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After Paul preaches, he is immediately rejected. It says, “by the Jews,” but that shouldn’t be understood as the entire Jewish nation as a whole. There were definitely Jewish converts, but the Jewish power players who tended to speak for the people had set themselves against the apostles. In that scenario, Paul didn’t fight with them or argue. He simple moved on. How many times have we chosen to fight against others when we should have spent the time looking for where God might be moving somewhere else?
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After Paul preaches, he is immediately rejected. It says, “by the Jews,” but that shouldn’t be understood as the entire Jewish nation as a whole. There were definitely Jewish converts, but the Jewish power players who tended to speak for the people had set themselves against the apostles. In that scenario, Paul didn’t fight with them or argue. He simple moved on. How many times have we chosen to fight against others when we should have spent the time looking for where God might be moving somewhere else?