Tell me how much you know of the sufferings of your fellow men and I will tell how much you have loved them.
Unknown
All Posts
All Posts On The Ranch
Anais Nin — Each friend represents…
Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born. Anais Nin
Victor Hugo — Have courage…
Have courage for the great sorrows of life and have patience for the small ones. Go to sleep in peace. God is awake.
Victor Hugo
Albert Schweitzer — Every person I have known…
Every person I have known who has been truly happy, has learned how to serve others.
Albert Schweitzer
Francis de Sales — Every Christian needs…
Every Christian needs a half an hour of prayer each day, except when he is busy, then he needs an hour.
Francis de Sales
C. S. Lewis — Joy is…
Joy is the serious business of heaven.
C. S. Lewis
Samuel Johnson — A wise man will make hast to forgive…
A wise man will make haste to forgive, because he knows the true value of time.
Samuel Johnson
Robert Louis Stevenson — There is nothing but God’s grace…
There is nothing but God’s grace. We walk upon it; we breathe it; we live and die by it; it makes the nails and axles of the universe.
Robert Louis Stevenson
Unknown — The way to worry about nothing…
The way to worry about nothing is to pray about everything.
Unknown
Mother Teresa — I have found the paradox…
I have found the paradox that if I love until it hurts, then there is no hurt, but only more love.
Mother Teresa
Samuel Rutherford — Jesus Christ came into my prison cell…
Jesus Christ came into my prison cell last night, and every stone flashed like a ruby.
Samuel Rutherford
Basil of Caesarea — The bread that you store up…
The bread that you store up belongs to the hungry; the cloak that lies on your chest belongs to the naked; and the gold that you have hidden in the ground belongs to the poor.
Basil of Caesarea
A. Maude Royden — Learn to hold loosely…
Learn to hold loosely all that is not eternal.
A. Maude Royden
Corrie ten Boom — If a bird is flying for pleasure…
If a bird is flying for pleasure, it flies with the wind, but if it meets danger it turns and faces the wind, in order that it may rise higher. Corrie ten Boom
E. B. Pusey — Never dwell on the tomorrow…
Never dwell on the tomorrow; remember, that it’s God’s and not ours. E. B. Pusey
P. Carnegie Simpson — The face of Christ…
The face of Christ does not indeed show us everything, but it shows us the one thing we need to know – the character of God. God is the God who sent Jesus.
P. Carnegie Simpson
Douglas Steere — In intercessory prayer…
In intercessory prayer, one seldom ends where one began.
Douglas Steere
Unknown — Don’t forget…
Don’t forget, a person’s greatest emotional need is to feel appreciated. Unknown
Flannery O’Connor — A God you understood…
A God you understood would be less than yourself.
Flannery O’Connor
Henry Schmidt — Only as a man brings his life…
Only as man brings his life into harmony with God does that life have balance and meaning. Then man finds that he is not simply a mass of dancing dirt, coming from nowhere and going nowhere.
Henry Schmidt
J. Edwin Hartill — Prayer is the slender nerve…
Prayer is the slender nerve that moves the muscle of Omnipotence.
J. Edwin Hartill
Thomas Mann — It is love, not reason…
It is love, not reason, that is stronger than death.
Thomas Mann
Winston Churchill — Men occasionally stumble over the truth…
Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry on as if nothing happened.
Winston Churchill
A. W. Tozer — What comes into our minds…
What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.
A. W. Tozer
Vance Havner — If you are a Christian…
If you are a Christian, you are not a citizen of this world trying to get to heaven; you are a citizen of heaven making your way through this world.
Vance Havner
Augustine — My weight…
My weight is my love.
Augustine
Martin Luther — I have so many things to do today…
I have so many things to do today, I dare not ignore my time with God. Martin Luther
Unknown — Remember that everyone you meet…
Remember that everyone you meet is afraid of something, loves something, and has lost something.
Unknown
Max Lucado — The next time you are called to suffer…
The next time you are called to suffer, pay attention. It may be the closest you’ll ever get to God.
Max Lucado
Bruce Wilkinson — The most fruitful…
The most fruitful and the most joy-filled Christians are the most pruned Christians.
Bruce Wilkinson
Unknown — The brook would lose its song…
The brook would lose its song if the rocks were removed.
Unknown
William Law — He who has learned to pray…
He who has learned to pray has learned the greatest secret of a holy and happy life.
William Law
Billy Graham — We have found that marriage…
We have found that marriage should be made up of two forgivers. We need to learn to say, “I was wrong, I’m sorry.” And we also need to say, “That’s all right, I love you.”
Billy Graham
Ed McCraken — My objective in life…
My objective in life is not to have a spiritual life that is separate from the rest of my life.
Ed McCraken
Abraham Lincoln — I have been driven many times…
I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.
Abraham Lincoln
Susan L. Lenzkes — Jesus, please teach me…
Jesus, please teach me to appreciate what I have before time forces me to appreciate what I had.
Susan L. Lenzkes
Unknown — Let us be the first…
Let us be the first to give a friendly sign; to nod first, smile first, speak first, and- if such a thing is necessary- forgive first.
Unknown
Fred Rogers — Life is deep and simple…
Life is deep and simple, and what our society gives us is shallow and complicated.
Fred Rogers
Soren Kierkegaard — A man prayed…
A man prayed, and at first he thought that prayer was talking. But he became more and more quiet until in the end he realized that prayer is listening.
Soren Kierkegaard
Sam Jones — Many a fellow is praying…
Many a fellow is praying for rain with his tub the wrong side up.
Sam Jones
Vernon Howard — Every day…
Every day that you attempt to see things as they are in truth is a supremely successful day.
Vernon Howard
Chinese proverb — If you want happiness…
If you want happiness for an hour, take a nap. If you want happiness for a day, go fishing. If you want happiness for a year, inherit a fortune. If you want happiness for a lifetime, help somebody.
Chinese proverb
Unknown — The most important missionary journey…
The most important missionary journey a person can make is to walk next door.
Unknown
Matthew Henry — All this…
All this and heaven too.
Matthew Henry
Hendrick Willem Van Loon — High up in the North…
High up in the North, in the land called Svithjod, there stands a rock. It is 100 miles high and 100 miles wide. Once every 1000 years a little bird comes to this rock to sharpen its beak. When the rock has thus been worn away, then a single day of eternity will have gone by. Hendrick Willem Van Loon
Johann Woldgang von Goethe — The Bible grows more beautiful…
The Bible grows more beautiful, as we grow in our understanding of it. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
David Grayson — Looking back…
Looking back, I have this to regret, that too often when I loved, I did not say so.
David Grayson
Andre Gide — One does not discover new lands…
One does not discover new lands without consenting to lose sight of the shore for a very long time.
Andre Gide
Blaise Pacal — The God of the infinite…
The God of the infinite is the God of the infinitesimal.
Blaise Pascal
William Gurnall — Some prayers have a longer voyage…
Some prayers have a longer voyage than others, but they return with the richer lading at last, so that the praying soul is a gainer by waiting for an answer.
William Gurnall
Izaar Walton — God has two dwellings…
God has two dwellings – one in heaven and the other in a thankful heart.
Izaar Walton
Edgar Guest — I’d rather see a sermon…
I’d rather see a sermon than hear one any day; I’d rather one should walk with me than merely tell the way.
Edgar Guest
Dwight L. Moody — I believe Satan to exist…
I believe Satan to exist for two reasons: first, the Bible says so, and second, I’ve done business with him.
Dwight L. Moody
Bill Hybels — The Christian life is one of faith…
The Christian life is one of faith, where we find ourselves routinely overdriving our headlights but knowing it’s okay because God is in control and has a purpose behind it.
Bill Hybels
Francois Fenelon — How can you expect God to speak…
How can you expect God to speak in that gentle and inward voice which melts the soul, when you are making so much noise with your rapid reflections? Be silent, and God will speak again.
Francois Fenelon
Unknown — What’s true of biology…
What’s true of biology is also true of faith: If it isn’t growing, it’s probably dead.
Unknown
David Viscott — To love and be loved…
To love and be loved is to feel the sun from both sides.
David Viscott
Leighton Ford — God loves us…
God loves us the way we are, but He loves us too much to leave us that way.
Leighton Ford
Unknown — You can never speak…
You can never speak to the wrong person about Christ.
Unknown
Maurice Horn — Some people confess a sin…
Some people confess a sin a thousand times, I tell them to confess it once, then thank God a thousand times for forgiving them.
Maurice Horn
Frederick Faber — Kindness has converted more sinners…
Kindness has converted more sinners than zeal, eloquence or learning. Frederick Faber
Francis of Assisi — Preach the gospel…
Preach the gospel everyday; if necessary, use words.
Francis of Assisi
Arthur Elfstrand — Don’t try to deal with sin…
Don’t try to deal with sin, for you are sure to lose. Deal with Christ; let him deal with your sin and you are sure to win.
Arthur Elfstrand
Margaret Willour — Never lose sight…
Never lose sight of the fact that old age needs so little but needs that little so much.
Margaret Willour
D. L. Moody — We can stand affliction…
We can stand affliction better than we can prosperity, for in prosperity we forget God.
D. L. Moody
Unknown — The love of God…
The love of God is like the Amazon River flowing down to water one daisy.
Unknown
Ralph Waldo Emerson — Sometimes when I consider…
Sometimes when I consider what tremendous consequences come from little things – I am tempted to think – there are no little things.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
James Dobson — God’s Heart…
God’s Heart is especially tender toward the downtrodden and the defeated. He knows your name and He has seen every tear you have shed.
James Dobson
My So-Called Life — Sometimes someone says something…
Sometimes someone says something really small, and it just fits right into this empty place in your heart.
My So-Called Life
Ramona Carroll — Faith is putting all your eggs…
Faith is putting all your eggs in God’s basket, then counting your blessings before they hatch.
Ramona Carroll
A. W. Tozer — An infinite God…
An infinite God can give all of Himself to each of His children. He does not distribute Himself that each may have a part, but to each one He gives all of Himself as fully as if there were no others.
A. W. Tozer
Robert Leighton — We lie to God in prayer…
We lie to God in prayer if we do not rely on him afterwards.
Robert Leighton
Mike Murdock — Truth is the most powerful force…
Truth is the most powerful force on earth because it cannot be changed. Mike Murdock
Dale Carnegie — You have it easily in your power…
You have it easily in your power to increase the sum total of this world’s happiness now. How? By giving a few words of sincere appreciation to someone who is lonely or discouraged. Perhaps you will forget tomorrow the kind words you say today, but the recipient may cherish them over a lifetime.
Dale Carnegie
Charles Spurgeon — Nobody ever outgrows Scripture…
Nobody ever outgrows Scripture; the Book widens and deepens with our years.
Charles Spurgeon
Lewis Carroll — I have had prayers answered…
I have had prayers answered – most strangely so sometimes – but I think our heavenly Father’s loving kindness has been even more evident in what He has refused me.
Lewis Carroll
John Ortberg — Imagine watching all that God…
Imagine watching all that God might have done with your life if you had let him.
John Ortberg
Wally Carter — The army of Israel looked at Goliath…
The army of Israel looked at Goliath through the eyes of man and said he’s too big to beat. David looked at him through the eyes of God and said he’s too big to miss.
Wally Carter
Henry Ward Beecher — A world without a Sabbath…
A world without a Sabbath would be like a man without a smile, like a summer without flowers, and like a homestead without a garden. It is the most joyous day of the whole week.
Henry Ward Beecher
George Washington Carver — There is nothing…
There is nothing that will not reveal its secrets if you love it enough. George Washington Carver
George Santayana — The family is one of…
The family is one of nature’s masterpieces.
George Santayana
Phillips Brooks — Pray the largest prayers…
Pray the largest prayers. You cannot think a prayer so large that God, in answering it, will not wish you had made it larger. Pray not for crutches but for wings.
Phillips Brooks
Unknown — Only when we are brought…
Only when we are brought to the end of ourselves are we in a position to see more of God than we have seen.
Unknown
Horace Bushnell — Trust God for great things…
Trust God for great things; with your five loaves and two fishes, he will show you a way to feed thousands.
Horace Bushnell
Bedouin — Truth may walk…
Truth may walk through the world unarmed.
Bedouin
John Burroughs — I still find each day…
I still find each day too short for all the thoughts I want to think, all the walks I want to take, all the books I want to read, and all the friends I want to see.
John Burroughs
William Blake — Every tear…
Every tear from every eye becomes a babe in eternity.
William Blake
George Macdonald — Afflictions are but the shadow…
Afflictions are but the shadow of God’s wings.
George Macdonald
J. Masai — Feelings…
Feelings are everywhere – be gentle.
J. Masai
Richard Bach — When we come to the last moment…
When we come to the last moment of this lifetime, and we look back across it, the only thing that’s going to matter is “what was the quality of our love?”
Richard Bach
O. A. Battista — One of the most lasting pleasures…
One of the most lasting pleasures you can experience is the feeling that comes over you when you genuinely forgive an enemy – whether he knows it or not.
O. A. Battista
Joseph Askinas — Our real blessings often appear…
Our real blessings often appear to us in the shapes of pains, losses, and disappointments; but let us have patience, and we soon shall see them in their proper figures.
Joseph Askinas
Unknown — To the world you maybe just one person…
To the world you may be just one person, but to one person you may be the world.
Unknown
Ralph Waldo Emerson — All that I have seen…
All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen. Ralph Waldo Emerson
Fulton J. Sheen — Most commit the same mistake with God…
Most commit the same mistake with God that they do with their friends: they do all the talking.
Fulton J. Sheen
Unknown — Peace is seeing a sunrise…
Peace is seeing a sunrise or a sunset and knowing whom to thank. Unknown
C. S. Lewis — God whispers to us…
God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pains; it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.
C.S. Lewis
Billy Graham — Heaven is full of answers to prayers…
Heaven is full of answers to prayers for which no one ever bothered to ask.
Billy Graham
C. H. Spurgeon — I looked at God…
I looked at God and He looked at me, and we were one forever.
C. H. Spurgeon
Unknown — Others may argue your beliefs…
Others may argue your beliefs, but they can’t refuse your love. Unknown
Wilma Askinas — A friend is one…
A friend is one who sees through you and still enjoys the view.
Wilma Askinas
Dwight L. Moody — I prayed for faith…
I prayed for faith and thought it would strike me like lightning. But faith did not come. One day I read, “Now faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.” I had closed my Bible and prayed for faith. I now began to study my Bible and faith has been growing ever since.
Dwight L. Moody
Corrie ten Boom — A religion that is small enough…
A religion that is small enough for our understanding would not be big enough for our needs.
Corrie ten Boom
George MacDonald — The miracles of Jesus…
The miracles of Jesus were the ordinary works of his Father, wrought small and swift that we might take them in.
George MacDonald
Johann Von Schiller — We can never replace a friend…
We can never replace a friend. When a man is fortunate enough to have several, he finds they are all different. No one has a double in friendship.
Johann Von Schiller
Cliff Richard — What other people think of me…
What other people think of me is becoming less and less important; what they think of Jesus because of me is critical.
Cliff Richard
Bernie Wiebe — Loving relationships…
Loving relationships are a family’s best protection against the challenges of the world.
Bernie Wiebe
Lynn Landrum — That the Potter should die…
That the Potter should die for His clay is a stupendous miracle.
Lynn Landrum
Samuel Rutherford — Our little time of suffering…
Our little time of suffering is not worthy of our first night’s welcome home to Heaven.
Samuel Rutherford
C. S. Lewis — I believe in Christianity…
I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.
C. S. Lewis
John Shedd — A ship in harbor is safe…
A ship in harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for.
John Shedd
Dutch proverb — The early morning hours…
The early morning hours have gold in their mouth.
Dutch proverb
Notes of Thanks – November 2008
A few thank you notes from The Ranch visitors…
11/1/08 – I just feel the presence of God as I read through your website. I could not hold back my tears saying: “God, thank you for The Ranch..I did not imagine there is such a ministry in the web such as this. I have been a Christian for 28 years…serving the Lord for many years in different capacities…yet there are times when I feel I need some encouragements. Thank you for your ministry. God bless you! M.S. / Bulacan, Philippines
11/2/08 – Amen & Amen!!! This was used of God this morning to strongly confirm some preceding proddings by the Holy Spirit to pray about our current circumstances. You’re a blessing brother! Keep up the good work. In Jesus precious name, L.C. / Canada
11/2/08 – Eric, Just now read this lesson – what an encouragement. Just 30 min. ago I was sitting here feeling uncertain about my leadership in some college-related things. Your words are really timely. K.S. / St. Louis, MO
11/2/08 – My daughter (13 years old) donated $2.55. My son (15 years old) donated $10. My wife donated $10. And I was able to gather $28.03. For a total of $50.58. I wish it could be more. We will make another effort next month. Hang in there brother! God bless you. S.E. / CA
11/3/08 – I don’t know why or how I received your email, Lessons in Rebuilding, but what a blessing. I’ve been needing to get back on the path that Christ has chosen for me, but it seems impossible to be free again. With the help of Nehemiah and God I am sure that I can win the battle. Thank you for this blessing and new chance to walk with my FATHER again. B.H. / Silver Creek, GA
11/3/08 – Very inspiring message that builds and encourages me as I walk in obedience to the scripture. R.A. / Uganda
11/5/08 – Keep it up Theranch! GOD BLESS. O.O. / Ondo, Nigeria
11/7/08 – God is calling me to minister to those who are hurt and damaged within. I would like to have fellowship with you to equip myself for the special calling i have. J.C. / Tamilnadu, South India
11/7/08 – Thank you for this wonderful ministry. S.S. / Charlotte, NC
11/9/08 – Thank you so much for this time for prayer and also for your wonderful sermons. I hang on to these in my busy life where I don’t seem to be getting to church as much as I would like. Thank you for helping me “learn to pray and how to pray”. Thank you for the beautiful music and your creativity with God’s Word and using your talents to change the world one person at a time! J.G.
11/10/08 – Thank you very much. J.
11/10/08 – I like your your work because it builds my spiritual life. S.W. / Kenya
11/12/08 – Eric, I put your Nehemiah Lesson 3 on our web page as people will regularly go to that. L.A. / UK
11/15/08 – Thank you so very much. I think I am finally finding a little peace due to your e-mail. It’s funny how we complain about technology but look how it can help. God Bless You. D.A.
11/18/08 – Dear Eric, Thank you for the website and the teachings. I have been profoundly blessed. Warmest regards A.N. / Cape Town, South Africa
11/21/08 – You and your family are in my prayers often. God bless you and your family. M.D. / Robesonia, PA
11/23/08 – Thank you very much for your very encouraging sermon. Have a good week. P.G / Nassau, Bahamas
11/23/08 – new to this, just 2 weeks ago, i asked God to come in to my life and need all the encouragement i can get!! C.M. / Ireland
11/24/08 – Love your weekly thoughts! Thanks. G.J. / Polokwane, South Africa
11/29/08 – I read one of your newsletters thru an email from a friend and it truly blessed me. M.P. / Benguet, Philippines
11/30/08 – A WONDERFUL MESSAGE. READ and REJOICE…GOD ALWAYS CARES ABOUT EACH OF US. AMEN. F.G.
11/30/08 – inspiring indeed. J.T. / Nairobi, Kenya
11/30/08 – Dear Eric, You dont know how much your sermon has helped me today. I had a difficult week and I’ve been praying to Jesus to show me the right thing to do. I wasn’t finding any answer until I read your sermon. Thank you, you have been an instrument of God, (do you use the word ‘instrument’ in English?). As we say in the school where I work: ‘May Jesus live in your heart, forever’ S. / Argentina
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Small Group Study Guide for Acts: Lessons In Faith

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
The following questions can be used for personal reflection, group discussion, or a combination of the two. Each set of questions corresponds directly to each of the thirty lessons contained in this book, counting the Introduction and Conclusion.
For groups wanting a shorter study, with more time for personal reflection and preparation between group discussions, group members could study five lessons on their own each week, then come together and discuss the highlights of those lessons, for a total of six weeks.
For groups wanting a longer study with less study and preparation time during the week, they may choose instead to study just two, three, or four lessons per week on their own, then come together and discuss those lessons over a period of seven, ten, or fifteen weeks.
For groups wanting to read and discuss each lesson together, without needing to do any study or preparation on their own during the week, they could complete this study together in thirty weeks.
Introduction
1. What did Mrs. Incredible mean when she said, “Doubt is a luxury we can’t afford anymore”? Can you think of any situations where this might be true in your life?
2. From where did Paul get his confidence to say, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me”? And from where can you get the same confidence?
Lesson 1 – Faith Waits
1. Which is harder for you: to muster up the faith to do something, or to muster up the faith to wait for something? How might God want to increase your faith in either area?
2. In your own words, what’s the difference between waiting idly and waiting expectantly? How could you apply these ideas to something you’re facing in life right now?
Lesson 2 – Faith Acts
1. How can exercising your faith make it grow stronger?
2. What evidence did the Apostle Peter give to show that he was really trying to exercise his faith? What were some of the end results of his spiritual workouts?
Lesson 3 – Faith Heals
1. Whose faith seemed to be at work in the healing of the crippled man at the temple? On whose name did they call for the healing?
2. Have you ever prayed for someone’s healing at the time they asked for it, right there in front of them, or on the phone with them, or in an email to them? If not, are you willing to try it?
Lesson 4 – Faith Saves
1. Why did Jesus tell the woman who wiped His feet with her tears, “your faith has saved you”? And from what, exactly, had she been saved?
2. What is so unique about Jesus that caused Peter and John to say, “Salvation comes from no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved”? Why can’t we call out to some other religious leader to save us?
3. If you’ve never asked Jesus to save you, are you ready yet to put your faith in Him?
Lesson 5 – Faith Obeys
1. How did Peter and John display their faith when told to stop preaching in the name of Jesus? Who did they decide to obey, even when faced with death?
2. What words did Jesus use as the ultimate model of a faith that is willing to obey God regardless of the cost? Is there something in your life that God might be wanting you to step out in faith and obey?
Lesson 6 – Faith Fills
1. Stephen was described as a man who was “full of faith.” What are some ways you can become “faith full,” too?
2. What role did C.S. Lewis’ friends play in helping him move from simply believing in God in general, to putting his faith in Christ specifically? How can other believers help you to increase your faith in Christ as well?
Lesson 7 – Faith Speaks
1. Why did Jesus say we wouldn’t have to be afraid to speak when He calls us to speak (see Matthew 10:26-28)? How did Stephen put this into practice?
2. Stephen’s words from 2,000 years ago are still echoing throughout the centuries, thanks to what biblical principle (see Isaiah 55:11)? How can that principle encourage you to speak the words God has given you?
Lesson 8 – Faith Explains
1. Why do you think the Ethiopian eunuch couldn’t understand the scriptures he was reading by himself? Was he just not smart enough, or was there some other reason?
2. How can you take encouragement to explain the Scriptures to others based on the eunuch’s response to Philip?
Lesson 9 – Faith Surrenders
1. Why are people asked to raise their hands when they surrender? And why might God want you raise your hands when surrendering to His will?
2. What can keep people from surrendering completely to God’s will? Is there anything holding you back from surrendering completely to Him as well?
Lesson 10 – Faith Gives
1. Why do you think God took notice of Cornelius’ gifts? What did God do for Cornelius in response?
2. Why would an increasing faith and trust in God also lead to an increasing willingness to give? Are there needs around you that God might want to meet through your prayers and gifts?
Lesson 11 – Faith Includes
1. Why did it take faith―and a vision from God―for Peter to be willing to go to Cornelius’ house? Why might Acts 4:12 sound “exclusive” to some people, while to others it sounds supremely “inclusive”?
2. What is it about Jesus that makes Him unique among all other religious leaders, past or present? On whose shoulders does the choice lie whether you’re included or excluded–saved or unsaved–in Christ’s kingdom?
3. If you’ve never made the choice to put your faith and trust in Christ, are you ready yet?
Lesson 12 – Faith Prays
1. What’s the difference between praying in fear and praying in faith, even though both can certainly be done “in earnest”? What attitudes and actions might accompany your prayers if you were to pray in faith (like carrying an umbrella when praying for rain!)?
2. What might be different in your own prayers if you were to pray in faith rather than praying in fear?
Lesson 13 – Faith Fasts
1. Why might fasting help to intensify, deepen, or accelerate your prayers―and the answers that come from those prayers?
2. What role has fasting played in your own prayer life? What role would you like it to play?
Lesson 14 – Faith Persists
1. What seemed to motivate Paul and Barnabas to persist in their faith, even in the face of tremendous opposition? How might that same thing motivate you?
2. Is there a specific area in your life where you’re tempted to throw in the towel? How can the words of Jesus (in Hebrews 12:2) and of Paul (in Philippians 3:14) encourage you to press on in your faith?
Lesson 15 – Faith Purifies
1. Why is it that all of our hand-wringing can’t wash away our own sin? Why is it that putting our faith and trust in Christ can do it?
2. Although Christ has already died for our sins, what do we need to do in order to “purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9)? Is there anything you’d like to confess to God today?
Lesson 16 – Faith Sings
1. How might singing to God have influenced Paul and Silas’ prayers to God? How might singing to God influence your prayers to Him?
2. Have you ever experienced a change of heart through singing, as King David seems to have experienced in Psalm 5? Why not try singing to God today?
Lesson 17 – Faith Examines
1. What were the Bereans looking for in the Scriptures as Paul spoke to them about Jesus? While “examining the Scriptures” for some could be an indication of their lack of faith, why did it seem to be a demonstration of faith on the part of the Bereans?
2. Do you have questions about Jesus that you’d like to have answered more fully? How could examining the Scriptures help you to discover your answers?
Lesson 18 – Faith Works
1. What role did making tents seem to play in Paul’s commitment to preaching the gospel? How does secular work compare to ministry work in your own mind?
2. Why did Jesus tell His disciples to “Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into His harvest field”? How do you feel God might want you to balance―or shift the balance―of secular work and ministry work in your own life?
Lesson 19 – Faith Baptizes
1. What did Paul say was the difference between John’s baptism and Jesus’ baptism? In what ways did God change and empower the twelve men who Paul baptized that day?
2. What level of importance do you place on baptism when sharing the good news of Christ? In light of Jesus’ “great commission” to His disciples, and the example of the various stories cited throughout the book of Acts, what what level of importance does God seem to place on baptism?
3. Have you been baptized? And if not, would you like to be?
Lesson 20 – Faith Resurrects
1. Why might Paul say so confidently in Romans 8:10-11 that the Spirit of God can give life to our mortal bodies? If God’s Spirit can resurrect those who have physically died, what other kinds of “resurrections” could perform?
2. Is there any area of your life where you could use a dose of God’s resurrection power? How can Paul’s experience of praying for Eutychus encourage you to pray for your situation?
Lesson 21 – Faith Dies
1. Is it contradictory to say that faith in Christ can both raise people from the dead, as well as lead people to their deaths? How can such different results come from the same faith?
2. How does Paul reconcile these two outcomes, according to his words in Romans 14:7-8? As difficult as it may be to answer, are you ready―as Paul was ready―to die for the name of the Lord Jesus?
Lesson 22 – Faith Testifies
1. What could have happened, and did happen many times, when Paul shared his testimony with others? Why didn’t he stop?
2. When considering sharing your testimony, what might be the response of some of the listeners, both positive and negative? What role can “timing” and “audience” play in determining when to share your testimony?
Lesson 23 – Faith Keeps A Clear Conscience
1. How can sand in your shoes eventually turn into a big problem? What other kinds of things can creep into our lives, perhaps even in relatively harmless ways at first, but could eventually turn into big problems?
2. In what ways can having a clear conscience help you in your life? Are there any areas where sand is getting in your shoes, and it’s time to dump it out?
Lesson 24 – Faith Flees
1. While faith often calls us to take a stand for what we believe, what are some examples from today’s lesson that suggest that it can sometimes be just as faith-full to flee a dangerous situation?
2. Have you ever had to exercise your faith to flee from a fight, rather than stand up to it? How did you know which way God wanted you to go?
Lesson 25 – Faith Appeals
1. Was Paul defying authority, or exercising his authority, by appealing to Caesar? What did Paul say in his speech in Acts 25:10-11 regarding his willingness to submit to the decision? If you’re willing to appeal, are you also willing to submit to the decision?
2. How did God say He would use this appeal process for His glory in Acts 23:11? How could God use an appeal for justice in your life?
Lesson 26 – Faith Models
1. While Paul could have sounded prideful by hoping that King Agrippa would become like him, what was at the heart of what Paul said? How can asking others to follow your lead be helpful to them, as Paul asked in 1 Corinthians 11:1?
2. How does your life model what Christ has done for you? How can your words help others to understand the changes that have taken place within you?
Lesson 27 – Faith Warns
1. How did Paul’s first warning to his shipmates help him when he had to give them a second warning, even though they ignored the first? How can your warnings to others help them eventually, even if they ignore your warnings at first?
2. How was Paul able to have such a strong faith in God that things would happen just as God had said? Are there people in your life who could use a good warning right now, based on what you know about God’s will and their lives?
Lesson 28 – Faith Supplies
1. Why were the people of Malta willing to supply Paul’s needs as Paul continued on his way? In what ways had Paul invested in their lives prior to this point?
2. Have you been touched in a special way through someone’s life or ministry? In what ways might you want to offer your thanks to them and help to supply their needs for the future?
Conclusion – The Power of Faith
1. Although the book of Acts doesn’t recorded what eventually happened to Paul, what do you think happened to him? Do you think he made it to Rome to testify before Caesar?
2. What are a few of the things that faith helped the earliest believers do, as recorded in the book of Acts? What did Jesus say would be impossible for us, if we put our faith in Him today?
3. In what ways has your faith grown during the course of this study?
Acts: Lessons In Faith
30 inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ
by Eric Elder
Read it online below!

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
INTRODUCTION (Back to Table of Contents)
Scripture Reading: Acts 27:25
One of my favorite lines about faith comes from the movie The Incredibles.
There’s a scene where a mom and her kids are on a plane that’s about to be blown apart. The mom calls on her daughter to put a shield around the plane, something bigger than she’s ever done before. The daughter panics and in her doubt she can’t do it. The plane explodes, but not before the mom grabs her kids to parachute into the water below.
Later, when the daughter apologizes, her mom responds:
“It isn’t your fault. It wasn’t fair for me to suddenly ask so much of you. But things are different now. And doubt is a luxury we can’t afford anymore, sweetie. You have more power than you realize. Don’t think. And don’t worry. If the time comes, you’ll know what to do. It’s in your blood.”
There are times in our lives when it’s OK to doubt. But there comes a time in each of our lives where “doubt is a luxury you can’t afford anymore.” You either believe or you don’t, and the outcome depends on what you choose to believe. The truth is, as a Christian, you do have more power than you realize. When you put your faith in Christ, God puts a seed of faith within you. It’s in your blood.
My goal in the coming weeks is to strengthen your faith, to help you believe that God is who He says He is and that He will do what He says He will do.
If you’ve already put your faith in Christ, I want to strengthen the faith that’s already within you. If you haven’t yet put your faith in Christ, I want to help you get to the point where you can put your faith in Him.
I want to get you to the point where the Apostle Paul was at the end of the book of Acts.
Like the mom and her kids in The Incredibles, Paul was on a ship that was about to be blown apart. Hurricane force winds had pummeled his boat for days. The other men on the ship had given up all hope of being saved. But just as the men think all is lost, Paul stands up and says:
“…keep up your courage, because not one of you will be lost; only the ship will be destroyed. Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me” (Acts 27:22-25).
And it did.
That’s the kind of faith God wants you to have, a faith that says, “I have faith in God it will happen just as He told me.” In the coming weeks, I want to walk with you through the book of Acts, chapter by chapter, taking a look at the various ways faith expressed itself in the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Sometimes God called them to wait. Other times He called them to stand up. Still other times He called them to speak, to pray, to give, to heal, to raise people from the dead.
My hope and prayer is that God will use this time to increase your faith to the point where you can say, like the Apostle Paul, “…for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.”
I also want to encourage you to read each day’s Scripture Reading in your own Bible in addition to my devotional for that day. I’ve limited myself to touching upon just one thought in each chapter of Acts, but there’s so much God may speak to you about other subjects in your life. When you’re done reading all the daily Scripture Readings, you’ll have read through the entire book of Acts.
And finally, I’ve included a prayer at the end of each devotional to help you focus your own prayers by praying them along with me. Here’s today’s prayer.
Prayer: Father, I pray that You would fill me with faith in the days ahead, a faith that can say, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.” In Jesus’ name, Amen.
- Introduction
- Lesson 1
- Lesson 2
- Lesson 3
- Lesson 4
- Lesson 5
- Lesson 6
- Lesson 7
- Lesson 8
- Lesson 9
- Lesson 10
- Lesson 11
- Lesson 12
- Lesson 13
- Lesson 14
- Lesson 15
- Lesson 16
- Lesson 17
- Lesson 18
- Lesson 19
- Lesson 20
- Lesson 21
- Lesson 22
- Lesson 23
- Lesson 24
- Lesson 25
- Lesson 26
- Lesson 27
- Lesson 28
- Conclusion
- Small Group Study Guide
LESSON 1: FAITH WAITS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 1
I think it’s ironic, but fitting, that the very first thing Jesus tells His disciples to do in the book of Acts isn’t an “act” at all. He tells them to “wait.”
“On one occasion, while He was eating with them, He gave them this command: ‘Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about. For John baptized with water, but in a few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit’ ” (Acts 1:4-5).
Wait. Wait for the gift of the Holy Spirit. You see, without God, what’s the point of going on? If God’s called you to wait, waiting can be just as much an act of faith as doing. And not waiting can be your downfall.
When God promised to give Abraham many descendants, Abraham got impatient and got his wife’s servant girl pregnant instead. God said that their child Ishmael would have descendants galore, but that he would always be in hostility towards his brothers. When Abraham and his wife eventually had a child of their own, God blessed that child, Isaac, with many descendants, too. But unfortunately, the hostility between those two brothers has carried on for generations, even to this day, as present-day Muslims claim Ishmael as their forefather and present-day Jews claim Isaac as theirs.
God honors His promises, but there’s a price to pay for not waiting.
It’s hard to wait, I know. But I want to encourage you today, if God’s called you to wait, wait.
I remember one of the times when I was waiting on God. I felt that God had called me to go to Israel. Even though I didn’t know why, but I sensed it was important, so I went. After a few days of looking around Jerusalem, I began to wonder if God was ever going to show up at all. What was I waiting for anyway?
As I laid on my bed, I read this verse from Psalm 27:14:
“Wait for the Lord, be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”
But I read it in the Amplified Bible, which gives even more detail about what the Hebrew and Greek words in the Bible mean. I love the way the Amplified Bible puts it:
“Wait and hope for and expect the Lord; be brave and of good courage and let your heart be stout and enduring. Yes, wait for and hope for and expect the Lord” (Psalm 27:14, AMP).
It changed my whole perspective. Instead of waiting idly and wondering if God would ever show up, I began to look forward to what God was going to do. The next day, God did show up in a powerful way. I met a pastor on the temple mount who was also visiting in Israel. He prayed for me that day, anointed me with oil, and spoke a prophetic word over me about my future life and ministry, including much of what I’m doing today.
The difference between waiting idly and waiting expectantly is the difference between sitting at home alone, wondering if anyone’s ever going to stop by, and sitting at home, waiting for the most important person in your life to walk through that door at any minute, because they called ahead and told you they were on their way.
If you’re not convinced that it’s worth it to wait, here are a few benefits of waiting: You’ll sleep better, feel better, think clearer. You’ll be more content, less frustrated, kinder, gentler, more patient, more gracious. You’ll grow stronger, live longer, stand firmer. Here’s how the Bible puts it in Isaiah 40:31:
“But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint” (Isaiah 40:31, KJV).
If God’s called you to wait, wait. Wait for the Lord. “Yes, wait for and hope for and expect the Lord” (Psalm 27:14, AMP).
Prayer: Father, help me to wait on you with expectancy, looking forward to what You’re going to do at the end of the wait. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 2: FAITH ACTS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 2
There’s a scene in the movie Spider-Man 2 where Spider-Man is swooping from building to building when suddenly he has a web failure. He crashes into the alley below, looks at his hands and says, “Why is this happening to me?”
He wonders if he’s losing his power. But it’s not true. He still has the same power he’s always had since he first got bitten by that supercharged spider. It’s in his blood. What he lacks is faith. He’s had some bad things happen to him and he’s ready to give up. He just wants to go back to being Peter Parker, a normal guy with a normal job.
But after a pep talk from his Aunt May, Peter goes back to being Spider-Man. From the top of a building, he takes a flying leap over the edge, yelling, “I’m back! I’m back!” Seconds later, he looks down, panics, and plummets into the cars parked below. He stands up gingerly and says, “My back. My back.”
I guess he still has a ways to go! But he’s working on it, something that I want to encourage you to do today, too.
I’ve heard it said that faith is like a muscle, it gets stronger the more we exercise it. There was another Peter who exercised his faith on a regular basis, Peter the Apostle, the one who stepped over the edge of a boat to walk on water, but seconds later, looked down, panicked and began to sink. This is the same Peter who stood by Jesus the night he was arrested, saying he’d die for Jesus, but then denied that he even knew Jesus three times before the morning.
Some people criticize Peter for his lack of faith, but the truth is, he’s the only one who stepped over the edge of the boat and got to experience walking on water, even if only for a short time.
On the day of Pentecost, when Jesus sent the Holy Spirit to empower the disciples as He promised He would, the Bible says:
“Then Peter stood up with the Eleven, raised his voice and addressed the crowd: ‘Fellow Jews and all of you who live in Jerusalem, let me explain this to you; listen carefully to what I say…’” (Acts 2:14).
Peter’s message was so powerful that three thousand were baptized and put their faith in Christ as a result.
How did Peter go from denying Christ to proclaiming His name to thousands? In short, he got his faith back. He’d seen Jesus raised from the dead, he waited when Jesus told him to wait, and he “got a dose of the Holy Ghost.” The combination was powerful, and when God told him to act, Peter stood up and boldly told the people gathered what he knew about Jesus.
Peter exercised his faith on a regular basis. And God wants us to do the same, even when asked to do a “little thing”―bring a meal to a friend, visit someone in a nursing home, send an email to someone who needs encouragement, speak the truth in love, encourage your co-workers to do what’s right, instead of what’s safe, easy or more profitable.
God told a poor widow to gather empty jars from her neighbors so He could fill them with oil. God did the miracle, but she had to gather the jars (see 2 Kings 4). God told Naaman to wash seven times in the Jordan River, something Naaman thought was too small to make any difference. But Naaman did it, and God healed him (see 2 Kings 5).
Jesus told the disciples they’d be His witnesses to the ends of the earth. When the day of Pentecost came, all Peter had to do was stand up and tell them what he knew about Jesus. God brought people from the ends of the earth to him (see Acts 2:5-12).
If God’s calling you to act, act―even if it’s just a little thing.
Prayer: Father, help me to wait when you say “Wait,” and to act when you say “Act,” so I can accomplish all You want to accomplish through me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 3: FAITH HEALS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 3
I’d like to talk about healing today, but before I do, I’d like to say a word to those of you who may have lost someone close to you, whether recently or in the past.
I know what it’s like to lose someone you love. I believe there are times to pray that God will take your loved ones home to heaven where there will be “no more death or mourning or crying or pain…” (Revelation 21:4). For the Christian, the moment we pass from this life to the next will be the greatest and most miraculous healing any of us will ever experience.
But there’s also a time to pray with all the strength and faith you have for God to heal someone, here and now, in the name of Jesus, and that’s what our passage is talking about today.
In Acts chapter 3, Peter and John came across a man who was crippled from birth. The man asked Peter and John for money, to which Peter responded:
“Silver or gold I do not have, but what I have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk” (Acts 3:6).
Peter took the man by the hand, the man’s feet and ankles became instantly strong, and he began walking and jumping and praising God.
It was a powerful scene―so powerful that people came running from all over to see what had happened. Peter said:
“Men of Israel, why does this surprise you? Why do you stare at us as if by our own power or godliness we had made this man walk? … By faith in the name of Jesus, this man whom you see and know was made strong. It is Jesus’ name and the faith that comes through Him that has given this complete healing to him, as you can all see” (Acts 3:12, 16).
Faith heals. In this case, I think it’s interesting that it doesn’t seem to be so much the faith of the man who was healed that made the difference. He was just asking Peter and John for money. It seems to be the faith of Peter and John that made the difference. They were the ones who had the faith to say to the man, “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” They were the ones who reached out and pulled the man to his feet. It’s a testimony to me of the power of the faith of a friend.
And you can be that friend when you pray for those around you.
There was a time when I would tell someone I’d pray for them, then walk away and pray later when I got home alone. While that was a good thing to do, Jesus said, “For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them” (Matthew 18:20).
I have no doubt that if Jesus were standing right there with me as I prayed for you, that He would reach out and touch you with His power. And Jesus tells us that when we come together in His name, He will be right there with us. Knowing this truth increases my faith tremendously.
So I’ve found it to be more powerful, and more meaningful to the person for whom I’m praying, to stop and ask them, “Can I pray for you right now?” If they agree, which almost always happens, then I say a prayer with them right there, whether in a hallway or in a store or at a restaurant. It’s a simple thing that doesn’t have to draw attention, but simply bowing our heads and praying at the time the need is expressed. Aside from being powerful and meaningful, it also helps me to remember to pray so I don’t forget by the time I get home!
For some of you, I want to go further and encourage you not just to pray for your family and friends to be healed in Jesus’ name, but to pray for them out loud and in front of them. I know this may be foreign territory for some of you, but it’s a great way to exercise your faith. It can be as simple as this, “Father, heal my friend. In Jesus’ name, Amen.” Not only will you become stronger in your faith, but so will your family and friends.
As James said,
“…pray for each other so you may be healed” (James 5:16b).
So whether in private or out loud, exercise your faith today! Pray for those around you to be healed in Jesus’ name.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to believe in Your power to heal and to pray that my family and friends will be healed. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 4: FAITH SAVES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 4
When people say they’re “saved,” what do they mean? And what exactly are they saved from?
To say you’re saved means more than just the fact that you’re a Christian. It means you’ve been saved from something. Specifically, it means you’ve been saved from hell, both the literal hell that Jesus talked about when people are separated from God for all eternity, and the practical hell that you can experience here on this earth when you continue to follow your own sinful ways.
To someone who isn’t “saved,” the word seems to be either offensive or just plain laughable. But to someone who is “saved,” the word is full of life, because they know what would have happened to them had Jesus not come to save them.
I read this week that one of the candidates running for office is being questioned because their pastor “preaches hell for anyone who doesn’t believe in Jesus.” I guess when you put it that way, it does sound rather offensive. But the truth is, it’s the same message that Jesus preached. (Good thing He isn’t running for office―He’d probably get crucified again!)
Some people, unfortunately, think that Jesus is out to get them, that He came to condemn them for what they’ve done. But Jesus didn’t come to condemn you. He came to save you. He even says so in His own words:
“For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him. Whoever believes in Him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son” (John 3:17-18).
So, yes, there is hell to pay if you don’t believe in Jesus. But no one’s going to hell because they haven’t believed in Jesus; they’re going to hell because of their sins, which is a completely different reason altogether. Whenever you sin, it separates you from God. And without a savior, you’d be separated from God forever. That’s hell. That’s the fate from which Jesus came to save you.
When the Apostles Peter and John were arrested for preaching that Jesus could save people from their sins, they didn’t back down even when threatened with death. In Acts chapter 4, they spoke boldly about the fact that Jesus alone had the power to save:
“Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).
Faith saves. One of my favorite scenes in the Indiana Jones series is when Indy comes to the edge of a cliff and can’t see any way across to the cliff on the other side. With a look of exasperation, he says, “It’s a leap of faith!” With his enemies pressing in from behind and no other way forward, he takes a giant step into what looks like thin air in front of him, only to find that he has stepped onto a solid rock bridge that had been camouflaged from view. Indy’s “leap of faith” had saved him.
Jesus wants to save you from more than just a bad ending to the movie of your life. He wants to save you from hell, both here on earth and on into eternity.
When Jesus died on the cross, He extended an invitation to every person in the world who had strayed from God to come back to Him. The price for our sins had been paid. But reconciliation is a two way street. Just because one party wants to be reconciled with the other doesn’t mean they are reconciled. Both parties have to agree to it.
Jesus has done His part. Now He’s waiting for each person to respond individually. And the way you respond is by faith.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ to save you from your sins, I pray you’ll do it today. He’d love to say to you what He said to the woman who wiped His feet with her tears:
“Your sins are forgiven. Your faith has saved you; go in peace” (Luke 7:48,50).
Prayer: Father, forgive me for the sins I have committed, too, as I put my faith in Christ. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 5: FAITH OBEYS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 5
I’d like to talk today about my all-time favorite Super Hero, if you could call Him that. His name is Jesus Christ and He’s the best example of our topic today, “Faith Obeys.”
I can’t think of anyone who epitomizes obedience more than Jesus on the night before He died when He prayed: “…not My will, but Yours be done” (Luke 22:42).
But just because Jesus was the Son of God, it doesn’t mean that He didn’t agonize over the choices He made, just like the rest of us do. Luke says that Jesus was in such anguish over His decision that night that, “His sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground” (Luke 22.44b).
I guess it’s not really fair to compare Jesus to other Super Heroes like Superman or Spider-Man, because Jesus was the Son of God. He had access to powers they could never have imagined. But at the same time, Jesus was also fully human―more real, and more like us, than Superman or Spider-Man ever were.
The Bible says that Jesus had real flesh and blood (Hebrews 2:14), was born as a baby (Luke 2:7), was scolded by his parents (Luke 2:48), and grew in wisdom and stature (Luke 2:52). He experienced love (John 11:5), anger (Mark 3:5), joy (Hebrews 12:2), betrayal (Luke 22:48), temptation (Hebrews 4:15) and pain (Matthew 27:46). He bled (John 19:34), He cried (John 11:35), He suffered (Hebrews 13:12) and He died (Mark 15:39).
The more that I can envision Jesus as a real human being, the more I can envision that I can really do what He did, as He said I could do when He said, “I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing” (John 14:12).
That includes being obedient to God, regardless of the consequences to us personally. Peter and John found that same strength to obey God, even when threatened with death, as we can see in Acts chapters 4 and 5. After calling on the name of Jesus to heal a man who had been crippled for over forty years, Peter and John were commanded by the religious leaders to stop speaking or teaching at all in the name of Jesus. Peter replied,
“Judge for yourselves whether it is right in God’s sight to obey you rather than God. For we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard…We must obey God rather than men!” (Acts 4:19-20, 5:29).
When faced with death, Peter and John had to make a choice. These weren’t idle threats. The religious leaders had already shown their resolve to follow through on their threats by putting Jesus to death.
But Peter and John also knew what Jesus had called them to do. They had just seen Christ perform a miracle through them when they called on His name. So they responded with the only response that made sense to them: “…we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”
If God is calling you to stop a relationship that you know is destroying you, stop it, even if it seems too hard or too complicated. If God is calling you to stay in a marriage that you’d rather get out of, stay in it. If God is calling you to another job, take it, but if He’s calling you to stay in your current job, don’t leave. If He’s calling you to stop a bad habit that’s killing you, stop it, and if He’s calling you to start a good habit that will save you, start it!
God gave Peter and John the strength to do what they needed to do, just like He gave Jesus the strength to do what He needed to do―just like He’ll give you the strength to do what He wants you to do, when you put your faith in Christ.
Prayer: Father, help me to do all that You’re calling me to do today, to obey Your will, not my own, and not the will of others, but Yours alone. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 6: FAITH FILLS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 6
I suppose you’ve heard what happens when you sing a country music song backwards, right? You get your car back, you get your dog back, you get your wife back.
Well today, I want to talk about how to get something else back: I want to talk about how to get your faith back ― how to get your faith back if you’ve lost it, how to find it for the first time if you’ve never found it before, and if you’ve already found it, how to help others find their faith, too, so that they can truly become filled with faith, or “faith full.”
There’s a scene in the movie The Chronicles of Narnia where Lucy and her brothers and sister finally all stumble into the land of Narnia when they’re trying to hide in an old wardrobe. Lucy had discovered Narnia before, but when she told her family about it, they made fun of her, they got mad at her, and they told her to stop imagining things. But now they all see it with their own eyes and finally believe. I love that moment of discovery, when people go from doubt to faith, from unbelief to belief, from questioning what others have told them to believing it with they’re whole heart, soul, mind and strength.
Acts chapter 6 describes one of the early believers named Stephen in a way that I’d love to become as well. Acts says that Stephen was:
“a man who was full of faith and of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 6:5).
That’s what I think God wants each of you to be: men and women who are full of faith and of the Holy Spirit. Men and women who are so filled with faith that it overflows from within you and onto those around you.
But how can we get to the point where we’re “faith full”? How can we help other people discover what we’ve found to be true?
Here are three things I’d recommend:
1) Read your Bible. The Bible contains story after story of people who have put their faith in God and become filled with faith as a result. When you read their stories, it will help to increase your faith as well.
Today’s a good day to read John chapter 20, for instance, where it describes three sets of people at the moment when they went from doubt to belief, who got to see Jesus raised from the day on that first Easter morning and in the days immediately following His resurrection. The Apostle John says he wrote these stories for you: “Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in His name” (John 20:30-31).
2) Research your Barriers. If you’ve got questions that are keeping you from fully believing what God has said in His Word, take time to get your questions answered so you can move forward in your faith.
This is what Lee Strobel did when his wife told him she had become a Christian. Lee was an atheist and the legal affairs editor for the Chicago Tribune. He decided to use his journalism and legal training to thoroughly investigate Christianity, hoping to liberate his wife from this cult! But his plan backfired when he found more evidence that supported the resurrection than he ever imagined and he ended up putting his faith in Christ.
3) Reconnect with your Brothers and Sisters in Christ. God doesn’t want you to go it alone. He wants you to help each other, to bear each other’s burdens and to sharpen each other like iron sharpens iron.
C.S. Lewis, who wrote The Chronicles of Narnia and other great Christian works, went to Oxford College as an atheist. But after reading books by George McDonald and others he admired and discovered were strong Christians, he turned from atheism to believing there must be a God. But it was when he began to meet with other Christians in person, like fellow student J.R.R. Tolkien who later wrote The Lord of The Rings, they challenged his thoughts and ideas. After talking with his friends till three in the morning one night, Lewis went home and the next morning went from just believing in God to becoming a Christian.
Read your Bible. Research your Barriers, and Reconnect with your Brothers and Sisters in Christ.
These aren’t the only way to become filled with faith, but they’re certainly good things to do, even if you’re a strong believer, because they can help you keep up in the faith that you’ve already come to believe in your heart.
Prayer: Father, thank You for giving me so many examples of people who have put their faith in You. Help me to keep putting my faith in You, and to help others put their faith in You, too. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 7: FAITH SPEAKS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 7
There are times when God wants you to hold your tongue. For instance, when Jesus healed two blind men, He told them sternly, “See that no one knows about this” (Matthew 9:30). And when Jesus brought Jairus’ daughter back from the dead, Jesus gave strict orders not to let anyone know about it (Mark 5:43).
But there are other times when God wants you to speak. For instance, when Jesus cast the demons out of the man named Legion, Jesus told him: “Return home and tell how much God has done for you” (Luke 8:39a). Or when Jesus healed ten men of leprosy on the road to Jerusalem, He told them: “Go, show yourselves to the priests” (Luke 17:14b).
So there are times when God wants you to hold your tongue, but there are also times when God wants you to speak. And when God calls you to speak, He wants you to be ready. The Bible says, “Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have” (1 Peter 3:15).
I’d like to give you three ideas today to help you speak when God calls you to speak. I’ve pulled these ideas from the story in Acts chapter 7 where God called Stephen to speak. Stephen spoke boldly, even though it was dangerous to do so. When Stephen was arrested and had to defend himself, he gave one of the boldest speeches in the Bible. Because of it, he was stoned to death, but his words were not in vain.
Here are the three things that I noticed Stephen did, and we can do, when God says to speak:
1) Don’t be afraid.
2) Pair up your words with Scripture.
3) Trust God to use His Word to transform lives.
First, don’t be afraid. Jesus had already forewarned His followers before He died that they would be arrested and flogged and persecuted. Jesus told them: “So do not be afraid of them. There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. What I tell you in the dark, speak in the daylight; what is whispered in your ear, proclaim from the roofs. Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:26-28).
Although Stephen could have been afraid that day, he didn’t let it keep him from speaking.
Second, pair up your words with Scripture. Stephen might also have worried about what he was going to say to his accusers, but Jesus had already told His followers: “But when they arrest you, do not worry about what to say or how to say it. At that time you will be given what to say, for it will not be you speaking, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you” (Matthew 10:19-20).
God did give Stephen words to speak. His Word. When Stephen spoke, he paired up his own words with Scripture to support what he was saying. Stephen quoted from Genesis, Exodus, Deuteronomy, Amos and Isaiah. When Stephen spoke, God spoke His Words through Stephen. This is one of the reasons it’s so important to read your Bible, study your Bible and memorize your Bible. When you know God’s Word, it helps you to infuse your words with His.
Third, trust that God will use His Word to transform lives. The Bible says that one of the men who heard Stephen speak that day was Saul, who at the time gave approval to Stephen’s death. But if you keep reading in Acts, you’ll see that Saul became a Christian himself shortly thereafter. Jesus changed Saul’s name to Paul, and Paul went on to write much of the rest of the New Testament, including the letters to the Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians and more.
Even though Stephen died, God used his words that day to reach many lives, including ours over 2,000 years later! As God said, “My word…will not return to Me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11).
When God calls you to speak, speak. Don’t be afraid. Pair up your words with Scripture. And trust that God will use His Word to transform lives.
Prayer: Father, help us to speak when you say, “Speak.” In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 8: FAITH EXPLAINS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 8
If God has given you a special gift to help people understand the Bible, I’d like to encourage you today to use that gift. You may not even realize it’s a gift. You may think that reading and understanding the Bible just comes naturally to you. But I’d like to show you what a gift it really is.
In Acts chapter 8, an angel of the Lord told Philip, one of Jesus’ disciples, to go to the road that leads down from Jerusalem to Gaza. Along the way, Philip encountered a man from Ethiopia who was sitting in his chariot reading from the book of Isaiah.
The Ethiopian was an important official in charge of the treasury for Candace, the Queen of Ethiopia. He had been to Jerusalem to worship and was now on his way back home. The Spirit told Philip to go near the man’s chariot, and when he did, he heard the man reading from Isaiah the prophet. Philip asked: “Do you understand what you are reading?” To which the Ethiopian replied:
“How can I, unless someone explains it to me?” (Acts 8:31)
So the Ethiopian invited Philip to come up and sit with him. Philip began with that very passage of Scripture and told the man the good news about Jesus.
As they traveled together along the road, the Ethiopian understood so well that he said, “Look here is water. Why shouldn’t I be baptized?” So the Ethiopian stopped the chariot, was baptized, and went on his way rejoicing!
God had given Philip special insight into the Scriptures. He had exposed him to the teachings and the life of Jesus in a way that Philip was able to help someone else understand why Jesus had to come and die.
The Ethiopian was smart (he was in charge of the Queen’s treasury). He loved God (he was just returning from a lengthy trip to worship in Jerusalem). And he was eager to learn spiritual truths (he was reading the book of Isaiah). But he still needed someone to explain the Scriptures to him. So God sent Philip to do just that.
Faith explains. When God gives you the faith to believe and to understand what He’s done through Christ, He wants you to share what you’ve learned with others.
I remember flying to California one time, hoping to share with someone I knew there about what Christ had done for me. But even though I tried to bring up the topic throughout the weekend, God never opened the door for me to walk through and share. As I flew home, my plane made a stop in another city before I reached home. A man boarded the plane, sat down next to me, and proceeded to open up a brand new Bible to the first page of the New Testament.
I glanced up to see his face and couldn’t believe it! It was a friend of mine from college who had been involved in some of the same things that Christ had eventually delivered me from! He was just as shocked to see me as I was to see him. When I asked about the Bible, he said his mother was worried about him so had bought this Bible for him. He thought he’d give it a try and had sat down to open it for the very first time. I knew what God wanted me to do.
We spent the rest of the flight talking about his life and talking about the Scriptures. I started with the passage where he had opened his Bible and I explained how Christ had delivered me from the very things with which my friend still struggled.
Although I don’t know what happened to him after we left the plane, I do know that God answered my prayers to be able to share what was on my heart. And He answered my friend’s prayers (or at least his mothers!) that someone would help him to understand what he was reading.
If God has given you the ability to understand the Scriptures, know that it’s a gift, and know that God wants you to use that gift to explain those Scriptures to those around you.
Prayer: Father, help me make the most of every opportunity You give me to explain to others what You’ve revealed to me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 9: FAITH SURRENDERS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 9
There are times when I’ll be singing a song of worship to God when my arms almost automatically begin to rise up. Almost without thinking I’ll find myself with my arms fully outstretched above my head in praise to God. It’s a beautiful time of both reaching out to God and completely giving myself to Him―an act of surrender, you might call it―with my hands up in the air, nothing to hide and gladly submitted to the Lordship of Christ.
I remember a similar moment when I put my faith in Christ at 23, having taken control of my own life for those years and seeing where I ended up, then finally yielding to Christ to let Him call the shots from then on. It was no longer a hard thing to do, but joyous, yielding myself completely to God’s will and purposes.
The Apostle Paul experienced his own profound moment of surrender on the road to Damascus.
Even though Paul was extremely religious, he didn’t believe in Christ. He was committed to imprisoning―and even killing―those who did. He had gotten permission from the high priest in Jerusalem to go to Damascus and take prisoner those who belonged to what was then called “the Way.”
Here’s what happened to Paul that not only changed the course of the rest of his trip, but also the rest of his life. In this passage, Paul is still called Saul, as Christ had not yet given him his new name:
“As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?’
‘Who are you, Lord?’ Saul asked.
‘I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,’ He replied. ‘Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do’ ” (Acts 9:3-6).
When Paul got up from that experience, he was physically blinded. Those traveling with him led him into Damascus, where he stayed for three days, neither eating nor drinking.
During those same three days, a believer in Damascus named Ananias faced his own moment of surrender.
He had already put his faith in Christ, but when the Lord, in a vision, called him to go and pray for Paul to receive his sight back, Ananias wrestled with what he was going to do. He had heard reports about what Paul had done to believers in Jerusalem. He knew Paul had authority from the chief priests to do the same in Damascus. Faced with this extremely tough dilemma, Ananias chose to surrender to the will of God:
“Then Ananias went to the house and entered it. Placing his hands on Saul, he said, ‘Brother Saul, the Lord―Jesus, who appeared to you on the road as you were coming here―has sent me so that you may see again and be filled with the Holy Spirit.’ Immediately, something like scales fell from Saul’s eyes, and he could see again. He got up and was baptized, and after taking some food, he regained his strength” (Acts 9:17-19).
From that day on, and for the rest of his life, Paul went on to preach boldly in the name of Christ. He wrote much of the New Testament, which has affected literally millions of lives in the 2,000 years since then.
Thank God that Paul surrendered his will to God’s. And thank God that Ananias surrendered his will to God’s, too.
Faith surrenders. Whether you’re still just considering putting your faith in Christ for the first time, or whether you’ve been a believer for years, I want to encourage you today to surrender whatever’s left of your will to the will of God. Is there something God is calling you to do? Somewhere He wants you to go? Someone He wants you to talk to? Something He wants you to give to Him?
Lift up your hands and take hold of His. Lift up your heart and give it to Him. Give up your will and get into His. Whatever you’re planning to do, wherever you’re planning to go, it will pale in comparison to what He wants to do in and through you.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to surrender my will to Yours. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 10: FAITH GIVES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 10
What prompts you to give? When you see a need around you, what is it that causes you to want to reach out and help? For me, I’ve found that when my faith is strong, my desire to give is strong. But when my faith is weak, my desire to give is weak. It seems that the more I’m able to trust God with my life and my resources, the more I’m able to let go of the things that I would otherwise try to hang onto.
Faith gives. And when God sees our faith and our giving, He loves to bless us back in return.
Take a look at what happened to a man in the Bible named Cornelius when he gave to others in response to his faith. Cornelius was a commander in the Roman army and even though he wasn’t Jewish, he was a devout and God-fearing man who prayed to God regularly and gave generously to those in need. Here’s what happened to him as recorded in Acts chapter 10:
“One day at about three in the afternoon he had a vision. He distinctly saw an angel of God, who came to him and said, ‘Cornelius!’
“Cornelius stared at him in fear. ‘What is it, Lord?’ he asked.
“The angel answered, ‘Your prayers and gifts to the poor have come up as a memorial offering before God. Now send men to Joppa to bring back a man named Simon who is called Peter. He is staying with Simon the tanner, whose house is by the sea’ ” (Acts 10:3-6).
Cornelius sent for Peter, who came in response to a vision of his own that God had given him. Peter shared with Cornelius the good news about Christ. Cornelius and the large crowd who came to his house to see Peter were baptized with water and the Holy Spirit.
God honored Cornelius’ prayers and gifts. They had made their way up to God as a memorial offering to Him. And God poured out his blessing back on Cornelius.
Faith gives and God sees those gifts. They are a natural response to the faith that God wells up inside of you. Your giving is a practical way to love God and love others.
I remember telling some friends about all that God had been doing in and through my life one time. When I finished, one of the people listening to me reached into his pocket and pulled out all the money he had. He put it in my hand.
I was totally caught off guard. Why was he giving me money? I had just been telling them about what God was doing in the world and in my life. I knew this man didn’t have money to spare. I tried a few times to put it back into his hands, but he wouldn’t take it. One of my other friends finally pulled me aside to the kitchen and said to me, “He’s giving that money to God, not to you. As you’re telling him about the power of God to work in people’s lives, God’s working on his heart and this is the way he wants to respond. Please don’t try to stop what God is doing in his life by giving the money back.”
This man was growing in his faith as he listened to my stories, and his desire to do something in response swelled up within him. When God increases our faith, he also increases our desire and willingness to give.
Are there needs around you that God might be prompting you to support with your prayers and gifts? Is God trying to increase your faith so that when a need arises, you’ll be able to meet it with both your faith and your giving?
God wants you to be devout and God-fearing like Cornelius, praying and giving generously to those who have needs. When you do, know that God will not overlook your prayers and gifts. He loves to bless the hearts of those who bless His heart, just like He blessed Cornelius and everyone who came to his house to hear the good news about Christ.
Prayer: Father, increase my faith and increase my willingness to give at the same time. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 11: FAITH INCLUDES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 11
Some people think that Christianity is exclusive. They think that because Christ said that people must believe in Him in order to come back to the Father that Christianity excludes people. The truth is, Christianity is not exclusive, but incredibly inclusive. It’s open to all people, of all ages, from all races and all nationalities.
The story of Peter and Cornelius in Acts chapters 10 and 11 shows us just how inclusive Christianity really is. Peter was a Jew and one of the closest follower of Christ, but God sent Peter to Cornelius, who was not Jewish, to tell him the good news about Christ. Peter went, but not without some having to triple check with God beforehand. The Bible says that as Peter was praying one day, he had a vision from God:
“He saw heaven opened and something like a large sheet being let down to earth by its four corners. It contained all kinds of four-footed animals, as well as reptiles of the earth and birds of the air. Then a voice told him, ‘Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.’
‘Surely not, Lord!’ Peter replied. ‘I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.’
The voice spoke to him a second time, ‘Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.’
This happened three times, and immediately the sheet was taken back to heaven” (Acts 10:11-16).
As Peter was wondering about the vision, some men arrived at his door, asking if he would come with them to see Cornelius, a man who was a Roman soldier, but who was devout and God-fearing, prayed regularly and gave generously to those in need.
Realizing the vision was from God, Peter went with them, shared the good news of Christ with Cornelius and all those at his house, and they were all baptized in both water and in the Holy Spirit.
Peter realized God’s desire to keep the Jewish people holy by not interacting with non-Jews was for their protection, but not for the exclusion of others. It was a way to keep the Jews pure, not keep others out. Others have always been welcome, and now, through Jesus, the way was made clear for them. When Peter told the other disciples what had happened, they praised God saying “So then, God has granted even the Gentiles repentance unto life” (Acts 11:18b).
I used to think Christians were being prideful and arrogant when they claimed that you had to believe in Christ in order to come to God. But I learned that it was not Christians who made that claim, but Jesus Himself. Just before His death and resurrection into heaven, Jesus told His disciples how to get where He was going:
“You know the way to the place where I am going….I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:4,6).
There was no pride or arrogance in what Jesus said, but simple, humble truth. Christ went on to demonstrate His love for us and the truthfulness of what He said when He died for our sins and opened the way for anyone who believed in Him to come back to God, free, clean and forgiven.
Peter shared this good news on another occasion to a crowd of thousands who had gathered from all over the world. During his message, Peter made this bold claim about Jesus: “Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). When the people heard it, rather than turning their backs and responding with disgust at Peter’s arrogance, over 3,000 of them turned their hearts towards Christ, putting their faith in Him, and being baptized in His name.
Faith includes, as Cornelius and his entire household discovered.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ, I encourage you to do it today. If you know someone who needs to put their faith in Christ, invite them to come to Him today. He is the way and the truth and the life, and His way is open to all.
Prayer: Father, thank You for sending Jesus as the way back to You. Help me invite others back, too. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 12: FAITH PRAYS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 12
If you need something supernatural to happen, do something supernatural: pray.
Prayer is not just quiet meditation. It’s not just thinking through your thoughts on your own. Prayer is having a conversation with the God who created you, who knows you better than anyone else, and who can act in ways that are both natural and even “super” natural.
One of the most dramatic answers to prayer is recorded in Acts chapter 12. I’d like to share it with you today to encourage you to pray earnestly for situations in your life for which there appear to be no earthly answers.
Here’s the background for this story: After Saul stopped persecuting the early Christians, they finally enjoyed a time of peace and continued to grow in numbers. But then King Herod took up the persecution again and began to arrest some of those believers putting a man named James to death with the sword. When Herod saw that this pleased some of the Jews, he put Peter in prison, too, planning to put him on trial after the Passover.
Things looked bleak for Peter. There was little hope for him after what had just happened to James, but those early believers weren’t hopeless. They did what they could: they prayed.
The Bible says, “but the church was earnestly praying to God for him” (Acts 12:5).
Look what happened when they did:
“The night before Herod was to bring him to trial, Peter was sleeping between two soldiers, bound with two chains, and sentries stood guard at the entrance. Suddenly an angel of the Lord appeared and a light shone in the cell. He struck Peter on the side and woke him up. ‘Quick, get up!’ he said, and the chains fell off Peter’s wrists.
“Then the angel said to him, ‘Put on your clothes and sandals.’ And Peter did so. ‘Wrap your cloak around you and follow me,’ the angel told him. Peter followed him out of the prison, but he had no idea that what the angel was doing was really happening; he thought he was seeing a vision. They passed the first and second guards and came to the iron gate leading to the city. It opened for them by itself, and they went through it. When they had walked the length of one street, suddenly the angel left him.
“Then Peter came to himself and said, ‘Now I know without a doubt that the Lord sent his angel and rescued me from Herod’s clutches and from everything the Jewish people were anticipating’” (Acts 12:6-11).
Faith prays. It may seem obvious that when people are filled with faith, they pray. But interestingly, it may not have been their great faith that drove them to prayer, but perhaps that they had nowhere else to turn. When Peter showed up later that night at the door of a house where many believers were gathered in prayer for him, the people didn’t even believe that it was really Peter at the door. When a servant girl came to tell them Peter was there, they told her, “You’re out of your mind!” (Acts 12:15). They didn’t believe her until Peter kept knocking and they finally opened the door for him. Then they saw for themselves and were astonished.
I love stories like this where God acts in such a way that it even astonishes those who are praying. We may think we’re full of faith, but when God answers remarkably like this, we realize just how little faith we had going into our prayers. But nonetheless, they were praying “earnestly.”
That’s the kind of faith I want for you today. A faith that will pray earnestly. A faith that will pray trusting that God is ultimately in control, but that still prays with full hope and expectation for God to do a miracle.
There’s no shame in praying, just power. Abraham Lincoln confessed, “I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.”
Faith prays. If you need something supernatural to happen, do something supernatural. Pray, and pray earnestly.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to pray earnestly for Your will to be done here on earth as it is in heaven. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 13: FAITH FASTS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 13
One of the best ways I’ve found to intensify, deepen or accelerate my prayers is to fast―to go without food for a period of time so I can focus more intensely on praying.
I don’t remember hearing much about fasting when I was growing up. I don’t know if it was because I was just a child, or because those around me didn’t fast, or because those who did fasted in a way that didn’t draw attention to their fasting. But I do know that when I began to read the Bible as an adult, I was surprised by the number of references to prayer and fasting throughout both the Old and New Testament. Moses, David, Elijah, Paul and Jesus Himself are just a few of the many who fasted.
As I read other Christian books, I was surprised to find that many people throughout history, including leaders of major Christian movements also fasted: Luther, Wesley, Finney, Edwards, Booth, to name just a few. I also found that many of the Christian leaders that I knew and respected living today also fasted with profound results.
After reading so many inspiring stories, I decided to try it myself. Now, after twenty years adding fasting to my prayer life at various times, whether for a few days or for several weeks at a time, I can confirm that some of the most significant words I’ve heard from the Lord have come during those times of prayer and fasting. God has spoken to me about all kinds of things, from who to marry to how to expand my ministry. It seems that when I empty myself physically, I’m able to fill up more spiritually.
Acts chapter 13 records how the earliest Christians fasted and prayed, and how God spoke to them during their fast:
“While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, ‘Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.’ So after they had fasted and prayed, they placed their hands on them and sent them off” (Acts 13:2-3).
This was the beginning of Saul’s (also known as Paul’s) missionary journeys. The believers were gathered in prayer, worshiping the Lord and fasting, when God spoke to them through His Holy Spirit that He wanted two of them to set off in a new direction. While this may have seemed like simple next steps for Barnabas and Paul, it began a whole new life of travel and ministry for them. These trips resulted in new church starts in city after city. Because of the prayers and fasting of those early believers, God charted a new life course for Paul, one which took him through to the end of his life.
If you’re asking God for direction in your life, for wisdom about how to move forward, for answers as to the next steps you should take, consider intensifying your prayers with fasting. If you’re praying for situations that seem to have hit a roadblock and you don’t know how to go any further in your prayers, try fasting to break through that barrier.
When Jesus’ disciples were praying for a boy who was having seizures and suffering greatly, their prayers didn’t seem to help, so they came to Jesus for help. Jesus drove out the demon that was affecting the boy and he was healed from that moment. When the disciples later came to Jesus in private and asked why they couldn’t drive it out, He said,
“Because you have so little faith. I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you. But this kind does not go out except by prayer and fasting” (Matthew 17:20-21).
It seems from this passage, and from many others in the Bible, that fasting adds a dimension to our faith and to our prayers that is not available without it.
If you want to intensify, deepen or accelerate your prayers―and fill up more spiritually at the same time―try fasting!
Prayer: Father, help me to grow in my faith, even through fasting and prayer, so that I can see Your will done here on the earth. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 14: FAITH PERSISTS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 14
There are times when all of us face obstacles that seem just too big to get past. Times when we’re ready to throw in the towel. Times when we want to give up and to walk away from the things we feel God has called us to do.
If you’re facing times like that today, I want to encourage you to press on, to be persistent in your faith. Don’t give up now. Now’s the time to let God work through you in a way that you can shine for Him.
Michael Jordan was an incredible basketball player. But the crowds didn’t come to watch him walk onto an empty court and shoot free-throws for an hour and a half. They came to watch him shine in the face of opposition. They came to watch him take the ball from one end of the court to the other, making his way through opponents who were doing everything they could to stop him.
When someone would try to steal the ball, Michael would dribble behind his back. When someone blocked his way forward, Michael would spin his way around. When someone would try to block his shot, Michael would leap into the air beyond their reach, swishing the ball through the net on his way back down.
The times Michael Jordan shone the brightest were the times when his opposition was the most intense.
Paul and Barnabas in the book of Acts remind me of Michael Jordan. When God sent them out to win the world for Christ, they went from city to city, winning converts all along the way. But they weren’t shooting free-throws on an empty court. One of the reasons they shone so bright was because their opposition was so intense. In city after city, they were spoken against, thrown out of town, and even stoned and left for dead.
In the city of Iconium, many people came to Christ. But others began to stir up trouble for Paul and Barnabas. Rather than running away, they pressed on. The Bible says:
“So Paul and Barnabas spent considerable time there, speaking boldly for the Lord, who confirmed the message of his grace by enabling them to do miraculous signs and wonders” (Acts 13:4).
Instead of throwing in the towel, Paul and Barnabas decided to stay even longer. When the people of Iconium eventually made a plan to kill them, they escaped. When the people of Lystra stoned them and left them for dead, they recovered and went right back into the city. When they had finished making their way through city after city, they didn’t just call it quits. They turned around and went right back through each of the cities where people had tried to kill them before, strengthening the believers they had won in those cities, and encouraging them to remain true to the faith.
When the opposition came, Paul and Barnabas dribbled behind their backs, spun around the opposition, and leapt into the air as they swished the ball through the net on their way back down.
Faith persists. It doesn’t give up and go home just because an opponent shows up on the court. That’s the time when faith shines. That’s the time when the crowds go wild for Christ. That’s the time when God Himself will cheer you on, sending His Holy Spirit to do things through you that you could never have done on your own.
I don’t know what kind of opposition you’re facing today: problems with your marriage, your money, your ministry, your ideas. Problems with your health, your plans, your future, your dreams. Problems with your family, your friends, your parents, your kids. Problems with your business, your home, your life, your career.
But whatever you’re facing right now, I want to encourage you to press on. Press on in your faith. Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter or your faith, who for the joy set before him, endured the cross (see Hebrews 12:2).
Press on, as Paul did, toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called you heavenward in Christ Jesus (Philippians 3:14).
If God has called you to it, press on through it!
Prayer: Father, help me to be persistent in my faith, to press on to win the prize for which You have called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 15: FAITH PURIFIES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 15
If you’ve ever read Macbeth by Shakespeare, you may remember the scene where Macbeth’s wife rubs her hands together over and over, trying to wash out an imaginary stain. What she was really trying to do was to “wash her hands” of a plot that she and her husband had planned to kill King Duncan. Even though the stain is imaginary, it represented something very real that she had done.
Many people have felt what Lady Macbeth felt. They’ve done something they can’t take back. No matter what they do, they can’t get clean. They can’t purify themselves. Maybe you’re in that situation yourself today, or know someone who is.
The truth is, you can’t purify yourself. You can’t wash, cleanse or save yourself from your own sins. But the good news is that Jesus can. And the way He does it is through faith.
It might seem odd that a mere thought―putting your faith in Christ―could open the floodgates of cleansing that you need. But it’s not just the thought that brings the cleansing. It’s Christ who brings the cleansing. It’s Christ, who died on the cross to take your sins upon Him so you could be clean, if you’ll just believe Him and put your faith in Him.
Some people wring their hands over what they can do to be clean. The earliest Christians made it clear that of all the things someone might try to do, the one necessary ingredient is faith.
One of the times the disciples had to address this issue head on is recorded in Acts chapter 15. Here’s a portion of how the issue came up and how the disciples responded:
“Some men came down from Judea to Antioch and were teaching the brothers: ‘Unless you are circumcised, according to the custom taught by Moses, you cannot be saved.’ This brought Paul and Barnabas into sharp dispute and debate with them. So Paul and Barnabas were appointed, along with some other believers, to go up to Jerusalem to see the apostles and elders about this question…. Then some of the believers who belonged to the party of the Pharisees stood up and said, ‘The Gentiles must be circumcised and required to obey the law of Moses.’
“The apostles and elders met to consider this question. After much discussion, Peter got up and addressed them: ‘Brothers, you know that some time ago God made a choice among you that the Gentiles might hear from my lips the message of the gospel and believe. God, who knows the heart, showed that He accepted them by giving the Holy Spirit to them, just as He did to us. He made no distinction between us and them, for He purified their hearts by faith. Now then, why do you try to test God by putting on the necks of the disciples a yoke that neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear? No! We believe it is through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved, just as they are” (Acts 15:1-2,5-11).
When it came down to it, Paul, Barnabas, Peter and the elders agreed: it is “through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved” and that God “purified their hearts by faith.”
I remember when my wife Lana was baptized. As she came up out of the water, she said that as the water dripped off her, she felt like her sins were being washed away. That’s the kind of cleansing that Lady Macbeth longed for, but never experienced, because she never put her faith in Christ.
If that’s the kind of cleansing that you’re longing for, you don’t have to wring your hands over and over. You can experience it, too, when you put your faith in Christ.
Confess your sins to Him and let Him wash you in His grace, removing your sins “as far as the east is from the west” (Psalm 103:12). As the Bible promises: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
Let Him purify you today, by faith.
Prayer: Father, I confess my sins to You and put my faith in Christ, asking that You would cleanse me, wash me and purify me from all unrighteousness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 16: FAITH SINGS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 16
When you’re down, singing is probably one of the last things you feel like doing. But it could be the very thing you need to bring you back up.
Singing is an expression of faith that you can exercise anytime, anywhere and with powerful results, as can be seen in Acts chapter 16. Even after being beaten and severely flogged earlier in the day, Paul and Silas sang at midnight in their prison cell. God heard their song and set them free.
Paul and Silas had been sharing about Christ in the city of Philippi (to which Paul later wrote his letter to the Philippians) when they ran across a slave girl who was possessed by an evil spirit by which she predicted the future. Paul cast the spirit out of her, causing her owners to realize that they were going to lose any future profits from the girl’s unusual abilities.
The owners of the girl seized Paul and Silas and brought them to the authorities, rallying the crowds against them as well, saying that they were throwing the city into an uproar. Paul and Silas were stripped, beaten and severely flogged, then put in the inner cell of the prison with their feet in the stocks.
Even after such a grueling day, listen to what the book of Acts says Paul and Silas did that night:
“About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them” (Acts 16:25).
They prayed and sang hymns to God. I can understand their praying, but it’s hard to imagine they had the strength, let alone the desire, to sing. But the fact that they were praying and singing makes me think that their prayers were more expressions of faith to God rather than frustration with God; prayers of trusting in God rather than interrogating God. Listen to what happened next as they expressed their faith in this way.
“Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all the prison doors flew open, and everybody’s chains came loose” (Acts 16:26-34).
Faith sings. And when faith sings, God responds. God not only set Paul and Silas free, but He set all the other prisoners free who were listening to them sing. If you continue reading the passage, you’ll find that God even set the jailer free, the one who had been holding them in their prison!
I was listening to a well-known, elderly pastor who talked about those times in his life when he was the most down. He said that the only thing that he had found that could consistently lift his spirits was to sing praises to God. As he sang, his spirits would lift, and he could see clearly again that God was in control of his life and circumstances.
King David did the same. As you read through many of his songs, which are recorded in the book of Psalms (which means “songs”), you’ll see that he’s often quite downcast as he begins singing, but by the end of the song, God has lifted his spirits and set him free.
Psalm 5, for instance, starts with the words, “Give ear to my words, O LORD, consider my sighing. Listen to my cry for help, my King and my God, for to You I pray” (Psalm 5:1-2).
But by the end of the song, David is singing out his praises to God, “But let all who take refuge in You be glad; let them ever sing for joy. Spread your protection over them, that those who love Your name may rejoice in You. For surely, O LORD, you bless the righteous; you surround them with your favor as with a shield” (Psalm 5:11-12).
There’s power in singing; power to lift us up and set us free, power to set those around us free, and even power to set those who are holding us in bondage free. If you need a lift today, express your faith to God with a song!
Prayer: Father, help me to sing to You, even when it may be the last thing I may want to do, so that You can set me free. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 17: FAITH EXAMINES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 17
I’ve spent the last few weeks in and out of doctors’ offices and the hospital with my Dad, trying to discover the source of some recent health problems.
Like many people, my Dad doesn’t really like doctors, hospitals or anything to do with examinations. He’d rather live with some minor discomfort than subject himself to the tests that are needed to find out what’s really wrong. Unless he’s in dire pain or distress, why rock the boat?
But as I went with him and helped him to see why the doctors wanted to do the tests they did, he consented. In the end, it turned out that my Dad just needs a shot once a month. It’s a simple solution, but if left uncorrected, could have led to his death.
For some people, reading the Bible sounds about as fun as going to see the doctor. If you’re not in dire pain or distress, why rock the boat?
Why? Because the Bible is filled with simple solutions to some of our biggest problems that, if left uncorrected, could lead to our death, both here on earth and eternally.
For people who are eager to live life to the fullest, doing a careful examination of their life from time to time is one of the smartest things they can do. They’re like the Bereans mentioned in the Bible, the people who lived in a city in Greece called Berea who did another kind of examination, but one that was just as life-changing.
When Paul went to the Bereans to tell them that Jesus was Christ, he found that they were more noble than the people of other cities he had visited:
“Now the Bereans were of more noble character than the Thessalonians, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true” (Acts 17:11).
The Bereans were eager to hear about Jesus, to find out if He really was the Savior, the Messiah, the Christ. They wanted to find out the truth, because they knew how important that truth would be to them. So they examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul was telling them was true.
The reason I like the Bereans so much is because I was one myself. Although I had gone to church all my life, I never really read the Bible on my own until my mid-20’s. I began attending a church where they had a class called the Berean Class. When I asked why they called it that, they told me the story of the Bereans in the Bible who eagerly examined the Scriptures every day to see if what they were being taught was true.
So I went out and bought a Bible filled with helpful study notes. I began to read it, and really enjoyed it! The more I read, the more eager I was to keep reading! I began to discover that all that I had been taught about the Bible was true. One day, I finally put my faith in Christ. It turned out to the be single most important turning point of my life, literally saving my life here on earth and for eternity.
Paul went to many cities and reasoned with many people from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead. “This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Christ,” he said (Acts 17:3b). As a result, many believed, both Jews and Greek, men and women.
Faith examines. If you’re curious about the Bible, about Jesus, or about any of the hundreds of other topics addressed in the Bible, from relationships to healing, from sexuality to eternal life, I’d encourage you to read the Bible for yourself. Examine it. Study it. Eagerly receive the message contained within it―and believe it.
You may find you just need a shot of B12, or you may need some serious, but life-saving surgery. Either way, when you examine the Bible like the Bereans did, you’ll find that it contains the words you need to live the fullest life possible here on earth―and in heaven, too.
Prayer: Father, help me to eagerly examine Your Word daily to find out for myself that the words are true. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 18: FAITH WORKS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 18
A friend once asked me, “Do you think God wants everyone to quit their job and go into full-time ministry?”
I thought it was a great question, because the answer can affect your view of ministry―and of work in general.
First, there’s no doubt that God wants more people to go into full-time ministry. When Jesus was going from town to town, preaching and healing people, the Bible says “when He saw the crowds, He had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then He said to His disciples, ‘The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field’ ” (Matthew 9:36-38).
Jesus saw the overwhelming needs of the world and asked His disciples to pray for more workers. Many of those disciples themselves had heard Jesus’ call to “Follow Me,” something which often required them to leave their profession, whether fishermen or tax collectors.
On the other hand, God has created, gifted and skilled each of us to to do meaningful work, whether it’s in full-time ministry or not. Work is a blessing from God, not a curse as some people think. Even before the first man sinned, the Bible says that God put him in the Garden of Eden with a specific task in mind:
“The LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it” (Genesis 2:15).
Of course, after Adam sinned, God did tell him that from then on his work would be very hard, with much sweat and toil (see Genesis 3:17-19). But the work itself was not a curse. God wanted Adam to work the land from the very beginning and to eat the fruit that came from it.
The Apostle Paul seems to have grasped both of these aspects of work. He applied himself to both jobs God had called and gifted him to do: at times doing the spiritual work of preaching and encouraging people in their relationship with Christ, and at times doing the practical work of making tents, a profession that met his own needs and the needs of those around him. In Acts chapter 18, we read that Paul went to the city of Corinth for a year and a half, staying with some fellow tentmakers there named Aquila and Priscilla:
“Paul went to see them, and because he was a tentmaker as they were, he stayed and worked with them. Every Sabbath he reasoned in the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks” (Acts 18:1-4).
Even though Paul was free to earn his living from his preaching (as he wrote later in 1 Corinthians 9), he was also free to earn his living from making tents. It wasn’t the source of his income that directed Paul’s work, but serving the Lord in all that he did. As Paul wrote later to the Christians in Ephesus, some of whom were slaves and some of whom were free:
“Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men, because you know that the Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or free” (Ephesians 6:7-8).
The truth is that everything we have comes from God. As King David said in his prayer of thanksgiving to God: “Everything comes from You, and we have given You only what comes from Your hand” (2 Chronicles 29:14).
A friend of mine, who started a business in a country that doesn’t officially allow Christian missionaries, says that his work is 100% business and 100% ministry. I think that’s a good way for all of us to view our work, whether that work is seemingly secular or religious.
Be open to God’s call to ministry. The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. But also be open to using whatever gifts and skills God has given you to meet the life needs of those around you. Whatever you do, work as if you were serving the Lord. You’ll be rewarded when you do.
Prayer: Father, help me to hear Your call on my life and to follow it with my whole heart wherever it leads. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 19: FAITH BAPTIZES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 19
Of all the things Jesus could have said in His final words to His disciples, He included baptism as one of the top three. Jesus said:
“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19-20a).
Go and make disciples… baptizing them… and teaching them to obey My commands.
What is it about baptism that gives it such a priority?
I think John the Baptist may have said it best when He said: “I baptize you with water for repentance. But after me will come one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am not fit to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire” (Matthew 3:11).
There’s something empowering that happens when a person is baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. It’s the empowerment of the Holy Spirit―the empowerment to carry out all of the rest of the things that Christ has called us to do.
When the Apostle Paul left Corinth and went to Ephesus, the Bible says:
“There he found some disciples and asked, ‘Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?
They answered, ‘No, we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.’
So Paul asked, ‘Then what baptism did you receive?’
‘John’s baptism,’ they replied.
Paul said, ‘John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance. He told the people to believe in the one coming after him, that is, in Jesus.’ On hearing this, they were baptized into the name of the Lord Jesus. When Paul placed his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they spoke in tongues and prophesied. There were about twelve men in all.” (Acts 19:1b-7).
When these Ephesian believers were baptized, God empowered them to do things that they weren’t able to do before―supernatural things that only the Holy Spirit could have done through them.
Christ calls us to be baptized, and yet there are many people who have never taken this step to be baptized. As a result, they’re missing out on many things, one of which is the supernatural ability to do things they could never have done on their own.
I know because I was one of those people. I had put my faith in Christ and repented of my sins, but I didn’t follow it up with the step of baptism. A friend asked me to consider it, so I studied the Scriptures and asked others who had been baptized about their experiences. But it took me another two years to finally get around to it.
One day I was asking Christ to do more in me and through me when I felt Him asking me if I had been obedient to the things He had already asked me to do. I had to answer, “No,” and baptism was at the top of the list.
I knew that if I wanted to ask God to do more in my life, I needed to be obedient to the things He had already asked me to do. So I was baptized. The next day, God empowered me to do supernatural things that I could never have done on my own.
Faith baptizes. Throughout the book of Acts, when people put their faith in Christ, they got baptized as well, whether it was the 3,000 who believed on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:37-41), the Ethiopian eunuch (Acts 8:34-38), the Apostle Paul (Acts 9:18-19), Cornelius and his friends and relatives (Acts 10:44-48), the jailer and his family (Acts 16:29-34), the many who believed in Corinth (Acts 18:8), or the dozen who are mentioned in today’s passage (Acts 19:1-7).
If you feel God prompting you to be baptized, I want to encourage you to do it. It’s not only part of being a Christian, it’s also part of receiving the empowerment of God to do all He wants to do in you and through you.
Prayer: Father, thank You for Your Holy Spirit and for the empowerment that comes through Him. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 20: FAITH RESURRECTS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 20
Some people think they have power when they can take a gun and shoot someone dead. But I think that someone has power if they can take someone who’s been dead and bring them back to life. Now that’s power!
You can read about at least ten resurrection stories in the Bible, stories where someone has been physically dead and then been raised back to life.
- Elijah raised the son of the widow (1 Kings 17:17-22)
- Elisha raised the son of the Shunamite woman (2 Kings 4:32-35)
- Elisha’s bones touched a dead man who was raised back to life (2 Kings 13:20-21)
- Jesus raised a widow’s son (Luke 7:11-15)
- Jesus raised Jairus’ daughter (Luke 8:49-56)
- Jesus raised Lazarus after Lazarus was dead for four days (John 11:1-44)
- God raised Jesus from the dead (Matthew 28:5-10)
- God raised many others from the dead at the same time He raised Jesus (Matthew 27:50-53).
- Peter raised Tabitha from the dead (Acts 9:38-40)
- Paul raised Eutychus from the dead (Acts 20:9-12).
Let’s take a look at this last story, since we’re looking today at Acts, chapter 20. As the Apostle Luke tells the story, Paul was speaking late into the night in the city of Troas. He was to leave early the next morning, so he stayed up all night speaking to the people:
“Seated in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he fell to the ground from the third story and was picked up dead. Paul went down, threw himself on the young man and put his arms around him. ‘Don’t be alarmed,’ he said. ‘He’s alive!’ Then he went upstairs again and broke bread and ate. After talking until daylight, he left. The people took the young man home alive and were greatly comforted” (Acts 20:9-12).
Faith resurrects. Not just a spiritual resurrection that will happen when those who believe in Christ will be raised to new life in heaven, but faith that even resurrects people who have died and then come back to life here on earth.
This doesn’t mean that just because we have faith in Christ, we can, or even should, raise everyone who dies back from the dead. God does have a plan and He’s limited all of our life spans for a reason.
But it does mean that all of us who have put our faith in Christ―and have been filled with, and empowered by, His Holy Spirit―have access to the same life-giving power that raised Jesus from the dead. Paul, who raised Eutychus from the dead, also wrote:
“But if Christ is in you, your body is dead because of sin, yet your spirit is alive because of righteousness. And if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit, who lives in you” (Romans 8:10-11).
Paul was sharing a spiritual truth, but it’s a physical truth as well. Paul knew from his own experience that the Spirit of God could literally bring people back from the dead.
If God calls you to pray for someone to be raised from the dead, by all means and by faith, do it! But God also wants you to use that power of faith to pray life back into all kinds of situations and circumstances in the world around you.
If you’re a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ and you need God to breathe life into something you’re facing today, call on the power of God’s Holy Spirit that lives within you―the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ to forgive you of your sins, do it today. You will be raised to a new life with Him here on earth, and you can be assured that you’ll be raised to an eternal life with Him in heaven.
Prayer: Father, fill me with Your Holy Spirit―the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead―and give me the faith to call on Your Spirit to pray life into everything around me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 21: FAITH DIES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 21
I remember the fear that came over me when I read the headline in our college newspaper that Congress had reinstated the draft and all men my age were to report immediately to serve in the military.
I couldn’t believe it. I’m not against serving in the military, but I had been considering studying abroad in the coming year, but I hadn’t made up my mind yet. Traveling alone, the cost of the program and other fears held me back from making a decision. But now, with the possibility that I might have to go into the service, and might even die doing it, my fears of studying abroad paled in comparison.
As I headed to the men’s showers that morning, I was still shaking my head in disbelief when someone else walked in and commented on the article. He asked if I noticed the date on the paper. It was April 1st―April Fool’s Day here in the U.S. The whole article was a hoax.
Even though my heart rate began to slow down, my mind was just getting started. Having faced the possibility of death, I felt now that I was given a new shot at life. I decided that day to study abroad and the following year I did.
Facing death has a way of waking us up and bringing us back to life. Jesus said it like this:
“For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for Me will find it” (Matthew 16:25).
The Apostle Paul had an abundant life, in large part, I believe, because he was willing to lose his life at any moment. Although he certainly didn’t have a death wish, he wasn’t afraid to die for Christ, either.
In Acts 21, Paul was warned by men and by the Holy Spirit that if he continued on his journey to the city of Jerusalem, he would be bound in chains when he got there. Paul’s friends pleaded with him not to go to Jerusalem, but Paul replied:
“Why are you weeping and breaking my heart? I am ready not only to be bound, but also to die in Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus” (Acts 21:13).
Paul went on to Jerusalem, and was indeed bound and put into prison. The rest of the book of Acts documents his travels from prison to prison as his case was appealed to higher and higher authorities all the way to Caesar in Rome. Although the book of Acts ends before the end of Paul’s life, church tradition tells us that Paul was eventually beheaded in Rome for his faith.
There are times when God calls people to use their faith to raise the dead, as Paul had just done for Eutycus in Acts 20. But there are also times when God calls people to use their faith to be ready to die, as Paul was ready in Acts 21. But how can the same faith lead to two such different results? Paul tell us in Romans 14:7-8:
“For none of us lives to himself alone and none of us dies to himself alone. If we live, we live to the Lord; and if we die, we die to the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord” (Romans 14:7-8).
It was Paul’s willingness to die for Christ that allowed him to live for Christ so boldly. Some thought he was foolish to go to Jerusalem when he was warned about what awaited him there. But as another missionary named James Elliot wrote: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose.”
God has many things He wants to do for you by faith. But God also has many things He wants to do through you by faith―for others.
How would it change your life if you were truly willing to die for Christ? If you truly no longer feared death? According to the Apostle Paul, the missionary Jim Elliot, and even Jesus Christ Himself, it’s only when you’re ready to lose your life for Christ that you will truly find it.
Prayer: Father, help me to be ready to die for Christ so that I can truly live for Him. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 22: FAITH TESTIFIES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 22
Has God touched your life in a special way? If so, that’s part of your testimony―and God loves it when you testify to others about what He has done for you.
But I also know it can be hard to share your testimony. When I first put my faith in Christ, I was asked to share my testimony with my singles class at church. “No way,” I thought! It wasn’t that I didn’t want to talk about what God had done, but I didn’t want to talk about what I had done. I was way too embarrassed to talk about the sin from which God had delivered me.
Yet over the years, as I’ve shared my testimony with more and more people, I’ve seen God give hope, encouragement and eternal life to others. Some people who hear my story are encouraged because they’ve struggled with some of the same things with which I’ve struggled. Others are encouraged because they realize that the God who could deliver me from the depths of my sin can deliver them from the depths of theirs.
The Apostle Paul had a lot of good reasons not to share his testimony with others. Not only did he have to share some difficult things about himself personally, but he also faced the real possibility of being killed every time he shared it. While Paul could have been afraid for his life, he wasn’t afraid to testify about what Christ had done for him. As a result, he brought encouragement and eternal life to many.
When Paul’s friends warned him not to go to Jerusalem because he might be bound and possibly killed, Paul went anyway, regardless of the outcome to his own life. Starting with the very first day he was bound in Jerusalem, look at how many times Paul was able to share his testimony:
- Paul testified to the crowd in Jerusalem (Acts 22:1-21),
- he testified to the chief priests and religious leaders in Jerusalem (Acts 23:1-10),
- he testified to Governor Felix in Caesarea (Acts 24:1-26),
- he testified to Governor Festus and King Agrippa in Caesarea (Acts 26:1-32),
- and he testified to the people in Rome while awaiting to testify to Caesar (Acts 28:28-31).
Paul could have been killed for his testimony, but he wanted to use every opportunity he could to share this new life he had found with others.
One of the things that helped me overcome the fear of sharing my testimony was to stand in the middle of a cemetery and think about what it meant from an eternal perspective. In the end, what did it matter if I lost my pride―or even my life―by sharing my testimony? If God could use it to do for others what He had done for me, it would be worth it.
That perspective has given me a tremendous freedom to be able to share my testimony when God wants me to share it. I’m still careful and prayerful about it, but my focus now is more on how it will affect those who hear it than on how it will affect me. Even Jesus spoke about the importance of timing when He told His disciples, “I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear” (John 16:12). We still need to be in tune with what our listeners need to hear.
But whatever the timing, know that the words of your testimony are like gold to God and that they have tremendous power. The Bible says:
“They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony; they did not love their lives so much as to shrink from death” (Revelation 12:11).
It’s by the blood of the Lamb―Jesus―and by the word of your testimony that you can overcome Satan. When you share your testimony, you can give hope, comfort peace, strength, encouragement and life to those who are losing theirs.
What has God done for you that could bring hope and eternal life to others? Reread Paul’s simple testimony in Acts 22, then consider sharing your testimony with others, too.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to share my testimony with others. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 23: FAITH KEEPS A CLEAR CONSCIENCE (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 23
A man who once walked across the entire United States said that the hardest thing about his walk wasn’t the mountains, or the extreme weather, or any of the things I would have expected. He said the hardest part of the walk was the sand in his shoes.
The little grains of sand didn’t seem like a big deal at first, but over time, the sand would build up and lead to blisters, infections and ongoing pain.
It can sometimes be the same way with sin. It may not be the big sins that threaten to undo you, but the little ones―a lie here or there, a lustful thought towards a co-worker, a glance from time to time at pornography. Because of God’s grace, He doesn’t blast at every wrong turn. But over time, those “little” sins build up and lead to a bigger problem.
The man who walked across America said that he learned to regularly empty out the sand from his shoes before it became a problem. Today, you may find that your conscience is being pricked about some “little” sins in your life that God wants you to give up. If so, I’d like to encourage you to follow those promptings, take off your shoes, and empty out the sand before it leads to a bigger problem.
The Apostle Paul knew the value of keeping a clear conscience. He would regularly do whatever it took to ensure that he was honoring God and others with his thoughts and actions. And the payoff was huge.
In Acts 23, when Paul was arrested and brought before the highest religious leaders in Jerusalem, Paul was asked to speak on his own behalf. He began by saying this:
“My brothers, I have fulfilled my duty to God in all good conscience to this day” (Acts 23:1b).
Even though the charges against Paul could have cost him his life, his conscience was clear. He had gone out of his way when he first entered Jerusalem to enter into the strict purification rites of the Jewish people. He wanted to honor both God and those who lived in that city (see Acts 22:17-26).
So when the accusations came, Paul was able to say with full confidence that his conscience was clear. By the end of Paul’s testimony, at the end of chapter 23, the commander overseeing Paul’s case concluded that there was “no charge against him that deserved death or imprisonment” (Acts 23:29b). Paul survived another day and went on to minister for many more years.
Your faith can help you in so many ways, one of which is to keep your conscience clear.
I’ve heard it said that “a clear conscience makes a soft pillow.” God gave you a conscience for a reason: not to make you feel guilty, but to keep you headed in the right direction. Like the sensitive nerve endings on your fingertips that keep you from burning your hand on a hot stove, your conscience serves to warn you from burning yourself in other ways. Not only will you sleep better with a clear conscience, but it can also save your life, your marriage, your job, your reputation, your ministry and your good witness.
As the Apostle Peter said, “Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us” (1 Peter 2:12).
Faith keeps a clear conscience. Is there sand building up in your shoes today? Take time to empty them out.
If you’ve sinned, confess it to God and then to a trusted friend. If you’re caught in some lies, come clean today by telling the truth. If you’ve started a habit that’s taking you where neither you nor God want you to go, give it up today. If you’re in a relationship that’s crossing lines that should never be crossed, break it off now before it destroys you and those around you.
May we all get to the point where we can say like Paul, “My brothers, I have fulfilled my duty to God in all good conscience to this day” (Acts 23:1b).
Prayer: Father, help me to empty my shoes of the sands of sin in my life before they bring me down completely. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 24: FAITH FLEES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 24
I often think of someone who is filled with faith as someone who can tough out any situation, who can stand firm in the face of adversity, who never walks away from a fight when their faith is at stake. But as I read through the book of Acts, and other books in the Bible, I see that there are times when it’s simple wisdom to walk away―or to run―when God wants to keep you from a dangerous situation.
For all the times when the Apostle Paul stood his ground, took a beating, and faced death, there were other times when he slipped away from those who intended to harm him.
When Paul first put his faith in Christ on the road to Damascus, the Jews there conspired to kill him. But when Paul learned of their plan, the believers in Damascus “took him by night and lowered him in a basket through an opening in the wall” (Acts 9:25).
Paul had to flee again when he came to Jerusalem. More than forty men had taken an oath not to eat or drink until they had killed Paul. When the son of Paul’s sister heard about the plot, he warned Paul. Paul sent the young man to the commander of the centurions who immediately gave these orders:
“Get ready a detachment of two hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen and two hundred spearmen to go to Caesarea at nine tonight. Provide mounts for Paul so that he may be taken safely to Governor Felix” (Acts 23:23b-24).
In cases like these, Paul fled for his life. Because he did, God was able to use him for many more years to testify to kings, governors and even us today who still read letters that he wrote after he fled.
There are even times when Jesus fled from those who meant Him harm. One day, when Jesus had so angered the Pharisees in Jerusalem, they picked up stones in order to stone Him to death. But John tells us that “Jesus hid Himself, slipping away from the temple grounds” (John 8:59b).
On another occasion, Jesus’ words so infuriated the people in the synagogue that Luke tells us, “They got up, drove Him out of the town, and took Him to the brow of the hill on which the town was built, in order to throw him down the cliff. But He walked right through the crowd and went on his way” (Luke 4:29-30).
While there may be times when your faith will help you to go to the cross like Jesus did (see 1 Peter 2:23), or face beatings and imprisonment like Paul often did, there may be other times when your faith will help you to flee from situations that are potentially dangerous, just like both Paul and Jesus did.
The key is to walk so in tune with God that you know when to stand and when to run. There’s nothing disgraceful about saving your life when God doesn’t want you to die. There’s nothing cowardly about fleeing from a potentially harmful situation when God doesn’t want you to be harmed. Walking away, slipping through the crowd or fleeing for your life could be the most faith-filled thing you could do.
There may be times when it’s more productive to walk away quietly from your boss who is treating you in a demeaning way, or to slip away for a time from an angry spouse while they take time to cool down, or to disengage from a conversation with someone that may be more destructive than constructive.
The ultimate goal in knowing what to do in situations like these is not to protect your pride or to defend things in which you strongly believe, but to follow God at every turn.
That’s why it’s so important to stay close to God, to cultivate your prayer life and to deepen your relationship with God and His Word. By doing so, God can more clearly point you in the direction He wants you to go, whether it’s to stand firm or to flee. Whatever He calls you to do, know that He’ll give you the faith to do it.
Prayer: Father, help me to stay so close to You that I can know which way to go every step of the way. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 25: FAITH APPEALS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 25
Some people think that when Christians are challenged, they should roll over and play dead―to “turn the other cheek” at all times. Oftentimes that’s exactly what we’re supposed to do as a way of submitting to one another and honoring those in authority over us.
But then there are other times when we, as followers of Christ, are called to defend ourselves, to take authority over wrongs that have been done to us, and to appeal to higher authorities. These, too, are biblical teachings.
Throughout the book of Acts, Paul takes care to walk through this maze of when to stand firm and when to run, when to submit to others and when to defend himself against them. In Acts chapter 25, Paul takes his boldest stand against the false accusations that were made against him: he appeals to Caesar. Paul says this to Governor Festus who was hearing his case:
“I have not done any wrong to the Jews, as you yourself know very well. If, however, I am guilty of doing anything deserving death, I do not refuse to die. But if the charges brought against me by these Jews are not true, no one has the right to hand me over to them. I appeal to Caesar!” (Acts 25:10-11).
Appealing to Caesar was no small deal. Caesar was the king, the highest authority in the entire Roman Empire, and his decision would be final―and possibly fatal. The appeal would be costly in terms of time and travel to Rome. In Paul’s case, the trip itself was almost fatal, and Paul was under house arrest in Rome for at least two years waiting for Caesar to hear his case.
But there was nothing ungodly nor disgraceful about Paul’s appeal. He knew he was innocent and he knew God wanted him to continue to testify about Christ in Rome. At the very beginning of Paul’s trials back in Jerusalem, the Lord stood near to Paul one night and said, “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome.” While it took great courage to appeal to Caesar and be sent to Rome, he was also simply following the clear command of the Lord.
When Paul appealed, Governor Festus conferred with his council and declared: “You have appealed to Caesar. To Caesar you will go!” (Acts 25:12).
Here in the U.S., an appeal is simply another step in the legal process. It’s not a sign of defying authority, but a way of following the steps that the authorities have set up, realizing that different people come to different conclusions, even based on the same evidence.
I’m amazed at the number of cases that are decided in the U.S. Supreme Court by a 5 to 4 decision. These are the some of the brightest and most highly trained people in the country regarding the law, yet they still reach completely opposite conclusions. While it could make some people cynical of the process, it makes me thankful for it, that our country has made a way to give us as many chances as possible to prove our innocence, or for someone else to prove our guilt.
There are times when your faith in Christ will compel you to submit to a decision that’s wrong, regardless of whether you simply believe it is wrong or whether it’s in fact wrong. It can be simple prudence and godliness to submit to someone’s decision, whether it’s a judge, a boss, a spouse, a parent or a friend.
But there are other times when your faith in Christ will compel you to appeal a wrongful decision, to respectfully call upon someone else to step in and hear your case.
In the end, God Himself is the One who will ultimately decide your case. So the important thing is to stay as close to Him as possible and follow His wisdom for whether He wants you to pursue or drop any appeal here on earth. Maybe He’ll say to you what He said to Paul: “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome” (Acts 23:11).
Prayer: Father, help me to hear from You if there’s ever a time You want me to appeal a decision that’s been made. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 26: FAITH MODELS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 26
The great evangelist H.A. Ironside was interrupted one time by the shouts of an atheist. The atheist yelled, “There is no God! Jesus is a myth!” and finally, “I challenge you to a debate!”
Ironside responded, “I accept your challenge, sir! But on one condition. When you come, bring with you ten men and women whose lives have been changed for the better by the message of atheism. Bring former prostitutes and criminals whose lives have been changed, who are now moral and responsible individuals. Bring outcasts who had no hope and have them tell us how becoming atheists has lifted them out of the pit!
“And sir,” he concluded, “if you can find ten such men and woman, I will be happy to debate you. And when I come, I will gladly bring with me two hundred men and women from this very city whose lives have been transformed in just those ways by the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ.”
Ironside knew that atheism doesn’t change lives. Jesus changes lives.
If you’re a Christian, your testimony is like gold to God. The story of how you came to Christ, how He forgave you of your sins and how He gave you the assurance that you will live with Him forever will speak volumes to those around you.
You may not consider yourself a great evangelist. You may not feel like there’s much in your life that others would want to emulate. But the truth is that when others see your changed life, it can lead them to put their faith in Christ, too.
The Apostle Paul knew the power of a testimony. He shared it on many occasions, one of which is in Acts chapter 26 when he was on trial in front of Governor Festus and King Agrippa. After hearing Paul’s story, King Agrippa said to Paul,
“Do you think that in such a short time you can persuade me to be a Christian?”
Paul replied, “Short time or long―I pray God that not only you but all who are listening to me today may become what I am, except for these chains.” (Acts 26:28-29).
Paul didn’t claim to be perfect. But he did claim to be changed. He claimed to have had an encounter with the Risen Christ that transformed his life and then he prayed that all who were listening to him would become what he was.
Faith models. Just like a fashion model wears cool clothes to show others what their life might become like if they put on the same thing, a Christian model is one who shows others what their life might become if they put their faith in Christ.
I had a friend who was living an immoral lifestyle. I knew that if he kept it up, it could kill him. I knew because I had lived a similar life, until I put my faith in Christ. I prayed with him one day that he would become what I had become, a Christian. It wasn’t that I thought I was perfect. I wanted him to follow me, because I followed Christ.
Paul called others to follow his lead when he said in 1 Corinthians, “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1). It’s not prideful to ask people to become what you’ve become. It’s simply faithful.
An athlete once told his coach he didn’t want to be a role model. His coach said, “It’s not a question of whether you want to be a role model or not. You’re already a role model. The question is whether you’ll be a good one or a bad one.”
You’re already a role model, too, whether you’re a Christian or not. If you’re a Christian, God wants you to model your faith, to let others see it in your life, to let them hear it from your lips―that Christ has truly forgiven you, changed you and given you the assurance that you’ll live with Him forever. If you’re not a Christian, my prayer for you is the same as Paul’s, “that not only you but all who are listening to me today may become what I am…”
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to model my life in a way that leads others to Christ. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 27: FAITH WARNS (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 27
Is there anyone in your life who could use a good warning right about now? Someone who is straying from God’s path and needs help finding their way back? Or someone who is headed for danger―and even trying to take you along?
If so, I want to encourage you today to give them a godly warning about what lies ahead. As hard as it may be, know that even if they don’t listen to you right now, your warning may help them to listen closer in the future.
I’m sure it took a lot of faith for the Apostle Paul to warn those around him of the danger facing them in Acts chapter 27. After all, Paul was hardly in a position of authority over any of them, being himself a prisoner on board a ship bound for Rome. Yet after his first warning proved to be true, even those who had authority over Paul began to regard his advice as if their lives depended on it―because it did!
Take a look at the first warning Paul offered when he foresaw the winter storms which loomed ahead:
“ ‘Men, I can see that our voyage is going to be disastrous and bring great loss to ship and cargo, and to our own lives also.’ But the centurion, instead of listening to what Paul said, followed the advice of the pilot and of the owner of the ship. Since the harbor was unsuitable to winter in, the majority decided that we should sail on, hoping to reach Phoenix and winter there” (Acts 27:9-12a).
So much for Paul’s warning! But it wasn’t wasted. When the wind whipped up with hurricane force and the crew had to let the storm drive them along in a direction they hadn’t planned to go, the crew eventually began to listen to Paul. He stood up before them and said:
“ ‘Men, you should have taken my advice not to sail from Crete; then you would have spared yourselves this damage and loss. But now I urge you to keep up your courage, because not one of you will be lost; only the ship will be destroyed. Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as he told me. Nevertheless, we must run aground on some island’ ” (Acts 27:21-26).
From that point on, the crew listened to everything Paul said. When some men tried to escape in a lifeboat, Paul warned the centurion that they must stay with the ship or be lost. The centurion brought them back. When all aboard had not eaten for fourteen days, Paul encouraged them to finally eat some food as they were about to be saved, but would need the remaining food to survive.
In the end, their ship ran aground on a remote island and was blasted apart by the pounding waves. But just as Paul had foretold, all 276 of the men on board survived.
I would love to be able to speak to others with the confidence which came from the faith that Paul had when he said, “So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as he told me.” I pray for that kind of faith for myself, and I want to encourage you to pray for it for yourself as well.
Faith warns. Even when your warnings may not be heeded the first time, they might still be necessary to help others believe in what you say the next time…and the next…and the next. If there’s someone in your life who needs a good warning today, ask God if you’re the one to give it to them.
If there’s someone in your life who is headed in the wrong direction, or even to hell, ask God to give you the faith to point them in the right direction today.
Prayer: Father, help me to have the faith to give godly warnings to those who need it today. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
LESSON 28: FAITH SUPPLIES (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Acts 28
One of the natural responses that often bursts forth when someone’s faith increases is the desire to give. Those who are touched by a message of faith often respond by giving back to those who touched them.
When I first put my faith in Christ, I was so moved that I instinctively began to support the church where I was saved. As I began to hear about missionaries who were taking the same message that touched me to others throughout the world, my natural response was to give. I wanted everyone to experience the same thing that I had experienced.
I still do. It’s not that I feel that I have to give. It’s simply the response of my heart to what God is doing in my life. I also believe that the increased desire to give comes from my increased trust in God; that He will continue to supply all of my needs, even as He uses me to help to supply the needs of others.
Those who were touched by the ministry of the Apostle Paul on the island of Malta had a similar response of giving.
Paul, along with his shipmates, had been shipwrecked on the island. The islanders showed unusual kindness to Paul and the others by building a fire for them because it was raining and cold. When a viper bit Paul on the hand as he threw some brushwood into the fire, the islanders thought Paul must have been guilty of a deadly crime: even though he had escaped from the shipwreck, they thought he would now die from the snakebite. When Paul didn’t die, the islanders changed their minds and thought he was a god!
Even though Paul wasn’t a god, God still had work to do through Paul. Paul and the others were invited into the home of Publius, a chief official of the island. When Paul found out that Publius’ father was sick in bed with fever and dysentery, Paul went to see him, “…and after prayer, placed his hands on him and healed him. When this had happened, the rest of the sick on the island came and were cured” (Acts 28:8-9).
While Paul’s faith in Christ allowed him to do many miracles in Jesus’ name, look at the response of faith that took place among the islanders who were touched by these miracles. The very next sentence of the story says:
“They honored us in many ways and when we were ready to sail, they furnished us with the supplies we needed” (Acts 28:10).
Faith supplies. When God works in powerful ways, people naturally want to respond in kind. They want to give freely to others as others have given freely to them.
In this way, Paul and the crew were able to go onto the next leg of their journey to Rome, where God had told Paul he would have to testify before Caesar. God had provided everything Paul needed to get as far as Malta. When the supplies ran out, God provided still more through those believers who had just been touched by God through Paul’s ministry.
Supplying the needs of others is a natural response of faith.
Have you been touched in a special way through someone’s ministry? Maybe someone in your local church, which nourishes you and perhaps your family? Maybe someone who has stopped by to pray for you? Maybe someone who has sent you a special gift or card or email or text message when you needed it? Maybe a ministry on the TV, or radio, or even this one on the Internet, that God has used in a special way to reach out to you to help you to increase your faith?
If so―and if God is causing your faith to well up within you with the desire to give―I encourage you to respond in faith and give. It’s a way to not only help that person or that ministry on the next leg of their journey, it’s a way to let them know that your heart is going with them as well. As Jesus said, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Luke 12:34).
Prayer: Father, show me how to respond in faith to those who have touched my life for You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
CONCLUSION: THE POWER OF FAITH (Back to Table of Contents)

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Scripture Reading: Matthew 17:20
At the end of the book of Acts, you’ll see that Paul finally made it to Rome. He stayed there for two years awaiting his trial before Caesar, living in his own rented house under house arrest. He welcomed all who came to see him, preaching boldly about the kingdom of God and teaching about Christ.
And that’s where the book of Acts ends.
In some ways, it seems like the book ends in mid sentence―like there’s a page or two still missing. What happened to Paul? Did he ever make it to his trial? Was he ever able to testify before Caesar?
Even though the Bible doesn’t record what happened next, I believe that Paul did make it to his trial and that he did get to testify before Caesar. Why? Because the same God who brought Paul this far had also told Paul that he would one day testify in Rome. Back in Acts 23, when Paul was first arrested in Jerusalem and when many were plotting to kill him, God said to Paul:
“Take courage! As you have testified about Me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome” (Acts 23:11).
Then again in Acts 27, when Paul’s shipmates were about to give up hope that they would ever be saved from the storm, an angel of God spoke to Paul again, as Paul told the men:
“Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me” (Acts 27:23-25).
That’s the kind of faith I’ve been praying for myself and for you as well all throughout this study, the kind of faith that says, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.” Because I know, like Paul knew, and like Christ knew, that when you have faith in Christ, nothing will be impossible for you.
In the mid-1900’s, there was a woman who did all kinds of miracles in the name of Christ, seeing people saved, healed and delivered from various addictions. When asked what kind of gift God had given to her to be able to do so many things, she said she didn’t have the gift of evangelism, or healing or prayer. She said she had the gift of faith. And with faith, all kinds of things are possible.
We’ve seen through the book of Acts how faith helped these earliest of believers to do all kinds of things. We’ve seen that faith waits, acts, heals, saves, obeys, fills, speaks, explains, surrenders, gives, includes, prays, fasts, persists, purifies, sings, examines, works, baptizes, resurrects, dies, testifies, keeps a clear conscience, appeals, models, warns and supplies. And I have a feeling that’s just the beginning.
The truth is the book of Acts really is unfinished. Jesus is still alive. He’s still working through people today. And He still wants to work through you. You may be surprised at what you can do when you put your faith in Him. For all the incredible things that Jesus did, here’s what He said you could do if you had faith in Him:
“I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father” (John 14:11-12).
As we finish this study together, my prayer is that the following words of Christ would echo in your ears in the days ahead, words that will give you the faith to do all that Christ still wants you to do:
“I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you” (Matthew 17:20).
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to move mountains and more. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
SMALL GROUP STUDY GUIDE FOR ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH (Back to Table of Contents)

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The following questions can be used for personal reflection, group discussion, or a combination of the two. Each set of questions corresponds directly to each of the thirty lessons contained in this book, counting the Introduction and Conclusion.
For groups wanting a shorter study, with more time for personal reflection and preparation between group discussions, group members could study five lessons on their own each week, then come together and discuss the highlights of those lessons, for a total of six weeks.
For groups wanting a longer study with less study and preparation time during the week, they may choose instead to study just two, three, or four lessons per week on their own, then come together and discuss those lessons over a period of seven, ten, or fifteen weeks.
For groups wanting to read and discuss each lesson together, without needing to do any study or preparation on their own during the week, they could complete this study together in thirty weeks.
Introduction
1. What did Mrs. Incredible mean when she said, “Doubt is a luxury we can’t afford anymore”? Can you think of any situations where this might be true in your life?
2. From where did Paul get his confidence to say, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me”? And from where can you get the same confidence?
Lesson 1 – Faith Waits
1. Which is harder for you: to muster up the faith to do something, or to muster up the faith to wait for something? How might God want to increase your faith in either area?
2. In your own words, what’s the difference between waiting idly and waiting expectantly? How could you apply these ideas to something you’re facing in life right now?
Lesson 2 – Faith Acts
1. How can exercising your faith make it grow stronger?
2. What evidence did the Apostle Peter give to show that he was really trying to exercise his faith? What were some of the end results of his spiritual workouts?
Lesson 3 – Faith Heals
1. Whose faith seemed to be at work in the healing of the crippled man at the temple? On whose name did they call for the healing?
2. Have you ever prayed for someone’s healing at the time they asked for it, right there in front of them, or on the phone with them, or in an email to them? If not, are you willing to try it?
Lesson 4 – Faith Saves
1. Why did Jesus tell the woman who wiped His feet with her tears, “your faith has saved you”? And from what, exactly, had she been saved?
2. What is so unique about Jesus that caused Peter and John to say, “Salvation comes from no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved”? Why can’t we call out to some other religious leader to save us?
3. If you’ve never asked Jesus to save you, are you ready yet to put your faith in Him?
Lesson 5 – Faith Obeys
1. How did Peter and John display their faith when told to stop preaching in the name of Jesus? Who did they decide to obey, even when faced with death?
2. What words did Jesus use as the ultimate model of a faith that is willing to obey God regardless of the cost? Is there something in your life that God might be wanting you to step out in faith and obey?
Lesson 6 – Faith Fills
1. Stephen was described as a man who was “full of faith.” What are some ways you can become “faith full,” too?
2. What role did C.S. Lewis’ friends play in helping him move from simply believing in God in general, to putting his faith in Christ specifically? How can other believers help you to increase your faith in Christ as well?
Lesson 7 – Faith Speaks
1. Why did Jesus say we wouldn’t have to be afraid to speak when He calls us to speak (see Matthew 10:26-28)? How did Stephen put this into practice?
2. Stephen’s words from 2,000 years ago are still echoing throughout the centuries, thanks to what biblical principle (see Isaiah 55:11)? How can that principle encourage you to speak the words God has given you?
Lesson 8 – Faith Explains
1. Why do you think the Ethiopian eunuch couldn’t understand the scriptures he was reading by himself? Was he just not smart enough, or was there some other reason?
2. How can you take encouragement to explain the Scriptures to others based on the eunuch’s response to Philip?
Lesson 9 – Faith Surrenders
1. Why are people asked to raise their hands when they surrender? And why might God want you raise your hands when surrendering to His will?
2. What can keep people from surrendering completely to God’s will? Is there anything holding you back from surrendering completely to Him as well?
Lesson 10 – Faith Gives
1. Why do you think God took notice of Cornelius’ gifts? What did God do for Cornelius in response?
2. Why would an increasing faith and trust in God also lead to an increasing willingness to give? Are there needs around you that God might want to meet through your prayers and gifts?
Lesson 11 – Faith Includes
1. Why did it take faith―and a vision from God―for Peter to be willing to go to Cornelius’ house? Why might Acts 4:12 sound “exclusive” to some people, while to others it sounds supremely “inclusive”?
2. What is it about Jesus that makes Him unique among all other religious leaders, past or present? On whose shoulders does the choice lie whether you’re included or excluded–saved or unsaved–in Christ’s kingdom?
3. If you’ve never made the choice to put your faith and trust in Christ, are you ready yet?
Lesson 12 – Faith Prays
1. What’s the difference between praying in fear and praying in faith, even though both can certainly be done “in earnest”? What attitudes and actions might accompany your prayers if you were to pray in faith (like carrying an umbrella when praying for rain!)?
2. What might be different in your own prayers if you were to pray in faith rather than praying in fear?
Lesson 13 – Faith Fasts
1. Why might fasting help to intensify, deepen, or accelerate your prayers―and the answers that come from those prayers?
2. What role has fasting played in your own prayer life? What role would you like it to play?
Lesson 14 – Faith Persists
1. What seemed to motivate Paul and Barnabas to persist in their faith, even in the face of tremendous opposition? How might that same thing motivate you?
2. Is there a specific area in your life where you’re tempted to throw in the towel? How can the words of Jesus (in Hebrews 12:2) and of Paul (in Philippians 3:14) encourage you to press on in your faith?
Lesson 15 – Faith Purifies
1. Why is it that all of our hand-wringing can’t wash away our own sin? Why is it that putting our faith and trust in Christ can do it?
2. Although Christ has already died for our sins, what do we need to do in order to “purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9)? Is there anything you’d like to confess to God today?
Lesson 16 – Faith Sings
1. How might singing to God have influenced Paul and Silas’ prayers to God? How might singing to God influence your prayers to Him?
2. Have you ever experienced a change of heart through singing, as King David seems to have experienced in Psalm 5? Why not try singing to God today?
Lesson 17 – Faith Examines
1. What were the Bereans looking for in the Scriptures as Paul spoke to them about Jesus? While “examining the Scriptures” for some could be an indication of their lack of faith, why did it seem to be a demonstration of faith on the part of the Bereans?
2. Do you have questions about Jesus that you’d like to have answered more fully? How could examining the Scriptures help you to discover your answers?
Lesson 18 – Faith Works
1. What role did making tents seem to play in Paul’s commitment to preaching the gospel? How does secular work compare to ministry work in your own mind?
2. Why did Jesus tell His disciples to “Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into His harvest field”? How do you feel God might want you to balance―or shift the balance―of secular work and ministry work in your own life?
Lesson 19 – Faith Baptizes
1. What did Paul say was the difference between John’s baptism and Jesus’ baptism? In what ways did God change and empower the twelve men who Paul baptized that day?
2. What level of importance do you place on baptism when sharing the good news of Christ? In light of Jesus’ “great commission” to His disciples, and the example of the various stories cited throughout the book of Acts, what what level of importance does God seem to place on baptism?
3. Have you been baptized? And if not, would you like to be?
Lesson 20 – Faith Resurrects
1. Why might Paul say so confidently in Romans 8:10-11 that the Spirit of God can give life to our mortal bodies? If God’s Spirit can resurrect those who have physically died, what other kinds of “resurrections” could perform?
2. Is there any area of your life where you could use a dose of God’s resurrection power? How can Paul’s experience of praying for Eutychus encourage you to pray for your situation?
Lesson 21 – Faith Dies
1. Is it contradictory to say that faith in Christ can both raise people from the dead, as well as lead people to their deaths? How can such different results come from the same faith?
2. How does Paul reconcile these two outcomes, according to his words in Romans 14:7-8? As difficult as it may be to answer, are you ready―as Paul was ready―to die for the name of the Lord Jesus?
Lesson 22 – Faith Testifies
1. What could have happened, and did happen many times, when Paul shared his testimony with others? Why didn’t he stop?
2. When considering sharing your testimony, what might be the response of some of the listeners, both positive and negative? What role can “timing” and “audience” play in determining when to share your testimony?
Lesson 23 – Faith Keeps A Clear Conscience
1. How can sand in your shoes eventually turn into a big problem? What other kinds of things can creep into our lives, perhaps even in relatively harmless ways at first, but could eventually turn into big problems?
2. In what ways can having a clear conscience help you in your life? Are there any areas where sand is getting in your shoes, and it’s time to dump it out?
Lesson 24 – Faith Flees
1. While faith often calls us to take a stand for what we believe, what are some examples from today’s lesson that suggest that it can sometimes be just as faith-full to flee a dangerous situation?
2. Have you ever had to exercise your faith to flee from a fight, rather than stand up to it? How did you know which way God wanted you to go?
Lesson 25 – Faith Appeals
1. Was Paul defying authority, or exercising his authority, by appealing to Caesar? What did Paul say in his speech in Acts 25:10-11 regarding his willingness to submit to the decision? If you’re willing to appeal, are you also willing to submit to the decision?
2. How did God say He would use this appeal process for His glory in Acts 23:11? How could God use an appeal for justice in your life?
Lesson 26 – Faith Models
1. While Paul could have sounded prideful by hoping that King Agrippa would become like him, what was at the heart of what Paul said? How can asking others to follow your lead be helpful to them, as Paul asked in 1 Corinthians 11:1?
2. How does your life model what Christ has done for you? How can your words help others to understand the changes that have taken place within you?
Lesson 27 – Faith Warns
1. How did Paul’s first warning to his shipmates help him when he had to give them a second warning, even though they ignored the first? How can your warnings to others help them eventually, even if they ignore your warnings at first?
2. How was Paul able to have such a strong faith in God that things would happen just as God had said? Are there people in your life who could use a good warning right now, based on what you know about God’s will and their lives?
Lesson 28 – Faith Supplies
1. Why were the people of Malta willing to supply Paul’s needs as Paul continued on his way? In what ways had Paul invested in their lives prior to this point?
2. Have you been touched in a special way through someone’s life or ministry? In what ways might you want to offer your thanks to them and help to supply their needs for the future?
Conclusion – The Power of Faith
1. Although the book of Acts doesn’t recorded what eventually happened to Paul, what do you think happened to him? Do you think he made it to Rome to testify before Caesar?
2. What are a few of the things that faith helped the earliest believers do, as recorded in the book of Acts? What did Jesus say would be impossible for us, if we put our faith in Him today?
3. In what ways has your faith grown during the course of this study?

Thanks for reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
Conclusion: The Power of Faith

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
Scripture Reading: Matthew 17:20
At the end of the book of Acts, you’ll see that Paul finally made it to Rome. He stayed there for two years awaiting his trial before Caesar, living in his own rented house under house arrest. He welcomed all who came to see him, preaching boldly about the kingdom of God and teaching about Christ.
And that’s where the book of Acts ends.
In some ways, it seems like the book ends in mid sentence―like there’s a page or two still missing. What happened to Paul? Did he ever make it to his trial? Was he ever able to testify before Caesar?
Even though the Bible doesn’t record what happened next, I believe that Paul did make it to his trial and that he did get to testify before Caesar. Why? Because the same God who brought Paul this far had also told Paul that he would one day testify in Rome. Back in Acts 23, when Paul was first arrested in Jerusalem and when many were plotting to kill him, God said to Paul:
“Take courage! As you have testified about Me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome” (Acts 23:11).
Then again in Acts 27, when Paul’s shipmates were about to give up hope that they would ever be saved from the storm, an angel of God spoke to Paul again, as Paul told the men:
“Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me” (Acts 27:23-25).
That’s the kind of faith I’ve been praying for myself and for you as well all throughout this study, the kind of faith that says, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.” Because I know, like Paul knew, and like Christ knew, that when you have faith in Christ, nothing will be impossible for you.
In the mid-1900’s, there was a woman who did all kinds of miracles in the name of Christ, seeing people saved, healed and delivered from various addictions. When asked what kind of gift God had given to her to be able to do so many things, she said she didn’t have the gift of evangelism, or healing or prayer. She said she had the gift of faith. And with faith, all kinds of things are possible.
We’ve seen through the book of Acts how faith helped these earliest of believers to do all kinds of things. We’ve seen that faith waits, acts, heals, saves, obeys, fills, speaks, explains, surrenders, gives, includes, prays, fasts, persists, purifies, sings, examines, works, baptizes, resurrects, dies, testifies, keeps a clear conscience, appeals, models, warns and supplies. And I have a feeling that’s just the beginning.
The truth is the book of Acts really is unfinished. Jesus is still alive. He’s still working through people today. And He still wants to work through you. You may be surprised at what you can do when you put your faith in Him. For all the incredible things that Jesus did, here’s what He said you could do if you had faith in Him:
“I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father” (John 14:11-12).
As we finish this study together, my prayer is that the following words of Christ would echo in your ears in the days ahead, words that will give you the faith to do all that Christ still wants you to do:
“I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you” (Matthew 17:20).
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to move mountains and more. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 28: Faith Supplies

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Scripture Reading: Acts 28
One of the natural responses that often bursts forth when someone’s faith increases is the desire to give. Those who are touched by a message of faith often respond by giving back to those who touched them.
When I first put my faith in Christ, I was so moved that I instinctively began to support the church where I was saved. As I began to hear about missionaries who were taking the same message that touched me to others throughout the world, my natural response was to give. I wanted everyone to experience the same thing that I had experienced.
I still do. It’s not that I feel that I have to give. It’s simply the response of my heart to what God is doing in my life. I also believe that the increased desire to give comes from my increased trust in God; that He will continue to supply all of my needs, even as He uses me to help to supply the needs of others.
Those who were touched by the ministry of the Apostle Paul on the island of Malta had a similar response of giving.
Paul, along with his shipmates, had been shipwrecked on the island. The islanders showed unusual kindness to Paul and the others by building a fire for them because it was raining and cold. When a viper bit Paul on the hand as he threw some brushwood into the fire, the islanders thought Paul must have been guilty of a deadly crime: even though he had escaped from the shipwreck, they thought he would now die from the snakebite. When Paul didn’t die, the islanders changed their minds and thought he was a god!
Even though Paul wasn’t a god, God still had work to do through Paul. Paul and the others were invited into the home of Publius, a chief official of the island. When Paul found out that Publius’ father was sick in bed with fever and dysentery, Paul went to see him, “…and after prayer, placed his hands on him and healed him. When this had happened, the rest of the sick on the island came and were cured” (Acts 28:8-9).
While Paul’s faith in Christ allowed him to do many miracles in Jesus’ name, look at the response of faith that took place among the islanders who were touched by these miracles. The very next sentence of the story says:
“They honored us in many ways and when we were ready to sail, they furnished us with the supplies we needed” (Acts 28:10).
Faith supplies. When God works in powerful ways, people naturally want to respond in kind. They want to give freely to others as others have given freely to them.
In this way, Paul and the crew were able to go onto the next leg of their journey to Rome, where God had told Paul he would have to testify before Caesar. God had provided everything Paul needed to get as far as Malta. When the supplies ran out, God provided still more through those believers who had just been touched by God through Paul’s ministry.
Supplying the needs of others is a natural response of faith.
Have you been touched in a special way through someone’s ministry? Maybe someone in your local church, which nourishes you and perhaps your family? Maybe someone who has stopped by to pray for you? Maybe someone who has sent you a special gift or card or email or text message when you needed it? Maybe a ministry on the TV, or radio, or even this one on the Internet, that God has used in a special way to reach out to you to help you to increase your faith?
If so―and if God is causing your faith to well up within you with the desire to give―I encourage you to respond in faith and give. It’s a way to not only help that person or that ministry on the next leg of their journey, it’s a way to let them know that your heart is going with them as well. As Jesus said, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Luke 12:34).
Prayer: Father, show me how to respond in faith to those who have touched my life for You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 27: Faith Warns

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Scripture Reading: Acts 27
Is there anyone in your life who could use a good warning right about now? Someone who is straying from God’s path and needs help finding their way back? Or someone who is headed for danger―and even trying to take you along?
If so, I want to encourage you today to give them a godly warning about what lies ahead. As hard as it may be, know that even if they don’t listen to you right now, your warning may help them to listen closer in the future.
I’m sure it took a lot of faith for the Apostle Paul to warn those around him of the danger facing them in Acts chapter 27. After all, Paul was hardly in a position of authority over any of them, being himself a prisoner on board a ship bound for Rome. Yet after his first warning proved to be true, even those who had authority over Paul began to regard his advice as if their lives depended on it―because it did!
Take a look at the first warning Paul offered when he foresaw the winter storms which loomed ahead:
“ ‘Men, I can see that our voyage is going to be disastrous and bring great loss to ship and cargo, and to our own lives also.’ But the centurion, instead of listening to what Paul said, followed the advice of the pilot and of the owner of the ship. Since the harbor was unsuitable to winter in, the majority decided that we should sail on, hoping to reach Phoenix and winter there” (Acts 27:9-12a).
So much for Paul’s warning! But it wasn’t wasted. When the wind whipped up with hurricane force and the crew had to let the storm drive them along in a direction they hadn’t planned to go, the crew eventually began to listen to Paul. He stood up before them and said:
“ ‘Men, you should have taken my advice not to sail from Crete; then you would have spared yourselves this damage and loss. But now I urge you to keep up your courage, because not one of you will be lost; only the ship will be destroyed. Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as he told me. Nevertheless, we must run aground on some island’ ” (Acts 27:21-26).
From that point on, the crew listened to everything Paul said. When some men tried to escape in a lifeboat, Paul warned the centurion that they must stay with the ship or be lost. The centurion brought them back. When all aboard had not eaten for fourteen days, Paul encouraged them to finally eat some food as they were about to be saved, but would need the remaining food to survive.
In the end, their ship ran aground on a remote island and was blasted apart by the pounding waves. But just as Paul had foretold, all 276 of the men on board survived.
I would love to be able to speak to others with the confidence which came from the faith that Paul had when he said, “So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as he told me.” I pray for that kind of faith for myself, and I want to encourage you to pray for it for yourself as well.
Faith warns. Even when your warnings may not be heeded the first time, they might still be necessary to help others believe in what you say the next time…and the next…and the next. If there’s someone in your life who needs a good warning today, ask God if you’re the one to give it to them.
If there’s someone in your life who is headed in the wrong direction, or even to hell, ask God to give you the faith to point them in the right direction today.
Prayer: Father, help me to have the faith to give godly warnings to those who need it today. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 26: Faith Models

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
Scripture Reading: Acts 26
The great evangelist H.A. Ironside was interrupted one time by the shouts of an atheist. The atheist yelled, “There is no God! Jesus is a myth!” and finally, “I challenge you to a debate!”
Ironside responded, “I accept your challenge, sir! But on one condition. When you come, bring with you ten men and women whose lives have been changed for the better by the message of atheism. Bring former prostitutes and criminals whose lives have been changed, who are now moral and responsible individuals. Bring outcasts who had no hope and have them tell us how becoming atheists has lifted them out of the pit!
“And sir,” he concluded, “if you can find ten such men and woman, I will be happy to debate you. And when I come, I will gladly bring with me two hundred men and women from this very city whose lives have been transformed in just those ways by the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ.”
Ironside knew that atheism doesn’t change lives. Jesus changes lives.
If you’re a Christian, your testimony is like gold to God. The story of how you came to Christ, how He forgave you of your sins and how He gave you the assurance that you will live with Him forever will speak volumes to those around you.
You may not consider yourself a great evangelist. You may not feel like there’s much in your life that others would want to emulate. But the truth is that when others see your changed life, it can lead them to put their faith in Christ, too.
The Apostle Paul knew the power of a testimony. He shared it on many occasions, one of which is in Acts chapter 26 when he was on trial in front of Governor Festus and King Agrippa. After hearing Paul’s story, King Agrippa said to Paul,
“Do you think that in such a short time you can persuade me to be a Christian?”
Paul replied, “Short time or long―I pray God that not only you but all who are listening to me today may become what I am, except for these chains.” (Acts 26:28-29).
Paul didn’t claim to be perfect. But he did claim to be changed. He claimed to have had an encounter with the Risen Christ that transformed his life and then he prayed that all who were listening to him would become what he was.
Faith models. Just like a fashion model wears cool clothes to show others what their life might become like if they put on the same thing, a Christian model is one who shows others what their life might become if they put their faith in Christ.
I had a friend who was living an immoral lifestyle. I knew that if he kept it up, it could kill him. I knew because I had lived a similar life, until I put my faith in Christ. I prayed with him one day that he would become what I had become, a Christian. It wasn’t that I thought I was perfect. I wanted him to follow me, because I followed Christ.
Paul called others to follow his lead when he said in 1 Corinthians, “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1). It’s not prideful to ask people to become what you’ve become. It’s simply faithful.
An athlete once told his coach he didn’t want to be a role model. His coach said, “It’s not a question of whether you want to be a role model or not. You’re already a role model. The question is whether you’ll be a good one or a bad one.”
You’re already a role model, too, whether you’re a Christian or not. If you’re a Christian, God wants you to model your faith, to let others see it in your life, to let them hear it from your lips―that Christ has truly forgiven you, changed you and given you the assurance that you’ll live with Him forever. If you’re not a Christian, my prayer for you is the same as Paul’s, “that not only you but all who are listening to me today may become what I am…”
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to model my life in a way that leads others to Christ. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 25: Faith Appeals

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Scripture Reading: Acts 25
Some people think that when Christians are challenged, they should roll over and play dead―to “turn the other cheek” at all times. Oftentimes that’s exactly what we’re supposed to do as a way of submitting to one another and honoring those in authority over us.
But then there are other times when we, as followers of Christ, are called to defend ourselves, to take authority over wrongs that have been done to us, and to appeal to higher authorities. These, too, are biblical teachings.
Throughout the book of Acts, Paul takes care to walk through this maze of when to stand firm and when to run, when to submit to others and when to defend himself against them. In Acts chapter 25, Paul takes his boldest stand against the false accusations that were made against him: he appeals to Caesar. Paul says this to Governor Festus who was hearing his case:
“I have not done any wrong to the Jews, as you yourself know very well. If, however, I am guilty of doing anything deserving death, I do not refuse to die. But if the charges brought against me by these Jews are not true, no one has the right to hand me over to them. I appeal to Caesar!” (Acts 25:10-11).
Appealing to Caesar was no small deal. Caesar was the king, the highest authority in the entire Roman Empire, and his decision would be final―and possibly fatal. The appeal would be costly in terms of time and travel to Rome. In Paul’s case, the trip itself was almost fatal, and Paul was under house arrest in Rome for at least two years waiting for Caesar to hear his case.
But there was nothing ungodly nor disgraceful about Paul’s appeal. He knew he was innocent and he knew God wanted him to continue to testify about Christ in Rome. At the very beginning of Paul’s trials back in Jerusalem, the Lord stood near to Paul one night and said, “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome.” While it took great courage to appeal to Caesar and be sent to Rome, he was also simply following the clear command of the Lord.
When Paul appealed, Governor Festus conferred with his council and declared: “You have appealed to Caesar. To Caesar you will go!” (Acts 25:12).
Here in the U.S., an appeal is simply another step in the legal process. It’s not a sign of defying authority, but a way of following the steps that the authorities have set up, realizing that different people come to different conclusions, even based on the same evidence.
I’m amazed at the number of cases that are decided in the U.S. Supreme Court by a 5 to 4 decision. These are the some of the brightest and most highly trained people in the country regarding the law, yet they still reach completely opposite conclusions. While it could make some people cynical of the process, it makes me thankful for it, that our country has made a way to give us as many chances as possible to prove our innocence, or for someone else to prove our guilt.
There are times when your faith in Christ will compel you to submit to a decision that’s wrong, regardless of whether you simply believe it is wrong or whether it’s in fact wrong. It can be simple prudence and godliness to submit to someone’s decision, whether it’s a judge, a boss, a spouse, a parent or a friend.
But there are other times when your faith in Christ will compel you to appeal a wrongful decision, to respectfully call upon someone else to step in and hear your case.
In the end, God Himself is the One who will ultimately decide your case. So the important thing is to stay as close to Him as possible and follow His wisdom for whether He wants you to pursue or drop any appeal here on earth. Maybe He’ll say to you what He said to Paul: “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome” (Acts 23:11).
Prayer: Father, help me to hear from You if there’s ever a time You want me to appeal a decision that’s been made. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 24: Faith Flees

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
Scripture Reading: Acts 24
I often think of someone who is filled with faith as someone who can tough out any situation, who can stand firm in the face of adversity, who never walks away from a fight when their faith is at stake. But as I read through the book of Acts, and other books in the Bible, I see that there are times when it’s simple wisdom to walk away―or to run―when God wants to keep you from a dangerous situation.
For all the times when the Apostle Paul stood his ground, took a beating, and faced death, there were other times when he slipped away from those who intended to harm him.
When Paul first put his faith in Christ on the road to Damascus, the Jews there conspired to kill him. But when Paul learned of their plan, the believers in Damascus “took him by night and lowered him in a basket through an opening in the wall” (Acts 9:25).
Paul had to flee again when he came to Jerusalem. More than forty men had taken an oath not to eat or drink until they had killed Paul. When the son of Paul’s sister heard about the plot, he warned Paul. Paul sent the young man to the commander of the centurions who immediately gave these orders:
“Get ready a detachment of two hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen and two hundred spearmen to go to Caesarea at nine tonight. Provide mounts for Paul so that he may be taken safely to Governor Felix” (Acts 23:23b-24).
In cases like these, Paul fled for his life. Because he did, God was able to use him for many more years to testify to kings, governors and even us today who still read letters that he wrote after he fled.
There are even times when Jesus fled from those who meant Him harm. One day, when Jesus had so angered the Pharisees in Jerusalem, they picked up stones in order to stone Him to death. But John tells us that “Jesus hid Himself, slipping away from the temple grounds” (John 8:59b).
On another occasion, Jesus’ words so infuriated the people in the synagogue that Luke tells us, “They got up, drove Him out of the town, and took Him to the brow of the hill on which the town was built, in order to throw him down the cliff. But He walked right through the crowd and went on his way” (Luke 4:29-30).
While there may be times when your faith will help you to go to the cross like Jesus did (see 1 Peter 2:23), or face beatings and imprisonment like Paul often did, there may be other times when your faith will help you to flee from situations that are potentially dangerous, just like both Paul and Jesus did.
The key is to walk so in tune with God that you know when to stand and when to run. There’s nothing disgraceful about saving your life when God doesn’t want you to die. There’s nothing cowardly about fleeing from a potentially harmful situation when God doesn’t want you to be harmed. Walking away, slipping through the crowd or fleeing for your life could be the most faith-filled thing you could do.
There may be times when it’s more productive to walk away quietly from your boss who is treating you in a demeaning way, or to slip away for a time from an angry spouse while they take time to cool down, or to disengage from a conversation with someone that may be more destructive than constructive.
The ultimate goal in knowing what to do in situations like these is not to protect your pride or to defend things in which you strongly believe, but to follow God at every turn.
That’s why it’s so important to stay close to God, to cultivate your prayer life and to deepen your relationship with God and His Word. By doing so, God can more clearly point you in the direction He wants you to go, whether it’s to stand firm or to flee. Whatever He calls you to do, know that He’ll give you the faith to do it.
Prayer: Father, help me to stay so close to You that I can know which way to go every step of the way. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 23: Faith Keeps A Clear Conscience

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Scripture Reading: Acts 23
A man who once walked across the entire United States said that the hardest thing about his walk wasn’t the mountains, or the extreme weather, or any of the things I would have expected. He said the hardest part of the walk was the sand in his shoes.
The little grains of sand didn’t seem like a big deal at first, but over time, the sand would build up and lead to blisters, infections and ongoing pain.
It can sometimes be the same way with sin. It may not be the big sins that threaten to undo you, but the little ones―a lie here or there, a lustful thought towards a co-worker, a glance from time to time at pornography. Because of God’s grace, He doesn’t blast at every wrong turn. But over time, those “little” sins build up and lead to a bigger problem.
The man who walked across America said that he learned to regularly empty out the sand from his shoes before it became a problem. Today, you may find that your conscience is being pricked about some “little” sins in your life that God wants you to give up. If so, I’d like to encourage you to follow those promptings, take off your shoes, and empty out the sand before it leads to a bigger problem.
The Apostle Paul knew the value of keeping a clear conscience. He would regularly do whatever it took to ensure that he was honoring God and others with his thoughts and actions. And the payoff was huge.
In Acts 23, when Paul was arrested and brought before the highest religious leaders in Jerusalem, Paul was asked to speak on his own behalf. He began by saying this:
“My brothers, I have fulfilled my duty to God in all good conscience to this day” (Acts 23:1b).
Even though the charges against Paul could have cost him his life, his conscience was clear. He had gone out of his way when he first entered Jerusalem to enter into the strict purification rites of the Jewish people. He wanted to honor both God and those who lived in that city (see Acts 22:17-26).
So when the accusations came, Paul was able to say with full confidence that his conscience was clear. By the end of Paul’s testimony, at the end of chapter 23, the commander overseeing Paul’s case concluded that there was “no charge against him that deserved death or imprisonment” (Acts 23:29b). Paul survived another day and went on to minister for many more years.
Your faith can help you in so many ways, one of which is to keep your conscience clear.
I’ve heard it said that “a clear conscience makes a soft pillow.” God gave you a conscience for a reason: not to make you feel guilty, but to keep you headed in the right direction. Like the sensitive nerve endings on your fingertips that keep you from burning your hand on a hot stove, your conscience serves to warn you from burning yourself in other ways. Not only will you sleep better with a clear conscience, but it can also save your life, your marriage, your job, your reputation, your ministry and your good witness.
As the Apostle Peter said, “Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us” (1 Peter 2:12).
Faith keeps a clear conscience. Is there sand building up in your shoes today? Take time to empty them out.
If you’ve sinned, confess it to God and then to a trusted friend. If you’re caught in some lies, come clean today by telling the truth. If you’ve started a habit that’s taking you where neither you nor God want you to go, give it up today. If you’re in a relationship that’s crossing lines that should never be crossed, break it off now before it destroys you and those around you.
May we all get to the point where we can say like Paul, “My brothers, I have fulfilled my duty to God in all good conscience to this day” (Acts 23:1b).
Prayer: Father, help me to empty my shoes of the sands of sin in my life before they bring me down completely. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 22: Faith Testifies

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Scripture Reading: Acts 22
Has God touched your life in a special way? If so, that’s part of your testimony―and God loves it when you testify to others about what He has done for you.
But I also know it can be hard to share your testimony. When I first put my faith in Christ, I was asked to share my testimony with my singles class at church. “No way,” I thought! It wasn’t that I didn’t want to talk about what God had done, but I didn’t want to talk about what I had done. I was way too embarrassed to talk about the sin from which God had delivered me.
Yet over the years, as I’ve shared my testimony with more and more people, I’ve seen God give hope, encouragement and eternal life to others. Some people who hear my story are encouraged because they’ve struggled with some of the same things with which I’ve struggled. Others are encouraged because they realize that the God who could deliver me from the depths of my sin can deliver them from the depths of theirs.
The Apostle Paul had a lot of good reasons not to share his testimony with others. Not only did he have to share some difficult things about himself personally, but he also faced the real possibility of being killed every time he shared it. While Paul could have been afraid for his life, he wasn’t afraid to testify about what Christ had done for him. As a result, he brought encouragement and eternal life to many.
When Paul’s friends warned him not to go to Jerusalem because he might be bound and possibly killed, Paul went anyway, regardless of the outcome to his own life. Starting with the very first day he was bound in Jerusalem, look at how many times Paul was able to share his testimony:
- Paul testified to the crowd in Jerusalem (Acts 22:1-21),
- he testified to the chief priests and religious leaders in Jerusalem (Acts 23:1-10),
- he testified to Governor Felix in Caesarea (Acts 24:1-26),
- he testified to Governor Festus and King Agrippa in Caesarea (Acts 26:1-32),
- and he testified to the people in Rome while awaiting to testify to Caesar (Acts 28:28-31).
Paul could have been killed for his testimony, but he wanted to use every opportunity he could to share this new life he had found with others.
One of the things that helped me overcome the fear of sharing my testimony was to stand in the middle of a cemetery and think about what it meant from an eternal perspective. In the end, what did it matter if I lost my pride―or even my life―by sharing my testimony? If God could use it to do for others what He had done for me, it would be worth it.
That perspective has given me a tremendous freedom to be able to share my testimony when God wants me to share it. I’m still careful and prayerful about it, but my focus now is more on how it will affect those who hear it than on how it will affect me. Even Jesus spoke about the importance of timing when He told His disciples, “I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear” (John 16:12). We still need to be in tune with what our listeners need to hear.
But whatever the timing, know that the words of your testimony are like gold to God and that they have tremendous power. The Bible says:
“They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony; they did not love their lives so much as to shrink from death” (Revelation 12:11).
It’s by the blood of the Lamb―Jesus―and by the word of your testimony that you can overcome Satan. When you share your testimony, you can give hope, comfort peace, strength, encouragement and life to those who are losing theirs.
What has God done for you that could bring hope and eternal life to others? Reread Paul’s simple testimony in Acts 22, then consider sharing your testimony with others, too.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to share my testimony with others. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 21: Faith Dies

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Scripture Reading: Acts 21
I remember the fear that came over me when I read the headline in our college newspaper that Congress had reinstated the draft and all men my age were to report immediately to serve in the military.
I couldn’t believe it. I’m not against serving in the military, but I had been considering studying abroad in the coming year, but I hadn’t made up my mind yet. Traveling alone, the cost of the program and other fears held me back from making a decision. But now, with the possibility that I might have to go into the service, and might even die doing it, my fears of studying abroad paled in comparison.
As I headed to the men’s showers that morning, I was still shaking my head in disbelief when someone else walked in and commented on the article. He asked if I noticed the date on the paper. It was April 1st―April Fool’s Day here in the U.S. The whole article was a hoax.
Even though my heart rate began to slow down, my mind was just getting started. Having faced the possibility of death, I felt now that I was given a new shot at life. I decided that day to study abroad and the following year I did.
Facing death has a way of waking us up and bringing us back to life. Jesus said it like this:
“For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for Me will find it” (Matthew 16:25).
The Apostle Paul had an abundant life, in large part, I believe, because he was willing to lose his life at any moment. Although he certainly didn’t have a death wish, he wasn’t afraid to die for Christ, either.
In Acts 21, Paul was warned by men and by the Holy Spirit that if he continued on his journey to the city of Jerusalem, he would be bound in chains when he got there. Paul’s friends pleaded with him not to go to Jerusalem, but Paul replied:
“Why are you weeping and breaking my heart? I am ready not only to be bound, but also to die in Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus” (Acts 21:13).
Paul went on to Jerusalem, and was indeed bound and put into prison. The rest of the book of Acts documents his travels from prison to prison as his case was appealed to higher and higher authorities all the way to Caesar in Rome. Although the book of Acts ends before the end of Paul’s life, church tradition tells us that Paul was eventually beheaded in Rome for his faith.
There are times when God calls people to use their faith to raise the dead, as Paul had just done for Eutycus in Acts 20. But there are also times when God calls people to use their faith to be ready to die, as Paul was ready in Acts 21. But how can the same faith lead to two such different results? Paul tell us in Romans 14:7-8:
“For none of us lives to himself alone and none of us dies to himself alone. If we live, we live to the Lord; and if we die, we die to the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord” (Romans 14:7-8).
It was Paul’s willingness to die for Christ that allowed him to live for Christ so boldly. Some thought he was foolish to go to Jerusalem when he was warned about what awaited him there. But as another missionary named James Elliot wrote: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose.”
God has many things He wants to do for you by faith. But God also has many things He wants to do through you by faith―for others.
How would it change your life if you were truly willing to die for Christ? If you truly no longer feared death? According to the Apostle Paul, the missionary Jim Elliot, and even Jesus Christ Himself, it’s only when you’re ready to lose your life for Christ that you will truly find it.
Prayer: Father, help me to be ready to die for Christ so that I can truly live for Him. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 20: Faith Resurrects

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Scripture Reading: Acts 20
Some people think they have power when they can take a gun and shoot someone dead. But I think that someone has power if they can take someone who’s been dead and bring them back to life. Now that’s power!
You can read about at least ten resurrection stories in the Bible, stories where someone has been physically dead and then been raised back to life.
- Elijah raised the son of the widow (1 Kings 17:17-22)
- Elisha raised the son of the Shunamite woman (2 Kings 4:32-35)
- Elisha’s bones touched a dead man who was raised back to life (2 Kings 13:20-21)
- Jesus raised a widow’s son (Luke 7:11-15)
- Jesus raised Jairus’ daughter (Luke 8:49-56)
- Jesus raised Lazarus after Lazarus was dead for four days (John 11:1-44)
- God raised Jesus from the dead (Matthew 28:5-10)
- God raised many others from the dead at the same time He raised Jesus (Matthew 27:50-53).
- Peter raised Tabitha from the dead (Acts 9:38-40)
- Paul raised Eutychus from the dead (Acts 20:9-12).
Let’s take a look at this last story, since we’re looking today at Acts, chapter 20. As the Apostle Luke tells the story, Paul was speaking late into the night in the city of Troas. He was to leave early the next morning, so he stayed up all night speaking to the people:
“Seated in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he fell to the ground from the third story and was picked up dead. Paul went down, threw himself on the young man and put his arms around him. ‘Don’t be alarmed,’ he said. ‘He’s alive!’ Then he went upstairs again and broke bread and ate. After talking until daylight, he left. The people took the young man home alive and were greatly comforted” (Acts 20:9-12).
Faith resurrects. Not just a spiritual resurrection that will happen when those who believe in Christ will be raised to new life in heaven, but faith that even resurrects people who have died and then come back to life here on earth.
This doesn’t mean that just because we have faith in Christ, we can, or even should, raise everyone who dies back from the dead. God does have a plan and He’s limited all of our life spans for a reason.
But it does mean that all of us who have put our faith in Christ―and have been filled with, and empowered by, His Holy Spirit―have access to the same life-giving power that raised Jesus from the dead. Paul, who raised Eutychus from the dead, also wrote:
“But if Christ is in you, your body is dead because of sin, yet your spirit is alive because of righteousness. And if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit, who lives in you” (Romans 8:10-11).
Paul was sharing a spiritual truth, but it’s a physical truth as well. Paul knew from his own experience that the Spirit of God could literally bring people back from the dead.
If God calls you to pray for someone to be raised from the dead, by all means and by faith, do it! But God also wants you to use that power of faith to pray life back into all kinds of situations and circumstances in the world around you.
If you’re a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ and you need God to breathe life into something you’re facing today, call on the power of God’s Holy Spirit that lives within you―the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ to forgive you of your sins, do it today. You will be raised to a new life with Him here on earth, and you can be assured that you’ll be raised to an eternal life with Him in heaven.
Prayer: Father, fill me with Your Holy Spirit―the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead―and give me the faith to call on Your Spirit to pray life into everything around me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 19: Faith Baptizes

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Scripture Reading: Acts 19
Of all the things Jesus could have said in His final words to His disciples, He included baptism as one of the top three. Jesus said:
“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19-20a).
Go and make disciples… baptizing them… and teaching them to obey My commands.
What is it about baptism that gives it such a priority?
I think John the Baptist may have said it best when He said: “I baptize you with water for repentance. But after me will come one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am not fit to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire” (Matthew 3:11).
There’s something empowering that happens when a person is baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. It’s the empowerment of the Holy Spirit―the empowerment to carry out all of the rest of the things that Christ has called us to do.
When the Apostle Paul left Corinth and went to Ephesus, the Bible says:
“There he found some disciples and asked, ‘Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?
They answered, ‘No, we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.’
So Paul asked, ‘Then what baptism did you receive?’
‘John’s baptism,’ they replied.
Paul said, ‘John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance. He told the people to believe in the one coming after him, that is, in Jesus.’ On hearing this, they were baptized into the name of the Lord Jesus. When Paul placed his hands on them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they spoke in tongues and prophesied. There were about twelve men in all.” (Acts 19:1b-7).
When these Ephesian believers were baptized, God empowered them to do things that they weren’t able to do before―supernatural things that only the Holy Spirit could have done through them.
Christ calls us to be baptized, and yet there are many people who have never taken this step to be baptized. As a result, they’re missing out on many things, one of which is the supernatural ability to do things they could never have done on their own.
I know because I was one of those people. I had put my faith in Christ and repented of my sins, but I didn’t follow it up with the step of baptism. A friend asked me to consider it, so I studied the Scriptures and asked others who had been baptized about their experiences. But it took me another two years to finally get around to it.
One day I was asking Christ to do more in me and through me when I felt Him asking me if I had been obedient to the things He had already asked me to do. I had to answer, “No,” and baptism was at the top of the list.
I knew that if I wanted to ask God to do more in my life, I needed to be obedient to the things He had already asked me to do. So I was baptized. The next day, God empowered me to do supernatural things that I could never have done on my own.
Faith baptizes. Throughout the book of Acts, when people put their faith in Christ, they got baptized as well, whether it was the 3,000 who believed on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:37-41), the Ethiopian eunuch (Acts 8:34-38), the Apostle Paul (Acts 9:18-19), Cornelius and his friends and relatives (Acts 10:44-48), the jailer and his family (Acts 16:29-34), the many who believed in Corinth (Acts 18:8), or the dozen who are mentioned in today’s passage (Acts 19:1-7).
If you feel God prompting you to be baptized, I want to encourage you to do it. It’s not only part of being a Christian, it’s also part of receiving the empowerment of God to do all He wants to do in you and through you.
Prayer: Father, thank You for Your Holy Spirit and for the empowerment that comes through Him. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 18: Faith Works

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Scripture Reading: Acts 18
A friend once asked me, “Do you think God wants everyone to quit their job and go into full-time ministry?”
I thought it was a great question, because the answer can affect your view of ministry―and of work in general.
First, there’s no doubt that God wants more people to go into full-time ministry. When Jesus was going from town to town, preaching and healing people, the Bible says “when He saw the crowds, He had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then He said to His disciples, ‘The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field’ ” (Matthew 9:36-38).
Jesus saw the overwhelming needs of the world and asked His disciples to pray for more workers. Many of those disciples themselves had heard Jesus’ call to “Follow Me,” something which often required them to leave their profession, whether fishermen or tax collectors.
On the other hand, God has created, gifted and skilled each of us to to do meaningful work, whether it’s in full-time ministry or not. Work is a blessing from God, not a curse as some people think. Even before the first man sinned, the Bible says that God put him in the Garden of Eden with a specific task in mind:
“The LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it” (Genesis 2:15).
Of course, after Adam sinned, God did tell him that from then on his work would be very hard, with much sweat and toil (see Genesis 3:17-19). But the work itself was not a curse. God wanted Adam to work the land from the very beginning and to eat the fruit that came from it.
The Apostle Paul seems to have grasped both of these aspects of work. He applied himself to both jobs God had called and gifted him to do: at times doing the spiritual work of preaching and encouraging people in their relationship with Christ, and at times doing the practical work of making tents, a profession that met his own needs and the needs of those around him. In Acts chapter 18, we read that Paul went to the city of Corinth for a year and a half, staying with some fellow tentmakers there named Aquila and Priscilla:
“Paul went to see them, and because he was a tentmaker as they were, he stayed and worked with them. Every Sabbath he reasoned in the synagogue, trying to persuade Jews and Greeks” (Acts 18:1-4).
Even though Paul was free to earn his living from his preaching (as he wrote later in 1 Corinthians 9), he was also free to earn his living from making tents. It wasn’t the source of his income that directed Paul’s work, but serving the Lord in all that he did. As Paul wrote later to the Christians in Ephesus, some of whom were slaves and some of whom were free:
“Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men, because you know that the Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or free” (Ephesians 6:7-8).
The truth is that everything we have comes from God. As King David said in his prayer of thanksgiving to God: “Everything comes from You, and we have given You only what comes from Your hand” (2 Chronicles 29:14).
A friend of mine, who started a business in a country that doesn’t officially allow Christian missionaries, says that his work is 100% business and 100% ministry. I think that’s a good way for all of us to view our work, whether that work is seemingly secular or religious.
Be open to God’s call to ministry. The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. But also be open to using whatever gifts and skills God has given you to meet the life needs of those around you. Whatever you do, work as if you were serving the Lord. You’ll be rewarded when you do.
Prayer: Father, help me to hear Your call on my life and to follow it with my whole heart wherever it leads. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 17: Faith Examines

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Scripture Reading: Acts 17
I’ve spent the last few weeks in and out of doctors’ offices and the hospital with my Dad, trying to discover the source of some recent health problems.
Like many people, my Dad doesn’t really like doctors, hospitals or anything to do with examinations. He’d rather live with some minor discomfort than subject himself to the tests that are needed to find out what’s really wrong. Unless he’s in dire pain or distress, why rock the boat?
But as I went with him and helped him to see why the doctors wanted to do the tests they did, he consented. In the end, it turned out that my Dad just needs a shot once a month. It’s a simple solution, but if left uncorrected, could have led to his death.
For some people, reading the Bible sounds about as fun as going to see the doctor. If you’re not in dire pain or distress, why rock the boat?
Why? Because the Bible is filled with simple solutions to some of our biggest problems that, if left uncorrected, could lead to our death, both here on earth and eternally.
For people who are eager to live life to the fullest, doing a careful examination of their life from time to time is one of the smartest things they can do. They’re like the Bereans mentioned in the Bible, the people who lived in a city in Greece called Berea who did another kind of examination, but one that was just as life-changing.
When Paul went to the Bereans to tell them that Jesus was Christ, he found that they were more noble than the people of other cities he had visited:
“Now the Bereans were of more noble character than the Thessalonians, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true” (Acts 17:11).
The Bereans were eager to hear about Jesus, to find out if He really was the Savior, the Messiah, the Christ. They wanted to find out the truth, because they knew how important that truth would be to them. So they examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul was telling them was true.
The reason I like the Bereans so much is because I was one myself. Although I had gone to church all my life, I never really read the Bible on my own until my mid-20’s. I began attending a church where they had a class called the Berean Class. When I asked why they called it that, they told me the story of the Bereans in the Bible who eagerly examined the Scriptures every day to see if what they were being taught was true.
So I went out and bought a Bible filled with helpful study notes. I began to read it, and really enjoyed it! The more I read, the more eager I was to keep reading! I began to discover that all that I had been taught about the Bible was true. One day, I finally put my faith in Christ. It turned out to the be single most important turning point of my life, literally saving my life here on earth and for eternity.
Paul went to many cities and reasoned with many people from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead. “This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Christ,” he said (Acts 17:3b). As a result, many believed, both Jews and Greek, men and women.
Faith examines. If you’re curious about the Bible, about Jesus, or about any of the hundreds of other topics addressed in the Bible, from relationships to healing, from sexuality to eternal life, I’d encourage you to read the Bible for yourself. Examine it. Study it. Eagerly receive the message contained within it―and believe it.
You may find you just need a shot of B12, or you may need some serious, but life-saving surgery. Either way, when you examine the Bible like the Bereans did, you’ll find that it contains the words you need to live the fullest life possible here on earth―and in heaven, too.
Prayer: Father, help me to eagerly examine Your Word daily to find out for myself that the words are true. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 16: Faith Sings

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Scripture Reading: Acts 16
When you’re down, singing is probably one of the last things you feel like doing. But it could be the very thing you need to bring you back up.
Singing is an expression of faith that you can exercise anytime, anywhere and with powerful results, as can be seen in Acts chapter 16. Even after being beaten and severely flogged earlier in the day, Paul and Silas sang at midnight in their prison cell. God heard their song and set them free.
Paul and Silas had been sharing about Christ in the city of Philippi (to which Paul later wrote his letter to the Philippians) when they ran across a slave girl who was possessed by an evil spirit by which she predicted the future. Paul cast the spirit out of her, causing her owners to realize that they were going to lose any future profits from the girl’s unusual abilities.
The owners of the girl seized Paul and Silas and brought them to the authorities, rallying the crowds against them as well, saying that they were throwing the city into an uproar. Paul and Silas were stripped, beaten and severely flogged, then put in the inner cell of the prison with their feet in the stocks.
Even after such a grueling day, listen to what the book of Acts says Paul and Silas did that night:
“About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them” (Acts 16:25).
They prayed and sang hymns to God. I can understand their praying, but it’s hard to imagine they had the strength, let alone the desire, to sing. But the fact that they were praying and singing makes me think that their prayers were more expressions of faith to God rather than frustration with God; prayers of trusting in God rather than interrogating God. Listen to what happened next as they expressed their faith in this way.
“Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all the prison doors flew open, and everybody’s chains came loose” (Acts 16:26-34).
Faith sings. And when faith sings, God responds. God not only set Paul and Silas free, but He set all the other prisoners free who were listening to them sing. If you continue reading the passage, you’ll find that God even set the jailer free, the one who had been holding them in their prison!
I was listening to a well-known, elderly pastor who talked about those times in his life when he was the most down. He said that the only thing that he had found that could consistently lift his spirits was to sing praises to God. As he sang, his spirits would lift, and he could see clearly again that God was in control of his life and circumstances.
King David did the same. As you read through many of his songs, which are recorded in the book of Psalms (which means “songs”), you’ll see that he’s often quite downcast as he begins singing, but by the end of the song, God has lifted his spirits and set him free.
Psalm 5, for instance, starts with the words, “Give ear to my words, O LORD, consider my sighing. Listen to my cry for help, my King and my God, for to You I pray” (Psalm 5:1-2).
But by the end of the song, David is singing out his praises to God, “But let all who take refuge in You be glad; let them ever sing for joy. Spread your protection over them, that those who love Your name may rejoice in You. For surely, O LORD, you bless the righteous; you surround them with your favor as with a shield” (Psalm 5:11-12).
There’s power in singing; power to lift us up and set us free, power to set those around us free, and even power to set those who are holding us in bondage free. If you need a lift today, express your faith to God with a song!
Prayer: Father, help me to sing to You, even when it may be the last thing I may want to do, so that You can set me free. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 15: Faith Purifies

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
Scripture Reading: Acts 15
If you’ve ever read Macbeth by Shakespeare, you may remember the scene where Macbeth’s wife rubs her hands together over and over, trying to wash out an imaginary stain. What she was really trying to do was to “wash her hands” of a plot that she and her husband had planned to kill King Duncan. Even though the stain is imaginary, it represented something very real that she had done.
Many people have felt what Lady Macbeth felt. They’ve done something they can’t take back. No matter what they do, they can’t get clean. They can’t purify themselves. Maybe you’re in that situation yourself today, or know someone who is.
The truth is, you can’t purify yourself. You can’t wash, cleanse or save yourself from your own sins. But the good news is that Jesus can. And the way He does it is through faith.
It might seem odd that a mere thought―putting your faith in Christ―could open the floodgates of cleansing that you need. But it’s not just the thought that brings the cleansing. It’s Christ who brings the cleansing. It’s Christ, who died on the cross to take your sins upon Him so you could be clean, if you’ll just believe Him and put your faith in Him.
Some people wring their hands over what they can do to be clean. The earliest Christians made it clear that of all the things someone might try to do, the one necessary ingredient is faith.
One of the times the disciples had to address this issue head on is recorded in Acts chapter 15. Here’s a portion of how the issue came up and how the disciples responded:
“Some men came down from Judea to Antioch and were teaching the brothers: ‘Unless you are circumcised, according to the custom taught by Moses, you cannot be saved.’ This brought Paul and Barnabas into sharp dispute and debate with them. So Paul and Barnabas were appointed, along with some other believers, to go up to Jerusalem to see the apostles and elders about this question…. Then some of the believers who belonged to the party of the Pharisees stood up and said, ‘The Gentiles must be circumcised and required to obey the law of Moses.’
“The apostles and elders met to consider this question. After much discussion, Peter got up and addressed them: ‘Brothers, you know that some time ago God made a choice among you that the Gentiles might hear from my lips the message of the gospel and believe. God, who knows the heart, showed that He accepted them by giving the Holy Spirit to them, just as He did to us. He made no distinction between us and them, for He purified their hearts by faith. Now then, why do you try to test God by putting on the necks of the disciples a yoke that neither we nor our fathers have been able to bear? No! We believe it is through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved, just as they are” (Acts 15:1-2,5-11).
When it came down to it, Paul, Barnabas, Peter and the elders agreed: it is “through the grace of our Lord Jesus that we are saved” and that God “purified their hearts by faith.”
I remember when my wife Lana was baptized. As she came up out of the water, she said that as the water dripped off her, she felt like her sins were being washed away. That’s the kind of cleansing that Lady Macbeth longed for, but never experienced, because she never put her faith in Christ.
If that’s the kind of cleansing that you’re longing for, you don’t have to wring your hands over and over. You can experience it, too, when you put your faith in Christ.
Confess your sins to Him and let Him wash you in His grace, removing your sins “as far as the east is from the west” (Psalm 103:12). As the Bible promises: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
Let Him purify you today, by faith.
Prayer: Father, I confess my sins to You and put my faith in Christ, asking that You would cleanse me, wash me and purify me from all unrighteousness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 14: Faith Persists

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Scripture Reading: Acts 14
There are times when all of us face obstacles that seem just too big to get past. Times when we’re ready to throw in the towel. Times when we want to give up and to walk away from the things we feel God has called us to do.
If you’re facing times like that today, I want to encourage you to press on, to be persistent in your faith. Don’t give up now. Now’s the time to let God work through you in a way that you can shine for Him.
Michael Jordan was an incredible basketball player. But the crowds didn’t come to watch him walk onto an empty court and shoot free-throws for an hour and a half. They came to watch him shine in the face of opposition. They came to watch him take the ball from one end of the court to the other, making his way through opponents who were doing everything they could to stop him.
When someone would try to steal the ball, Michael would dribble behind his back. When someone blocked his way forward, Michael would spin his way around. When someone would try to block his shot, Michael would leap into the air beyond their reach, swishing the ball through the net on his way back down.
The times Michael Jordan shone the brightest were the times when his opposition was the most intense.
Paul and Barnabas in the book of Acts remind me of Michael Jordan. When God sent them out to win the world for Christ, they went from city to city, winning converts all along the way. But they weren’t shooting free-throws on an empty court. One of the reasons they shone so bright was because their opposition was so intense. In city after city, they were spoken against, thrown out of town, and even stoned and left for dead.
In the city of Iconium, many people came to Christ. But others began to stir up trouble for Paul and Barnabas. Rather than running away, they pressed on. The Bible says:
“So Paul and Barnabas spent considerable time there, speaking boldly for the Lord, who confirmed the message of his grace by enabling them to do miraculous signs and wonders” (Acts 13:4).
Instead of throwing in the towel, Paul and Barnabas decided to stay even longer. When the people of Iconium eventually made a plan to kill them, they escaped. When the people of Lystra stoned them and left them for dead, they recovered and went right back into the city. When they had finished making their way through city after city, they didn’t just call it quits. They turned around and went right back through each of the cities where people had tried to kill them before, strengthening the believers they had won in those cities, and encouraging them to remain true to the faith.
When the opposition came, Paul and Barnabas dribbled behind their backs, spun around the opposition, and leapt into the air as they swished the ball through the net on their way back down.
Faith persists. It doesn’t give up and go home just because an opponent shows up on the court. That’s the time when faith shines. That’s the time when the crowds go wild for Christ. That’s the time when God Himself will cheer you on, sending His Holy Spirit to do things through you that you could never have done on your own.
I don’t know what kind of opposition you’re facing today: problems with your marriage, your money, your ministry, your ideas. Problems with your health, your plans, your future, your dreams. Problems with your family, your friends, your parents, your kids. Problems with your business, your home, your life, your career.
But whatever you’re facing right now, I want to encourage you to press on. Press on in your faith. Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter or your faith, who for the joy set before him, endured the cross (see Hebrews 12:2).
Press on, as Paul did, toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called you heavenward in Christ Jesus (Philippians 3:14).
If God has called you to it, press on through it!
Prayer: Father, help me to be persistent in my faith, to press on to win the prize for which You have called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 13: Faith Fasts

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Scripture Reading: Acts 13
One of the best ways I’ve found to intensify, deepen or accelerate my prayers is to fast―to go without food for a period of time so I can focus more intensely on praying.
I don’t remember hearing much about fasting when I was growing up. I don’t know if it was because I was just a child, or because those around me didn’t fast, or because those who did fasted in a way that didn’t draw attention to their fasting. But I do know that when I began to read the Bible as an adult, I was surprised by the number of references to prayer and fasting throughout both the Old and New Testament. Moses, David, Elijah, Paul and Jesus Himself are just a few of the many who fasted.
As I read other Christian books, I was surprised to find that many people throughout history, including leaders of major Christian movements also fasted: Luther, Wesley, Finney, Edwards, Booth, to name just a few. I also found that many of the Christian leaders that I knew and respected living today also fasted with profound results.
After reading so many inspiring stories, I decided to try it myself. Now, after twenty years adding fasting to my prayer life at various times, whether for a few days or for several weeks at a time, I can confirm that some of the most significant words I’ve heard from the Lord have come during those times of prayer and fasting. God has spoken to me about all kinds of things, from who to marry to how to expand my ministry. It seems that when I empty myself physically, I’m able to fill up more spiritually.
Acts chapter 13 records how the earliest Christians fasted and prayed, and how God spoke to them during their fast:
“While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, ‘Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.’ So after they had fasted and prayed, they placed their hands on them and sent them off” (Acts 13:2-3).
This was the beginning of Saul’s (also known as Paul’s) missionary journeys. The believers were gathered in prayer, worshiping the Lord and fasting, when God spoke to them through His Holy Spirit that He wanted two of them to set off in a new direction. While this may have seemed like simple next steps for Barnabas and Paul, it began a whole new life of travel and ministry for them. These trips resulted in new church starts in city after city. Because of the prayers and fasting of those early believers, God charted a new life course for Paul, one which took him through to the end of his life.
If you’re asking God for direction in your life, for wisdom about how to move forward, for answers as to the next steps you should take, consider intensifying your prayers with fasting. If you’re praying for situations that seem to have hit a roadblock and you don’t know how to go any further in your prayers, try fasting to break through that barrier.
When Jesus’ disciples were praying for a boy who was having seizures and suffering greatly, their prayers didn’t seem to help, so they came to Jesus for help. Jesus drove out the demon that was affecting the boy and he was healed from that moment. When the disciples later came to Jesus in private and asked why they couldn’t drive it out, He said,
“Because you have so little faith. I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you. But this kind does not go out except by prayer and fasting” (Matthew 17:20-21).
It seems from this passage, and from many others in the Bible, that fasting adds a dimension to our faith and to our prayers that is not available without it.
If you want to intensify, deepen or accelerate your prayers―and fill up more spiritually at the same time―try fasting!
Prayer: Father, help me to grow in my faith, even through fasting and prayer, so that I can see Your will done here on the earth. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 12: Faith Prays

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Scripture Reading: Acts 12
If you need something supernatural to happen, do something supernatural: pray.
Prayer is not just quiet meditation. It’s not just thinking through your thoughts on your own. Prayer is having a conversation with the God who created you, who knows you better than anyone else, and who can act in ways that are both natural and even “super” natural.
One of the most dramatic answers to prayer is recorded in Acts chapter 12. I’d like to share it with you today to encourage you to pray earnestly for situations in your life for which there appear to be no earthly answers.
Here’s the background for this story: After Saul stopped persecuting the early Christians, they finally enjoyed a time of peace and continued to grow in numbers. But then King Herod took up the persecution again and began to arrest some of those believers putting a man named James to death with the sword. When Herod saw that this pleased some of the Jews, he put Peter in prison, too, planning to put him on trial after the Passover.
Things looked bleak for Peter. There was little hope for him after what had just happened to James, but those early believers weren’t hopeless. They did what they could: they prayed.
The Bible says, “but the church was earnestly praying to God for him” (Acts 12:5).
Look what happened when they did:
“The night before Herod was to bring him to trial, Peter was sleeping between two soldiers, bound with two chains, and sentries stood guard at the entrance. Suddenly an angel of the Lord appeared and a light shone in the cell. He struck Peter on the side and woke him up. ‘Quick, get up!’ he said, and the chains fell off Peter’s wrists.
“Then the angel said to him, ‘Put on your clothes and sandals.’ And Peter did so. ‘Wrap your cloak around you and follow me,’ the angel told him. Peter followed him out of the prison, but he had no idea that what the angel was doing was really happening; he thought he was seeing a vision. They passed the first and second guards and came to the iron gate leading to the city. It opened for them by itself, and they went through it. When they had walked the length of one street, suddenly the angel left him.
“Then Peter came to himself and said, ‘Now I know without a doubt that the Lord sent his angel and rescued me from Herod’s clutches and from everything the Jewish people were anticipating’” (Acts 12:6-11).
Faith prays. It may seem obvious that when people are filled with faith, they pray. But interestingly, it may not have been their great faith that drove them to prayer, but perhaps that they had nowhere else to turn. When Peter showed up later that night at the door of a house where many believers were gathered in prayer for him, the people didn’t even believe that it was really Peter at the door. When a servant girl came to tell them Peter was there, they told her, “You’re out of your mind!” (Acts 12:15). They didn’t believe her until Peter kept knocking and they finally opened the door for him. Then they saw for themselves and were astonished.
I love stories like this where God acts in such a way that it even astonishes those who are praying. We may think we’re full of faith, but when God answers remarkably like this, we realize just how little faith we had going into our prayers. But nonetheless, they were praying “earnestly.”
That’s the kind of faith I want for you today. A faith that will pray earnestly. A faith that will pray trusting that God is ultimately in control, but that still prays with full hope and expectation for God to do a miracle.
There’s no shame in praying, just power. Abraham Lincoln confessed, “I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.”
Faith prays. If you need something supernatural to happen, do something supernatural. Pray, and pray earnestly.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to pray earnestly for Your will to be done here on earth as it is in heaven. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 11: Faith Includes

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Scripture Reading: Acts 11
Some people think that Christianity is exclusive. They think that because Christ said that people must believe in Him in order to come back to the Father that Christianity excludes people. The truth is, Christianity is not exclusive, but incredibly inclusive. It’s open to all people, of all ages, from all races and all nationalities.
The story of Peter and Cornelius in Acts chapters 10 and 11 shows us just how inclusive Christianity really is. Peter was a Jew and one of the closest follower of Christ, but God sent Peter to Cornelius, who was not Jewish, to tell him the good news about Christ. Peter went, but not without some having to triple check with God beforehand. The Bible says that as Peter was praying one day, he had a vision from God:
“He saw heaven opened and something like a large sheet being let down to earth by its four corners. It contained all kinds of four-footed animals, as well as reptiles of the earth and birds of the air. Then a voice told him, ‘Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.’
‘Surely not, Lord!’ Peter replied. ‘I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.’
The voice spoke to him a second time, ‘Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.’
This happened three times, and immediately the sheet was taken back to heaven” (Acts 10:11-16).
As Peter was wondering about the vision, some men arrived at his door, asking if he would come with them to see Cornelius, a man who was a Roman soldier, but who was devout and God-fearing, prayed regularly and gave generously to those in need.
Realizing the vision was from God, Peter went with them, shared the good news of Christ with Cornelius and all those at his house, and they were all baptized in both water and in the Holy Spirit.
Peter realized God’s desire to keep the Jewish people holy by not interacting with non-Jews was for their protection, but not for the exclusion of others. It was a way to keep the Jews pure, not keep others out. Others have always been welcome, and now, through Jesus, the way was made clear for them. When Peter told the other disciples what had happened, they praised God saying “So then, God has granted even the Gentiles repentance unto life” (Acts 11:18b).
I used to think Christians were being prideful and arrogant when they claimed that you had to believe in Christ in order to come to God. But I learned that it was not Christians who made that claim, but Jesus Himself. Just before His death and resurrection into heaven, Jesus told His disciples how to get where He was going:
“You know the way to the place where I am going….I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:4,6).
There was no pride or arrogance in what Jesus said, but simple, humble truth. Christ went on to demonstrate His love for us and the truthfulness of what He said when He died for our sins and opened the way for anyone who believed in Him to come back to God, free, clean and forgiven.
Peter shared this good news on another occasion to a crowd of thousands who had gathered from all over the world. During his message, Peter made this bold claim about Jesus: “Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). When the people heard it, rather than turning their backs and responding with disgust at Peter’s arrogance, over 3,000 of them turned their hearts towards Christ, putting their faith in Him, and being baptized in His name.
Faith includes, as Cornelius and his entire household discovered.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ, I encourage you to do it today. If you know someone who needs to put their faith in Christ, invite them to come to Him today. He is the way and the truth and the life, and His way is open to all.
Prayer: Father, thank You for sending Jesus as the way back to You. Help me invite others back, too. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 10: Faith Gives

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Scripture Reading: Acts 10
What prompts you to give? When you see a need around you, what is it that causes you to want to reach out and help? For me, I’ve found that when my faith is strong, my desire to give is strong. But when my faith is weak, my desire to give is weak. It seems that the more I’m able to trust God with my life and my resources, the more I’m able to let go of the things that I would otherwise try to hang onto.
Faith gives. And when God sees our faith and our giving, He loves to bless us back in return.
Take a look at what happened to a man in the Bible named Cornelius when he gave to others in response to his faith. Cornelius was a commander in the Roman army and even though he wasn’t Jewish, he was a devout and God-fearing man who prayed to God regularly and gave generously to those in need. Here’s what happened to him as recorded in Acts chapter 10:
“One day at about three in the afternoon he had a vision. He distinctly saw an angel of God, who came to him and said, ‘Cornelius!’
“Cornelius stared at him in fear. ‘What is it, Lord?’ he asked.
“The angel answered, ‘Your prayers and gifts to the poor have come up as a memorial offering before God. Now send men to Joppa to bring back a man named Simon who is called Peter. He is staying with Simon the tanner, whose house is by the sea’ ” (Acts 10:3-6).
Cornelius sent for Peter, who came in response to a vision of his own that God had given him. Peter shared with Cornelius the good news about Christ. Cornelius and the large crowd who came to his house to see Peter were baptized with water and the Holy Spirit.
God honored Cornelius’ prayers and gifts. They had made their way up to God as a memorial offering to Him. And God poured out his blessing back on Cornelius.
Faith gives and God sees those gifts. They are a natural response to the faith that God wells up inside of you. Your giving is a practical way to love God and love others.
I remember telling some friends about all that God had been doing in and through my life one time. When I finished, one of the people listening to me reached into his pocket and pulled out all the money he had. He put it in my hand.
I was totally caught off guard. Why was he giving me money? I had just been telling them about what God was doing in the world and in my life. I knew this man didn’t have money to spare. I tried a few times to put it back into his hands, but he wouldn’t take it. One of my other friends finally pulled me aside to the kitchen and said to me, “He’s giving that money to God, not to you. As you’re telling him about the power of God to work in people’s lives, God’s working on his heart and this is the way he wants to respond. Please don’t try to stop what God is doing in his life by giving the money back.”
This man was growing in his faith as he listened to my stories, and his desire to do something in response swelled up within him. When God increases our faith, he also increases our desire and willingness to give.
Are there needs around you that God might be prompting you to support with your prayers and gifts? Is God trying to increase your faith so that when a need arises, you’ll be able to meet it with both your faith and your giving?
God wants you to be devout and God-fearing like Cornelius, praying and giving generously to those who have needs. When you do, know that God will not overlook your prayers and gifts. He loves to bless the hearts of those who bless His heart, just like He blessed Cornelius and everyone who came to his house to hear the good news about Christ.
Prayer: Father, increase my faith and increase my willingness to give at the same time. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 9: Faith Surrenders

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Scripture Reading: Acts 9
There are times when I’ll be singing a song of worship to God when my arms almost automatically begin to rise up. Almost without thinking I’ll find myself with my arms fully outstretched above my head in praise to God. It’s a beautiful time of both reaching out to God and completely giving myself to Him―an act of surrender, you might call it―with my hands up in the air, nothing to hide and gladly submitted to the Lordship of Christ.
I remember a similar moment when I put my faith in Christ at 23, having taken control of my own life for those years and seeing where I ended up, then finally yielding to Christ to let Him call the shots from then on. It was no longer a hard thing to do, but joyous, yielding myself completely to God’s will and purposes.
The Apostle Paul experienced his own profound moment of surrender on the road to Damascus.
Even though Paul was extremely religious, he didn’t believe in Christ. He was committed to imprisoning―and even killing―those who did. He had gotten permission from the high priest in Jerusalem to go to Damascus and take prisoner those who belonged to what was then called “the Way.”
Here’s what happened to Paul that not only changed the course of the rest of his trip, but also the rest of his life. In this passage, Paul is still called Saul, as Christ had not yet given him his new name:
“As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?’
‘Who are you, Lord?’ Saul asked.
‘I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,’ He replied. ‘Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do’ ” (Acts 9:3-6).
When Paul got up from that experience, he was physically blinded. Those traveling with him led him into Damascus, where he stayed for three days, neither eating nor drinking.
During those same three days, a believer in Damascus named Ananias faced his own moment of surrender.
He had already put his faith in Christ, but when the Lord, in a vision, called him to go and pray for Paul to receive his sight back, Ananias wrestled with what he was going to do. He had heard reports about what Paul had done to believers in Jerusalem. He knew Paul had authority from the chief priests to do the same in Damascus. Faced with this extremely tough dilemma, Ananias chose to surrender to the will of God:
“Then Ananias went to the house and entered it. Placing his hands on Saul, he said, ‘Brother Saul, the Lord―Jesus, who appeared to you on the road as you were coming here―has sent me so that you may see again and be filled with the Holy Spirit.’ Immediately, something like scales fell from Saul’s eyes, and he could see again. He got up and was baptized, and after taking some food, he regained his strength” (Acts 9:17-19).
From that day on, and for the rest of his life, Paul went on to preach boldly in the name of Christ. He wrote much of the New Testament, which has affected literally millions of lives in the 2,000 years since then.
Thank God that Paul surrendered his will to God’s. And thank God that Ananias surrendered his will to God’s, too.
Faith surrenders. Whether you’re still just considering putting your faith in Christ for the first time, or whether you’ve been a believer for years, I want to encourage you today to surrender whatever’s left of your will to the will of God. Is there something God is calling you to do? Somewhere He wants you to go? Someone He wants you to talk to? Something He wants you to give to Him?
Lift up your hands and take hold of His. Lift up your heart and give it to Him. Give up your will and get into His. Whatever you’re planning to do, wherever you’re planning to go, it will pale in comparison to what He wants to do in and through you.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to surrender my will to Yours. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 8: Faith Explains

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Scripture Reading: Acts 8
If God has given you a special gift to help people understand the Bible, I’d like to encourage you today to use that gift. You may not even realize it’s a gift. You may think that reading and understanding the Bible just comes naturally to you. But I’d like to show you what a gift it really is.
In Acts chapter 8, an angel of the Lord told Philip, one of Jesus’ disciples, to go to the road that leads down from Jerusalem to Gaza. Along the way, Philip encountered a man from Ethiopia who was sitting in his chariot reading from the book of Isaiah.
The Ethiopian was an important official in charge of the treasury for Candace, the Queen of Ethiopia. He had been to Jerusalem to worship and was now on his way back home. The Spirit told Philip to go near the man’s chariot, and when he did, he heard the man reading from Isaiah the prophet. Philip asked: “Do you understand what you are reading?” To which the Ethiopian replied:
“How can I, unless someone explains it to me?” (Acts 8:31)
So the Ethiopian invited Philip to come up and sit with him. Philip began with that very passage of Scripture and told the man the good news about Jesus.
As they traveled together along the road, the Ethiopian understood so well that he said, “Look here is water. Why shouldn’t I be baptized?” So the Ethiopian stopped the chariot, was baptized, and went on his way rejoicing!
God had given Philip special insight into the Scriptures. He had exposed him to the teachings and the life of Jesus in a way that Philip was able to help someone else understand why Jesus had to come and die.
The Ethiopian was smart (he was in charge of the Queen’s treasury). He loved God (he was just returning from a lengthy trip to worship in Jerusalem). And he was eager to learn spiritual truths (he was reading the book of Isaiah). But he still needed someone to explain the Scriptures to him. So God sent Philip to do just that.
Faith explains. When God gives you the faith to believe and to understand what He’s done through Christ, He wants you to share what you’ve learned with others.
I remember flying to California one time, hoping to share with someone I knew there about what Christ had done for me. But even though I tried to bring up the topic throughout the weekend, God never opened the door for me to walk through and share. As I flew home, my plane made a stop in another city before I reached home. A man boarded the plane, sat down next to me, and proceeded to open up a brand new Bible to the first page of the New Testament.
I glanced up to see his face and couldn’t believe it! It was a friend of mine from college who had been involved in some of the same things that Christ had eventually delivered me from! He was just as shocked to see me as I was to see him. When I asked about the Bible, he said his mother was worried about him so had bought this Bible for him. He thought he’d give it a try and had sat down to open it for the very first time. I knew what God wanted me to do.
We spent the rest of the flight talking about his life and talking about the Scriptures. I started with the passage where he had opened his Bible and I explained how Christ had delivered me from the very things with which my friend still struggled.
Although I don’t know what happened to him after we left the plane, I do know that God answered my prayers to be able to share what was on my heart. And He answered my friend’s prayers (or at least his mothers!) that someone would help him to understand what he was reading.
If God has given you the ability to understand the Scriptures, know that it’s a gift, and know that God wants you to use that gift to explain those Scriptures to those around you.
Prayer: Father, help me make the most of every opportunity You give me to explain to others what You’ve revealed to me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 7: Faith Speaks

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Scripture Reading: Acts 7
There are times when God wants you to hold your tongue. For instance, when Jesus healed two blind men, He told them sternly, “See that no one knows about this” (Matthew 9:30). And when Jesus brought Jairus’ daughter back from the dead, Jesus gave strict orders not to let anyone know about it (Mark 5:43).
But there are other times when God wants you to speak. For instance, when Jesus cast the demons out of the man named Legion, Jesus told him: “Return home and tell how much God has done for you” (Luke 8:39a). Or when Jesus healed ten men of leprosy on the road to Jerusalem, He told them: “Go, show yourselves to the priests” (Luke 17:14b).
So there are times when God wants you to hold your tongue, but there are also times when God wants you to speak. And when God calls you to speak, He wants you to be ready. The Bible says, “Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have” (1 Peter 3:15).
I’d like to give you three ideas today to help you speak when God calls you to speak. I’ve pulled these ideas from the story in Acts chapter 7 where God called Stephen to speak. Stephen spoke boldly, even though it was dangerous to do so. When Stephen was arrested and had to defend himself, he gave one of the boldest speeches in the Bible. Because of it, he was stoned to death, but his words were not in vain.
Here are the three things that I noticed Stephen did, and we can do, when God says to speak:
1) Don’t be afraid.
2) Pair up your words with Scripture.
3) Trust God to use His Word to transform lives.
First, don’t be afraid. Jesus had already forewarned His followers before He died that they would be arrested and flogged and persecuted. Jesus told them: “So do not be afraid of them. There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. What I tell you in the dark, speak in the daylight; what is whispered in your ear, proclaim from the roofs. Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:26-28).
Although Stephen could have been afraid that day, he didn’t let it keep him from speaking.
Second, pair up your words with Scripture. Stephen might also have worried about what he was going to say to his accusers, but Jesus had already told His followers: “But when they arrest you, do not worry about what to say or how to say it. At that time you will be given what to say, for it will not be you speaking, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you” (Matthew 10:19-20).
God did give Stephen words to speak. His Word. When Stephen spoke, he paired up his own words with Scripture to support what he was saying. Stephen quoted from Genesis, Exodus, Deuteronomy, Amos and Isaiah. When Stephen spoke, God spoke His Words through Stephen. This is one of the reasons it’s so important to read your Bible, study your Bible and memorize your Bible. When you know God’s Word, it helps you to infuse your words with His.
Third, trust that God will use His Word to transform lives. The Bible says that one of the men who heard Stephen speak that day was Saul, who at the time gave approval to Stephen’s death. But if you keep reading in Acts, you’ll see that Saul became a Christian himself shortly thereafter. Jesus changed Saul’s name to Paul, and Paul went on to write much of the rest of the New Testament, including the letters to the Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians and more.
Even though Stephen died, God used his words that day to reach many lives, including ours over 2,000 years later! As God said, “My word…will not return to Me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11).
When God calls you to speak, speak. Don’t be afraid. Pair up your words with Scripture. And trust that God will use His Word to transform lives.
Prayer: Father, help us to speak when you say, “Speak.” In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 6: Faith Fills

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Scripture Reading: Acts 6
I suppose you’ve heard what happens when you sing a country music song backwards, right? You get your car back, you get your dog back, you get your wife back.
Well today, I want to talk about how to get something else back: I want to talk about how to get your faith back ― how to get your faith back if you’ve lost it, how to find it for the first time if you’ve never found it before, and if you’ve already found it, how to help others find their faith, too, so that they can truly become filled with faith, or “faith full.”
There’s a scene in the movie The Chronicles of Narnia where Lucy and her brothers and sister finally all stumble into the land of Narnia when they’re trying to hide in an old wardrobe. Lucy had discovered Narnia before, but when she told her family about it, they made fun of her, they got mad at her, and they told her to stop imagining things. But now they all see it with their own eyes and finally believe. I love that moment of discovery, when people go from doubt to faith, from unbelief to belief, from questioning what others have told them to believing it with they’re whole heart, soul, mind and strength.
Acts chapter 6 describes one of the early believers named Stephen in a way that I’d love to become as well. Acts says that Stephen was:
“a man who was full of faith and of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 6:5).
That’s what I think God wants each of you to be: men and women who are full of faith and of the Holy Spirit. Men and women who are so filled with faith that it overflows from within you and onto those around you.
But how can we get to the point where we’re “faith full”? How can we help other people discover what we’ve found to be true?
Here are three things I’d recommend:
1) Read your Bible. The Bible contains story after story of people who have put their faith in God and become filled with faith as a result. When you read their stories, it will help to increase your faith as well.
Today’s a good day to read John chapter 20, for instance, where it describes three sets of people at the moment when they went from doubt to belief, who got to see Jesus raised from the day on that first Easter morning and in the days immediately following His resurrection. The Apostle John says he wrote these stories for you: “Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in His name” (John 20:30-31).
2) Research your Barriers. If you’ve got questions that are keeping you from fully believing what God has said in His Word, take time to get your questions answered so you can move forward in your faith.
This is what Lee Strobel did when his wife told him she had become a Christian. Lee was an atheist and the legal affairs editor for the Chicago Tribune. He decided to use his journalism and legal training to thoroughly investigate Christianity, hoping to liberate his wife from this cult! But his plan backfired when he found more evidence that supported the resurrection than he ever imagined and he ended up putting his faith in Christ.
3) Reconnect with your Brothers and Sisters in Christ. God doesn’t want you to go it alone. He wants you to help each other, to bear each other’s burdens and to sharpen each other like iron sharpens iron.
C.S. Lewis, who wrote The Chronicles of Narnia and other great Christian works, went to Oxford College as an atheist. But after reading books by George McDonald and others he admired and discovered were strong Christians, he turned from atheism to believing there must be a God. But it was when he began to meet with other Christians in person, like fellow student J.R.R. Tolkien who later wrote The Lord of The Rings, they challenged his thoughts and ideas. After talking with his friends till three in the morning one night, Lewis went home and the next morning went from just believing in God to becoming a Christian.
Read your Bible. Research your Barriers, and Reconnect with your Brothers and Sisters in Christ.
These aren’t the only way to become filled with faith, but they’re certainly good things to do, even if you’re a strong believer, because they can help you keep up in the faith that you’ve already come to believe in your heart.
Prayer: Father, thank You for giving me so many examples of people who have put their faith in You. Help me to keep putting my faith in You, and to help others put their faith in You, too. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 5: Faith Obeys

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Scripture Reading: Acts 5
I’d like to talk today about my all-time favorite Super Hero, if you could call Him that. His name is Jesus Christ and He’s the best example of our topic today, “Faith Obeys.”
I can’t think of anyone who epitomizes obedience more than Jesus on the night before He died when He prayed: “…not My will, but Yours be done” (Luke 22:42).
But just because Jesus was the Son of God, it doesn’t mean that He didn’t agonize over the choices He made, just like the rest of us do. Luke says that Jesus was in such anguish over His decision that night that, “His sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground” (Luke 22.44b).
I guess it’s not really fair to compare Jesus to other Super Heroes like Superman or Spider-Man, because Jesus was the Son of God. He had access to powers they could never have imagined. But at the same time, Jesus was also fully human―more real, and more like us, than Superman or Spider-Man ever were.
The Bible says that Jesus had real flesh and blood (Hebrews 2:14), was born as a baby (Luke 2:7), was scolded by his parents (Luke 2:48), and grew in wisdom and stature (Luke 2:52). He experienced love (John 11:5), anger (Mark 3:5), joy (Hebrews 12:2), betrayal (Luke 22:48), temptation (Hebrews 4:15) and pain (Matthew 27:46). He bled (John 19:34), He cried (John 11:35), He suffered (Hebrews 13:12) and He died (Mark 15:39).
The more that I can envision Jesus as a real human being, the more I can envision that I can really do what He did, as He said I could do when He said, “I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing” (John 14:12).
That includes being obedient to God, regardless of the consequences to us personally. Peter and John found that same strength to obey God, even when threatened with death, as we can see in Acts chapters 4 and 5. After calling on the name of Jesus to heal a man who had been crippled for over forty years, Peter and John were commanded by the religious leaders to stop speaking or teaching at all in the name of Jesus. Peter replied,
“Judge for yourselves whether it is right in God’s sight to obey you rather than God. For we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard…We must obey God rather than men!” (Acts 4:19-20, 5:29).
When faced with death, Peter and John had to make a choice. These weren’t idle threats. The religious leaders had already shown their resolve to follow through on their threats by putting Jesus to death.
But Peter and John also knew what Jesus had called them to do. They had just seen Christ perform a miracle through them when they called on His name. So they responded with the only response that made sense to them: “…we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”
If God is calling you to stop a relationship that you know is destroying you, stop it, even if it seems too hard or too complicated. If God is calling you to stay in a marriage that you’d rather get out of, stay in it. If God is calling you to another job, take it, but if He’s calling you to stay in your current job, don’t leave. If He’s calling you to stop a bad habit that’s killing you, stop it, and if He’s calling you to start a good habit that will save you, start it!
God gave Peter and John the strength to do what they needed to do, just like He gave Jesus the strength to do what He needed to do―just like He’ll give you the strength to do what He wants you to do, when you put your faith in Christ.
Prayer: Father, help me to do all that You’re calling me to do today, to obey Your will, not my own, and not the will of others, but Yours alone. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 4: Faith Saves

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Scripture Reading: Acts 4
When people say they’re “saved,” what do they mean? And what exactly are they saved from?
To say you’re saved means more than just the fact that you’re a Christian. It means you’ve been saved from something. Specifically, it means you’ve been saved from hell, both the literal hell that Jesus talked about when people are separated from God for all eternity, and the practical hell that you can experience here on this earth when you continue to follow your own sinful ways.
To someone who isn’t “saved,” the word seems to be either offensive or just plain laughable. But to someone who is “saved,” the word is full of life, because they know what would have happened to them had Jesus not come to save them.
I read this week that one of the candidates running for office is being questioned because their pastor “preaches hell for anyone who doesn’t believe in Jesus.” I guess when you put it that way, it does sound rather offensive. But the truth is, it’s the same message that Jesus preached. (Good thing He isn’t running for office―He’d probably get crucified again!)
Some people, unfortunately, think that Jesus is out to get them, that He came to condemn them for what they’ve done. But Jesus didn’t come to condemn you. He came to save you. He even says so in His own words:
“For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him. Whoever believes in Him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son” (John 3:17-18).
So, yes, there is hell to pay if you don’t believe in Jesus. But no one’s going to hell because they haven’t believed in Jesus; they’re going to hell because of their sins, which is a completely different reason altogether. Whenever you sin, it separates you from God. And without a savior, you’d be separated from God forever. That’s hell. That’s the fate from which Jesus came to save you.
When the Apostles Peter and John were arrested for preaching that Jesus could save people from their sins, they didn’t back down even when threatened with death. In Acts chapter 4, they spoke boldly about the fact that Jesus alone had the power to save:
“Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).
Faith saves. One of my favorite scenes in the Indiana Jones series is when Indy comes to the edge of a cliff and can’t see any way across to the cliff on the other side. With a look of exasperation, he says, “It’s a leap of faith!” With his enemies pressing in from behind and no other way forward, he takes a giant step into what looks like thin air in front of him, only to find that he has stepped onto a solid rock bridge that had been camouflaged from view. Indy’s “leap of faith” had saved him.
Jesus wants to save you from more than just a bad ending to the movie of your life. He wants to save you from hell, both here on earth and on into eternity.
When Jesus died on the cross, He extended an invitation to every person in the world who had strayed from God to come back to Him. The price for our sins had been paid. But reconciliation is a two way street. Just because one party wants to be reconciled with the other doesn’t mean they are reconciled. Both parties have to agree to it.
Jesus has done His part. Now He’s waiting for each person to respond individually. And the way you respond is by faith.
If you’ve never put your faith in Christ to save you from your sins, I pray you’ll do it today. He’d love to say to you what He said to the woman who wiped His feet with her tears:
“Your sins are forgiven. Your faith has saved you; go in peace” (Luke 7:48,50).
Prayer: Father, forgive me for the sins I have committed, too, as I put my faith in Christ. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 3: Faith Heals

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Scripture Reading: Acts 3
I’d like to talk about healing today, but before I do, I’d like to say a word to those of you who may have lost someone close to you, whether recently or in the past.
I know what it’s like to lose someone you love. I believe there are times to pray that God will take your loved ones home to heaven where there will be “no more death or mourning or crying or pain…” (Revelation 21:4). For the Christian, the moment we pass from this life to the next will be the greatest and most miraculous healing any of us will ever experience.
But there’s also a time to pray with all the strength and faith you have for God to heal someone, here and now, in the name of Jesus, and that’s what our passage is talking about today.
In Acts chapter 3, Peter and John came across a man who was crippled from birth. The man asked Peter and John for money, to which Peter responded:
“Silver or gold I do not have, but what I have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk” (Acts 3:6).
Peter took the man by the hand, the man’s feet and ankles became instantly strong, and he began walking and jumping and praising God.
It was a powerful scene―so powerful that people came running from all over to see what had happened. Peter said:
“Men of Israel, why does this surprise you? Why do you stare at us as if by our own power or godliness we had made this man walk? … By faith in the name of Jesus, this man whom you see and know was made strong. It is Jesus’ name and the faith that comes through Him that has given this complete healing to him, as you can all see” (Acts 3:12, 16).
Faith heals. In this case, I think it’s interesting that it doesn’t seem to be so much the faith of the man who was healed that made the difference. He was just asking Peter and John for money. It seems to be the faith of Peter and John that made the difference. They were the ones who had the faith to say to the man, “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” They were the ones who reached out and pulled the man to his feet. It’s a testimony to me of the power of the faith of a friend.
And you can be that friend when you pray for those around you.
There was a time when I would tell someone I’d pray for them, then walk away and pray later when I got home alone. While that was a good thing to do, Jesus said, “For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them” (Matthew 18:20).
I have no doubt that if Jesus were standing right there with me as I prayed for you, that He would reach out and touch you with His power. And Jesus tells us that when we come together in His name, He will be right there with us. Knowing this truth increases my faith tremendously.
So I’ve found it to be more powerful, and more meaningful to the person for whom I’m praying, to stop and ask them, “Can I pray for you right now?” If they agree, which almost always happens, then I say a prayer with them right there, whether in a hallway or in a store or at a restaurant. It’s a simple thing that doesn’t have to draw attention, but simply bowing our heads and praying at the time the need is expressed. Aside from being powerful and meaningful, it also helps me to remember to pray so I don’t forget by the time I get home!
For some of you, I want to go further and encourage you not just to pray for your family and friends to be healed in Jesus’ name, but to pray for them out loud and in front of them. I know this may be foreign territory for some of you, but it’s a great way to exercise your faith. It can be as simple as this, “Father, heal my friend. In Jesus’ name, Amen.” Not only will you become stronger in your faith, but so will your family and friends.
As James said,
“…pray for each other so you may be healed” (James 5:16b).
So whether in private or out loud, exercise your faith today! Pray for those around you to be healed in Jesus’ name.
Prayer: Father, give me the faith to believe in Your power to heal and to pray that my family and friends will be healed. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 2: Faith Acts

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Scripture Reading: Acts 2
There’s a scene in the movie Spider-Man 2 where Spider-Man is swooping from building to building when suddenly he has a web failure. He crashes into the alley below, looks at his hands and says, “Why is this happening to me?”
He wonders if he’s losing his power. But it’s not true. He still has the same power he’s always had since he first got bitten by that supercharged spider. It’s in his blood. What he lacks is faith. He’s had some bad things happen to him and he’s ready to give up. He just wants to go back to being Peter Parker, a normal guy with a normal job.
But after a pep talk from his Aunt May, Peter goes back to being Spider-Man. From the top of a building, he takes a flying leap over the edge, yelling, “I’m back! I’m back!” Seconds later, he looks down, panics, and plummets into the cars parked below. He stands up gingerly and says, “My back. My back.”
I guess he still has a ways to go! But he’s working on it, something that I want to encourage you to do today, too.
I’ve heard it said that faith is like a muscle, it gets stronger the more we exercise it. There was another Peter who exercised his faith on a regular basis, Peter the Apostle, the one who stepped over the edge of a boat to walk on water, but seconds later, looked down, panicked and began to sink. This is the same Peter who stood by Jesus the night he was arrested, saying he’d die for Jesus, but then denied that he even knew Jesus three times before the morning.
Some people criticize Peter for his lack of faith, but the truth is, he’s the only one who stepped over the edge of the boat and got to experience walking on water, even if only for a short time.
On the day of Pentecost, when Jesus sent the Holy Spirit to empower the disciples as He promised He would, the Bible says:
“Then Peter stood up with the Eleven, raised his voice and addressed the crowd: ‘Fellow Jews and all of you who live in Jerusalem, let me explain this to you; listen carefully to what I say…’” (Acts 2:14).
Peter’s message was so powerful that three thousand were baptized and put their faith in Christ as a result.
How did Peter go from denying Christ to proclaiming His name to thousands? In short, he got his faith back. He’d seen Jesus raised from the dead, he waited when Jesus told him to wait, and he “got a dose of the Holy Ghost.” The combination was powerful, and when God told him to act, Peter stood up and boldly told the people gathered what he knew about Jesus.
Peter exercised his faith on a regular basis. And God wants us to do the same, even when asked to do a “little thing”―bring a meal to a friend, visit someone in a nursing home, send an email to someone who needs encouragement, speak the truth in love, encourage your co-workers to do what’s right, instead of what’s safe, easy or more profitable.
God told a poor widow to gather empty jars from her neighbors so He could fill them with oil. God did the miracle, but she had to gather the jars (see 2 Kings 4). God told Naaman to wash seven times in the Jordan River, something Naaman thought was too small to make any difference. But Naaman did it, and God healed him (see 2 Kings 5).
Jesus told the disciples they’d be His witnesses to the ends of the earth. When the day of Pentecost came, all Peter had to do was stand up and tell them what he knew about Jesus. God brought people from the ends of the earth to him (see Acts 2:5-12).
If God’s calling you to act, act―even if it’s just a little thing.
Prayer: Father, help me to wait when you say “Wait,” and to act when you say “Act,” so I can accomplish all You want to accomplish through me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Lesson 1: Faith Waits

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Scripture Reading: Acts 1
I think it’s ironic, but fitting, that the very first thing Jesus tells His disciples to do in the book of Acts isn’t an “act” at all. He tells them to “wait.”
“On one occasion, while He was eating with them, He gave them this command: ‘Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised, which you have heard me speak about. For John baptized with water, but in a few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit’ ” (Acts 1:4-5).
Wait. Wait for the gift of the Holy Spirit. You see, without God, what’s the point of going on? If God’s called you to wait, waiting can be just as much an act of faith as doing. And not waiting can be your downfall.
When God promised to give Abraham many descendants, Abraham got impatient and got his wife’s servant girl pregnant instead. God said that their child Ishmael would have descendants galore, but that he would always be in hostility towards his brothers. When Abraham and his wife eventually had a child of their own, God blessed that child, Isaac, with many descendants, too. But unfortunately, the hostility between those two brothers has carried on for generations, even to this day, as present-day Muslims claim Ishmael as their forefather and present-day Jews claim Isaac as theirs.
God honors His promises, but there’s a price to pay for not waiting.
It’s hard to wait, I know. But I want to encourage you today, if God’s called you to wait, wait.
I remember one of the times when I was waiting on God. I felt that God had called me to go to Israel. Even though I didn’t know why, but I sensed it was important, so I went. After a few days of looking around Jerusalem, I began to wonder if God was ever going to show up at all. What was I waiting for anyway?
As I laid on my bed, I read this verse from Psalm 27:14:
“Wait for the Lord, be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”
But I read it in the Amplified Bible, which gives even more detail about what the Hebrew and Greek words in the Bible mean. I love the way the Amplified Bible puts it:
“Wait and hope for and expect the Lord; be brave and of good courage and let your heart be stout and enduring. Yes, wait for and hope for and expect the Lord” (Psalm 27:14, AMP).
It changed my whole perspective. Instead of waiting idly and wondering if God would ever show up, I began to look forward to what God was going to do. The next day, God did show up in a powerful way. I met a pastor on the temple mount who was also visiting in Israel. He prayed for me that day, anointed me with oil, and spoke a prophetic word over me about my future life and ministry, including much of what I’m doing today.
The difference between waiting idly and waiting expectantly is the difference between sitting at home alone, wondering if anyone’s ever going to stop by, and sitting at home, waiting for the most important person in your life to walk through that door at any minute, because they called ahead and told you they were on their way.
If you’re not convinced that it’s worth it to wait, here are a few benefits of waiting: You’ll sleep better, feel better, think clearer. You’ll be more content, less frustrated, kinder, gentler, more patient, more gracious. You’ll grow stronger, live longer, stand firmer. Here’s how the Bible puts it in Isaiah 40:31:
“But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint” (Isaiah 40:31, KJV).
If God’s called you to wait, wait. Wait for the Lord. “Yes, wait for and hope for and expect the Lord” (Psalm 27:14, AMP).
Prayer: Father, help me to wait on you with expectancy, looking forward to what You’re going to do at the end of the wait. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Acts: Lessons In Faith – Introduction

You’re reading ACTS: LESSONS IN FAITH, by Eric Elder, featuring thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Also available in paperback and eBook formats in our bookstore for a donation of any size!
How To Find, Increase And Express Your Faith In Christ
by Eric Elder
Thirty inspiring devotionals based on the lives of the very first followers of Christ.
INTRODUCTION
Scripture Reading: Acts 27:25
One of my favorite lines about faith comes from the movie The Incredibles.
There’s a scene where a mom and her kids are on a plane that’s about to be blown apart. The mom calls on her daughter to put a shield around the plane, something bigger than she’s ever done before. The daughter panics and in her doubt she can’t do it. The plane explodes, but not before the mom grabs her kids to parachute into the water below.
Later, when the daughter apologizes, her mom responds:
“It isn’t your fault. It wasn’t fair for me to suddenly ask so much of you. But things are different now. And doubt is a luxury we can’t afford anymore, sweetie. You have more power than you realize. Don’t think. And don’t worry. If the time comes, you’ll know what to do. It’s in your blood.”
There are times in our lives when it’s OK to doubt. But there comes a time in each of our lives where “doubt is a luxury you can’t afford anymore.” You either believe or you don’t, and the outcome depends on what you choose to believe. The truth is, as a Christian, you do have more power than you realize. When you put your faith in Christ, God puts a seed of faith within you. It’s in your blood.
My goal in the coming weeks is to strengthen your faith, to help you believe that God is who He says He is and that He will do what He says He will do.
If you’ve already put your faith in Christ, I want to strengthen the faith that’s already within you. If you haven’t yet put your faith in Christ, I want to help you get to the point where you can put your faith in Him.
I want to get you to the point where the Apostle Paul was at the end of the book of Acts.
Like the mom and her kids in The Incredibles, Paul was on a ship that was about to be blown apart. Hurricane force winds had pummeled his boat for days. The other men on the ship had given up all hope of being saved. But just as the men think all is lost, Paul stands up and says:
“…keep up your courage, because not one of you will be lost; only the ship will be destroyed. Last night an angel of the God whose I am and whom I serve stood beside me and said, ‘Do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand trial before Caesar; and God has graciously given you the lives of all who sail with you.’ So keep up your courage, men, for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me” (Acts 27:22-25).
And it did.
That’s the kind of faith God wants you to have, a faith that says, “I have faith in God it will happen just as He told me.” In the coming weeks, I want to walk with you through the book of Acts, chapter by chapter, taking a look at the various ways faith expressed itself in the lives of the very first followers of Christ. Sometimes God called them to wait. Other times He called them to stand up. Still other times He called them to speak, to pray, to give, to heal, to raise people from the dead.
My hope and prayer is that God will use this time to increase your faith to the point where you can say, like the Apostle Paul, “…for I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.”
I also want to encourage you to read each day’s Scripture Reading in your own Bible in addition to my devotional for that day. I’ve limited myself to touching upon just one thought in each chapter of Acts, but there’s so much God may speak to you about other subjects in your life. When you’re done reading all the daily Scripture Readings, you’ll have read through the entire book of Acts.
And finally, I’ve included a prayer at the end of each devotional to help you focus your own prayers by praying them along with me. Here’s today’s prayer.
Prayer: Father, I pray that You would fill me with faith in the days ahead, a faith that can say, “I have faith in God that it will happen just as He told me.” In Jesus’ name, Amen.
News From The Ranch – August 2008
The Newsletter of Eric Elder Ministries
New prayer request page, update on the Dominican Republic missions trip, painting at Clover Ranch, and donation update.
I’d like to take a break today from the book of Acts to give you a personal update on our lives and ministry.
Many of you know that we moved to Peru, Illinois last December. The move has gone great in many ways. But if you’re like me, it seems like it’s often after we’ve taken a step of faith into unknown territory that the doubts and second-guesses really kick in. Over the past few weeks, I feel like a skier who has taken off from the end of the high jump ramp and is now sailing through the air. I haven’t landed yet, and I’m not sure exactly how the landing’s going to go, but I also know that I can’t go back!
When I was asking God about this unsettling sensation this week, I wondered how to get that “settled” feeling back, even though it may be some time before we’re actually settled. I then listened to a podcast from Mosaic Church on the topic of “Courage” (you can listen to it yourself from http://www.mosaic.org). The speaker talked about how to overcome our doubts and fears when God has called you into unknown territory. The speaker suggested we heed the most frequent command found in Scripture: “Fear Not!”
But how can we “fear not” when there’s so much to be afraid of? By trusting in God every step of the way, by that He is with us every step of the way. As God says in Isaiah 41:10, “Fear not, for I am with you…” (NKJV).
God wouldn’t have told us to “fear not” if it weren’t possible. I decided to put my trust in God again that morning, and God has given me His peace again knowing that He’s with us. He reminded me of why we made the move in the first place and helped me to get my focus back on Him purposes instead of my fears. What a way to get that “settled” feeling back again!
If you’ve stepped out in faith and into some unknown territory, I want to encourage you with the words God spoke to Joshua when God called Joshua into his own unknown territory. Even though the land was full of giants and other obstacles, God said: “Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be terrified; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go” (Joshua 1:9).
Thanks for all of your thoughts and prayers for us as we continue to get “settled” here in our new town. Here are a number of other updates I thought you’d like to hear about…
Need Prayer?
If you need prayer–or if you’d like to pray for others–I’d like to invite you to visit the new Prayer Request page I designed for an online ministry called “This Day’s Thought.” I’ve been working together with “This Day’s Thought” for several years now, and the new prayer request system is the latest addition.
Since launching this new system earlier this month, the prayer page is getting about 10 prayer requests a day from people all over the world. If you ever need prayer, you can post your request on this page and it will be seen by a team of people who will immediately pray for your request. If you’d like to join the team to pray for others, you can sign up on the same prayer page where people post their request. You will be notified by email with each new request, then you can pray for–and even personally respond–to those requests that particularly touch you.
The Internet is such a great way to get requests out to people who are willing and able to pray, so I’m glad this new system can harness the power of the Internet for good, for God, and for you! Remember, “The earnest prayer of a righteous person has great power and produces wonderful results” (James 5:16, NLT).
To post a request or to pray for others who have posted theirs, visit: This Day’s Thought Prayer Page
Back From The Dominican Republic
Lana and our three oldest kids are now back from their missions trip to the Dominican Republic. They went for a week in July to help a new congregation there build a church and parsonage.
It was hot, sweaty and hard work, but they enjoyed being able to encourage the members of this new church, as well as the new local pastor and his family (pictured here with Lana and our older kids).
The missionaries who helped to establish this church and hosted our team on the trip said that they simply couldn’t have been able to get so much done without the team’s help. For those of you who prayed for and supported our family on this trip, you’re part of that team! So thanks to you as well!
Work Days At Clover Ranch!
The next few months we’ll be having several work days at Clover Ranch here in Illinois. We’re continuing to transform the property into a personal retreat center.
If you’d like to help out in person, we’ve love to have you join us. We’ll be doing all kinds of projects: scraping, painting, dry walling, mudding, sanding, staining, varnishing, installing garage doors, weeding and planting trees and grass. Let me know if you’re interested and I’ll be sure to let you know which days we’ll be working there.
Even if you can’t come, you can still help out! We need to buy several dozen gallons of paint over the next few weeks, and each gallon costs about $30. If you’d like to donate a gallon or two (or more!), just click the link below and you can donate online or get mailing instructions for sending a check. Thanks!
Financial Update
While our trust is always in the Lord for the funds to do this work, we also know that He often provides for His work through His people. So from time to time, I know it’s important to let you know our needs so you can help out if you can.
While our donations have remained steady this year at about $3,000 a month, our expenses have continued to increase. Between our move to Peru and the various projects we have going on with our ministry, we could really use an infusion of cash right now! Everything we do is funded entirely by donations from people like you, not by any one church or organization. From this amount we pay all the costs of running our ministry including our salary and housing expenses, our computer and Internet expenses, our publication expenses, and our Clover Ranch expenses of mortgage payments, gas, electricity and renovation. As you can see, we do a lot with what we get!
If you could make a one-time donation to our ministry right now, that would really help us as we head into the fall. Whether it’s $10, $100, or $1,000 or more, know that we’ll put it to good use for the kingdom. As a registered non-profit organization, all of our work is overseen by a board of directors and all of our financial reports are publicly available. This means you donations are also fully tax-deductible!
We could also use some additional monthly donors. If every person reading this note gave a monthly gift of just $10, we’d be able to meet–and even exceed–our budget for the entire year. I know that not everyone reading this note is able to give to support this work, but if you do, know that your gifts will not only be a blessing to us, they will be a blessing to those we are able to minister to each week. Our monthly donors currently give anywhere from $10 a month to $400 a month. Would you be able to join them with a monthly gift of any amount?
Another way you can help us on the financial front is by ordering any of the inspiring books and CD’s our ministry has produced over the years. I know many of you like to get a jump on the Christmas shopping season, and some of these books and CD’s will make great gifts to encourage your friends and family in their faith.
The piano CD’s are especially great for introducing people to God in a non-threatening way. The titles set the tone for each CD, with titles like “Clear My Mind,” “Simply Relaxing,” “Hymns,” “Eden,” “Still Waters,” and “Christmas.” Our devotional books are also great ways to get people into the Word of God, written in a simple, easy to read style with lots of personal stories that apply to everyday life. Titles include, “Two Weeks With God,” “Jesus: Lessons In Love,” “Exodus: Lessons In Freedom,” and “What God Says About Sex.” Know that when you order any of these resources, you’re also helping us reach even more people with the message of Christ.
So if you’d like to make a one-time donation, or to sign up to make a monthly donation, just click the link below for instructions.
To order books or CD’s, visit The Ranch Giftshop at this link:
Reader’s Comments
Before I close, I’d like to share just a few comments from readers of my weekly devotionals. I especially love to hear from those who tell me they’re putting these biblical principles into practice in their lives. Here are a few comments I received after writing a message on fasting:
From Illinois: “I did a 3-day fast last week–I had never done one that long before. It was a great experience, and your lesson came at just the right moment and encouraged me to do it.”
From Texas: “Thanks, Eric, as always for an apt word. I am praying fervently (and fasting)…Perhaps you can pray with me for God’s will to become apparent and/or his storehouses to open on our behalf.”
From Arkansas: “Your note followed up on my prayers and makes me believe that the Lord is calling me to take hold of fasting alongside my prayer life in a meaningful way.”
Look for more devotions from the book of Acts as we finish up in the book in the weeks ahead. If you’ve missed any of the series or would like to reread them, you can read them online at this link:
Please Pray With Us
Father,
- Thank You for helping us get the Prayer Request system up and running for This Day’s Thought,
- Thank You for the work You did in the Dominican Republic,
- And thank You for the opportunity to reach many people through The Ranch website and the upcoming Clover Ranch.
Father,
- We now pray that You would provide the funding to continue with each of these projects,
- That You would provide safety for those who are working to restore Clover Ranch,
- And for more people find their way to The Ranch so they can find their way to You.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Love,
Eric Elder
The Ranch Fellowship is a non-profit 501(c)(3) religious organization whose purpose is to share the message of Jesus Christ throughout the world. Click here to read more about our ministry.
To give a gift to The Ranch and to yourself, please visit The Ranch Giftshop.
To make a donation without ordering, just click Make A Donation.
News From The Ranch – May 2008
The Newsletter of Eric Elder Ministries
Our move to Peru, IL, Missions Trip to the Dominican Republic, Clover Ranch update, and emails from the series in Acts.

Makari, Lucas, Lana and Karis will be heading to the Dominican Republic in July to help a new congregation build a church where they can meet and grow.
Dear Friends,
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I’d like to take a short break from our look at the book of Acts to give you an update of news from The Ranch. It’s a chance for me to share with you some of the cool things God is doing in our personal lives and ministry, and also let you know how you can be involved in what we’re doing. Starting with a personal story…
We’ve Moved!
Just before Christmas last year, we moved back to Lana’s hometown of Peru, Illinois. When her parents moved out of their big house (they had nine kids) into a smaller house a few minutes away, her family asked if we’d want to move into their bigger house. It would give us more room for our growing family (we have six kids) and would get us closer to her family to spend more time with them and help take care of her parents.
After much prayer, we felt we should move and I felt strongly that God wanted us to move “by the end of the year.” As the year went on, I didn’t see how we could undertake such a big move with so little time left till the end, so I asked God for some kind of confirming word from the Bible if He really wanted us to move that quickly. I racked my brain trying to think of any verses that talked about doing something by the end of the year, but none came to mind.
So I went to read another verse in the Bible I had been thinking about that week from 2nd Timothy 3:15. It says, “Every part of Scripture is God-breathed and useful one way or another—showing us truth, exposing our rebellion, correcting our mistakes, training us to live God’s way” (from The Message). I was thinking about how powerful the Word of God is, and how God can breath life into any of the words whenever He wants to speak to us, if we’re willing to listen.
I kept on reading through 2nd Timothy when all of the sudden the words seemed to jump off the page. I read: “Try hard to come to me before winter.” Winter here in the U.S. was on December 22nd, less than ten days from the end of the year! I felt like God was speaking directly to me calling to me from Peru and saying, “I mean it! Try hard to come to Me before winter!” So we began to pack and clean in earnest, and by December 21st had finally gotten our beds moved over. We’re still not fully unpacked, but it’s been great to be here and we’ve already felt God’s hand in our move in so many ways. The Word of God really is “God-breathed”!
Missions Trip To The Dominican Republic
Lana and our three oldest kids are heading to the Dominican Republic in July to help to build a church for a new congregation there, giving them a place to meet and grow. They’re excited about this opportunity to help and have been praying, planning and working towards this for the past 6 months.
They’ve worked and raised over half of the money they need to go on this trip ($1,000 each including supplies to build the church). But with just a couple of months left to go, a donation of any size would really help them reach their goal. Know that your gifts will be greatly appreciated and put to good use. I’m thrilled that they’ll be able to serve together as a family in this way, and will be glad for your prayers for me as I’m home with the three younger kids! Just click here to send a donation by mail or online by PayPal or credit card. Please mention that your gift is for the “DR Mission Trip”.
Clover Ranch Update
We made tremendous progress last year on getting our Clover Ranch retreat property ready for guests, but still have a ways to go. If you’d like to help us this summer, we’ll be doing a number of jobs, from finishing the rewiring of the house, to drywalling, painting and landscaping.
We’re still in need of donations for each of these projects, and in particular could use a good, reliable riding lawn mower to cut the almost 2 acres of grass. If you know of someone who has a good mower, or could donate towards the $3,500 cost of a new one, please let us know. Even while the house is under renovation we’ve been able to make use of it for prayer and ministry, so thanks for all your help and prayers to get it this far.
Back To Acts
Back at The Ranch website, I’m in the midst of writing a weekly devotional series called “Acts: Lessons In Faith.” The weekly messages go out to 1,200 subscribers to The Ranch newsletter, and another 18,000 subscribers of a partner ministry called This Day’s Thought.
I’ve enjoyed writing it, and even got to preach the first six messages at our church during February and March while we search for a new senior pastor.
I thought you might like to read a few comments from readers from around the world.
Betty from the UK writes: “Praise be to Jesus, the message u sent me strengthened my faith.”
Chris from the UK writes: “Thanks as ever – time and time again your thoughts for the day hit home. God speed, Chris”
Phil from Colorado writes: “I got your article called “Faith Waits.” It was exceptional and I am asking permission to reprint it and use it, with your permission and showing that it is yours, in our ministry.”
Ley from the UK writes: “What I have had from The Ranch has been a tremendous inspiration from God Himself. Many thanks for all your hard work in this ministry.”
David from Oregon writes: “Your “Acts: Lessons In Faith” message was fantastic. Of course, I loved the quote from The Incredibles. The next time I watch it with our two youngest kids, I’ll still be thinking about what you wrote.”
Many others have written in to express their appreciation for this series. If you’ve missed part of it, or want to reread any of the short devotionals or full length versions, just click here.
Our Personal Needs
Many of you know that this is our full-time ministry and we rely fully on gifts from people like you for all we do, including our personal expenditures like moving to a new home. We need so little to reach so many, but we need that little so much! As the summer approaches and income to many ministries including ours, takes a dip, we could really use some extra financial support. We certainly understand if you are unable to give. For those that can contribute a little extra this month or substantially, please know that we would certainly appreciate your generosity. So if you’ve been blessed by what we’re doing, or if you’d like to help us keep it going and expand it so others can be blessed by it, please click the link below to send us a one-time or monthly donation of any size.
If you’d like a gift in appreciation of your donation (which we’d be glad to send you), you can click the second link to request any of our several books and CD’s that we’ve produced though this ministry and you’ll be able to choose a donation amount and we’ll send you a gift as a thank you for your donation.
To make donations to Clover Ranch, the Dominican Republic Missions Trip, or just our personal support, click here.
Please Pray With Us
Father,
- Thank You for the move to Peru going well,
- Thank You for so many being encouraged in their faith through the weekly messages,
- And thank You for the opportunity to reach many others through missions trips and projects like Clover Ranch.
Father,
- We now pray that You would use each of these projects to draw people closer to You,
- That You would provide funding for this ministry to keep going forward and expanding,
- And for more people find their way to The Ranch so they can find their way to You.
In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Love,
Eric Elder
The Ranch Fellowship is a non-profit 501(c)(3) religious organization whose purpose is to share the message of Jesus Christ throughout the world. Click here to read more about our ministry.
To give a gift to The Ranch and to yourself, please visit The Ranch Giftshop.
To make a donation without ordering, just click Make A Donation.
D. T. Niles — Hurry means…
Hurry means that we gather impressions but have no experiences, that we collect acquaintances but make no friends, that we attend meetings but experience no encounter. We must recover eternity if we are to find time, and eternity is what Jesus came to restore. For without it, there can be no charity.
D. T. Niles
Jeremy Taylor — God is pleased with no music below so much as…
God is pleased with no music below so much as with the thanksgiving songs of relieved widows and supported orphans; of rejoicing, comforted, and thankful persons.
Jeremy Taylor
Corrie ten Boom — When Jesus tells us to love our enemies…
When Jesus tells us to love our enemies, He Himself will give us the love with which to do it. We are neither factories nor reservoirs of His love, only channels. When we understand that, all excuse for pride is eliminated.
Corrie ten Boom
Joseph Stowell — Eternity is primary…
Eternity is primary. Heaven must become our first and ultimate point of reference. We are built for it, redeemed for it, and on our way to it. Success demands that we see and respond to now in the light of then. All that we have, are, and accumulate must be seen as resources by which we can influence and impact the world beyond. Even our tragedies are viewed as events that can bring eternal gain.
Joseph Stowell
Leonard Ravenhill — We never pray for folks we gossip about…
We never pray for folks we gossip about, and we never gossip about the folk for whom we pray!
Leonard Ravenhill
A. B. Simpson — Have you ever learned the beautiful art of letting God…
Have you ever learned the beautiful art of letting God take care of you and giving all your thought and strength to pray for others and for the kingdom of God? It will relieve you of a thousand cares.
A. B. Simpson
Warren Wiersbe — Christians think they are…
Christians think they are prosecuting attorneys or judges, when, in realty, God has called all of us to be witnesses.
Warren Wiersbe
Gloria Gaither — God’s loving initiative to step into time…
God’s loving initiative to step into time and space to restore us to Himself is still a cause for wonder and praise.
Gloria Gaither
Brother Lawrence — What can God have that gives him greater satisfaction…
What can God have that gives him greater satisfaction than that a thousand times a day all his creatures should thus pause to withdraw and worship him in the heart.
Brother Lawrence
Oswald Chambers — Living a life of faith…
Living a life of faith means never knowing where you are being led. But it does mean loving and knowing the One who is leading. It is literally a life of faith…a life of knowing Him who calls us to go.
Oswald Chambers
Thomas Curtis Clark — God gave me joy in the common things…
God give me joy in the common things:
In the dawn that lures, the eve that sings.
In the new grass sparkling after rain,
In the late wind’s wild and weird refrain;
In the springtime’s spacious field of gold,
In the precious light by winter doled…
God give me joy in the tasks that press,
In the memories that burn and bless;
In the thought that life has love to spend,
In the faith that God’s at journey’s end.
Thomas Curtis Clark
Philip Yancey — Grace means that God…
Grace means that God already loves us as much as an infinite God can possibly love.
Philip Yancey
Dietrich Bonhoeffer — The hungry need bread…
The hungry need bread and the homeless need a roof; the dispossessed need justice and the lonely need fellowship; the undisciplined need order and the slaves need freedom. To allow the hungry to remain hungry would be blasphemy against God and one’s neighbor, for what is nearest to God is precisely the need of one’s neighbor.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Arthur T. Pierson – The peace of God is that eternal calm…
The peace of God is that eternal calm which lies far too deep down to be reached by any external trouble or disturbance.
Arthur T. Pierson
Calvin Coolidge — There is no dignity quite so impressive…
There is no dignity quite so impressive, and no independence quite so important, as living within your means.
Calvin Coolidge
Jerome — A friend is long sought…
A friend is long sought, hardly found, and with difficulty kept.
Jerome
Augustine — He so loved us that…
He so loved us that, for our sake,
He was made man in time,
although through him all times were made.
He was made man, who made man.
He was created of a mother whom he created.
He was carried by hands that he formed.
He cried in the manger in wordless infancy, he the Word,
without whom all human eloquence is mute.
Augustine
John Wesley — When I was young, I was sure of everything…
When I was young, I was sure of everything. In a few years, having been mistaken a thousand times, I was not half so sure of most things as I was before. At present, I am hardly sure of anything but what God has revealed to man.
John Wesley
Douglas Steere — In intercessory prayer…
In intercessory prayer, one seldom ends where one began.
Douglas Steere
William Booth — Faith and works should travel side by side…
Faith and works should travel side by side, step answering to step, like the legs of men walking. First faith, and then works; and then faith again, and then works again- until you can scarcely distinguish which is one and which is the other.
William Booth
Thomas Manton — It is Satan’s custom by small sins…
It is Satan’s custom by small sins to draw us to greater, as the little sticks set the great ones on fire, and a wisp of straw kindles a block of wood.
Thomas Manton
Annie Johnson Flint — God has not promised skies always blue…
God has not promised skies always blue,
flower-strewn pathways all our lives through;
God has not promised sun without rain,
joy without sorrow, peace without pain.
But God has promised strength for the day,
rest for the labor, light for the way,
grace for the trials, help from above,
unfailing sympathy, undying love.
Annie Johnson Flint
Augustine — The Holy Scriptures…
The Holy Scriptures are our letters from home.
Augustine
Robert Murray M’Cheyne — I know well that Christ is nearest…
I know well that when Christ is nearest, Satan is also busiest.
Robert Murray M’Cheyne
Douglas Steere — There is no greater intimacy…
There is no greater intimacy with another than that which is built through holding him or her up in prayer.
Douglas Steere
Paul Lowenberg — At Bethlehem God became…
At Bethlehem God became what He was not before, but did not cease being what He always was.
Paul Lowenberg
Bob Hope — When we recall Christmas past…
When we recall Christmas past, we usually find that the simplest things, not the great occasions, give off the greatest glow of happiness.
Bob Hope
Corrie ten Boom — If Jesus were born one thousand times…
If Jesus were born one thousand times in Bethlehem and not in me, then I would still be lost.
Corrie ten Boom
Edgar Guest — At Christmas…
At Christmas, man is almost what God sent him here to be.
Edgar Guest
H. G. Den — Let Christmas be a bright and happy day…
Let Christmas be a bright and happy day; but let its brightness come from the radiance of the star of Bethlehem, and its happiness be found in Christ, the sinner’s loving Saviour.
H. G. Den
O. Henry — There were two poor lovers…
There were two poor lovers who wanted to give each other Christmas presents. The man sold his most prized possession, his watch, in order to buy a handsome comb for his sweetheart’s beautiful hair. Meanwhile the girl cut off and sold her hair in order to buy a chain for her lover’s cherished watch.
O. Henry
Holley Gerth — Jesus…He came not to a throne…
Jesus…
He came not to a throne,
but to a manger.
He lived not as a king,
but as a servant.
He chose not an earthly kingdom,
but a cross.
He gave not just a little,
but everything.
Holley Gerth
Josh McDowell — Many will say that Jesus was a good moral teacher…
Many will say that Jesus was a good moral teacher. Let’s be realistic. How could he be a great moral teacher and knowingly mislead people at the most important point of his teaching- his own identity?
Josh McDowell
Dale Evans Rogers — Every day we live is a priceless gift of God…
Every day we live is a priceless gift of God, loaded with possibilities to learn something new, to gain fresh insights.
Dale Evans Rogers
Billy Graham — Being a Christian…
Being a Christian is more than just an instantaneous conversion; it is like a daily process whereby you grow to be more and more like Christ.
Billy Graham
Jim Carrey — I think everybody should get rich and famous…
I think everybody should get rich and famous and do everything they ever dreamed of so they can see that it’s not the answer.
Jim Carrey
Ken Gire — Much of what is sacred…
Much of what is sacred is hidden in the ordinary, everyday moments of our lives. To see something of the sacred in those moments takes slowing down so we can live our lives more reflectively.
Ken Gire
Robert E. Selle — Think…
Think-
Of stepping on shore and finding it Heaven;
Of taking hold of a hand and finding it God’s hand;
Of breathing a new air and finding it celestial air;
Of feeling invigorated and finding it immortality;
Of passing from storm and tempest to an unbroken calm;
Of waking up, and finding it Home!
Robert E. Selle
Oswald Chambers — Every time we pray…
Every time we pray our horizon is altered, our attitude to things is altered, not sometimes but every time, and the amazing thing is that we don’t pray more.
Oswald Chambers
Charles Kingsley — Beauty is God’s handwriting…
Beauty is God’s handwriting. Welcome it in every fair face, every fair day, every fair flower.
Charles Kingsley
George MacDonald — The one use of the Bible…
The one use of the Bible is to make us look at Jesus, that through Him we might know His Father and our Father, His God and our God.
George MacDonald
Thomas Kempis — Have confidence in God’s mercy…
Have confidence in God’s mercy, for when you think He is a long way from you, He is often quite near.
Thomas Kempis
Charles H. Spurgeon — Trust in your Redeemer’s strength…
Trust in your Redeemer’s strength…exercise what faith you have, and by and by He shall rise upon you with healing beneath His wings. Go from faith to faith and you shall receive blessing upon blessing.
Charles H. Spurgeon
E. Stanley Jones — When I met Christ…
When I met Christ, I felt that I had swallowed sunshine.
E. Stanley Jones
Fred Rogers — Life is deep and simple…
Life is deep and simple, and what our society gives us is shallow and complicated.
Fred Rogers
Elisabeth Elliot — It is God to whom and with whom we travel…
It is God to whom and with whom we travel, and while He is the End of our journey, He is also at every stopping place.
Elisabeth Elliot
Andrew Murray — Get yourself into the presence…
Get yourself into the presence of the loving Father. Just place yourself before Him, and look up into His face; think of His love, His wonderful, tender, pitying love.
Andrew Murray
James Freeman — The light of God…
The light of God surrounds me;
The love of God enfolds me;
The power of God protects me;
The presence of God watches over me.
Wherever I am, God is.
James Freeman
Andrew Murray — Some read the Bible to learn…
Some read the Bible to learn, and some read the Bible to hear from heaven.
Andrew Murray
Charles Spurgeon — It is remarkable that the Holy Spirit…
It is remarkable that the Holy Spirit has given us very few deathbed scenes in the book of God. We have very few in the Old Testament, fewer still in the New. And I take it that the reason may be, because the Holy Ghost would have us to take more account of how we live than how we die, for life is the main business. He who learns to die daily while he lives will find it no difficulty to breathe out his soul for the last time into the hands of his faithful Creator.
Charles Spurgeon
Tim Tebow — Have fun; love Jesus…
Have fun; love Jesus; and, tell others about Him.
Tim Tebow
Roseann Alexander-Isham — Lord…give me the gift of faith…
Lord…give me the gift of faith to be renewed and shared with others each day. Teach me to live this moment only, looking neither to the past with regret, nor the future with apprehension. Let love be my aim and my life a prayer.
Roseann Alexander-Isham
William Law — If anyone would tell you…
If anyone would tell you the shortest, surest way to happiness and all perfection, he must tell you to make it a rule to yourself to thank and praise God for everything that happens to you. For it is certain that whatever happens to you, if you thank and praise God for it, you turn it into a blessing.
William Law
Max Lucado — Which would you prefer…
Which would you prefer? To be king of the mountain for a day? Or to be a child of God for eternity?
Max Lucado
Joseph Hall — He that takes his cares on himself…
He that takes his cares on himself loads himself in vain with an uneasy burden. I will cast my cares on God; he has bidden me; they cannot burden him.
Joseph Hall
George Muller — Faith does not operate in the realm of the possible…
Faith does not operate in the realm of the possible. There is no glory for God in that which is humanly possible. Faith begins where man’s power ends.
George Muller
Henry David Thoreau — Friends do not live in harmony merely…
Friends do not live in harmony merely, as some say, but in melody.
Henry David Thoreau
Thomas Watson — God’s center is everywhere…
God’s center is everywhere. His circumference is nowhere.
Thomas Watson
Martin Luther — I study my Bible as I gather apples…
I study my Bible as I gather apples. First, I shake the whole tree that the ripest might fall. Then I shake each limb, and when I have shaken each limb, I shake each branch and every twig. Then I look under every leaf.
Martin Luther
William H. Walton — To carry a grudge…
To carry a grudge is like being stung to death by one bee.
William H. Walton
Unknown — A friend…
A friend is a poem.
Unknown
Richard J. Foster — To pray is to change…
To pray is to change. This is a great grace. How good of God to provide a path whereby our lives can be taken over by love and joy and peace and patience and kindness and goodness and faithfulness and gentleness and self-control.
Richard J. Foster
R. A. Torrey — Oh, men and women, pray through…
Oh, men and women, pray through; pray through! Do not just begin to pray and pray a little while and throw up your hands and quit, but pray and pray and pray until God bends the heavens and comes down!
R. A. Torrey
Mother Teresa — Lord, give me an open heart…
Lord, give me an open heart to find You everywhere, to glimpse the heaven enfolded in a bud, and to experience eternity in the smallest act of love.
Mother Teresa
Kenneth Grahame — Come along inside…
Come along inside, we’ll see if tea and buns can make the world a better place.
Kenneth Grahame
Lloyd John Ogilvie — The secret of life…
The secret of life is that all we have and are is a gift of grace to be shared.
Lloyd John Ogilvie
Bill Hybels — I can usually sense that a leading is from the Holy Spirit…
I can usually sense that a leading is from the Holy Spirit when it calls me to humble myself, serve somebody, encourage somebody or give something away. Very rarely will the evil one lead us to do those kinds of things.
Bill Hybels
Franklin Graham — There is not a single thing that Jesus cannot change…
There is not a single thing that Jesus cannot change, control, and conquer because He is the living Lord.
Franklin Graham
C. S. Lewis — There is no use in talking as if forgiveness were easy…
There is no use in talking as if forgiveness were easy. For we find that the work of forgiveness has to be done over and over again.
C. S. Lewis
John C. Maxwell — Dan Clark recalls that when he was a teenager…
Dan Clark recalls that when he was a teenager, he and his father once stood in line to buy tickets for the circus. As they waited, they noticed the family immediately in front of them. The parents were holding hands, and they had eight children in tow, all behaved well and all probably under the age of twelve. Based on their clean but simple clothing, he suspected they didn’t have a lot of money. The kids jabbered about the exciting things they expected to see, and he could tell that the circus was going to be a new adventure for them.
As the couple approached the counter, the attendant asked how many tickets they wanted. The man proudly responded, “Please let me buy eight children’s tickets and two adult tickets so I can take my family to the circus.”
When the attendant quoted the price, the man’s wife let go of his hand, and her head drooped. The man leaned a little closer and asked, “How much did you say?” The attendant again quoted the price. The man obviously didn’t have enough money. He looked crushed.
Clark says his father watched all of this, put his hand in his pocket, pulled out a twenty-dollar bill, and dropped it on the ground. His father then reached down, picked up the bill, tapped the man on the shoulder, and said, “Excuse me, sir, this fell out of your pocket.”
The man knew exactly what was going on. He looked straight into Clark’s father’s eyes, took his hand, shook it, and with a tear streaming down his cheek, replied, “Thank you, thank you, sir. This really means a lot to me and my family.”
Clark and his father went back to their car and drove home. They didn’t have enough money to go to the circus that night, but it didn’t matter. They had encouraged a whole family. And it was something neither family would ever forget.
John C. Maxwell
C. S. Lewis — Our Lord finds our desires not too strong…
Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.
C. S. Lewis
Bill Hybels — The Christian life is one of faith…
The Christian life is one of faith, where we find ourselves routinely overdriving our headlights but knowing it’s okay because God is in control and has a purpose behind it.
Bill Hybels
Robert Southey — Not where I breath…
Not where I breath,
But where I love, I live.
Robert Southey
Billy Graham — We hurt people by being too busy…
We hurt people by being too busy. Too busy to notice their needs. Too busy to drop that note of comfort or encouragement or assurance of love. Too busy to listen when someone needs to talk. Too busy to care.
Billy Graham
J. I. Packer — Disregard the study of God…
Disregard the study of God, and you sentence yourself to stumble and blunder through life blindfolded.
J. I. Packer
Joseph Addison — The mind never unbends itself so agreeably…
The mind never unbends itself so agreeably as in the conversation of a well-chosen friend. There is indeed no blessing of life that is any way comparable to the enjoyment of a discreet and virtuous friend. It eases and unloads the mind, clears and improves the understanding, engenders thought and knowledge, animates virtue and good resolutions, soothes and allays the passions, and finds employment for most of the vacant hours of life.
Joseph Addison
John Newton — I am not what I ought to be…
I am not what I ought to be,
I am not what I wish to be,
I am not what I hope to be;
but, by the grace of God,
I am not what I was.
John Newton
F. B. Meyer — God has set Eternity in our heart…
God has set Eternity in our heart, and man’s infinite capacity cannot be filled or satisfied with the things of time and sense.
F. B. Meyer
John Greenleaf Whittier — To worship rightly…
To worship rightly is to love each other,
Each smile a hymn, each kindly deed a prayer.
John Greenleaf Whittier
Teresa of Avila — Love is of utmost importance…
Love is of utmost importance. Once you have set your will that you will learn the way of love, then there is no flaw or irritation in another person that you cannot bear…If this one commandment were kept- “Love one another”- I know that it would carry us a long way toward keeping all the rest of our Lord’s commands.
Teresa of Avila
Oswald Chambers — Whenever the insistence is on the point that God answers prayer…
Whenever the insistence is on the point that God answers prayer, we are off the track. The meaning of prayer is that we get hold of God, not of the answer.
Oswald Chambers
Unknown — A lad who heard his father prayer for missions…
A lad who heard his father pray for missions, and especially for the needs of missionaries, that they might be supplied, and that their institutions might be amply sustained, said to him, “Father, I wish I had your money.” “Why, my son, what would you do with it?” asked the father. “I would answer your prayers,” was the reply.
Unknown
Tim Stafford — To be really truthful…
To be really truthful, we have to do more than stop lying. Really, most of the work is positively learning how to speak the whole truth in love.
Tim Stafford
Horatius Bonar — In order to grow in grace…
In order to grow in grace, we must be much alone. It is not in society that the soul grows most vigorously. In one single quite hour of prayer it will often make more progress than in days of company with others. It is in the desert that the dew falls freshest and the air ifs purest.
Horatius Bonar
Bob Barnes — A pastor once asked a group of men…
A pastor once asked a group of men on a retreat, “Men, is your wife a better Christian because she is married to you, or has your marriage been a hindrance to her spiritual growth?”
Bob Barnes
Willard Harley Jr. — Honesty is like a flu shot…
Honesty is like a flu shot. It may give you a short, sharp pain, but it keeps you healthier in the long run.
Willard Harley Jr.
Oswald Chambers — It is by no haphazard chance…
It is by no haphazard chance that in every age men have risen early to pray. The first thing that marks decline in spiritual life is our relationship to the early morning.
Oswald Chambers
Mark Driscoll — You are more evil than you have ever feared…
You are more evil than you have ever feared, and more loved than you have ever hoped.
Mark Driscoll
Socrates – Contentment is natural wealth…
Contentment is natural wealth; luxury, artificial poverty.
Socrates
Tim Stafford — Truthfulness is much more…
Truthfulness is much more than the absence of lies. It is genuine communication of minds and hearts. Real truthfulness reflects the character of God, who is always exactly what He says he is, and who speaks painful but joyful truth, never any small talk to our hearts. Think of Jesus: ever kind, but relentlessly truthful.
Tim Stafford
Russell T. Loesch — In Tolstoy’s “Man and Dame Fortune”…
In Tolstoy’s “Man and Dame Fortune,” the hero is told he can have the right to all the land around which he can plow a furrow in a single day. The man started off with great vigor, and was going to encompass only that which he could easily care for. But as the day progressed, he desired more and more rights. He plowed and plowed, until at the end of the day he could in no possible way return to his original point of departure, but struggling to do so, he fell, the victim of a heart attack. The only right he secured was the right to 18 square feet of land in which to be buried.
Russell T. Loesch
Charles Stanley — We can be tired, weary and emotionally distraught…
We can be tired, weary and emotionally distraught, but after spending time alone with God, we find that He injects into our bodies energy, power and strength.
Charles Stanley
Samuel Dickey Gordon — Joy is distinctly a Christian word…
Joy is distinctly a Christian word and a Christian thing. It is the reverse of happiness. Happiness is the result of what happens of an agreeable sort. Joy has its springs deep down inside. And that spring never runs dry, no matter what happens. Only Jesus gives that joy. He had joy, singing its music within, even under the shadow of the cross. It is an unknown word and thing except as He has sway within.
Samuel Dickey Gordon
Thomas Brooks — The Lord has made a promise…
The Lord has made a promise to late repentance, but where has he made a promise of late repentance?
Thomas Brooks
Benjamin Disraeli — The greatest good you can do for another…
The greatest good you can do for another is not just to share your riches but to reveal to him his own.
Benjamin Disraeli
A. W. Tozer — At the close of every obituary…
At the close of every obituary of his believing children God adds the word “henceforth!”
A. W. Tozer
The Lutheran Witness — God permits troubles to beset His children…
God permits troubles to beset His children, but He also refreshes them. He grants them respite when the heart is still and the soul joyous, and you will agree with me that such moments of the secret joy of the Spirit are far more precious than the highest pleasures this world can offer.
The Lutheran Witness
Blaise Pascal — A unit joined to infinity…
A unit joined to infinity adds nothing to it any more than one foot added to infinite length. The finite is swallowed up by the infinite and becomes pure zero. So are our minds before God.
Blaise Pascal
James M. Tulloch — A smile creates happiness in the home…
A smile creates happiness in the home, fosters good will in business and is the countersign of friends. It is rest to the weary, daylight to the discouraged, sunshine to the sad, and nature’s best antidote for trouble. Yet it cannot be bought, begged, borrowed, or stolen, for it is something that is no earthly good to anybody until it is given away. Keep smiling- and let your smile be one of sincerity. Don’t just force it out to make a sale, to keep out of a fight, or for similar reasons. But smile from the heart out, making those who see you smile do likewise in a feeling of good fellowship.
James M. Tulloch
Unknown — A guest at a country house coming down to breakfast…
A guest at a country house coming down to breakfast one morning was met by the child of the house, who running up to him and putting his hand in his, looked up into his face with a smile, saying, “I’m your friend now; I put you in my prayer last night!”
Unknown
Mabel Hale — Honesty, or dishonesty…
Honesty, or dishonesty, is shown in every little act of life.
Mabel Hale
James H. Hamilton — Goodness is love in action…
Goodness is love in action, love with its hands to the plow, love with the burden on its back, love following His footsteps who went about continually doing good.
James H. Hamilton
Unknown — A man who lived some six miles from the house of worship…
A man who lived some six miles from the house of worship, complained to his pastor of the distance he had to go to attend public worship. “Never mind,” said the minister, “remember every Sabbath you have the privilege of preaching a sermon six miles long- you preach the gospel to all the residents and people you pass.”
Unknown
Charles Spurgeon — There is an old story…
There is an old story which tells of an Italian duke who went on board a galley ship. As he passed the crew of slaves he asked several of them what their offenses were. Every one laid the blame to someone else, saying his brother was to blame or the judge was bribed. One sturdy young fellow said: “My lord, I am justly in here. I wanted money and I stole it. No one is to blame but myself.” The duke on hearing this seized him by the shoulder, saying, “You rogue! What are you doing here among so many honest men? Get you out of their company!” The young fellow was then set at liberty, while the rest were left to tug at the oars.
Charles Spurgeon
Irenaeus — The Lord has taught us…
The Lord has taught us that nobody can know God unless God teaches him.
Irenaeus
William D. Tammeus — You don’t really understand human nature…
You don’t really understand human nature unless you know why a child on a merry-go-round will wave at his parents every time around- and why his parents will always wave back.
William D. Tammeus
Richard Baxter — Is it a small thing in your eyes to be loved by God…
Is it a small thing in your eyes to be loved by God- to be the son, the spouse, the love, the delight of the King of glory? Christian, believe this, and think about it: you will be eternally embraced in the arms of the love which was from everlasting, and will extend to everlasting- of the love which brought the Son of God’s love from heaven to earth, from earth to the cross, from the cross to the grave, from the grave to glory- that love which was weary, hungry, tempted, scorned, scourged, buffered, spat upon, crucified, pierced- which fasted, prayed, taught, healed, wept, sweated, bled, died. That love will eternally embrace you.
Richard Baxter
Max Lucado — One phrase summarizes the horror of hell…
One phrase summarizes the horror of hell. “God isn’t there.”
Max Lucado
Jill Briscoe — You may have no family…
You may have no family, no food, no clothes, no future, no spouse, no health, or no children, yet be rich beyond your wildest dreams because you have the Holy Spirit in your life.
Jill Briscoe
Robert C. Dodds — The goal in marriage…
The goal in marriage is not to think alike, but to think together.
Robert C. Dodds
Thomas Brooks — A man’s most glorious actions…
A man’s most glorious actions will at last be found to be but glorious sins, if he hath made himself, and not the glory of God, the end of those actions.
Thomas Brooks
Norman Vincent Peale — The word resentment…
The word resentment means to re-feel…to feel again. Someone wrongs or wounds you; in resenting it, you re-feel the injury. And you re-hurt yourself. The Hebrew Talmud says that a person who bears a grudge is “Like one who, having cut one hand while handling a knife, avenges himself by stabbing the other hand.”
Norman Vincent Peale
Norman Corwin — Of course a home without love…
Of course a home without love is just cold real estate…it is a minuscule world. If it has 10 books, it is partly a library; if three pictures, a little museum; if six tools, a repair shop. If one big, crowded closet of bric-a-brac, a warehouse. Whenever a piano or fiddle is in serious use, it is a part-time conservatory. At mealtime grace, or in answering a child’s question about God, it is a fraction of a church. In the throes of argument or the heart of discourse, it becomes a court; in sickness it is a field hospital; when you discover old forgotten letters, pictures, souveniers in a trunk or attic, it is a wing of archaeology. When the kids climb trees, fences, high furniture, or other forbidden obstacles, it is a commando camp…
Norman Corwin (his graphic description of the components of home life)
George Mueller — If we desire our faith to be strengthened…
If we desire our faith to be strengthened, we should not shrink from opportunities where our faith may be tried, and therefore, through trial, be strengthened.
George Mueller
Robert Murray McCheyne — I ought to pray before seeing anyone…
I ought to pray before seeing anyone. Often when I sleep long, or meet with others early, it is eleven or twelve o’clock before I begin secret prayer. This is a wretched system. It is unscriptural. Christ arose before day and went into solitary place. David says: “Early will I seek thee; Thou shalt early hear my voice.” Family prayer loses much of its power and sweetness, and I can do no good to those who come to seek from me. The conscience feels guilty, the soul unfed, the lamp not trimmed. Then when I secure prayer the soul is often out of tune. I feel it is far better to begin with God- to see his face first, to get my soul near him before it is near another.
Robert Murray McCheyne
Raymond T. Moreland — Benjamin West tells…
Benjamin West tells how he actually became a successful and important painter. When he was young, his mother went out and left him in charge of his sister Sally. In the meantime, little Benjamin discovered bottles of colored ink and began to do Sally’s portrait. What a mess soon developed. Finally, when Ben’s mother came home and saw the tragic mess, she said nothing. She merely picked up the paper with the portrait and said, “Why it’s Sally!” and she kissed Ben. Ever since that day, West has said, “My mother’s kiss made me a painter.”
Raymond T. Moreland
Unknown — The love of God…
The love of God is like the Amazon River flowing down to water one daisy.
Unknown
C. S. Lewis — To please God…
To please God…to be a real ingredient in the divine happiness…to be loved by God, not merely pitied, but delight in, as an artist delights in this work or a father in a son…it seems impossible, a weight or burden of glory which your thoughts can hardly sustain. But it is so!
C. S. Lewis
Joseph Hall — Infidelity and Faith…
Infidelity and Faith look both through the same perspective-glass, but at contrary ends. Infidelity looks through the wrong end of the glass; and therefore, sees those objects near which are afar off, and makes great things little, diminishing the greatest spiritual blessings, and removing far from us threatened evils. Faith looks at the right end, and brings the blessings that are far off close to our eye, and multiplies God’s mercies, which, in the distance, lost their greatness.
Joseph Hall
Jonathan Edwards — The enjoyment of God…
The enjoyment of God is the only happiness with which our souls can be satisfied. To go to heaven, fully to enjoy God, is infinitely better than the most pleasant accommodations here. Fathers and mothers, husbands, wives, or children, or the company of earthly friends, are but shadows; but God is the substance. These are but scattered beams, but God is the sun. These are but streams. But God is the ocean.
Jonathan Edwards
Alice Fryling — At different seasons of life…
At different seasons of life, we will be growing in different areas. I try to see where God is at work in my life, and where he is at work in the lives of my friends, and then I pray for and encourage growth in those particular areas.
Alice Fryling
Francois Fenelon — How dangerous it is for our salvation…
How dangerous it is for our salvation, how unworthy of God and of ourselves, how pernicious even for the peace of our hearts, to want always to stay where we are! Our whole life was only given us to advance us by great strides toward our heavenly country.
Francois Fenelon
Unknown — Forgiveness…
Forgiveness is the greatest expression of love.
Unknown
Unknown — If your Christianity doesn’t work at home…
If your Christianity doesn’t work at home, then it doesn’t work at all. So don’t export it.
Unknown
Gloria Gaither — We need the whole song…
We need the whole song, all the verses and the choruses to serve us as our own story unfolds because- trust me- life is hard, but God is good.
Gloria Gaither
Unknown — May life’s greatest gifts…
May life’s greatest gifts always be yours,
Happiness, memories and dreams.
Unknown
Horatius Bonar — The more fully that the gospel is preached…
The more fully that the gospel is preached, in the grand old apostolic way, the more likely is it to accomplish the results which it did in the apostolic days.
Horatius Bonar
Thomas Merton — Silence is the first language of God…
Silence is the first language of God; all else is a poor translation.
Thomas Merton
Sinclair Ferguson — Marriage, and the process of coming to it…
Marriage, and the process of coming to it, is not heaven! It is the bonding together of two needy sinners in order to make a partnership which is substantially greater than either of them alone.
Sinclair Ferguson
Roberta Lieberman — Strangers are friends…
Strangers are friends that you have yet to meet.
Roberta Lieberman
Leaves of Gold — The friendship of Jesus is lasting…
The friendship of Jesus is lasting. Other friends may grow old and cold. It is not so with the friendship of our Savior. Other friends may possibly misunderstand us, Jesus never. His love is the same in youth as in old age. The friendship will rather grow stronger in old age. When you have lost what to you seemed everything, and you find yourself friendless and alone, despised and forsaken, Jesus will be your dear and precious friend.
Leaves of Gold
J. I. Packer — The gospel starts by teaching us…
The gospel starts by teaching us that we, as creatures, are absolutely dependent on God, and that he, as Creator, has an absolute claim on us. Only when we have learned this can we see what sin is, and only when we see what sin is can we understand the good news of salvation from sin.
J. I. Packer
Max Lucado — To accept grace…
To accept grace is to admit failure, a step we are hesitant to take. We opt to impress God with how good we are rather than confessing how great he is.
Max Lucado
Kerry & Chris Shook — There is power in gratitude…
There is power in gratitude to heal us spiritually, emotionally, and relationally.
Kerry & Chris Shook
Faye Landrum — Tears…
Tears are liquid love.
Faye Landrum
Clement of Alexandria — If you do not hope…
If you do not hope, you will not find what is beyond your hopes.
Clement of Alexandria
Austin Farrer — The gift of the Holy Spirit…
The gift of the Holy Spirit closes the gap between the life of God and ours. When we allow the love of God to move in us we can no longer distinguish ours and his; he becomes us, he lives us. It is the first fruits of the Spirit, the beginning of our being made divine.
Austin Farrer
The Lookout — Id’ rather see a sermon than hear one…
Id’ rather see a sermon than hear one any day;
Id’ rather one should walk with me than merely show the way.
The eye’s a better pupil and more willing than the ear;
Fine counsel is confusing, but example’s always clear.
And the best of all preachers are the men who live their creeds,
For to see the good in action is what everybody needs.
I can soon learn how to do it if you’ll let me see it done;
I can watch your hands in action, but your tongue too fast may run.
And the lectures you deliver may be very wise and true,
But I’d rather get my lesson by observing what you do.
For I may misunderstand you and the high advice you give,
But there’s no misunderstanding how you act and how you live.
The Lookout
Thomas Brooks — Prayer crowns God…
Prayer crowns God with the honor and glory due to His name, and God crowns prayer with assurance and comfort. The most praying souls are the most assured souls.
Thomas Brooks
Willard Scott — A good marriage…
A good marriage is like an incredible retirement fund. You put everything you have into it during your productive life, and over the years it turns from silver to gold to platinum.
Willard Scott
Charles F. Banning – If all the gold in the world…
If all the gold in the world were melted down into a solid cube it would be about the size of an eight-room house. If a man got possession of all that gold- billions of dollars’ worth- he could not buy a friend, character, peace of mind, clear conscience, or a sense of eternity.
Charles F. Banning
Theodore Ledyard Cuyler — God never built a Christian…
God never built a Christian strong enough to carry today’s duties and tomorrow’s anxieties piled on top of them.
Theodore Ledyard Cuyler
Fulton J. Sheen — The imagery of the heavens…
The imagery of the heavens as being two thousand million light-years in diameter is awesome when compared to the tiny earth, but trivial when compared to the imagery of the “hand that measured the heavens.”
Fulton J. Sheen
George Whitefield — Had an hour’s conversation with a gentleman…
Had an hour’s conversation with a gentleman about new birth in Jesus Christ. Breakfasted with some gentlemen in the great cabin, who were very civil and let me put in a word for God. About eleven at night went and sat down among the sailors in the steerway and reasoned with them concerning the Christian life. Gained an opportunity, by walking at night on the deck, to talk closely to the chief mate and one of the sergeants of the regiment and hope my words were not altogether in vain.
George Whitefield (as he noted in his journal the contacts he made on shipboard)
Andre Maurois — A happy marriage…
A happy marriage is a long conversation that always seems too short.
Andre Maurois
François Fénelon — Perfect prayer…
Perfect prayer is only another name for love.
François Fénelon
Clarence Budington Kelland — My father didn’t tell me how to live…
My father didn’t tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it.
Clarence Budington Kelland
Unknown — Saints are men…
Saints are men who permit God’s forgiveness to come into them so fully that not only are their sins washed out, but also their very selves, their egos, and the root of their self will. And again we see, the intensity of their power really to forgive is in exact proportion to the degree that they have permitted themselves to be forgiven and so brought back to God.
Unknown
Charles Spurgeon — Godliness is a life-long business…
Godliness is a life-long business. The working out of the salvation that the Lord, himself, works in you is not a matter of certain hours, or of a limited period of life. Salvation is unfolded throughout our entire sojourn here.
Charles Spurgeon
Martin Luther King — Hatred and bitterness can never cure the disease of fear…
Hatred and bitterness can never cure the disease of fear; only love can do that. Hatred paralyses life; love releases it. Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. Hatred darkens life; love illumines it.
Martin Luther King
John Ray — When flatterers meet…
When flatterers meet, the devil goes to dinner.
John Ray
Ernest Hello — The words of the Gospels…
The words of the Gospels, repeated to a child, a workman or a peasant, do not surprise him in the least. Nothing is told with a view to effect. Not a word in the Gospels is intended to startle.
Ernest Hello
Henry W. Thornton — How great is the contrast…
How great is the contrast between that forgiveness to which we lay claim from God towards us, and our temper towards others! God, we expect, will forgive us great offences, offences many times repeated; and will forgive them freely, liberally, and from the heart. But we are offended at our neighbor, perhaps, for the merest trifles, and for an injury only once offered; and we are but half reconciled when we deem to forgive. Even an uncertain humor, an ambiguous word, or a suspected look, will inflame our anger; and hardly any persuasion will induce us for a long time to relent.
Henry W. Thornton
C. S. Lewis — Is any pleasure on earth as great…
Is any pleasure on earth as great as a circle of Christian friends by a fire?
C. S. Lewis
Peter De Vries — The value of marriage…
The value of marriage is not that adults produce children, but that children produce adults.
Peter De Vries
Jonathan Edwards — Of all kinds of knowledge…
Of all kinds of knowledge that we can ever obtain, the knowledge of God and the knowledge of ourselves are the most important.
Jonathan Edwards
Judith Martin — It is far more impressive…
It is far more impressive when others discover your good qualities without your help.
Judith Martin
Kim Moore — When we are humble enough…
When we are humble enough to allow God to fill us with His love, a miracle happens.
Kim Moore
Unknown — What is home…
What is home?
A world of strife shut out- a word of love shut in.
The only spot on earth where faults and failings of fallen humanity are hidden under the mantle of charity.
The father’s kingdom, the children’s paradise, the mother’s world.
Where you are treated the best and grumble the most.
Unknown
Phillips Brooks — You who are letting miserable misunderstandings…
You who are letting miserable misunderstandings run on from year to year, meaning to clear them up some day; you who are keeping wretched quarrels alive because you cannot quite make up your minds that now is the day to sacrifice your pride and kill them; you who are letting your neighbor starve until you hear that he is dying of starvation or letting your friend’s heart ache for a word of appreciation or sympathy, which you mean to give him some day; if you could only know and see and feel all of a sudden that time is short, how it would break the “spell.” How you would go instantly and do the thing which you might never have another chance to do.
Phillips Brooks
Mother Teresa — People are unreasonable…
People are unreasonable, illogical, and self-centered. Love them anyway.
Mother Teresa
C. S. Lewis — Don’t bother much about your feelings…
Don’t bother much about your feelings. When they are humble, loving, brave, give thanks for them; when they are conceited, selfish, cowardly, ask to have them altered. In neither case are they you, but only a thing that happens to you. What matters is your intentions and your behaviour.
C. S. Lewis
Joseph Stowell — Nothing transcends the power of God…
Nothing transcends the power of God. Whether our difficulty is from Satan, others, self-inflicted, or experienced in the process of our obedience, it is God’s prerogative to rearrange, reconstruct, reinterpret, and realign the situation to bring glory and praise to His name.
Joseph Stowell
Advent Herald — The following is a quotation from the words of Dr. W. B. Hinson…
The following is a quotation from the words of Dr. W. B. Hinson, speaking from the pulpit a year after the commencement of the illness from which he ultimately died: “I remember a year ago when a man in this city said, ‘You have got to go to your death.’ I walked out to where I live, five miles out of this city, and I looked across at that mountain that I love, and I looked at the river in which I rejoice, and I looked at the stately trees that are always God’s own poetry to my soul. Then in the evening I looked up into the great sky where God was lighting his lamps, and I said ‘I may not see you many more times, but, Mountain, I shall be alive when you are gone; and, River, I shall be alive when you cease running toward the sea; and, Stars, I shall be alive when you have fallen from your sockets in the great down-pulling of the material universe!'” This is the confidence of one who knew the Saviour. Is it yours?
Advent Herald
Oswald Chambers — Never tolerate the idea of martyrdom…
Never tolerate the idea of martyrdom about the cross of Jesus Christ. The cross was a superb triumph in which the foundations of hell were shaken. There is nothing more certain in time or eternity than what Jesus Christ did on the cross: He switched the whole of the human race back into a right relationship with God.
Oswald Chambers
Karl Barth — The Easter message tells us…
The Easter message tells us that our enemies, sin, the curse, and death, are beaten. Ultimately they can no longer start mischief. They still behave as though the game were not decided, the battle not fought; we must still reckon with them, but fundamentally we must cease to fear them any more.
Karl Barth
E. Stanley Jones — Surrender the thing you fear into the hands of God…
Surrender the thing you fear into the hands of God. Turn it right over to God and ask Him to solve it with you. Fear is keeping things in your own hands; faith is turning them over into the hands of God.
E. Stanley Jones
Frederick W. Faber — Many a friendship…
Many a friendship- long, loyal, and self-sacrificing- rested at first upon no thicker a foundation than a kind word.
Frederick W. Faber
Martin Luther — Faith, like light…
Faith, like light, should always be simple and unbending; while love, like warmth, should beam forth on every side, and bend to every necessity of our brethren.
Martin Luther
Corrie Ten Boom — Never be afraid to trust…
Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.
Corrie Ten Boom
Tony Bland — The phone rang in the office of a Washington D.C. church…
The phone rang in the office of a Washington D.C. church. The voice on the other end asked, “Will the President be in church Sunday morning?” The pastor quickly replied, “That I cannot promise, but I do know Jesus Christ will be here and that should be sufficient incentive for a reasonably large attendance.”
Tony Bland
Oswald Chambers — We impoversih God in our minds…
We impoverish God in our minds when we say there must be answers to our prayers on the material plane; the biggest answers to our prayers are in the realm of the unseen.
Oswald Chambers
Laura Schroff — A simple gesture can make an enormous difference…
A simple gesture can make an enormous difference. Without even knowing it, you could change the life of another person.
Laura Schroff
George Macdonald — I came from God…
I came from God, and I’m going back to God, and I won’t have any gaps of death in the middle of my life.
George Macdonald
Arnold H. Glasow — A loyal friend…
A loyal friend laughs at your jokes when they’re not so good, and sympathizes with your problems when they’re not so bad.
Arnold H. Glasow
The Talmud — In every place…
In every place where you find the imprint of men’s feet there am I.
The Talmud
Brakkenstein Community of Blessed Sacrament Fathers — Live your human task…
Live your human task in the liberating certainty that nothing in the world can separate you from God’s love for you.
Brakkenstein Community of Blessed Sacrament Fathers
Oswald Chambers — Everything that God has created…
Everything that God has created is like an orchestra praising Him.
Oswald Chambers
William J. Johnston — There is a treasury of blessing…
There is a treasury of blessing to be found in sharing with shut-ins; they have much to give and often no one to give it to.
William J. Johnston
Gregory of Nazianzus — The first of all beautiful things…
The first of all beautiful things is the continual possession of God.
Gregory of Nazianzus
Anne Graham Lotz — No storm is so great…
No storm is so great, no wave is so high, no sea is so deep, no wind is so strong, that Jesus cannot either calm it or carry us through it.
Anne Graham Lotz
R. C. Foster — Jesus said…
Jesus said, “Go,” but the church through selfishness and indifference has refused to obey. We try to substitute “write,” “send,” or “give,” for “go.” We try to salve our conscience by turning over the task of “going” to someone else and giving languidly for their support. Of course, we must send where we cannot go. But because we can’t go across the world does not excuse us for refusing to go across the street.
R. C. Foster
Norman G. Shidle — Few kindnesses are as warmly welcomed…
Few kindnesses are as warmly welcomed as sincere, objective interest.
Norman G. Shidle
Henry Matthey — I thank Thee first…
I thank Thee first because I was never robbed before; second, because although they took my purse they did not take my life; third, although they took my all, it was not much; and fourth, because it was I who was robbed and not I who robbed.
Henry Matthey, on the night he was robbed, he prayed this prayer
John Greenleaf Whittier — The steps of faith…
The steps of faith fall on the seeming void but find the rock beneath.
John Greenleaf Whittier
Sam Walter Foss — Let me live in a house by the side of the road…
Let me live in a house by the side of the road and be a friend to man.
Sam Walter Foss
C. S. Lewis — All your life an unattainable ecstasy…
All your life an unattainable ecstasy has hovered just beyond the grasp of your consciousness. The day is coming when you will wake to find, beyond all hope, that you have attained it, or else, that it was within your reach and you have lost it forever.
C. S. Lewis
Norman Vincent Peale — Many of the world’s finest Oriental rugs…
Many of the world’s finest Oriental rugs come from little villages in the Middle East, China, or India. These rugs are hand-produced by crews of men and boys under direction of a master weaver. They work from the underside of the rug-to-be. It frequently happens that a weaver absentmindedly makes a mistake and introduces a color that is not according to the pattern. When this occurs, the master weaver, instead of having the work pulled out in the order to correct the color sequence, will find some way to incorporate the mistake harmoniously into the overall pattern. In weaving our lives, we can lean to take unexpected difficulties and mistakes and weave them advantageously in the greater overall patterns of our lives. There is an inherent good in most difficulties.
Norman Vincent Peale
E. M. Bounds — Faith gathers strength…
Faith gathers strength by waiting and praying.
E. M. Bounds
James A. Michener — The master in the art of living…
The master in the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his information and his recreation, his love and his religion. He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence at whatever he does, leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him he’s always doing both.
James A. Michener
Charles D. Williams — A dear old friend of mine used to say…
A dear old friend of mine used to say with the truest Christian charity, when he heard any one being loudly condemned for some fault: “Ah! well, yes, it seems very bad to me, because it is not my way of sinning!”
Charles D. Williams
Dietrich Bonhoeffer — Prayer does not mean…
Prayer does not mean simply to pour out one’s heart. It means rather to find the way to God and to speak with him, whether the heart is full or empty.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Abraham Lincoln — It is said an eastern monarch once charged his wise men…
It is said an eastern monarch once charged his wise men to invent a sentence, to be ever in view, and which should be true and appropriate in all times and situations. They presented him with the words, “And this, too, shall pass away.” How much it expresses! How chastening in the hour of pride! How consoling in the depths of affliction!
Abraham Lincoln
John Selden — It is an unhappy division…
It is an unhappy division that has been made between faith and works, though in my intellect I may divide them, just as in a candle I know there is both light and heat; but yet, put out the candle and they are both gone; one remains not without the other. So it is betwixt faith and works.
John Selden
Dennis and Barbara Rainey — Pulling weeds and planting seeds…
Pulling weeds and planting seeds. That’s the story of life. We are individual lots on which either weeds of selfishness or fruit of the Holy Spirit grows and flourishes.
Dennis and Barbara Rainey
Unknown — A young man who saw all sin…
A young man who saw all the sin, selfishness, and injustice in the world complained to his pastor that God had made a mess of things. “Why,” the boy said, “I could make a better world myself.” “Good,” said the pastor, “go to it; that is just why you’re here!”
Unknown
W. E. McCumber — We need to arrange a servanthood conference…
We need to arrange a servanthood conference, with workshops in love, forgiveness, feet-washing, cross bearing- in short, workshops in Christlikeness. God is not waiting for people to get big enough to use, but to get small enough in their own eyes for Him to entrust with His mission and Spirit. Christ cannot be represented by swaggering leaders who “lord it over” the flock of God. He cannot be represented by puffed-up laymen who nominate themselves as church bosses. He can be honestly manifested only in the lives of those who feel, as did Paul, that they are “less than the least of all the saints.”
W. E. McCumber
John Gunstone — The best answer to fear…
The best answer to fear is to have a firm grasp of what it means to be accepted by God.
John Gunstone
Randy Alcorn — Ironically, many people can’t afford to give…
Ironically, many people can’t afford to give precisely because they’re not giving. If we pay our debt to God first, then we will incur His blessing to help us pay our debts to men. But when we rob God to pay men, we rob ourselves of God’s blessing.
Randy Alcorn
Hammer William Webb-Peploe — Joy is not gush…
Joy is not gush; joy is not jolliness. Joy is just perfect acquiescence in God’s will because the soul delights itself in God Himself.
Hammer William Webb-Peploe
Jeremy Taylor — Faith is the root of all blessings…
Faith is the root of all blessings. Believe and you shall be saved; believe, and you must be satisfied; believe, and you cannot but be comforted and happy.
Jeremy Taylor
Albert Einstein — There are two ways to live…
There are two ways to live: you can live as if nothing is a miracle; you can live as if everything is a miracle.
Albert Einstein
Thomas Kempis — The reflections on a day well spent…
The reflections on a day well spent furnishes us with joys more pleasing than ten thousand triumphs.
Thomas Kempis





