Latest Commentaries
Acts 5:40-42 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
The Council heeds Gamaliel's advice to not kill the apostles. But they have them whipped all the same, then forbid them again from teaching about Jesus. When released, the apostles praise God that He found them worthy of persecution. They go right back to preaching that Jesus is the Messiah, in the temple and at people's homes.
Acts 5:33-39 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
Many in the Council are enraged by the apostles' defense. They wish to kill them. But Gamaliel, a Pharisee, advises the other religious leaders to leave the apostles alone. He reminds the Council of two other men from the past who pretended to be sent by God, but when they died, their followers gave up their cause. If the apostles are not from God, their ministry will fail. If they are from God, then nothing can stop them, nor would the Council want to oppose God's will.
Acts 5:27-32 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
The high priest interrogates the apostles. He asks them why they are teaching in Jesus's name throughout Jerusalem. He reminds them that he had already threatened Peter and John to stop this. He also asks why the apostles keep accusing them of being responsible for Jesus's death. The apostles reply that they obey God, not men. They speak their message to the Council, that God resurrected Jesus, and exalted Him as Prince and Savior to sit at the right hand of God's throne. The apostles testify that they have witnessed these acts of God, and that the Holy Spirit is with them.
Acts 5:21b-26 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
The Council of Pharisees and Sadducees send for their prisoners, the apostles. But the temple soldiers discover the apostles are not in the jail, despite the doors being locked and the guards standing at their posts. A messenger informs the Council that the apostles are back at the temple, teaching just as before. The guards arrest the apostles again, peacefully, to avoid conflict with the crowds of people there.
Acts 5:17-21a meaningSeptember 13, 2022
The Sadducees are angered by the apostles' ministry in the temple and have them arrested. An angel frees the apostles during the night and tells them to return to the temple and continue teaching. The apostles obey.
Acts 5:12-16 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
The apostles continue to heal the Jewish people in the walkway of the temple, preaching that Jesus is the Christ. Crowds gather, even from the suburbs of Jerusalem. Sick and afflicted people pour in daily, experiencing healing. Many repent and believe, joining the growing church.
Acts 5:7-11 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
Sapphira, the wife of Ananias, goes before the apostles, not knowing that her husband is dead. Peter tests her by asking if the money they donated was the full price of the property sale. She lies and says "Yes." Peter wonders why she and her husband conspired to lie to God. She too is struck dead by God, and is buried. A sobering, instructive fear spreads among the believers when they hear this.
Acts 5:1-6 meaningSeptember 13, 2022
Two believers, Ananias and his wife Sapphira, sell property just as other believers have been doing. However, they plot to keep some of the money for themselves, and lie to the apostles that they are donating the full sale to the church. Peter confronts Ananias for lying to God. God strikes Ananias dead and he is buried.
Matthew 22:41-46 meaningSeptember 11, 2022
With aid of Psalm 110, Jesus asks the Pharisees a series of questions about how the Messiah is both the Lord of David and his son? The Pharisees have no response, and Jesus’s enemies are afraid to publicly confront Him.
Matthew 22:39-40 meaningSeptember 11, 2022
Jesus tells the Pharisees’ lawyer that the second greatest commandment is to ‘love your neighbor as your love yourself’. He tells him that this commandment along with the first, are what the entire moral code of Jewish ethics are based upon.
Matthew 22:37-38 meaningSeptember 10, 2022
Jesus answers the lawyer’s question about the great commandment. He tells Him it is this: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.”
Jonah 1:17 meaningSeptember 9, 2022
The LORD spares Jonah’s life by appointing a great fish to swallow him. Jonah spends three days and three nights in the belly of the fish.
Jonah 1:10-16 meaningSeptember 9, 2022
Jonah tells the sailors that the storm is the result of his disobedience to the LORD. He suggests that they send him into the sea so that the sea may calm down. After much resistance, the sailors cast Jonah overboard, and the storm stops suddenly. Then the sailors fear the LORD and worship Him.
Jonah 1:7-9 meaningSeptember 9, 2022
Jonah arrives on deck. The sailors cast lots to isolate the individual who is responsible for the storm. The lot falls on Jonah. The sailors ask him about his identity.
Jonah 1:4-6 meaningSeptember 9, 2022
The LORD throws a great windstorm on the sea. The sailors pray to their gods and wake Jonah up from his deep sleep to pray to his God.
Jonah 1:1-3 meaningSeptember 9, 2022
The LORD sends Jonah to Nineveh. But Jonah goes to Tarshish to run away from the LORD.
Matthew 22:34-36 meaningSeptember 7, 2022
A lawyer from the Pharisees asks Jesus which commandment is the greatest.
Matthew 22:29-33 meaningSeptember 7, 2022
Jesus answers the Sadducees loaded question about the resurrection by pointing out their error. He then proceeds to explain how people are not given in marriage in the resurrection, before demonstrating the resurrection from the books of Moses. The crowds are amazed at His answer.
Matthew 22:23-28 meaningSeptember 7, 2022
The Sadducees ask Jesus a loaded question about the resurrection. They introduce their question with an extreme scenario about a woman seven-times married. Their scenario was intended to show the ridiculousness of the resurrection.
Matthew 22:15-22 meaningSeptember 7, 2022
The Pharisees send spies to trap Jesus into saying something against Rome. They bring along some pro-Roman Herodians as conspirators in their plot. They ask Jesus whether it is lawful to pay poll-taxes to Caesar or not. Jesus perceives their trap and calls them on it before answering their question. He asks for a coin and whose likeness it bears. When he is told the image belongs to Caesar, Jesus answers "to render to Caesar the things that belong to Caesar's and to God the things that are God's."
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