Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: June 30th (Daniel 9 & Acts 23:12-35)
Episode Date: June 29, 2021Seventy weeks of years. A plot against Paul. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporting this project, ple...ase consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Daniel chapter 9. In the first year of Darius the son of Ehas Juarez by descent Amid, who was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans. In the first year of his reign, I, Daniel, perceived in the books the number of years that, according to the word of the Lord to Jeremiah the prophet, must pass before the end of the desolations of Jerusalem, namely 70 years. Then I turned my face to the Lord God, seeking him by prayer and pleased for mercy, with fasting and sackcloth and ashes. I pray to you. I pray to my face to the Lord God, seeking him by prayer and pleas for mercy, with fasting and sackcloth and ashes. I pray, I pray to
the Lord my God and made confession, saying, O Lord, the great and awesome God, who keeps covenant
and steadfast love with those who love him and keep his commandments. We have sinned and done wrong
and acted wickedly and rebelled, turning aside from your commandments and rules. We have not
listened to your servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, our princes and
our fathers, and to all the people of the land. To you, O Lord, belongs righteousness, but to us,
open shame, as at this day, to the men of Judah, to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to all Israel,
those who are near and those who are far away, in all the lands to which you have driven them,
because of the treachery that they have committed against you. To us, O Lord, belongs open shame,
to our kings, to our princes, and to our fathers, because we have sinned against you.
To the Lord our God belong mercy and forgiveness, for we have rebelled against him,
and have not obeyed the voice of the Lord our God.
by walking in his laws, which he set before us by his servants the prophets.
All Israel has transgressed your law and turned aside, refusing to obey your voice.
And the curse and oath that are written in the law of Moses the servant of God
have been poured out upon us because we have sinned against him.
He has confirmed his words which he spoke against us and against our rulers who ruled us
by bringing upon us a great calamity.
For under the whole heaven there has not been done ever.
anything like what has been done against Jerusalem.
As it is written in the law of Moses,
all this calamity has come upon us,
yet we have not entreated the favour of the Lord our God,
turning from our iniquities and gaining insight by your truth.
Therefore the Lord has kept ready the calamity,
and has brought it upon us.
For the Lord our God is righteous in all the works that he has done,
and we have not obeyed his voice.
And now, O Lord our God,
who brought your people out of the land of Egypt,
with a mighty hand and have made a name for yourself as at this day we have sinned we have done wickedly
O Lord according to all your righteous acts let your anger and your wrath turn away from your city Jerusalem
your holy hill because for our sins and for the iniquities of our fathers
Jerusalem and your people have become a byword among all who are around us
now therefore O our God listen to the prayer of your servant and to his pleas for mercy
and for your own sake, O Lord,
make your face to shine upon your sanctuary,
which is desolate.
O my God, incline your ear and hear,
open your eyes and see our desolations,
and the city that is called by your name,
for we do not present our pleas before you
because of our righteousness,
but because of your great mercy.
O Lord hear, O Lord, forgive,
O Lord, pay attention and act.
Delay not for your own sake, oh my God,
because your city and your people,
are called by your name. While I was speaking and praying, confessing my sin and the sin of my
people Israel, and presenting my plea before the Lord my God, for the holy hill of my God, while I was
speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the first, came to me in swift
flight at the time of the evening sacrifice. He made me understand, speaking with me and saying,
O Daniel, I have now come out to give you insight and understanding. At the beginning of your pleas for
mercy a word went out and I have come to tell it to you for you are greatly loved therefore
consider the word and understand the vision 70 weeks are decreed about your people and your holy
city to finish the transgression to put an end to sin and to atone for iniquity to bring in everlasting
righteousness to seal both vision and prophet and to anoint a most holy place know therefore and
understand that from the going out of the work to restore and build Jerusalem to the coming of an
anointed one, a prince, there shall be seven weeks, then for 62 weeks it shall be built again
with squares and moat, but in a troubled time. And after the 62 weeks, an anointed one shall be
cut off and shall have nothing, and the people of the prince who is to come shall destroy the city
and the sanctuary. Its end shall come with a flood, and to the end there shall be war. Desolations are
decreed, and he shall make a strong covenant with many for one week, and for half of the week he shall put
an end to sacrifice an offering, and on the wing of abominations shall come one who makes desolate,
until the decreed end is poured out on the desolator. Daniel chapter 9 opens with Daniel's recognition
that the 70 years spoken of in the prophecy of Jeremiah chapter 25, verses 8 to 12,
in which Jeremiah foretells the number of years that must pass before Jerusalem's desolations would end,
was shortly to be completed. This occurs in the first year of the reign of Darius,
here further described as the son of Ahaz Uaris. Jeremiah's prophecy reads,
Therefore thus says the Lord of hosts, because you have not obeyed my words,
behold I will send for all the tribes of the north, declares the Lord,
and for Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, my servant, and I will bring them against this land
and its inhabitants, and against all these surrounding nations. I will devote them to destruction,
and make them a horror, a hissing, and an everlasting desolation.
Moreover, I will banish from them the voice of mirth and the voice of gladness,
the voice of the bride, the grinding of the millstones and the light of the lamp.
This whole land shall become a ruin and a waste,
and these nations shall serve the King of Babylon 70 years.
Then after 70 years are completed, I will punish the King of Babylon and that nation,
the land of the Chaldeans for their iniquity, declares the Lord.
making the land an everlasting waste.
Jeremiah also prophesies on the matter in chapter 29 verse 10,
for thus says the Lord, when 70 years are completed for Babylon,
I will visit you and I will fulfil to you my promise and bring you back to this place.
The 70 years of exile are also mentioned in 2 Chronicles chapter 36, verses 20 to 21.
He took into exile in Babylon those who had escaped from the sword,
and they became servants to him and to his sons.
until the establishment of the kingdom of Persia, to fulfill the word of the Lord by the mouth of
Jeremiah, until the land had enjoyed its Sabbaths. All the days that it lay desolate it kept Sabbath,
to fulfill 70 years. The land being rendered desolate and enjoying its Sabbaths, the years of Sabbath
rest it was denied, is mentioned in the covenant blessings and curses in Leviticus chapter 26,
verse 43. But the land shall be abandoned by them and enjoy its Sabbaths while it lies desolate without them.
and they shall make amends for their iniquity, because they spurned my rules, and their soul abhorred my statutes.
The calendar of Israel had the principle of Sabbath weaving through it on all levels.
The seventh day was the weekly Sabbath.
There were two great seven-day feasts, unleavened bread and tabernacles.
There was the feast of weeks connected with seven times seven weeks.
There was the cluster of feasts in the seventh month.
Then there was the Sabbath year and the year of Jubilee, once again based on the prince.
principle of seven times seven. The 50th year was the new year following the passing of seven
years times seven. The great events in Israel's history were often also connected with a Sabbath
principle. For instance, the completion of Solomon's temple complex occurred in the 500th year
after the Exodus, a jubilee cycle raised to the next order of magnitude. The book of Ezekiel makes
great use of Sabbath and Jubilee themes, with the numbers 49, 50 and 25, a half-jubilee,
appearing throughout the great visionary temple at the end of the book.
With the overthrow of Jerusalem and Judah by the Babylonians,
the land enjoyed a sort of Sabbath rest.
An oppressive rich class was removed from the land,
and the poor took possession of it.
The situation under the governorship of Gedeliah was short-lived, however,
a false dawn.
But the purging of the land of a sinful people
allowed the land itself to enjoy a period of rest.
Understanding the 70 years of Jeremiah is challenging,
even if not as challenging as understanding the 70 weeks of years that are mentioned at the end of this chapter.
Differing positions exist. Some regard the 70 years as a symbolic, rather than a literal reference to a period of time.
As a symbolic designation for a time period, it would evoke Sabbath and other connections for the hearers.
For other commentators, it is regarded as an exact period of time, and for yet others an approximate one.
The Sabbath and Jubilee patterns gave a structure for hope.
70 years are an exact or an approximate period of time, we need to work out their boundaries.
Did they begin with the events of 605 BC when the prophecy of Jeremiah was first given,
when Nebuchadnezzar defeated the Egyptians at Carcumish, became the king of Babylon,
established Babylonian dominance in the region, besieged Jerusalem, took some of the royal family hostage,
and placed the kingdom of Judah under his yoke.
Perhaps earlier, with the destruction of Nineveh in 612 BC,
and the devastation of the Neo-Assyrian Empire at that time.
In his lengthy treatment of the subject,
Ross Winkle argues for 609 BC as the key date,
with the final defeat of Assyria.
Or do the years begin with the final overthrow of Jerusalem in 586 BC?
What is the end point?
Is at the time of the rebuilding of the temple in 516 BC,
the time of Babylon's overthrow in 539 BC,
the return under Cyrus shortly after that,
in 538 BC, or to some other date.
The period of time seems to relate quite particularly to the time of Babylon's dominance over the countries of the region, not merely to Judah's exile.
There are several candidates for a good starting point in the late 7th century BC, which is where I believe we ought to focus.
The most natural endpoint would be 539 BC or 538 BC with the overthrow of Babylon and the decree of Cyrus.
This, I believe, is why Daniel is reflecting upon this prophecy of Jeremiah in the first year of the reign of Darius.
If we take the subdivisions of the later 70 weeks of years in this chapter,
as something that might help us to understand how the 70 years of Jeremiah function in the understanding of Daniel,
we might find a clue in the fact that Darius comes to the throne at 62 years of age,
mapping the 70 years onto the schema of the 70 weeks of years,
the final year is the year after Babylon's overthrow.
Having recognised that the time spoken of by Jeremiah's prophecy had been completed,
Daniel recognises also that the people should be returning home, but they're not doing so yet.
So Daniel turns to the Lord in prayer.
He farses and dresses in sackcloth and ashes,
confessing the rebellion, the sins, and the unfaithfulness of the people that had led them into exile in the first place.
Daniel is approaching the Lord on the basis of, and in terms of covenant promises such as those found,
in Leviticus chapter 26, verses 40 to 42 and 44 to 45, sandwiching the judgment of that chapter
concerning the land being granted at Sabbaths. But if they confess their iniquity and the
iniquity of their fathers in their treachery that they committed against me, and also in walking
contrary to me, so that I walk contrary to them and brought them into the land of their enemies,
if then their uncircumcised heart is humbled, and they make amends for their iniquity,
then I will remember my covenant with Jacob, and I will remember my covenant with Jacob, and I will
remember my covenant with Isaac and my covenant with Abraham and I will remember the land and then continuing
in verse 44 yet for all that when they are in the land of their enemies I will not spurn them
neither will I abhor them so as to destroy them utterly and break my covenant with them for I am the
Lord their God but I will for their sake remember the covenant with their forefathers whom I brought
out of the land of Egypt in the sight of the nations that I might be their God I am the Lord
Daniel prays as a prophetic intercessor for his people.
It may also be helpful to see Daniel's prayer in the light of the sacrificial system,
covering is needed for Israel's sins, a purification,
and Daniel's prayer seeks this.
Daniel's prayer is a long prayer of confession,
in which Daniel confesses the sins of the nation to the Lord.
Daniel's prayer is driven by a profound sense of the Lord's holiness and justice,
but also by his unswerving faithfulness to his covenant,
and by the confident that,
Since Judah and Jerusalem are named by the Lord's name, he will not cast them off completely.
The prayer alternates between the two parties of the covenant,
speaking of the riches of the Lord's justice, faithfulness, righteousness and truth,
while juxtaposing each of these with the injustice and faithfulness, unrighteousness, and falsehood of Israel.
The Lord's unchanging character and commitment to his covenant is the bedrock of Daniel's appeal.
Each trait of the Lord exposes something new about the sin of his people.
The Lord's faithfulness to the covenant exposes just how unfaithful his people have been.
His righteousness exposes the wickedness and the shame of his people.
His mercy, forgiveness and long-suffering expose the depth of the people's rebellion.
His deliverance exposes the extent of the people's ingratitude.
His hallowing of his name through his redemption of his people in the midst of the nations
exposes the perversity of the way that redeemed people, graciously called by his name,
made themselves a byword among the nations on account of their wickedness and the destruction
that resulted from it. Yet here lies the one hope for Israel. Daniel has exposed their complete and
utter bankruptcy, but he can still appeal to the Lord because the Lord has placed his name upon them
as his own people. The angel Gabriel comes to Daniel at the time of the evening sacrifice. The evening
tribute or offering came at the beginning of a new day and was a memorial, calling upon God to see his
people and to act on their behalf. This is essentially what Daniel's prayer had been. Even though there
was no earthly tribute being given at that time, Daniel still presents the response to his prayer
in terms of that offering. This might offer a powerful insight into the way that prayer can be
considered in terms of ritual. Such a principle is illustrated in Psalm 141 verses 1 to 2.
O Lord, I call upon you, hasten to me, give ear to my voice when I call to you. Let my prayer
be counted as incense before you, and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice.
Prayer and song can be thought of as akin to sacrifices, but the connection can work in the other
way too, and help us better to understand the nature of the sacrificial system.
Sacrifices are like dramatized or ritualized prayers. As the prophets often stress, the sacrifices
don't operate as a sort of mindless ritual, irrespective of the posture of heart of those performing
them. The temple was not primarily a house of sacrifice, but a house of prayer. Gabriel assures Daniel
that his pleas for mercy have been heard and tells him that he has a word and vision in answer to Daniel's
prayer, as Daniel is greatly loved. Like Moses in Exodus chapter 32 to 34, the prophet loved by the
Lord intercedes for a wicked people. The vision that he has given concerns 70 weeks. While Jeremiah's
prophecy was about 70 years, Daniel is told of 70 weeks, or sevens, not literal weeks, but periods
of time, generally identified as years. We should recognize the Jubilee themes here. In Levitica's
chapter 25, verse 8 to 13, the law of the Jubilee is given. It starts on the 10th day of the 7th month,
in connection with the Day of Atonement. Liberty is proclaimed to the land and all of its inhabitants,
who can return to their ancestral properties. Leviticus speaks of seven weeks of years in reference to the
Jubilee, the time of replanting in the land, extending themes of Pentecost, which is seven weeks of days.
The event declared to Daniel is a greater awaited Jubilee, a Jubilee multiplied by 10, a Jubilee raised by an
order of magnitude. This awaited event would put an end to Israel's transgressions,
confirm the sin or purification offerings, cover Israel's liability to punishment,
establish the reign of righteousness,
confirm and fulfill that which was foretold by visions and faithful prophets,
and anoint a most holy place, establishing a place of God's dwelling.
From the very earliest period of the church, Christians have seen in this prophecy
a foretelling of the advent and the ministry of Christ.
The 70 weeks of years are subdivided into seven weeks of years,
62 weeks of years and a single final week. Once again determining dating is difficult.
What and when is the decree referred to in verse 25? Is it the decree of Cyrus around 538 BC,
following shortly after the fulfillment of the 70 years of the prophecy of Jeremiah?
Or is it some later event? Here we encounter significant differences on chronology,
particularly around the dating of the return and the rebuilding of the city and temple,
are Ezra and Nehemiah to be dated immediately
after the decree of Cyrus, or do they relate to a time over a century later?
James Jordan, for instance, argues for a short chronology,
with Ezra and E.m.a.a. dating from the time of Cyrus's decree in 538 BC onwards.
Much depends on the identification of the Arctic Cirxes of Ezra and his connection with
Darius the Mead of Daniel, who is also identified by Jordan as Cyrus the Persian.
Jordan has also previously raised the possibility that wholesale and radical revisionist work
and the entire BC dating system might be required.
Such a revision, of which he is not the only advocate,
would remove about 80 years in the process,
cutting the length of the Persian Empire from 205 to 120 years.
Modern Christian commentators, by contrast,
have tended to date the events of Ezra Nehemiah later,
with Arctic Xerxes commissioned to Ezra,
which is commonly identified with the decree,
coming in 458 BC,
calculating from this date,
taking the weeks as a reference to 490 literal solar years,
the start of the 70th week comes in 26 AD,
the beginning of Christ's ministry according to this reckoning,
with his cutting off occurring halfway through the final week.
James Bajan, for instance, interprets the decree
as a mandate from Arctic Xerxes to re-establish Judah's religious governance
in 458 BC.
In 409 BC, in Bajan's account,
Nehemiah the Anointed Prince, is in Jerusalem,
and completes the reforms initiated by Ezra.
Paul Tanner argues for a different date, 444 BC,
the word of Arctic Cirxes to Nehemiah authorising him to return to Jerusalem
to rebuild a city in its walls.
He argues that the years, rather than being taken as regular solar years,
should be interpreted as prophetic years of 360 days.
This would yield a time of 475 regular years instead of 490.
This yields the beginning of the 70th week in 33 AD, the more generally recognised date for Christ's death and resurrection.
We should observe the way that the 70 weeks of years begins with a period of seven weeks of years, an initial regular Jubilee cycle, as part of the Great Jubilee cycle, the Jubilee cycle times 10.
Numerous other positions exist. Some relate this to events surrounding Antiochus the fourth epiphanies.
Symbolic readings of these time periods can dispense with many of the attempt.
to match these clearly to specific dates.
Some argue that some of the years are symbolic,
while others are literal,
others that there is a gap or delay,
or that a period of time intervenes
between some of these weeks.
Some clues to the meaning of periods of time within it
might also be found elsewhere in the book of Daniel
and in books like Revelation.
In Daniel chapter 7 verse 25,
the little horn is described as follows.
He shall speak words against the Most High
and shall wear out the saints of the Most High,
and shall think to change the times and the law, and they shall be given into his hand for a time,
times, times, and half a time. A time, times, and half a time makes three and a half, which is half a week.
Elsewhere in the book of Revelation, this is connected with 1,260 days and 42 months.
42 months is three and a half years in months, and 1,260 days is 3.5 years and days.
This measuring of three and a half years and days
would seem to give some support to Tanner's proposal
that the years are prophetic years of 360 days
rather than standard solar years.
The anointed one, or literally the Messiah that has cut off,
seems to be a reference to Christ.
We had a foreshadowing of the coming of this figure
in Daniel in the Lion's Den.
The Lion's Den symbolised the period of exile.
It also anticipated the events of the resurrection.
The Messianic Prince acts in the 70th,
week. He is expelled from his people in that week, dispossessed and condemned to death,
but then the city will be destroyed, overwhelmed in a flood of judgment. This refers, I believe,
to the judgment of Jerusalem in 1870. While this does not occur within the 70 weeks of years,
its sentence is established at that time. Through Christ's death and resurrection, he brings the
covenant into full force. He ends the tribute and peace offering, and the city is going to be rendered
desolate. He puts an end to the sacrificial system and establishes a new
covenant in its place. The year of Jubilee began on the Day of Atonement, and the greater
Jubilee that is foretold to Daniel also involves a great act of Atonement or covering as its
climax, as Christ is the last great sin offering for his people. Sacrifice is put to an end,
because all previous sacrifices could only anticipate his sacrifice, and they depended upon it
for their efficacy. A question to consider, where else in Scripture do we encounter 70 times
7. How could we read these references in the light of Daniel's 70 weeks of years?
Acts chapter 23 versus 12 to 35. When it was day, the Jews made a plot and bound themselves by an oath,
neither to eat nor drink till they had killed Paul. There were more than 40 who made this
conspiracy. They went to the chief priests and elders and said, we have strictly bound ourselves
by an oath to taste no food till we have killed Paul. Now therefore you,
along with the council, give notice to the tribune to bring him down to you,
as though you were going to determine his case more exactly,
and we are ready to kill him before he comes near.
Now the son of Paul's sister heard of their ambush,
so he went and entered the barracks and told Paul.
Paul called one of the centurions and said,
Take this young man to the tribune, for he has something to tell him.
So he took him and brought him to the tribune and said,
Paul the prisoner called me and asked me to bring this young man,
man to you, as he has something to say to you. The tribune took him by the hand, and going aside,
asked him privately, what is it that you have to tell me? And he said, the Jews have agreed to ask you
to bring Paul down to the council tomorrow, as though they were going to inquire somewhat more
closely about him. But do not be persuaded by them, for more than 40 of their men are lying in ambush
for him, who have bound themselves by an oath, neither to eat nor drink till they have killed him.
and now they are ready waiting for your consent.
So the Tribune dismissed the young man,
charging him,
tell no one that you have informed me of these things.
Then he called two of the Centurions and said,
Get ready 200 soldiers,
with 70 horsemen and 200 spearmen
to go as far as Caesarea at the third hour of the night.
Also provide mounts for Paul to ride
and bring him safely to Felix the governor,
and he wrote a letter to this effect.
Claudius Lysius, to his excellency the Governor Felix, greetings.
This man was seized by the Jews and was about to be killed by them, when I came upon them
with the soldiers and rescued him, having learned that he was a Roman citizen.
And desiring to know the charge for which they were accusing him, I brought him down to their
council. I found that he was being accused about questions of their law, but charged with nothing
deserving death or imprisonment. And when it was disclosed to me that there would be a place,
lot against the man, I sent him to you at once, ordering his accusers also to state before you
what they have against him. So the soldiers, according to their instructions, took Paul and brought
him by night to Antipatras, and on the next day they returned to the barracks, letting the
horsemen go on with him. When they had come to Caesarea, and deliver the letter to the governor,
they presented Paul also before him. On reading the letter, he asked what province he was from,
and when he learned that he was from Solicius, he said,
I will give you a hearing when your accusers arrive,
and he commanded him to be guarded in Herod's Pretorium.
Paul was taken in the temple by the Romans, delivering him from the mob who were about to kill him.
The Tribune, Claudius Lysius, was trying to get to the bottom of things
to discover why the Jews so hated him, and in Chapter 23 he has just testified before the Sanhedron,
but his mention of the resurrection had produced such dissension in the council,
that he once again had to be rescued by the Romans.
That night the Lord appeared to him
and told him that he would have to testify
concerning him in Rome.
Paul has faced a number of plots to this point in the Book of Acts
and has been delivered from each one of them.
There were plots against him in Damascus and Jerusalem in Chapter 9
and in Greece in Chapter 20.
Now he faces a seemingly more serious plot
about which he is alerted by his nephew.
Jesus of course had plots against him
during the period of his ministry also.
Once again this plot is instigated by the Jews.
Their oath not to eat or drink until they kill Paul
might recall the rash vow of King Saul
back in 1st Samuel chapter 14.
There are 40 of them involved, which is a very large number,
and they go to the chief priests and the elders
telling them about their conspiracy and getting them involved.
The chief priests and elders would have to ask the tribune
to bring Paul down to them,
and then while they were on the way, they would strike Paul when he was exposed.
The involvement of the chief priests and elders is important here.
The Jewish authorities and aristocracy, for all of their supposed lawfulness and their cooperation with the Romans,
are only too happy to employ assassins and to align themselves with bandits, going against the law of Rome.
Paul has been accused of subversion, but here the very authorities are corruptly acting against the law,
and quite purposefully seeking to circumvent the justice of Rome.
The sort of corruption and violence from the authorities that we see here is also testified to by the writings of Josephus,
who describes the sort of intrigue that was found among the Jewish authorities of the period,
and the collusion of the aristocracy and chief priest with robbers and brigands.
Earlier in this chapter, Ananias the high priest clearly acted contrary to the law in his handling of Paul's case.
Now we are beginning to see how deep the lawlessness of the rulers and the aristocracy goes.
This sort of corruption would ultimately contribute to the downfall of Jerusalem in AD 70.
Here it also serves an apologetic purpose for Luke.
Paul and the Christian movement, while they are accused of breaking the law and being seditious,
are law abiding and not seditious, whereas the accusers from the Jews are profoundly compromised
and complicit with brigands and robbers.
News of the plot gets to Paul's nephew.
Considering the number of people involved, 40 people, presumably younger,
men and the chief priests and the elders, it might not be entirely surprising that word leaked out.
Paul had spent most of his earlier life in Jerusalem. His sister presumably moved to Jerusalem at the same
time as he did, and likely married there. We know that Paul was a very well-connected person prior to
his conversion. He studied under Gamaliel. He had access to the high priest. He advanced in his studies
more than others, and he was a Roman citizen. It's likely that his sister, his brother-in-law,
and his nephew moved in the higher parts of Jerusalem society,
where his nephew might have gotten wind of the plot.
As a relative of Paul, Paul's nephew would also have had access to him
to provide needed support when he was in the barracks.
Paul is in the barracks, not a prison,
and various allowances would have been made for him to receive visitors,
particularly visitors of family that would support him.
After Paul's nephew informs him of the plot,
Paul instructs the centurion to bring his nephew to the Tribune.
The Tribune listens carefully to the testimony of the nephew.
He presumably knows enough about the Jerusalem authorities not to trust them.
The report of this plot presumably had the ring of truth to it.
Knowing that 40 men lie in ambush, presumably well-armed,
in a place where they would be unseen and where terrain would be to their advantage,
he determines to send a large contingent of soldiers with Paul.
Paul was also given a mount to ride, presumably to allow him free movement if they were attacked.
The size of the force sent with him is surprising. It is very large, about 470 men,
200 soldiers, 70 horsemen and 200 spearmen. It might be the case that hearing these rumblings
and plots, the Tribune is concerned to give a show of strength. Whatever is the case, we should
see God's providence in this situation. The Lord has delivered Paul out of plots before, and now he
does so again. The Tribune, Claudius Lysius, sends a message with the contingent to the Governor
Felix. It is possible that Luke had access to the original letter. The letter briefly describes
the Tribune's part in Paul's case, and the plot against him. The Tribune clearly skirts over certain
details that might be inconvenient to him, for instance the fact that he only found out that he was a
Roman citizen as he was about to whip him. Along with sending Paul to Felix, he has also
instructed the accusers of Paul to bring their case before Felix. The group escorting Paul splits up
at Antipatras. The most dangerous leg of the journey having been completed, the soldiers can
return to Jerusalem while the horsemen go on with Paul. Antipatrus was about 37 miles northwest of
Jerusalem, about halfway to Caesarea. Upon his arrival, Paul was presented before the Governor
Felix, along with the letter that Lysseus sent. Felix promises a hearing when Paul's accusers
arrive. A question to consider, what can we say about the relative presentation of the Jewish and the Roman
authorities within the Book of Acts.
