William Barclay emphasizes the two...
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William Barclay emphasizes the two leading features Luke describes as typical of the community life of the early Church: (one) responsibility for each other; and (two) a real desire to share all they had. Albert C. Winn in his commentary, Acts of the Apostles, put the thrust of this passage in this way: "I have more than I need, and if a brother who shares with me in the Spirit is in want, it is unthinkable therefore for me to hold on selfishly to what I have. This is the root of the so-called 'communism' of the early Church" (p. 50).
Robert F. Horton, the distinguished English churchman, put the matter in this way: "We should ever remember that the object of Christianity is the kingdom of God upon earth; and the kingdom of God upon earth means that state of things in which all men's good is each man's rule, and each lives not for his own selfish interests but for the whole!"
- Macleod
Robert F. Horton, the distinguished English churchman, put the matter in this way: "We should ever remember that the object of Christianity is the kingdom of God upon earth; and the kingdom of God upon earth means that state of things in which all men's good is each man's rule, and each lives not for his own selfish interests but for the whole!"
- Macleod
