Beginning
24 Five days later, Ananias the high priest came from Jerusalem. He brought with him some of the leaders and a lawyer named Tertullus. They told the ruler their complaint against Paul.
2 Paul was called in. Tertullus began to bring the complaints. `Great ruler Felix,' he said, `we have peace because of what you have done. These people have a better life because of you.
3 We are always very glad for this everywhere we go.
4 I do not want to take much of your time. But please be kind and listen to a few words from us.
5 We have found this man to be a real trouble-maker. He talks to the Jews all over the world and causes them to disobey the laws. He is the leading trouble-maker of the Nazarene group.
6 He even tried to make the temple unclean. But we caught him and were going to judge him by our law.
7 But Lysias the commanding officer came. He took Paul away from us by force.
8 He told those who have complaints against him to come to you. Ask him yourself and you will find out from him about all these complaints we have brought against him.'
9 The Jews agreed with what Tertullus the lawyer said. They said, `Yes, yes, he is telling the truth.'
10 The ruler made a sign for Paul to speak. So Paul said, `I know that for many years you have judged matters for this people.
11 So I am happy to speak for myself. Not more than twelve days ago I went to Jerusalem to worship. If you ask the people, you will find this out.
12 They did not find me quarrelling with anyone in the temple. I was not making trouble among the people in the meeting houses or in the city.
13 They cannot prove the things they have said against me here.
14 But I myself tell you this. I worship the God of my fathers in the Christian way. They say this is not the right way. I believe everything that the law teaches. I believe everything that the prophets have written.
15 I believe that God will raise from death both the good people and the bad people. These people here believe the same thing.
16 I always try to do what is right to God and to men.
17 `I was away for a few years and I had come to Jerusalem to bring gifts to my people, and to give offerings.
18 While I was doing this, they found me in the temple. I had made myself clean the way the law says to do. I did not have many people around me. I was not making trouble.
19 Some Jews were there from Asia Minor. They should be here before you and talk against me if they have anything to say.
20 Or let these men here tell if they found anything wrong with me when I stood in their court.
21 I did this one thing. I shouted while I was standing among them, "I am being judged today because I believe that the dead will be raised again." '
22 Felix sent them away because he knew many things about the Christian way. He said, `When Lysias, the commanding officer, comes down, I will know everything about this matter.'
23 He said to the officer, `Keep Paul in prison but let him have some freedom. Let his friends come to visit him and to do things for him.'
24 Some days after that, Felix came with his wife Drusilla. She was a Jewess. He sent for Paul and listened to what Paul said about believing in Christ Jesus.
25 Paul talked about what is right, about living the right way, and about the time when all people will be judged. Felix was very much afraid when he heard these things. He said to Paul, `You may go now. When I have time, I will call you again.'
26 He hoped that Paul would give him money to free him. And so he often sent for Paul and talked with him.
27 After two years, a man named Porcius Festus came to rule in Felix's place. Felix had wanted to please the Jewish leaders, so he left Paul in prison.
25 Three days after Festus came to the country, he went to Jerusalem from Caesarea.
2 Then the chief priests and the leaders of the Jews told him what they had against Paul.
3 `Please do something for us,' they begged. `Send for Paul to come to Jerusalem.' They had made a secret plan to kill him on the road.
4 Festus said, `Paul is being kept in prison in Caesarea. I myself am going there soon.
5 Let the men among you who are able come with me. If Paul has done anything wrong, then they can talk against him.'
6 Festus stayed only eight or ten days more among them. Then he went to Caesarea. The next day he sat on his chair in the court and had Paul brought in.
7 When Paul came in, the Jewish leaders who had come from Jerusalem stood around Paul. They talked much against him. But they could not prove that the things they said were true.
8 Paul spoke for himself. He said, `I have done no wrong to the law, or to the temple, or against Caesar the ruler of the Romans.'
9 Festus wanted to please the Jewish leaders, so he said to Paul, `Will you go to Jerusalem and let me judge you there about these things?'
10 Paul said, `I am standing in Caesar's court. That is where I should be judged. I have done nothing wrong to the Jews. You yourself know that well.
11 If I have done wrong things, or any wrong thing for which I should die, then I do not ask to live. But if the things these people say are not true, then no one has power to give me up to the leaders of the Jews. I ask to go to Caesar.'
12 So Festus talked the matter over with the court. Then he said to Paul, `You have asked to go to Caesar. All right, you will go to Caesar!'
13 Some time after that, king Agrippa and Bernice came to Caesarea to greet Festus.
14 They stayed for many days. Festus brought Paul's matter to the king. He said, `Felix left a man in prison here.
15 When I was in Jerusalem, the chief priest and leaders of the Jews came to me. They talked against him, and they asked me to punish him.
16 I told them that the Romans do not do it that way. They do not punish a man until he has met those who talk against him. Then he has a chance to speak for himself.
17 So they came here with me. I did not wait. The very next day I sat on my chair in the court and had the man brought in.
18 When they stood up, they did not say the wrong things against him that I thought they would.
19 But instead, they had a quarrel with him about the things they believe in. The quarrel is about a man named Jesus who died. Paul said he is alive.
20 I did not know how to judge such things. So I asked if he would go to Jerusalem and be judged there about these matters.
21 But Paul asked to wait and let Caesar judge his case. So I had him put in prison to be kept there until I can send him to Caesar.'
22 Agrippa said to Festus, `I should like to hear the man myself.' Festus said, `Tomorrow you shall hear him.'
23 So the next day Agrippa and Bernice came, making a big show of themselves. They went into the room to hear Paul talk. Officers and the leading men of the city also went in. When Festus called for Paul, he was brought in.
24 Then Festus said, `King Agrippa and all you men here with us, you see this man. All the Jewish leaders, both in Jerusalem and here, came together and talked about him. They shouted, "He must die!"
25 But I found out that he had not done anything wrong for which he should die. He himself asked to go to Caesar, so I decided to send him.
26 But I have no real complaint about him to write to my ruler. So I have brought this man before you all, and most of all before you, king Agrippa. When you have heard him, I hope I will have something to write about him.
27 I think that it does not make sense to send a prisoner and not say what wrong he has done.'
26 Then Agrippa said to Paul, `You may speak for yourself.' So Paul put out his hand and began to speak.
2 `King Agrippa, I am happy to speak for myself before you today. I will talk about all the things the leaders of the Jews have said against me.
3 You know all the ways of the Jews. You know what they believe. So please take time to listen to me.
4 `All the Jews know the way I lived from the time I was young. From the beginning I lived with my own people at Jerusalem.
5 They have known me for a long time. They know, if they would tell it, that I lived like the Pharisee group. They obey the law better than any others who worship God the way we do.
6 I believe that God will keep the promise that he made to our fathers long ago. That is why I am standing here being judged today.
7 All the people of our twelve tribes serve God faithfully day and night. They do this because they believe they will receive what he has promised. Because I believe this, king Agrippa, the Jewish leaders are talking against me.
8 Why is it so hard for any of you to believe that God should raise the dead?
9 `I used to think that I must do many things against the name of Jesus of Nazareth.
10 I did this in Jerusalem. The chief priests gave me power. I put many of God's people in prison. And when they were killed, I agreed to it.
11 Often I punished them in all the meeting places. I tried to make them say wrong things about Christ. I was very, very angry. I even went to other cities to trouble them.'
12 `And so I was on my way to the city of Damascus. The chief priests had given me power and a letter.
13 I was on the road at midday, king Agrippa, and I saw a bright light. It came from the sky and was brighter than the light of the sun. It shone all around me and the men who were travelling with me.
14 We all fell to the ground. I heard someone say to me in the Jews' language, "Saul, Saul, why are you troubling me? You hurt yourself when you kick against the sticks which guide you."
15 `I said, "Who are you, Lord?" And the Lord said, "I am Jesus, the one you are troubling.
16 But get up. Stand on your feet. Here is why I have shown myself to you. I have chosen you to work for me. I have chosen you to tell people what you saw when you saw me today. You are to tell them also about the other times when I will show myself to you.
17 I will keep you safe from your own people, the Jews. And I will keep you safe from those who are not Jews. I am sending you to them.
18 I send you to them to open their eyes. Then they will turn from darkness to light. You are to take them out of Satan's power and turn them to God, to be forgiven of their wrong ways. Then they will be among those who are made clean and pure by believing in me." '
19 `So, king Agrippa, I obeyed what the one from heaven told me to do.
20 I told the good news to the people of Damascus and Jerusalem. Then I told it all over Judea. I went to those who are not Jews. I told everyone that they must stop doing wrong things and turn to God. I told them they must show by the way they live that they have stopped doing wrong things.
21 That is why the leaders of the Jews caught me in the temple and tried to kill me.
22 God has always helped me up to today. I have stood and talked to both small people and great people. I have said nothing more than what the prophets and Moses said would happen.
23 They said Christ must suffer. They said he would be the first person to rise from death. He would be the first person to bring news of light to the Jews and those who are not Jews.'
24 While Paul was saying these things Festus shouted, `Paul, you are crazy! All your book learning is making you crazy.'
25 Paul said, `No, great ruler Festus, I am not crazy. But what I say is true. It makes good sense.
26 The king knows about these things. I am not afraid to talk to him about them. I am sure that not one of these things happened without his knowing about it. This did not happen in secret.
27 King Agrippa do you believe the prophets? I know you believe them.'
28 Then Agrippa said to Paul, `You are trying to make me a Christian right away.'
29 `Right away or later,' said Paul. `I wish that all who hear me today might be what I am. That is, what I am without these chains.'
30 Then king Agrippa stood up. Festus and Bernice and those who were sitting there with them stood up also.
31 They left the room and talked the matter over. They said, `This man is not doing anything wrong for which he ought to be in prison or die.'
32 Agrippa said to Festus, `We could let this man go free if he had not asked to go to Caesar.'
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