Acts 13:42-52
The gospel brings division: some believe and rejoice, others reject and oppose, yet God advances His saving purpose among the nations.
Scripture Text
13:42 So when the Jews went out of the synagogue, the Gentiles begged that these words might be preached to them the next Sabbath.
13:43 Now when the synagogue broke up, many of the Jews and of the devout proselytes followed Paul and Barnabas; who, speaking to them, urged them to continue in the grace of God.
13:44 The next Sabbath, almost the whole city was gathered together to hear the word of God.
13:45 But when the Jews saw the multitudes, they were filled with jealousy, and contradicted the things which were spoken by Paul, and blasphemed.
13:46 Paul and Barnabas spoke out boldly, and said, “It was necessary that God’s word should be spoken to You first. Since indeed You thrust it from Yourselves, and judge Yourselves unworthy of eternal life, behold, we turn to the Gentiles.
13:47 For so has the Lord commanded us, saying, ‘I have set You as a light for the Gentiles, that You should bring salvation to the uttermost parts of the earth.’ ”
13:48 As the Gentiles heard this, they were glad, and glorified the word of God. As many as were appointed to eternal life believed.
13:49 The Lord’s word was spread abroad throughout all the region.
13:50 But the Jews stirred up the devout and prominent women and the chief men of the city, and stirred up a persecution against Paul and Barnabas, and threw them out of their borders.
13:51 But they shook off the dust of their feet against them, and came to Iconium.
13:52 The disciples were filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit.
The gospel brings division: some believe and rejoice, others reject and oppose, yet God advances His saving purpose among the nations.
Many receive the word with joy, but Jewish opposition intensifies; Paul and Barnabas declare their turning to the Gentiles, and the word spreads throughout the region.
The church must send obediently, preach Christ clearly, warn hearers soberly, resist jealousy, and endure opposition with Spirit-filled joy.
- Spirit-Sent Mission The Antioch church worships, fasts, prays, and sets apart Barnabas and Saul under the Holy Spirit's command.
- Mission Confronts False Power The gospel reaches Cyprus and confronts a false prophet who tries to turn a ruler away from the faith.
- Mission Presses On Despite Loss John Mark leaves the mission team, but Paul and Barnabas continue to Pisidian Antioch.
- Synagogue Sermon Centers on Christ Paul proclaims Jesus as the fulfillment of Israel's history, Davidic promise, prophetic Scripture, resurrection hope, forgiveness, and justification.
- Grace Invites Continuance Many respond with interest and are urged to continue in the grace of God.
- Jewish Rejection and Gentile Joy Opposition rises from jealousy, and the missionaries boldly turn to the Gentiles according to Scripture.
- Word Spreads Despite Persecution The missionaries are expelled, but the word spreads and the disciples are filled with joy and the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit sends Barnabas and Saul from Antioch, the gospel confronts spiritual opposition in Cyprus, Paul proclaims Jesus from Israel's history in Pisidian Antioch, and rejection by some Jews leads to bold Gentile mission and joy in the Holy Spirit.
Acts 13 argues that gospel mission is Spirit-initiated, Scripture-governed, Christ-centered, and unstoppable despite opposition. The Antioch church sends missionaries under the Spirit's direction. Paul proclaims Jesus as the promised Davidic Savior, crucified by those who failed to recognize Scripture, raised by God in fulfillment of Scripture, and proclaimed as the source of forgiveness and justification. When the word is rejected by some, Scripture itself authorizes turning to the Gentiles.
Theological logic
- The mission begins in worship, fasting, prayer, and the Holy Spirit's command, not human strategy alone.
- The church participates in the sending through prayer and laying on of hands, but the Spirit is the decisive sender.
- The gospel first enters synagogue contexts, showing continuity with Israel's Scriptures and priority to Jewish hearers.
- Spiritual opposition seeks to turn people away from the faith, but the Spirit-filled apostolic witness exposes and overcomes deception.
- Sergius Paulus believes because he is amazed not merely by power but by the teaching about the Lord.
- John Mark's departure introduces missionary strain, but the mission continues.
- Paul's sermon begins with Israel's history to show that the gospel fulfills God's covenant purposes.
- David becomes the key bridge to Jesus, the promised Savior from David's line.
- John the Baptist is placed as the preparatory witness who points away from himself to the coming one.
- The Jerusalem rulers fulfilled the prophetic words they did not recognize, showing that ignorance of Scripture's true fulfillment can coexist with regular Scripture reading.
- Jesus' death was unjust according to human guilt, but according to God's plan and prophetic fulfillment.
- God raised Jesus from the dead, and resurrection witnesses confirm the event.
- Scripture proves that the resurrection fulfills God's promise to the fathers, especially the Davidic promises.
- Because Jesus is risen and did not see decay, he is the living source of forgiveness and justification.
- The law of Moses could not provide the full justification now proclaimed through Jesus to everyone who believes.
- The warning from the prophets confronts hearers with the danger of despising God's saving work.
- Jealous opposition rejects the word and proves unworthy of eternal life.
- The turn to the Gentiles is not reactionary pragmatism but obedience to the Lord's scriptural command.
- Gentiles rejoice and honor the word, showing that the word rejected by some becomes life to others.
- Persecution removes the missionaries from the region, but the word spreads and the disciples are filled with joy and the Holy Spirit.
- Do not isolate divine appointment from gospel proclamation; belief follows hearing the word.
- Do not interpret Jewish rejection as total; Luke highlights division, not uniform response.
- Do not equate opposition with failure; it advances mission trajectory.
- Do not detach joy from suffering; both coexist in Spirit-filled discipleship.
- Do not reduce turning to the Gentiles to strategy alone; it fulfills prophetic promise.
- Do not interpret 'appointed to eternal life' as eliminating human responsibility.
- Avoid framing the Jewish opposition as universally representative.
- Do not detach persecution from God's sovereign purposes.
- Guard against triumphalism in Gentile inclusion.
- Do not overlook the continued pattern of synagogue engagement in later chapters.
- Faithful preaching often produces divided responses.
- Rejection in one place may open doors elsewhere.
- Jealousy can distort spiritual discernment.
- Joy and Spirit-filling sustain believers under hostility.
- Mission continues despite opposition.
- Make worship, prayer, and fasting part of missionary discernment.
- Set apart and send workers whom the Spirit calls.
- Expect and confront spiritual deception with Spirit-filled clarity.
- Proclaim Jesus as fulfillment of God's promises, not as detached religious advice.
- Announce forgiveness and justification through Christ to everyone who believes.
- Warn hearers not to despise the word of salvation.
- Continue in the grace of God after hearing the gospel.
- Turn opposition into wider mission rather than retreat.
- Honor the word of the Lord and rejoice when it spreads.
- Remain filled with joy and the Holy Spirit under persecution.
Worshipful discernment, missionary obedience, boldness against opposition, Scripture-shaped proclamation, grace-centered perseverance, humility before God's work, and joy under pressure.
- Spirit-sent mission from Antioch : The Antioch church, introduced in Acts 11, becomes the sending church for the first missionary journey.
- Jesus as Davidic Savior : Paul proclaims Jesus as the Savior brought from David's descendants according to promise.
- John the Baptist as preparatory witness : Paul places John as the one who prepared Israel for Jesus and denied being the Messiah.
- Scripture fulfilled in Jesus' death : The rulers fulfilled the prophetic words by condemning Jesus, though they did not recognize Him.
- Resurrection and sonship : Paul cites Psalm 2 to connect Jesus' resurrection with the fulfillment of divine sonship and kingship.
- Holy and sure blessings of David : Paul connects Isaiah's promise of Davidic blessings to the risen Christ who will never decay.
- The Holy One not seeing decay : Paul uses Psalm 16 to show that David's words ultimately point beyond David to the risen Jesus.
- Justification through Christ : Acts 13 announces justification through Jesus beyond what the law of Moses could provide.
- Warning from the prophets : Paul cites Habakkuk to warn hearers not to despise God's astonishing saving work.
- Light for the Gentiles : Paul and Barnabas cite Isaiah to ground the Gentile mission in the Lord's command.
The message of eternal life through Christ must be received by faith. Rejection does not nullify God’s purpose; those appointed to life believe and rejoice.