Scripture:
“And Peter said to them, ‘Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is for you and for your children and for all who are far off, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to himself.’” — Acts 2:38–39 (ESV)
Think:
Peter stands before a crowd still carrying the weight of what they had done to Jesus. Some had mocked Him. Some had rejected Him. Some had simply walked away indifferent. Yet after preaching the cross and resurrection, Peter does not leave them in despair. He points them to a promise.
“You will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.”
This is the heart of Pentecost.
Jesus did not merely die to forgive sin in some distant theological sense. He died and rose again to bring dead people to life. To restore what sin destroyed. To bring humanity back into relationship with God. And the evidence that Jesus truly accomplished that is the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
Throughout the Old Testament, the Spirit would come upon certain people for certain moments—prophets, priests, kings. But now, because of Jesus, the Spirit is being poured out on ordinary believers. The promise is no longer limited to a few. Through Christ, the presence of God now dwells within His people.
And the Spirit does more than comfort us.
He gives life.
What was spiritually dead begins to awaken. Desires change. Hearts soften. Eyes open to the beauty of Jesus. As Matt Chandler often says, salvation is not making bad people try harder—it is God making dead people alive.
But the Spirit also gives power.
Jesus had already told the disciples in Acts 1:8:
“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses.”
That is exactly what is happening here. Peter—the same man who once denied Jesus around a fire—is now boldly proclaiming Christ before thousands. The Spirit empowers ordinary people to accomplish the mission of God.
Pentecost was never about spiritual spectacle. The fire, the wind, the languages—all of it pointed to this reality: Jesus is alive, and His followers are now empowered to make Him known.
The promise was never just about getting people into heaven someday. It was about filling them with the life and presence of God now so the world could see Jesus through them.
And Peter says:
“The promise is for you.”
For weak people.
For fearful people.
For people who know they cannot do this on their own.
The Spirit is not a reward for the strong. He is a gift for those who surrender to Christ.
Application:
You were not saved merely to survive spiritually. The Holy Spirit gives you life, strength, boldness, and power to live for Jesus and point others to Him. Ask God to make you more aware of His presence and more available for His purpose.
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for dying and rising again so I could have new life. Holy Spirit, fill me with Your power and presence. Help me live boldly, love deeply, and faithfully point people to Jesus. Amen.
Scripture:
“And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. And awe came upon every soul…” — Acts 2:42–43 (ESV)
Think:
The fire had faded from the sky by this point.
The rushing wind was gone.
The crowds had started dispersing.
The noise of Pentecost was settling.
But something brand new had been born.
Acts 2 is not just the story of a supernatural moment—it is the story of what happened after the moment. Luke is showing us the fruit of the fire. What does it look like when the Holy Spirit truly fills people?
They became devoted.
Not entertained.
Not spiritually curious.
Devoted.
Thousands of people who once lived completely ordinary lives suddenly could not get enough of Jesus. They gathered around Scripture. They prayed together. They shared meals. They worshiped with glad hearts. They stayed close to one another because something deeper than friendship now bound them together.
The Spirit had formed a family.
And this is what makes Acts 2 so beautiful: this is the beginning of the church as we know it. The cross had reconciled people to God, and now the Spirit was reconciling people to one another. Men and women from different backgrounds, different stories, different failures, were now sitting at the same tables with tears in their eyes, worshiping the same risen Savior.
Luke says:
“They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching…”
Because when the Holy Spirit awakens a heart, people become hungry for truth. The same people who once ignored Jesus now leaned in to hear every word about Him. They understood something we often forget: the Word of God is not lifeless information—it is where we encounter the living Christ.
And then there was fellowship.
koinonia.
Not shallow small talk. Not pretending everything was fine. Shared life. Shared burdens. Shared joy. Shared mission. The kind of closeness only grace can create.
This was the miracle of Pentecost: strangers became brothers and sisters.
And hovering over all of it was this holy sense of awe.
“Awe came upon every soul…”
Can you imagine it?
Every gathering felt sacred because they knew God Himself was among them. Every prayer carried weight. Every meal reminded them of Jesus. Every baptism told the story of death becoming life. They had watched the Spirit of God take fearful disciples and turn them into bold witnesses. They had seen dead hearts come alive in a single sermon.
Nothing felt casual anymore.
Honestly, that may be what hits hardest about Acts 2. The early church was not perfect, but they were captivated. Jesus was not an accessory to their lives. He was their life.
And maybe that is what our hearts ache for too.
Not colder religion.
Not bigger platforms.
Not polished performances.
But the kind of church where people are overwhelmed by the presence of God again. Where Scripture burns in hearts again. Where prayer matters again. Where people stop pretending and start becoming family again.
That is the fruit of the fire.
Application:
Ask God where your heart has grown spiritually numb or familiar. Invite Him to awaken fresh awe in you again. Lean into community, Scripture, prayer, and worship—not out of obligation, but because Jesus is worthy of your devotion.
Prayer:
Jesus, awaken wonder in me again. Forgive me for settling for casual faith when You gave everything to bring me near. Fill me with fresh hunger for Your Word, Your people, and Your presence. Let my life become evidence that Your Spirit is still alive and moving today. Amen.
Scripture:
“And all who believed were together and had all things in common. And they were selling their possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to all, as any had need… they received their food with glad and generous hearts.” — Acts 2:44–46 (ESV)
Think:
Something supernatural was happening in the early church.
Not just miracles.
Not just signs and wonders.
People were changing.
Luke says:
“All who believed were together…”
That sounds simple until you realize what kind of people these were. Different backgrounds. Different regions. Different social classes. Some were wealthy pilgrims visiting Jerusalem. Others were poor laborers. Some had religious status. Others carried shame and failure.
Yet suddenly they were eating together, praying together, worshiping together, and carrying one another’s burdens like family.
Why?
Because Pentecost did not just fill people with spiritual power. It created a new kind of people altogether.
Luke says they had “all things in common.” The Greek word behind fellowship earlier in the passage is koinonia—a deep spiritual sharing of life. But here Luke pushes even further. Their unity was not theoretical or sentimental. Grace had become tangible.
They shared meals.
Shared homes.
Shared resources.
Shared burdens.
The gospel had shattered the invisible walls people normally build around themselves.
And honestly, this is one of the greatest evidences that the Holy Spirit was truly at work. Human beings naturally move toward self-protection. We cling tightly to our money, our comfort, our schedules, our privacy, our lives. But when the Spirit fills people, hearts begin opening instead of closing.
That is why verse 46 is so beautiful:
“Glad and generous hearts.”
The word “generous” can also carry the idea of sincerity or singleness of heart. Their joy was not manufactured. They were no longer divided internally, constantly grasping for more. Jesus had become enough.
This is the fruit of the gospel.
Before Christ, people spend their lives trying to secure themselves—protecting status, chasing approval, building smaller and smaller kingdoms around themselves. But the cross changes people. When you realize Jesus gave everything for you, generosity stops feeling dangerous.
You no longer have to live clenched.
And this kind of community would have stunned the ancient world. In Roman culture, people associated almost exclusively within their social rank and status. But now slaves, widows, merchants, fishermen, and religious outsiders were gathering around the same table as equals before God.
The church became a living picture of the kingdom of God.
Tertullian, one of the earliest church leaders, said the watching world looked at Christians and marveled:
“See how they love one another.”
That was the witness.
Not perfection.
Not polish.
Love.
A Spirit-filled people so transformed by Jesus that they began living open-hearted lives in a closed-off world.
And honestly, that is still what makes the gospel believable today.
Application:
Ask God to reveal where your life has become closed off or self-protective. Who needs your presence, generosity, encouragement, or vulnerability right now? The Holy Spirit forms us into people who make room for others.
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for welcoming me into Your family when I had nothing to offer You. Soften my heart where it has become guarded or selfish. Teach me to live open-handed, love deeply, and reflect the beauty of Your kingdom to the world around me. Amen.
Scripture:
“…praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved.” — Acts 2:47 (ESV)
Think:
The church exploded in Acts 2.
Not because they had influence.
Not because they had buildings.
Not because they mastered marketing.
They had the presence of God.
The same people who had once hidden in fear were now living so differently that the world could not ignore them. There was joy among them. Generosity among them. Awe among them. Their lives had become living evidence that Jesus was alive.
And Luke says:
“The Lord added to their number day by day…”
That line matters deeply.
The growth of the church was not ultimately built on human talent or strategy. It was the work of God. The risen Christ was still saving people. Still drawing hearts. Still building His church through ordinary believers empowered by the Holy Spirit.
This is the fulfillment of everything Jesus promised in Acts 1:8:
“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses.”
And that word “witnesses” is important. The Greek word is martys—where we get the word martyr. A witness was someone who testified to what they had personally seen and experienced, even if it cost them something.
That is what the early church became.
They were not merely spreading information about Jesus. Their lives themselves became testimonies. The way they loved. The way they suffered. The way they worshiped. The way they welcomed outsiders. The way they held loosely to possessions and tightly to Christ—it all pointed somewhere beyond themselves.
People looked at them and saw echoes of Jesus.
And that is the real miracle of Acts 2.
The Holy Spirit did not come merely to create spiritual experiences. He came to make Jesus visible through His people. Pentecost was never meant to terminate in the upper room. The fire was meant to spread.
Day by day, people were being saved because day by day the church was living as the church.
There is something deeply challenging about that. The early believers did not separate “church life” from “real life.” Their faith shaped everything. Meals became ministry. Homes became places of worship. Ordinary conversations became opportunities for witness.
And somehow, in the middle of an often hostile culture, they had “favor with all the people.” That does not mean everyone agreed with them. Persecution would come soon enough. But there was something undeniably compelling about a community so transformed by grace.
The world was seeing a glimpse of the kingdom of God.
Honestly, I think this is what people are still searching for today. Not perfect Christians. Not polished performances. But people whose lives genuinely make Jesus believable.
And the beautiful part is this:
“The Lord added…”
The pressure is not on us to save people. That belongs to Jesus. Our calling is faithfulness—to live filled with the Spirit, rooted in truth, overflowing with love, and ready to point people toward Christ.
The same Lord who added to the church in Acts 2 is still drawing people today.
Application:
Ask God to make your life a clearer witness to Jesus. Consider the places you live, work, eat, and interact every day. How might the Holy Spirit want to use your ordinary life to point someone toward Christ?
Prayer:
Jesus, thank You for still building Your church. Fill me with Your Spirit so my life reflects Your love, truth, and grace. Help me live faithfully in a way that points people toward You. Use even the ordinary parts of my life for Your kingdom and Your glory. Amen.
Scripture:
"Now Peter and John were going up to the temple at the hour of prayer, the ninth hour. And a man lame from birth was being carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple that is called the Beautiful Gate to ask alms of those entering the temple. Seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple, he asked to receive alms. And Peter directed his gaze at him, as did John, and said, 'Look at us.' And he fixed his attention on them, expecting to receive something from them." — Acts 3:1-5 (ESV)
Think:
Imagine waking up every morning knowing exactly how your day will go.
Someone carries you. Someone sets you down at the same gate. You watch the same crowd walk past you into the same place you are not allowed to enter. You hold out your hand. Most people don't look at you. Some drop a coin. The sun moves across the sky and eventually someone carries you home.
Then you do it again tomorrow.
And the day after that.
For forty years.
That is not just poverty. That is a life hollowed out by repetition. That is hope so deferred it stopped feeling like hope and started feeling like foolishness. At some point this man stopped expecting anything to change. He wasn't dreaming about walking anymore. He was just trying to make it through another afternoon.
And that is exactly where God shows up.
Peter and John weren't on their way to do something great. They were on their way to pray. No agenda. No miracle planned. Just two men keeping a rhythm of faithfulness — walking toward God in the middle of an ordinary afternoon.
And that ordinary walk became the hinge everything turned on.
This is one of the most quietly radical things in all of Acts: God didn't use Peter and John because they were impressive. He used them because they showed up. They were available. They were moving in the right direction. And when the moment came, they didn't walk past it.
Most of us will never stand on a stage or preach to thousands. But every single one of us walks past people every day who are sitting at gates. The question Acts 3 keeps asking us is simple and uncomfortable:
Are you paying attention?
Peter sees him.
Not past him. Not through him. At him.
"Peter directed his gaze at him, as did John, and said, 'Look at us.'"
In a world where this man had been invisible for decades — where people had perfected the art of dropping a coin without making contact — Peter stops and looks him dead in the eye. And then he does something even more extraordinary. He asks the man to look back.
Look at us.
Not look at what we're about to do. Not brace yourself for a miracle. Just — we're here. We see you. You are not invisible to us.
Before the healing, there is the seeing. And I wonder if after forty years of being nobody's priority, being truly seen felt like the first part of the miracle.
We live in a world of curated feeds and noise and hurry where real human beings are disappearing into the background of our busy lives. Somewhere near you right now there is a person who cannot remember the last time someone looked them in the eye and made them feel like they mattered.
You have that power. Right now. Today.
Then Peter says something that stops me every time.
He looks at a man with forty years of unmet need and says — with no embarrassment, no apology — "I have no silver and gold."
Just like that. No pretending. No stalling. No trying to be something he isn't.
And then, in the same breath, with the same calm: "But what I do have I give to you."
That sentence is everything.
Peter isn't waiting until he has more. He isn't paralyzed by what he lacks. He isn't standing there wishing he had something better to offer. He knows exactly what he's carrying, and he gives it — without hesitation, without conditions, without holding anything back.
What he has is a name. The name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth. And he says it like he actually believes it's enough.
Because it is.
Here is what the enemy wants you to believe: that you don't have enough to make a difference. That you're too broken, too busy, too ordinary. That someone else — someone more gifted, more resourced, more put-together — is better suited for this. So you wait. And while you wait, real people sit at real gates and wonder if anyone is ever going to stop.
You are not too empty. You are not too small. If Jesus lives in you, you are carrying the most powerful thing in the universe. And He is waiting for you to offer it.
The man was expecting coins.
That's the part that breaks me. After forty years, he had learned to want so little. Just enough to eat. Just enough to survive the week. He had no category for what was about to happen to him. He wasn't asking for his legs. He had given up on his legs a long time ago.
But God hadn't.
God was thinking about the temple courts this man had never walked through. God was thinking about the leaping and the praising that was about to pour out of a body that had never known what it felt like to stand. God was writing a story this man couldn't have imagined from the ground.
The gap between what we ask for and what God wants to give — that gap is the gospel.
He did not know he was sitting at the edge of a miracle. He did not know that two men were walking toward him who carried a name that would change everything. He just held out his hand one more time, the way he had ten thousand times before.
And this time, everything was different.
That person on your route — the one you keep meaning to check on, the one who has gone quiet, the one everyone else has moved on from — they are holding out their hand in ways you might not even recognize. They're not going to announce their need. They never do. They've learned, like this man, to want less. To expect less. To keep their hopes small enough that the disappointment doesn't destroy them.
You have a name that can change that.
Not a program. Not a perfect plan. Not silver or gold. Just the willingness to stop, to look, and to give what you actually have — which is more than you think, because Christ in you is more than enough for whatever they are facing.
The gate is on your route. It always has been.
Stop walking past it.
Application:
Put a name to the person God just put on your heart. Don't negotiate with it — you know who it is. Now pick one real, specific action: show up at their door, make the call you've been putting off, invite them to your table. Not this month. Not when things settle down. Write the name down. Write the action next to it. Then do it. The miracle belongs to God. The showing up belongs to you.
Prayer:
God, forgive me for all the gates I have walked past. For the times I told myself I had nothing to offer, or that someone else would stop, or that I'd do it later. Open my eyes. Give me the courage to stop and actually see the person You've placed in front of me. I don't have much — but I have You. And I'm trusting that is enough. Use me. Amen.
Scripture:
"And Peter said, 'I have no silver and gold, but what I do have I give to you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise up and walk.' And he took him by the right hand and raised him up, and immediately his feet and ankles were made strong. And leaping up, he stood and began to walk, and entered the temple with them, walking and leaping and praising God." — Acts 3:6-8 (ESV)
Think:
Peter doesn't negotiate. He doesn't apologize for what he can't offer. He just looks at this broken man and says the only thing he knows to be true:
In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth — rise up and walk.
And the man does.
Forty years of atrophied muscle. Forty years of bones that had never once held his weight. Gone. Instantly. Luke — a physician — uses precise medical language here: the ankle bones snapped into alignment, the feet came alive. This was not a slow recovery. This was creation-level power moving through a name.
And that is the whole point. Peter wasn't wielding a formula. He was trusting a Person. The name of Jesus wasn't a magic phrase — it was the full weight of who Jesus was: His authority, His resurrection life, His identity as the Son of God. Peter spoke it with that kind of certainty because he had stood at an empty tomb. He knew the name worked because the One who carried it was still alive.
That name is still alive today. That's not a bumper sticker. It's the reason any of this matters.
But don't miss what happens next — because it's the part that should undo us.
The man doesn't just walk. He leaps. He goes into the temple walking and leaping and praising God — and that last detail carries more weight than it first appears.
He had never been allowed inside.
The law of his day barred the lame from the inner courts. For forty years he had sat at the threshold — close enough to hear the worship, close enough to smell the incense, watching everyone else walk through a door that was permanently closed to him.
The first place his new feet take him is the one place he was never allowed to go.
That is not just a healing. That is the gospel in one image. The excluded, brought in. The one who lived his whole life at the threshold, now standing in the presence of God — leaping, because what just happened to him is too enormous for anything less.
His praise was uncontainable because his gratitude was that big.
Here is what I don't want you to do with this passage: admire it from a distance.
Because if Jesus has done anything in your life — opened any door that had no business opening, restored anything you had given up on, brought you into any room you had no right to enter — then you have more in common with this man than you think.
You were once at a gate too. You were once outside a door.
And Someone reached down, took your hand, and pulled you to your feet.
That is worth leaping over. That is worth being loud about. Not as a performance — but in the way a person who actually remembers what they were saved from cannot help but worship.
Application:
What door did Jesus open for you that had no business opening? Name it. Don't let it stay abstract. Then ask yourself — when is the last time you praised Him for it with anything close to what this man brought into the temple? Let that memory move you today. Tell someone what He did. Say it out loud. Let your life be the announcement.
Prayer:
Jesus, I confess I have grown too comfortable with what You've done for me. Forgive me. Remind me what I was before You reached down and took my hand — and remind me what door You opened that I never could have opened myself. You are still healing. You are still restoring. You are still bringing people into rooms that were closed against them. Amen.
Scripture:
"And all the people saw him walking and praising God, and recognized him as the one who sat at the Beautiful Gate of the temple, asking for alms. And they were filled with wonder and amazement at what had happened to him. While he clung to Peter and John, all the people, utterly astonished, ran together to them in the portico called Solomon's Portico. And when Peter saw it, he addressed the people: 'Men of Israel, why do you wonder at this, or why do you stare at us, as though by our own power or piety we had made him walk?'" — Acts 3:9–12 (ESV)
Think:
Be honest with yourself for a second.
You have imagined it before.
The moment the room turns toward you. The moment something you did — something you built, said, led, or accomplished — suddenly becomes impossible for people to ignore.
We don't say it out loud much, but we ache to be seen.
To matter. To be admired. To be the one everyone is looking at.
And here stands Peter in the middle of exactly that moment.
A man crippled for over forty years is suddenly walking, leaping, praising God. The crowd is running toward Peter and John in stunned amazement. This is the kind of moment people build ministries on. Platforms on. Reputations on.
And Peter does the exact opposite of what human nature wants to do.
He refuses to let the miracle terminate on himself.
"Why are you staring at us? As though by our own power or piety we had made him walk?"
Peter knows something the crowd does not yet understand:
The miracle is not ultimately about the man walking.
It is about the power of the risen Jesus.
That phrase matters — our own power or piety.
Peter is dismantling two lies humanity has always believed:
that power comes from us, or that holiness comes from us.
The crippled man was not healed because Peter was powerful enough.
He was not healed because Peter was righteous enough.
This was not human ability. This was not spiritual achievement. This was Jesus.
And you need to feel how shocking it is that Peter says this.
Because this is Peter.
The disciple who once argued about who would be greatest. The man who drew a sword in Gethsemane because he wanted to prove his loyalty louder than everyone else. The man who denied Jesus three times because the opinion of the crowd suddenly mattered more than faithfulness.
Peter knew what it was to crave significance.
But something had happened to him.
He had seen the risen Christ.
He had stood before Jesus carrying the full weight of his failure and discovered mercy instead of rejection. He had watched a crucified Savior walk out of a grave. He had been filled with the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. And now Peter understood: the power moving through him was never his to begin with.
That is why he redirects the crowd so quickly.
Because once you truly know Jesus is alive, you stop needing people to think you are extraordinary.
The gospel had reordered Peter completely.
The same man who once tried to preserve his own reputation at all costs is now disappearing into the background so Jesus can be seen clearly.
That is what the Holy Spirit does. He does not magnify people. He magnifies Christ.
And here is where Acts 3 confronts us.
How much of our lives are spent subtly collecting credit for what only God could have done?
The relationship restored.
The open door.
The wisdom you carried into a hard moment.
The ministry that flourished.
The strength you somehow had when you should have fallen apart.
We naturally put ourselves at the center of the story.
But Peter understood something deeper: if Jesus has the power to raise dead bodies from graves, then every miracle, every changed life, every healing, every transformed heart traces back to Him.
Not our power.
Not our goodness.
Not our brilliance.
Jesus.
The healed man was walking because Jesus was alive.
And the same Jesus is still alive now.
Still saving.
Still restoring.
Still healing what sin shattered.
Still taking spiritually crippled people and making them new.
Peter pushed the glory away because he knew where the power came from.
And when you truly understand what Christ has done for you, you stop wanting people to be impressed with you and start longing for them to encounter Him.
Application:
Think of one thing in your life right now that people associate with you — a success, a strength, an opportunity, a moment of influence. Have you genuinely pointed anyone past yourself to Jesus? Not artificially. Not performatively. Honestly.
Let someone hear you say this week: “God has been unbelievably kind to me. I could not have done this without Him.”
Prayer:
Jesus, forgive me for wanting credit for things only You could do. Forgive me for building my identity on attention, approval, or admiration. Remind me that every good thing in my life traces back to Your grace and Your power. Make me like Peter — quick to redirect attention, quick to give glory away, quick to make much of You instead of myself. You alone are powerful enough to heal, save, restore, and change hearts. Let my life point clearly to You. Amen.
Scripture:
"And as they were speaking to the people, the priests and the captain of the temple and the Sadducees came upon them, greatly annoyed because they were teaching the people and proclaiming in Jesus the resurrection from the dead. And they arrested them and put them in custody until the next day, for it was already evening. But many of those who had heard the word believed, and the number of the men came to about five thousand." — Acts 4:1-4 (ESV)
Think:
It is hard not to feel the weight of this moment.
Peter is standing in the same city where Jesus was beaten, mocked, and crucified. The same religious system that condemned Jesus is now glaring back at him. The same threats. The same pressure. The same danger.
And yet Peter does not flinch.
Just weeks earlier, he trembled before a servant girl and denied even knowing Jesus. Now he stands publicly proclaiming resurrection in the streets of Jerusalem.
What happened to him?
Peter saw the risen Christ.
And once a person truly encounters the resurrected Jesus, fear begins losing its grip.
The religious leaders were “greatly annoyed.” Not mildly irritated—deeply disturbed. Because the gospel was spreading beyond their control. Broken people were finding hope. The lame man was walking. Crowds were gathering. And at the center of it all was the name they thought they had already silenced: Jesus.
The resurrection has always been offensive to systems built on power, pride, and self-sufficiency because it declares that humanity cannot save itself.
If Jesus rose from the dead, then you must accept all He said; if He did not rise, then why worry about anything He said. Everything hinges on the resurrection.
Peter understood that now.
And suddenly prison seemed small compared to eternity.
Threats seemed weak compared to glory.
Approval seemed empty compared to Jesus.
This is what the Holy Spirit does.
He takes ordinary, fearful people and fills them with holy courage.
Not because they become strong—
but because Jesus becomes bigger than what they fear.
Some believers today are exhausted from trying to blend in with a world that desperately needs light. Quiet compromise slowly suffocates the soul. But Acts 4 reminds us that the gospel was never meant to be hidden safely in private corners of our lives.
There are moments when following Jesus will cost you comfort, reputation, relationships, or security.
But there is also something worse than suffering for Christ:
living like He is not worth suffering for.
Application:
What fear has been silencing your faith lately? Ask God to make Jesus so real to your heart that courage begins to rise where fear once ruled.
Prayer:
Jesus, forgive me for the times I have stayed silent out of fear. Fill me with the kind of boldness that comes from knowing You are alive, present, and worth everything. Amen.