Part 1
An in-depth examination of events that occurred in the 1st Century after the inclusion of Gentiles into the Christian congregation reveals an alternative understanding to the Watchtower’s teachings on the meaning of Acts 15:28-29.
Around 36 C.E, the Roman centurion Cornelius who was stationed in Caesarea, became the first of the Gentile Christians. He experienced a Divine vision and was instructed by an angel to send his men on a journey to find Peter (Acts 10:5).
A day later, in Joppa, the apostle Peter also had a Divine revelation involving four-footed creatures, reptiles and birds. The voice in his vision said:-
“13 …“Rise, Peter, slaughter and eat!” 14 But Peter said: “Not at all, Lord, because never have I eaten anything defiled and unclean.” 15 And the voice [spoke] again to him, the second time: “You stop calling defiled the things God has cleansed.”” (Acts 10:13-15)
Noteworthy is the part highlighted in bold. Peter was commanded to ‘stop calling defiled the things GOD has cleansed’.
After this puzzling vision, the Holy Spirit commanded Peter to go to the house of Cornelius. Accompanied by some Jewish believers from Joppa, he departed with the men who were sent to find him, and on reaching Caesarea, they entered the home of Cornelius. In the house, Peter was greeted by Cornelius and a group of his Gentile friends and relatives, and his words to them are of interest.
In Acts 10:28 Peter says:-
“YOU well know how unlawful it is for a Jew to join himself to or approach a man of another race; and yet God has shown me I should call no man defiled or unclean.”
Even though Peter was breaking the Jewish Law by entering the home of a Gentile and ignoring the long-held beliefs of his people, he was emboldened to do so as a direct result of the instructions he was given by the voice in the vision. He now understood that God had decided to end the separation between ‘clean and unclean’ and the purpose of his vision had been to demonstrate that God now accepted Gentiles as ‘cleansed’, and that salvation was not only for Jews but also for Gentiles, even though at that time, the latter were uncircumcised, and therefore not following the Law.
Note also that having now become acquainted with the Gentiles, Peter begins his speech by saying:-
“For a certainty I perceive that God is not partial, 35 but in every nation the man that fears him and works righteousness is acceptable to him.” (Acts 10: 34-35)
Conspicuous by its absence was any mention of communication from God commanding that Gentiles must adhere to the Law. Instead, Peter pronounced that these people were acceptable to God because of their fear for Him and because their works were righteous.
It is also significant that even though the Gentiles were devout and feared God, they were not proselytes (converts to Judaism) and would have been completely at liberty, according to the Law, to eat meat that contained blood if they so chose. (Deuteronomy 14:21)
If it had been God’s purpose for the Gentile converts to Christianity to follow any aspect of the Law of Moses, this occasion would have been an appropriate time for Him to make known His commands. God was in direct communication with Peter at that very moment, so the conveyance of any directions or commandments to the Gentiles would have been straightforward. But nothing was forthcoming.
The pouring out of the Holy Spirit on Cornelius and his household, and their speaking in tongues further confirmed God’s approval of the Gentiles. This was regardless of their lack of observance of the Law, a fact that caused the Jewish brothers who were present to be astounded (Acts 10:45).
As Peter had explained to Cornelius, it was ‘unlawful’ for a Jew to associate with the ‘People of the Nations’. The integration of the Gentiles into the Christian congregation, although meeting Divine approval, would soon prove to be a serious matter for the Jews and the Jewish Christians.
After a brief stay with Cornelius and his household, during which the Gentiles were baptised, Peter travelled to Jerusalem and was immediately confronted there by the Jewish brothers who were ‘supporters of circumcision’, and keen followers of the Law. (Acts 11:2). These brothers did not raise any objections to the ground-breaking news of the baptism of Gentiles, but they were seriously troubled to hear that Peter had disobeyed the Law by entering the house of someone uncircumcised and had eaten at his table, and they began to accuse him and contend with him over his actions. (Acts 11:2,3).
After explaining all the events that led up to his meeting with Cornelius, Peter said:-
“So If God gave them the same gift he gave us who believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I to think that I could stand in God’s way?
When they heard this, they had no further objections and praised God, saying ‘So then, even to Gentiles God has granted repentance that leads to life’” NIV (Acts 11:17-18)
The Jewish brothers who were scrupulous about the Law, accepted Peter’s testimony. Noteworthy is fact that they had ‘no further objections’.
At stake in the discussions about the Gentile converts was how the Jewish Christians could continue to honour the Law which was given to their ancestors by God and was recorded in their scriptures, whilst at the same time having fellowship with Gentile Christians, without insisting the Gentiles keep the Jewish religious laws.
There was clearly no Divine obligation for Gentiles to adhere to the Law because both Peter and the Holy Spirit had confirmed God’s approval, as well as the fact that God didn’t intervene at that moment when the brothers were gathered in Jerusalem. This juncture would have been the ideal opportunity, should God have ordained that Gentiles must obey parts of the Law, for Him to inform the brothers in Jerusalem that the Gentiles must also ‘abstain from things polluted by idols and from fornication and from what is strangled and from blood’. And yet God said nothing whatsoever.
It would have been the optimum time for God to speak because the good news was just about to be spread far and wide to the ‘People of the Nations’. (Acts 11:20-21) In that scenario, God’s requirements would have been passed on to the newly converted Christians as part and parcel of their faith and they would have then been aware that they must adjust their daily lives to live in harmony with His will. But this did not occur.
If the issue had been crucial to God, it would be absurd to suggest that He would have omitted to say anything at this point in time, as clarifying his wishes would have avoided future complications in the relationship between Jewish and Gentile Christians.