使徒行传 22
Chinese New Version (Simplified)
22 “各位父老弟兄,请听听我现在对你们的申辩。” 2 他们听见保罗用希伯来语说话,就更加安静了。保罗说: 3 “我是犹太人,生在基利家的大数,在城里长大,按照我们祖宗律法的严格要求,在迦玛列门下受教,我为 神热心,好象你们大家今天一样。 4 我曾经迫害信奉这道的人直至死地,把男男女女都捆绑起来,送进监狱, 5 这是大祭司和全公议会都可以给我作证的。我也从他们那里得到了写给众弟兄的信,就去大马士革,要把那里的人捆绑起来,带到耶路撒冷接受惩罚。
保罗自述信主经过
6 “约在正午,当我走近大马士革的时候,忽然有大光从天上向我四面照射, 7 我仆倒在地上,听见有声音对我说:‘扫罗,扫罗,你为甚么迫害我?’ 8 我回答:‘主啊,你是谁?’他说:‘我就是你所迫害的拿撒勒人耶稣。’ 9 跟我在一起的人,只看见那光,却听不清楚那位对我说话的声音。 10 我说:‘主啊,我应当作甚么呢?’主说:‘起来,进大马士革去,在那里有人会把指定给你作的一切事告诉你。’ 11 因为那光太强烈,我的眼睛就瞎了,跟我在一起的人就牵着我的手,进了大马士革。
12 “有一个人名叫亚拿尼亚的,他是一个虔诚而遵守律法的人,当地所有的犹太人都称赞他。 13 他来见我,站在我旁边,对我说:‘扫罗弟兄,你现在可以看见了。’我立刻往上一看,看见了他。 14 他又说:‘我们祖先的 神选派了你,让你明白他的旨意,看见那义者,听见他口中的声音。 15 因为你要把所看见所听见的,向万人为他作见证。 16 现在你为甚么还耽搁呢?起来受洗,求告他的名,洗净你的罪吧。’
保罗蒙差遣向外族人传福音
17 “后来,我回到耶路撒冷,在殿里祷告的时候,魂游象外, 18 看见主对我说:‘你要快快离开耶路撒冷,因为你为我作的见证,他们是不会接受的。’ 19 我说:‘主啊,他们知道我曾把信你的人监禁起来,又在各会堂拷打他们, 20 并且你的见证人司提反受害流血的时候,我也亲自在场,表示同意,并且为杀他的人看守衣服。’ 21 他对我说:‘你走吧,我要派你到远方的外族人那里去。’”
保罗与千夫长
22 众人听见他说到这句话,就高声说:“这样的人应该从地上除掉,不应该活着!” 23 大家正在喊叫着,拋掷衣服,向空中扬灰撒土的时候, 24 千夫长下令把保罗带到营楼去,吩咐人用鞭子拷问他,要知道群众为甚么这样向他喊叫。 25 士兵正用皮带绑他的时候,保罗对站在旁边的百夫长说:“你们鞭打一个还没有定罪的罗马公民,是合法的吗?” 26 百夫长听了,就去报告千夫长,说:“这个人是罗马公民,你要怎么办呢?” 27 千夫长就来问保罗:“告诉我,你是罗马公民吗?”他说:“是的。” 28 千夫长说:“我花了一大笔钱,才取得罗马籍。”保罗说:“我生下来就是罗马公民。” 29 于是那些要拷问他的人,立刻离开他走了。千夫长既知道他是罗马公民,又因捆绑过他,就害怕起来。
保罗在公议会面前申辩
30 第二天,千夫长为要知道犹太人控告保罗的真相,就解开他,召集了祭司长和公议会全体在一起,把保罗带下来,叫他站在他们面前。
Acts 22
The Message
22 1-2 “My dear brothers and fathers, listen carefully to what I have to say before you jump to conclusions about me.” When they heard him speaking Hebrew, they grew even quieter. No one wanted to miss a word of this.
2-3 He continued, “I am a good Jew, born in Tarsus in the province of Cilicia, but educated here in Jerusalem under the exacting eye of Rabbi Gamaliel, thoroughly instructed in our religious traditions. And I’ve always been passionately on God’s side, just as you are right now.
4-5 “I went after anyone connected with this ‘Way,’ went at them with all my might, ready to kill for God. I rounded up men and women right and left and had them thrown in prison. You can ask the Chief Priest or anyone in the High Council to verify this; they all knew me well. Then I went off to our brothers in Damascus, armed with official documents authorizing me to hunt down the followers of Jesus there, arrest them, and bring them back to Jerusalem for sentencing.
6-7 “As I arrived on the outskirts of Damascus about noon, a blinding light blazed out of the skies and I fell to the ground, dazed. I heard a voice: ‘Saul, Saul, why are you out to get me?’
8-9 “‘Who are you, Master?’ I asked.
“He said, ‘I am Jesus the Nazarene, the One you’re hunting down.’ My companions saw the light, but they didn’t hear the conversation.
10-11 “Then I said, ‘What do I do now, Master?’
“He said, ‘Get to your feet and enter Damascus. There you’ll be told everything that’s been set out for you to do.’ And so we entered Damascus, but nothing like the entrance I had planned—I was blind as a bat and my companions had to lead me in by the hand.
12-13 “And that’s when I met Ananias, a man with a sterling reputation in observing our laws—the Jewish community in Damascus is unanimous on that score. He came and put his arm on my shoulder. ‘Look up,’ he said. I looked, and found myself looking right into his eyes—I could see again!
14-16 “Then he said, ‘The God of our ancestors has handpicked you to be briefed on his plan of action. You’ve actually seen the Righteous Innocent and heard him speak. You are to be a key witness to everyone you meet of what you’ve seen and heard. So what are you waiting for? Get up and get yourself baptized, scrubbed clean of those sins and personally acquainted with God.’
17-18 “Well, it happened just as Ananias said. After I was back in Jerusalem and praying one day in the Temple, lost in the presence of God, I saw him, saw God’s Righteous Innocent, and heard him say to me, ‘Hurry up! Get out of here as quickly as you can. None of the Jews here in Jerusalem are going to accept what you say about me.’
19-20 “At first I objected: ‘Who has better credentials? They all know how obsessed I was with hunting out those who believed in you, beating them up in the meeting places and throwing them in jail. And when your witness Stephen was murdered, I was right there, holding the coats of the murderers and cheering them on. And now they see me totally converted. What better qualification could I have?’
21 “But he said, ‘Don’t argue. Go. I’m sending you on a long journey to outsider non-Jews.’”
A Roman Citizen
22-25 The people in the crowd had listened attentively up to this point, but now they broke loose, shouting out, “Kill him! He’s an insect! Stomp on him!” They shook their fists. They filled the air with curses. That’s when the captain intervened and ordered Paul taken into the barracks. By now the captain was thoroughly exasperated. He decided to interrogate Paul under torture in order to get to the bottom of this, to find out what he had done that provoked this outraged violence. As they spread-eagled him with strips of leather, getting him ready for the whip, Paul said to the centurion standing there, “Is this legal: torturing a Roman citizen without a fair trial?”
26 When the centurion heard that, he went directly to the captain. “Do you realize what you’ve done? This man is a Roman citizen!”
27 The captain came back and took charge. “Is what I hear right? You’re a Roman citizen?”
Paul said, “I certainly am.”
28 The captain was impressed. “I paid a huge sum for my citizenship. How much did it cost you?”
“Nothing,” said Paul. “It cost me nothing. I was free from the day of my birth.”
29 That put a stop to the interrogation. And it put the fear of God into the captain. He had put a Roman citizen in chains and come within a whisker of putting him under torture!
30 The next day, determined to get to the root of the trouble and know for sure what was behind the Jewish accusation, the captain released Paul and ordered a meeting of the high priests and the High Council to see what they could make of it. Paul was led in and took his place before them.
Chinese New Version (CNV). Copyright © 1976, 1992, 1999, 2001, 2005 by Worldwide Bible Society.
Copyright © 1993, 2002, 2018 by Eugene H. Peterson