Acts 6
The appointment of the Seven—Stephen, Philip, and five others—resolves a tension between Hellenist and Hebrew widows by creating a structure of service that is not a demotion but a pneumatic commissioning; these men are full of faith and of the Holy Spirit, and their diaconal (servant) role becomes the launching pad for the Spirit's next phase of witness. Stephen, full of grace and power, works great wonders and signs, and his boldness in the synagogue of freedmen provokes opposition from those who cannot withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which he speaks; the charge of blasphemy against Moses and God anticipates the Sanhedrin's own blasphemy in rejecting the Son of Man. His face shines like an angel's—a theophanic radiance echoing Moses and the prophets—signaling that the Spirit's presence transforms the human countenance and marks the witness as belonging to God's covenant people.