Saint Paul never rode a roller coaster. He wouldn’t have needed to. His missionary journeys are a series of wild ups and downs. Paul’s first missionary journey takes him (together with Barnabas) from Antioch in Syria to several cities in Asia Minor (what is now Turkiye). Paul and Barnabas share
Every history book is wrong. Let me explain. Acts 12 tells the story of a king, two holy men, and the angel of the Lord. To win favor with the people, the king has one of the holy men killed. He arrests the second holy man, intending to kill him
A momentous event is the subject of Acts 10: Gentiles, specifically the centurion Cornelius and his household, receive the Holy Spirit for the first time. This is preceded by Peter’s dream, where God instructs him that he may eat any animal, for “what God has cleansed, you must not call common.”
In An Introduction to the Devout Life, St. Francis de Sales writes of the necessity, and the ongoing nature, of conversion for followers of Christ. The conversion of St. Paul, recounted by Saint Luke in Acts 9, was an extraordinary conversion that birthed St. Paul’s ministry across the Mediterranean world. St.
As the stones rained down on Stephen, and as Saul stood watch by the coats, Stephen implored God, saying, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them” (Acts 7:60). Some time later, as Saul traveled to Damascus, “breathing murderous threats against the disciples of the Lord” (Acts 9:1), the Lord Jesus appeared to him.
The persecution of the Church catalyzes the spread of the Good News to the larger Roman world. Luke reports that following the martyrdom of Stephen all of the Christians except the apostles were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria. Philip (one of the men chosen to serve as deacons in Acts
The persecution of the Church, foretold by Jesus, begins in earnest with the stoning of Stephen in Acts 7. What did Stephen say that so infuriated the Sanhedrin? And why was the persecution of the Church and the blood of the martyrs part of God’s plan? Luke tells us in
“When they heard this, they became infuriated and wanted to put them to death. But a Pharisee in the Sanhedrin named Gamaliel, a teacher of the law, respected by all the people, stood up, ordered the men to be put outside for a short time, and said to them, ‘Fellow
Acts of the Apostles is one of the most hopeful books in the Bible. And yet, in the midst of the inspiring stories of the early Church, we have the sobering tale of Ananias and Sapphira, the married couple who lie about their charity and fall dead at the apostles’ feet.
Twice in Acts Saint Luke wrote short paragraphs describing the life of the early Church. These short vignettes serve as models for how the Church in every age should live together as a community of believers. Let’s look in detail at how the early Church followed Christ: “They devoted themselves
After their release they went back to their own people and reported what the chief priests and elders had told them. And when they heard it, they raised their voices to God with one accord and said, “Sovereign Lord, maker of heaven and earth and the sea and all that
On the morning of Pentecost, in 33 AD, there were maybe 500 followers of Jesus in the world. By the end of the great day, 3,000 people had been baptized. The Church grew sixfold in one day. It was the greatest day in the history of evangelization. How did it
The Ascension of Jesus is the transitional point between Jesus’ earthly ministry and the Age of the Church. Luke both ends his gospel and begins Acts of the Apostles with this event. The Ascension is also the culmination of the Resurrection. Jesus did not defeat death for its own sake,
On Sunday morning, May 24, in the year 33 A.D., 120 people were gathered together in the city of Jerusalem. Their leader had been killed seven weeks earlier, and they were in hiding. They were men and women, mostly humble workers, fishermen and the like, who lived outside the big