Acts 7:27

"“The day following, he appeared to them as they fought, and urged them to be at peace again, saying, ‘Sirs, you are brothers. Why do you wrong one another?’"

Key Reflection

This passage illustrates the potential for reconciliation and the importance of brotherly love, even in the face of conflict. Through Moses' intervention, it underscores the idea that despite their disagreements, the Israelites share a common identity as God's chosen people.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

Verse 27. But he that did, etc. Intent on his purpose, filled with rage and passion, he rejected all interference, and all attempts at peace. It is usually the man that does the injury that is unwilling to be reconciled; and when we find a man that regards the entreaties of his friends as improper interference, when he becomes increasingly angry when we exhort him to peace, it is usually a strong evidence that he is conscious that he has been at fault. If we wish to reconcile parties, we should go first to the man that has been injured. In the controversy between God and man, it is the sinner who has done the wrong that is unwilling to be reconciled, and not God. His neighbour.

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