Luke 1:3 first letter to Theophilus
Acts 1:1 continuation of letter to Theophilus
This section begins in Acts 9:32 and ends in Acts 11:18 and tells us about Peter preaching the gospel to gentiles. Acts 10 is about a Roman centurion Cornelius, receiving the gospel. In a vision Cornelius is told to send for Peter who was at that time in Joppa. Peter also has a vision and God shows him the gospel is for all people not just Israel. Peter goes to Joppa with Cornelius's servants and tells Cornelius and others the gospel.
Acts
The Book of Acts follows the Gospel of John.
The Acts of the Apostles. The Acts of the Apostles, abbreviation Acts, fifth book of the New Testament, a valuable history of the early Christian church. Acts was written in Greek, presumably by the Evangelist Luke, whose gospel concludes where Acts begins, namely, with Christ's Ascension into heaven.
The Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles were written by Luke in the King James Version of the Bible.
Acts is not one of the Synoptic Gospels - they are Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Acts can be considered a follow-on or sequel to Luke, since they were written to the same person and evidently by the same author. But Acts is not a Gospel.
AnswerThere are four gospels in the Bible. They were originally anonymous, but are now called after the evangelists who the late second-century Church Fathers thought were the most likely authors: The Gospel of MatthewThe Gospel of MarkThe Gospel of LukeThe Gospel of John
The book of Acts is often considered the second part of Luke
Luke the physician addressed both his Gospel and the Book of Acts to Theophilus.
greek
Luke
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