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Topic:
The Book Of Acts -- A Brief Overview, Part 1 Of 2
The Book of Acts is the title now given to the fifth and last of the
historical books of the New Testament. The author styles it a
"treatise" (1:1). It was early called "The Acts,"
"The Gospel of the Holy Ghost," and "The Gospel of the
Resurrection." It contains properly no account of any of the
apostles except Peter and Paul. John is noticed only three times; and
all that is recorded of James, the son of Zebedee, is his execution by
Herod. It is properly therefore not the history of the "Acts of the
Apostles," a title which was given to the book at a later date, but
of "Acts of Apostles," or more correctly, of "Some Acts
of Certain Apostles." As regards its authorship, it was certainly
the work of Luke, the "beloved physician" (comp. Luke 1:1-4;
Acts 1:1). This is the uniform tradition of antiquity, although the
writer nowhere makes mention of himself by name. The style and idiom of
the Gospel of Luke and of the Acts, and the usage of words and phrases
common to both, strengthen this opinion. The writer first appears in the
narrative in 16:11, and then disappears till Paul's return to Philippi
two years afterwards, when he and Paul left that place together (20:6),
and the two seem henceforth to have been constant companions to the end.
He was certainly with Paul at Rome (28; Col. 4:14). Thus he wrote a
great portion of that history from personal observation. For what lay
beyond his own experience he had the instruction of Paul. If, as is very
probable, 2 Tim. was written during Paul's second imprisonment at Rome,
Luke was with him then as his faithful companion to the last (2 Tim.
4:11). Of his subsequent history we have no certain information. The
design of Luke's Gospel was to give an exhibition of the character and
work of Christ as seen in his history till he was taken up from his
disciples into heaven; and of the Acts, as its sequel, to give an
illustration of the power and working of the gospel when preached among
all nations, "beginning at Jerusalem." The opening sentences
of the Acts are just an expansion and an explanation of the closing
words of the Gospel. In this book we have just a continuation of the
history of the church after Christ's ascension. Luke here carries on the
history in the same spirit in which he had commenced it. It is only a
book of beginnings, a history of the founding of churches, the initial
steps in the formation of the Christian society in the different places
visited by the apostles. It records a cycle of "representative
events." All through the narrative we see the ever-present,
all-controlling power of the ever-living Saviour. He worketh all and in
all in spreading abroad his truth among men by his Spirit and through
the instrumentality of his apostles. The time of the writing of this
history may be gathered from the fact that the narrative extends down to
the close of the second year of Paul's first imprisonment at Rome. It
could not therefore have been written earlier than A.D. 61 or 62, nor
later than about the end of A.D. 63. Paul was probably put to death
during his second imprisonment, about A.D. 64, or, as some think, 66.
From: Easton's Bible Dictionary. Fair Use. Presented for educational
purposes only.
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