Acts Chapter 28: Rome
Paul arrived in Rome under house arrest and spent two years welcoming everyone who came through the door, preaching the kingdom and teaching about Yeshua with all boldness. The last word in the Greek is akolutos. Unhindered. Acts ends on an open door.
Acts Chapter 27: Storm, Shipwreck, and a Promise That Did Not Sink
An angel told Paul in the middle of a fourteen-day storm that Yehovah had granted him the lives of all 276 people on the ship. The vessel broke apart on a reef off Malta. Every person made it to the beach alive. Yehovah does not make small promises.
Acts Chapter 26: The Defense That Became a Sermon
Paul stood before the most powerful audience of his life and preached. Agrippa said: in a short time would you persuade me? He could have been set free. But then he would not have gone to Rome.
Acts Chapter 25: The Appeal That Changed Everything
Three words changed everything: I appeal to Caesar. The right of Roman citizenship, the promise of Rome, and a governor\u2019s political convenience all worked together to put Paul on a ship bound for the emperor. Nothing in the preparation was wasted.
Acts Chapter 24: Truth Before a Corrupt Judge
Felix heard truth, was alarmed by it, and sent it away. Then sent for Paul again. Then sent him away again. For two years. A man can hear the gospel and still find reasons to keep it at a convenient distance.
Acts Chapter 23: The Night Yehovah Spoke
The night after the Sanhedrin nearly tore Paul apart, Yehovah stood beside him in the barracks and said: take courage. You must testify in Rome. Four hundred and seventy soldiers moved him to Caesarea by midnight. The promise was already being kept.
Acts Chapter 22: A Man Tells His Own Story
Paul told his story to the crowd that had been beating him minutes earlier. They listened through all of it — the credentials, Damascus, the vision in the temple. Then he said one word and they stopped listening.
Acts Chapter 21: The Road Nobody Could Stop Him From Taking
Every stop between Miletus and Jerusalem carried the same prophetic warning. Paul kept walking. Some things Yehovah reveals not to prevent the obedience but to prepare the obedient.
Acts Chapter 20: The Last Words to Ephesus
Paul knew he was leaving Ephesus for the last time. He walked them to the ship and said everything he needed to say — the whole counsel of Yehovah, the wolves that were coming, the tears, the three years. Then he knelt and prayed with all of them and sailed.
Acts Chapter 19: When the Gospel Disrupts an Economy
When the gospel takes hold in a city, the industries built on false worship feel it in their income. Demetrius the silversmith named the problem plainly. The riot in Ephesus was not about religion. It was about money.