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55 But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. 56 “Look,” he said, “I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.” 57 At this they covered their ears and, yelling at the top of their voices, they all rushed at him, 58 dragged him out of the city and began to stone him. Meanwhile, the witnesses laid their coats at the feet of a young man named Saul. 59 While they were stoning him, Stephen prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” 60 Then he fell on his knees and cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” When he had said this, he fell asleep. (Acts 7:55-60 NIV)
Dear Friend, I thank you for your prayers and for sharing your thoughts on my question about the name change of this ministry. I shared with some of you that I will keep the name ConCafé for this devotional and I may start Heavenly Hope as a website or some other sort of publication. "The joy of the Lord is my strength" is a verse that describes my joy in sharing these devotionals with you and some of you share the same verse in your responses to me. May the Lord bless you and keep you. Quick update: Rev, Whyte, the pastor from Canada, is now in Canada thanks to an air ambulance that flew him and his wife home this Tuesday morning; thanks be to God!
This passage introduces us to two important men in God's plan for the salvation; one was the first person to die for his faith. The second was there because he approved of this death. The first's death would later impact the second's future. The martyr was Stephen, a man chosen to be a Deacon, a servant to people on the Lord's behalf, who paid the ultimate price for his faith. Like Jesus, he was hated for his relatioship with God and falsely accused of wrong things.
We are in the great fifty days of Easter — the season when the Church lives in the light of the empty tomb, singing alleluias and feasting on the reality of resurrection. It may seem surprising, then, to pause at the stoning of Stephen. Death feels out of place in a season of life.
But look more carefully. Stephen's death is not a contradiction of Easter. It is Easter applied — the resurrection power of Jesus made visible in a human life surrendered completely to God. This is what Eastertide is for: not merely to celebrate that Jesus rose, but to ask what his rising changes about how we live, how we suffer, and yes, how we love our enemies.
Luke tells us Stephen was "full of the Holy Spirit." That phrase is doing enormous work. Stephen was not a bishop or an apostle — he was a deacon, appointed to serve tables. Yet in his moment of greatest crisis, he was not empty, not grasping, not afraid. He was full.
And what did that fullness produce? He looked up. In the middle of a crowd that had turned to a mob, in the moment his life was about to be taken, Stephen's gaze went upward. He saw the glory of God. He saw Jesus — not seated, as Psalm 110 describes him in rest, but standing. Standing, as if to receive his servant home. Standing, as if to bear witness on Stephen's behalf before the courts of heaven.
Stephen's declaration — "I see heaven open" — was not a private vision he kept to himself. He spoke it aloud, to people who were already furious with him. This was not recklessness. This was witness. The Greek root of our word martyr simply means witness. Stephen bore witness with his words and, moments later, with his blood.
Notice what his testimony provoked. The crowd covered their ears. They could not bear to hear it. This is a telling detail: the truth of the risen Christ is not always received; sometimes it is violently refused. The resurrection does not guarantee our comfort or our safety. It guarantees that what we speak and suffer for is real, is permanent, and is watched over by One who stands on our behalf.
Luke, the careful historian, makes one other detail explicit: a young man named Saul was there, watching the coats of the executioners. That detail will matter enormously later. God was writing a story that no one in the crowd could yet read.
When the stones begin to fly, Stephen prays two prayers. The first: "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." The second: "Lord, do not hold this sin against them."
You have heard these words before. From the cross, Jesus said, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit." From the cross, Jesus prayed, "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing." Stephen is not imitating a dead hero. He is being conformed, by the Holy Spirit, to a living Lord. The resurrection meant that Jesus' pattern of dying — trusting, forgiving — could now be reproduced in others. Easter is the engine of that reproduction.
This is perhaps the most radical claim of the Christian gospel: that the grace shown on Good Friday was not a one-time event, but the opening of a new way of being human. Stephen inhabits that new humanity fully, completely, even to his last breath. The resurrection did not make Stephen immune to suffering. It made him capable of forgiving in the midst of it. That is the Eastertide transformation: not escape from the hard things, but grace sufficient to meet them with open hands and an upward gaze.
PRAYER: Risen Lord, fix our eyes on you when the world presses in. Make us full of your Spirit — full enough to look up, full enough to speak the truth, full enough to forgive. Let the resurrection that raised you raise the quality of our love. In the name of our Lord Jesus we pray, Amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: This week, choose one person who has wronged you — and pray for them by name, daily, asking God to bless them. Let Stephen's last words become the practice of your ordinary days.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! Keep your eyes on Jesus, for He is life and that in abundance.
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






