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This Sunday we’ll be in Acts 14:8–23, a passage that moves fast and hits hard. In one moment, Paul is being worshiped like a god after a miraculous healing. In the next, the crowd turns—and he’s stoned and left for dead outside the city.
It’s a jarring picture of how quickly people can shift—how easily we can elevate something one minute and reject it the next. But right in the middle of that instability, we see something steady: the unshakable mission of the gospel.
As Paul and Barnabas respond, we watch the gospel do three important things:
What stands out most isn’t hype or momentum—it’s resilient, steady faithfulness.
Paul doesn’t measure success by comfort or applause. He measures it by obedience. And as he revisits the churches, he reminds them of a truth we don’t always like but desperately need: “It is through many tribulations that we must enter the kingdom of God.”
This passage invites us to wrestle with some honest questions:
Because the reality is, God often does His deepest work not on the mountaintop moments, but in the quiet, costly, in-between places where faith is tested and formed.
And the good news? He’s building something that lasts. Something not dependent on public opinion, but grounded in His power and purpose.
By Mercy Hill5
44 ratings
This Sunday we’ll be in Acts 14:8–23, a passage that moves fast and hits hard. In one moment, Paul is being worshiped like a god after a miraculous healing. In the next, the crowd turns—and he’s stoned and left for dead outside the city.
It’s a jarring picture of how quickly people can shift—how easily we can elevate something one minute and reject it the next. But right in the middle of that instability, we see something steady: the unshakable mission of the gospel.
As Paul and Barnabas respond, we watch the gospel do three important things:
What stands out most isn’t hype or momentum—it’s resilient, steady faithfulness.
Paul doesn’t measure success by comfort or applause. He measures it by obedience. And as he revisits the churches, he reminds them of a truth we don’t always like but desperately need: “It is through many tribulations that we must enter the kingdom of God.”
This passage invites us to wrestle with some honest questions:
Because the reality is, God often does His deepest work not on the mountaintop moments, but in the quiet, costly, in-between places where faith is tested and formed.
And the good news? He’s building something that lasts. Something not dependent on public opinion, but grounded in His power and purpose.