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The Acts 17:3-18 Contemporary English Version Anglicised (CEVUK00)

3. to show them that the Messiah had to suffer, but that he would rise from death. Paul also told them that Jesus is the Messiah he was preaching about.

4. Some of them believed what Paul had said, and they became followers with Paul and Silas. Some Gentiles and many important women also believed the message.

5. The Jewish leaders were jealous and got some worthless louts who hung around the market place to start a riot in the city. They wanted to drag Paul and Silas out to the mob, and so they went straight to Jason's home.

6. But when they did not find them there, they dragged out Jason and some of the Lord's followers. They took them to the city authorities and shouted, “Paul and Silas have been upsetting things everywhere. Now they have come here,

7. and Jason has welcomed them into his home. All of them break the laws of the Roman Emperor by claiming that someone named Jesus is king.”

8. The officials and the people were upset when they heard this.

9. So they made Jason and the other followers pay bail before letting them go.

10. That same night the Lord's followers sent Paul and Silas on to Berea, and after they arrived, they went to the Jewish meeting place.

11. The people in Berea were much nicer than those in Thessalonica, and they gladly accepted the message. Day after day they studied the Scriptures to see if these things were true.

12. Many of them put their faith in the Lord, including some important Greek women and several men.

13. When the Jewish leaders in Thessalonica heard that Paul had been preaching God's message in Berea, they went there and caused trouble by turning the crowds against Paul.

14. Straight away the followers sent Paul down to the coast, but Silas and Timothy stayed in Berea.

15. Some men went with Paul as far as Athens, and then returned with instructions for Silas and Timothy to join him as soon as possible.

16. While Paul was waiting in Athens, he was upset to see all the idols in the city.

17. He went to the Jewish meeting place to speak to the Jews and to anyone who worshipped with them. Day after day he also spoke to everyone he met in the market.

18. Some of them were Epicureans and some were Stoics, and they started arguing with him.People were asking, “What is this know-all trying to say?”Some even said, “Paul must be preaching about foreign gods! That's what he means when he talks about Jesus and about people rising from death.”

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