Acts 15 & The Jerusalem Council — Defending and Displaying Grace


Pastor Troy Dobbs – Preached at Grace Church Eden Prairie (and campuses) — May 10, 2026

There’s a phrase that keeps showing up in church history: doctrinal clarity comes through doctrinal controversy. When a theological fight breaks out, the church digs into God’s Word, and that digging produces clarity about who we are and what we believe. That pattern goes all the way back to the very first church council — the one recorded in Acts 15.


A Quick Tour of the Councils

Before getting to Acts 15, Pastor Troy gave a brief survey of the great ecumenical councils and why they matter:

  • Council of Nicaea (325 AD) — Condemned Arianism, which taught that Jesus was created by God and therefore not co-eternal or co-equal with the Father. The council affirmed the pre-existence of Christ and produced the Nicene Creed. (Side note: Jehovah’s Witnesses have essentially repackaged this same heresy.)
  • Council of Ephesus (431 AD) — Condemned Nestorianism, which viewed Christ as two distinct persons. The council affirmed Jesus as one unified person — fully God and fully man simultaneously.
  • Council of Chalcedon (451 AD) — Affirmed the Hypostatic Union: Christ existed in two natures, fully divine and fully human, in one person.
  • Third Council of Constantinople (681 AD) — Confirmed Christ had two wills — human and divine — acting in perfect harmony. Most clearly seen in Gethsemane: “Not my will, but your will be done.”

All of those councils wrestled with the question: Who is Jesus? But Acts 15 asked a different question entirely.


The First Council: How Is a Person Saved?

Acts 15:1–31 records the Jerusalem Council — the first major doctrinal council in church history. The presenting controversy came from a group known as the Judaizers, who were teaching that Gentile believers had to be circumcised according to the Law of Moses in order to be saved.

Their formula: Jesus + circumcision = salvation.

Pastor Troy made the point plainly: anything that supplants the sufficiency of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross is heresy. That error didn’t die in the first century. It shows up today in forms like:

  • Jesus + keeping the sacraments = salvation
  • Jesus + good works/morality = salvation
  • Jesus + church attendance = salvation

He also pushed back on the romanticized idea of returning to the “perfect first-century church.” The early church had members lying to the Holy Spirit, confusion about the Spirit’s role, people abandoning mission teams, organizational grievances, false teachers, strife, and division. As he put it: “There are issues with the church in every century, because human beings are involved.”

Peter’s Four Arguments (Acts 15:7–11)

  1. God has always saved people through hearing and believing — by faith in Christ. That’s been the consistent pattern from the beginning.
  2. God gave the Gentiles the Holy Spirit — the same way He gave it to the Jews. No distinction.
  3. Requiring circumcision is testing God — since God already cleansed their hearts by faith, adding a condition isn’t spiritual maturity; it’s questioning what God has already done. “Why are you putting God to the test by placing a yoke on the neck of the disciples that neither our fathers nor we have been able to bear?” (v. 10)
  4. Both Jews and Gentiles are saved by grace — this isn’t new information. “We believe that we will be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, just as they will.” (v. 11)

Peter’s conclusion: it has always been grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.

James Delivers the Verdict

James — half-brother of Jesus, author of the book of James, and a recognized pillar of the Jerusalem church — brought the council to a resolution. He:

  1. Affirmed the consensus: The gospel is circumcision-free. Gentiles are accepted into God’s family by faith, not by adopting Jewish practice.
  2. Cited Old Testament prophecy (Amos 9:11–12): The inclusion of Gentiles was not Plan B. It was not an afterthought. It was foreordained and prophesied — a fulfillment of Scripture, not a departure from it.
  3. Rendered judgment (Acts 15:19): “My judgment is that we should not trouble those of the Gentiles who turn to God.” Stop making this harder than it has to be.
  4. Issued four practical guidelines for Gentile believers — not requirements for salvation, but wisdom guidelines to build unity and fellowship with Jewish brothers and sisters: abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from sexual immorality, from things strangled, and from blood.

The whole church agreed. They sent a letter to Antioch, and Acts 15:31 records the result: “When they had read it, they rejoiced because of its encouragement.” Clarity produced joy.


Two Big Takeaways

1. Grace Must Be Defended From Addition

The most dangerous false gospels are often not outright denials of Jesus — they are additions to Jesus:

  • Jesus + morality
  • Jesus + politics
  • Jesus + baptism for salvation
  • Jesus + church attendance
  • Jesus + family heritage
  • Jesus + personal effort or good works

“Grace is not Jesus doing most of it and you and I finishing the rest. He’s done it all, and He gets credit for doing it all.”

The cross is sufficient, not deficient. Jesus did not pay for 80% of your salvation. He paid for all of it. The gospel does not need a boost, a bump, an addendum, or an addition.

If you are exhausted from a life of religion — trying to be good enough, moral enough, changed enough, sorry enough, strong enough — Acts 15 has a simple word for you: Christ is enough.

2. Grace Must Be Displayed in Relationships

After establishing the doctrine, James turned to the relational dimension. He asked Gentile believers to voluntarily modify certain behaviors — not for salvation, but for the sake of unity, mission, and fellowship with Jewish brothers and sisters.

“We can defend doctrine and love people at the same time.”

This requires holding a distinction between essentials and non-essentials. On non-essentials, Christians can be graciously flexible — agree to disagree — without destroying unity or fellowship. On essentials, the church stands firm.

Among the essentials that are never up for negotiation: the inspiration and authority of Scripture; the Trinity; the unchanging character of God; creation ex nihilo; human sinfulness and the need for a Savior; the gospel itself; the full humanity and divinity of Christ; Christ as substitute, dying in our place; Christ as the only way to the Father; the deity of the Holy Spirit; the resurrection; heaven and hell; the Great Commission; grace alone, faith alone, Christ alone; repentance and justification by faith; the priesthood of the believer; and the Church as the Bride and Body of Christ.

As Pastor Troy put it: “You don’t need to go through a priest or through me to get to God. You can go directly through Jesus Christ alone.”


The Big Idea: Unity, Clarity, Charity

  • Unity — Don’t fracture over secondary issues.
  • Clarity — Know what you will die for. Know your non-negotiable convictions.
  • Charity — Be a loving servant even as you hold your theological convictions firmly.

“We defend grace because Christ is enough. We display grace because people saved by grace should become gracious, loving, grace-filled people.”

“It is not by avoiding theology that we find unity. Rather, it is in clarifying our theological convictions that biblical unity actually emerges.”

Closing Challenge

  • Know the gospel so well that you recognize when it’s being misrepresented.
  • Examine yourself: Are you gracious? Theological seriousness must never produce arrogance or lovelessness.
  • Rest: Stop striving through religion. Jesus has done the heavy lifting.
  • Turn and trust: It’s not your work that counts — it is His.

Jesus Christ is the only way to be saved.


Summary of the May 10, 2026 message at Grace Church Eden Prairie and campuses.

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