Acts 1


Acts 1 is the first chapter of the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. The book containing this chapter is anonymous, but early Christian tradition affirmed that Luke composed this book as well as the Gospel of Luke. This chapter functions as a transition from the "former account" with a narrative prelude, repeated record of the ascension of Jesus Christ with more detail and the meeting of Jesus' followers, until before Pentecost.

Text

The original text was written in Koine Greek. This chapter is divided into 26 verses.

Textual witnesses

Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:
This chapter mentions the following places:
The beginning of the book offers a conventional opening statement containing the name of the addressee, Theophilus, and a brief reminder of the content of the "former account" by the same author.

Verses 1–3

  • The "former account" refers to the Gospel of Luke.
  • "Theophilus" : the intended reader of this book, as well as the previous one, might be a "patron" who is already informed about "things which have been fulfilled among us", but still needs "assurance" to "know the certainty of those things".
  • Luke describes Jesus as "alive after his sufferings", or "alive after his passion". There are later phrases in Acts which show that Jesus was "raised from the dead", e.g. Acts 17:3. William Gilson Humphry referred to "passion" as a "sacred term" to be used in the translation of this verse, whereas E. H. Plumptre preferred to say "He had suffered", suggesting that the authorised translation, passion, "somewhat anticipate the later special sense" of the word.

    Verse 4

Forty days after his resurrection, Jesus commands the disciples during a meal to stay in Jerusalem and to wait for the coming of the Holy Spirit. The is rendered as "he was eating with them" in the New International Version. Some translations state that they were "assembled" or "gathered" together. Whether "eating" represents the correct interpretation has been long debated.

Ascension of Jesus (1:6–12)

Then a cloud takes Jesus upward from sight, and two men in white appear to tell them that he will return "in the same way you have seen him go into heaven."

Verse 8

Before Jesus left, he charged the disciples with the task of acting as 'witnesses' to him, in the locations that can be read as a 'geographical program' for the whole book of Acts:
  • The first 7 chapters set in Jerusalem
  • Chapter 8–11 record the spread of the gospel to the surrounding areas within Syria-Palestine
  • Chapter 13 onwards following Paul's mission to ever farther places.
Luke chapter 24 tells how Jesus leads the eleven disciples "as far as" Bethany, a village on the Mount of Olives, where he instructs them to remain in Jerusalem until the coming of the Holy Spirit: "And it came to pass, while he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven. And they worshiped him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy".
The Gospel of John has three references to ascension in Jesus' own words: "No one has ascended into heaven but he who descended from heaven, the son of man" ; "What if you were to see the son of man ascending where he was before?" ; and to Mary Magdalene after his resurrection, "Do not hold me, for I not yet ascended to my father...". Various epistles also refer to an ascension in relation to the post-resurrection "exaltation" of Jesus to the right hand of God. Gospel of Mark contains the brief ascension account, but it is considered by a broad consensus among scholars to be a later addition to the original version of that gospel.

Verse 12

  • "The hill called the Mount of Olives" : This geographical site is mentioned by Luke alone in the narrative of Jesus' last entry into Jerusalem and as a place to rest during Jesus' final ministry of teaching. names Bethany as the site of ascension, which is identified in as a location at the Mount of Olives.
  • "A Sabbath day's walk" : 2,000 cubits, about 5/8 mile or about 1 kilometer, showing a proximity to Jerusalem, as well as portraying the disciples as faithful Jews. The distance seems differ significantly with the Bethany in, but the ascension site, according to Lightfoot, "was from the place where that tract of the Mount of Olives ceased to be called Bethphage and began to be called Bethany", not inside the village.

    Election of Matthias (1:13–26)

As the disciples waited obediently in the upper room in Jerusalem for the promised coming of the Holy Spirit, they devoted themselves "with one accord" in prayer, underlying the unity of the group which surprisingly now includes Jesus' mother, brothers, and some women.
Verse 13 lists the names of the apostles with some differences compared to the apostolic list in :
  • Andrew was moved down from the second place to the fourth place after John
  • Thomas was moved up from the eighth place to the sixth place following Philip
  • Judas Iscariot is no longer listed.
The omission of Judas Iscariot motivates the narrative of his final fate and Peter's call to find his replacement. The process begins by Peter's appeal to the Scripture, and the requirements for the candidate. With this, Peter reinforces the identity of the group and exerts his de facto authority in the group.

Verse 14

  • "Mary the mother of Jesus": was mentioned by name for the first time in Luke-Acts since the infancy narrative in Luke 2.
  • "Brothers": or "brothers and sisters", translated from the plural Greek word adelphoi, which, depending on the context in New Testament usage, may refer either to "brothers" or to "brothers and sisters".

    Verse 15

  • "Stood up": from Greek: ἀναστὰς: adding a participle to a finite verb to indicate the posture or position of a speaker is a characteristic of Luke as this word is found in Luke's Gospel 17 times, and in Acts 19 times, only twice in Matthew, six or seven times in Mark.

    Verses 21–22

  • "Went in and out": is a "Semitism or Septuagintalism" expression, comparable to the English phrase "comings and goings".
  • "Beginning" : The "baptism" of John" to "that day when He was taken up from us" mark the scope for the story of Jesus, with an emphasis on "His resurrection". In Acts 10, Luke notes Peter preaching the gospel using "precisely the same parameters" also using arxamenos with the claim of being a witness specifically to the resurrection.
The apostles proceed by asking God as the only resource to 'indicate' his choice through the casting of lots, which is a familiar mean to ascertain divine purpose in both the Graeco-Roman world and the Bible, to get Matthias "numbered with the eleven apostles".

Verse 26

  • "Matthias": only mentioned in this chapter in the whole Bible, he was chosen by casting lots to be included as "the Twelve" from then on.