Acts 1: The Ministry of the Gospel
What happened to the disciples after Jesus’ resurrection? Acts 1 continues the narrative.
What happened to the disciples after Jesus’ resurrection? Acts 1 continues the narrative.
Life has always been gift and grace. God’s grace is even bigger than we thought. John 21 demonstrates this truth to us through His love for Peter after his denial of Jesus as well as through His service to the disciples.
You are not primarily a body. You are not primarily a soul. You are a person with both body and soul. Both are essential components of the human person.
What do we do when things are out of our control, when we face opposition from without or from within? We hope in Christ and rest in the promises of God.
The apostle Paul was adamant that all who put their faith in Christ were free from sin and death and are now free to live a life in the Spirit.
Is Jesus the basis for your being made right before God, or is He not? Do you simply have to believe, or are there certain things you have to do to be saved?
“In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice.” (Genesis 22:18). God keeps His promises. As Acts unfolds we learn precisely how this promise is fulfilled.
John 13 marks a significant shift in Jesus’ ministry. He’s done numerous public signs to prove that He is the Christ and that it is through Him that one may have life. He now shifts to something different.
How is it that one of early Christianity’s most ardent enemies would become one of its most significant evangelists?
After Pentecost it was time for the apostles to take the Gospel beyond Judea into Samaria, and eventually into the ends of the earth. Now that the disciples had seen the risen Lord and received power through the Holy Spirit, they couldn’t stop from sharing the Good News.
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