Salvation is found in no one else,
for there is no other name under heaven
given to mankind by which we must be saved.
Acts 4:12
Peter and John are summoned before the rulers because they had openly proclaimed that Jesus had risen from the dead. With striking courage, Peter shows that the resurrection of Jesus is not merely a private conviction, but a public truth to be declared. He says clearly that Jesus, whom they crucified, is the One God raised from the dead. His boldness teaches us two important truths. First, it tells us the truth about the human heart. Jesus came healing, serving, and loving, yet people rejected Him and put Him to death. That shows how deeply sin has wounded the world and each of us. We must be honest about that, or our faith becomes proud and shallow.
But Peter is also bold about God’s grace. Though people rejected Jesus, God raised Him from the dead. Human sin is real, but it does not have the last word. God still rules. God still loves. God still restores. Jesus is “the stone you builders rejected, which has become the cornerstone.” What people threw away, God made the foundation of salvation. The healing of the lame man proves that Jesus is still alive and still at work. He is not only a figure from the past. He is the living Christ.
This passage calls us to the same kind of boldness. We must be humble enough to admit our sin and our need for mercy. But we must also be joyful and brave enough to say that Jesus is alive, and that salvation is found in Him alone. The church is here to tell a broken world that God has acted in Christ to save, heal, and restore. To live in Eastertide is to stand humbly, speak clearly, and trust joyfully that the living Christ still saves.
Prayer:
Heavenly Father, thank You that Jesus is alive. Make me humble about my sin and bold about Your grace. Help me to trust Christ, my cornerstone, and to live as a faithful witness to His saving name. Amen.






