1 Chronicles 17:1 When David had settled into his house, he said to the prophet Nathan, “Notice! I am living in a cedar house while the ark of Yahveh’s covenant is under tent curtains.”
1 Chronicles 17:2 So Nathan told David, “Do all that is on your mind, for God is with you.”
1 Chronicles 17:3 But that night the word of God came to Nathan:
1 Chronicles 17:4 “Go to David my slave and say, ‘This is what Yahveh says: You are not the one to build me a house to dwell in.
1 Chronicles 17:5 From the time I brought Israel out of Egypt until today, I have not dwelt in a house; instead, I have moved from one tent site to another and from one tabernacle location to another.
1 Chronicles 17:6 In all my journeys throughout Israel, have I ever spoken a word to even one of the judges of Israel, whom I commanded to shepherd my people, asking: Why haven’t you built me a house of cedar? ‘
1 Chronicles 17:7 “So now this is what you are to say to my slave David: ‘This is what Yahveh of Armies says: I took you from the pasture, from tending the flock, to be ruler over my people Israel.
1 Chronicles 17:8 I have been with you wherever you have gone, and I have cut down all your enemies before you. I will make a name for you like that of the greatest on the land.
1 Chronicles 17:9 I will place a place for my people Israel and plant them, so that they may live there and not be disturbed again. Evildoers will not add oppression to them as they have done
1 Chronicles 17:10 ever since the day I ordered judges to be over my people Israel. I will also subdue all your enemies. ” ‘Furthermore, I declare to you that Yahveh himself will build a house for you.
1 Chronicles 17:11 When your time comes to be with your fathers, I will raise after you your seed, who is one of your sons, and I will establish his kingdom.
1 Chronicles 17:12 He is the one who will build a house for me, and I will establish his throne permanently.
1 Chronicles 17:13 I will be his father, and he will be my son. I will not remove my covenant faithfulness from him as I removed it from the one who was before you.
1 Chronicles 17:14 I will appoint him over my house and my kingdom forever, and his throne will be established permanently.'”
1 Chronicles 17:15 Nathan reported all these words and this entire vision to David.
1 Chronicles 17:16 Then King David went in, sat in Yahveh’s face, and said, Who am I, Yahveh God, and what is my house that you have brought me this far?
1 Chronicles 17:17 This was a little thing to you, God, for you have spoken about your slave’s house in the distant future. You regard me as a man of distinction, Yahveh God.
1 Chronicles 17:18 What more can David add to you for rewarding your slave? You know your slave.
1 Chronicles 17:19 Yahveh, you have done this whole great thing, making known all these great promises for the sake of your slave and according to your will.
1 Chronicles 17:20 Yahveh, there is no one like you, and there is no God besides you, as all we have heard confirms.
1 Chronicles 17:21 And who is like your people Israel? God, you came to one nation on the land to redeem a people for yourself, to place a name for yourself through great and awesome works by driving out nations before your people you redeemed from Egypt.
1 Chronicles 17:22 You made your people Israel your own permanent people, and you, Yahveh, have become their God.
1 Chronicles 17:23 Now, Yahveh, let the word that you have spoken concerning your slave and his house be confirmed permanently, and do as you have promised.
1 Chronicles 17:24 Let your name be confirmed and magnified permanently in the saying, “Yahveh of Armies, the God of Israel, is God over Israel.” May the house of your slave David be established before you.
1 Chronicles 17:25 Since you, my God, have revealed to your slave that you will build him a house, your servant has found courage to pray in your face.
1 Chronicles 17:26 Yahveh, you indeed are God, and you have promised this good thing to your slave.
1 Chronicles 17:27 So now, you have been pleased to endorse your slave’s house that it may continue before you permanently. For you, Yahveh, have endorsed it, and it is endorsed permanently.
1 Chronicles 16:1 They brought the ark of God and placed it inside the tent David had pitched for it. Then they offered ascending offerings and sacrifices for healthy relationships[1] in God’s face.
1 Chronicles 16:2 When David had finished offering the ascending offerings and the sacrifices for healthy relationships, he empowered the people in the name of the Lord.
1 Chronicles 16:3 Then he distributed to each and every Israelite, both men and women, a loaf of bread, a date cake, and a raisin cake.
1 Chronicles 16:4 David appointed some of the Levites to minister before the ark of the Lord, to celebrate Yahveh God of Israel, and to give thanks and praise to him.
1 Chronicles 16:5 Asaph was the chief and Zechariah was second to him. Jeiel, Shemiramoth, Jehiel, Mattithiah, Eliab, Benaiah, Obed-edom, and Jeiel played the harps and lyres, while Asaph sounded the cymbals
1 Chronicles 16:6 and the priests Benaiah and Jahaziel blew the trumpets continually[2] before the ark of the covenant of God.
1 Chronicles 16:7 On that day David decreed for the first time that thanks be given to Yahveh by Asaph and his relatives:
1 Chronicles 16:8 Give thanks to the Lord; call on his name; proclaim his deeds among the peoples.
1 Chronicles 16:9 Sing to him; sing praise to him; tell about all his overwhelming[3] works!
1 Chronicles 16:10 Honor his sacred name; let the hearts of those who seek Yahveh enjoy[4] him.
1 Chronicles 16:11 Seek Yahveh and his strength; seek his face continually.
1 Chronicles 16:12 Remember the overwhelming works he has done, his wonders, and the judgments he has pronounced,
1 Chronicles 16:13 you seed[5] of Israel his slave, Jacob’s descendants — his chosen ones.
1 Chronicles 16:14 He is Yahveh our God; his judgments govern the whole land.
1 Chronicles 16:15 Remember his covenant permanently — the promise he ordained for a thousand generations,
1 Chronicles 16:16 the covenant he established with Abraham, swore to Isaac,
1 Chronicles 16:17 and confirmed to Jacob as a prescribed task,[6] and to Israel as a permanent covenant:
1 Chronicles 16:18 “I will give the land of Canaan to you as your inherited portion.”
1 Chronicles 16:19 When they were few in number, very few indeed, and resident guests[7] in Canaan
1 Chronicles 16:20 wandering from nation to nation and from one kingdom to another,
1 Chronicles 16:21 he allowed no one to exploit[8] them; he rebuked kings on their behalf: 1 Chronicles 16:22 “Do not touch my anointed ones or harm my prophets.”
1 Chronicles 16:23 Let the whole land sing to the Lord. Proclaim his salvation from day to day.
1 Chronicles 16:24 Declare his impressive appearance[9] among the nations, his overwhelming works among all peoples.
1 Chronicles 16:25 Because Yahveh is great and highly praised; he is feared above all gods.
1 Chronicles 16:26 Because all the gods of the peoples are idols, but Yahveh made the sky.[10]
1 Chronicles 16:27 Splendor and majesty are before him; strength and joy are in his place.
1 Chronicles 16:28 Ascribe to the Lord, clans of the peoples, ascribe to Yahveh impressive appearance and strength.
1 Chronicles 16:29 Ascribe to Yahveh the impressive appearance of his name; bring a tribute offering[11] and come before him. Worship Yahveh in the splendor of his sacredness;
1 Chronicles 16:30 let the whole land tremble before him. The world is firmly established; it cannot be shaken.
1 Chronicles 16:31 Let the sky be glad and the land enjoy, and let them say among the nations, “Yahveh reigns!”
1 Chronicles 16:32 Let the sea and all that fills it resound; let the fields and everything in them exult.
1 Chronicles 16:33 Then the trees of the forest will shout for joy before the Lord, for he is coming to judge the land.
1 Chronicles 16:34 Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; his covenant faithfulness[12] endures permanently.
1 Chronicles 16:35 And say: “Rescue us, God of our rescue; gather us and strip us from the nations so that we may give thanks to your sacred name and rejoice in your praise.
1 Chronicles 16:36 Praised be Yahveh God of Israel from age to age.” Then all the people said, “Amen” and “Praise the Lord.”
1 Chronicles 16:37 So David left Asaph and his relatives there before the ark of Yahveh’s covenant to minister continually before the ark according to the daily requirements.
1 Chronicles 16:38 He assigned Obed-edom and his sixty-eight relatives. Obed-edom son of Jeduthun and Hosah were to be gatekeepers.
1 Chronicles 16:39 David left the priest Zadok and his fellow priests before the tabernacle of Yahveh at the high place in Gibeon
1 Chronicles 16:40 to offer ascending offerings continually, morning and evening, to Yahveh on the altar of ascending offerings and to do everything that was written in the instruction[13] of the Lord, which he had commanded Israel to keep.
1 Chronicles 16:41 With them were Heman, Jeduthun, and the rest who were chosen and designated by name to give thanks to the Lord — for his covenant faithfulness endures permanently.
1 Chronicles 16:42 Heman and Jeduthun had with them trumpets and cymbals to play and musical instruments of God. Jeduthun’s sons were at the city gate.
1 Chronicles 16:43 Then all the people went home, and David returned home to empower his house.
19 “Therefore, O King Agrippa, I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision, 20 but declared first to those in Damascus, then in Jerusalem and throughout all the region of Judea, and also to the Gentiles, that they should repent and turn to God, performing deeds in keeping with their repentance. 21 For this reason, the Jews seized me in the temple and tried to kill me. 22 To this day I have had the help that comes from God, and so I stand here testifying both to small and great, saying nothing but what the prophets and Moses said would come to pass: 23 that the Christ must suffer and that, by being the first to rise from the dead, he would proclaim light both to our people and to the Gentiles.”
Paul’s appearance before King Herod Agrippa II in Acts 26 is one of the most dramatic moments in the book of Acts. Here stands the apostle — chained, falsely accused, misunderstood, and misrepresented — yet completely unashamed. He is not intimidated by the power of Rome or the hostility of his Jewish opponents. He is not flustered by the courtroom setting or the political tension in the air. Instead, Paul sees this moment for what it truly is: an opportunity to proclaim the gospel.
Paul is not merely defending himself. He is defending the message that changed his life. His Jewish antagonists have accused him of betraying Moses, abandoning the Scriptures, and stirring up trouble among the people. But Paul insists that the very opposite is true. The gospel he preaches is not a departure from the Old Testament — it is the fulfillment of it. The gospel is not a new invention — it is the realization of God’s ancient promises. And so, standing before Agrippa, Paul outlines the gospel in a way that is both simple and profound, both historical and deeply personal.
In Acts 26:19–23, Paul gives us seven essential elements of the gospel — seven truths that shaped the preaching of the early church and must shape our preaching today. If we leave out any of these seven, we are not proclaiming the full gospel. Paul proclaimed them. The apostles proclaimed them. Many early Christians died for them. And these truths must be the focus of our faith and testimony as well.
Let us walk through these seven elements together.
1. The Gospel Is About Historical Events That Fulfilled God’s Promises (v. 22)
Paul begins by saying that he has said “nothing but what the prophets and Moses said would come to pass.” In other words, the gospel is not a new philosophy or a spiritual idea floating in the air. It is grounded in real events that took place in history — events that God had promised long before they happened.
The Old Testament pointed forward to a Messiah who would suffer, who would rise, and who would bring salvation to the nations. Every sacrifice, every prophecy, every shadow in the Law was pointing toward Jesus. Paul wants Agrippa to understand that the gospel is not a break from Israel’s story — it is the climax of it.
This matters for us today. Christianity is not built on myths or moral lessons. It is built on events — God acting in time and space. The gospel is rooted in history, anchored in Scripture, and verified by eyewitnesses. When we preach the gospel, we are not offering people a religious opinion. We are proclaiming what God has done.
2. The Gospel Explains Why Jesus Went to the Cross (v. 23)
Paul continues: the Messiah “must suffer.” The cross was not a tragic accident. It was not the result of political miscalculation. It was not simply the cruelty of Rome or the jealousy of the religious leaders. It was the plan of God.
Jesus went to the cross because sin demanded justice. The holiness of God required that sin be punished. And the love of God moved Him to provide a substitute. Jesus bore our sins in His body on the tree. He fulfilled Isaiah 53. He fulfilled the sacrificial system. He fulfilled the Passover. He fulfilled the promise that God Himself would provide the Lamb.
The gospel is not simply that Jesus died — but that He died for us. He died in our place. He died to reconcile us to God. Without the cross, there is no forgiveness, no salvation, no hope. The gospel explains why Jesus had to die — because only His sacrifice could save sinners. Our sins created a debt that we could not pay. Even our deaths do not pay that debt. It requires a sinless sacrifice. Only Jesus could redeem us.
3. The Gospel Explains Why Jesus Had to Be the First Raised to Immortality (v. 23)
Paul says that Jesus is “the first to rise from the dead.” Not the first to be raised — others were raised before Him — but the first to rise to immortal, resurrection life. Jesus’ resurrection is not merely a return to life. It is the beginning of a new creation.
He is the firstfruits. His resurrection is the guarantee of ours. If Christ had not been raised, Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15, our faith would be in vain. But because He lives, we know that death is not the end. Because He lives, we know that God has begun the renewal of all things.
The gospel is not just about forgiveness. It is about new life — resurrection life. Jesus’ resurrection is the foundation of Christian hope.
4. The Gospel Is Light for Everyone, Regardless of Background (v. 23)
Paul declares that the risen Christ brings light “to our people and to the Gentiles.” This is a radical statement. For centuries, Israel had been God’s chosen people. But now, through Christ, the light of salvation shines on every nation, every culture, every background.
The gospel is not limited by ethnicity, geography, or social status. It is not reserved for the religious or the moral. It is for everyone — Jew and Gentile, rich and poor, educated and uneducated, moral and immoral. The same Christ who confronted Paul on the Damascus road confronts every person with truth and grace.
This is why the church must be a missionary people. The gospel is not ours to hoard. It is light for the world.
5. The Gospel Calls All People to Repent (v. 20)
Paul says he preached that people “should repent and turn to God.” Repentance is not an optional add-on to the gospel. It is the doorway into the kingdom. It means turning away from sin, abandoning self-rule, and submitting to Christ’s lordship.
Repentance is not merely feeling sorry. It is a change of direction — a decisive turning toward God. It is both a moment and a lifelong posture. The gospel demands a response. It confronts us with the reality of our sin and calls us to surrender.
Without repentance, there is no salvation. Without repentance, there is no new life. The gospel calls all people — everywhere — to repent.
6. The Gospel Calls for Obedience That Demonstrates Genuine Faith (v. 20)
Paul adds that people must “perform deeds in keeping with their repentance.” Works do not save us. But they reveal whether our repentance is real. True faith produces visible transformation. The gospel does not merely forgive — it changes.
Paul is not calling for perfection. He is calling for evidence. A tree is known by its fruit. A disciple is known by obedience. The gospel creates disciples, not merely converts. It produces a life that reflects the character of Christ.
This is why the church must teach obedience, not just belief. Faith without works is dead. The gospel calls us to live out what we profess. We cannot get saved by our works, but once we are saved, if we want to get our neighbors, friends and family saved, its going to take some works.
7. The Gospel Promises Future Resurrection to Eternal Life (25:19; 26:6–8, 23)
Finally, Paul speaks of the hope that sustained him — the hope of resurrection. This is the hope of Israel. This is the hope of the apostles. This is the hope of the church.
Jesus’ resurrection guarantees ours. Eternal life is not disembodied existence. It is restored, immortal life in God’s renewed creation. It is the defeat of death, the healing of creation, the fulfillment of God’s promises.
This hope sustained Paul through trials, imprisonments, beatings, and threats. It gave him courage to stand before kings. It gave him strength to endure suffering. And it gives us strength today.
The gospel ends not in death but in everlasting life.
Conclusion: The Full Gospel We Must Proclaim
Paul preached this sevenfold gospel. The apostles preached it. The early church preached it. Many believers died for it. And if we leave out any of these elements, we are not proclaiming the gospel Paul proclaimed.
The gospel is historical. The gospel is Christ-centered. The gospel is universal. The gospel demands repentance. The gospel produces obedience. The gospel promises resurrection. The gospel is the power of God for salvation.
This must be the focus of our faith and our testimony. This is the message entrusted to us. This is the message the world needs.
LORD, give us the courage to proclaim your gospel, and the understanding to proclaim the whole gospel.
1 Chronicles 14:1 King Hiram of Tyre sent agents[1] to David, along with cedar logs, stonemasons, and carpenters to build a house for him.
1 Chronicles 14:2 Then David knew that Yahveh had established him as king over Israel and that his kingdom had been exalted for the sake of his people Israel.
1 Chronicles 14:3 David took more wives in Jerusalem, and he became the father of more sons and daughters.
1 Chronicles 14:4 These are the names of the children born to him in Jerusalem: Shammua, Shobab, Nathan, Solomon,
1 Chronicles 14:5 Ibhar, Elishua, Elpelet,
1 Chronicles 14:6 Nogah, Nepheg, Japhia,
1 Chronicles 14:7 Elishama, Beeliada, and Eliphelet.
1 Chronicles 14:8 When the Philistines heard that David had been anointed king over all Israel, they all went in search of David; when David heard of this, he went out to face them.
1 Chronicles 14:9 Now the Philistines had come and raided in the Valley of Rephaim,
1 Chronicles 14:10 so David inquired of God, “Should I attack the Philistines? Will you hand them over to me?” Yahveh replied, “Attack, and I will hand them over to you.”
1 Chronicles 14:11 So the Israelites went up to Baal-perazim, and David struck down the Philistines there. Then David said, “Like a bursting flood, God has used me to burst out against my enemies.” Therefore, they named that place Yahveh Bursts Out.
1 Chronicles 14:12 The Philistines abandoned their idols there, and David ordered that they be burned in the fire.
1 Chronicles 14:13 Once again, the Philistines added a raid to[2] the valley.
1 Chronicles 14:14 So David again inquired of God, and God answered him, “Do not pursue them directly. Circle around them and attack them opposite the balsam trees.
1 Chronicles 14:15 When you hear the sound of marching in the tops of the balsam trees, then go out to battle, for God will have gone out before of you to strike down the army of the Philistines.”
1 Chronicles 14:16 So David did as God commanded him, and they struck down the Philistine army from Gibeon to Gezer.
1 Chronicles 14:17 Then David’s fame spread throughout the lands, and Yahveh caused all the nations to be terrified of him.