| PAUL was
a faithful servant of God, and a true disciple of
Jesus. He traveled from place to place telling
the people about the wonderful things God was
planning to do for them when Jesus is King. After
a while God made it known to Paul that he should
visit Jerusalem. He always did what God wanted
him to do, so he started to travel in the
direction of Jerusalem. They
didnt have airplanes or railroad trains or
automobiles at that time, so it was much more
difficult for Paul to travel than it is for us.
Sometimes he walked. Sometimes he traveled in a
sailboat.
On his way to Jerusalem he
visited the disciples of Jesus in many places,
and when it was possible he preached to them. In
a place called Troas the disciples of Jesus met
together, and Paul preached to them all night.
One young man, who was sitting on a window sill,
went to sleep while Paul was preaching, and fell
out of the window, and when they picked him up he
was dead. But Paul used the power of God to make
this young man alive again.
As Paul went from place to
place on his way to Jerusalem, some of his
friends advised him not to continue his journey
to Jerusalem. They said that when he arrived he
would be put in prison. But Paul didnt take
their advice. He knew that God wanted him to
visit Jerusalem so he was determined to go. He
said:
I am ready not to be
bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem for the
name of the Lord Jesus.
When Paul and his companions
reached Jerusalem they went to the home of James.
There they met a number of Jesus disciples,
and Paul told them about the many wonderful
experiences he had enjoyed when telling the
people about Jesus. Then he visited the temple,
and while he was there some of the Israelites,
who had been acquainted with him and knew that he
now was a disciple of Jesus, arrested him.
These were the same kind of
people who caused Jesus and Stephen to be killed;
and now they wanted to kill Paul. We mustnt
think badly of them, though, because they thought
Paul was one of Gods enemies. Paul himself
at one time thought that Jesus and Stephen were
enemies of God, but now he understood better. Now
he knew that Jesus was the Lamb of
God who had died in order that all the people
might be made alive again.
The Israelitesas I have
told you beforewere not the real rulers of
Jerusalem. The city was under the rule of the
Romans, and when the Roman chief of police beard
that the Israelites had seized Paul and were
beating him and intended to kill him, he sent
soldiers to rescue him.
This Roman officer was called
the chief captain of the band. He
supposed that Paul had committed some great
crime, so he told his soldiers to put two chains
on him and take him into the castle where he
could be questioned.
The people were greatly
excited!
The Roman soldiers had to carry
Paul to keep him from the mob. As they were
carrying him up the stairs into the castle, Paul
asked permission to speak to the people who were
crying out against him. He was given this
permission. He waved to them with his hand, and
they stopped their shouting long enough to hear
what he had to say. Then Paul told them that at
one time he was just like them, that he, too,
thought all who believed in Jesus were Gods
enemies, and that they should be put to death.
Paul then told the people who
were trying to kill him about the wonderful
experience he had when Jesus spoke to him while
he was on his way to Damascus to arrest the
disciples of Jesus who lived there. It was then
that he learned how wrong he was. He found out
that Jesus was the Son of God, who had come to
the world to die for the people.
Yes, Paul told his enemies a
wonderful story, and it was a true story, too.
But still they wanted to kill him. Finally the
people wouldnt listen any more, and they
cried out saying:
Away with such a fellow
from the earth; for it is not fit that he should
live.
Then the chief of police gave
orders that Paul be taken into the castle and
that he should be beaten to make him tell the
truth about the great crime which it was supposed
he had committed. Of course Paul had done no
wrong, but the chief of police didnt know
this. He didnt realize that the people
could be so angry with Paul just because he was a
disciple of Jesus.
It is really wrong to be angry
with people just because they dont think as
we do.
When the Roman soldiers had
securely bound and were about ready to beat Paul,
he spoke to a guard who was standing nearby, and
asked him if it was lawful to beat a Roman who
had not been tried and condemned. The guard was
very much surprised that Paul was a Roman, and he
quickly reported it to his chief. When it was
discovered that Paul was a Roman they arranged to
hold a trial for him, and let the people tell
what great wrong he had done.
Yes, Paul was a Roman, but he
was also an Israelite. It was something like one
who is an Englishman becoming a United States
citizen. Even though ones parents are
English, if he is born in the United States he is
a citizen of the United States. One who is not
born in the United States can become a citizen by
taking out citizenship papers.
So there were these two ways of
becoming a Roman citizen. Paul, although his
parents were Jewish, was born a Roman citizen. It
was a very good thing for him to be a Roman
citizen, for because of this the Roman soldiers
had to protect him.
The next day the chief of
police arranged for Paul to appear before a
council of Israelites to defend himself. Some of
the men in this council were called Pharisees,
and some were Sadducees. The Pharisees believed
that God would make dead people alive again, it
the resurrection of the dead. The
Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection.
Paul knew this, so he told the council that the
thing he was being accused of was his belief in
the resurrection.
Well, that started an argument
among the Pharisees and Sadducees who were in the
council. Besides, the Pharisees believed in
angels, and they thought perhaps an angel had
spoken to Paul. If so, they were afraid to do
anything to harm him. But the Sadducees
didnt believe in angels, so this was
something else over which they argued.
They not only argued, but
started to fight one another. The chief of police
saw what was occurring, and he was afraid Paul
would be seriously hurt, so he ordered his
soldiers to take him back into the castle where
he would be safe.
That night a very wonderful
thing occurred. The Bible tells us that the Lord
stood by Paul and said to him:
Be of good cheer, Paul;
for as thou hast testified of me in Jerusalem, so
must thou bear witness also at Rome.
Now Paul knew what to expect.
He was sure that he would be delivered from the
Israelites in Jerusalem, and that he was to go to
the city of Rome, in Italy, to tell the people
about Jesus, and about the resurrection. But the
way in which Paul traveled to Rome was very
strange indeed.
The next day after the Lord
spoke to Paul, a group of more than forty
Israelites banded together and agreed that they
would neither eat nor drink until they had killed
Paul. They told the chief priests and elders
about it, and suggested to them that they ask the
chief of police to bring Paul before them again
for further questioning. They explained that this
would give them an opportunity to seize Paul and
kill him.
But this plan didnt work.
Paul had a young nephew who lived in Jerusalem,
and he overheard the plans that were made by
these wicked men to kill his Uncle Paul, so he
hurried to the castle, where he was able to see
the chief of police and warn him of the plot.
Then the chief of police, whose
name was Claudius Lysias, decided to send Paul
out of the city to a Roman governor in Caesarea
by the name of Felix. So he arranged that night
for two hundred soldiers, seventy cavalrymen, and
two hundred spearmen to take Paul out of the city
to Caesarea.
Claudius sent a letter to
Felix, explaining what he knew about Paul and the
charges against him, and that he was sending him
to Felix to be tried because be was a Roman
citizen. Five days later a committee of
Israelites came from Jerusalem to accuse Paul
before Felix.
Felix was a clever man, and he
could see that Paul had done no wrong, so he sent
these men back to Jerusalem, telling them that be
would examine the case further at a later time.
Then he instructed the guard to give Paul is much
liberty as possible, and to allow his friends to
visit him. And there Paul remained for more than
two years.
Then another Roman officer
named Festus took the place of Felix in Caesarea,
and it was arranged that Paul should be tried
again before him. Festus, who was then visiting
Jerusalem, insisted that his accusers go with him
to Caesarea. At this trial Paul, knowing that God
wanted him to go to Rome, appealed to Caesar.
Caesar was the emperor of the Roman Empire, of
which Rome was the capital. As Paul was a Roman
citizen, his appeal was honored, and now be was
to be taken as a prisoner to Rome.
But before Paul started on the
journey toward Rome, arrangements were made by
Festus for him to present his case to a Roman
king named Agrippa. King Agrippa was very much
interested in what Paul told him, and said that
he was almost convinced that he should be a
disciple of Jesus. Paul certainly did preach a
wonderful sermon to King Agrippa, telling him
about Jesus, and that he had been made alive
again, and that all who have died are also to be
made alive again.
King Agrippa said that Paul
could have been set free if he had not appealed
his case to Caesar. But God had told him he was
to go to Rome and tell the people there about
Jesus. So, determined that he would do what God
wanted him to do, it made little or no difference
to him whether he were free or not.
After awhile arrangements were
complete for Paul to leave by ship, together with
other prisoners, on the long journey to Rome. All
these prisoners were put in charge of an officer
named Julius. There were no vessels which went
directly to Rome, so they sailed from place to
place, changing from one ship to another several
times until they reached Alexandria in Egypt.
There they arranged to sail in
a ship that was going to Italy. But this ship
never reached Italy, because it was wrecked in a
severe storm off the island of Melita.
Before this happened and before
they set sail again, they were stopping for a
while in a place called The Fair
Havens. It was by now very late in the fall
of the year, and Paul advised the captain of the
ship to remain in The Fair Havens for the winter.
There were two hundred and seventy-six persons on
the ship. Many of them were anxious to get to
their destinations so it was decided to set sail
and not take Pauls advice.
But it turned out that Paul was
right. A heavy winter storm arose, and it seemed
certain that the ship would be wrecked. The
people on the ship were very much frightened, so
Paul delivered a wonderful message to them,
saying:
Now I exhort you to be of
good cheer: for there shall be no loss of any
mans life among you, but of the ship.
Then Paul explained to the
people on the sinking ship why he was so sure
that they would all be saved. He said that one of
Gods angels had spoken to him, saying:
Fear not, Paul; thou must
be brought before Caesar; and lo, God hath given
thee all them that sail with thee.
They steered the ship as best
they could toward the land, and it went aground
some little distance off shore. Those who could
swim ashore did so. Some used boards, and others
used broken pieces of the ship to keep themselves
afloat, and finally they all managed to get to
the dry land and to safety. The people who lived
on this island of Melita were very kind to the
shipwrecked travelers. It was rainy and cold so
they built a fire for them.
Paul helped to build the fire,
and as he was putting wood on it a poisonous
snake called a viper bit him on the
hand. The Bible says that the viper came out of
the heat. It was cold weather, and probably the
serpent had hidden itself away in the wood for
the winter, and the fire drove it out.
The people of the island, as
well as the passengers, knew that anyone bitten
by a viper was almost certain to die. But Paul
was not harmed. God was taking care of him
because he wanted him to tell the people in Rome
about Jesus. When Paul didnt die from the
viper bite, the people of the island were kinder
to him than ever.
The ruler of the island was
named Publius. His father was very sick, and Paul
healed him. Paul also healed other sick people on
the island. They remained on Melita for three
months. By that time the worst of the winter was
over. Another ship from Alexandria, which had not
been wrecked, but had remained at Melita for the
winter, was sailing, so Paul was taken on this
ship to complete his journey to Italy. After two
more stops on the way, Paul finally arrived in
Italy by ship, at a seaport which was quite a
journey from Rome.
The Roman officers knew that
Paul had not committed any crime, so when they
brought him to Rome they did not put him in
prison as they did other prisoners, but allowed
him to hire a house for himself. He was not free,
though, because he was kept chained to a soldier
all the time, day and night. It was arranged that
different soldiers would take turns in thus
guarding Paul.
For two years Paul lived this
way. And what do you suppose he did all this
time?
Well, first of all, he sent for
the important Jews of Rome to come and see him.
He told them about Jesus and the resurrection.
Some of them believed what he told them, and some
did not.
After that various Gentiles
visited him.
So all day long, day after day,
for two whole years, Paul continued to tell the
people who came to see him about Jesus, and about
all the good things God will do for the people
when Jesus becomes King of all the earth.
The Bible doesnt tell us
very much about what Paul did after this. It is
believed, though, that he was set free, but later
arrested by the Romans again and brought to Rome,
where he was put to death. Like Jesus, however,
Paul was not put to death because he had done
wrong. He was put to death because the rulers
didnt want him to tell the people about
King Jesus. Wont it be grand when everybody
will love Jesus, and will be glad that he is
their King?
QUESTIONS
What happened to Paul when
he visited the temple in Jerusalem?
Name the Roman rulers to
whom Paul explained why his enemies hated him?
What happened to Paul on his
way to Rome, and why did he spend the winter in
Melita?
How was Paul treated after
he arrived in Rome?
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