Acts 10
Acts 10 is the tenth 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 uniformly affirmed that Luke composed this book as well as the Gospel of Luke. This chapter records the vision of Saint Peter and his meeting with Cornelius in Caesarea.
Text
The original text was written in Koine Greek. This chapter is divided into 48 verses.Textual witnesses
Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:;In Greek
- Papyrus 50
- Papyrus 53
- Codex Vaticanus
- Codex Sinaiticus
- Codex Bezae
- Codex Alexandrinus
- Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus
- Papyrus 127
- Codex Laudianus
- León palimpsest
Old Testament references
- :
- : and
New Testament references
- : and
Locations
- Joppa
- Caesarea
Cornelius' vision (10:1–8)
Verse 2
- "Devout" is translated from the Greek term ευσεβης, which is used rather loosely in Lukan literature to characterize "gentiles who were attracted to the religious practice of Judaism", perhaps from dissatisfaction with Roman polytheism, "but shrank from the rigours of full conversion".
- "Alms": or "charitable gifts".
Verse 7
Peter's vision (10:9–16)
In the story recorded in this section, Saint Peter had a vision of a sheet full of animals being lowered from heaven. A voice from heaven told Peter to kill and eat, but since the sheet contained unclean animals, Peter declined. The command was repeated two more times, along with the voice saying, "What God hath cleansed, that call not thou common" and then the sheet was taken back to heaven. The triple refusal here echoes the denial of Peter described in the Synoptic Gospels. At this point in the narrative, messengers sent from Cornelius the Centurion arrive and urge Peter to go with them. He does so, and mentions the vision as he speaks to Cornelius, saying "God hath shewed me that I should not call any man common or unclean". Peter related the vision again in Acts 11:4–9.Simon J. Kistemaker suggests that the lesson God taught Peter in this vision is that "God has removed the barriers he once erected to separate his people from the surrounding nations." Kistemaker argues that it means Peter has to accept Gentile believers as full members of the Christian Church, but also that God has made all animals clean, so that "Peter with his fellow Jewish Christians can disregard the food laws that have been observed since the days of Moses." Luke Timothy Johnson and Daniel J. Harrington write that this episode heralds a radical change in Peter's "identity as a member of God's people", but also that "the implication is that all things God created are declared clean by him, and are not affected by human discriminations."
Peter summoned to Caesarea (10:17-23)
Unaware of the vision received by Cornelius, Peter was still up on the roof-top, puzzling over the meaning of the vision he had just seen, when the emissaries of Cornelius knocked at the door downstairs. The Spirit's "direct intervention" leads Peter to go downstairs to meet them. Peter, directed that "I have sent them", recognises that these visitors have been sent by God, although the connection to his vision was not yet clear.Peter is instructed to "go with them, doubting nothing", an ambiguous verb with double meaning which can simply mean 'without hesitation', or without doubt as to the lawfulness of doing so, but also has the sense 'without making distinctions', 'without discrimination'. The messengers convey the message from Cornelius, basically repeating the record in the earlier passage, with the additional information that Cornelius was 'well spoken of by the whole Jewish nation' to underline the fact that he is a Gentile.
Peter meets Cornelius (10:23-33)
The constant repetition of narrative detail emphasizes Peter's dilemma and helps readers to unfold with him the gradual steps of the new stage in God's plan for the non-Jews. Peter took with him some of the 'brothers' from Joppa to Caesarea which was a full day journey. Initially Peter only met the Gentile soldier and the house-servants sent by Cornelius, then in Caesarea he saw a houseful of the centurion's 'relatives and close friends' assembled in his honor and had to take the next decisive step in 'entering a Gentile household'. By then, Peter had already made the connection with the animal vision, that the prohibition against calling anything 'common or unclean' is not about food but about people he associates with. Cornelius gave a recapitulation of his own vision setting up the listeners, poised and expectant 'in the presence of God', to hear what God has commissioned Peter to say.Peter preaches to the Gentiles (10:34—43)
This part records Peter's last evangelistic speech in the book of Acts, comparable to those he spoke in Jerusalem, with the specific burden that God shows no 'partiality' and that people 'in every nation' can be acceptable before God as a subtle adaption for the Caesarean setting. This is the fullest summary of the gospel in Acts: starting in Galilee after John's baptism, to the main story of the charismatic power of Jesus' healing ministry. As in his Jerusalem speeches, Peter repeated the charge that Jesus was 'put to death', without specifying who was responsible, but with more emphasis on his resurrection, including a 'reprise of the apostolic commission'. God's message is sent first to Israel in form of a small group of witnesses for 'the people', but the message itself is universal, as the final judgement is of 'the living and the dead' and the forgiveness of sins is for 'everyone who believes in' Jesus, setting the stage for 'an extension of the word of God' to the Gentiles.The coming of the Spirit in Caesarea (10:44–48)
At a precise concluding point of the sermon, the Holy Spirit intervened that 'all who heard the word' experienced the same charismatic experience as the Jewish disciples. This brought an 'astounded' reaction of Peter's Jewish Christian companions from Joppa that 'even Gentiles' can receive the spiritual gift of 'speaking in tongues', which has not been mentioned since the Pentecost experience, 'just as we have' to underline the parallel. The logical follow-up was to baptize the Gentile believers as the initiative was God's. The form of the question recalls the Ethiopian's question about baptism in Acts 8:37.Verse 48
- "He commanded them to be baptized": The Greek construction could be translated either "he ordered them to be baptized" or "he ordered that they be baptized," that is, Peter was ordering those Jewish Christians who accompanied him to baptize the new Gentile converts.