Acts 1:12-26 · Matthias Chosen to Replace Judas
Readying the Twelve for Mission
Acts 1:12-26
Sermon
by Donald Macleod
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After two such unprecedented events as Resurrection and Ascension, certainly this question is in order: what can God do for an encore? Or, one might simply exclaim: what a hard act to follow! The eleven disciples left Mt. Olivet and returned to Jerusalem, as Jesus had commanded them. Naturally, they sought out the Upper Room, a place filled with memories that were now sacred. Other faithful persons joined them until they numbered about a hundred and twenty, (v. 15) including a number of women with Mary and Jesus’ brothers (v. 14). Here occurred the first congregational meeting of the infant church, with Peter acting as spokesperson for the group.

Did they have an agenda? Well, yes and no. Echoing in their minds were Jesus’ words before his Ascension: "Go - and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you:

and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age" (Matthew 28:18, 20 RSV). What an assignment! What a challenge! But look at their only resources, their meager man-power, in the face of the vested interests of the prevailing Jewish religion and culture, not to mention the vast conglomeration of sects of the Gentile world. Think of it: only eleven disciples, and of these just four or five could be counted on to spearhead Jesus’ idea of a world mission!

With our historical hindsight we know now that the period of waiting which Jesus commanded was followed by that great Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit descended upon this group and galvanized them into a movement that launched the evangelical movement of the early church. However, our text today (Acts 1:15-17, 21-26) outlines an incident of a somewhat routine nature that occurred between the Ascension and Pentecost. Peter, with more sense than he had generally hitherto shown, stood up and called their attention to an item of unfinished business. This time he didn’t put his fishing rod in his mouth. He talked with regret about the defection of their brother, Judas, and he did so in a temperate fashion, concluding with the words, he went "to his own place" (v. 25). St. Chrysostom echoed this thought when he wrote, "No man can hurt a man but himself." The immediate agenda now was to elect someone to take Judas’ place. St. Ignatius once said: "Pray as if everything depended upon God" (the group had done this), but he added, "Act as if everything depended on oneself." The group didn’t have their heads entirely in the clouds; they got down to business over a concrete detail.

You all know the story. Two names were put forward in a sort of primary (it must have been by a voice vote): Barsabas and Matthias whose qualifications were well known and acceptable to all. Then a season of prayer was decided upon, followed by a casting of lots which put responsibility upon each one to vote as his or her conscience seemed to be led by God. Matthias was chosen, and now the original band of chosen disciples again numbered twelve.

What, now, do we make of all this? As this post-Easter season ends, is there a message here for modern church people? Consider these three observations:

1. It says something to the whole worshiping congregation of the church. In every congregation there are official members whose names are on the roll titled, "By Profession of Faith." They are eligible to serve on its boards, partake of Holy Communion and represent that congregation before the courts of the denomination. But there are others, numbering in some large centers, in the hundreds, who worship regularly, pay their dues, believe sincerely, but who are nameless and often unrecognized. They constitute a resource which church members often neglect.

Consider Matthias: Peter described him as one who had "accompanied us during all the time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us," all the way from Jesus’ Baptism to the Ascension. He was not merely a loose hanger-on; he was a sincere and steady fellow traveler whose integrity commended him to the others; he was really a partner among equals. Indeed, Scripture records many of similar character: In the Book of Ezra we read the account of the dedication of "the house of the Lord in Jerusalem" in which every significant group of names is listed. And then, like an afterthought, we read, "There were among them 200 singing men and singing women" (Ezra 2:65 KJV). No one knows the names of those who thronged the Master on that first Palm Sunday. Little is known about Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, yet they took care of the body of Jesus after his death and laid it in the tomb. Every Sunday in every pew in the local church there are what someone called, "God’s nameless great." They have had their spiritual life enriched and deepened as they have accompanied the church membership through the years. There are many Matthiases among them. Probably a simple season of prayer will lead someone to them and give them a well deserved identity in the greater-enterprises of the church.

2. It singles out an essential qualification for church membership. Listen to Peter: "One of these men must become with us a witness to his resurrection" (v. 22). Note how he uses the preposition "to" instead of "of." Anyone can be a witness "of" something, but to witness "to" means much, much more. A disciple is not made by a book or by rules or by political strategy. To be a disciple, one must know intimately the person of Christ, must absorb his message, must sense his purpose and must have experienced a total reorientation of his or her life by his redemptive power. When all this happens, then one cannot help becoming a witness to the Risen Lord and being able to say to the world, in the words of Alexander Maclaren:

We are plain men, telling a plain story ... We want you to believe us as honest men, relating what we have seen. We bring it to you as a thing that happened upon this earth which we saw with our own eyes and of which we are the witnesses.1

3. This simple and unobtrusive incident gives a fuller insight into the efficacy of prayer. People pray daily for many things, usually for strength to cope with life’s problems, for release from anxiety and fear, for love and kindheartedness in dealing with difficult people and for God’s blessing upon our families and our homes. Prayer, however, had a further dimension for these disciples and followers of Jesus in that Upper Room. They did not say, "We’ve got a problem. Let’s pray about it." The issue arose out of their praying, not the reverse. God knows what the particular need is, and in our deep spiritual communion with him we become sensitive to its reality and are directed to do something about it. Remember that soul-wrenching night in the Garden of Gethsemane when Jesus agonized in prayer over the choice of the Cross. There came the moment when he had prayed the matter through, and then he arose and said to the disciples, "Arise, let us be going ..." (Matthew 26:46 RSV). That is the kind of prayer we must recover, so that as we rise from our knees, the direction is clear and the decision then is ours. And, as we move outward and onward, ours will be the consciousness that God’s will is being done.


1. Expositions of Holy Scripture (The Acts), Vol. 8 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1952), p. 33.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Palms And Thorns, by Donald Macleod