Thomas J Parlette
“Weathering the Storm”
Acts 5: 27-32
4/27/25
Emily Elliot is a University of Alabama scientist who studies ancient hurricanes. Not storms from last year or from a decade ago – but from hundreds, even thousands of years ago.
Driving tubes into the bottoms of lakes, she and her colleagues pull up sediment that contains evidence of deadly storms from the past. They have discovered that there were periods when intense storms struck coastlines even more frequently than they do today. According to their studies, oceans can produce hurricane seasons even worse than the ones we have experienced in recent years.
These scientists are uncovering evidence of some terrible ancient storms. We need to learn from them, especially as modern storms become more intense. Caring for creation is a priority for Christians, not only as we observe Earth Day every April. Caring for the environment is a way of caring for people as well, especially those in the paths of the most destructive of storms. If the past is any indication, says Elliot to The Washington Post, “our coastal areas are really vulnerable.” (1)
This field of research is called “paleotempestology,” the study of ancient hurricanes. Scientists are trying to predict how hurricane patterns will change in response to rising temperatures. They do this by looking back at what happened thousands of years ago.
On a recent expedition in Florida, Emily Elliot and her colleagues drilled down 1.5 feet and pulled up a sand layer from a relatively recent storm – probably Hurricane Opal in 1995. Then they went deeper into the lakebed and deeper into the past. The next two core samples were from about 3 feet deep and 13 feet deep. The deepest sample probably dates back more than 10,000 years.
From studies of sediment, they have made some fascinating discoveries. For instance, there was once a period of intense hurricane activity in the Gulf Coast region – much worse than we see today. It lasted for centuries, and then it ended abruptly around 600 to 800 years ago.
Why did the Gulf Coast have this long period of storms? Scientists think that a current of warm water flowed close to shore during that time, fueling the storms. Then the current shifted away, no one is certain exactly why – and the water cooled, and the storms were not nearly as common. Paleotempestologists are getting increasingly worried that the Gulf’s surface temperature is now warming up again, so we may face another period of terrible storms.
The first followers of Jesus were certainly not strangers to weathering storms, especially storms of the political and spiritual nature. In first-century Jerusalem, the followers of Christ were meeting together, following the teaching of the Apostles, sharing their possessions, praying in the Temple and praising God. Because of this, the Christian community grew rapidly. The Book of Acts – or Luke, Part II as I like to call it – tells us that “day by day the Lord added to their number those who were being saved.”
One day, Peter and John went up to the Temple. There, they healed a crippled man and spoke about the power of Jesus to heal and forgive. A group of religious leaders came to them, “much annoyed because they were teaching the people and proclaiming that in Jesus there is the resurrection of the dead.”
So the religious leaders had Peter and John arrested and put in prison. When questioned about the source of their power, Peter said, “this man standing before you in good health by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified, whom God raised from the dead.” – that’s the source of our power. The leaders were amazed and initially didn’t know what to do. Finally, they regained their composure and ordered Peter and John to stop it – stop teaching in the name of Jesus.
But Peter and John said – Nope, no can do. “We cannot keep from speaking out about what we have seen and heard.” The leaders threatened them, but then let them go. They realized that they were in a tight spot. It wouldn’t look good to the people of Jerusalem if they punished Peter and John, because they were all praising God for what had happened.
Back in the Christian community, Peter and John prayed with the other followers of Jesus, and “they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God with boldness.” And they didn’t keep it to themselves, they went out and gave told their story about the resurrection of Jesus to the whole city.
But because the apostles were having great success healing the sick – the high priest took action. Talk was one thing, but healing people was something else entirely. So, the high priest and the Sadducees threw the apostles in jail. But in the middle of the night, and angel of the Lord freed them.
The religious leaders rounded them up again and brought them back to the high priest and the religious council. The high priest questioned them, saying, “We gave you strict orders not to teach in this name, yet here you have filled Jerusalem with your teaching, and you are determined to bring this man’s blood on us.”
Well, Peter decides to get a little stormy himself, as he answered, “We must obey God rather than any human authority.” Peter knew he was compelled to follow God by preaching the Gospel – the good news of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. He was practicing what we would now call “civil disobedience.”
Then Peter brings a little thunder with his storm, he throws a couple flashes of lightning into the mix, when he says – “The God of our ancestors raised up Jesus, whom you had killed by hanging him on a tree. God exalted him at his right hand as Leader and Savior that he might give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins. And we are witnesses to these things, and so is the Holy Spirit, whom God has given to those who obey him.”
Three cracks of thunder can be heard in those words – three flashes of lightning:
1. You had Jesus killed by hanging him on a tree – an act of premeditated murder in Peter’s eyes – crack of thunder, flash of lightning.
2. God exalted Jesus as “Leader and Savior” – read between the lines, not you guys. Interestingly, this is the first time that the word “Savior” is used to describe Jesus in the Book of Acts - crack of thunder, flash of lightning.
3. “We are witnesses to these things, and so is the Holy Spirit.” The powerful breath of God has been inspiring everything that the apostles have seen and said – crack of thunder, flash of lightning.
Not surprisingly, the religious leaders were enraged by Peter’s words and wanted to kill the apostles. Fortunately, there was level-headed Pharisee present named Gamaliel, who calmed the storm by saying to the leaders, “I tell you… let them alone, because if this plan or this undertaking is of human origin, it will fail; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them – in that case, you may even be found fighting against God.”
So the leaders flogged the apostles and let them go – and they went right back to proclaiming Jesus as the Messiah.
So, what can this storm teach us? What can we learn if we put on our paleotempestology hats on when looking at this passage?
Like Peter and the rest of the apostles, we cannot keep from speaking about what we have seen and heard. We have to be honest about the presence of the risen Christ in ourselves and the church today, and be willing to speak about it. Jesus continues to forgive us and heal us, and to inspire the Christian community to act as his hands and feet in this world.
Like Peter and all the apostles, we must obey God, rather than any human authority. This means having the courage to put God first in terms of the things we do in ministry and mission. When we welcome strangers, visit people in prison, feed the hungry and care for the sick, we are putting God and God’s Kingdom, first. When we cry out against injustice and violence, we are part of the movement of God in our world.
Finally, like Peter and John, we trust Jesus to be our Savior and Leader, as we follow the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Jesus is the one who saves us from sin and death, in every age and place. The Holy Spirit is the force that guides us into an uncertain future, giving us new understanding and insight. Ultimately, Jesus is our only King – despite rumors to the contrary.
The storms of the first century have much to teach us. Storms from the past can help us weather the storms we face now with honesty, courage, trust – and confidence. Confidence that God will be victorious in the end.
May God be praised. Amen.
Dino Grandoni, “Scientists find warning signs about extreme hurricanes in the most unlikely of places.” The Washington Post, July 1st, 2024, www.washingtonpost.com