Acts 23:22-32

22 The captain dismissed the nephew with a warning: "Don't breathe a word of this to a soul."
23 The captain called up two centurions. "Get two hundred soldiers ready to go immediately to Caesarea. Also seventy cavalry and two hundred light infantry. I want them ready to march by nine o'clock tonight.
24 And you'll need a couple of mules for Paul and his gear. We're going to present this man safe and sound to Governor Felix."
25 Then he wrote this letter:
26 From Claudius Lysias, to the Most Honorable Governor Felix:
27 I rescued this man from a Jewish mob. They had seized him and were about to kill him when I learned that he was a Roman citizen. So I sent in my soldiers.
28 Wanting to know what he had done wrong, I had him brought before their council.
29 It turned out to be a squabble turned vicious over some of their religious differences, but nothing remotely criminal.
30 The next thing I knew, they had cooked up a plot to murder him. I decided that for his own safety I'd better get him out of here in a hurry. So I'm sending him to you. I'm informing his accusers that he's now under your jurisdiction.
31 The soldiers, following orders, took Paul that same night to safety in Antipatris.
32 In the morning the soldiers returned to their barracks in Jerusalem, sending Paul on to Caesarea under guard of the cavalry.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.