Bible Acts

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The book of Acts in the New Testament of the Bible is pivotal in understanding Christianity today. Originally, the manuscript of Acts traveled with the gospel book of Luke. Acts is the connector between the earthly ministry of Jesus and the Spirit-empowered ministry of the Church. Written by Luke, somewhere between the years 62-64AD, the events in Acts span approximately 32 years. The overriding topic in Acts is certainly the unstoppable advancement of the Gospel of Jesus Christ which begins in Jerusalem, moves to Judea, then Samaria, and finally throughout the ends of the earth.
Acts can be divided into two main sections. The first section is chapters 1-12 which begins with the ascension of Jesus. This is crucial in understanding from …show more content…

It is this man who was self-proclaimed as a “Hebrew of Hebrews” that God uses to move the message all the way to Rome. F. F. Bruce states, “Luke’s goal has been reached when he has brought Paul to Rome and left him preaching the gospel freely there.” Paul’s death is not mentioned in the book of Acts because the highlight of the story is that God used His instrument to take the Gospel of the Kingdom to the center of the world so that men might know that Jesus is the Savior of all mankind. Although certainly not without struggle, the Gospel is preached in Acts to the common man as well as …show more content…

Throughout history, Israel had been chosen as God’s people, and it would be no different in the fact that the first converts were Jewish. In his article, The Church’s Progress to the Council of Jerusalem According to the Book of Acts, J. Julius Scott states, “All of the disciples and the initial coverts were racially Hebrew/Jews present in Jerusalem. They accepted the basic tenets and practices of Judaism in general and of one or more of the Jewish groups of the time. At first they were virtually indistinguishable within the complex Jewish social, religious structure. Generally, they seem to have regarded the new faith as a continuation of God’s work through the history of Israel in the past. They were simply Jews who were convinced that Jesus was the Messiah and that through Him, the “age of fulfillment” had

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