Revised Common Lectionary (Complementary)
King Agrippa hears Paul, who describes his calling from the beginning.
26 Agrippa said to Paul, You are permitted to speak for yourself. Then Paul stretched forth his hand and answered for himself:
2 I think myself fortunate, King Agrippa, because I may answer this day before you to all the things I am accused of by the Jews, 3 especially because you are expert in all the customs and questions that are among the Jews. Therefore I beseech you to hear me patiently.
4 My life from my childhood, which was at first among my own nation at Jerusalem, all the Jews 5 who knew me from the beginning know, if they would testify it. For in accordance with the most strict sect of our religion, I lived as a Pharisee. 6 And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made by God to our fathers, 7 to which promise our twelve tribes, earnestly serving God day and night, hope to attain. For which hope’s sake, King Agrippa, I am accused by the Jews. 8 Why should it be thought a thing incredible to you, that God should raise the dead up again?
9 I also truly thought in myself that I ought to do many things to utterly oppose the name of Jesus of Nazareth – 10 which things I also did in Jerusalem, where I shut up many of the saints in prison, having received authority from the high priests. And when they were put to death, I joined in giving the sentence. 11 And I punished them often in every synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme, and was even more mad upon them, and persecuted them even to distant cities.
Copyright © 2016 by Ruth Magnusson (Davis). Includes emendations to February 2022. All rights reserved.