Luke
Acts 25:4ESV·traditional attribution

Festus replied that Paul was being kept at Caesarea and that he himself intended to go there shortly.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

See how restless malice is: Paul bears his imprisonment patiently, yet his enemies cannot bear even a three-day delay in pursuing him to death. They rush upon Festus the moment he arrives, trying to prejudge the cause before any fair trial.

AI summary

Commenting on Acts 25:1-12

John Gill Reformed Baptist

Festus gave a wise answer: Paul must stay in Caesarea where he was lawfully held under guard, and Festus himself would return there shortly anyway, making any removal both unnecessary and improper.

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Albert Barnes Presbyterian

Festus likely knew Paul held Roman citizenship and that his case belonged before the governor, not the Jewish council. Caesarea was already the seat of the court and Paul was safely lodged there, so he granted the Jews what they could reasonably ask: a speedy trial.

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