Episode Title: Unity Expanded, When God Changes “We” Episode Summary
In this episode, we continue our study of unity by moving into Acts of the Apostles 10, where God reshapes Peter’s understanding of who belongs in His Kingdom.
What begins as a vision about food becomes a seismic shift in identity. Through repetition, obedience, and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, God expands the definition of “we” to include the Gentiles, not as an afterthought, but as His design.
This episode explores:
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Why this moment would have been incredibly difficult for Jewish believers
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The significance of God repeating the vision three times
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How Peter’s story of denial and restoration echoes in this passage
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Why the Holy Spirit falls before the Church can debate the decision
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What Acts 10 teaches us about division in our culture today
Unity in Christ is not built on sameness. It is built on the shared gift of the Spirit.
Where We’ve Been
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Jesus’ prayer for unity in the Gospel of John 17
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Unity under persecution in Acts 4
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Now: unity expanded beyond ethnic and covenant boundaries in Acts 10
For thousands of years, Israel had been:
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Chosen
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Set apart
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Defined by covenant markers, including food laws
Gentile inclusion would not have felt like simple celebration, it would have felt like loss, destabilization, and confusion.
2. The Vision and the Repetition
Peter:
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Is hungry
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Falls into a trance
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Sees heaven open
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Hears the command: “Kill and eat.”
God repeats the vision three times, confirming its weight and necessity.
This repetition echoes:
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Peter’s three denials
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Jesus’ three restoration questions after the resurrection
The same grace that restored Peter now reshapes him.
3. Obedience Before Understanding
Peter does not immediately understand the vision.
Clarity comes through action, welcoming Gentile messengers into his home.
Sometimes theology unfolds as we obey.
4. The Spirit Falls
While Peter is still preaching, the Holy Spirit falls on Cornelius and his household.
This is not theological compromise, it is divine confirmation.
Unity is not negotiated. It is initiated by God.
5. Then and Now
Acts 10 still speaks to us.
We live in a culture shaped by:
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Political division
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Social fragmentation
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Generational tension
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Even division within the Church
Acts 10 invites us to ask:
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Who is “we”?
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Who have we unintentionally labeled “them”?
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John 17
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Acts 4
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Acts 10:9–42
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Ephesians 2
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Where might God be expanding your understanding of “we”?
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What assumptions about belonging might need re-examining?
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Are there places where obedience may need to come before full understanding?
Unity is not built on ethnicity, background, or shared culture.
It is built on the shared gift of the Holy Spirit.
Acts 10 shows us a God who is patient with His people, even when the lesson stretches them beyond what feels comfortable.
Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated Monthly
- PublishedFebruary 15, 2026 at 8:13 PM UTC
- Length14 min
- Episode70
- RatingClean
