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Topic:
The Book Of Acts -- A Brief Overview, Part 2 Of 2
The place where the book of Acts was written was probably Rome, to
which Luke accompanied Paul. The key to the contents of the book is in
1:8, "Ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all
Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth."
After referring to what had been recorded in a "former
treatise" of the sayings and doings of Jesus Christ before his
ascension, the author proceeds to give an account of the circumstances
connected with that event, and then records the leading facts with
reference to the spread and triumphs of Christianity over the world
during a period of about thirty years. The record begins with Pentecost
(A.D. 33) and ends with Paul's first imprisonment (A.D. 63 or 64). The
whole contents of the book may be divided into these three parts:
(1.) Chaps. 1-12, describing the first twelve years of the Christian
church. This section has been entitled "From Jerusalem to
Antioch." It contains the history of the planting and extension of
the church among the Jews by the ministry of Peter.
(2.) Chaps. 13-21, Paul's missionary journeys, giving the history of the
extension and planting of the church among the Gentiles.
(3.) Chaps. 21-28, Paul at Rome, and the events which led to this.
Chaps. 13-28 have been entitled "From Antioch to Rome." In
this book it is worthy of note that no mention is made of the writing by
Paul of any of his epistles. This may be accounted for by the fact that
the writer confined himself to a history of the planting of the church,
and not to that of its training or edification. The relation, however,
between this history and the epistles of Paul is of such a kind, i.e.,
brings to light so many undesigned coincidences, as to prove the
genuineness and authenticity of both, as is so ably shown by Paley in
his Horae Paulinae . "No ancient work affords so many tests of
veracity; for no other has such numerous points of contact in all
directions with contemporary history, politics, and topography, whether
Jewish, or Greek, or Roman." Lightfoot.
From: Easton's Bible Dictionary. Fair Use. Presented for educational
purposes only.
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