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Chapter 1
Acts Twenty 1:1  The first account which I drew up, Theophilus, dealt with all that Jesus did and taught from the very first,
Acts Twenty 1:2  Down to that day on which he was taken up to Heaven, after he had, by the help of the Holy Spirit, given instructions to the Apostles whom he had chosen.
Acts Twenty 1:3  With abundant proofs, he showed himself to them, still living, after his death; appearing to them from time to time during forty days, and speaking of all that related to the Kingdom of God.
Acts Twenty 1:4  And once, when he had gathered them together, he charged them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait there for the fulfillment of the Father's promise--"that promise," he said, "of which you have heard me speak;
Acts Twenty 1:5  For, while John baptized with water, you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit before many days have passed."
Acts Twenty 1:6  So, when the Apostles had met together, they asked Jesus this question--"Master, is this the time when you intend to re-establish the Kingdom for Israel?"
Acts Twenty 1:7  His answer was. "It is not for you to know times or hours, for the Father has reserved these for his own decision;
Acts Twenty 1:8  But you shall receive power, when the Holy Spirit shall have descended upon you, and shall be witnesses for me not only in Jerusalem, but throughout Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."
Acts Twenty 1:9  No sooner had Jesus said this than he was caught up before their eyes, and a cloud received him from their sight.
Acts Twenty 1:10  While they were still gazing up into the heavens, as he went, suddenly two men, clothed in white, stood beside them,
Acts Twenty 1:11  And said. "Men of Galilee, why are you standing here looking up into the heavens? This very Jesus, who has been taken from you into the heavens, will come in the very way in which you have seen him go into the heavens."
Acts Twenty 1:12  Then the Apostles returned to Jerusalem from the hill called Olivet, which is about three quarters of a mile from the city.
Acts Twenty 1:13  When they reached Jerusalem, they went to the upstairs room, where they were staying. There were there Peter, John, James, and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus, Simon the Zealot, and Judas the son of James.
Acts Twenty 1:14  They all united in devoting themselves to Prayer, and so did some women, and Mary, the mother of Jesus, and his brothers.
Acts Twenty 1:15  About this time, at a meeting of the Brethren, when there were about a hundred and twenty present, Peter rose to speak.
Acts Twenty 1:16  "Brothers," he said, "it was necessary that the prediction of Scripture should be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit made by the lips of David about Judas, who acted as guide to the men that arrested Jesus,
Acts Twenty 1:17  For he was one of our number and had his part allotted him in this work of ours."
Acts Twenty 1:18  (This man had bought a piece of land with the price of his treachery; and, falling heavily, his body had burst open, and all his bowels protruded.
Acts Twenty 1:19  This became known to every one living in Jerusalem, so that the field came to be called, in their language, 'Akeldama,' which means the 'Field of Blood.')
Acts Twenty 1:20  "For in the Book of Psalms," Peter continued, "it is said--'Let his dwelling become desolate, and let no one live in it';and also--'His office let another take.'
Acts Twenty 1:21  Therefore, from among the men who have been with us all the time that Jesus, our Master, went in and out among us--
Acts Twenty 1:22  From his baptism by John down to that day on which he was taken from us--some one must be found to join us as a witness of his resurrection."
Acts Twenty 1:23  So they put forward two men, Joseph called Barsabas, whose other name was Justus, and Matthias;
Acts Twenty 1:24  And they offered this prayer--"O Lord, who reads all hearts, show which of these two men you has chosen
Acts Twenty 1:25  To take the place in this apostolic work, which Judas has abandoned, to go to his proper place."
Acts Twenty 1:26  Then they drew lots between them; and, the lot having fallen on Matthias, he was added to the number of the eleven Apostles.
Chapter 2
Acts Twenty 2:1  In the course of the Festival at the close of the Harvest the disciples had all met together,
Acts Twenty 2:2  When suddenly there came from the heavens a noise like that of a strong wind rushing by; it filled the whole house in which they were sitting.
Acts Twenty 2:3  Then there appeared tongues of what seemed to be flame, separating, so that one settled on each of them;
Acts Twenty 2:4  And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak with strange 'tongues' as the Spirit prompted their utterances.
Acts Twenty 2:5  Now there were then staying in Jerusalem religious Jews from every country in the world;
Acts Twenty 2:6  And, when this sound was heard, numbers of people collected, in the greatest excitement, because each of them heard the disciples speaking in his own language.
Acts Twenty 2:7  They were utterly amazed, and kept asking in astonishment. "What! Are not all these men who are speaking Galileans?
Acts Twenty 2:8  Then how is it that we each of us hear them in our own native language?
Acts Twenty 2:9  Some of us are Parthians, some Medes, some Elamites; and some of us live in Mesopotamia, in Judea and Cappadocia, in Pontus and Roman Asia,
Acts Twenty 2:10  In Phrygia and Pamphylia, in Egypt and the districts of Libya adjoining Cyrene; some of us are visitors from Rome,
Acts Twenty 2:11  Either Jews by birth or converts, and some are Cretans and Arabians-- yet we all alike hear them speaking in our own tongues of the great things that God has done."
Acts Twenty 2:12  They were all utterly amazed and bewildered. "What does it mean?" they asked one another.
Acts Twenty 2:13  But there were some who said with a sneer. "They have had too much new wine."
Acts Twenty 2:14  Then Peter, surrounded by the eleven other Apostles, stood up, and, raising his voice, addressed the crowd. "Men of Judea," he began, "and all you who are staying in Jerusalem, let me tell you what this means. Mark well my words.
Acts Twenty 2:15  These men are not drunk, as you suppose; for it is only now nine in the morning! No!
Acts Twenty 2:16  This is what is spoken of in the prophet Joel--
Acts Twenty 2:17  'It shall come about in the last days,' God says, 'That I will pour out my Spirit on all mankind; your sons and your daughters shall become Prophets, your young men shall see visions, and your old men dream dreams;
Acts Twenty 2:18  Yes, even on the slaves--for they are mine--both men and women, I will in those days pour out my Spirit,
Acts Twenty 2:19  And I will show wonders in the heavens above, and signs on the earth below--Blood and fire and mist of smoke;
Acts Twenty 2:20  The sun shall become darkness, and the moon blood-red, Before the Day of the Lord comes--that great and awful day.
Acts Twenty 2:21  Then shall every one who invokes the Name of the Lord be saved.'
Acts Twenty 2:22  Men of Israel, listen to what I am saying. Jesus of Nazareth, a man whose mission from God to you was proved by miracles, wonders, and signs, which God showed among you through him, as you know full well--
Acts Twenty 2:23  He, I say, in accordance with God's definite plan and with his previous knowledge, was betrayed, and you, by the hands of lawless men, nailed him to a cross and put him to death.
Acts Twenty 2:24  But God released him from the pangs of death and raised him to life, it being impossible for death to retain its hold upon him.
Acts Twenty 2:25  Indeed it was to him that David was referring when he said--'I have had the Lord ever before my eyes, For he stands at my right hand, that I should not be disquieted.
Acts Twenty 2:26  Therefore my heart was cheered, and my tongue told its delight; Yes, even my body, too, will rest in hope;
Acts Twenty 2:27  For you wilt not abandon my soul to the Place of Death, nor surrender me, your holy one, to undergo corruption.
Acts Twenty 2:28  Thou have shown me the path to life, you wilt fill me with gladness in your presence.'
Acts Twenty 2:29  Brothers, I can speak to you the more confidently about the Patriarch David, because he is dead and buried, and his tomb is here among us to this very day.
Acts Twenty 2:30  David, then, Prophet as he was, knowing that God 'had solemnly sworn to him to set one of his descendants upon his throne,' looked into the future,
Acts Twenty 2:31  And referred to the resurrection of the Christ when he said that 'he had not been abandoned to the Place of Death, nor had his body undergone corruption.'
Acts Twenty 2:32  It was this Jesus, whom God raised to life; and of that we are ourselves all witnesses.
Acts Twenty 2:33  And now that he has been exalted to the right hand of God, and has received from the Father the promised gift of the Holy Spirit, he has begun to pour out that gift, as you yourselves now see and hear.
Acts Twenty 2:34  It was not David who went up into Heaven; for he himself says- -'The Lord said to my master. "Sit on my right hand,
Acts Twenty 2:35  Till I put your enemies as a footstool under they feet."'
Acts Twenty 2:36  So let the whole nation of Israel know beyond all doubt, that God has made him both Lord and Christ--this very Jesus whom you crucified."
Acts Twenty 2:37  When the people heard this, they were conscience-smitten, and said to Peter and the rest of the Apostles. "Brothers, what can we do?"
Acts Twenty 2:38  "Repent," answered Peter, "and be baptized every one of you in the Faith of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and then you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Acts Twenty 2:39  For the promise is for you and for your children, and also for all those now far away, who may be called by the Lord our God."
Acts Twenty 2:40  With many other words Peter enforced his teaching, while the burden of his exhortations was--"Save yourselves from the perverse spirit of this age."
Acts Twenty 2:41  So those who accepted his teaching were baptized, and about three thousand people joined the disciples on that day alone.
Acts Twenty 2:42  They devoted themselves to the teaching of the Apostles and to the Common Life of the Church, to the Breaking of the Bread and to the Prayers.
Acts Twenty 2:43  A deep impression was made upon every one, and many wonders and signs were done at the hands of the Apostles.
Acts Twenty 2:44  All who became believers in Christ held everything for the common use;
Acts Twenty 2:45  They sold their property and their goods, and shared the proceeds among them all, according to their individual needs.
Acts Twenty 2:46  Every day they devoted themselves to meeting together in the Temple Courts, and to the Breaking of Bread at their homes, while they partook of their food in simple-hearted gladness, praising God, and winning the good-will of all the people.
Acts Twenty 2:47  And the Lord daily added to their company those who were in the path of Salvation.
Chapter 3
Acts Twenty 3:1  One day, as Peter and John were going up into the Temple Courts for the three o'clock Prayers, a man, who had been lame from his birth, was being carried by.
Acts Twenty 3:2  This man used to be set down every day at the gate of the Temple called 'the Beautiful Gate,' to beg of those who went in.
Acts Twenty 3:3  Seeing Peter and John on the point of entering, he asked them to give him something.
Acts Twenty 3:4  Peter fixed his eyes on him, and so did John, and then Peter said. "Look at us."
Acts Twenty 3:5  The man was all attention, expecting to get something from them;
Acts Twenty 3:6  But Peter added. "I have no gold or silver, but I give you what I have. In the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth I bid you walk."
Acts Twenty 3:7  Grasping the lame man by the right hand, Peter lifted him up. Instantly the man's feet and ankles became strong,
Acts Twenty 3:8  And, leaping up, he stood and began to walk about, and then went with them into the Temple Courts, walking, and leaping, and praising God.
Acts Twenty 3:9  All the people saw him walking about and praising God;
Acts Twenty 3:10  And, when they recognized him as the man who used to sit begging at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple, they were utterly astonished and amazed at what had happened to him.
Acts Twenty 3:11  While the man still clung to Peter and John, the people all quickly gathered round them in the Colonnade named after Solomon, in the greatest astonishment.
Acts Twenty 3:12  On seeing this, Peter said to the people. "Men of Israel, why are you surprised at this? and why do you stare at us, as though we, by any power or piety of our own, had enabled this man to walk?
Acts Twenty 3:13  The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God of our ancestors, has done honor to his Servant Jesus--him whom you gave up and disowned before Pilate, when he had decided to set him free.
Acts Twenty 3:14  You, I say, disowned the Holy and Righteous One, and asked for the release of a murderer!
Acts Twenty 3:15  The very Guide to Life you put to death! But God raised him from the dead--and of that we are ourselves witnesses.
Acts Twenty 3:16  And it is by faith in the Name of Jesus, that this man, whom you all see and know, has--by his Name--been made strong. Yes, it is the faith inspired by Jesus that has made this complete cure of the man, before the eyes of you all.
Acts Twenty 3:17  And yet, my Brothers, I know that you acted as you did from ignorance, and your rulers also.
Acts Twenty 3:18  But it was in this way that God fulfilled all that he had long ago foretold, as to the sufferings of his Christ, by the lips of all the Prophets.
Acts Twenty 3:19  Therefore, repent and turn, that your sins may be wiped away; so that happier times may come from the Lord himself,
Acts Twenty 3:20  And that he may send you, in Jesus, your long-appointed Christ.
Acts Twenty 3:21  But Heaven must be his home, until the days of the Universal Restoration, of which God has spoken by the lips of his holy Prophets from the very first.
Acts Twenty 3:22  Moses himself said--'The Lord your God will raise up from among your brothers a Prophet, as he raised me. To him you will listen whenever he speaks to you.
Acts Twenty 3:23  And it shall be that should any one among the people not listen to that Prophet, he will be utterly destroyed.'
Acts Twenty 3:24  Yes, and all the Prophets from Samuel onwards, and all their successors who had a message to deliver, told of these days.
Acts Twenty 3:25  You yourselves are the heirs of the Prophets, and heirs, too, of the Covenant which God made with your ancestors, when he said to Abraham-- 'In your descendants will all the nations of the earth be blessed.'
Acts Twenty 3:26  For you, first, God raised up his Servant, and sent him to bless you, by turning each one of you from his wicked ways."
Chapter 4
Acts Twenty 4:1  While Peter and John were still speaking to the people, the Chief Priest, with the Officer in charge at the Temple and the Sadducees, came up to them,
Acts Twenty 4:2  Much annoyed because they were teaching the people, and because, through Jesus, they were preaching the resurrection from the dead.
Acts Twenty 4:3  They arrested the Apostles and, as it was already evening, had them placed in custody till the next day.
Acts Twenty 4:4  Many, however, of those who had heard the Apostles' Message became believers in Christ, the number of the men alone amounting to about five thousand.
Acts Twenty 4:5  The next day, a meeting of the leading men, the Councillors, and the Teachers of the Law was held in Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 4:6  There were present Annas the High Priest, Caiaphas, John, Alexander, and all who were of High-Priestly rank.
Acts Twenty 4:7  They had Peter and John brought before them, and questioned them. "By what power," they asked, "Or in whose name have men like you done this thing?"
Acts Twenty 4:8  On this, Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, spoke as follows. "Leaders of the people and Councillors,
Acts Twenty 4:9  Since we are on our trial to-day for a kind act done to a helpless man, and are asked in what way the man here before you has been cured,
Acts Twenty 4:10  Let me tell you all and all the people of Israel, that it is by the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified and whom God raised from the dead--it is, I say, by his Name that this man stands here before you lame no longer.
Acts Twenty 4:11  Jesus is 'the stone which, scorned by you the builders, has yet become the corner stone.'
Acts Twenty 4:12  And Salvation is in him alone; for there is no other Name in the whole world, given to men, to which we must look for our Salvation."
Acts Twenty 4:13  When the Council saw how boldly Peter and John spoke, and found that they were uneducated men of humble station, they were surprised, and realized that they had been companions of Jesus.
Acts Twenty 4:14  But, when they looked at the man who had been healed, standing there with them, they had nothing to say.
Acts Twenty 4:15  So they ordered them out of court, and then began consulting together.
Acts Twenty 4:16  "What are we to do to these men?" they asked one another. "That a remarkable sign has been given through them is obvious to every one living in Jerusalem, and we cannot deny it.
Acts Twenty 4:17  But, to prevent this thing from spreading further among the people, let us warn them not to speak in this Name any more to any one whatever."
Acts Twenty 4:18  So they called the Apostles in, and ordered them not to speak or teach in the Name of Jesus.
Acts Twenty 4:19  But Peter and John replied. "Whether it is right, in the sight of God, to listen to you rather than to him--
Acts Twenty 4:20  Judge for yourselves, for we cannot help speaking of what we have seen and heard."
Acts Twenty 4:21  However, after further warnings, the Council set them at liberty, not seeing any safe way of punishing them, because of the people, for they were all praising God for what had occurred;
Acts Twenty 4:22  For the man who was the subject of this miraculous cure was more than forty years old.
Acts Twenty 4:23  After they had been set at liberty, the Apostles went to their friends and told them what the Chief Priests and the Councillors had said to them.
Acts Twenty 4:24  All who heard their story, moved by a common impulse, raised their voices to God in prayer. "O Sovereign Lord, it is you who has 'made the heavens, the earth, the sea, and everything that is in them,'
Acts Twenty 4:25  And who, by the lips of our ancestor, your servant David, who spoke under the influence of the Holy Spirit, have said--'Why did the nations rage, and the peoples form vain designs?
Acts Twenty 4:26  The kings of the earth set their array, and its rulers gathered together, against the Lord and against his Christ.'
Acts Twenty 4:27  There have indeed gathered together in this city against your holy Servant Jesus, whom you has consecrated the Christ, not Herod and Pontius Pilate only, but the nations and the people of Israel besides--
Acts Twenty 4:28  Yet only to do what thou, by thy power and of thy own will, didst long ago destine to be done.
Acts Twenty 4:29  Now, therefore, O Lord, mark their threats, and enable thy servants, with all fearlessness, to tell thy Message,
Acts Twenty 4:30  While thou stretchest out thy hand to heal, and causest signs and wonders to take place through the Name of thy holy Servant Jesus."
Acts Twenty 4:31  When their prayer was ended, the place in which they were assembled was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to tell God's Message fearlessly.
Acts Twenty 4:32  The whole body of those who had become believers in Christ were of one heart and mind. Not one of them claimed any of his goods as his own, but everything was held for the common use.
Acts Twenty 4:33  The Apostles continued with great power to bear their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and God's blessing rested upon them all abundantly.
Acts Twenty 4:34  Nor was there any one in need among them, for all who were owners of land or houses sold them, and brought the proceeds of the sales
Acts Twenty 4:35  And laid them at the Apostles' feet; and then every one received a share in proportion to his wants.
Acts Twenty 4:36  A Levite of Cyprian birth, named Joseph, (who had received from the Apostles the additional name of 'Barnabas'--which means 'The Consoler,')
Acts Twenty 4:37  Sold a farm that belonged to him, and brought the money and laid it at the Apostles' feet.
Chapter 5
Acts Twenty 5:1  There was, however, a man named Ananias, who, with his wife Sapphira, sold some property,
Acts Twenty 5:2  And, with her connivance, kept back some of the proceeds. He brought only a part and laid it at the Apostles' feet.
Acts Twenty 5:3  "Ananias," Peter exclaimed, "how is it that Satan has so taken possession of your heart that you have lied to the Holy Spirit, and kept back a part of the money paid for the land?
Acts Twenty 5:4  While it was unsold, was not it your own? and after it was sold, was not the money at your own disposal? How did you come to think of such a thing? You have lied, not to men, but to God!"
Acts Twenty 5:5  As Ananias heard these words, he fell down and expired; and every one who heard of it was appalled.
Acts Twenty 5:6  The young men got up, and, winding the body in a sheet, carried it out and buried it.
Acts Twenty 5:7  After an interval of about three hours his wife came in, not knowing what had happened.
Acts Twenty 5:8  "Is it true," Peter asked, addressing her, "that you sold your land for such a sum?" "Yes," she answered, "we did."
Acts Twenty 5:9  Then Peter said. "How did you come to agree to provoke the Spirit of the Lord? Listen! The foot-steps of those who have buried your husband are at the door; and they will carry you out too."
Acts Twenty 5:10  Instantly Sapphira fell down at Peter's feet and expired. On coming in, the young men found her dead; so they carried her out and buried her by her husband's side.
Acts Twenty 5:11  The whole Church and all who heard of these events were appalled.
Acts Twenty 5:12  Many signs and wonders continued to occur among the people, through the instrumentality of the Apostles, whose custom it was to meet all together in the Colonnade of Solomon;
Acts Twenty 5:13  But of the rest no one ventured to join them. On the other hand, the people were full of their praise,
Acts Twenty 5:14  And still larger numbers, both of men and women, as they became believers in the Lord, were added to their number.
Acts Twenty 5:15  The consequence was that people would bring out their sick even into the streets, and lay them on mattresses and mats, in the hope that, as Peter came by, at least his shadow might fall on some one of them.
Acts Twenty 5:16  Besides this, the inhabitants of the towns round Jerusalem flocked into the city, bringing with them their sick and those who were troubled by foul spirits; and they were cured every one.
Acts Twenty 5:17  At this the High Priest was roused to action, and he and all his supporters (who formed the party of the Sadducees), moved by jealousy,
Acts Twenty 5:18  Arrested the Apostles, and had them placed in custody. An angel of the Lord, however, opened the prison doors at night and led them out.
Acts Twenty 5:20  "Go," he said, "and stand in the Temple Courts, and tell the people the whole Message of this new Life."
Acts Twenty 5:21  When they heard this, they went at daybreak into the Temple Courts, and began to teach. The High Priest and his party, on their arrival, summoned the High Council, including all the leading men among the Israelites, and sent to the jail to fetch the Apostles.
Acts Twenty 5:22  But, when the officers got there, they did not find them in the prison; so they returned and reported that,
Acts Twenty 5:23  While they had found the goal barred securely and the guards posted at the doors, yet, on opening them, they had not found any one inside.
Acts Twenty 5:24  When the Officer in charge at the Temple and the Chief Priests heard their story, they were perplexed about the Apostles and as to what all this would lead to.
Acts Twenty 5:25  Presently, however, some one came and told them, that the men whom they had put in prison were actually standing in the Temple Courts, teaching the people.
Acts Twenty 5:26  On this, the Officer went with his men and fetched the Apostles-- without using violence, for they were afraid of being stoned by the people--
Acts Twenty 5:27  And then brought them before the Council. The High Priest demanded an explanation from them.
Acts Twenty 5:28  "We gave you strict orders," he said, "not to teach in this Name. Yet you have actually flooded Jerusalem with your teaching, and you want to make us responsible for the death of this man."
Acts Twenty 5:29  To this Peter and the Apostles replied. "We must obey God rather than men.
Acts Twenty 5:30  The God of our ancestors raised Jesus, whom you put to death by hanging him on a cross.
Acts Twenty 5:31  It is this Jesus whom God has exalted to his right hand, to be a Guide and a Savior, to give Israel repentance and forgiveness of sins.
Acts Twenty 5:32  And we are witness to the truth of this, and so is the Holy Spirit-- the gift of God to those who obey him."
Acts Twenty 5:33  The members of the Council became frantic with rage on hearing this, and were for putting the Apostles to death.
Acts Twenty 5:34  But Gamaliel, a Pharisee, who was a Doctor of the Law and who was held in universal respect, rose in the Council, and directed that the men should be taken out of court for a little while.
Acts Twenty 5:35  He then said. "Men of Israel, take care as to what you intend to do with these men.
Acts Twenty 5:36  For not long ago Theudas appeared, professing to be somebody, and was joined by a body of some four hundred men. But he was killed; and all his followers scattered and dwindled away.
Acts Twenty 5:37  After him, Judas the Galilean appeared at the time of the census, and induced people to follow him; Yet he, too, perished and all his followers were dispersed.
Acts Twenty 5:38  And, in this present case, my advice to you is not to interfere with these men, but to let them alone, for, if their designs and their work are merely of human origin, they will come to an end;
Acts Twenty 5:39  But, if they are of divine origin, you will be powerless to put an end to them--or else you may find yourselves fighting against God!"
Acts Twenty 5:40  The Council followed his advice, and, calling the Apostles in, had them flogged, and then, after cautioning them not to speak in the Name of Jesus, set them free.
Acts Twenty 5:41  But the Apostles left the Council, rejoicing that they had been thought worthy to suffer disgrace for that Name;
Acts Twenty 5:42  And never for a single day, either in the Temple Courts or in private houses, did they cease to teach, or to tell the Good News of Jesus, the Christ.
Chapter 6
Acts Twenty 6:1  About this time, when the number of the disciples was constantly increasing, complaints were made by the Jews of foreign birth against the native Jews, that their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution.
Acts Twenty 6:2  The Twelve, therefore, called together the general body of the disciples and said to them. "It is not well for us to see to the distribution at the tables and neglect God's Message.
Acts Twenty 6:3  Therefore, Brothers, look for seven men of reputation among yourselves, wise and spiritually-minded men, and we will appoint them to attend to this matter;
Acts Twenty 6:4  While we, for our part, will devote ourselves to Prayer, and to the delivery of the Message."
Acts Twenty 6:5  This proposal was unanimously agreed to; and the disciples chose Stephen--a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit--and Philip, Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicholas of Antioch, a former convert to Judaism;
Acts Twenty 6:6  And they brought these men to the Apostles, who, after praying, placed their hands on them.
Acts Twenty 6:7  So God's Message spread, and the number of the disciples continued to increase rapidly in Jerusalem, and a large body of the priests accepted the Faith.
Acts Twenty 6:8  Meanwhile Stephen, divinely helped and strengthened, was showing great wonders and signs among the people.
Acts Twenty 6:9  But some members of the Synagogue known as that of Libertines, Cyrenians, Alexandrians, and Visitors from Cilicia and Roman Asia, were roused to action and began disputing with Stephen;
Acts Twenty 6:10  Yet they were quite unable to withstand the wisdom and the inspiration with which he spoke.
Acts Twenty 6:11  Then they induced some men to assert that they had heard Stephen saying blasphemous things against Moses, and against God;
Acts Twenty 6:12  And they stirred up the people, as well as the Councillors and the Teachers of the Law, and set upon Stephen, and arrested him, and brought him before the High Council.
Acts Twenty 6:13  There they produced witnesses who gave false evidence. "This man," they said, "is incessantly saying things against this Holy Place and the Law;
Acts Twenty 6:14  Indeed, we have heard him declare that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this Place, and change the customs handed down to us by Moses."
Acts Twenty 6:15  The eyes of all the members of the Council were riveted upon Stephen, and they saw his face looking like the face of an angel.
Chapter 7
Acts Twenty 7:2  And, upon that, Stephen spoke as follows. "Brothers and Fathers, hear what I have to say. God, who manifests himself in the Glory, appeared to our ancestor Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, and before he settled in Haran, and said to him--
Acts Twenty 7:3  'Leave your country and your kindred, and come into the country that I will show you.'
Acts Twenty 7:4  On this, Abraham left the country of the Chaldaeans and settled in Haran; and from there, after his father's death, God caused him to migrate into this very country, in which you are now living.
Acts Twenty 7:5  God did not at that time give him any part of it, not even a foot of ground. But he promised to 'give him possession of it and his descendants after him, though at that time he had no child.
Acts Twenty 7:6  God's words were these--'Abraham's descendants shall live in a foreign country, where they will be enslaved and ill-treated for four hundred years.
Acts Twenty 7:7  But I myself will judge the nation, to which they will be enslaved,' God said, 'and after that they shall leave the country and worship me in this place.'
Acts Twenty 7:8  Then God made with Abraham the Covenant of Circumcision; and under it Abraham became the father of Isaac, and circumcised him when he was eight days old; and Isaac became the father of Jacob; and Jacob of the Twelve Patriarchs.
Acts Twenty 7:9  The Patriarchs, out of jealousy, sold Joseph into slavery in Egypt; but God was with him,
Acts Twenty 7:10  And delivered him out of all his troubles, and enabled him to win favor and show wisdom before Pharaoh, King of Egypt, who appointed him Governor of Egypt and of his whole household.
Acts Twenty 7:11  Then a famine spread over the whole of Egypt and Canaan, causing great distress, and our ancestors could find no food.
Acts Twenty 7:12  Hearing, however, that there was corn in Egypt, Jacob sent our ancestors there on their first visit.
Acts Twenty 7:13  In the course of their second visit, Joseph revealed himself to his brothers, and his family became known to Pharaoh.
Acts Twenty 7:14  Then Joseph sent an urgent invitation to his father Jacob and to his relations, seventy-five persons in all;
Acts Twenty 7:15  And so Jacob went down into Egypt. There he died, and our ancestors also,
Acts Twenty 7:16  And their bodies were removed to Shechem, and laid in the tomb which Abraham had bought for a sum of money from the sons of Hamor in Shechem.
Acts Twenty 7:17  As the time drew near for the fulfillment of the promise which God had made to Abraham, the people increased largely in numbers in Egypt,
Acts Twenty 7:18  Until a new king, who knew nothing of Joseph, came to the throne.
Acts Twenty 7:19  This king acted deceitfully towards our race and ill-treated our ancestors, making them abandon their own infants, so that they should not be reared.
Acts Twenty 7:20  It was just at this time that Moses was born. He was an exceedingly beautiful child, and for three months was brought up in his own father's house;
Acts Twenty 7:21  And, when he was abandoned, the daughter of Pharaoh found him and brought him up as her own son.
Acts Twenty 7:22  So Moses was educated in all the learning of the Egyptians, and proved his ability both by his words and actions.
Acts Twenty 7:23  When he was in his fortieth year, he resolved to visit his brother Israelites;
Acts Twenty 7:24  And, seeing an Israelite ill-treated, he defended him, and avenged the man, who was being wronged, by striking down the Egyptian.
Acts Twenty 7:25  He thought his brothers would understand that God was using him to save them; but they failed to do so.
Acts Twenty 7:26  The next day he again appeared upon the scene, when some of them were fighting, and tried to make peace between them. 'Men,' he said, 'you are brothers; how is it that you are ill-treating one another?'
Acts Twenty 7:27  But the man who was ill-treating his fellow workman pushed Moses aside saying--'Who made you a ruler and judge over us?
Acts Twenty 7:28  Do you mean to make away with me as you did yesterday with that Egyptian?'
Acts Twenty 7:29  At these words Moses took to flight, and became an exile in Midian; and there he had two sons born to him.
Acts Twenty 7:30  Forty years had passed when there appeared to him, in the Desert of Mount Sinai, an angel in a flame of fire in a bush.
Acts Twenty 7:31  When Moses saw it, he was astonished at the vision; but on his going nearer to look at it more closely, the voice of the Lord was heard to say--
Acts Twenty 7:32  'I am the God of your ancestors, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.' Moses trembled, and did not dare to look.
Acts Twenty 7:33  Then the Lord said to him--'Take your sandals off your feet, for the spot where you are standing is holy ground.
Acts Twenty 7:34  I have seen the oppression of my people who are in Egypt, and heard their groans, and I have come down to deliver them. Come now and I will send you into Egypt.'
Acts Twenty 7:35  This same Moses, whom they had disowned with the words--'Who made you a ruler and a judge?' was the very man whom God sent to be both a ruler and a deliverer, under the guidance of the angel that had appeared to him in the bush.
Acts Twenty 7:36  He it was who led them out, after he had shown wonders and signs in Egypt, in the Red Sea, and in the Desert during forty years.
Acts Twenty 7:37  This was the Moses who said to the people of Israel--'God will raise up for you, from among your brothers, a Prophet, as he raised up me.'
Acts Twenty 7:38  He, too, it was who was present at the assembly in the Desert, with the angel who talked to him on Mount Sinai, and with our ancestors, and who received living truths to impart to you.
Acts Twenty 7:39  Yet our ancestors refused him obedience; more than that, they rejected him, and in their hearts turned back to Egypt,
Acts Twenty 7:40  While they said to Aaron--'Make us Gods who will lead the way for us, since, as for this Moses who has brought us out of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him.'
Acts Twenty 7:41  That was the time when they made the Calf and offered sacrifice to their idol, and held festivities in honor of their own handiwork!
Acts Twenty 7:42  So God turned from them and left them to the worship of the Starry Host, as is written in the Book of the Prophets--'Did you offer victims and sacrifices to me, O House of Israel, all those forty years in the Desert?
Acts Twenty 7:43  You took with you the tabernacle of Moloch and the Star of the god Rephan--the images which you had made to worship. Therefore I will exile you beyond Babylon.'
Acts Twenty 7:44  Our ancestors had the Tabernacle of Revelation in the Desert, constructed, just as he who spoke to Moses had directed him to make it, after the model which he had seen.
Acts Twenty 7:45  This Tabernacle, which was handed down to them, was brought into this country by our ancestors who accompanied Joshua (at the conquest of the nations that God drove out before their advance), and remained here until the time of David.
Acts Twenty 7:46  David found favor with God, and prayed that he might find a dwelling for the God of Jacob.
Acts Twenty 7:48  Yet it is not in buildings made by hands that the Most High dwells. As the Prophet says--
Acts Twenty 7:49  'The heavens are a throne for me, and the earth a stool for my feet. What manner of House will you build me, says the Lord, or what place is there where I may rest?
Acts Twenty 7:50  Was it not my hand that made all these things?'
Acts Twenty 7:51  O! stubborn race, heathen in heart and ears, you are for ever resisting the Holy Spirit; your ancestors did it, and you are doing it still.
Acts Twenty 7:52  Which of the Prophets escaped persecution at their hands? They killed those who foretold the coming of the Righteous One; of whom you, in your turn, have now become the betrayers and murderers--
Acts Twenty 7:53  You who received the Law as transmitted by angels and yet failed to keep it."
Acts Twenty 7:54  As they listened to this, the Council grew frantic with rage, and gnashed their teeth at Stephen.
Acts Twenty 7:55  He, filled as he was with the Holy Spirit, fixed his eyes intently on the heavens, and saw the Glory of God and Jesus standing at God's right hand.
Acts Twenty 7:56  "Look," he exclaimed, "I see Heaven open and the Son of Man standing at God's right hand!"
Acts Twenty 7:57  At this, with a loud shout, they stopped their ears and all rushed upon him, forced him outside the city,
Acts Twenty 7:58  And began to stone him, the witnesses laying their clothes at the feet of a young man named Saul.
Acts Twenty 7:59  And they stoned Stephen, while he cried to the Lord. "Lord Jesus! receive my spirit!"
Acts Twenty 7:60  Falling on his knees, he called out loudly. "Lord! do not charge them with this sin;" and with these words he fell asleep.
Chapter 8
Acts Twenty 8:1  Saul approved of his being put to death. On that very day a great persecution broke out against the Church which was in Jerusalem; and its members, with the exception of the Apostles, were all scattered over the districts of Judea and Samaria.
Acts Twenty 8:2  Some religious men buried Stephen, with loud lamentations for him.
Acts Twenty 8:3  But Saul began to devastate the Church; he entered house after house, dragged out men and women alike, and threw them into prison.
Acts Twenty 8:4  Now those who were scattered in different directions went from place to place proclaiming the Good News.
Acts Twenty 8:5  Philip went down to the city of Samaria, and there began to preach the Christ.
Acts Twenty 8:6  The people, one and all, listened attentively to what Philip told them, when they heard of, and saw, the miracles which he was working.
Acts Twenty 8:7  For there were many instances of people with foul spirits, where the spirits, with loud screams, came out of them;
Acts Twenty 8:8  And many who were paralyzed or lame were cured, so that there was great rejoicing throughout that city.
Acts Twenty 8:9  There was staying in the city a man named Simon, who had been practicing magic there and mystifying the Samaritan people, giving himself out to be some great Being.
Acts Twenty 8:10  Every one, high and low, paid attention to him. 'This man,' they used to say, 'must be that Power of God which men call "The Great Power."'
Acts Twenty 8:11  And they paid attention to him because they had for a long time been mystified by his magic arts.
Acts Twenty 8:12  However, when they came to believe Philip, as he told them the Good News about the Kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women.
Acts Twenty 8:13  Even Simon believed, and after his baptism attached himself to Philip, and was in his turn mystified at seeing signs and great miracles constantly occurring.
Acts Twenty 8:14  When the Apostles at Jerusalem heard that the Samaritans had welcomed God's Message, they sent Peter and John to them;
Acts Twenty 8:15  And they, on their arrival, prayed that the Samaritans might receive the Holy Spirit.
Acts Twenty 8:16  (As yet the Spirit had not descended upon any of them; they had only been baptized into the Faith of the Lord Jesus).
Acts Twenty 8:17  Then Peter and John placed their hands on them, and they received the Holy Spirit.
Acts Twenty 8:18  When Simon saw that it was through the placing of the Apostles' hands on them that the Spirit was given, he brought them a sum of money and said.
Acts Twenty 8:19  "Give me also this power of yours, so that, if I place my hands upon any one, he may receive the Holy Spirit."
Acts Twenty 8:20  "A curse upon you and upon your money," Peter exclaimed, "for thinking that God's free gift can be bought with gold!
Acts Twenty 8:21  You have no share or part in our Message, for your 'heart is not right with God.'
Acts Twenty 8:22  Therefore repent of this wickedness of yours, and pray to the Lord, that, if possible, you may be forgiven for such a thought;
Acts Twenty 8:23  For I see that you have fallen into the 'bitterness of envy' and the 'fetters of sin.'"
Acts Twenty 8:24  "Pray to the Lord for me, all of you," Simon answered, "so that none of the things you have spoken of may befall me."
Acts Twenty 8:25  Peter and John, having borne their testimony and delivered the Lord's Message, returned to Jerusalem, telling the Good News, as they went, in many Samaritan villages.
Acts Twenty 8:26  Meanwhile an angel of the Lord had said to Philip. "Set out on a journey southwards, along the road that runs down from Jerusalem to Gaza."
Acts Twenty 8:27  So Philip set out on a journey; and on his way he came upon an official of high rank, in the service of Candace, Queen of the Abyssinians. He was her treasurer, and had been to Jerusalem to worship,
Acts Twenty 8:28  And was now on his way home, sitting in his carriage and reading the Prophet Isaiah.
Acts Twenty 8:29  The Spirit said to Philip. "Go up to the carriage yonder and keep close to it."
Acts Twenty 8:30  So Philip ran up, and he heard the Abyssinian reading the Prophet Isaiah. "Do you understand what you are reading?" he asked.
Acts Twenty 8:31  "How can I," the other answered, "unless some one will explain it to me?" and he invited Philip to get up and sit by his side.
Acts Twenty 8:32  The passage of Scripture which he was reading was this--'Like a sheep, he was led away to slaughter, and as a lamb is dumb in the hands of its shearer, so he refrains from opening his lips.
Acts Twenty 8:33  In his lowly condition justice was denied him. Who will tell the story of his generation? For his life is cut off from earth.'
Acts Twenty 8:34  "Now," said the Treasurer, addressing Philip, "tell me, of whom is the Prophet speaking? Of himself, or of some one else?"
Acts Twenty 8:35  Then Philip began, and, taking this passage as his text, told him the Good News about Jesus.
Acts Twenty 8:36  Presently, as they were going along the road, they came to some water, and the Treasurer exclaimed. "Look! here is water; what is to prevent my being baptized?"
Acts Twenty 8:38  So he ordered the carriage to stop, and they went down into the water--both Philip and the Treasurer--and Philip baptized him.
Acts Twenty 8:39  But, when they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught Philip away, and the Treasurer saw no more of him; for he continued his journey with a joyful heart.
Acts Twenty 8:40  But Philip was found at Ashdod, and, as he went on his way, he told the Good News in all the towns through which he passed, till he came to Caesarea.
Chapter 9
Acts Twenty 9:1  Meanwhile Saul, still breathing murderous threats against the disciples of the Lord, went to the High Priest,
Acts Twenty 9:2  And asked him to give him letters to the Jewish congregations at Damascus, authorizing him, if he found there any supporters of the Cause, whether men or women, to have them put in chains and brought to Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 9:3  While on his journey, as he was nearing Damascus, suddenly a light from the heavens flashed around him.
Acts Twenty 9:4  He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him--"Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?"
Acts Twenty 9:5  "Who are you, Lord?" he asked. "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting," the voice answered;
Acts Twenty 9:6  "Yet stand up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do."
Acts Twenty 9:7  The men traveling with Saul were meanwhile standing speechless; they heard the sound of the voice, but saw no one.
Acts Twenty 9:8  When Saul got up from the ground, though his eyes were open, he could see nothing. So his men led him by the hand, and brought him into Damascus;
Acts Twenty 9:9  And for three days he was unable to see, and took nothing either to eat or to drink.
Acts Twenty 9:10  Now there was at Damascus a disciple named Ananias, to whom, in a vision, the Lord said. "Ananias." "Yes, Lord," he answered.
Acts Twenty 9:11  "Go at once," said the Lord, "to the 'Straight Street',and ask at Judas's house for a man named Saul, from Tarsus. He is at this moment praying,
Acts Twenty 9:12  And he has seen, in a vision, a man named Ananias coming in and placing his hands on him, so that he may recover his sight."
Acts Twenty 9:13  "Lord," exclaimed Ananias, "I have heard from many people about this man--how much harm he has done at Jerusalem to your People there.
Acts Twenty 9:14  And, here, too, he holds authority from the Chief Priests to put in chains all those who invoke your Name."
Acts Twenty 9:15  But the Lord said to him. "Go, for this man is my chosen instrument to uphold my Name before the Gentiles and their kings, and the people of Israel.
Acts Twenty 9:16  I will myself show him all that he has to suffer for my Name."
Acts Twenty 9:17  So Ananias went, entered the house, and, placing his hands on Saul, said. "Saul, my Brother, I have been sent by the Lord--by Jesus, who appeared to you on your way here--so that you may recover your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit."
Acts Twenty 9:18  Instantly it seemed as if a film fell from Saul's eyes, and his sight was restored. Then he got up and was baptized,
Acts Twenty 9:19  And, after he had taken food, he felt his strength return. Saul stayed for some days with the disciples who were at Damascus,
Acts Twenty 9:20  And at once began in the Synagogues to proclaim Jesus as the Son of God.
Acts Twenty 9:21  All who heard him were amazed. "Is not this," they asked, "the man who worked havoc in Jerusalem among those that invoke this Name, and who had also come here for the express purpose of having such persons put in chains and taken before the Chief Priests?"
Acts Twenty 9:22  Saul's influence, however, kept steadily increasing, and he confounded the Jews who lived in Damascus by the proofs that he gave that Jesus was the Christ.
Acts Twenty 9:23  After some time the Jews laid a plot to kill Saul,
Acts Twenty 9:24  But it became known to him. They even watched the gates day and night, to kill him;
Acts Twenty 9:25  But his disciples let him down by night through an opening in the wall, lowering him in a basket.
Acts Twenty 9:26  On his arrival in Jerusalem, Saul attempted to join the disciples, but they were all afraid of him, as they did not believe that he was really a disciple.
Acts Twenty 9:27  Barnabas, however, taking him by the hand, brought him to the Apostles, and told them the whole story of how Saul on his journey had seen the Lord, and how the Lord had talked to him, and how in Damascus he had spoken out fearlessly in the Name of Jesus.
Acts Twenty 9:28  After that, Saul remained in Jerusalem, in close intercourse with the Apostles; and he spoke fearlessly in the Name of the Lord,
Acts Twenty 9:29  Talking and arguing with the Jews of foreign birth, who, however, made attempts to kill him.
Acts Twenty 9:30  But, when the Brethren found this out, they took him down to Caesarea, and sent him on his way to Tarsus.
Acts Twenty 9:31  And so it came about that the Church, throughout Judea, Galilee, and Samaria, enjoyed peace and became firmly established; and, ordering its life by reverence for the Lord and the help of the Holy Spirit, it increased in numbers.
Acts Twenty 9:32  Peter, while traveling from place to place throughout the country, went down to visit the People of Christ living at Lydda.
Acts Twenty 9:33  There he found a man named Aeneas, who had been bed-ridden for eight years with paralysis.
Acts Twenty 9:34  "Aeneas," Peter said to him, "Jesus Christ cures you. Get up, and make your bed." Aeneas got up at once;
Acts Twenty 9:35  And all the inhabitants of Lydda and of the Plain of Sharon saw him, and came over to the Lord's side.
Acts Twenty 9:36  At Jaffa there lived a disciple whose name was Tabitha, which is in Greek 'Dorcas'--a Gazelle. Her life was spent in doing kind and charitable actions.
Acts Twenty 9:37  Just at that time she was taken ill, and died; and they had washed her body and laid it out in an upstairs room.
Acts Twenty 9:38  Jaffa was near Lydda, and the disciples, having heard that Peter was at Lydda, sent two men with the request that he would come on to them without delay.
Acts Twenty 9:39  Peter returned with them at once. On his arrival, he was taken upstairs, and all the widows came round him in tears, showing the coats and other clothing which Dorcas had made while she was among them.
Acts Twenty 9:40  But Peter sent everybody out of the room, and knelt down and prayed. Then, turning to the body, he said. "Tabitha! stand up." She opened her eyes, and, seeing Peter, sat up.
Acts Twenty 9:41  Giving her his hand, Peter raised her up, and, calling in the widows and others of Christ's People, presented her to them alive.
Acts Twenty 9:42  This became known all through Jaffa, and numbers of People came to believe in the Lord.
Acts Twenty 9:43  And Peter stayed some days at Jaffa with a tanner named Simon.
Chapter 10
Acts Twenty 10:1  There was then in Caesarea a man named Cornelius, a Captain in the regiment known as the 'Italian Regiment,'
Acts Twenty 10:2  A religious man and one who reverenced God, with all his household. He was liberal in his charities to the people, and prayed to God constantly.
Acts Twenty 10:3  One afternoon, about three o'clock, he distinctly saw in a vision an angel from God come to him, and call him by name.
Acts Twenty 10:4  Cornelius fixed his eyes on him and, in great alarm, said. "What is it, Lord?" "Your prayers and your charities," the angel answered, "have been an acceptable offering to God.
Acts Twenty 10:5  And now, send messengers to Jaffa and fetch a man called Simon, who is also known as Peter.
Acts Twenty 10:6  He is lodging with a tanner named Simon, who has a house near the sea."
Acts Twenty 10:7  When the angel, who had spoken to him, had gone, Cornelius called two menservants and a religious soldier, who was one of his constant attendants,
Acts Twenty 10:8  And, after telling them the whole story, sent them to Jaffa.
Acts Twenty 10:9  On the next day, while these men were on their way, just as they were nearing the town, Peter went up on the housetop about mid-day to pray.
Acts Twenty 10:10  He became hungry and wanted something to eat; but while it was being prepared, he fell into a trance,
Acts Twenty 10:11  And saw that the heavens were open, and that something like a great sail was descending, let down by its four corners towards the earth.
Acts Twenty 10:12  In it were all kinds of quadrupeds, reptiles, and birds.
Acts Twenty 10:13  Then he was aware of a voice which said--"Stand up, Peter, kill something, and eat."
Acts Twenty 10:14  "No, Lord, I cannot," answered Peter, "for I have never eaten anything 'defiled' and 'unclean'."
Acts Twenty 10:15  Again he was aware of a voice which said--"What God has pronounced 'clean',do not regard as 'defiled'."
Acts Twenty 10:16  This happened three times, and then suddenly it was all taken up into the heavens.
Acts Twenty 10:17  While Peter was still perplexed as to the meaning of the vision that he had seen, the men sent by Cornelius, having enquired the way to Simon's house, came up to the gate,
Acts Twenty 10:18  And called out and asked if the Simon, who was also known as Peter, was lodging there.
Acts Twenty 10:19  Peter was still pondering over the vision, when the Spirit said to him. "There are two men looking for you at this moment.
Acts Twenty 10:20  Go down at once and do not hesitate to go with them, for I have sent them."
Acts Twenty 10:21  Peter went down to the men and said. "I am the man for whom you are looking. What is your reason for coming?"
Acts Twenty 10:22  The men replied. "Our captain, Cornelius, a pious man who reverences God and is well spoken of by the whole Jewish nation, has been instructed by a holy angel to send for you to his house, and to listen to what you have to say."
Acts Twenty 10:23  Upon this Peter invited them in and entertained them. The next day he lost no time in setting out with them, accompanied by some of the Brethren from Jaffa;
Acts Twenty 10:24  And the day following he entered Caesarea. Cornelius was expecting them, and had invited his relations and intimate friends to meet them.
Acts Twenty 10:25  So, when Peter entered the city, Cornelius met him, and, throwing himself at Peter's feet, bowed to the ground.
Acts Twenty 10:26  Peter, however, lifted him up, saying as he did so. "Stand up, I am only a man like yourself."
Acts Twenty 10:27  Talking with him as he went, Peter entered the house, where he found a large gathering of people, to whom he said.
Acts Twenty 10:28  "You are doubtless aware that it is forbidden for a Jew to be intimate with a foreigner, or even to enter his house; and yet God has shown me that I ought not to call any man 'defiled' or 'unclean.'
Acts Twenty 10:29  That was why I came, when I was sent for, without raising any objection. And now I ask your reason for sending for me."
Acts Twenty 10:30  "Just three days ago this very hour," Cornelius said, "I was in my house, saying the Afternoon Prayers, when a man in dazzling clothing suddenly stood before me.
Acts Twenty 10:31  'Cornelius,' he said, 'your prayer has been heard, and your charities have been accepted, by God.
Acts Twenty 10:32  Therefore send to Jaffa, and invite the Simon, who is also known as Peter, to come here. He is lodging in the house of Simon the tanner, near the sea.'
Acts Twenty 10:33  Accordingly I sent to you at once, and you have been so good as to come. And now we are all here in the presence of God, to listen to all that you have been instructed by the Lord to say."
Acts Twenty 10:34  Then Peter began. "I see, beyond all doubt," he said, "that 'God does not show partiality,'
Acts Twenty 10:35  But that in every nation he who reverences him and does what is right is acceptable to him.
Acts Twenty 10:36  God has sent his Message to the Israelites and told them, through Jesus Christ, the Good News of peace--and Jesus is Lord of all!
Acts Twenty 10:37  You yourselves know the story which spread through all Judea, how, beginning form Galilee, after the baptism which John proclaimed--
Acts Twenty 10:38  The story, I mean, of Jesus of Nazareth, and how God consecrated him his Christ by enduing him with the Holy Spirit and with power; and how he went about doing good and curing all who were under the power of the Devil, because God was with him.
Acts Twenty 10:39  We are ourselves, too, witnesses to all that he did in Judea and in Jerusalem; yet they put him to death by hanging him on a cross!
Acts Twenty 10:40  This Jesus God raised on the third day, and enabled him to appear,
Acts Twenty 10:41  Not indeed to every one, but to witnesses chosen beforehand by God-- to us, who ate and drank with him after his resurrection from the dead.
Acts Twenty 10:42  Further, God charged us to proclaim to the people, and solemnly affirm, that it is Jesus who has been appointed by God Judge of the living and the dead.
Acts Twenty 10:43  To him it is that all the Prophets bear witness, when they say that every one who believes in him receives through his Name forgiveness of sins."
Acts Twenty 10:44  Before Peter had finished saying these words, the Holy Spirit fell on all who were listening to the Message.
Acts Twenty 10:45  Those converts from Judaism, who had come with Peter, were amazed that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been bestowed even upon the Gentiles;
Acts Twenty 10:46  For they heard them speaking with 'tongues' and extolling God. At this Peter asked.
Acts Twenty 10:47  "Can any one refuse the water for the baptism of these people, now that they have received the Holy Spirit as we did ourselves?"
Acts Twenty 10:48  And he directed that they should be baptized in the Faith of Jesus Christ; after which they asked him to stay there a few days longer.
Chapter 11
Acts Twenty 11:1  The Apostles and the Brethren throughout Judea heard that even the Gentiles had welcomed God's Message.
Acts Twenty 11:2  But, when Peter went up to Jerusalem, those who were converts from Judaism began to attack him,
Acts Twenty 11:3  On the ground that he had visited people who were not circumcised, and had taken meals with them.
Acts Twenty 11:4  So Peter began to relate the facts to them as they had occurred.
Acts Twenty 11:5  "I was in the town of Jaffa," he said, "and was praying; and, while in a trance, I saw a vision. There was something like a great sail descending, let down by its four corners out of the heavens; and it came right down to me.
Acts Twenty 11:6  Looking intently at it, I began to distinguish quadrupeds, wild beasts, reptiles, and birds;
Acts Twenty 11:7  And I also heard a voice saying to me--'Stand up, Peter, kill something and eat.'
Acts Twenty 11:8  'No, Lord, I cannot,' I answered, 'for nothing 'defiled' or 'unclean' has ever passed my lips.'
Acts Twenty 11:9  Then a second time there came a voice from the heavens. "What God has pronounced 'clean',"it said, "you must not call 'defiled'."
Acts Twenty 11:10  This happened three times, and then all was drawn up again into the heavens.
Acts Twenty 11:11  At that moment three men, who had been sent from Caesarea to see me, came up to the house in which we were.
Acts Twenty 11:12  The Spirit told me to go with them without hesitation. These six Brothers also went with me. And, when we came into the man's house,
Acts Twenty 11:13  He told us how he had seen the angel standing in his house, and how the angel had said to him--'Send to Jaffa and fetch the Simon, who is also known as Peter;
Acts Twenty 11:14  For he will tell you truths, which will prove the means of Salvation to you and all your household.'
Acts Twenty 11:15  I had but just begun to speak," continued Peter, "when the Holy Spirit fell on them, exactly as on us at the first;
Acts Twenty 11:16  And I recalled the saying of the Master--'John baptized with water, but you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.'
Acts Twenty 11:17  Since then, God had given them the very same gift as he gave us when we became believers in Jesus Christ the Master--who was I that I could thwart God?"
Acts Twenty 11:18  On hearing this statement, they said no more, but broke out into praise of God. "So even to the Gentiles," they exclaimed, "God has granted the repentance which leads to Life!"
Acts Twenty 11:19  Now those who had been scattered in different directions, in consequence of the persecution that followed upon the death of Stephen, went as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Antioch, telling the Message--but only to Jews.
Acts Twenty 11:20  Some of them, however, who were men of Cyprus and Cyrene, on coming to Antioch, addressed themselves also to the Jews of foreign birth, telling them the Good News about that Lord Jesus.
Acts Twenty 11:21  The power of the Lord was with them, so that a great number who had learned to believe came over to the Lord's side.
Acts Twenty 11:22  The news about them reached the ears of the Church at Jerusalem, and they sent Barnabas to Antioch.
Acts Twenty 11:23  On coming there he saw to his great joy these tokens of the loving- kindness of God, and encouraged them all to make up their minds to be faithful to the Lord--
Acts Twenty 11:24  For Barnabas was a good man and full of the Holy Spirit and of faith- -and a large number of people took their stand on the Lord's side.
Acts Twenty 11:25  Afterwards Barnabas left for Tarsus to look for Saul;
Acts Twenty 11:26  And, when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch. And so it came about that, for a whole year, they attended the meetings of the Church there, and taught a large number of people; and it was in Antioch that the disciples were first called 'Christians.'
Acts Twenty 11:27  During this time, some Prophets came to Antioch from Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 11:28  One of them, named Agabus, came forward and, under the influence of the Spirit, foretold a great famine that was to spread over all the world--a famine which occurred in the reign of Claudius.
Acts Twenty 11:29  So the disciples, without exception, determined, in proportion to their means, to send something to help the Brethren living in Judea.
Acts Twenty 11:30  And this they did, sending it to the Officers of the Church by the hands of Barnabas and Saul.
Chapter 12
Acts Twenty 12:1  It was at that time that King Herod began to ill-treat some of the members of the Church.
Acts Twenty 12:3  And, when he saw that the Jews were pleased with this, he proceeded to arrest Peter also. (This was during the Festival of the Unleavened Bread.)
Acts Twenty 12:4  After seizing Peter, Herod put him in prison, and entrusted him to the keeping of four Guards of four soldiers each, intending, after the Passover, to bring him up before the people.
Acts Twenty 12:5  So Peter was kept in prison, but meanwhile the prayers of the Church were being earnestly offered to God on his behalf.
Acts Twenty 12:6  Just when Herod was intending to bring him before the people, on that very night Peter was asleep between two soldiers, chained to them both, while there were sentries in front of the door, guarding the prison.
Acts Twenty 12:7  Suddenly an angel of the Lord stood by him, and a light shone in the cell. The angel struck Peter on the side, and roused him with the words. "Get up quickly."
Acts Twenty 12:8  The chains dropped from his wrists, and then the angel said. "Put on your girdle and sandals." When Peter had done so, the angel added. "Throw your cloak round you and follow me."
Acts Twenty 12:9  Peter followed him out, not knowing that what was happening under the angel's guidance was real, but thinking that he was seeing a vision.
Acts Twenty 12:10  Passing the first Guard, and then the second, they came to the iron gate leading into the city, which opened to them of itself; and, when they had passed through that, and had walked along one street, all at once the angel left him.
Acts Twenty 12:11  Then Peter came to himself and said. "Now I know beyond all doubt that the Lord has sent his angel, and has rescued me from Herod's hands and from all that the Jewish people have been expecting."
Acts Twenty 12:12  As soon as he realized what had happened, he went to the house of Mary, the mother of John who was also known as Mark, where a number of people were gathered together, praying.
Acts Twenty 12:13  On his knocking at the door in the gate, a maidservant, named Rhoda, came to answer it.
Acts Twenty 12:14  She recognized Peter's voice, but in her joy left the gate unopened, and ran in, and told them that Peter was standing outside.
Acts Twenty 12:15  "You are mad!" they exclaimed. But, when she persisted that it was so, they said. "It must be his spirit!"
Acts Twenty 12:16  Meanwhile Peter went on knocking, and, when they opened the gate and saw him, they were amazed.
Acts Twenty 12:17  Peter signed to them with his hand to be silent, and then told them how the Lord had brought him out of the prison, adding. "Tell James and the Brethren all this." Then he left the house, and went away to another place.
Acts Twenty 12:18  In the morning there was a great stir among the soldiers--what could have become of Peter!
Acts Twenty 12:19  And, when Herod had made further search for him and failed to find him, he closely questioned the Guard, and ordered them away to execution. Then he went down from Judea to stay at Caesarea.
Acts Twenty 12:20  It happened that Herod was deeply offended with the people of Tyre and Sidon, but they went in a body to him, and, having succeeded in winning over Blastus, the Chamberlain, they begged Herod for a reconciliation, because their country was dependent on the King's for its food-supply.
Acts Twenty 12:21  On an appointed day Herod, wearing his state-robes, seated himself on his throne, and delivered an oration.
Acts Twenty 12:22  The people kept shouting. "It is the voice of God, and not of a man!"
Acts Twenty 12:23  Instantly an angel of the Lord struck him, because he did not give God the glory; and he was attacked with worms, and died.
Acts Twenty 12:24  Meanwhile the Lord's Message kept extending, and spreading far and wide.
Acts Twenty 12:25  When Barnabas and Saul had carried out their mission, they returned to Jerusalem, and took with them John, who was also known as Mark.
Chapter 13
Acts Twenty 13:1  Among the members of the Church at Antioch there were several Prophets and Teachers--Barnabas, Simeon who was known by the name of 'Black',Lucius of Cyrene, Manaen, foster-brother of Prince Herod, and Saul.
Acts Twenty 13:2  While they were engaged in the worship of the Lord and were fasting, the Holy Spirit said. "Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul, for the work to which I have called them."
Acts Twenty 13:3  Accordingly, after fasting and prayer, they placed their hands on them and dismissed them.
Acts Twenty 13:4  Barnabas and Saul, sent on this mission, as they were, by the Holy Spirit, went down to Seleucia, and from there sailed to Cyprus.
Acts Twenty 13:5  On reaching Salamis, they began to tell the Message of God in the Jewish Synagogues; and they had John with them as an assistant.
Acts Twenty 13:6  After passing through the whole island, they reached Paphos, where they found an astrologer who pretended to be a Prophet--a Jew by birth, whose name was Barjoshua.
Acts Twenty 13:7  He was at the court of the Governor, Sergius Paulus, a man of intelligence, who sent for Barnabas and Saul and asked to be told God's Message.
Acts Twenty 13:8  But Elymas, the astrologer (for that is the meaning of the word), opposed them, eager to divert the Governor's attention from the Faith.
Acts Twenty 13:9  However, Saul, full of the Holy Spirit, fixed his eyes on him and said.
Acts Twenty 13:10  "You incarnation of deceit and all fraud! You son of the Devil! You opponent of all that is good! Will you never cease to divert 'the straight paths of the Lord'?Listen!
Acts Twenty 13:11  The hand of the Lord is upon you even now, and you will be blind for a time and unable to see the sun." Immediately a mist and darkness fell upon him, and he went feeling about for some one to guide him.
Acts Twenty 13:12  When the Governor saw what had happened, he became a believer in Christ, being greatly impressed by the teaching about the Lord.
Acts Twenty 13:13  After this, Paul and his companions set sail from Paphos and went to Perga in Pamphylia, where John left them and returned to Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 13:14  The others went on from Perga and arrived at Antioch in Pisidia. There they went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath and took their seats.
Acts Twenty 13:15  After the reading of the Law and the Prophets, the President of the Synagogue sent them this message--"Brothers, if you have any helpful words to address to the people, now is the time to speak."
Acts Twenty 13:16  So Paul rose and, motioning with his hand, spoke as follows. "Men of Israel and all here who reverence God, hear what I have to say.
Acts Twenty 13:17  The God of this people Israel chose our ancestors, and during their stay in Egypt increased the prosperity of the people, and then 'with uplifted arm brought them out from that land.'
Acts Twenty 13:18  For about forty years 'he bore with them in the Desert';
Acts Twenty 13:19  Then, after destroying seven heathen nations in Canaan, he allotted their land to this people--
Acts Twenty 13:20  For about four hundred and fifty years. In later times he gave them Judges, of whom the Prophet Samuel was the last.
Acts Twenty 13:21  And, when they demanded a king, God gave them Saul the son of Kish, a man of the tribe of Benjamin, who reigned for forty years.
Acts Twenty 13:22  After removing him, he raised David to the throne, and bore this testimony to him--'In David, the son of Jesse, I have found a man after my own heart, who will carry out all my purposes.'
Acts Twenty 13:23  It was from this man's descendants that God, in accordance with his promise, gave Israel a Savior--Jesus;
Acts Twenty 13:24  John having first proclaimed, before the appearance of Jesus, a baptism upon repentance for all the people of Israel.
Acts Twenty 13:25  As John was drawing towards the end of his career, he said what do you suppose that I am? I am not the Christ. But there is "One Coming" after me, whose very sandal I am not worthy to untie.'
Acts Twenty 13:26  Brothers, descendants of Abraham, and all those among you who reverence God, it was to us that the Message of this Salvation was sent.
Acts Twenty 13:27  The people of Jerusalem and their leading men, failing to recognize Jesus, and not understanding the utterances of the Prophets that are read every Sabbath, fulfilled them by condemning him.
Acts Twenty 13:28  They found no ground at all for putting him to death, and yet demanded his execution from Pilate;
Acts Twenty 13:29  And, after carrying out everything written about him, they took Jesus down from the cross, and laid him in a tomb.
Acts Twenty 13:31  And he appeared for many days to those who had gone up with him from Galilee to Jerusalem, and who are now witnesses for him to the people.
Acts Twenty 13:32  We also have good news to tell you, about the promise made to our ancestors--
Acts Twenty 13:33  That our children have had this promise completely fulfilled to them by God, by his raising Jesus. That is just what is said in the second Psalm--'Thou art my Son; this day I have become thy Father.'
Acts Twenty 13:34  As to his raising Jesus from the dead, never again to return to corruption, this is what is said--'I will give to you the sacred promises made to David;'
Acts Twenty 13:35  And, therefore, in another Psalm it is said--'Thou wilt not give up the Holy One to undergo corruption.'
Acts Twenty 13:36  David, after obediently doing God's will in his own time, 'fell asleep and was laid by the side of his ancestors, and did undergo corruption;
Acts Twenty 13:37  But Jesus, whom God raised from the dead, did not undergo corruption.
Acts Twenty 13:38  I would, therefore, have you know, brothers, that through Jesus forgiveness of sins is being proclaimed to you,
Acts Twenty 13:39  And that, in union with him, every one who believes in him is absolved from every sin from which under the Law of Moses you could not be absolved.
Acts Twenty 13:40  Beware, therefore, that what is said in the Prophets does not come true of you--
Acts Twenty 13:41  'Look, you despisers, and wonder, and perish; for I am doing a deed in your days--a deed which, though told you in full, you will never believe'."
Acts Twenty 13:42  As Paul and Barnabas were leaving the Synagogue, the people begged for a repetition of this teaching on the next Sabbath.
Acts Twenty 13:43  After the congregation had dispersed, many of the Jews, and of the converts who joined in their worship, followed Paul and Barnabas, who talked with them and urged them to continue to rely upon the loving- kindness of God.
Acts Twenty 13:44  On the following Sabbath, almost all the city gathered to hear God's Message.
Acts Twenty 13:45  But the sight of the crowds of people filled the minds of the Jews with jealousy, and they kept contradicting Paul's statements in violent language.
Acts Twenty 13:46  Then Paul and Barnabas spoke out fearlessly, and said. "It was necessary that the Message of God should be told to you first; but, since you reject it and reckon yourselves not worthy of the Immortal Life--we turn to the Gentiles!
Acts Twenty 13:47  For this is the Lord's command to us--'I have destined thee for a Light to the Gentiles, a means of Salvation to the ends of the earth'."
Acts Twenty 13:48  On hearing this, the Gentiles were glad and extolled God's Message; and all those who had been enrolled for Immortal Life became believers in Christ;
Acts Twenty 13:49  And the Lord's Message was carried throughout that district.
Acts Twenty 13:50  But the Jews incited the women of position who worshiped with them, and the leading men of the town, and started a persecution against Paul and Barnabas, and drove them out of their neighborhood.
Acts Twenty 13:51  They, however, shook the dust off their feet in protest,
Acts Twenty 13:52  And went to Iconium, leaving the disciples full of joy and of the Holy Spirit.
Chapter 14
Acts Twenty 14:1  The same thing occurred in Iconium, where Paul and Barnabas went into the Jewish Synagogue, and spoke in such a way that a great number of both Jews and Greeks believed in Christ.
Acts Twenty 14:2  But the Jews who refused to believe stirred up the Gentiles, and poisoned their minds against the Brethren.
Acts Twenty 14:3  Therefore Paul and Barnabas spent a long time there, and spoke out fearlessly, relying upon the Lord, who confirmed the Message of his Love by permitting signs and wonders to take place at their hands.
Acts Twenty 14:4  But the townspeople were divided, some siding with the Jews, some with the Apostles;
Acts Twenty 14:5  And, when there was an attempt on the part of both Gentiles and Jews, with their leading men, to resort to violence and to stone them,
Acts Twenty 14:6  The Apostles heard of it, and took refuge in Lystra and Derbe, towns in Lycaonia, and in the district round,
Acts Twenty 14:7  And there they continued to tell the Good News.
Acts Twenty 14:8  In the streets of Lystra there used to sit a man who had no power in his feet; he had been lame from his birth, and had never walked.
Acts Twenty 14:9  This man was listening to Paul speaking, when Paul, fixing his eyes on him, and seeing that he had the faith to be healed,
Acts Twenty 14:10  Said loudly. "Stand upright on your feet." The man leaped up, and began walking about,
Acts Twenty 14:11  And the crowd, seeing what Paul had done, called out in the Lycaonian language. "The Gods have made themselves like men and have come down to us."
Acts Twenty 14:12  So they called Barnabas 'Zeus,' and Paul 'Hermes,' because he took the lead in speaking;
Acts Twenty 14:13  And the priest of Zeus-beyond-the-Walls, accompanied by the crowd, brought bullocks and garlands to the gates, with the intention of offering sacrifices.
Acts Twenty 14:14  But, when the Apostles Barnabas and Paul heard of it, they tore their clothes and rushed out into the crowd. "Friends, why are you doing this?" they shouted.
Acts Twenty 14:15  "We are only men like yourselves, and we have come with the Good News that you should turn away from these follies to a living God, 'who made the heavens, the earth, the sea, and everything that is in them.'
Acts Twenty 14:16  In bygone times he permitted all the nations to go their own ways.
Acts Twenty 14:17  Yet he has not failed to give you, in the good he does, some revelation of himself--sending you from heaven rain and fruitful seasons, and gladdening your hearts with plenty and good cheer."
Acts Twenty 14:18  Even with this appeal they could hardly restrain the people from offering sacrifice to them.
Acts Twenty 14:19  Presently, however, there came some Jews from Antioch, and Iconium who, after they had won over the people, stoned Paul, and dragged him out of the town, thinking him to be dead.
Acts Twenty 14:20  But, when the disciples had gathered round him, he got up and went back into the town; the next day he went with Barnabas to Derbe.
Acts Twenty 14:21  After telling the Good News throughout that town, and making a number of converts, they returned to Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch,
Acts Twenty 14:22  Reassuring the minds of the disciples, urging them to remain true to the Faith, and showing that it is only through many troubles that we can enter the Kingdom of God.
Acts Twenty 14:23  They also appointed Officers for them in every Church, and, after prayer and fasting, commended them to the Lord in whom they had learned to believe.
Acts Twenty 14:24  Paul and Barnabas then went through Pisidia, and came into Pamphylia,
Acts Twenty 14:25  And, after telling the Message at Perga, went down to Attaleia.
Acts Twenty 14:26  From there they sailed to Antioch--the place where they had been committed to the gracious care of God for the work which they had now finished.
Acts Twenty 14:27  After their arrival, they gathered the Church together, and gave an account of all that God had helped them to do, and especially how he had opened to the Gentiles the door of faith;
Acts Twenty 14:28  And at Antioch they stayed with the disciples for a considerable time.
Chapter 15
Acts Twenty 15:1  But certain persons came down from Judea, and began to teach the Brethren that, unless they were circumcised, in accordance with the custom enjoined by Moses, they could not be saved.
Acts Twenty 15:2  This gave rise to a serious dispute, and much discussion, between Paul and Barnabas and these men, and it was therefore settled that Paul and Barnabas and others of their number should go up to Jerusalem, to consult the Apostles and Officers of the Church about the matter under discussion.
Acts Twenty 15:3  The Church, therefore, sent them on their journey, and they made their way through Phoenicia and Samaria, telling the story of the conversion of the Gentiles, to the great joy of all the Brethren.
Acts Twenty 15:4  On their arrival at Jerusalem, they were welcomed by the Church, as well as by the Apostles and the Officers, and gave an account of all that God had helped them to do.
Acts Twenty 15:5  Some of the Pharisees' party, however, who had become believers in Christ, came forward and declared that they were bound to circumcise converts and to direct them to observe the Law of Moses.
Acts Twenty 15:6  The Apostles and the Officers of the Church held a meeting to consider this question.
Acts Twenty 15:7  After much discussion, Peter rose and said. "You, my Brothers, know well that long ago God singled me out--that through my lips the Gentiles should hear the Message of the Good News, and become believers in Christ.
Acts Twenty 15:8  Now God, who reads all hearts, declared his acceptance of the Gentiles, by giving them the Holy Spirit, just as he did to us.
Acts Twenty 15:9  He made no distinction between them and us, when he purified their hearts by their faith.
Acts Twenty 15:10  Why, then, do you now provoke God, by putting on the necks of these disciples a yoke which neither our ancestors nor we were able to bear?
Acts Twenty 15:11  No, it is through the loving-kindness of the Lord Jesus that we, just as they do, believe that we have been saved."
Acts Twenty 15:12  Every voice in the assembly was hushed, as they listened to Barnabas and Paul, while they gave an account of all the signs and wonders which God had shown among the Gentiles through them.
Acts Twenty 15:13  After they had finished speaking, James addressed the Council. "Brothers," he began, "hear what I have to say.
Acts Twenty 15:14  Simon has described the manner in which God first visited the Gentiles, in order to take from among them a people to bear his Name.
Acts Twenty 15:15  And that is in harmony with the words of the Prophets, where they say--
Acts Twenty 15:16  '"After this I will return; and I will rebuild the House of David which has fallen--its very ruins I will rebuild, and will set it up once more;
Acts Twenty 15:17  That so the rest of mankind may earnestly seek the Lord--even all the Gentiles on whom my Name has been bestowed."
Acts Twenty 15:18  Says the Lord, as he does these things, foreknown from of old.'
Acts Twenty 15:19  In my judgement, therefore, we should not add to the difficulties of those Gentiles who are turning to God,
Acts Twenty 15:20  But we should write to them to abstain from food that has been polluted by being sacrificed to idols, from impurity, from eating the flesh of strangled animals, and from blood.
Acts Twenty 15:21  For in every town, for generations past, there have been those who preach Moses, read as he is in the Synagogues every Sabbath."
Acts Twenty 15:22  It was then decided by the Apostles and the Officers, with the assent of the whole Church, to choose some of their number, and send them to Antioch with Paul and Barnabas. Those chosen were Judas (called Barsabas) and Silas, who were leading men among the Brethren.
Acts Twenty 15:23  They were bearers of the following letter--'The Apostles, and the Brothers who are the Officers of the Church, send their greetings to the Brethren of Gentile birth in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia.
Acts Twenty 15:24  As we had heard that some of our number had upset you by their assertions, and unsettled your minds--without instructions from us--
Acts Twenty 15:25  We met and decided to choose certain men and send them to you with our dear brothers Barnabas and Paul,
Acts Twenty 15:26  Who have sacrificed themselves for the Name of our Lord, Jesus Christ.
Acts Twenty 15:27  We are accordingly sending Judas and Silas, and they will tell you by word of mouth what we are now writing.
Acts Twenty 15:28  We have, therefore, decided, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, to lay no further burden upon you beyond these necessary conditions--
Acts Twenty 15:29  That you abstain from food offered to idols, from blood, from eating the flesh of strangled animals, and from impurity. If you guard yourselves against such things, it will be well with you. Farewell.'
Acts Twenty 15:30  So the bearers of this letter were sent on their way, and went down to Antioch. There they called a meeting of all the brethren,
Acts Twenty 15:31  And delivered the letter, the reading of which caused great rejoicing by its encouraging contents.
Acts Twenty 15:32  Judas and Silas, who were themselves Prophets, further encouraged the Brethren by many an address, and strengthened their faith.
Acts Twenty 15:33  After some stay, they were dismissed with kind farewells from the Brethren, and returned to those who had sent them.
Acts Twenty 15:35  Paul and Barnabas, however, remained in Antioch, where they taught and, with the help of many others, told the Good News of the Lord's Message.
Acts Twenty 15:36  Some time after this, Paul said to Barnabas. "Let us go back and visit the Brethren in every town in which we have told the Lord's Message, and see how they are prospering."
Acts Twenty 15:37  Barnabas wished to take with them John, whose other name was Mark;
Acts Twenty 15:38  But Paul felt that they ought not to take with them the man who had deserted them in Pamphylia, and had not gone on with them to their work.
Acts Twenty 15:39  This caused such unpleasant feeling between them that they parted, Barnabas taking Mark and sailing for Cyprus,
Acts Twenty 15:40  While Paul chose Silas for his companion and, after he had been committed by the Brethren to the gracious care of the Lord,
Acts Twenty 15:41  Started on his journey and went through Syria and Cilicia, strengthening the Churches in the faith.
Chapter 16
Acts Twenty 16:1  Among other places Paul went to Derbe and Lystra. At the latter place they found a disciple, named Timothy, whose mother was a Jewess who had become a believer in Christ, while his father was a Greek,
Acts Twenty 16:2  And who was well spoken of by the Brethren in Lystra and Iconium.
Acts Twenty 16:3  Wishing to take this man with him on his journey, Paul caused him to be circumcised on account of the Jews in that neighborhood, for they all knew that his father had been a Greek.
Acts Twenty 16:4  As they traveled from town to town, they gave the Brethren the decisions which had been reached by the Apostles and Officers of the Church at Jerusalem, for them to observe.
Acts Twenty 16:5  So the Churches grew stronger in the Faith, and increased in numbers from day to day.
Acts Twenty 16:6  They next went through the Phrygian district of Galatia, but were restrained by the Holy Spirit from delivering the Message in Roman Asia.
Acts Twenty 16:7  When they reached the borders of Mysia, they attempted to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit of Jesus did not permit them.
Acts Twenty 16:8  Passing through Mysia, they went down to Troas;
Acts Twenty 16:9  And there one night Paul saw a vision. A Macedonian was standing and appealing to him--'Come over to Macedonia and help us.'
Acts Twenty 16:10  So, immediately after Paul had seen the vision, we looked for an opportunity to cross over to Macedonia, concluding that God had summoned us to tell the Good News to the people there.
Acts Twenty 16:11  Accordingly we set sail from Troas, and ran before the wind to Samothrace, reaching Neapolis the next day.
Acts Twenty 16:12  From there we made our way to Philippi, which is the principal city of that part of Macedonia, and also a Roman Settlement. In that city we spent several days.
Acts Twenty 16:13  On the Sabbath we went outside the gate to the river-side, where we supposed there would be a Place of Prayer; and we sat down and talked to the women who were gathered there.
Acts Twenty 16:14  Among them was a woman, named Lydia, belonging to Thyatira, a dealer in purple cloth, who was accustomed to join in the worship of God. The Lord touched this woman's heart, so that she gave attention to the Message delivered by Paul,
Acts Twenty 16:15  And, when she and her household had been baptized, she urged us to become her guests. "Since you have shown your conviction," she said, "that I really am a believer in the Lord, come and stay in my house." And she insisted on our doing so.
Acts Twenty 16:16  One day, as we were on our way to the Place of Prayer, we were met by a girl possessed by a divining spirit, who made large profits for her masters by fortune-telling.
Acts Twenty 16:17  This girl followed Paul and the rest of us, calling. "These men are servants of the most high God, and they are bringing you news of a way to Salvation."
Acts Twenty 16:18  She had been doing this for several days, when Paul, much vexed, turned and said to the spirit within her. "In the Name of Jesus Christ I command you to leave her." That very moment the spirit left her.
Acts Twenty 16:19  When her masters saw that there was no hope of further profit from her, they seized Paul and Silas, dragged them into the public square to the authorities,
Acts Twenty 16:20  And took them before the Magistrates. "These men are causing a great disturbance in our town," they complained;
Acts Twenty 16:21  "They are Jews, and they are teaching customs which it is not right for us, as Romans, to sanction or adopt."
Acts Twenty 16:22  On this the mob rose as one man against them, and the Magistrates stripped them of their clothing and ordered them to be beaten with rods.
Acts Twenty 16:23  After beating them severely, the Magistrates put them in prison, with orders to the Governor of the Jail to keep them in safe custody.
Acts Twenty 16:24  On receiving so strict an order, the Governor put them into the inner cell, and secured their feet in the stocks.
Acts Twenty 16:25  About midnight, while Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and while the prisoners were listening to them,
Acts Twenty 16:26  Suddenly there was an earthquake of such violence that the Jail was shaken to its foundations; all the doors flew open, and all the prisoners' chains were loosened.
Acts Twenty 16:27  Roused from his sleep, and seeing the prison doors open, the Governor drew his sword intending to kill himself, in the belief that the prisoners had escaped.
Acts Twenty 16:28  But Paul called our loudly. "Do not harm yourself; we are all here."
Acts Twenty 16:29  Calling for a light, the Governor rushed in, and flung himself trembling at the feet of Paul and Silas.
Acts Twenty 16:30  Then he led them out, and said. "What must I do to be saved?"
Acts Twenty 16:31  "Believe in Jesus, our Lord," they replied, "and you shall be saved, you and your household too."
Acts Twenty 16:32  Then they spoke to him of God's Message, and to all his household as well.
Acts Twenty 16:33  And that very hour of the night he took them and washed their wounds, and he himself and every one belonging to him were baptized without delay.
Acts Twenty 16:34  Afterwards he took them up to his house and set before them something to eat, rejoicing that he, with all his household, had come to believe in God.
Acts Twenty 16:35  In the morning the Magistrates sent the police with an order for the men to be discharged.
Acts Twenty 16:36  The Governor of the Jail told Paul of his instructions. "The Magistrates have sent an order for your discharge," he said, "so you had better leave the place at once and go quietly away."
Acts Twenty 16:37  But Paul's answer to them was. "They have flogged us in public without trial, though we are Roman citizens, and they have put us in prison, and now they are for sending us out secretly! No, indeed! Let them come and take us out themselves."
Acts Twenty 16:38  The police reported his words to the Magistrates, who, on hearing that Paul and Silas were Roman citizens, were alarmed,
Acts Twenty 16:39  And went to the prison, and did their best to conciliate them. Then they took them out, and begged them to leave the city.
Acts Twenty 16:40  When Paul and Silas left the prison, they went to Lydia's house, and, after they had seen the Brethren, and encouraged them, they left the place.
Chapter 17
Acts Twenty 17:1  After passing through Amphipolis and Apollonia, Paul and Silas came to Thessalonica. Here the Jews had a Synagogue;
Acts Twenty 17:2  And, following his usual custom, Paul joined them, and for three Sabbaths addressed them, drawing his arguments from the Scriptures.
Acts Twenty 17:3  He laid before them and explained that the Christ must undergo suffering and rise from the dead; and "It is this man," he declared, "who is the Christ--this Jesus about whom I am telling you."
Acts Twenty 17:4  Some of the people were convinced, and threw in their lot with Paul and Silas, as did also a large body of Greeks who were accustomed to join in the Jewish services, and a great number of women belonging to the leading families.
Acts Twenty 17:5  But the Jews, becoming jealous, engaged some worthless fellows from the streets, and, getting a mob together, kept the city in an uproar. They attacked Jason's house, with the intention of bringing Paul and Silas before the Popular Assembly;
Acts Twenty 17:6  And, not finding them there, they proceeded to drag Jason and some of the Brethren before the City Magistrates, shouting out. "These men, who have turned the world upside down, have now come here,
Acts Twenty 17:7  And have been harbored by Jason! They say that some one else is king- -a man called Jesus!"
Acts Twenty 17:8  On hearing this, the people and the City Magistrates were much concerned;
Acts Twenty 17:9  And, before letting them go, they took bail from Jason and the others.
Acts Twenty 17:10  That very night the Brethren sent Paul and Silas off to Beroea; and on reaching that place, they went to the Jewish Synagogue.
Acts Twenty 17:11  These Jews of Beroea were better disposed than those in Thessalonica, for they welcomed the Message with great readiness, and daily examined the Scriptures to see if what was said was true.
Acts Twenty 17:12  As a consequence, many of them became believers in Christ, besides a considerable number of Greek women of position, and of men also.
Acts Twenty 17:13  But, when the Jews of Thessalonica found out that God's Message had been delivered by Paul at Beroea, they came there too, exciting and disturbing the minds of the people.
Acts Twenty 17:14  Immediately upon that, the Brethren sent Paul off on his way to the sea coast, but both Silas and Timothy stayed behind in Beroea.
Acts Twenty 17:15  The friends who escorted Paul took him as far as Athens, and, after receiving a message for Silas and Timothy to join him as quickly as possible, they started on their return.
Acts Twenty 17:16  While Paul was waiting for them at Athens, his heart was stirred at seeing the whole city full of idols.
Acts Twenty 17:17  So he argued in the Synagogue with the Jews and with those who joined in their worship, as well as daily in the public Square with those who happened to be there.
Acts Twenty 17:18  Among others, some Epicurean and Stoic Philosophers joined issue with him. Some would ask "What is this prater wanting to make out?", while others would say "He seems to be a Preacher of foreign Deities." (This was because he was telling the Good News about Jesus and the Resurrection).
Acts Twenty 17:19  So they laid hold of him and took him to the Court of Areopagus. "May we hear," they asked, "what new teaching this is which you are giving?
Acts Twenty 17:20  For you are bringing some strange things to our notice, and we should like to know what they mean."
Acts Twenty 17:21  (All Athenians and the foreigners staying in the city found no time for anything else but telling, or listening to, the last new thing.)
Acts Twenty 17:22  So Paul took his stand in the middle of the Court, and said--"Men of Athens, on every hand I see signs of your being very devout.
Acts Twenty 17:23  For as I was going about, looking at your sacred shrines, I came upon an altar with this inscription--'To an Unknown God.' What, therefore, you worship in ignorance, that I am now proclaiming to you.
Acts Twenty 17:24  The God who made the world and all things that are in it--he, Lord as he is of Heaven and Earth, does not dwell in temples made by hands,
Acts Twenty 17:25  Nor yet do human hands minister to his wants, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives, to all, life, and breath, and all things.
Acts Twenty 17:26  He made all races of the earth's surface--fixing a time for their rise and fall, and the limits of their settlements--
Acts Twenty 17:27  That they might search for God, if by any means they might feel their way to him and find him. And yet he is not really far from any one of us;
Acts Twenty 17:28  For in him we live and move and are. To use the words of some of your own poets--'His offspring, too, are we.'
Acts Twenty 17:29  Therefore, as the offspring of God, we must not think that the Deity has any resemblance to anything made of gold, or silver, or stone--a work of human art and imagination.
Acts Twenty 17:30  True, God looked with indulgence on the days of men's ignorance, but now he is announcing to every one everywhere the need for repentance,
Acts Twenty 17:31  Because he has fixed a day on which he intends to 'judge the world with justice,' by a man whom he has appointed--and of this he has given all men a pledge by raising this man from the dead."
Acts Twenty 17:32  On hearing of a resurrection of the dead, some began jeering, but others said that they would hear what he had to say about that another time.
Acts Twenty 17:34  There were, however, some men who joined him, and became believers in Christ. Among them were Dionysius, a member of the Court of Areopagus, a woman named Damaris, and several others.
Chapter 18
Acts Twenty 18:2  There he met a Jew of the name of Aquila, a native of Pontus, who, with his wife Priscilla, had lately come from Italy, in consequence of the order which had been issued by the Emperor Claudius for all Jews to leave Rome. Paul paid them a visit,
Acts Twenty 18:3  And, since their trade was the same as his, he stayed and worked with them--their trade was tent-making.
Acts Twenty 18:4  Every Sabbath Paul gave addresses in the Synagogue, trying to convince both Jews and Greeks.
Acts Twenty 18:5  But, when Silas and Timothy had come down from Macedonia, Paul devoted himself entirely to delivering the Message, earnestly maintaining before the Jews that Jesus was the Christ.
Acts Twenty 18:6  However, as they set themselves against him and became abusive, Paul shook his clothes in protest and said to them. "Your blood be on your own heads. My conscience is clear. From this time forward I shall go to the Gentiles."
Acts Twenty 18:7  So he left, and went to the house of a certain Titius Justus, who had been accustomed to join in the worship of God, and whose house was next door to the Synagogue.
Acts Twenty 18:8  Crispus, the President of the Synagogue, came to believe in the Lord, and so did all his household; and many of the Corinthians, as they listened to Paul, became believers in Christ and were baptized.
Acts Twenty 18:9  One night the Lord said to Paul, in a vision. "Have no fear, but continue to speak, and refuse to be silenced;
Acts Twenty 18:10  For I am with you, and no one shall do you harm, for I have many People in this city."
Acts Twenty 18:11  So he settled there for a year and a half, and taught God's Message among the people.
Acts Twenty 18:12  While Gallio was governor of Greece, the Jews made a combined attack on Paul, and brought him before the Governor's Bench,
Acts Twenty 18:13  Charging him with persuading people to worship God in a way forbidden by the Law.
Acts Twenty 18:14  Just as Paul was on the point of speaking, Gallio said to the Jews. "Jews, if this were a case of misdemeanor or some serious crime, there would be some reason for my listening patiently to you;
Acts Twenty 18:15  But, since it is a dispute about words, and names, and your own Law, you must see to it yourselves. I do not choose to be a judge in such matters."
Acts Twenty 18:17  Then they all set upon Sosthenes, the President of the Synagogue, and beat him in front of the Bench, but Gallio did not trouble himself about any of these things.
Acts Twenty 18:18  Paul remained there some time after this, and then took leave of the Brethren, and sailed to Syria with Priscilla and Aquila, but not before his head had been shaved at Cenchreae, because he was under a vow.
Acts Twenty 18:19  They put into Ephesus, and there Paul, leaving his companions, went into the Synagogue and addressed the Jews.
Acts Twenty 18:20  When they asked him to prolong his stay, he declined, saying however,
Acts Twenty 18:21  As he took his leave, "I will come back again to you, please God," and then set sail from Ephesus.
Acts Twenty 18:22  On reaching Caesarea, he went up to Jerusalem and exchanged greetings with the Church, and then went down to Antioch.
Acts Twenty 18:23  After making some stay in Antioch, he set out on a tour through the Phrygian district of Galatia, strengthening the faith of all the disciples as he went.
Acts Twenty 18:24  Meanwhile there had come to Ephesus an Alexandrian Jew, named Apollos, an eloquent man, who was well-versed in the Scriptures.
Acts Twenty 18:25  He had been well-instructed in the Cause of the Lord, and with burning zeal he spoke of, and taught carefully, the facts about Jesus, though he knew of no baptism but John's.
Acts Twenty 18:26  This man began to speak out fearlessly in the Synagogue; and when Priscilla and Aquila heard him, they took him home and explained the Cause of God to him more carefully still.
Acts Twenty 18:27  When he wanted to cross to Greece, the Brethren furthered his plans, and wrote to the disciples there to welcome him. On his arrival he proved of great assistance to those who had, through the loving- kindness of God, become believers in Christ,
Acts Twenty 18:28  For he vigorously confuted the Jews, publicly proving by the Scriptures that Jesus was the Christ.
Chapter 19
Acts Twenty 19:1  While Apollos was at Corinth, Paul passed through the inland districts of Roman Asia, and went to Ephesus. There he found some disciples, of whom he asked.
Acts Twenty 19:2  "Did you, when you became believers in Christ, receive the Holy Spirit?" "No," they answered, "we did not even hear that there was a Holy Spirit."
Acts Twenty 19:4  "John's baptism was a baptism upon repentance," rejoined Paul, "and John told the people (speaking of the 'One Coming; after him) that they should believe in him--that is in Jesus."
Acts Twenty 19:5  On hearing this, they were baptized into the faith of the Lord Jesus,
Acts Twenty 19:6  And, after Paul had placed his hands on them, the Holy Spirit descended upon them, and they began to speak with 'tongues' and to preach.
Acts Twenty 19:8  Paul went to the Synagogue there, and for three months spoke out fearlessly, giving addresses and trying to convince his hearers, about the kingdom of God.
Acts Twenty 19:9  Some of them, however, hardened their hears and refused to believe, denouncing the Cause before the people. So Paul left them and withdrew his disciples, and gave daily addresses in the lecture-hall of Tyrannus.
Acts Twenty 19:10  This went on for two years, so that all who lived in Roman Asia, Jews and Greeks alike, heard the Lord's Message.
Acts Twenty 19:11  God did miracles of no ordinary kind by Paul's hands;
Acts Twenty 19:12  So that people would carry home to the sick handkerchiefs or aprons that had touched his body, and their diseases would leave them and the wicked spirits go out of them.
Acts Twenty 19:13  An attempt was made by some itinerant Jews, who were exorcists, to use the Name of the Lord Jesus over those who had wicked spirits in them. "I adjure you," they would say, "by the Jesus, whom Paul preaches."
Acts Twenty 19:14  The seven sons of Sceva, a Jewish Chief Priest, were doing this;
Acts Twenty 19:15  But the wicked spirit answered them. "Jesus I acknowledge, and Paul I know, but you--who are you?"
Acts Twenty 19:16  Then the man, in whom this wicked spirit was, sprang upon them, mastered both of them, and so completely overpowered them, that they fled out of the house, stripped of their clothes, and wounded.
Acts Twenty 19:17  This incident came to the knowledge of all the Jews and Greeks living at Ephesus; they were all awe-struck, and the Name of the Lord Jesus was held in the highest honor.
Acts Twenty 19:18  Many, too, of those who had become believers in Christ came with a full confession of their practices;
Acts Twenty 19:19  While a number of people, who had practiced magic, collected their books and burnt them publicly; and on reckoning up the price of these, they found it amounted to five thousand pounds.
Acts Twenty 19:20  So irresistibly did the Lord's Message spread and prevail.
Acts Twenty 19:21  Sometime after these events Paul resolved to go through Macedonia and Greece, and then make his way to Jerusalem. "And after I have been there," he said, "I must visit Rome also."
Acts Twenty 19:22  So he sent to Macedonia two of his helpers, Timothy and Erastus, while he himself stayed for some time longer in Roman Asia.
Acts Twenty 19:23  Just about that time a great disturbance arose about the Cause.
Acts Twenty 19:24  A silversmith named Demetrius, who made silver models of the shrine of Artemis, and so gave a great deal of work to the artisans,
Acts Twenty 19:25  Got these men together, as well as the workmen engaged in similar occupations, and said. "Men, you know that our prosperity depends upon this work,
Acts Twenty 19:26  And you see and hear that not only at Ephesus, but in almost the whole of Roman Asia, this Paul has convinced and won over great numbers of people, by his assertion that those Gods which are made by hands are not Gods at all.
Acts Twenty 19:27  So that not only is this business of ours likely to fall into discredit, but there is the further danger that the Temple of the great Goddess Artemis will be thought nothing of, and that she herself will be deprived of her splendor--though all Roman Asia and the whole world worship her."
Acts Twenty 19:28  When they heard this, the men were greatly enraged, and began shouting--"Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!"
Acts Twenty 19:29  The commotion spread through the whole city, and the people rushed together into the amphitheater, dragging with them Gaius and Aristarchus, two Macedonians who were Paul's traveling companions.
Acts Twenty 19:30  Paul wished to go into the amphitheater and face the people, but the disciples would not let him,
Acts Twenty 19:31  While some of the chief religious officials of the province, who were friendly to him, sent repeated entreaties to him not to trust himself inside.
Acts Twenty 19:32  Meanwhile some were shouting one thing and some another, for the Assembly was all in confusion, most of those present not even knowing why they had met.
Acts Twenty 19:33  But some of the crowd prompted Alexander, whom the Jews had pushed to the front, and he waved his hand to show that he wanted to speak in their defense to the people.
Acts Twenty 19:34  However, when they recognized him as a Jew, one cry broke from them all, and they continued shouting for two hours--"Great is Artemis of the Ephesians!"
Acts Twenty 19:35  When the Recorder had succeeded in quieting the crowd, he said. "Men of Ephesus, who is there, I ask you, who needs to be told that this city of Ephesus is the Warden of the Temple of the great Artemis, and of the statue which fell down from Zeus?
Acts Twenty 19:36  As these are undeniable facts, you ought to keep calm and do nothing rash;
Acts Twenty 19:37  For you have brought these men here, though they are neither robbers of Temples nor blasphemers of our Goddess.
Acts Twenty 19:38  If, however, Demetrius and the artisans who are acting with him have a charge to make against any one, there are Court Days and there are Magistrates; let both parties take legal proceedings.
Acts Twenty 19:39  But if you want anything more, it will have to be settled in the regular Assembly.
Acts Twenty 19:40  For I tell you that we are in danger of being proceeded against for to-day's riot, there being nothing to account for it; and in that case we shall be at a loss to give any reason for this disorderly gathering."
Chapter 20
Acts Twenty 20:1  When the uproar had ceased, Paul sent for the disciples, and, with encouraging words, bade them goodbye, and started on his journey to Macedonia.
Acts Twenty 20:2  After going through those districts and speaking many encouraging words to the disciples, he went into Greece, where he stayed three months.
Acts Twenty 20:3  He was about to sail to Syria, when he learned that a plot had been laid against him by the Jews; so he decided to return by way of Macedonia.
Acts Twenty 20:4  He was accompanied by Sopater the son of Pyrrhus, of Beroea, Aristarchus and Secundus from Thessalonica, Gaius of Derbe, and Timothy, as well as by Tychicus and Trophimus of Roman Asia.
Acts Twenty 20:5  These men went to Troas and waited for us there;
Acts Twenty 20:6  While we ourselves sailed from Philippi after the Passover, and joined them five days later at Troas, where we stayed for a week.
Acts Twenty 20:7  On the first day of the week, when we had met for the Breaking of Bread, Paul, who was intending to leave the next day, began to address those who were present, and prolonged his address till midnight.
Acts Twenty 20:8  There were a good many lamps in the upstairs room, where we had met;
Acts Twenty 20:9  And a young man named Eutychus, sitting at the window, was gradually overcome with great drowsiness, as Paul continued his address. At last, quite overpowered by his drowsiness, he fell from the third storey to the ground, and was picked up for dead.
Acts Twenty 20:10  But Paul went down, threw himself upon him, and put his arms round him. "Do not be alarmed," he said, "he is still alive."
Acts Twenty 20:11  Then he went upstairs; and, after breaking and partaking of the Bread, he talked with them at great length till daybreak, and then left.
Acts Twenty 20:12  Meanwhile they had taken the lad away alive, and were greatly comforted.
Acts Twenty 20:13  We started first, went on board ship, and sailed for Assos, intending to take Paul on board there. This was by his own arrangement, as he intended to go by land himself.
Acts Twenty 20:14  So, when he met us at Assos, we took him on board and went on to Mitylene.
Acts Twenty 20:15  The day after we had sailed from there, we arrived off Chios, touched at Samos the following day, and the next day reached Miletus;
Acts Twenty 20:16  For Paul had decided to sail past Ephesus, so as to avoid spending much time in Roman Asia. He was making haste to reach Jerusalem, if possible, by the Festival at the close of the Harvest.
Acts Twenty 20:17  From Miletus, however, he sent to Ephesus and invited the Officers of the Church to meet him;
Acts Twenty 20:18  And, when they came, he spoke to them as follows. "You know well the life that I always led among you from the very first day that I set foot in Roman Asia,
Acts Twenty 20:19  Serving the Lord, as I did, in all humility, amid the tears and trials which fell to my lot through the plots of the Jews.
Acts Twenty 20:20  I never shrank from telling you anything that could be helpful to you, or from teaching you both in public and in private.
Acts Twenty 20:21  I earnestly pointed both Jews and Greeks to the repentance that leads to God, and to faith in Jesus, our Lord.
Acts Twenty 20:22  And now, under spiritual constraint, I am here on my way to Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there,
Acts Twenty 20:23  Except that in town after town the Holy Spirit plainly declares to me that imprisonment and troubles await me.
Acts Twenty 20:24  But I count my life of no value to myself, if only I may complete the course marked out for me, and the task that was allotted me by the Lord Jesus--which was to declare the Good News of the Love of God.
Acts Twenty 20:25  And now, I tell you, I know that none of you will ever see my face again--you among whom I have gone about proclaiming the Kingdom.
Acts Twenty 20:26  Therefore I declare to you this day, that my conscience is clear in regard to the fate of any of you,
Acts Twenty 20:27  For I have not shrunk from announcing the whole purpose of God regarding you.
Acts Twenty 20:28  Be watchful over yourselves, and over the whole flock, of which the Holy Spirit has placed you in charge, to shepherd the Church of God, which he won for himself at the cost of his life.
Acts Twenty 20:29  I know that, after my departure, merciless wolves will get in among you, who will not spare the flock;
Acts Twenty 20:30  And from among yourselves, too, men will arise, who will teach perversions of truth, so as to draw away the disciples after them.
Acts Twenty 20:31  Therefore, be on your guard, remembering how for three years, night and day, I never ceased, even with tears, to warn each one of you.
Acts Twenty 20:32  And now I commend you to the Lord and to the Message of his Love--a Message which has the power to build up your characters, and to give you your place among all those who have become Christ's People.
Acts Twenty 20:33  I have never coveted any one's gold or silver or clothing.
Acts Twenty 20:34  You, yourselves, know that these hands of mine provided not only for my own wants, but for my companions also.
Acts Twenty 20:35  I left nothing undone to show you that, laboring as I labored, you ought to help the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said himself--'It is more blessed to give than to receive.'"
Acts Twenty 20:36  When Paul had finished speaking, he knelt down and prayed with them all.
Acts Twenty 20:37  All were in tears; and throwing their arms round Paul's neck, they kissed him again and again,
Acts Twenty 20:38  Grieving most of all over what he had said--that they would never see his face again. Then they escorted him to the ship.
Chapter 21
Acts Twenty 21:1  When we had torn ourselves away and had set sail, we ran before the wind to Cos; the next day we came to Rhodes, and from there to Patara,
Acts Twenty 21:2  Where we found a ship crossing to Phoenicia, and went on board and set sail.
Acts Twenty 21:3  After sighting Cyprus and leaving it on the left, we sailed to Syria, and put into Tyre, where the ship was to discharge her cargo.
Acts Twenty 21:4  There we found the disciples and stayed a week with them. Speaking under the influence of the Spirit, they warned Paul not to set foot in Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 21:5  However, when we had come to the end of our visit, we went on our way, all the disciples with their wives and children escorting us out of the city. We knelt down on the beach, and prayed,
Acts Twenty 21:6  And then said good-bye to one another; after which we went on board, and they returned home.
Acts Twenty 21:7  After we had made the run from Tyre, we landed at Ptolemais, and exchanged greetings with the Brethren there, and spent a day with them.
Acts Twenty 21:8  The next day we left, and reached Caesarea, where we went to the house of Philip, the Missionary, who was one of 'the Seven,' and stayed with him.
Acts Twenty 21:9  He had four unmarried daughters, who had the gift of prophecy.
Acts Twenty 21:10  During our visit, which lasted several days, a Prophet, named Agabus, came down from Judea.
Acts Twenty 21:11  He came to see us, and, taking Paul's girdle, and binding his own feet and hands with it, said. "This is what the Holy Spirit says-- 'The man to whom this girdle belongs will be bound like this at Jerusalem by the Jews, and they will give him up to the Gentiles'."
Acts Twenty 21:12  When we heard that, we and the people of the place began to entreat Paul not to go up to Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 21:13  It was then that Paul made the reply. "Why are you weeping and breaking my heart like this? For my part, I am ready not only to be bound, but even to suffer death at Jerusalem for the Name of the Lord Jesus."
Acts Twenty 21:14  So, as he would not be persuaded, we said no more to him, only adding--"The Lord's will be done."
Acts Twenty 21:15  At the end of our visit, we made our preparations, and started on our way up to Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 21:16  Some of the disciples from Caesarea went with us, and brought Mnason with them, a Cypriot disciple of long standing, with whom we were to stay.
Acts Twenty 21:17  On our arrival at Jerusalem, the Brethren there gave us a hearty welcome;
Acts Twenty 21:18  And the next day Paul went with us to see James, and all the Officers of the Church were present.
Acts Twenty 21:19  After greeting them, Paul related in detail all that God had done among the Gentiles through his efforts;
Acts Twenty 21:20  And, when they had heard it, they began praising God, and said to Paul. "You see, Brother, that the Jews who have become believers in Christ may be numbered by tens of thousands, and they are all naturally earnest in upholding the Jewish Law.
Acts Twenty 21:21  Now they have heard it said about you, that you teach all Jews in foreign countries to forsake Moses, for you tell them not to circumcise their children or even to observe Jewish customs.
Acts Twenty 21:22  Well now, as they are certain to hear of your arrival, do what we are going to suggest.
Acts Twenty 21:23  We have four men here, who have of their own accord put themselves under a vow.
Acts Twenty 21:24  Join these men, share their purification, and bear their expenses, so that they may shave their heads; and then all will see that there is no truth in what they have been told about you, but that, on the contrary, you yourself rule your life in obedience to the Jewish Law.
Acts Twenty 21:25  As to the Gentiles who have become believers in Christ, we have sent our decision that they should avoid food offered to idols, and blood, and the flesh of strangled animals, and impurity."
Acts Twenty 21:26  On this, Paul joined the men, and the next day shared their purification, and went into the Temple, and gave notice of the expiration of the period of purification when the usual offering should have been made on behalf of each of them.
Acts Twenty 21:27  But, just as the seven days were drawing to a close, the Jews from Roman Asia caught sight of Paul in the Temple, and caused great excitement among all the people present, by seizing Paul and shouting.
Acts Twenty 21:28  "Men of Israel! help! This is the man who teaches every one everywhere against our People, our Law, and this Place; and, what is more, he has actually brought Greeks into the Temple and defiled this sacred place."
Acts Twenty 21:29  (For they had previously seen Trophimus the Ephesian in Paul's company in the city, and were under the belief that Paul had taken him into the Temple.)
Acts Twenty 21:30  The whole city was stirred, and the people quickly collected, seized Paul, and dragged him out of the Temple, when the doors were immediately shut.
Acts Twenty 21:31  They were bent upon killing him, when it was reported to the Officer commanding the garrison, that all Jerusalem was in commotion.
Acts Twenty 21:32  He instantly got together some officers and men, and charged down upon the crowd, who, when they saw the Commanding Officer and his men, stopped beating Paul.
Acts Twenty 21:33  Then he went up to Paul, arrested him, ordered him to be doubly chained, and proceeded to inquire who he was, and what he had been doing.
Acts Twenty 21:34  Some of the crowd said one thing, and some another; and, as he could get no definite reply on account of the uproar, he ordered Paul to be taken into the barracks.
Acts Twenty 21:35  When Paul reached the steps, he was actually being carried by the soldiers, owing to the violence of the mob;
Acts Twenty 21:36  For the people were following in a mass, shouting out. "Kill him!"
Acts Twenty 21:37  Just as he was about to be taken into the Fort, Paul said to the Commanding Officer. "May I speak to you?" "Do you know Greek?" asked the Commanding Officer.
Acts Twenty 21:38  "Are not you, then, the Egyptian who some time ago raised an insurrection and led the four thousand Bandits out into the Wilderness?"
Acts Twenty 21:39  "No," said Paul, "I am a Jew of Tarsus in Cilicia, a citizen of a city of some note; and I beg you to give me permission to speak to the people."
Acts Twenty 21:40  The Commanding Officer gave his permission, and Paul, standing on the steps, made signs with his hand to the people, and, when comparative silence had been obtained, he spoke to them in Hebrew, as follows.
Chapter 22
Acts Twenty 22:1  "Brothers and Father, listen to the defense which I am about to make."
Acts Twenty 22:2  When they heard that he was speaking to them in Hebrew, they were still more quiet; and Paul went on.
Acts Twenty 22:3  "I am a Jew, a native of Tarsus in Cilicia, but I was brought up in this city under the teaching of Gamaliel, and educated in accordance with the strict system of our ancestral Law. I was as zealous in God's service as any of you who are here to-day.
Acts Twenty 22:4  In my persecution of this Cause I did not stop even at the taking of life. I put in chains, and imprisoned, men and women alike--
Acts Twenty 22:5  And to that the High Priest himself and all the Council can testify. For I had letters of introduction from them to our fellow Jews at Damascus, and I was on my way to that place, to bring those whom I might find there prisoners to Jerusalem for punishment.
Acts Twenty 22:6  While I was still on my way, just as I was getting close to Damascus, about mid-day, suddenly there flashed from the heavens a great light all round me.
Acts Twenty 22:7  I fell to the ground, and heard a voice saying to me 'Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?'
Acts Twenty 22:8  'Who are you, Lord?' I replied. Then the voice said 'I am Jesus of Nazareth whom you are persecuting.'
Acts Twenty 22:9  The men with me saw the light, but did not hear the speaker's voice.
Acts Twenty 22:10  Then I said 'What am I to do, Lord?' 'Get up and go into Damascus,' The Lord said to me, 'and there you shall be told all that you have been appointed to do.'
Acts Twenty 22:11  In consequence of that dazzling light I could not see, but my companions held me by the hand, till I reached Damascus.
Acts Twenty 22:12  There a man named Ananias, a strict observer of our Law, well spoken of by all the Jewish inhabitants, came to see me.
Acts Twenty 22:13  Standing close to me, he said 'Saul, my Brother, recover your sight.' And then and there I recovered my sight and looked up at him.
Acts Twenty 22:14  Then he said 'The God of our ancestors has appointed you to learn his will, and to see the Righteous One, and to hear words from his lips;
Acts Twenty 22:15  For you shall be a witness for him to all the world of what you have just seen and heard.
Acts Twenty 22:16  And now why wait any longer. Be baptized at once, wash away your sins, and invoke his Name.
Acts Twenty 22:17  After my return to Jerusalem, while I was praying one day in the Temple, I fell into a trance,
Acts Twenty 22:18  And saw Jesus saying to me 'Make haste and leave Jerusalem at once, because they will not accept your testimony about me.'
Acts Twenty 22:19  'Lord,' I answered, 'these people know that I used to imprison and scourge, in Synagogue after Synagogue, those who believed in you;
Acts Twenty 22:20  And, when the blood of your martyr, Stephen, was being shed, I was myself standing by, approving of his death, and took charge of the clothes of those who were murdering him.
Acts Twenty 22:21  But Jesus said to me 'Go; for I will send you to the Gentiles far away'."
Acts Twenty 22:22  Up to this point the people had been listening to Paul, but at these words they called out. "Kill him! A fellow like this ought not to have been allowed to live!"
Acts Twenty 22:23  As they were shouting, tearing off their clothes, and throwing dust in the air,
Acts Twenty 22:24  The Commanding Officer ordered Paul to be taken into the Fort, and directed that he should be examined under the lash, that he might find out the reason for their outcry against him.
Acts Twenty 22:25  But just as they had tied him up to be scourged, Paul said to the Captain standing near. "Is it legal for you to scourge a Roman citizen, unconvicted?"
Acts Twenty 22:26  On hearing this, the Captain went and reported it to the Commanding Officer. "Do you know what you are doing?" he said. "This man is a Roman citizen."
Acts Twenty 22:27  So the Commanding Officer went up to Paul and said. "Tell me, are you a Roman citizen?" "Yes," replied Paul.
Acts Twenty 22:28  "I had to pay a heavy price for my position as citizen," said the Officer. "I am one by birth," rejoined Paul.
Acts Twenty 22:29  The men who were to have examined Paul immediately drew back, and the Officer, finding that Paul was a Roman citizen, was alarmed at having put him in chains.
Acts Twenty 22:30  On the next day the Commanding Officer, wishing to find out the real reason why Paul was denounced by the Jews, had his chains taken off, and directed the Chief Priests and the whole of the High Council to assemble, and then took Paul down and brought him before them.
Chapter 23
Acts Twenty 23:1  Paul fixed his eyes upon the Council, and began. "Brothers, for my part, I have always ordered my life before God, with a clear conscience, up to this very day."
Acts Twenty 23:2  At this, the High Priest Ananias ordered the men standing near to strike him on the mouth;
Acts Twenty 23:3  Whereupon Paul turned to him and said. "God will strike you, you white-washed wall! Are you sitting there to try me in accordance with law, and yet, in defiance of law, order me to be struck?"
Acts Twenty 23:4  The people standing near said to Paul. "Do you know that you are insulting God's High Priest?"
Acts Twenty 23:5  "I did not know, Brothers, that it was the High Priest," said Paul, "for Scripture says--'Of the Ruler of thy People thou shalt speak no ill'."
Acts Twenty 23:6  Noticing that some of those present were Sadducees and others Pharisees, Paul called out in the Council. "Brothers, I am a Pharisee and a son of Pharisees. It is on the question of hope for the dead and of their resurrection that I am on my trial."
Acts Twenty 23:7  As soon as he said this, a dispute arose between the Pharisees and the Sadducees; and there was a sharp division of opinion among those present.
Acts Twenty 23:8  (For Sadducees say there is no such thing as a resurrection, and that there is neither angel nor spirit, while Pharisees believe in both.)
Acts Twenty 23:9  So a great uproar ensued, and some of the Teaches of the Law belonging to the Pharisees' party stood up and hotly protested. "We find nothing whatever wrong in this man. Suppose a spirit did speak to him, or an angel--"
Acts Twenty 23:10  The dispute was becoming so violent, that the Commanding Officer, fearing that Paul would be torn in pieces between them, ordered the Guard to go down and rescue him from them, and take him into the Fort.
Acts Twenty 23:11  That night the Lord came and stood by Paul, and said. "Courage! You have borne witness for me in Jerusalem and you must bear witness in Rome also."
Acts Twenty 23:12  In the morning the Jews combined together, and took an oath that they would not eat or drink till they had killed Paul.
Acts Twenty 23:14  And they went to the Chief Priests and the Councillors, and said. "We have taken a solemn oath not to touch food till we have killed Paul.
Acts Twenty 23:15  So we want you now, with the consent of the Council, to suggest to the Commanding Officer that he should bring Paul down before you, as though you intended to go more fully into his case; but, before he comes here, we will be ready to make away with him."
Acts Twenty 23:16  However, the son of Paul's sister, hearing of the plot, went to the Fort, and on being admitted, told Paul about it.
Acts Twenty 23:17  Paul called one of the Captains of the garrison and asked him to take the lad to the Commanding Officer, as he had something to tell him.
Acts Twenty 23:18  The Captain went with the lad to the Commanding Officer, and said. "The prisoner Paul called me and asked me to bring this lad to you, as he has something to tell you."
Acts Twenty 23:19  The Commanding Officer took the lad by the hand, and, stepping aside, asked what it was he had to tell him.
Acts Twenty 23:20  "The Jews have agreed," answered the lad, "to ask you to bring Paul down before the Council to-morrow, on the plea of your making further inquiry into his case.
Acts Twenty 23:21  But do not let them persuade you, for more than forty of them are lying in wait for him, who have taken an oath that they will not eat or drink, till they have made away with him; and they are at this very moment in readiness, counting upon your promise."
Acts Twenty 23:22  The Commanding Officer then dismissed the lad, cautioning him not to mention to anybody that he had given him that information.
Acts Twenty 23:23  Then he called two Captains, and ordered them to have two hundred men ready to go to Caesarea, as well as seventy troopers and two hundred lancers, by nine o'clock that night,
Acts Twenty 23:24  And to have horses ready for Paul to ride, so that they might take him safely to Felix, the Governor.
Acts Twenty 23:26  'Claudius Lysias sends his compliments to His Excellency Felix the Governor.
Acts Twenty 23:27  The man whom I send with this had been seized by the Jews, and was on the point of being killed by them, when I came upon them with the force under my command, and rescued him, as I learned that he was a Roman citizen.
Acts Twenty 23:28  Wishing to ascertain exactly the ground of the charges they made against him, I brought him before their Council,
Acts Twenty 23:29  When I found that their charges were connected with questions of their own Law, and that there was nothing alleged involving either death or imprisonment.
Acts Twenty 23:30  Having, however, information of a plot against the man, which was about to be put into execution, I am sending him to you at once, and I have also directed his accusers to prosecute him before you.'
Acts Twenty 23:31  The soldiers, in accordance with their orders, took charge of Paul and conducted him by night to Antipatris;
Acts Twenty 23:32  And on the next day, leaving the troopers to go on with him, they returned to the Fort.
Acts Twenty 23:33  On arriving at Caesarea, the troopers delivered the letter to the Governor, and brought Paul before him.
Acts Twenty 23:34  As soon as Felix had read the letter, he enquired to what province Paul belonged, and, learning that he came from Cilicia, he said.
Acts Twenty 23:35  "I will hear all you have to say as soon as your accusers have arrived." And he ordered Paul to be kept under guard in Herod's Government House.
Chapter 24
Acts Twenty 24:1  Five days afterwards the High Priest Ananias came down with some of the Councillors and a barrister named Tertullus. They laid an information with the Governor against Paul;
Acts Twenty 24:2  And, when the hearing came on, Tertullus began his speech for the prosecution.
Acts Twenty 24:3  "We owe it to your Excellency," he said, "that we are enjoying profound peace, and we owe it to your foresight that this nation is constantly securing reforms--advantages which we very gratefully accept at all times and places.
Acts Twenty 24:4  But--not to be tedious--I beg you, with your accustomed fairness, to listen to a brief statement of our case.
Acts Twenty 24:5  We have found this man a public pest; he is one who stirs up disputes among the Jews all the world over, and is a ringleader of the Nazarene heretics.
Acts Twenty 24:6  He even attempted to desecrate the Temple itself, but we caught him;
Acts Twenty 24:8  And you will be able, by examining him on all these points, to satisfy yourself as to the charges which we are bringing against him."
Acts Twenty 24:9  The Jews also joined in the attack and bore out his statements.
Acts Twenty 24:10  On a sign from the Governor, Paul made this reply. "Knowing, as I do, for how many years you have acted as Judge to this nation, it is with confidence that I undertake my own defense.
Acts Twenty 24:11  For you can easily ascertain that it is not more than twelve days ago that I went up to worship at Jerusalem,
Acts Twenty 24:12  Where my prosecutors never found me holding discussions with any one, or causing a crowd to collect--either in the Temple, or in the Synagogues, or about the city;
Acts Twenty 24:13  And they cannot establish the charges which they are now making against me.
Acts Twenty 24:14  This, however, I do acknowledge to you, that it is as a believer in the Cause which they call heretical, that I worship the God of my ancestors. At the same time, I believe everything that is in accordance with the Law and that is written in the prophets;
Acts Twenty 24:15  And I have a hope that rests in God--a hope which they also cherish-- that there will one day be a resurrection of good and bad alike.
Acts Twenty 24:16  This being so, I strive at all times to keep my conscience clear before both God and man.
Acts Twenty 24:17  After some years' absence I had come to bring charitable gifts to my nation, and to make offerings;
Acts Twenty 24:18  And it was while engaged in this that they found me in the Temple, after completing a period of purification, but not with any crowd or disorder.
Acts Twenty 24:19  There were, however, some Jews from Roman Asia who ought to have been here before you, and to have made any charge that they may have against me--
Acts Twenty 24:20  Or else let my opponents here say what they found wrong in me when I was before the Council,
Acts Twenty 24:21  Except as to the one sentence that I shouted out as I stood among them--'It is about the resurrection of the dead that I am on my trial before you to-day'."
Acts Twenty 24:22  Felix, however, adjourned the case--though he had a fairly accurate knowledge of all that concerned the Cause--with the promise. "When Lysias, the commanding Officer, comes down, I will give my decision in your case."
Acts Twenty 24:23  So he gave orders to the Captain in charge of Paul to keep him in custody, but to relax the regulations, and not to prevent any of his personal friends from attending to his wants.
Acts Twenty 24:24  Some days later Felix came with his wife Drusilla, who was herself a Jewess, and, sending for Paul, listened to what he had to say about faith in Christ Jesus.
Acts Twenty 24:25  But, while Paul was speaking at length about righteousness, self- control, and the coming judgement, Felix became terrified, and interrupted him--"Go for the present, but, when I find an opportunity, I will send for you again."
Acts Twenty 24:26  He was hoping, too, for a bribe from Paul, and so he used to send for him frequently and talk with him.
Acts Twenty 24:27  But, after the lapse of two years, Felix was succeeded by Porcius Festus; and, wishing to gain popularity with the Jews, he left Paul a prisoner.
Chapter 25
Acts Twenty 25:1  Three days after Festus had entered upon his province, he left Caesarea and went up to Jerusalem.
Acts Twenty 25:2  There the Chief Priests and the leading men among the Jews laid an information before him against Paul,
Acts Twenty 25:3  And asked a favor of him, to Paul's injury--to have Paul brought to Jerusalem. All the while they were plotting to make away with him on the road.
Acts Twenty 25:4  But Festus answered that Paul was in prison at Caesarea, and that he himself would be leaving for that place shortly.
Acts Twenty 25:5  "So let the influential men among you," he said, "go down with me, and if there is anything amiss in the man, charge him formally with it."
Acts Twenty 25:6  After staying among them some eight or ten days, Festus went down to Caesarea. The next day he took his seat on the Bench, and ordered Paul to be brought before him.
Acts Twenty 25:7  On Paul's appearance, the Jews who had come down from Jerusalem surrounded him, and made many serious charges, which they failed to establish.
Acts Twenty 25:8  Paul's answer to the charge was--'I have not committed any offence against the Jewish Law, or the Temple, or the Emperor.'
Acts Twenty 25:9  But, as Festus wished to gain popularity with the Jews, he interrupted Paul with the question. "Are you willing to go up to Jerusalem and be tried on these charges before me there?"
Acts Twenty 25:10  "No," replied Paul, "I am standing at the Emperor's Bar, where I ought to be tried. I have not wronged the Jews, as you yourself are well aware.
Acts Twenty 25:11  If, however, I am breaking the law and have committed any offence deserving death, I do not ask to escape the penalty; but, if there is nothing in the accusations of these people, no one has the power to give me up to them. I appeal to the Emperor."
Acts Twenty 25:12  Upon that, Festus, after conferring with his Council, answered. "You have appealed to the Emperor; to the Emperor you shall go."
Acts Twenty 25:13  Some days later King Agrippa and Bernice came down to Caesarea, and paid a visit of congratulation to Festus;
Acts Twenty 25:14  And, as they were staying there for several days, Festus laid Paul's case before the King. "There is a man here," he said, "left a prisoner by Felix,
Acts Twenty 25:15  About whom, when I came to Jerusalem, the Jewish Chief Priest and the Councillors laid an information, demanding judgement against him.
Acts Twenty 25:16  My answer to them was, that it was not the practice of Romans to give up any man to his accusers till the accused had met them face to face, and had also had an opportunity of answering the charges brought against him.
Acts Twenty 25:17  So they met here, and without loss of time I took my seat on the Bench the very next day, and ordered the man to be brought before me.
Acts Twenty 25:18  But, when his accusers came forward, they brought no charge of wrong- doing such as I had expected;
Acts Twenty 25:19  But I found that there were certain questions in dispute between them about their own religion, and about some dead man called Jesus, whom Paul declared to be alive.
Acts Twenty 25:20  And, as I was at a loss how to enquire into questions of this kind, I asked Paul if he were willing to go up to Jerusalem, and there be put upon his trial.
Acts Twenty 25:21  Paul, however, appealed to have his case reserved for the consideration of his August Majesty, so I ordered him to be detained in custody, until I could send him to the Emperor."
Acts Twenty 25:22  "I should like to hear this man myself," Agrippa said to Festus. "You shall hear him to-morrow," Festus answered.
Acts Twenty 25:23  So the next day, when Agrippa and Bernice had come in full state and had entered the Audience Chamber, with the superior officers and the principal people of the city, by the order of Festus Paul was brought before them.
Acts Twenty 25:24  Then Festus said. "King Agrippa, and all here present, you see before you the man about whom the whole Jewish people have applied to me, both at Jerusalem and here, loudly asserting that he ought not to be allowed to live.
Acts Twenty 25:25  I found, however, that he had not done anything deserving death; so, as he had himself appealed to his August Majesty, I decided to send him.
Acts Twenty 25:26  But I have nothing definite to write about him to my Imperial Master; and for that reason I have brought him before you all, and especially before you, King Agrippa, that, after examining him, I may have something to write.
Acts Twenty 25:27  For it seems to me absurd to send a prisoner, without at the same time stating the charges made against him."
Chapter 26
Acts Twenty 26:1  Turning to Paul, Agrippa said. "You are at liberty to speak for yourself." Then Paul stretched out his hand and began his defense.
Acts Twenty 26:2  "I have been congratulating myself, King Agrippa," he said, "that it is before you that I have to make my defense to-day, with regard to all the charges brought against me by Jews,
Acts Twenty 26:3  Especially as you are so well-versed in all the customs and questions of the Jewish world. I beg you therefore to give me a patient hearing.
Acts Twenty 26:4  My life, then, from youth upwards, was passed, from the very first, among my own nation, and in Jerusalem, and is within the knowledge of all Jews;
Acts Twenty 26:5  And they have always known--if they choose to give evidence- -that, in accordance with the very strictest form of our religion, I lived a true Pharisee.
Acts Twenty 26:6  Even now, it is because of my hope in the promise given by God to our ancestors that I stand here on my trial--
Acts Twenty 26:7  A promise which our Twelve Tribes, by earnest service night and day, hope to see fulfilled. It is for this hope, your Majesty, that I am accused--and by Jews themselves!
Acts Twenty 26:8  Why do you all hold it incredible that God should raise the dead?
Acts Twenty 26:9  I myself, it is true, once thought it my duty to oppose in every way the Name of Jesus of Nazareth;
Acts Twenty 26:10  And I actually did so at Jerusalem. Acting on the authority of the Chief Priests, I myself threw many of the People of Christ into prison, and, when it was proposed to put them to death, I gave my vote for it.
Acts Twenty 26:11  Time after time, in every Synagogue, I tried by punishments to force them to blaspheme. So frantic was I against them, that I pursued them even to towns beyond our borders.
Acts Twenty 26:12  It was while I was traveling to Damascus on an errand of this kind, entrusted with full powers by the Chief Priests,
Acts Twenty 26:13  That at mid-day, your Majesty, I saw right in my path, coming from the heavens, a light brighter than the glare of the sun, which shone all round me and those traveling with me.
Acts Twenty 26:14  We all fell to the ground, and then I heard a voice saying to me in Hebrew--'Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? By kicking against the goad you are punishing yourself.'
Acts Twenty 26:15  'Who are you, Lord?' I asked. And the Lord said. "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting;
Acts Twenty 26:16  But get up and stand upright; for I have appeared to you in order to appoint you a servant and a witness of those revelations of me which you have already had, and of those in which I shall yet appear to you,
Acts Twenty 26:17  Since I am choosing you out from your own people and from the Gentiles, to whom I now send you,
Acts Twenty 26:18  To open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God; so that they may receive pardon for their sins, and a place among those who have become God's People, by faith in me.'
Acts Twenty 26:19  After that, King Agrippa, I did not fail to obey the heavenly vision;
Acts Twenty 26:20  On the contrary, first to those at Damascus and Jerusalem, and then through the whole of Judea, and to the Gentiles as well, I began to preach repentance and conversion to God, and a life befitting that repentance.
Acts Twenty 26:21  This is why the Jews seized me in the Temple, and made attempts upon my life.
Acts Twenty 26:22  However I have received help from God to this very day, and so stand here, and bear my testimony to high and low alike--without adding a word to what the Prophets, as well as Moses, declared should happen--
Acts Twenty 26:23  That the Christ must suffer, and that, by rising from the dead, he was destined to be the first to bring news of Light, not only to our nation, but also to the Gentiles."
Acts Twenty 26:24  While Paul was making this defense, Festus called out loudly. "You are mad, Paul; your great learning is driving you mad."
Acts Twenty 26:25  "I am not mad, your Excellency," he replied; "on the contrary, the statements that I am making are true and sober.
Acts Twenty 26:26  Indeed, the King knows about these matters, so I speak before him without constraint. I am sure that there is nothing whatever of what I have been telling him that has escaped his attention; for all this has not been done in a corner.
Acts Twenty 26:27  King Agrippa, do you believe the Prophets? I know you do."
Acts Twenty 26:28  But Agrippa said to Paul. "You are soon trying to make a Christian of me!"
Acts Twenty 26:29  "Whether it is soon or late," answered Paul, "I would to God that not only you, but all who are listening to me, might to-day become just what I am myself--except for these chains!"
Acts Twenty 26:30  Then the King rose, with the Governor and Bernice and those who had been sitting with them,
Acts Twenty 26:31  And, after retiring, discussed the case among themselves. "There is nothing," they said, "deserving death or imprisonment in this man's conduct";
Acts Twenty 26:32  And, speaking to Festus, Agrippa added. "The man might have been discharged, if he had not appealed to the Emperor."
Chapter 27
Acts Twenty 27:1  As it was decided that we were to sail to Italy, Paul and some other prisoners were put in charge of a Captain of the Augustan Guard, named Julius.
Acts Twenty 27:2  We went on board a ship from Adramyttium, which was on the point of sailing to the ports along the coast of Roman Asia, and put to sea. Aristarchus, a Macedonian from Thessalonica, went with us.
Acts Twenty 27:3  The next day we put in to Sidon, where Julius treated Paul in a friendly manner, and allowed him to go to see his friends and receive their hospitality.
Acts Twenty 27:4  Putting to sea again, we sailed under the lee of Cyprus, because the wind was against us;
Acts Twenty 27:5  And, after crossing the sea of Cilicia and Pamphylia, we reached Myra in Lycia.
Acts Twenty 27:6  There the Roman Officer found an Alexandrian ship on her way to Italy, and put us on board of her.
Acts Twenty 27:7  For several days our progress was slow, and it was only with difficulty that we arrived off Cnidus. As the wind was still unfavorable when we came off Cape Salmone, we sailed under the lee of Crete,
Acts Twenty 27:8  And with difficulty, by keeping close in shore, we reached a place called 'Fair Havens,' near which was the town of Lasea.
Acts Twenty 27:9  This had taken a considerable time, and sailing was already dangerous, for the Fast was already over; and so Paul gave this warning.
Acts Twenty 27:10  "My friends," he said, "I see that this voyage will be attended with injury and much damage, not only to the cargo and the ship, but to our own lives also."
Acts Twenty 27:11  The Roman Officer, however, was more influenced by the captain and the owner than by what was said by Paul.
Acts Twenty 27:12  And, as the harbor was not a suitable one to winter in, the majority were in favor of continuing the voyage, in hope of being able to reach Phoenix, and winter there. Phoenix was a Cretan harbor, open to the north-east and south-east.
Acts Twenty 27:13  So, when a light wind sprang up from the south, thinking that they had found their opportunity, they weighed anchor and kept along the coast of Crete, close in shore.
Acts Twenty 27:14  But shortly afterwards a hurricane came down on us off the land--a north-easter, as it is called.
Acts Twenty 27:15  The ship was caught by it and was unable to keep her head to the wind, so we had to give way and let her drive before it.
Acts Twenty 27:16  Running under the lee of a small island called Cauda, we only just managed to secure the ship's boat,
Acts Twenty 27:17  And, after hoisting it on board, the men frapped the ship. But, afraid of being driven on to the Syrtis Sands, they lowered the yard, and then drifted.
Acts Twenty 27:18  So violently were we tossed about by the storm, that the next day they began throwing the cargo overboard,
Acts Twenty 27:19  And, on the following day, threw out the ship's tackle with their own hands.
Acts Twenty 27:20  As neither sun nor stars were visible for several days, and, as the gale still continued severe, all hope of our being saved was at last abandoned.
Acts Twenty 27:21  It was then, when they had gone a long time without food, that Paul came forward, and said. "My friends, you should have listened to me, and not have sailed from Crete and so incurred this injury and damage.
Acts Twenty 27:22  Yet, even as things are, I urge you not to lose courage, for there will not be a single life lost among you--only the ship.
Acts Twenty 27:23  For last night an angel of the God to whom I belong, and whom I serve, stood by me, and said--
Acts Twenty 27:24  'Have no fear, Paul; you must appear before the Emperor, and God himself has given you the lives of all your fellow-voyagers.'
Acts Twenty 27:25  Therefore, courage, my friends! for I believe God, that everything will happen exactly as I have been told.
Acts Twenty 27:26  We shall, however, have to be driven on some island."
Acts Twenty 27:27  It was now the fourteenth night of the storm, and we were drifting about in the Adriatic Sea, when, about midnight, the sailors began to suspect that they were drawing near land.
Acts Twenty 27:28  So they took soundings, and found twenty fathoms of water. After waiting a little, they took soundings again, and found fifteen fathoms.
Acts Twenty 27:29  Then, as they were afraid of our being driven upon some rocky coast, they let go four anchors from the stern, and longed for daylight.
Acts Twenty 27:30  The sailors wanted to leave the ship, and had lowered the boat, on pretense of running out anchors from the bows,
Acts Twenty 27:31  When Paul said to the Roman Officer and his men. "Unless the sailors remain on board, you cannot be saved."
Acts Twenty 27:32  Upon that the soldiers cut the ropes which held the boat, and let her drift away.
Acts Twenty 27:33  In the interval before daybreak Paul kept urging them all to take something to eat. "It is a fortnight to-day," he said, "that, owing to your anxiety, you have gone without food, taking nothing.
Acts Twenty 27:34  So I urge you to take something to eat; your safety depends upon it, for not one of you will lose even a hair of his head."
Acts Twenty 27:35  With these words he took some bread, and, after saying the thanksgiving to God before them all, broke it in pieces, and began to eat;
Acts Twenty 27:36  And the men all felt cheered and had something to eat themselves.
Acts Twenty 27:37  There were about seventy-six of us on board, all told.
Acts Twenty 27:38  After satisfying their hunger, they further lightened the ship by throwing the grain into the sea.
Acts Twenty 27:39  When daylight came, they could not make out what land it was, but, observing a creek in which there was a beach, they consulted as to whether they could run the ship safely into it.
Acts Twenty 27:40  Then they cast off, and abandoned the anchors, and at the same time unlashed the gear of the steering oars, hoisted the foresail to the wind, and made for the beach.
Acts Twenty 27:41  They got, however, into a kind of channel, and there ran the ship aground. The bows stuck fast and could not be moved, while the stern began breaking up under the strain.
Acts Twenty 27:42  The advice of the soldiers was that the prisoners should be killed, for fear that any of them should swim away and make their escape.
Acts Twenty 27:43  But the Roman Officer, anxious to save Paul, prevented their carrying out their intention, and ordered that those who could swim should be the first to jump into the sea and try to reach the shore;
Acts Twenty 27:44  And that the rest should follow, some on planks, and others on different pieces of the ship. In these various ways every one managed to get safely ashore.
Chapter 28
Acts Twenty 28:1  When we were all safe, we found that the island was called Malta.
Acts Twenty 28:2  The natives showed us marked kindness, for they lit a fire and took us all under shelter, because it had come on to rain and was cold.
Acts Twenty 28:3  Paul had gathered a quantity of dry sticks and laid them on the fire, when a viper, driven out by the heat, fastened on his hand.
Acts Twenty 28:4  When the natives saw the creature hanging from his hand, they said to one another. "Evidently this man is a murderer, for though he has been saved from the sea, Justice has not allowed him to live."
Acts Twenty 28:5  However, Paul shook the creature off into the fire and took no harm.
Acts Twenty 28:6  The natives were expecting inflammation to set in, or that he would suddenly fall dead; but, after waiting for a long time, and seeing that there was nothing amiss with him, they changed their minds and said that he was a God.
Acts Twenty 28:7  In that neighborhood there was an estate belonging to the Governor of the island, whose name was Publius. He took us up to his house, and for three days entertained us most courteously.
Acts Twenty 28:8  It happened that the father of Publius was lying ill of fever and dysentery. So Paul went to see him; and, after praying, he placed his hands on him and cured him.
Acts Twenty 28:9  After this, all the people in the island who had any illness came to Paul, and were cured.
Acts Twenty 28:10  They also presented us with many gifts, and when we set sail they put supplies of necessaries on board.
Acts Twenty 28:11  After three months, we set sail in a ship that had wintered in the island. She was an Alexandrian vessel, and had the Twin Sons of Zeus for her figure-head.
Acts Twenty 28:12  We put in at Syracuse and stayed there three days,
Acts Twenty 28:13  And from there we worked to windward and so got to Rhegium. A day later a south wind sprang up and took us to Puteoli in two days.
Acts Twenty 28:14  There we found some of the Brethren, and were urged to stay a week with them; after which we went on to Rome.
Acts Twenty 28:15  The Brethren there had heard about us, and came out as far as the Market of Appius and the Three Taverns to meet us. At sight of them Paul thanked God and was much cheered.
Acts Twenty 28:16  On our reaching Rome, Paul was allowed to live by himself, except for the soldier who was in charge of him.
Acts Twenty 28:17  Three days after our arrival, Paul invited the leading Jews to meet him; and, when they came, he spoke to them as follows. "Brothers, although I had done nothing hostile to the interests of our nation or to our ancestral customs, yet I was sent from Jerusalem as a prisoner, and handed over to the Romans.
Acts Twenty 28:18  The Romans, when they had examined me, were ready to release me, because there was nothing in my conduct deserving death.
Acts Twenty 28:19  But, as the Jews opposed my release, I was compelled to appeal to the Emperor--not, indeed, that I had any charge to make against my own nation.
Acts Twenty 28:20  This, then, is my reason for urging you to come to see me and talk with me; because it is for the sake of the Hope of Israel that I am here in chains."
Acts Twenty 28:21  "We," was their reply, "have not had any letter about you from Judea, nor have any of our fellow-Jews come and reported or said anything bad about you.
Acts Twenty 28:22  But we shall be glad to hear from you what your views are, for, with regard to this sect, we are well aware that it is spoken against on all sides."
Acts Twenty 28:23  They then fixed a day with him, and came to the place where he was staying, in even larger numbers, when Paul proceeded to lay the subject before them. He bore his testimony to the Kingdom of God, and tried to convince them about Jesus, by arguments drawn from the Law of Moses and from the Prophets--speaking from morning till evening.
Acts Twenty 28:24  Some were inclined to accept what he said; others, however, rejected it.
Acts Twenty 28:25  So, as they disagreed among themselves, they began to disperse, Paul adding only--"True, indeed, was the declaration made by the Holy Spirit, through the Prophet Isaiah to your ancestors- -
Acts Twenty 28:26  'Go to this nation and say--"You will hear with your ears without ever understanding, and, though you have eyes, you will see without ever perceiving."
Acts Twenty 28:27  For the mind of this nation has grown dense, and their ears are dull of hearing, their eyes also have they closed; lest some day they should see with their eyes, and with their ears they should hear, and in their mind they should understand, and should turn--and I should heal them.'
Acts Twenty 28:28  Understand, then, that this Salvation of God was sent for the Gentiles; and they will listen."
Acts Twenty 28:30  For two whole years Paul stayed in a house which he rented for himself, welcoming all who came to see him,
Acts Twenty 28:31  Proclaiming the Kingdom of God, and teaching about the Lord Jesus Christ, with perfect fearlessness, unmolested.