This Sunday we’re in Acts 15:1–35, a pivotal moment in the early church where a major conflict threatens to distort the gospel itself. As more Gentiles come to faith, a question rises to the surface: Is faith in Jesus enough, or is something more required?
What follows is honest debate, tension, and a gathering of leaders to discern what’s true. It’s not a small disagreement—it’s about the very foundation of salvation.
In the middle of it all, we see something powerful:
God brings clarity through community, Scripture, and His Spirit.
Peter stands and reminds everyone that salvation comes through grace alone. Paul and Barnabas share how God is moving among the Gentiles. James points back to Scripture to confirm what God has been doing all along. And together, they refuse to add burdens where God has not.
This passage shows us that:
- The gospel must be protected. Even well-meaning additions can quietly distort what Jesus has already accomplished.
- Conflict isn’t always bad. When handled with humility and truth, it can actually lead to greater clarity and unity.
- Clarity leads to encouragement. When the church sends its decision, it doesn’t weigh people down—it lifts them up.
It leaves us with a question worth considering:
Are we holding tightly to the true gospel—or subtly adding to it?
Because even today, it’s easy to drift toward performance, pressure, or preference. But the good news is still the same: we are saved by grace through faith in Jesus—nothing more, nothing less.