Book Segment
Paul's Third Missionary Journey
Paul's extended ministry in Ephesus and final journey to Jerusalem
"The question: must Gentile believers be circumcised? Peter, Paul, Barnabas, and James speak. Decision: Gentiles need not"
Acts 15:11
Background
Acts 13-21 follows Paul's three missionary journeys across the Roman world — from Cyprus through Asia Minor to Macedonia and Greece. The missionary strategy is consistent: begin in the synagogue, present Jesus as the fulfillment of Israel's Scriptures, face mixed reception (some believe, some oppose), establish a community, appoint elders, and move on. The Jerusalem Council (ch. 15) resolves the Gentile admission question — one of the most important decisions in church history. The Macedonian vision (16:9) opens Europe to the gospel. Paul's Athens speech (17:22-31) is the most sophisticated cross-cultural apologetic in the NT.
Story Plot
The Jerusalem Council
Acts 15:11The question: must Gentile believers be circumcised? Peter, Paul, Barnabas, and James speak. Decision: Gentiles need not be circumcised — they are saved through grace like Jews.
The Macedonian Vision
Acts 16:9-10Paul has a vision of a Macedonian man saying 'Come over to Macedonia and help us.' They conclude God is calling them to preach there — and Europe's evangelization begins.
Paul at Athens
Acts 17:22-31Standing at the Areopagus, Paul uses the altar 'to an unknown god' as his entry point — engaging Greek philosophy and poets to announce the resurrection.
Characters
Paul the Missionary Theologian
The Apostle to the Gentiles
Former persecutor, now the most traveled, most theologized, and most persecuted missionary the early church produced.
Theological Themes
Missio Dei — The Mission Belongs to God
Throughout Acts, the Spirit directs, redirects, empowers, and advances the mission — human missionaries are instruments of a divine initiative.
We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us (2 Corinthians 5:20).
Life Lessons
The Jerusalem Council's grace-based decision models how theological disputes should be resolved — hearing multiple voices, appealing to Scripture, and reaching a decision that protects the gospel.
The Macedonian vision's redirection models the spiritual discipline of openness to divine course-correction even in the middle of strategic plans.
Paul's Athens approach (engaging with the culture's own questions) models contextualized apologetics rather than extracted-from-culture proclamation.
Lydia's immediate hospitality after conversion models the natural connection between salvation and generous, practical care for God's servants.
Modern Applications
The Jerusalem Council's process has been used as a model for church councils, synods, and theological commissions addressing controversial contemporary questions.
The Macedonian vision principle — Spirit-redirection of mission strategy — speaks to missionaries and church planters who need to remain open to unexpected divine course changes.
Paul's Athens apologetic strategy has inspired every generation of contextual theologians from Justin Martyr to C.S. Lewis to contemporary public theologians.
Lydia as businesswoman, household head, and church-hosting leader provides a model for women in commercial life and church leadership.
A Prayer for Reflection
Heavenly Father, as we reflect on Paul's Third Missionary Journey in Acts, open our hearts to receive the truth You have embedded in these chapters. Help us to see not merely historical events but Your living word speaking to our present reality. Where we are confused, bring clarity; where we are discouraged, bring hope; where we are proud, bring humility. May the lessons of Paul's Third Missionary Journey take root in us and bear fruit in how we love You and serve others. In Jesus' name, Amen.