
Teaching Summary of John 21 – Acts 1
🌿 Overall Themes in John 21 – Acts 1
- Jesus restores and recommissions His disciples — especially Peter.
- Love and obedience define leadership — “Feed My sheep.”
- Eyewitness testimony — The apostles are chosen witnesses of the resurrection.
- The kingdom and the Spirit — Jesus teaches about the kingdom and promises the Spirit’s power.
- The ascension — Jesus returns to the Father and reigns from heaven.
- Waiting in obedience — The disciples pray and prepare for the Spirit’s coming.
- Scripture fulfilled — Even Judas’ fall fits within God’s sovereign plan.
John 21 — Restoration, Commission, and Witness
21:1–14 — Jesus Appears by the Sea of Galilee
- Seven disciples return to fishing.
- They catch nothing until Jesus directs them to cast on the right side.
- The miraculous catch reveals His identity.
- Jesus prepares breakfast—an echo of His provision and fellowship.
- This is the third resurrection appearance to the disciples.
21:15–19 — Peter’s Restoration and Commission
- Jesus asks Peter three times, “Do you love Me?”
- Each affirmation is met with a commission:
- “Feed My lambs.”
- “Tend My sheep.”
- “Feed My sheep.”
- Jesus restores Peter from his three denials.
- Jesus predicts Peter’s future martyrdom.
- The call remains: “Follow Me.”
21:20–23 — The Beloved Disciple’s Future
- Peter asks about John’s destiny.
- Jesus redirects him: “What is that to you? You follow Me.”
- A rumor spreads that John would not die, but Jesus did not say that.
21:24–25 — The Testimony of the Beloved Disciple
- John affirms the truthfulness of his witness.
- The world could not contain the books if everything Jesus did were written.
Teaching angle:
John 21 shows Jesus’ tender restoration, His call to shepherding love, and the personal nature of discipleship.
Acts 1 — The Ascension, the Promise of the Spirit, and the Preparation for Mission
1:1–5 — The Risen Jesus Teaches and Promises the Spirit
- Luke addresses Theophilus, continuing the story from his Gospel.
- Jesus appears over forty days, teaching about the kingdom of God.
- He commands the disciples to stay in Jerusalem.
- They will be baptized with the Holy Spirit “not many days from now.”
1:6–8 — The Mission and the Power
- The disciples ask about restoring the kingdom to Israel.
- Jesus redirects them from timing to mission.
- Key verse:
- “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.”
- “You will be My witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”
- The mission flows outward in concentric circles.
1:9–11 — The Ascension
- Jesus is lifted up and taken into heaven.
- A cloud (symbol of God’s presence) receives Him.
- Two angels promise He will return in the same way.
1:12–14 — Waiting in Prayer
- The disciples return to Jerusalem.
- They gather in the upper room with the women, Mary the mother of Jesus, and His brothers.
- They devote themselves to prayer—unity before mission.
1:15–26 — Replacing Judas
- Peter stands among about 120 believers.
- He explains Judas’ fall as fulfillment of Scripture.
- They choose a replacement who has been with them from John’s baptism to the resurrection.
- Two candidates: Joseph Barsabbas and Matthias.
- They pray and cast lots; Matthias is chosen.
Teaching angle:
Acts 1 shows the church in transition—waiting, praying, obeying, and preparing for the Spirit’s empowering mission.
🔍 Key Teaching Angles
From John 21
- Jesus restores failures: Peter’s denial is not the end; grace recommissions him.
- Love leads to service: Shepherding flows from loving Jesus.
- Discipleship is personal: Jesus calls each follower uniquely—“You follow Me.”
From Acts 1
- The Spirit empowers mission: The church cannot witness without divine power.
- The ascension is enthronement: Jesus reigns and will return.
- Prayer precedes power: The early church waits in unity and expectation.
- Scripture guides the community: Even leadership decisions align with God’s Word.
