Acts 15:6-11
God has already demonstrated that faith in Christ, not law observance, is the basis of salvation for all.
Scripture Text
15:6 The apostles and the elders were gathered together to see about this matter.
15:7 When there had been much discussion, Peter rose up and said to them, “Brothers, You know that a good while ago God made a choice among You that by my mouth the nations should hear the word of the Good News and believe.
15:8 God, who knows the heart, testified about them, giving them the Holy Spirit, just like He did to us.
15:9 He made no distinction between us and them, cleansing their hearts by faith.
15:10 Now therefore why do You tempt God, that You should put a yoke on the neck of the disciples which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?
15:11 But we believe that we are saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, just as they are.”
God has already demonstrated that faith in Christ, not law observance, is the basis of salvation for all.
Peter reminds the assembly that God gave the Holy Spirit to Gentiles without distinction, cleansing their hearts by faith, and therefore neither Jews nor Gentiles are saved through the law but through grace.
Churches must not trouble believers with unauthorized burdens, but must preserve gospel clarity, fellowship holiness, and mission continuity.
- Gospel Threat Identified The church confronts teaching that makes circumcision and law observance necessary for Gentile salvation.
- Grace Defended by Peter Peter argues from God's prior action: the Spirit was given to Gentiles, their hearts were cleansed by faith, and all are saved by the grace of the Lord Jesus.
- Mission Evidence Reported Barnabas and Paul testify to God's confirming work among Gentiles.
- Scripture Applied by James James shows that Gentile inclusion fulfills the prophetic hope of the nations bearing the Lord's name.
- Pastoral Decision Communicated The church sends an official letter preserving grace while giving Gentile believers fellowship-sensitive instructions.
- Church Strengthened The Antioch church receives the decision with joy and is strengthened through exhortation and teaching.
- Mission Continues Through Separation Paul and Barnabas separate over John Mark, but the churches continue to be strengthened.
A salvation controversy arises in Antioch, the apostles and elders discern God's work among Gentiles, Peter, Barnabas, Paul, and James testify, the church sends a letter preserving grace and fellowship, and the mission continues despite a painful ministry separation.
Acts 15 argues that Gentiles are not saved by becoming Jews through circumcision or by bearing the yoke of the Mosaic law, but through the grace of the Lord Jesus. God has already testified to their inclusion by giving them the Holy Spirit and cleansing their hearts by faith. Scripture agrees that the Gentiles would bear the Lord's name. Therefore, the church must not trouble Gentiles turning to God, but must call them to live in ways that reject idolatry, sexual immorality, and fellowship-destroying practices.
Theological logic
- The controversy begins when teachers add circumcision to the gospel as a requirement for salvation.
- Paul and Barnabas recognize the issue as serious enough to dispute sharply because the grace of the gospel is at stake.
- The journey to Jerusalem includes reports of Gentile conversion, showing that God's work is already bearing fruit.
- The Pharisee-background believers frame the question as circumcision plus obedience to the law of Moses.
- The apostles and elders gather, showing that doctrinal controversy must be handled with serious church discernment.
- Peter appeals to God's action with Cornelius: Gentiles heard the gospel, received the Spirit, and were accepted by God.
- Peter declares that God made no distinction between Jewish and Gentile believers, cleansing Gentile hearts by faith.
- Peter warns that requiring the law as a yoke would test God and burden Gentile disciples with what Israel itself could not bear.
- Peter's conclusion is gospel-defining: Jews and Gentiles are saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus.
- Barnabas and Paul strengthen the argument by reporting God's confirming work among Gentiles.
- James shows that the prophets agree: God is taking from the Gentiles a people for his name.
- James's judgment protects Gentiles from unnecessary burden while preserving holiness and fellowship.
- The letter clarifies that the troubling teachers were unauthorized.
- The phrase 'it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us' shows Spirit-guided communal discernment.
- The decision brings encouragement and joy to Antioch because the gospel of grace has been preserved.
- Judas and Silas strengthen the believers, showing that doctrinal clarity must be followed by pastoral strengthening.
- The chapter ends with painful disagreement between faithful workers, reminding readers that real mission can include real relational strain.
- Even through separation, the churches continue to be strengthened and the mission continues.
- Do not interpret Peter as dismissing moral obedience; He addresses justification, not sanctification.
- Do not detach Spirit-giving from faith; it is evidence of divine acceptance.
- Do not treat the law as evil; the burden refers to its inability to justify.
- Do not overlook the unity of salvation for Jew and Gentile.
- Do not minimize the gravity of adding requirements to grace.
- Do not portray the Law as sinful rather than insufficient for salvation.
- Avoid implying Jewish believers were saved by a different method.
- Do not detach Spirit-gift from faith in Christ.
- Guard against antinomian readings that reject moral instruction entirely.
- Do not minimize the seriousness of the doctrinal dispute.
- Doctrinal decisions must be grounded in God's revealed action.
- The Holy Spirit's work confirms gospel truth.
- Legal burdens distort the freedom of grace.
- Church unity rests on shared salvation in Christ.
- Leadership must speak clearly when the gospel is threatened.
- Reject any teaching that makes Christ's grace insufficient.
- Test disputed doctrine by Scripture, apostolic gospel, and the evidence of God's saving work.
- Refuse to impose salvation burdens God has not imposed.
- Welcome believers whose hearts God has cleansed by faith.
- Practice holiness that rejects idolatry and sexual immorality.
- Communicate church decisions clearly and pastorally.
- Strengthen unsettled believers with the word of the Lord.
- Continue mission even when faithful workers disagree.
Gospel courage, doctrinal clarity, humility before God's work, Scripture-governed discernment, Spirit-dependent decision-making, fellowship-sensitive holiness, encouragement, and mission perseverance.
- Cornelius and Gentile Spirit reception : Peter's argument depends on God's earlier gift of the Spirit to Cornelius' household.
- Cleansed hearts by faith : The council affirms that God cleanses hearts by faith, not by circumcision or law observance.
- The yoke of the law : Peter warns against placing an unbearable yoke on Gentile disciples, anticipating later apostolic teaching on law and grace.
- Saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus : Peter's declaration aligns with the apostolic teaching that salvation rests on Christ's grace.
- Gentiles called by the Lord's name : James cites the prophets to show that Gentiles bearing the Lord's name fulfills Scripture.
- Gentile fellowship and holiness : The council's instructions call Gentile believers away from idolatry and immorality while preserving fellowship with Jewish believers.
- Mission report and strengthening churches : Acts 15 continues the pattern of reporting God's work and strengthening churches after missionary labor.
- Paul, Barnabas, and Mark : The disagreement over Mark becomes part of the larger missionary story, later showing restoration in Paul's references to Mark.
We are saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, not by bearing the yoke of the law; hearts are cleansed by faith.