find a location | TATES CREEK armstrong mill georgetown WINCHESTER ROAD online CAMPUS TV CAMPUS
When all the people saw him walking and praising God, the recognized him as the same man who used to sit begging at the temple gate called Beautiful, and they were filled with wonder and amazement at what had happened to him. (Acts 3:9-10)
In Acts 3, Peter and John heal a lame man who was begging for alms outside of God’s temple at the gate called Beautiful. Like the lame man, we are all beggars at the Lord’s temple. This passage reflects the transformational power of God’s grace. Though we are undeserving, by God’s grace we are welcome in the gates. There are three ways that God’s grace transforms us:
First, God’s grace changes our hearts. The lame man spent his entire life begging others for money and focusing on what the world could offer him. However, the Lord used Peter and John to turn his heart to Jesus, who was the only one that could give him the healing he needed. In verse 4, Peter tells the lame man “Look at us,” and his attention shifts from silver and gold to the grace of God. When the man opens his heart to Jesus, he realizes that the world can’t offer the healing power of the Savior.
Not only does God’s grace change our hearts, but it also strengthens our faith. God meets the lame man right where he is and strengthens him physically and spiritually. This man experiences two things for the first time through his faith in Jesus: first, he is miraculously able to walk under the power of his own two feet; and second, and more importantly, he experiences an intimate encounter with his Savior. In verse 8:
the man went with Peter and John into the temple courts, walking and jumping, and praising God. He is no longer the man begging outside the temple gates; he’s the man expressing his faith in Jesus inside the temple.
Finally, God’s grace compels us to live for His glory. By nature, we seek to draw attention to ourselves. However, when we submit to the Lordship of Christ, He uses us as vessels to glorify Him and draw others into His presence. This is precisely what happens at the end of the beggar's story when the people were filled with wonder and amazement at what the Lord had done in his life.
Let’s make sure our lives, like that of the beggar, are drawing others toward Christ.
By C.A. Carter
C.A. is a senior at LCA. She has been at Immanuel for two years and is the daughter of Jimmy and Carrie Carter.
All Rights Reserved | Immanuel Baptist Church