The Jerusalem Council : Grace or Law (And The Question of Tithing) The Jerusalem Council (Acts 15) stands as a decisive moment in the New Testament where the gospel is publicly guarded from being restructured into Law-based entry. The immediate controversy was not a minor cultural preference but a gospel-defining claim: “Unless you are circumcised according to the custom of Moses, you cannot be saved” (Acts 15:1). This was not merely a debate about ritual. It was a question of what constitutes salvation and what governs belonging among the people of God. The council’s purpose, therefore, was to preserve the gospel as God’s action in Christ—received by faith—rather than a covenant admission structure governed by the old written code. Peter’s argument establishes the center. God gave the Holy Spirit to the nations “just as he did to us,” “making no distinction” of jew and the other nations, cleansing their hearts “by faith” (Acts 15:8–9). Therefore, to place the Mosaic yoke upon believer...
Love Fulfilled Ministry
When we bear fruit, after being deeply rooted, and growing up truth in love, the love of God is fulfilled.