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Within Cupped Hands (Acts of the Apostles) (Christ Church)

on January 7, 2026

INTRODUCTION

We see in this passage how the sovereign God moves all things in accordance with His purpose and will, and He turns the machinations of the wicked back upon them. God had told Paul that he was going to bear witness to Christ in Rome; he need not worry. All plots against him would misfire.

THE TEXT

“And the night following the Lord stood by him, and said, Be of good cheer, Paul: for as thou hast testified of me in Jerusalem, so must thou bear witness also at Rome. And when it was day, certain of the Jews banded together, and bound themselves under a curse, saying that they would neither eat nor drink till they had killed Paul . . .” (Acts 23:11–35).

SUMMARY OF THE TEXT

The Lord encouraged Paul that night, assuring him that he would witness in Rome, just as he had in Jerusalem (v. 11). The next day more than forty Jews bound themselves with an oath, saying they would neither eat nor drink until they had killed Paul (vv. 12-13). They came to the Council and told them this, and suggested a plan—the Council should ask for another opportunity to question Paul, and they would kill him on the way (vv. 14-15). Paul’s nephew heard of it and came to warn Paul (v. 16). Paul called one of the centurions and asked him to take the boy to the Captain, which the centurion did (vv. 17-18). The Captain took him aside privately by the hand and asked for the message (v. 19), which the boy delivered (vv. 20-21). So the Captain sent the boy away with a charge to tell no one (v. 22). The Captain then ordered a force of 470 men to escort Paul to Caesarea at three in the morning (vv. 23-24), and provided a mount for Paul (v. 24).

The Captain sent an accompanying letter to Felix the governor, a letter designed to fudge the details just a bit. To the most excellent governor Felix, greetings (v. 26). This prisoner had been taken by the Jews, who would have killed him if not for the prompt action of the Captain who, having discovered that Paul was a Roman, came and rescued him (v. 27). You should recall that he actually discovered Paul was a Roman when he was on the verge of having him flogged. Everything after this bit was accurate enough though. He wanted to know more and brought him before the Jewish Council (v. 28). It was there he learned that Paul had done nothing worthy of death or imprisonment, but it was just a Jewish wrangle (v. 29). He then mentions the fact that he was made aware of a plot against Paul, and so he sent Paul to Felix. He told Paul’s accusers to take their complaint to Felix (v. 30).

And so the soldiers, as commanded, took Paul to Antipatris that night (v. 31), a city halfway between Jerusalem and Caesarea. The next day the foot soldiers returned to Jerusalem, leaving Paul to go on to Caesarea with the 70 cavalrymen (v. 32). They came to Caesarea, delivered the Captain’s letter, and presented Paul to Felix (v. 33). Felix read the letter and asked Paul was province he was from, and learned it was from Cilicia (v. 34). He said that he would hear Paul out after his accusers had arrived. Until then, Paul was to be kept there in Herod’s judgment hall (v. 35).

PAUL’S NEPHEW AND JERUSALEM INTRIGUES

Agabus had predicted that Paul would be seized in Jerusalem, and turned over to the Gentiles (Acts 21:11). This came to pass, but the Gentiles wound up serving as Paul’s guards and protectors.

We are given a tantalizing glimpse of Paul’s extended family. Paul’s nephew (his sister’s son) heard of the plot against Paul (v. 16). We are told that he is a young man (neanias), and we can see that he is very young in the fact that the Captain takes him aside, leading him by the hand (v. 19). The conspiracy against Paul was organized at the highest levels, involving forty men and the Council, which means that Paul’s family was close enough to the corridors of power (still) to become aware of the plot. We don’t know that they were Christians, but we do know that there was still familial sympathy for Paul. I remember how much this story delighted me as a young boy. The conspirators were not going to eat and drink until they had killed Paul, and I thought “I bet they are pretty hungry by now.” They were going to be conducting this murder on the stairs leading down from the fortress, most likely—defiling the Temple with a murder.

We can see that this was a very serious situation—the Captain was concerned about the security of Jerusalem, in that the 400 foot soldiers returned to Jerusalem as soon as Paul was safely out of harm’s way. The Captain wanted those troops back.

But instead of a successful assassination, what happens? Paul was brought out of Jerusalem with an escort fit for a prince.

A NOTE ABOUT FELIX

Felix, the Roman governor at the time, was a brutal man. He had originally been a slave, and had been emancipated by the emperor Claudius, or possibly the mother of Claudius (who was the daughter of Mark Anthony). Felix’s tenure was marked by all kinds of societal disturbances (terrorists, messiahs, false prophets, sicarii), which Felix responded to with real brutality in kind. The Roman historian Tacitus noted that he “practiced every kind of cruelty and lust, wielding the power of king with all the instincts of a slave” (Histories 5.9). All of this makes the comment made by Tertullus in the next chapter (24:2)—that “by thee we enjoy great quietness”—pretty funny.

WATCHING OUT FOR PAUL

Now it is quite true that the Captain wrote his letter to Felix in a way that covered up for his earlier blunder in ordering that Paul be flogged. He did streamline the truth a bit, watching out for himself. But notice also how this Roman soldier, not a believer, goes out of his way to protect Paul. He gives Felix his opinion that Paul did not deserve death and he did not deserve chains (v. 29). In addition, he tells the story in such a way as to make it clear that he was sending Paul to Felix because his accusers were not acting in good faith, planning murder as they were (v. 30).

THE INVISIBLE HAND

In the book of Esther, God is not mentioned by name once—but at the same time, His protecting and providential hand can be seen throughout the entire narrative. It is the same kind of thing here. God said that Paul needed to testify in Rome (v. 11), and with that end in view, without mentioning God again, we can see how seamlessly all the chess pieces were moved to their necessary places—including the would-be assassins.

So always remember how the doctrine of God’s sovereignty is such a comforting doctrine. Whatever your challenges, whatever afflictions beset you, the cupped hands of your everlasting Father are around you. You must not ever think of yourself as somehow just caught in the machinery.

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