Acts

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September 28, 2025

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Acts – The Wild and Wonderful Start to the Jesus Movement

What’s this Book All About?

Acts is like the ultimate origin story – it’s how a small group of Jesus followers in Jerusalem exploded into a movement that flipped the Roman Empire upside down. Think of it as part historical documentary, part adventure story, following the apostles as they navigate prison breaks, shipwrecks, and the messy business of building the first churches.

The Full Context

Luke wrote Acts around 60-62 CE as the second volume of his two-part work (Luke-Acts), addressing a Roman official named Theophilus who needed to understand how this Jewish movement called “the Way” had become a legitimate religion worthy of Roman protection. The book picks up right where Luke’s Gospel ends – Jesus has ascended, and His followers are left wondering what happens next. Luke’s writing this during a critical moment when Christianity needed to establish its credibility in the Roman world, especially as Paul sits under house arrest in Rome.

The literary structure is brilliant – Acts moves in expanding circles from Jerusalem to “the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8), following the geographic spread of the Gospel through the Jewish world and into Gentile territory. Luke masterfully weaves together multiple storylines: Peter’s ministry to Jews, Philip’s breakthrough with Samaritans and Ethiopians, and Paul’s three missionary journeys that plant churches across the Mediterranean. The overarching theme is the unstoppable advance of God’s kingdom through the power of the Holy Spirit, despite opposition, persecution, and internal conflicts that could have derailed everything.

What the Ancient Words Tell us

When Luke uses the word ekklesia for “church,” he’s not talking about buildings with steeples. This was the Greek term for a citizen assembly – picture the town square where free citizens gathered to make decisions about their community. Luke is saying the followers of Jesus aren’t just a religious club; they’re an alternative society with its own values, leadership, and way of life.

Grammar Geeks

The phrase “filled with the Holy Spirit” appears in different Greek tenses throughout Acts. Sometimes it’s pleroo (a one-time filling for a specific task), other times it’s pimplemi (being continually full). Luke is showing us that the Spirit works both in crisis moments and as an ongoing reality in believers’ lives.

But here’s what really gets me excited – Luke consistently uses the Greek word parrhesia to describe how the apostles spoke. This isn’t just “boldness” like your English Bible probably says. Parrhesia was a political term meaning “fearless speech” – the right of a free citizen to speak truth to power without fear of consequences. Every time Luke uses this word, he’s making a statement about the dignity and authority that comes with following Jesus.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

A Roman official reading Acts would have recognized something familiar in Luke’s narrative structure – this follows the pattern of ancient travel literature and political histories that Romans loved. But Luke subverts their expectations at every turn. Where they’d expect to read about military conquests, Luke shows them conquests through suffering. Where they’d expect political power moves, Luke shows them leaders who wash feet and share possessions.

The early chapters would have sounded almost revolutionary to Roman ears. When the apostles declare that “we must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29), they’re using language that echoes Socrates’ famous defense before the Athenian court. Luke is positioning the apostles in the tradition of noble philosophical resisters who chose principle over personal safety.

Did You Know?

The “Jerusalem Council” in Acts 15 follows the exact procedures of a Roman Senate meeting – formal speeches, debate, and a written decree sent to affected parties. Luke is showing Roman readers that Christians handle disputes through civilized deliberation, not mob violence or arbitrary authority.

But Wait… Why Did They…?

Here’s something that puzzles me as I read Acts: Why does Luke spend so much time on Paul’s legal troubles in the final chapters? Nearly a quarter of the book focuses on Paul’s arrests, trials, and appeals. At first glance, it feels anticlimactic – we want to see more churches planted, more dramatic conversions, more explosive growth.

But Luke is doing something brilliant here. He’s creating a legal precedent. Every time a Roman official declares Paul innocent (Acts 18:14-15, Acts 23:29, Acts 25:25), Luke is building a case that Christianity deserves legal protection throughout the Empire. This isn’t just biography – it’s advocacy journalism.

Wrestling with the Text

The relationship between the Holy Spirit and the early church in Acts can feel almost too good to be true. Miraculous healings, perfect unity, dramatic interventions – it’s easy to read Acts and wonder why our churches don’t look like this. But Luke doesn’t hide the messy parts: Ananias and Sapphira’s deadly deception (Acts 5:1-11), the bitter conflict between Paul and Barnabas (Acts 15:36-41), the ongoing tensions between Jewish and Gentile believers. Maybe the early church’s highlight reel isn’t as different to our churches today as we think…

Wait, That’s Strange…

Luke never mentions Paul writing letters, even though we know from Paul’s own writings that he was constantly corresponding with churches. Luke also never mentions the collection for Jerusalem that was so important to Paul. Why these omissions? Luke is focused on the forward movement of the Gospel, not the administrative details of church life.

What strikes me most is how the early Christians navigate change. They don’t have precedent for most of what they’re doing – including Gentiles, handling money, appointing leaders, dealing with persecution. Yet they consistently choose inclusion over exclusion, generosity over security, and mission over comfort. They’re making it up as they go, but always guided by the Spirit and committed to Jesus’ example.

How This Changes Everything

Acts fundamentally reshapes how we think about Christianity’s relationship with power and culture. This isn’t a story about God blessing the comfortable or maintaining the status quo. It’s about a movement that consistently chooses the margins – reaching out to Samaritans, eunuchs, centurions, jailers, philosophers, and slaves.

The economic vision in Acts is particularly challenging for modern readers. The early Jerusalem church practices radical economic sharing (Acts 2:44-47), not as a temporary experiment but as a natural expression of their new life together. When Luke describes this community, he uses language that would have reminded educated readers of the ideal societies described by Greek philosophers – except this one actually existed.

“The Gospel creates communities where the usual social barriers become irrelevant, and that’s both thrilling and terrifying.”

Perhaps most importantly, Acts shows us that the church’s mission isn’t primarily about getting people to Heaven when they die – it’s about creating foretastes of God’s Kingdom here and now. Every healing, every reconciliation, every act of justice is a sign that God’s future is breaking into the present.

Key Takeaway

The book of Acts teaches us that the Holy Spirit doesn’t just comfort us – the Spirit propels us into places and relationships we never would have chosen, creating a community that looks suspiciously like the kingdom of God.

Further reading

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Author Bio

By Jean Paul
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