Beautiful, Broken People (repost)

Note: This month I’m posting a series of devotional thoughts from Acts. Many of these are reposts, some are new. I’m “working out the kinks” for submission to a compilation of short, pastoral writings in Acts to be published later this year. If you have suggestions, corrections, or comments, please let me know!


When my wife and I planted a church in Seattle in the late 90’s we occasionally had some good-natured person suggest something along the lines of, “if you could just get Bill Gates saved and tithing to your church, you’d be set”.

We had heard a similar refrain in Youth Ministry. When discussing growth strategies among our leaders, someone would always recommend more targeted outreach to the athletes, the “preps”, and the other ultra-popular kids. If we pulled in the favored, everyone else would follow is how the thinking went.

Somehow we imagine that if we focus on the beautiful people first, then everyone else will follow. I call that idea “trickle-down grace”.

In Acts 3, Peter and John were walking through the beautiful gate; some say it was called this because it was a magnificent entrance to the temple area that the important people liked to walk through.

I read that it’s even possible that this is the very place where the wealthy people were giving their offerings when Jesus talked to his disciples about a widow’s coin in Luke 21. If this is the case, it makes sense why a disabled, immobile man would be dropped off every day to beg there.

Gate Beautiful also represented something that all gates represent, regardless of how beautiful they are: Gates keep people out. This one was no exception. Only those who were whole and religiously acceptable could get closer to the temple to properly worship through this magnificent gate.

Beautiful gates are for beautiful people; not broken ones.

Broken people sit just outside of the gate. And often, we ignore them. We think if we can get the beautiful, wealthy or important people saved, that might start a movement, and then the broken people will also be impacted.

Trickle-down grace.

But God thinks very differently than we do.

This is the first recorded physical healing to happen in the Early Church Era. God, for that first candidate, did not choose someone with influence, wealth, or beauty, but He intentionally chose a person who had nothing.

Then again, Jesus was always looking for the blind, the bound and the broken. If you were beautiful, you had a hurdle to get over (or an eye of a needle to get through), because first you had to recognize your need.

When this guy who was sitting at the gate got healed, all heaven broke loose. It was the manifestation of the power of God, the love of God and the grace of God to the least likely.

(You know, Jesus would have passed by him many times without healing him, but then he was the first one healed in the new era of the Church…I wonder if Jesus secretly knew what He had in store for the man every time He walked by?)

Are we too focused on the “beautiful” people? Do we search out the best and brightest to the exclusion of the least? Or do we forget that God delights in using and touching those who seemingly have very little to offer? (If so, we should re-read 1 Corinthians 1:26-31)

Our ministries must be full of folks who know they are nothing without Jesus. We need to notice them, talk to them, and touch them with the life of the Holy Spirit.

We also have to remember that we, too, are nothing without Jesus. If that’s not happening, we’re missing the whole point of the gospel.

And the point is that in God’s eyes, broken people are the truly beautiful ones—and when God gets a hold of them, their beauty shines through and impacts everything.

Trickle up grace!