Episode 16

Acts — Read the NT in 90 Days

How did a small group of ordinary people ignite a movement that changed the world in just one generation? In this episode of Seek Go Create, host Tim Winders dives into the Book of Acts and explores how spirit-powered witness transformed communities from Jerusalem to Rome. Discover the ongoing story of the early church, the challenges faced, and the explosive growth that followed persecution. Whether you’re intrigued by historical context, spiritual momentum, or the mystery of Acts’ legal undertones, this episode invites you to read and experience the New Testament through fresh eyes.

"Acts traces spirit powered witness from Jerusalem to Rome through ordinary people who couldn't be stopped." - Tim Winders

Access all show and episode resources HERE

Episode Resources:

  1. NT90 Hub – This is the central website for the 90-day New Testament reading plan, with downloadable, printable plans, background information, and links to all episodes and resources.

Episode Highlights:

00:00 Introduction: The Global Movement of Acts

00:18 Overview of the Reading Plan

00:41 Introduction to the Book of Acts

01:10 Key Facts About Acts

02:40 Historical Context and Setting

03:24 The Spread of the Early Church

04:08 The Legal Perspective of Luke and Acts

05:55 Themes and Key Events in Acts

08:48 Theophilus: The Intended Audience

09:29 Conclusion and Next Steps

Transcript
Speaker:

How a small sect became a global movement.

Speaker:

In one generation Acts traces, spirit powered witness from

Speaker:

Jerusalem to Rome through ordinary people who couldn't be stopped.

Speaker:

This is Seek Go Create.

Speaker:

You're listening to read the New Testament in 90 days, 27 books in order in context.

Speaker:

We're walking through the New Testament, the way it was written, so you can

Speaker:

hear it the way the first churches.

Speaker:

Did make sure before we get going here, we've got a lot of

Speaker:

information in this episode.

Speaker:

Make sure you get the reading plan K two M Foundation slash 1890.

Speaker:

I'm gonna try to move quickly here Today's stop is Acts.

Speaker:

We just finished up Luke, and now we stay with Luke, his second part.

Speaker:

Same author, same audience, same project.

Speaker:

Luke and Acts is one story in two volumes.

Speaker:

What Jesus began to do in the gospel.

Speaker:

Luke, he continues to do through his followers here in Acts.

Speaker:

Alright, let's talk about some key facts here.

Speaker:

first of all, the altar was Luke.

Speaker:

Of course.

Speaker:

This is the sequel to his gospel.

Speaker:

I'm excited.

Speaker:

In the reading plan, we're able to put the two back to back.

Speaker:

I think many times we read them separately.

Speaker:

And, the years fell when they were written where it was close enough.

Speaker:

There's a batch of things going on right now.

Speaker:

So we put AX together.

Speaker:

We're right around AD 62.

Speaker:

And the audience, interestingly enough, is.

Speaker:

An individual Theophilus.

Speaker:

That's who it says that was, that it was written to.

Speaker:

We don't know exactly who he was, but Luke calls him most excellent.

Speaker:

A word called Este.

Speaker:

The same title used for Roman officials like Felix and Festus.

Speaker:

That suggests he may have been a magistrate or an official, possibly

Speaker:

one connected to Paul's case.

Speaker:

We'll mention something in just a moment.

Speaker:

The setting 32 years post resurrection.

Speaker:

The story spans from 80 30 about the time of the cross and resurrection

Speaker:

all the way up to present.

Speaker:

So current 80 62, which it sort of ends abruptly, but that also is gonna back up.

Speaker:

Something I'm gonna say in just a moment.

Speaker:

The temple is still standing in Jerusalem and it's still eight

Speaker:

years away from that being.

Speaker:

Destroyed.

Speaker:

Here's some historical context.

Speaker:

In Rome, we're gonna see multiple emperors across the narrative.

Speaker:

Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero.

Speaker:

All throughout the, the history I guess of, of acts, Paul ends under house

Speaker:

arrest in Rome and Nero is on the throne.

Speaker:

At that time, so when it was released, it would've been Nero, Jerusalem.

Speaker:

The temple is intact throughout the story of Acts.

Speaker:

We do get some major items like Stephen is martyred, James is

Speaker:

executed, believers are scattered.

Speaker:

the church, this is what's beautiful about Acts.

Speaker:

We see the church go from about 120 people in an upper room to communities

Speaker:

that are scattered across the Roman Empire, Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria,

Speaker:

Antioch, Galatia, Macedonia, Ukiah, Rome.

Speaker:

They're everywhere.

Speaker:

And that is what I love about acts.

Speaker:

We just see the spread of this body of people during this time, the tension.

Speaker:

We really see it here.

Speaker:

We've discussed it in other areas, but there's opposition from the Sanhedrin, the

Speaker:

synagogues, pagan mobs, yet persecution, scatters, and spreads the gospel.

Speaker:

Why now Luke writes, as Paul Awaits trial, the story ends open because

Speaker:

it's not over all right, and here's something that I wanna bring up.

Speaker:

Is this a legal brief?

Speaker:

Some scholars see Luke and acts as a two volume defense for Paul.

Speaker:

Notice how Roman officials consistently find Jesus and Paul.

Speaker:

Innocent throughout both volumes.

Speaker:

If Theophilus is connected to Paul's case, Luke is giving him everything he

Speaker:

needs to understand who these Christians are and why they're no threat to Rome.

Speaker:

I wanna be upfront.

Speaker:

this is.

Speaker:

Serious when I say this, there is no hard evidence for who Theophilus

Speaker:

was or why Luke wrote, but as I've been reading it more and more, I've

Speaker:

been operating under the assumption that it has a legal document.

Speaker:

Aspect to it for a defense of Paul.

Speaker:

And let me just say, if you wanna read it in that perspective, I don't

Speaker:

think it's gonna mess it up for you.

Speaker:

In fact, I think it's really gonna cause it to pop for you.

Speaker:

It really, really does make some sense in that area.

Speaker:

So don't take my word for it.

Speaker:

I'm not making a doctrine out of it, or saying that's what you need to do.

Speaker:

I'm just giving you something that I've speculated on and

Speaker:

I think it has some merit.

Speaker:

I've been reading it as that, and once you see it, I can tell you

Speaker:

what, it's a hard pattern to unsee.

Speaker:

Here's what you're going to encounter.

Speaker:

Acts is movement and momentum.

Speaker:

The spirit drives the mission forward, and also there's this just,

Speaker:

it doesn't have to be said, but that power of the resurrection, that thing

Speaker:

that separates this movement apart

Speaker:

Everything else is really the gasoline that keeps that engine going.

Speaker:

And so we hear discussions about the, the resurrection.

Speaker:

You hear things like Paul and others talking about, sharing the gospel.

Speaker:

And we have to understand that what that means is they were sharing

Speaker:

the good news of the gospel, which is the resurrection of Christ.

Speaker:

So anyway, powerful stuff.

Speaker:

Here's what you'll hear about Pentecost and the early signs.

Speaker:

The spirit comes like fire and wind.

Speaker:

Peter preaches 3000, believe healings and prison breaks follow Stevens

Speaker:

martyrdom and the scattering the.

Speaker:

First Christian martyr eyes.

Speaker:

Saul guards the coats while they do it in the, mid to early thirties.

Speaker:

Persecution scatters believers, and wherever they go, they preach.

Speaker:

The persecutor becomes an apostle Saul of Tarsus meets the risen Christ.

Speaker:

I am Jesus whom you are persecuting.

Speaker:

Luke later calls him Paul.

Speaker:

As the mission shifts to gentile territory, the Gentile door

Speaker:

opens Peter's vision, Cornelius's household, the Jerusalem Council.

Speaker:

Paul's Journeys, three missionary journeys, planting

Speaker:

churches across the empire.

Speaker:

And then there's what many of us consider to be an unfinished ending.

Speaker:

Paul in Rome preaching with all boldness and without hindrance.

Speaker:

And then Roman officials declare innocence.

Speaker:

Galileo dismisses charges.

Speaker:

Festus and Agrippa agree.

Speaker:

Paul has done nothing deserving death.

Speaker:

Luke is building a case.

Speaker:

Jesus warnings fulfilled in real time.

Speaker:

Stephen was martyred right around 80 30.

Speaker:

We mentioned that earlier.

Speaker:

James be headed around 80 44.

Speaker:

The famine under Claudius 80 46 to 48 in Luke's gospel.

Speaker:

Jesus warned it would happen within this generation in Acts, Luke

Speaker:

shows Theophilus it's happening.

Speaker:

No verdict, no conclusion because this story isn't quite over.

Speaker:

Let's look again at this Theophilus lens, the audience.

Speaker:

That's what we're attempting to do in this reading.

Speaker:

The New Testament context is put ourselves as best we can

Speaker:

in the seat of the audience.

Speaker:

As you read, put yourself in Theophilus place.

Speaker:

Luke has given you two volumes of evidence.

Speaker:

Eyewitnesses, miracles, transformed lives, unstoppable expansion.

Speaker:

Now you have to decide, did it happen?

Speaker:

Who is this?

Speaker:

Jesus, and who is this?

Speaker:

Paul?

Speaker:

A dangerous criminal or faithful witness to a risen king.

Speaker:

Now let's read acts over the next six sessions.

Speaker:

You'll be able to read the story of the early church.

Speaker:

Try to read it again, try to group it together if you can.

Speaker:

But You've got six sessions that you can read that in.

Speaker:

What comes up next?

Speaker:

Oh, another great one, Hebrews.

Speaker:

the warning to not turn back Jesus is better than everything.

Speaker:

You might go back to.

Speaker:

Make sure you remember to go to K two M Foundation slash NT 90 and once again,

Speaker:

keep sharing this with a friend who might want to read scripture with context.

Speaker:

Now, before you read, let's set the scene.

Speaker:

It is AD 62.

Speaker:

You are Theophilus.

Speaker:

A scroll has arrived.

Speaker:

The second one from Luke the first told you who Jesus was.

Speaker:

This one tells you what happened next.

Speaker:

You unroll it.

Speaker:

32 years of history from an upper room in Jerusalem to communities

Speaker:

across the empire, persecution, prison breaks, famines, martyrs, and

Speaker:

through it all, unstoppable expansion.

Speaker:

And now Paul, the man whose trial may cross your desk awaits verdict in Rome.

Speaker:

Luke has given you everything you need.

Speaker:

The witnesses, the evidence, the pattern.

Speaker:

Now you read the case and you decide.

About the Podcast

Show artwork for Seek Go Create - The Leadership Journey for Christian Entrepreneurs and Faith-Driven Leaders
Seek Go Create - The Leadership Journey for Christian Entrepreneurs and Faith-Driven Leaders

About your host

Profile picture for Tim Winders

Tim Winders

Tim Winders knows what it looks like when everything falls apart—and what it takes to rebuild.

After losing two businesses, his home, and starting over in a Honda van in 2013, Tim rebuilt his life from the ground up. That season reshaped how he thinks about success, leadership, and what actually matters.

Today, he serves as Chief Operating Officer at Earth Retention, leading operations and team development with an engineer's discipline and a builder's instinct. He's also the host of Seek Go Create – The Leadership Journey, a podcast with 300+ episodes exploring intentional leadership and purpose-driven success since 2019.

His latest project, NT90, invites listeners into a 90-day journey through the New Testament—reading the books in the order they were written and understanding them the way the original audience did.

Tim is the author of Coach: A Story of Success Redefined, a novel that mirrors his own journey from striving to stillness. He and his wife Glori live, travel, and work as "essential nomads" from their motorhome—proof that home isn't always a place.

📍 Engineer by training (Georgia Tech) | Author | Strategist | Podcast Host

Support Seek Go Create - The Leadership Journey for Christian Entrepreneurs and Faith-Driven Leaders

A huge thank you to our supporters, it means a lot that you support our podcast.

If you like the podcast and want to support it, too, you can leave us a tip using the button below. We really appreciate it and it only takes a moment!
Support Seek Go Create - The Leadership Journey for Christian Entrepreneurs and Faith-Driven Leaders
A
Anonymous $34
A
Anonymous $90
A
Anonymous $90
A
Anonymous $77
A
Anonymous $115
A
Anonymous $64
A
Anonymous $82
g
gj $84
G
GJ $75
G
GJ $50
G
GJ $50
G
GJ $64
A
Anonymous $85