Sunday, October 26, 2025

“Who Belongs?” (Acts 15:1-35)



1488
A couple of weeks ago, there was troubling news in the Bangor Daily News. Large Nazi symbols were painted on a walking path in Bangor near I-95. The graffiti included a swastika and the numbers “1488.” For those who may not know, 1488 is a white-supremacist hate symbol. The number 14 refers to the “14 words” slogan: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children,” and 88 stands for “Heil Hitler,” because H is the eighth letter in the alphabet. Sadly, this is not the first time. Just last month, members of Patriot Front (Texas-based hate group) were seen putting up stickers downtown in Bangor, promoting their message of white supremacy.[1] It’s disturbing news, but it’s not new. This “us versus them” mindset runs deep, all the way back to our ancestors in Genesis. From the very beginning, humanity has wrestled with this question: “Who belongs?”

Jerusalem Council
We often say that the early church is our role model to follow, but even the early church faced division and tension. As the church grew, there were growing tensions between different groups of people, especially between Jewish and Gentile believers. The question of their time was: “Who truly belongs to God’s people?” Some Jewish believers said “The gentiles must be circumcised and keep the law of Moses to be saved, just like we do.” (v. 1, 5) Here they were saying, “To be a Christian, they must first become Jewish.”

So the church gathered – leaders, apostles, elders – to listen and discern God’s will together. It was not a quick decision. It was a Spirit-led process. Their discernment followed four steps: reason, experience, fruits (tradition), and Scripture. This process later inspired what John Wesley called the Wesleyan Quadrilateral.

Reason (vv. 6-7)
First, when the church gathered to consider this question (“Who belongs?”), they began with open discussion and reasoning. The Bible says there had been a long and heated debate. They listened, they wrestled, and the weighed the issue together. This was “reason” at work – the God-given gift to think critically, prayerfully, and communally. Faith does not silence reason; faith invites reason to serve the Spirit’s leading.

Experience (vv. 7-11)
After the discussion, Peter stood and shared his experience how God had opened his eyes and changed his heart. One day, while praying, he saw a vision. Heaven opened, and something like a large sheet came down, filled with animals considered “unclean.” Then a voice said: “Get up, Peter! Kill and eat!” Peter protested, “Absolutely not, Lord! I have never eaten anything unclean.” Then the voice said, “Never consider unclean what God has made pure.” This happened three times. Soon after, Peter was invited to the house of Cornelius, a God-fearing Roman centurion. As Peter began to preach the good news, he saw the Holy Spirit fall on everyone who listened. He saw God gave the Holy Spirit to Gentiles before they kept the law. Peter’s pride and prejudice shattered. So he said in verse 9, “God made no distinction between us and them, but purified their deepest thoughts and desires through faith.” Then, he continued, “We believe that we and they are saved in the same way by the grace of the Lord Jesus.” (v. 11)

For me, I will never forget the moment I knelt on a military cot in the barracks while serving in East Timor. In that valley of death, I cried out, “Lord, have mercy on me!” God not only healed me from Dengue Fever, but also changed my heart. Our genuine Christian experiences shape the way we discern God’s will and interpret Scripture in real life.

Fruits of Ministry (Tradition; v. 12)
After Peter, Barnabas and Paul spoke. They testified about the signs and wonders God had done among the Gentiles through their ministry – lives changed, bodies healed, hearts renewed. The Gospel of Mark ends this way: “[The apostles] went out and proclaimed the message everywhere. The Lord worked with them, confirming the word by the signs that accompanied it.” (16:20) These fruits of ministry (signs and wonders) confirmed God’s favor – the Holy Spirit was already moving among outsiders. This is “tradition” in a living sense – not a dead ritual, but the ongoing fruit of ministry, the story of God’s surprising work through time.

Scripture (vv. 13-18)
Finally, and most importantly, comes Scripture. When Barnabas and Paul finished, James spoke. By the Holy Spirit, he anchored their decision in the Word of God. He quoted the prophet Amos 9:11-12, saying, “I will return… rebuild… restore David’s fallen house, so that the rest of humanity will seek the Lord, even all the Gentiles who belong to me.” (vv. 16-17) So salvation for all nations (Gentiles) was not an afterthought; instead, it was God’s original plan. So James concluded this way: “We shouldn’t create problems for Gentiles who turn to God other than the essentials: refuse food offered to idols, blood, the meat from strangled animals, and sexual immorality.” (vv. 19-20, 28-29)

Reason, experience, and tradition help us discern God’s will, but Scripture remains the anchor. Through this Spirit-guided process, the early church learned this: God’s grace is bigger than our boundaries.

The Sign of Jonah
Jerusalem Council’s decision echoes our Christian confession: “We are saved by grace through faith.” Salvation is God’s gift from start to finish. All we do is trust him enough to receive this gift. It is free for us, but costly for God. It cost Jesus his life.

After World War II, Germany lay in ruins. People asked, “Who is guilty for all this?” Rutenborn’s Play The Sign of Jonah explores that haunting question: “Who is to blame?” In the play a soldier says, “I just followed orders. The generals are to blame.” The generals say, “The politicians are to blame.” The politicians say, “The system is to blame.” Each group passes the blame upward. At last, they reach the top of the ladder and point up to heaven: “Then God must be to blame.” So they decide to put God on trial and declare: “God is guilty. He must suffer as we have suffered.” The sentence: “God must become human, feel hunger, grief, and death.” But then comes the quiet revelation: God already has.

Like in Rutenborn’s The Sign of Jonah, we often draw circles, asking “Who belongs?” and “Who is to blame?” We blame our leaders, our systems, sometimes even God. But on the cross, Jesus doesn’t point fingers. Instead, he stretches out his hands and says, “I’ll take it.” On the cross, Jesus bore the blame, the pain, and the consequence of our sin. Just as Jonah spent three days in the belly of the fish, Christ entered the depths of our guilt, our darkness, our death, to bring new life for all people. Through Jesus’ death and resurrection, there is forgiveness. There is a new beginning. There is grace for all.

May we never forget the very first hour when God saved “a wretch like me.” May our church follow the example of the early church – to draw a circle wide, to bear the blame, and to do everything with love. Amen.



[1] Annie Rupertus, “Nazi graffiti painted on Bangor walking path,” Bangor Daily News (Oct 14, 2025), https://www.bangordailynews.com/2025/10/14/bangor/nazi-graffiti-painted-on-bangor-walking-path/

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