The deaf community at the midsize American church was struggling. Two of their most faithful members had died. Their longtime interpreter was retiring, and the church was changing pastors.

The new pastor knew the importance of speaking to people in their language, so he worked on his sign-language skills. One Sunday, prior to the worship service, he struck up a halting conversation with one of the deaf seated near the front. Soon he stepped off the platform and sat down next to her. He paid close attention to her signs and carefully signed back. He asked questions and accepted her patient correction of his signing mistakes.

The deaf seated around them noticed! That pastor made himself vulnerable and crossed the line into their world.

The apostle Peter crossed a big line into a new world—the world of the Gentiles. As a devout Jew, he carefully followed the prohibitions against eating certain foods or entering the home of a Gentile. But God was smashing the walls that divided people, so in a vision He spoke to Cornelius, a God-fearing Roman military leader (see Acts 10:1-7). Then he spoke to Peter (Acts 10:9-21). Soon Peter went to the centurion’s house, and the church grew in ways previously unimagined! (Acts 10:34-48). Luke writes, “The Jewish believers . . . were amazed that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out on the Gentiles, too” (Acts 10:45).

Walls of division have no place in the body of Christ. That may mean we need to build some bridges we’re not comfortable crossing. But when we dismantle divisive walls and step into new territory, we reflect the One who crossed the biggest line of all—Jesus. He entered our world as a baby and learned to speak our language.

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Mark 2:23–3:19