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Paul preached in Thessalonica for three Sabbaths, showing from the Scriptures that the Messiah had to suffer and rise, and declaring, “This Jesus … is the Christ” (vv. 2–3). Some Jews, many devout Greeks, and leading women believed, but jealous opponents stirred a mob and accused the believers of treason for proclaiming Jesus as King (vv. 4–9). Sent away to Berea, Paul found hearers who received the word eagerly and examined the Scriptures daily; many believed—women and men of high standing—until agitators from Thessalonica arrived and stirred trouble again (vv. 10–14).
Escorted to Athens, Paul’s spirit was provoked by the city’s idols, so he reasoned in the synagogue and the marketplace (vv. 16–17). Taken to the Areopagus, he proclaimed the Creator who needs nothing, who made all nations and calls all people to repent because He has fixed a day to judge the world through the risen Jesus (vv. 24–31). Some mocked the resurrection, some wanted to hear more, and some believed—among them Dionysius and Damaris (vv. 32–34).
🌀 Reflection:
Where is your heart “provoked” by the idols of our age, and how will you respond—with patient reasoning from Scripture and a clear call to repent and trust the risen Christ (vv. 16–17, 30–31)?
💬 Mission Challenge:
Practice the Berean pattern this week: pick one conversation about Jesus, open a Bible together, and “examine the Scriptures” with that person (v. 11).

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