Acts 25:3

3 They asked Festus if he wouldn't please do them a favor by sending Paul to Jerusalem to respond to their charges. A lie, of course - they had revived their old plot to set an ambush and kill him along the way.

Acts 25:3 Meaning and Commentary

Acts 25:3

And desired favour against him
Paul; they asked what would be a favour to them, and a prejudice to him: or "of him", that is, of Festus; they asked a favour of him, and desired it as such, as what would be gratefully accepted and acknowledged by them; which sense is confirmed by the Syriac version; the Arabic version renders it "to", or "upon them"; that is, they asked him to grant a favour to them, or bestow one on them, which is as follows:

that he would send for him to Jerusalem;
that his case might be heard before him, and he might be tried and judged by him, as they pretended:

laying wait in the way to kill him;
this was their design, though they concealed it, and pretended no other view than that justice might take place: their scheme was, that if they could have prevailed upon Festus to have sent for Paul to Jerusalem, from Caesarea, they would have provided men, perhaps the same forty and upwards as before, in ( Acts 23:12 Acts 23:13 ) to have laid in wait for him in the way as he came, and to have killed him: the whole of this shows the malice of these men, the badness of their cause, the indefatigableness and diligence to attain their end, the danger the apostle was in, and the care of Providence over him.

Acts 25:3 In-Context

1 Three days after Festus arrived in Caesarea to take up his duties as governor, he went up to Jerusalem.
2 The high priests and top leaders renewed their vendetta against Paul.
3 They asked Festus if he wouldn't please do them a favor by sending Paul to Jerusalem to respond to their charges. A lie, of course - they had revived their old plot to set an ambush and kill him along the way.
4 Festus answered that Caesarea was the proper jurisdiction for Paul, and that he himself was going back there in a few days.
5 "You're perfectly welcome," he said, "to go back with me then and accuse him of whatever you think he's done wrong."
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.