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14 Then Peter stood up with the Eleven, raised his voice and addressed the crowd: 36 “Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Messiah.” 37 When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, “Brothers, what shall we do?” 38 Peter replied, “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39 The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off—for all whom the Lord our God will call.” 40 With many other words he warned them; and he pleaded with them, “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.” 41 Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day. (Acts 2: 14a, 36-41 NIV)
Every pastor at one time or another has secretly or not so secretly wished that one of his/her sermons would reach 3,000 who would be "added to their number that day." Maybe some even wish they could preach to a crowd of that size. But keep in mind this is not a competition. We compete not against other preachers but against the enemy of preachers. But among my friends whenever they call to check on me after I preach at some new place, "Did you convert 3,000 with your sermon?" Or I ask them.
Not many weeks earlier, this same Peter had stood in a courtyard by a charcoal fire and denied three times that he even knew Jesus. He had cursed and sworn and slipped away into the shadows. But now, on the morning of Pentecost, something has happened to him. He stands up. He raises his voice. He addresses a crowd of thousands in the very city where his Lord was executed.
This is what resurrection does to a person. The same power that rolled away the stone, that transformed a borrowed tomb into the most important empty room in history, has transformed Peter. He is not managing his shame. He is not offering a carefully hedged theological position. He is making a declaration: the Jesus you crucified is Lord and Messiah. Full stop.
The Easter season invites us to ask the same question the resurrection asked of Peter: Has the risen Christ changed me? Not just what I believe, but who I am — my courage, my willingness to stand up, my readiness to speak? The resurrection is not merely a doctrine to affirm. It is a power to receive.
Peter’s message is startling in its directness. He does not soften the central claim or bury it in qualifications. He says: God has made the Jesus whom you crucified both Lord and Messiah. The word “you” lands like a stone in still water. Many in the crowd had been in Jerusalem during Passover. Some had perhaps cried out for Barabbas. Others had simply stood by in silence. None of them could claim to be entirely uninvolved in what had happened to Jesus.
But here is the grace hidden in that accusation: Peter is not addressing enemies. He calls them “brothers.” He is speaking to people who are, in that moment, reachable. The same hands that were raised against Jesus can be opened to receive Him. This is the scandal of Easter grace — that the gospel is preached first to those who crucified the Christ, and three thousand of them say yes.
We are all, in one way or another, in that crowd. We have all turned away, denied, been complicit in the small crucifixions of everyday life — the lies we told, the kindness we withheld, the idol we chose over the living God. And yet the sermon is preached to us, too. The question “what shall we do?” is ours to ask.
The crowd’s response is one of the most remarkable phrases in the New Testament: “they were cut to the heart.” The Greek word carries the image of something sharp and sudden — a piercing, a puncturing. The truth of the resurrection, proclaimed with clarity and boldness, did something to them that no amount of philosophical argument or emotional manipulation could do. It broke through.
This is always how genuine conviction works. It is not manufactured by clever technique or worked up by atmospheric pressure. It is the work of the Holy Spirit, using the proclaimed Word to reach places in the human heart that nothing else can access. Peter did not cut them to the heart. The truth about the risen Christ did. Peter simply had the courage to say it out loud.
Have you ever been cut to the heart by the gospel? Can you remember the moment when the resurrection stopped being a theological proposition and became a personal confrontation — when the question “what shall we do?” became your own? If you have, let this season renew the memory. If you haven’t, let this be your Pentecost.
Peter’s answer to the crowd’s urgent question is wonderfully simple: repent, be baptized, and receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. Three movements, each flowing into the next. Repentance is the turning — away from the old life, the futile ways, the self-constructed kingdoms. Baptism is the public declaration — I belong to the crucified and risen Jesus, and I am not ashamed. And the gift of the Holy Spirit is what makes all of this sustainable: not our own willpower or religious effort, but the very presence and power of God living within us.
And then Peter widens the lens to an astonishing breadth: “The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off — for all whom the Lord our God will call.” Far off. That phrase would have echoed in the ears of every Gentile who heard it later, every person who felt themselves on the outside of God’s story. The resurrection has no borders. The Spirit has no favorites. The call goes out to the near and the far, the young and the old, those who feel worthy and those who are quite sure they are not.
Three thousand people said yes that day. Not because Peter was a brilliant orator. Not because the conditions were perfect. But because the risen Christ was real, the Spirit was moving, and the Word went forth with power. That same risen Christ is real today. That same Spirit is moving. The Word has not lost its edge.
PRAYER: Loving God, thank you for those first sermons that touch people for the first time or convict for the first time. Thank you for the men and women who have responded to preaching and reaching us. Help us to know we have a "pulpit" from which we too, can "preach" the love fo Jesus to all; in His name we pray, amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Identify one person in your life who is “far off” — far from faith, far from hope, or simply far from community — and take one deliberate step toward them. It doesn’t have to be a sermon. It might be a conversation, an invitation, a meal, or simply the courage to tell them what the risen Christ has meant to you.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






