AI OVERVIEW: Acts 12 presses the claim that breaking chains means trusting God with the outcomes, not merely praying for relief, because the real question is whether trust holds when the outcome isn’t what we hoped. Luke presents four hinge points—enemy power versus the church's prayer, a miracle that seems impossible yet is already moving, wavering faith beside unshakable truth, and a tyrant’s rage contrasted with the word of God multiplying. Peter’s delivery shows peace rooted in trust of the One who holds the outcome, while James dies and the church wrestles with doubt; the ultimate chain Jesus came to break is sin and separation from God, and God alone gets the last word.
YOUTUBE DESCRIPTION: Title: What Chains Do You Need Broken? YouTube Description: --- How do you maintain complete trust in God—even when it seems like the chains won't break? At the start of Acts 12, what looks like disaster strikes the church when Herod kills James and imprisons Peter. But by the en...