Thursday, April 16, 2026

Islam in WEST & Christian in Muslim countries

 























































POPE is TRAITOR To The WEST

 

















What's up with the BRITS????


;-)

 




Who Were The Gentiles in ACTS 15?

 




by Michael Bradley

In Acts of the Apostles 15, the dispute was about what to do with Gentiles who had responded in faith. The Pharisees argued they must be circumcised (Acts 15:1, 5), while Paul and Barnabas opposed that requirement. The final ruling—that they do not need to be circumcised—does not redefine the audience as the entire pagan world. It resolves how attached Gentiles relate to the covenant, not whether totally disconnected nations are now the target.
As James D. G. Dunn notes, “The issue was not whether Gentiles could be saved, but on what terms they could be included within the people of God.” (SOURCE: Dunn - The Acts of the Apostles, p. 208)
James concludes by giving a limited set of instructions rooted directly in the Law of Moses. The four requirements—abstaining from things polluted by idols, from sexual immorality, from what is strangled, and from blood—closely reflect Torah regulations, particularly those found in Leviticus 17–18. In those chapters, the Law repeatedly addresses both native Israelites and the sojourner (ger) living among them, showing that these standards already applied to non-native participants within Israel’s covenant life.
As Craig S. Keener observes, “The prohibitions in Acts 15 likely reflect laws that applied to resident aliens in Leviticus… suggesting that Gentile believers were treated analogously to such ‘sojourners.’” (SOURCE: Keener - Acts: An Exegetical Commentary, Vol. 3, p. 2220)
For example, Leviticus 17 forbids the consumption of blood for both Israelites and the stranger among them, while also regulating sacrificial practices to prevent idolatry. Likewise, Leviticus 18 outlines sexual prohibitions that apply to anyone dwelling within the land. This demonstrates that James is not creating a new framework for all Gentiles everywhere, but is drawing from an existing set of Torah-based expectations governing how sojourners could live among and participate in Israel’s covenant community.
Richard Bauckham similarly explains, “The decree draws on the Pentateuchal laws for resident aliens… indicating that Gentiles are incorporated into the people of God in a way analogous to the ger in Israel.” (SOURCE: Bauckham - James and the Jerusalem Church, p. 155)
The inclusion of Acts 15:21—“For Moses from ancient generations has in every city those who preach him, since he is read in the synagogues every Sabbath”—further reinforces this point. James presents the synagogue reading of Moses as the rationale for the decision, which only makes sense if the Gentiles in question are within reach of that ongoing instruction.
As Ben Witherington III notes, “James assumes that these Gentiles will continue to hear the law read in the synagogue… suggesting an ongoing engagement with the Jewish community and its Scriptures.” (SOURCE: Witherington - The Acts of the Apostles: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary, p. 460)
As a result, these requirements function as initial boundaries that enable fellowship and participation, with the expectation that continued exposure to Moses in the synagogue would provide ongoing instruction.
N. T. Wright captures this well: “The point was not to abandon the law, but to define how Gentiles could belong to the renewed people of God without full conversion to Judaism.” (SOURCE: Wright - Paul and the Faithfulness of God, p. 1220)
Rather than replacing the Law, the decision in Acts 15 presupposes its presence and authority, applying its principles in a way that integrates these Gentiles into the existing covenantal structure without requiring full proselyte conversion.
In summary, Acts 15 pertains to Gentiles who would normally hear the Law of Moses. The Law of Moses was taught in synagogues. Which Gentiles are consistently shown in synagogue settings in Acts? Those described throughout Acts as God-fearers, like Cornelius. This aligns with what historians of Second Temple Judaism observe about synagogue life in the diaspora.
As Louis H. Feldman writes, “There is considerable evidence for the presence of ‘God-fearers’—Gentiles attracted to Judaism—who attended synagogues and participated to varying degrees in Jewish religious life.” (SOURCE: Feldman - Jew and Gentile in the Ancient World, p. 342)
This means the Gentiles in Acts 15 are best understood not as random pagans with no exposure to Israel’s covenantal structure, but as people already connected to it—being included without the requirement of full proselyte conversion.