Acts 13:39

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

Through Him everyone who believes is justified from everything you could not be justified from by the law of Moses.

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What it means

Paul is wrapping up his sermon in the synagogue at Pisidian Antioch, and this verse is the punchline. Look at the structure: through Him — that's Jesus, the one he's just told them was crucified and raised. Everyone who believes — no ethnic filter, no resume required. Is justified — declared right with God, the verdict of not guilty slammed down on the table. And then the kicker: from everything you could not be justified from by the law of Moses.

Don't miss what Paul is doing. He's standing in a synagogue, surrounded by people who have built their whole identity around the law of Moses, and he tells them that law has a ceiling. It can't get you all the way home. The Greek word behind "justified" (dikaioō) is courtroom language — God the judge declaring you righteous. Paul is saying: the law could put you on trial, but it couldn't acquit you on every charge. Jesus can.

Notice the word everything. Not some things. Not the small stuff. Everything. Whatever the law couldn't reach — the inner corruption, the guilt that the right sacrifice couldn't quite cover, the sins for which there was no provision at all (in Numbers 15:30–31 some sins had no sacrifice attached) — Jesus reaches it.

This is the sentence where Christians have argued for centuries. Protestants hear it as the seed of sola fide — faith alone justifies, the law saves nobody. Catholics and Orthodox read it more carefully: yes, faith justifies, but Paul isn't pitting faith against a life of obedience and the sacraments; he's pitting Christ against the Mosaic law as a system. What's at stake? Whether justification is a one-time legal verdict (Protestant emphasis) or the beginning of a real, ongoing transformation that God works in you (Catholic/Orthodox emphasis). Both sides agree on this much: the law of Moses by itself was never going to be enough.

Historical Context

Paul is in Pisidian Antioch, in what's now central Turkey, probably around AD 46–48 on his first missionary journey. Picture a Roman colony perched on a high plateau, a mix of Roman veterans, local Greeks, and a sizable Jewish community with their own synagogue. Paul and Barnabas have walked in on the Sabbath, sat down, and after the Torah and Prophets were read, the synagogue leaders did what was customary — they invited the visiting rabbis to speak.

Paul stands up and gives a sweeping retelling of Israel's story — from the Exodus through David — and lands it on Jesus. Verse 39 is near the end. The audience is mixed: ethnic Jews who have lived under the law their whole lives, and God-fearers — Gentiles who hung around the synagogue, attracted to the God of Israel but not willing (or in the case of men, not willing to be circumcised) to fully convert. These Gentile God-fearers are sitting there knowing that the law of Moses, as gracious as it is, has a wall around it they can't quite climb over.

When Paul says everyone who believes — and especially when he says justification comes from somewhere other than the law of Moses — the God-fearers' ears would have lit up. The next verses tell us exactly that: they begged him to come back next Sabbath, and the following week "almost the whole city" turned out (13:42–44). And that's when the trouble started. The synagogue leadership saw their seekers being scooped up by this new movement, and they ran Paul out of town.

It's worth knowing that this is the earliest recorded sermon of Paul in Acts. The themes you'll later read in Romans and Galatians — justification by faith, the limits of the law, Christ as the fulfillment — they're already here in seed form, preached out loud in a synagogue years before he wrote them down in letters.

Original Language

The key word is δικαιωθῆναι (dikaiōthēnai) — "to be justified." It's a courtroom word. A judge dikaioōs someone when he declares them in the right. It doesn't mean make them morally perfect; it means issue a verdict in their favor. Paul uses it twice in this one verse, like he's pounding the table.

Then πᾶς ὁ πιστεύων (pas ho pisteuōn) — "everyone who believes," or more literally, "every-the-believing-one." The Greek participle is in the present tense, which carries the sense of ongoing trust, not a single moment of mental agreement. It's not "everyone who once said yes" — it's "everyone who keeps trusting." Faith here is a posture you stay in, not a box you ticked.

ἀπὸ πάντων (apo pantōn) — "from all things," or "from everything." The word pantōn is sweeping. Paul could have said "from many things." He didn't. He said all. Whatever charges the law couldn't dismiss, Jesus dismisses.

And the contrast: ἐν νόμῳ Μωϋσέως (en nomō Mōuseōs) — "in/by the law of Moses." The little preposition en points to the law as the sphere or instrument of justification that failed. The law was the courtroom you were trying to be acquitted in — and in that courtroom, full acquittal was never on the docket.

Application

Here's where this lands on you. There is something in your life right now that you've been trying to fix by following rules. Maybe they're God's rules — Bible reading, prayer, fasting, showing up at church. Maybe they're rules you made up — eat better, snap at your kids less, stop scrolling at midnight, be a better spouse. And you've noticed that the rules can change your behavior on the surface, sometimes, for a while. But they can't touch the thing underneath. They can't justify you from everything.

Paul is saying: stop trying to get acquitted in the wrong courtroom. The law — even the good law, the God-given law — was never designed to do what only Jesus can do. If you spend your life trying to earn a verdict that's already been handed down, you'll exhaust yourself and never feel clean.

The cost of this verse is this: you have to actually let go. Not just intellectually agree that Jesus justifies you, but actually stop the white-knuckled effort to justify yourself. That's harder than it sounds, because self-justification is the most addictive drug in the human heart. We love having something we did to point to. "Look, God, I'm trying." Paul is telling you: the trying was never going to be enough, and the good news is — it doesn't have to be. Through Him, everyone who believes is justified from everything.

What would change if you actually believed that today? Which specific guilt would you stop carrying? Which sin would you finally bring into the light, knowing the verdict is already in?

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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