Introductory Issues#
Authorship#
According to early church tradition, Luke wrote the book of Acts. If he did, the book is a sequel to the Gospel of Luke. Evidence within Acts supports authorship by Luke.
Just as his Gospel opens with a dedication to Theophilus, so also does Acts.
Vocabulary and style are very similar in the two books.
Though it does not prove that he wrote Luke-Acts, frequent use of medical terms agrees with Luke’s being a physician.
By his use of “we” in narrating parts of Paul’s journeys, the author of Acts implies that he was a traveling companion of Paul. Other traveling companions do not fit the data of the text.
Timothy and several lesser-known ones are mentioned apart from the “we” and “us” of Acts 20:4-6. According to Paul’s letters, neither Titus nor Silas (still other traveling companions unmentioned in Acts 20:4-6) accompanied him to Rome or stayed with him there.
The narrative of his voyage to Rome makes up one of the “we”–sections. By such processes of elimination Luke remains the only likely candidate for the authorship of Acts.
Literary Technique#
Together with the Gospel of Luke and the Letter to the Hebrews, the book of Acts contains some of the most cultured Greek writing in the New Testament. On the other hand, roughness of Greek style turns up where Luke appears to be following Semitic sources or imitating the Septuagint. Some scholars regard the speeches and sermons in Acts as literary devices improvised by Luke himself to fill out his stories. That some ancient historians followed such a practice is true, but not to the extent that has sometimes been claimed.
Although Luke need not have given verbatim reports of speeches and sermons, it does seem that he accurately gives the gist of what was said. Support for such accuracy comes from striking parallels of expression between Peter’s sermons in Acts and 1 Peter and between Paul’s sermons in Acts and his letters. These parallels can hardly have arisen by chance; and no other evidence exists to indicate that Luke imitated or used in any other way the letters, or that Peter and Paul imitated Acts when writing their letters. The only adequate explanation: Luke did not make up the speeches and sermons, but summarized their contents so accurately that the characteristic phraseology of Peter and Paul is evident in Luke’s reporting as well as in their letters.
Sources#
For the material in Acts, Luke drew on his own recollections where possible. He may have put some of these in a diary at the time of the events. Doubtless, additional information came to him from Paul, from Christians in Jerusalem, Syrian Antioch, and other places that he visited with and without Paul, from other traveling companions of Paul, such as Silas and Timothy, and from Philip the deacon and evangelist and an early disciple named Mnason, in whose homes he stayed (Acts 21:8, 16). Also available were written sources, such as the decree of the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:23-29) and perhaps Aramaic or Hebrew documents relating the early events of Christianity in and around Jerusalem.
Historical Accuracy#
To a large degree, archaeological discoveries have supported Luke’s historical accuracy. This accuracy is doubly remarkable in that the use of these terms was in a constant state of flux because the political status of various communities was constantly changing.
For example, we now know that his use of titles for various kinds of local and provincial governmental officials—procurators, consuls, praetors, politarchs, Asiarchs, and others—was exactly correct for the times and localities about which he was writing.
Ending and Date#
The book of Acts ends abruptly. Luke brings the story of Paul to the point where Paul, imprisoned in Rome, has been waiting for two years to be tried before Caesar. But we read no more. What happened to Paul? Did he ever appear before Caesar? If so, was he condemned? Martyred? Acquitted? Released? Luke does not tell. Many suggestions are offered to explain the abruptness of this ending:
Perhaps Luke intended a third volume that would answer the lingering questions. But his first volume, the Gospel of Luke, closes with a sense of completeness even though he probably intended already to write Acts.
Maybe Luke came to the end of his papyrus scroll. But presumably he would have seen that space was running out and formed an appropriate conclusion.
Personal catastrophe may have prevented Luke from finishing the book. But it is already long enough to fill a lengthy papyrus scroll.
Perhaps Acts 20:22-25; 21:4, 10-14 imply well enough that Paul was martyred in Rome. But those passages set out the possibility of martyrdom at the hands of hostile Jews in Jerusalem, not at the hands of Caesar in Rome; and the remainder of Acts tells of Paul’s escaping martyrdom at the hands of such Jews and of his exoneration by Roman officialdom.
Perhaps Luke accomplished a purpose of showing the progress of Christianity from Jerusalem, the place of origin, to Rome, capital of the empire. But Paul’s prison ministry in Rome makes a disappointing climax; a Christian community already existed there; and the problem remains why Luke did not tell what happened to Paul, the dominant character in Acts 13-28.
The best solution is to say that Luke wrote up to the events so far as they had happened; that is, at the time of writing Paul was still awaiting trial before the Caesar, Nero. Surely it would have been irrelevant for Luke to prove the political innocence of Christianity, as he does throughout the book, if he were writing after Nero had turned against Christians (A.D. 64). Luke wrote Acts, therefore, when Paul had been in Rome for two years (about A.D. 63).
Also favoring an early date is the lack of allusions to the Neronic persecution, to the martyrdom of James the Lord’s brother, again in the 60s, and to the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Relatively undeveloped theology and controversy over the status of Gentile Christians possibly point in the same direction, but may instead reflect Luke’s accuracy in describing the primitive church, without implications for the date of writing.
Theologically, the abruptness with which Acts ends suggests the unfinished task of worldwide evangelism. What the early church began, the later church is to finish.
Purpose#
As in his Gospel, Luke slants the book of Acts toward Gentiles, especially those with open-minded interest in the historical origins of Christianity. In so doing, he continues to emphasize the religious piety, moral purity, and political innocence of believers in Jesus, and to portray Christianity as universal, a traditional religion rooted in Judaism but open to all.
In Luke the narrative progressed to Jerusalem, the center of Judaism.
In Acts the narrative progresses to Rome, center of the world.
The power of the Holy Spirit makes possible this progress. Luke does not write about the spread of Christianity to Egypt or to the East, but we do read recurring statements that summarize the success of the gospel wherever Christians proclaimed it: “And the word of God kept growing, and the number of the disciples in Jerusalem kept multiplying greatly” (Acts 6:7; see also 9:31; 12:24; 16:5; 19:20; 28:30-31).
Special attention goes to showing that Christianity deserves continued freedom because it derives from Judaism, which has legal standing, and because it does not pose any threat to the Roman government. Repeatedly, Luke describes Christianity as a kind of fulfilled Judaism and cites favorable judgments concerning Christianity and its proponents by various kinds of local and provincial officials.
Such an apology was needed, because Christianity had started with the handicap that its founder had died by crucifixion, the Roman means of executing criminals, and because disturbance arose wherever Christianity spread.
Already in his Gospel, Luke has shown that both Pilate and Herod Antipas pronounced Jesus innocent and that mob pressure led to a miscarriage of justice. In Acts, too, Luke shows that disturbances over Christianity arose from the violence of mobs and from false accusations, often by unbelieving Jews, not through any misdeeds of the Christians themselves. In this way Luke hopes to dispel prejudice against Christianity and to win sympathy from the likes of Theophilus, whose designation “most excellent” in Luke 1:3 may indicate influential political position as well as aristocratic, or at least middle-class, social standing.
Paul’s Journey#
A Summary of Main Stopping Places and Events Synchronized with the Pauline Letters (All Dates Approximate)
| Time | Letter | Events |
|---|---|---|
| A.D. 33 | Jesus died and rose. | |
| 34 | Paul was converted, preached in Damascus, and descaped a Jewish plot by being let down in a basket through an opening in the wall at Damascus | |
| Barnabas introduced Paul to the church in Jerusalem. | ||
| Paul returned to Tarsus. | ||
| Barnabas brought Paul to Antioch in Syria | ||
| 47 | Barnabas and Paul took famine relief to Jerusalem. | |
| I. The First Missionary Journey | ||
| Antioch in Syria | ||
| Cyprus - Bar-Jesus (Elymas) was blinded and the proconsul Sergius Paulus converted. | ||
| Perga in Pamphylia - John Mark returned. | ||
| Antioch of Pisidia - Paul preached in the synagogue. | ||
| Iconium | ||
| Lystra - Paul healed a cripple; Barnabas and Paul were worshiped as Zeus and Hermes; Paul was stoned. | ||
| Derbe | ||
| Lystra | ||
| Iconium | ||
| Antioch of Pisidia | ||
| Perga in Pamphylia | ||
| Antioch in Syria | ||
| 49 | Galatians (under early date of South Galatian theory) | The Jerusalem Councile (Acts 15) |
| 50-51 | II. The Second Missionary Journey | |
| (Paul and Barnabas disagreed whether to take John Mark; Paul took Silas.) | ||
| Antioch in Syria | ||
| Derbe | ||
| Lystra - Paul took Timothy (Phrygia and South Galatia) | ||
| Iconium (Phrygia and South Galatia) | ||
| Antioch of Pisidia (Phrygia and South Galatia) | ||
| Troas - Paul saw the man of Macedonia in a vision. | ||
| Philippi - Lydia was converted; a demon-possessed girl was delivered; Paul and Silas were jailed; an earthquake occurred at midnight; the jailer was converted. | ||
| Thessalonica - A Jewish-inspired mob assaulted the house of Jason, where Paul was staying. | ||
| Berea - The Bereans “searched the [Old Testament] scriptures” to verify Paul’s message. | ||
| Athens - Paul was alone; he preached his sermon on Mars’ Hill; Timothy and Silas rejoined Paul, but Paul sent Timothy back to Thessalonica and Silas elsewhere. | ||
| 1 and 2 Thessalonians | Corinth - Paul made tents with Priscilla and Aquila; Timothy and Silas rejoined Paul; Paul moved his preaching from the synagogue to the house of Titius Justus; Crispus the synagogue ruler was converted; in a vision Jesus told Paul to stay; the Roman proconsul Galio refused to condemn Paul for preaching; Paul spent one and a half years in Corinth | |
| Cenchrea - Paul shaved his head. | ||
| Ephesus - Priscilla and Aquila accompanied Paul this far, but stayed in Ephesus. | ||
| Caesarea | ||
| Jerusalem | ||
| Antioch in Syria | ||
| III. The Third Missionary Journey | ||
| Antioch in Syria | ||
| Galatia and Phrygia | ||
| 1 Corinthians | Ephesus - Disciples of John the Baptist received the Spirit; Paul preached in the school of Tyrannus; the seven sons of Sceva (unbelieving Jews) tried to use Jesus’ name in exorcising demons; converts burned their books of magic; Demetrius led a riot in behalf of the goddess Artemis (Diana); Paul spent two years and three months in Ephesus. | |
| 2 Corinthians | Macedonia (Philippi, Thessalonica, Berea) | |
| Greece, or Achaia (Athens and Corinth) - Jews plotted to kill Paul on a voyage to Palestine | ||
| Macedonia | ||
| Troas - Eutychus fell out of a window during Paul’s sermon | ||
| Miletus - Paul bade farewell to the Ephesian elders. | ||
| Tyre - Paul was warned not to go to Jerusalem. | ||
| Caesarea - Paul stayed in the house of Philip; Agabus warned Paul with a symbolic girdle about what would happen in Jerusalem. | ||
| 57 | Jerusalem - Paul reported to the church; involved himself in a Jewish vow to show he was not against the Mosaic Law; was seized in the temple; was rescued by Roman soldiers; spoke to the Jews from the castle stairway; spoke to the Sanhedrin; Jews plotted to ambush him; Claudius Lysias sent him to Felix in Caesarea | |
| Caesarea - Paul stood trial before Felix, Festus, and Agrippa and appealed his case to Caesar. | ||
| IV. The Journey to Rome | ||
| Caesarea | ||
| Crete - Paul’s advice not to sail was rejected. | ||
| 60 | Storm on the Mediterranean Sea. | |
| Malta (Melita) - Shipwreck occurred; Paul shook a viper off his hand and suffered no ill effects. | ||
| 61 | Philemon | Rome - Paul rented a house-prison; preached to Jews and Gentiles; and for two years awaited trial before Nero. |
| Colossians | ||
| Ephesians | ||
| Phillipians | ||
| 63 | Paul was released from prison; did further traveling. | |
| 1 Timothy | ||
| Titus | Reimprisonment | |
| 2 Timothy | Martyrdom |
Summary#
As a follow-up on Luke’s Gospel, the book of Acts traces the Spirit-powered progress of the gospel from Jerusalem to Rome. Luke himself participated in many of the events that contributed to this progress. Its tracing gives him opportunity to highlight items that would appeal to a Hellenistic audience, items such as the rootage of Christianity in the ancient religion of Judaism, the openness of Christianity to Gentiles, the exemplary religious, moral, and political behavior of Christians, and the failure of Roman officialdom to find any truth in accusations brought against them. Peter and Paul loom large in Luke’s narrative.
In particular, Paul’s three missionary journeys and voyage to Rome occupy more than half the last chapters of Acts. Sermons and speeches dot the whole of the narrative. Acts ends with Paul’s awaiting trial before Caesar in Rome, probably because nothing more had happened at the time of writing.