Holy Boldness
When pressure rises and opposition comes, our natural instinct is often to retreat, panic, or fight back. But in Acts 4, the early church responded differently. After Peter and John were threatened for preaching Jesus, the believers did not gather to complain, strategize, or hide—they gathered to pray. And their prayer reveals the source of true Christian boldness. They anchored themselves in the sovereignty of God, trusted the sufficiency of Scripture, and fixed their eyes on the supremacy of the risen Christ. These ordinary believers understood that if Jesus truly reigns, then no threat, suffering, government, or hardship can stop the mission of God. The same fearful disciples who once hid behind locked doors were now boldly proclaiming the Gospel because they had encountered the resurrected Christ and had been filled with the Holy Spirit. And in a culture increasingly resistant to biblical truth, Acts 4 reminds us that boldness is not personality, bravado, or fearlessness—it is the Spirit-empowered confidence that comes from knowing who God is, trusting His Word, and believing that Jesus is still on the throne.
