A Roman official reclines in shadow, gesturing dismissively, while a bearded man stands in a beam of light before him, scrolls unopened on the tribunal bench, dust suspended in the air.

A City That Shouldn’t Have Believed

When Paul stood before the Roman official Gallio, ready to defend the gospel, he was silenced before he spoke. But what looked like dismissal became divine strategy. In Corinth, God used indifference to open new doors—and the gospel moved forward through walls no one saw coming.

A silhouetted preacher stands on temple steps with arms raised, speaking boldly to a crowd illuminated by late afternoon light.

A Miracle Lit the Fuse

A crippled man stands, Peter preaches the risen Christ, and Jerusalem is shaken. In Acts 3–4, a miracle opens the door, but it is the bold proclamation of Jesus’ name that brings thousands to faith and ignites a movement that cannot be stopped.