“WHEN GOD’S WILL IS OUTSIDE OUR IDEOLOGY”
(Acts 9:1 – 12:25)
“What God has made clean, do not call common.” – Acts 10:15 (ESV)
Most of us carry invisible “Do Not Cross” lines—people we assume won’t respond to Jesus, customs we insist God would never overturn, groups we quietly avoid. Peter had those lines. So did Cornelius. God erased both on the same day.
Key Elements: That Led to the Salvation of the Gentiles
- Cornelius (Acts 10:1–8): A Roman centurion—devout, generous, prayerful—receives an angelic visit: send for Peter. He wants what is foreign to him: Israel’s God and the gospel.
- Peter (10:9–16): A rooftop vision interrupts his kosher convictions. The sheet descends; the voice reframes his categories: “Rise, Peter; kill and eat… What God has made clean, do not call common.”
- The Collision (10:17–43): God choreographs the meeting. Peter crosses a forbidden threshold (“You yourselves know… it is unlawful,” v.28) and preaches Jesus—Lord of all, crucified, raised, seen, and appointed Judge and Savior.
- Spirit Baptism (10:44–48): Before the altar call, heaven moves. The Spirit falls, the Gentiles speak in tongues, and Jewish believers are stunned. God gives the same gift He gave at Pentecost—no second-class citizens in the kingdom.
- Jerusalem Debrief (11:1–18): When criticized, Peter points to God’s initiative and the Spirit’s evidence. The church concludes: “Then to the Gentiles also God has granted repentance that leads to life.”
Key Insights
- Revelation > Tradition: Scripture and the Spirit correct sincere but too-small interpretations (Peter’s diet laws vs. God’s mission).
- Impartial Grace: The gospel is not culture-bound. God shows no partiality but welcomes all who fear Him and do what is right (Acts 10:34–35).
- Spirit as Validator: Spirit baptism among Gentiles was heaven’s stamp—God has welcomed them. Our structures must follow the Spirit’s lead.
At TLC, we have around 80 different nations that make up our congregation. For us to fulfill our mission, we all have to let go of pre-judgments of other groups different from our own preferences. Today I am asking you to let today’s devotion lead you to breakthroughs that will allow you to embrace those who think and act differently. We are bound together not by culture, color of skin, or ideologies, but rather by the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the Spirit’s seal of approval.
Practice — Breakthroughs You Can Act On
- Name Your Line: Write down one “unclean/common” category you’ve held (a person group, neighborhood, lifestyle, political tribe). Repent specifically.
- Pray the Rooftop Prayer: “Lord, show me what You call clean that I still call common. I will go where You send.”
- Cross a Threshold: Share a meal or start a conversation with someone across your line. Listen first. Ask, “How can I pray for you?”
- Preach the Person of Jesus: Keep it simple—Jesus’ life, death, resurrection, and forgiveness (Acts 10:36–43).
- Follow the Fingerprints: Where you see repentance, hunger for truth, love for Jesus, and the Spirit’s activity—affirm and step with it, even if it disrupts your norms.
- Lead Like Peter: When challenged, tell the story of what God did (11:4–17). Let evidence of grace quiet objections.
Reflection Questions
- Which convictions of mine are biblical principles, and which are cultural preferences that may hinder mission?
- Where have I mistaken my comfort zone for God’s boundary line?
- What “Cornelius” (hungry but outside my circle) might God be preparing around me right now?
- If the Spirit moved in an unexpected group, would I recognize His work—or resist it? Why?
- What one step will I take in the next 48 hours to cross a line for the sake of the gospel?
Closing Prayer:
Lord Jesus, tear down the walls I’ve built in Your name. Cleanse my assumptions, enlarge my heart, and align me with Your global, impartial grace. Fill me with Your Spirit so I can recognize Your work and join it—especially where it offends my comfort. Lead me to my Cornelius today, and let Your “Yes” be louder than my limits. Amen.
Today’s Witness Step:
Send a text right now to someone outside your usual circle: “I’m praying today—anything I can bring before God for you?” Then watch how God choreographs the meeting.
About our Author
Pastor James M. Armpriester, Jr. worked as a molecular biologist at Procter & Gamble for ten years before becoming a pastor. With over thirty years of experience in ministry, he has been heavily involved in church planting and church health. He has served as a district director in Ohio and North Texas and has been a national leader in curriculum development, coaching, and consulting for church planting and revitalization. Pastor Jim has been the lead pastor of several churches, including New Hope in Cincinnati, Ohio, First Assembly of God in Niagara Falls, NY, and Transformation Life Church, which has multiple campuses in New Jersey.
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