2018, April 8 ~ Acts 4:32-35; and 1 John 1:1-2:2
Acts 4:32-35
The book called “The Acts of the Apostles” was written around 85 to 90 CE by the anonymous author of the Gospel According to Luke. The first 15 chapters of Acts are a didactic “history” of the early Jesus Follower Movement starting with the Ascension. The last 13 chapters describe Paul’s Missionary Journeys – not always consistently with Paul’s letters.
The Gospel According to Luke and Acts of the Apostles see the Holy Spirit as the driving force for all that happens. The events surrounding today’s reading exemplify this.
Peter and John and other Jesus Followers prayed at the Temple soon after the Ascension and Pentecost. (Jesus Followers saw themselves as part of Judaism until the late 1st Century, even after the Temple was destroyed in 70 CE.)
After praying, they were all filled with the Holy Spirit (v.31) and, as described in today’s reading, the “whole group” gave all their possessions to be held in common so that no one would be needy among them (v.34). Today’s reading is a reiteration of the holding all things in common by “all who believed” as described in Acts 2:44.
Holding all goods in common is still characteristic of those religious orders whose members take a vow of poverty.
1 John 1:1-2:2
There are three letters attributed to “John” – an attribution that was given to the letters in the late 2nd Century about the same time that the four canonical Gospels were attributed to Mark, Matthew, Luke and John. (We do not know the actual authors of any of the Gospels.)
There are similarities between these three letters and the Fourth Gospel (for example, “from the beginning” in verse 1). But there are also differences – in the use of images (in the Fourth Gospel, Jesus is the “light” but in 1 John, a moral life is the “light” v. 7), as well as differences in theology and in other aspects of the Fourth Gospel.
Biblical Scholars believe that the author of 1 John was likely an individual speaking on behalf of a community (“We declare” in verse 1) of followers of the author of the Fourth Gospel.
Scholars also conclude that the three letters attributed to “John” were written after 100 CE because they do not reflect the tense relationships found in the Fourth Gospel between the Jesus Followers and the Temple Authorities (in Jesus’ lifetime and up until 70 CE) and the Pharisees (from at least 70 CE until the “parting of the ways” around 100 CE).