It was a mistake on the part of those Catholics to think they could get a Baptist to completely become a Catholic.

There are small mistakes and bigger ones. Saul's big mistake caused lives to be lost. God disposed of the matter by choosing him as his missionary apostle, thus correcting the apostles' smaller mistake of choosing Matthias to replace Judas.

What can we do about our small and large mistakes made today? Consider three correctives for the tendency to think we know it all and fall into temptations today.

First, we must recognize we are human. We are not God. Only God is God. We should not view our opinions and plans as absolute. That doesn't mean we should forever stay in the land of indecision, avoiding action at all costs. It just means that we are limited in our understanding and actions. We must avoid the problem of a Lutheran pastor who was arguing with a Roman Catholic priest about religion. Finally the Lutheran pastor said, "I think we should just agree that we are both trying to do God's will, you in your way, and I in his." Hmmm.

Second, we must recognize our own fallibility. None of us is infallible. Not one of us does right at all times. Sometimes we take ourselves and our opinions too seriously. Sometimes we stubbornly cling to our way of thinking, even when the evidence is against us. A wife said to her husband, "You are so stubborn. You always think you are right."

He replied, "You're stubborn, too."

"No," she said coolly. "You're stubborn. I'm indomitable."

There is a pretty fine line between stubborn and indomitable. Sometimes we fool ourselves.

Third, we are all called to repentance. This is the one thing needful and the hardest thing of all. To admit our mistakes and say we are sorry is the important step back to health. That's why we have confession of sins as a part of every worship service.

A recovering alcoholic confessed, "When I was drinking, I always blamed someone else for my problems. I never took responsibility for what I did wrong. When I went to church, I said the words of confession, but I never really believed they applied to me. I always wanted my wife and children to change. I wanted my boss to change. I wanted my friends to change. Now that I am a recovering alcoholic I have come to see I can't change anyone else, only me. Finally, I have taken responsibility for my actions. It's hard because some of my actions have been terrible, but I'm beginning to learn the lesson that my plans are not always God's plans and my ways are not always God's ways. Every morning when I arise I pray, 'Dear Father, I'm not all I should be and I'm not all I'm going to be, but thanks to you, I'm not what I used to be.' "

Man proposes; God alone disposes. That means we fall short, even when we try to do right. That means we are called to see our humanity, our fallibility, and our need for repentance. That means that we are easily deceived by the evil one. It's a comfort to know that in the high priestly prayer in John 17 (our Gospel Reading for today) Jesus prayed for us. "I'm not asking to take them out of the world, but that you would protect them from the evil one." The evil one always divides; God forgives us, restores us, and unites us.

Man proposes; God alone disposes. You can build a life around that principle.


1. William Barclay, Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1976), p. 17.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons on the First Readings: Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter, Reversal, by Ron Lavin