Luke's main point in Acts 16 is that the gospel advances in every level of society. The gospel advances in the life of a respectable, religious, and successful businesswoman like Lydia. It advances in the life of an abused girl who is treated as property by her owners and by her demon. And the gospel advances in the life of a common public servant—a prison guard who probably tends to see himself as a pretty good guy, especially better than the people he spends most of his time with. The gospel is for men and women, the respectable and the despicable, those who suffered abuse and those who never did, Jews and pagans, high class and low class and everyone in between—it's for every kind of person. Joe draws five applications based on this central truth.
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Joe has served as a shepherd at Tri-County Bible Church in Madison, Ohio since 2005. He's been a believer in Jesus Christ since childhood. He grew up in Vermont, North Carolina, a short bit in Moscow, but mostly in the greater Philadelphia area (making him someone who proudly...