Stephen in Smiths Bible Dictionary
the first Christian martyr, was the chief of the seven
(commonly called Deacons) appointed to rectify the
complaints in the early Church of Jerusalem, made by the
Hellenistic against the hebrew Christians. His Greek name
indicates his own Hellenistic origin. His importance is
stamped on the narrative by a reiteration of emphatic,
almost superlative, phrases: "full of faith and of the Holy
Ghost," Ac 6:5 "full of grace and power," ibid. Ac 6:8
irresistible "spirit and wisdom," ibid Ac 6:10 "full of the
Holy Ghost." Ac 7:55 He shot far ahead of his six
companions, and far above his particular office. First, he
arrests attention by the "great wonders and miracles that he
did." Then begins a series of disputations with the
Hellenistic Jews of north Africa, Alexandria and Asia Minor,
his companions in race and birthplace. The subject of these
disputations is not expressly mentioned; but from what
follows it is obvious that he struck into a new vein of
teaching, which evidently caused his martyrdom. Down to this
time the apostles and the early Christian community had
clung in their worship, not merely to the holy land and the
holy city but to the holy place of the temple. This local
worship, with the Jewish customs belonging to it, Stephen
denounced. So we must infer from the accusations brought
against him confirmed as they are by the tenor of his
defence. He was arrested at the instigation of the
Hellenistic Jews, and brought before the Sanhedrin. His
speech in his defence, and his execution by stoning outside
the gates of Jerusalem, are related at length in Acts 7. The
frame work in which his defence is cast is a summary of the
history of the Jewish Church. In the facts which he selects
from his history he is guided by two principles. The first
is the endeavor to prove that, even in the previous Jewish
history, the presence and favor of God had not been confined
to the holy land or the temple of Jerusalem. The second
principle of selection is based on the at tempt to show that
there was a tendency from the earliest times toward the same
ungrateful and narrow spirit that had appeared in this last
stage of their political existence. It would seem that, just
at the close of his argument, Stephen saw a change in the
aspect of his judges, as if for the first time they had
caught the drift of his meaning. He broke off from his calm
address, and tumult suddenly upon them in an impassioned
attack, which shows that he saw what was in store for him.
As he spoke they showed by their faces that their hearts
"were being sawn asunder," and they kept gnashing their set
teeth against him; but still, though with difficultly,
restraining themselves. He, in this last crisis of his fate,
turned his face upward to the; open sky, and as he gazed the
vault of heaven seemed to him to part asunder; and the
divine Glory appeared through the rending of the earthly
veil --the divine Presence, seated on a throne, and on the
right hand the human form of Jesus. Stephen spoke as if to
himself, describing the glorious vision; and in so doing,
alone of all the speakers and writers in the New Testament
except, only Christ himself, uses the expressive phrase "the
Son of man." As his judges heard the words, they would
listen no longer. They broke into, a loud yell; they clapped
their hands to their ears; they flew as with one impulse
upon him, and dragged him out of the city to the place of
execution. Those who took the lead in the execution were the
persons wile had taken upon themselves the responsibility of
denouncing him. De 17:7 comp. John 8:7...
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