
Teaching Summary Of Acts 20–21
Overall Themes
- Perseverance in ministry — Paul serves with humility, tears, trials, and courage.
- The Spirit’s guidance and warnings — preparing Paul for suffering in Jerusalem.
- The value of the local church — elders, teaching, vigilance, and shared life.
- The cost of obedience — Paul moves toward danger because he is bound to Christ.
- The unity of believers across cultures — Jewish and Gentile Christians share fellowship and concern.
- The tension between tradition and the gospel — misunderstandings in Jerusalem reveal ongoing struggles.
- God’s sovereignty in hardship — even arrest becomes a platform for witness.
Acts 20
- Paul travels through Macedonia and Greece, strengthening the churches.
- In Troas, believers gather on the first day of the week; Paul preaches late into the night.
- Eutychus falls from a window and is taken up dead; Paul embraces him and God restores his life.
- Paul continues traveling by land and sea, determined to reach Jerusalem by Pentecost.
- In Miletus, he calls for the Ephesian elders and delivers a deeply personal farewell:
- He served with humility, tears, and endurance.
- He preached publicly and from house to house.
- He declared repentance toward God and faith in Jesus.
- He is compelled by the Spirit to go to Jerusalem, knowing suffering awaits.
- He considers his life worth nothing compared to finishing his ministry.
- He warns them of future wolves and false teachers.
- He commends them to God and the word of His grace.
- He reminds them of his example of hard work and generosity.
- They kneel together in prayer; the elders weep, embracing Paul, knowing they will not see him again.
Acts 21
- Paul sails toward Jerusalem, stopping in Tyre, where believers urge him not to go because of coming danger.
- In Caesarea, he stays with Philip the evangelist; the prophet Agabus dramatically warns that Paul will be bound and handed over to the Gentiles.
- Friends plead with Paul to avoid Jerusalem, but he responds that he is ready not only to be bound but to die for the name of Jesus.
- They submit to the Lord’s will and accompany him to Jerusalem.
- In Jerusalem, Paul is warmly received by the church and reports what God has done among the Gentiles.
- The elders rejoice but express concern about rumors that Paul teaches Jews to abandon Moses.
- To ease tensions, they advise Paul to join four men in a purification vow to show he respects the law.
- Paul agrees, demonstrating his commitment to unity.
- Jews from Asia see Paul in the temple and falsely accuse him of bringing Gentiles into the inner courts.
- A riot erupts; the crowd seizes Paul and attempts to kill him.
- Roman soldiers intervene, rescuing Paul and carrying him up the steps as the mob shouts for his death.
- Even in chains, Paul asks for permission to speak to the crowd — turning crisis into opportunity for witness.
Acts 20–21 in One Sentence
Paul travels toward Jerusalem with Spirit‑given resolve, strengthening churches, warning leaders, embracing suffering, and demonstrating unity, while God uses both encouragement and opposition to advance the gospel and prepare His servant for the next stage of his mission.
