I’ve been camped out in Acts 10-11 for almost a week now, which is pretty rare for me to spend more than a couple of days on a particular text before moving on. But it’s been so rich that I’ve wanted to linger. It’s God’s heart for all people that has provided the savory reflections on Acts 10-11. These chapters reveal, in narrative form, God’s heart for all people, and there is something particularly compelling to me seeing Peter’s perspective change and align with God’s. To provide a short recap, Ch. 10 begins with this Roman centurion named Cornelius, a God-fearing man, receiving a vision that commands him to send for the Apostle Peter to hear what this man is proclaiming (about Jesus). The story then moves to Peter receiving a vision of a sheet carrying all kinds of “unclean” (to the Jew) animals descending from heaven. God commands Peter to “rise, kill, and eat” to which Peter, as a devout Jew, refuses to do. This t...
Reflections on a life lived for King Jesus.