That two-word phrase is: Taken Up. It is used four times in Acts 1.
AnswerWe have no independent account of anything the apostles did after the ascension of Jesus, but the Book of Acts does report the killing of Ananias and Sapphira (chapter 5), supposedly justified because Ananias and Sapphira had lied to Peter, with the other Christians reported as accomplices after the fact for removing the bodies and not reporting the deaths to the authorities. It also reports the blinding by Paul of Bar-Jesus (chapter 13), an act occasioning grievous bodily harm, merely to convert a Roman official. If these events really happened, then the apostles did sin after the ascension of Jesus.
Acts of the Apostles at chapter 5.
Acts chapter 2 is about when the 11 apostles were at the Pentecost and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit. They elders and pharisees were amazed because they could speak in their own language and they were uneducated men, the apostles I mean.
Ananias and Sapphira Their story is in Acts chapter 5
Acts chapter 2 is about when the 11 apostles were at the Pentecost and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit. They elders and pharisees were amazed because they could speak in their own language and they were uneducated men, the apostles I mean.
The Acts of Apostles Chapter 1 talks about Matthias as being the thirteenth disciples.
Longest chapter in Acts is Chapter 7 (seven) with 60 verses. The shortest chapter in Acts is Chapter 6 (six) with 15 verses
The prophet Issiah has two main visions that christ would be born to a virgin. And the second one is chapter 43 inwhich he clearly shows christs substitie v chapter of not speaking at his trial and his suffering on the cross.
The 12 Patriarchs, or Apostles. This image comes from Revelation chapter 12.
It was fun.
The prophet Isaiah, was to prophecy, the birth of christ 700 years before the birth of Christ. He also in chapter 53 clearly tells of Christs trial and punishment for us.
Section 2 chapter 13 describe the goals of a blockade