18
Certain Epicurean and Stoic teachers also debated with him. Some of them asked, "What is this ignorant show-off trying to say?" Others answered, "He seems to be talking about foreign gods." They said this because Paul was preaching about Jesus and the resurrection.
19
So they took Paul, brought him before the city council, the Areopagus, and said, "We would like to know what this new teaching is that you are talking about.
20
Some of the things we hear you say sound strange to us, and we would like to know what they mean.
21
(For all the citizens of Athens and the foreigners who lived there liked to spend all their time telling and hearing the latest new thing.)
22
Paul stood up in front of the city council and said, "I see that in every way you Athenians are very religious.
23
For as I walked through your city and looked at the places where you worship, I found an altar on which is written, "To an Unknown God.' That which you worship, then, even though you do not know it, is what I now proclaim to you.
1
24
God, who made the world and everything in it, is Lord of heaven and earth and does not live in temples made by human hands.
2
25
Nor does he need anything that we can supply by working for him, since it is he himself who gives life and breath and everything else to everyone.
3
26
From one human being he created all races of people and made them live throughout the whole earth. He himself fixed beforehand the exact times and the limits of the places where they would live.
4
27
He did this so that they would look for him, and perhaps find him as they felt around for him. Yet God is actually not far from any one of us;
5
28
as someone has said, "In him we live and move and exist.' It is as some of your poets have said, "We too are his children.'