Acts

Home
Waiting
Ascension
Betrayal
Pentecost
First Sermon
Early Church
In The Name
Opposition
Ananias
Providence
Growing Strong
Martyrdom
Sorcerer
Ethopian Eunuch
Road to Damascus
God's Timing
God Opens Doors
On Dispute
Encouragement
Get Out Of Jail Free
Glory of God
The Missionary
Evidence
Perils of Imitation
Testing God
On Failure
Hospitality
Midnight View
The Incarnation
Tentmaker
Model of Unity
The Name
Making a Buck
Preparation
Prophecy
Primacy of God
Testimony
Two Years
God's Ways, Our Ways
Storm
Happy Habit
Redemption

The author of the book is undisputed:  it is Luke, the physician, who wrote the Gospel which also bears his name.  He is a historian, but one who acknowledges the power of the Holy Spirit in his writing.  In this there is wisdom, for Luke clearly is not an eyewitness of the Resurrection.  We know little enough about him, but it is most likely that he is a convert to Christianity taught by Paul.  His method in both books is plain:  he is a researcher.  He gathers the words and evidence of others to produce his book.

In one sense this is a terrible blow to the fundamentalist school of "automatic writing."  This school holds that all the books of the Bible were written by the Holy Spirit  - the nominal authors just held the pen while the Spirit moved their hands.  If so, why the careful research?  But in another sense Acts can be called the "history of the Holy Spirit."  For as the Gospels were the biography of Christ, in a sense, Acts records what the Spirit did through the church.  No book of the Bible expounds more clearly the work of the Holy Spirit.

The study seems, perhaps, overly long to some.  The world is accustomed to thirteen weeks in the quarterly, and no topic takes more.  A pity, that.  Here is a study much longer - and yet it barely touches upon the most fundamental of things.  The wells of God are deep indeed.