{
  "kind": "commentary_unit",
  "branch": "new-testament-lite",
  "custom_id": "ACT_050",
  "book": "Acts",
  "title": "Paul before Agrippa; defense and response",
  "reference": "Acts 25:13 - Acts 26:32",
  "canonical_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament-lite/acts/paul-before-agrippa-defense-and-response/",
  "full_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament/acts/paul-before-agrippa-defense-and-response/",
  "overview_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/book-overviews/acts/",
  "main_point": "Paul stands before Agrippa not because he has committed a real crime, but because he testifies that the risen Jesus is the fulfillment of Israel’s hope. Again and again, Roman officials find no basis for condemning him, while Luke makes clear that the gospel is publicly defensible, historically grounded, and centered on Christ’s resurrection.",
  "commentary": "Paul’s case has reached a difficult stage for Festus. Paul has appealed to Caesar, so Festus must send him to Rome, yet he still does not know what charge to write against him. When King Agrippa and Bernice arrive in Caesarea, Festus uses their visit to seek help. He explains that the Jewish leaders wanted Paul condemned, but the accusations were not about ordinary crimes. The dispute was about matters of their religion, and especially about Jesus, who had died but whom Paul kept saying was alive. Luke wants the reader to see that the heart of the controversy is the resurrection of Jesus, not political rebellion or civil wrongdoing.\n\nThe next day, Agrippa and Bernice enter with great ceremony, together with military commanders and the leading men of the city. Paul is brought in as a prisoner. Festus openly admits that he has found nothing in Paul deserving death and that he needs this hearing so he can send a definite charge along with him to Caesar. So the hearing serves two purposes. It is a legal necessity for Festus, and it becomes a major opportunity for Paul to bear witness.\n\nPaul begins with respect. He is glad to speak before Agrippa because Agrippa understands Jewish customs and controversies better than Festus does. Paul frames the entire case around God’s promise to Israel. He says he is on trial because of the hope God promised to the fathers, the very hope Israel itself claims to await. Paul is not rejecting Israel’s Scriptures; he is proclaiming their fulfillment. The issue is not whether Paul has abandoned the Jewish faith, but whether God has fulfilled His promise through the resurrection of Jesus.\n\nThat is why Paul asks, “Why is it thought unbelievable that God raises the dead?” Resurrection is the central disputed claim in this hearing. Jesus’ resurrection confirms Paul’s message and stands at the center of the whole controversy.\n\nPaul then reminds Agrippa of his former life. He had lived as a strict Pharisee, and his fellow Jews knew it. He had once opposed Jesus with intense zeal. He imprisoned believers, supported death sentences against them, punished them in the synagogues, and tried to force them to blaspheme. He even pursued them into foreign cities. This shows both Paul’s credibility and the depth of the change that had taken place in him.\n\nPaul then recounts his encounter on the Damascus road. At noon he saw a heavenly light brighter than the sun, and he heard Jesus speak to him in Aramaic. Jesus identified Himself plainly: “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting.” This shows that the risen Jesus is truly alive and so closely united with His people that to persecute them is to persecute Him. Jesus also commissioned Paul, appointing him as a servant and witness, promising to rescue him, and sending him to both Jews and Gentiles.\n\nThe purpose of that mission is clear: to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God. The goal is that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a share among those who are sanctified by faith in Christ. Apart from Christ, people are in darkness and under Satan’s power. They need to turn to God. Forgiveness, sanctification, and inheritance come through faith in Jesus. These blessings are for Jews and Gentiles alike, not for one ethnic group only.\n\nPaul says he was not disobedient to this heavenly vision. So he preached first in Damascus, then in Jerusalem and Judea, and then to the Gentiles. His message was the same everywhere: people must repent, turn to God, and do deeds consistent with repentance. This does not mean works earn salvation. It means true repentance is real and shows itself in a changed life.\n\nPaul explains that this is why the Jews seized him in the temple and tried to kill him. His suffering is the result of faithful obedience to Christ’s commission, not of criminal conduct. Yet God had helped him to that very day, enabling him to keep testifying to everyone, both small and great. Paul stresses that his message is not a novelty. He teaches nothing except what Moses and the prophets said would happen: that the Messiah would suffer, be the first to rise from the dead, and proclaim light to both Jews and Gentiles. Paul is not pointing to one single Old Testament verse here. He is summarizing broad scriptural themes. The gospel stands in continuity with the Old Testament rather than in contradiction to it.\n\nAt this point Festus interrupts loudly and says Paul is out of his mind, claiming that great learning has driven him mad. Festus cannot make sense of these claims. But Paul answers calmly and firmly. He says he is speaking words of truth and sober reason. Christian witness here is not irrational frenzy. It is public truth about what God has done in history.\n\nPaul then turns directly to Agrippa. He knows Agrippa is familiar with these matters and says these events were not done in a corner. Then he presses the issue: “Do you believe the prophets, King Agrippa? I know that you believe.” This is a personal appeal. If Agrippa believes the prophets, then he must reckon with what Paul is saying about Christ.\n\nAgrippa replies in a way that shows he feels the force of the appeal. The preferred reading is that he is acknowledging how near Paul is bringing him to an open Christian confession: “In a short time you are persuading me to become a Christian.” Still, caution is needed. His tone may include irony or evasion, since in such a public setting open identification with Paul would have been costly. Even so, the narrative clearly presents real personal pressure. Paul’s response confirms this. He expresses his desire that whether quickly or slowly, not only Agrippa but all who hear him would become as he is—except for his chains.\n\nThe hearing then comes to an end. The rulers withdraw and agree among themselves that Paul has done nothing deserving death or imprisonment. Agrippa even says that Paul could have been released if he had not appealed to Caesar. This does not mean Paul made a mistake. It means the legal process has now moved beyond local release. Luke’s point is that repeated official examinations continue to find no criminal guilt in Paul.\n\nSo this whole episode serves Luke’s larger purpose in Acts. Paul’s imprisonment results from faithful witness to the risen Christ. The Christian message is presented as the fulfillment of Israel’s promised hope, especially through the Messiah’s suffering and resurrection. The gospel calls for repentance, turning to God, and a life that matches that repentance. Though many resist or dismiss the message, it remains true, public, and non-criminal. The risen Jesus is alive, He speaks, He commissions, and He governs this mission, calling both Jews and Gentiles to forgiveness and inheritance through faith in Him.",
  "key_truths": [
    "Paul is on trial because he preaches the risen Jesus as the fulfillment of Israel’s hope.",
    "Roman authorities repeatedly find no legal basis to condemn Paul.",
    "The central disputed issue is the resurrection, especially the resurrection of Jesus.",
    "Paul’s conversion and mission come from a real encounter with the risen Christ.",
    "The gospel calls people to repent, turn to God, and bear fruit consistent with repentance.",
    "Forgiveness, sanctification, and inheritance are given through faith in Christ to Jews and Gentiles alike.",
    "Hostile or dismissive responses do not cancel the truth or rationality of Christian witness."
  ],
  "warnings": [
    "Do not treat this passage as an isolated story detached from Acts as a whole; it advances Luke’s larger account of the gospel moving from Jerusalem toward Rome through divinely guided witness.",
    "Do not reduce Paul’s message to private spirituality; in this passage it is public truth rooted in God’s acts in history and in Israel’s Scriptures.",
    "Do not weaken repentance into mere words or inward sentiment; Paul includes deeds consistent with repentance as the proper fruit of turning to God.",
    "Do not press the phrase about “kicking against the goads” into a detailed psychology of Paul’s inner life beyond what the text itself states.",
    "Do not claim certainty about Agrippa’s tone in 26:28; the statement likely reflects real personal pressure, though irony or evasion may still be present."
  ],
  "application": [
    "Present the gospel as true, historical, and grounded in God’s revealed plan, not as a private preference.",
    "Explain Christ from the whole Bible, showing continuity between the Old Testament promises and their fulfillment in Jesus.",
    "Call people not only to believe facts about Christ but to repent, turn to God, and live in a way that shows repentance is real.",
    "Do not be shaken when some respond with scorn or dismissal; speak true and rational words with courage and restraint.",
    "Remember that faithful witness may lead to suffering, yet God sustains His servants in the path of obedience."
  ]
}