"Acts chapter ten is one of the most pivotal passages of scripture in the entire New Testament. It’s a passage that’s often used to support the erroneous teaching that God has now released us to freely eat every kind of animal, even those He previously defined as unfit for food and thereby human consumption."
"Yet we quickly see from Scripture that Peter’s vision wasn’t about being able to eat unclean food at all, rather it was about God accepting the Gentile believer coming into faith and community. This was the great mystery of the ages being revealed to Peter through his vision here in Acts chapter 10 – that God would extend salvation to the Gentiles without them needing to first convert by becoming a legal Jew."
I respectfully disagree with this person’s position.
See 5209.
The question caused a council to convene in Jerusalem.
This was settled in Acts 15.And Peter was there.
Gentiles and the church were not bound by Jewish dietary laws in the Old Testament.
The purpose of the Law was to show that no man could keep the whole Law at all times.
If the Law could save, it would negate the sacrifice made for all men at one time by Jesus Christ.
Paul goes to great lengths to teach this concept throughout his New Testament writings.