Acts Daily Devotional Podcast

Day 80 — James's Judgment (Acts 15:13-21) | July 14

7 min · I går
episode Day 80 — James's Judgment (Acts 15:13-21) | July 14 cover

Beskrivelse

Of everyone in the room, James had the strongest credibility with the conservative faction. He was the brother of Jesus, leader of the Jerusalem church, known for his devotion to the law. If anyone was going to side with the Judaizers, it was him. He didn't. James affirmed Peter's testimony, then reached into the prophet Amos and pulled out a passage that envisions Gentiles seeking God as Gentiles, with no mention of circumcision as a prerequisite. His verdict: don't heap unnecessary burdens on people who are coming to faith. Then he proposed four practical guidelines to help Jewish and Gentile believers share a table. These were concessions for fellowship, not conditions for salvation. The Jerusalem Council protected the gospel from legalism on one side and from carelessness on the other. Grace is the foundation. Love shapes how we live on it.

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81 episoder

episode Day 80 — James's Judgment (Acts 15:13-21) | July 14 cover

Day 80 — James's Judgment (Acts 15:13-21) | July 14

Of everyone in the room, James had the strongest credibility with the conservative faction. He was the brother of Jesus, leader of the Jerusalem church, known for his devotion to the law. If anyone was going to side with the Judaizers, it was him. He didn't. James affirmed Peter's testimony, then reached into the prophet Amos and pulled out a passage that envisions Gentiles seeking God as Gentiles, with no mention of circumcision as a prerequisite. His verdict: don't heap unnecessary burdens on people who are coming to faith. Then he proposed four practical guidelines to help Jewish and Gentile believers share a table. These were concessions for fellowship, not conditions for salvation. The Jerusalem Council protected the gospel from legalism on one side and from carelessness on the other. Grace is the foundation. Love shapes how we live on it.

I går7 min
episode Day 79 — Barnabas and Paul Report (Acts 15:12) | July 13 cover

Day 79 — Barnabas and Paul Report (Acts 15:12) | July 13

One verse. That's all Luke gives the testimony of Barnabas and Paul at the Jerusalem Council. But it might be the most underrated sentence in Acts 15. The room had gone silent after Peter's speech. Then Barnabas and Paul stood up and told their story. Think about what that room heard: the blinding of Elymas, the lame man in Lystra who walked for the first time, the stoning that should have killed Paul, churches planted in hostile cities. They described what God had done through them. That word "through" carries weight. They were instruments, not headliners. Peter gave them the theology. Barnabas and Paul gave them the evidence. Doctrine and testimony, working together. Sometimes the most effective argument for the gospel is a changed life told in plain language.

13. juli 20266 min
episode Day 78 — Peter's Testimony (Acts 15:6-11) | July 12 cover

Day 78 — Peter's Testimony (Acts 15:6-11) | July 12

The Jerusalem Council had been arguing. Voices were raised, tempers hot, and for a while the room sounded like an argument nobody was winning. Then Peter stood up. The same man who denied Jesus three times, who ate with Gentiles then pulled back in fear, who spent years learning what God had been teaching him since a sheet full of unclean animals dropped from the sky. He reminded the room that God had already settled this question ten years earlier at Cornelius's house. The Spirit fell on uncircumcised Romans while Peter was still preaching. God made no distinction. Then Peter flipped the equation: Jews are saved the same way Gentiles are, by grace. This is Peter's last appearance in Acts. The fisherman who stumbled through the Gospels stands up at the most important theological moment of the first century and delivers a defense of grace that silences the room.

12. juli 20266 min
episode Day 77 — The Controversy Begins (Acts 15:1-5) | July 11 cover

Day 77 — The Controversy Begins (Acts 15:1-5) | July 11

Paul and Barnabas had barely settled back into life in Antioch when men arrived from Judea with a message that put the whole church on its heels: Gentile believers can't be saved without circumcision and the law of Moses. This was the most dangerous theological crisis the early church had faced. If the Judaizers won this argument, the gospel would become a subset of Judaism, and every Gentile who had believed would be reclassified as falling short. Paul fought back hard. The Antioch church sent him to Jerusalem to settle it with the apostles and elders. On the way, Paul told the story of Gentile conversions everywhere he stopped, and the response was joy. But in Jerusalem, believers from the party of the Pharisees stood up and insisted: circumcision is necessary. The lines are drawn. Is the gospel enough, or does it need our help?

11. juli 20266 min
episode Day 76 — Return to Antioch (Acts 14:24-28) | July 10 cover

Day 76 — Return to Antioch (Acts 14:24-28) | July 10

The first intentional missionary journey in the history of the church is over. Paul and Barnabas crossed the Taurus mountains, preached in Perga where they'd passed through without stopping on the way out, and sailed home to Syrian Antioch. They'd traveled over 1,400 miles, been worshiped as gods, stoned and left for dead, and planted churches across hostile Galatian territory. When they arrived home, they gathered the whole church and told the story of what God had done with them. That word "with" is worth holding onto. They weren't solo operators filing a performance review. They were collaborators giving credit to the One who opened every door. The headline of the whole trip: God had opened the door of faith to the Gentiles. And that door would change everything that followed.

10. juli 20266 min