Prepare to Teach

Acts 28:11-16

God brings His servant to the heart of the empire, fulfilling the promise of testimony in Rome.

Scripture Text

28:11 After three months, we set sail in a ship of Alexandria which had wintered in the island, whose sign was “The Twin Brothers.”

28:12 Touching at Syracuse, we stayed there three days.

28:13 From there we circled around and arrived at Rhegium. After one day, a south wind sprang up, and on the second day we came to Puteoli,

28:14 Where we found brothers, and were entreated to stay with them for seven days. So we came to Rome.

28:15 From there the brothers, when they heard of us, came to meet us as far as The Market of Appius and The Three Taverns. When Paul saw them, He thanked God and took courage.

28:16 When we entered into Rome, the centurion delivered the prisoners to the captain of the guard, but Paul was allowed to stay by Himself with the soldier who guarded Him.

Anchor

God brings His servant to the heart of the empire, fulfilling the promise of testimony in Rome.

After wintering on Malta, Paul reaches Rome under Roman custody, where He is permitted to live by Himself with a soldier guarding Him.

Point of Contact

Believers must see that limitations do not hinder the word of God, and that faithful ministry continues through hospitality, healing, encouragement, Scripture exposition, and bold teaching.

Rhythm
  1. Preserved on Malta Paul and the shipwreck survivors are welcomed, and Paul survives a viper bite without harm.
  2. Mercy and Healing on Malta Paul heals Publius’s father and many other sick islanders, and the islanders honor and provide for them.
  3. Arrival in Rome Paul completes the journey to Rome, encouraged by believers who come to meet Him.
  4. Paul Explains His Chains Paul tells the Jewish leaders that He is chained because of the hope of Israel.
  5. Kingdom Witness and Divided Response Paul expounds the kingdom and Jesus from Moses and the Prophets, persuading some while others disbelieve.
  6. Isaiah’s Warning and Gentile Hearing Paul applies Isaiah’s word about hardened hearing and announces that God’s salvation has been sent to the Gentiles.
  7. Unhindered Proclamation Acts ends with Paul proclaiming the kingdom and teaching the Lord Jesus Christ boldly and without hindrance.
Crucial Turning Point

Paul survives Malta, heals many, arrives in Rome, explains His case to Jewish leaders, expounds the kingdom from the Scriptures, warns through Isaiah about unbelief, announces Gentile reception of God’s salvation, and continues proclaiming Christ unhindered.

Acts 28 argues that God fulfills His promise to bring Paul to Rome and that the gospel remains unhindered even when its messenger is under guard. Paul is preserved from shipwreck, snakebite, sickness, and legal obstruction. In Rome He proclaims the kingdom and Jesus from the Scriptures. Some believe and others reject, but God’s salvation goes to the Gentiles, and the book closes with bold, unhindered proclamation.

Theological logic
  1. The safe arrival on Malta confirms the promise of Acts 27 that every life would be preserved.
  2. The islanders’ kindness displays God’s provision through unexpected Gentile hospitality.
  3. The viper bite creates another apparent threat to Paul’s life, but he suffers no harm.
  4. The islanders’ shifting judgment shows the instability of pagan interpretation apart from revelation.
  5. Paul’s healing ministry on Malta displays God’s mercy and confirms that the prisoner is also God’s servant.
  6. The survivors are honored and supplied, continuing the theme of providential provision.
  7. After winter, the voyage resumes, showing that delay does not cancel the promised destination.
  8. The believers who meet Paul on the way to Rome become instruments of encouragement.
  9. Paul thanks God and takes courage, showing that even strong servants need fellowship.
  10. Paul reaches Rome under guard, fulfilling the Lord’s promise that he must testify there.
  11. Paul first addresses Jewish leaders, continuing the pattern of witness to Israel first.
  12. He insists that he has done nothing against his people or ancestral customs.
  13. He explains that his chain is because of the hope of Israel, not criminal guilt.
  14. The Roman Jewish leaders agree to hear him because the Christian movement is widely disputed.
  15. Paul expounds the kingdom of God and persuades concerning Jesus from Moses and the Prophets.
  16. The divided response in Rome mirrors the repeated pattern throughout Acts: some believe, others reject.
  17. Paul applies Isaiah’s hardening text to explain unbelief as a longstanding covenantal pattern.
  18. The announcement that Gentiles will listen does not erase Jewish priority but exposes unbelief and affirms the worldwide mission.
  19. The final picture of Paul welcoming all who come shows gospel hospitality under imprisonment.
  20. The ending emphasizes the triumph of the message, not the freedom of the messenger.
  21. The kingdom of God and the Lord Jesus Christ are proclaimed boldly and without hindrance.
Watch Out
  • Do not treat arrival in Rome as triumph free from restraint.
  • Do not overlook the importance of Christian encouragement.
  • Do not detach this moment from the earlier divine promise.
  • Do not assume guarded status limits gospel influence.
  • Do not reduce the narrative to travel logistics without theological purpose.
  • Do not minimize the significance of ordinary travel details.
  • Avoid portraying Rome arrival as triumphal political victory.
  • Do not equate house arrest with full freedom.
  • Guard against reading mythological imagery as endorsement.
  • Do not detach Paul’s courage from divine promise.
Invitation Arc
  • God’s timing may involve long waiting before fulfillment.
  • Christian fellowship strengthens weary servants.
  • Mission progress includes ordinary travel and endurance.
  • Encouragement from believers is a gift of God.
  • Chains do not hinder gospel advancement.
Response
  • Receive and extend hospitality in hardship.
  • Reject superstitious or simplistic readings of suffering.
  • Pray for mercy and serve the sick.
  • Thank God when believers encourage You.
  • Explain the hope of Israel fulfilled in Christ.
  • Use Moses and the Prophets to persuade concerning Jesus.
  • Expect both belief and unbelief.
  • Warn against hardened hearing.
  • Proclaim salvation to all peoples.
  • Welcome those who come to hear.
  • Teach the kingdom and the Lord Jesus Christ with boldness.
Formation Aim

Endurance, gratitude, courage, hospitality, scriptural clarity, gospel boldness, patience with hearers, and confidence in the unhindered word.

Canonical Thread
Gospel Clarity

The Lord who promised Paul testimony in Rome faithfully brings Him there and sustains Him through fellowship.