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Acts 21:27-39

When the seven days were almost completed, the Jews from Asia, who had
seen him in the temple, stirred up the whole crowd.  They seized him,
shouting, "Fellow Israelites, help!  This is the man who is teaching
everyone everywhere against our people, our law, and this place; more than
that, he has actually brought Greeks into the temple and has defiled this
holy place."  For they had previously seen Trophimus the Ephesian with him
in the city, and they supposed that Paul had brought him into the temple.
Then all the city was aroused, and the people rushed together.  They
seized Paul and dragged him out of the temple, and immediately the doors
were shut.  While they were trying to kill him, word came to the tribune
of the cohort that all Jerusalem was in an uproar.  Immediately he took
soldiers and centurions and ran down to them.  When they saw the tribune
and the soldiers, they stopped beating Paul.  Then the tribune came,
arrested him, and ordered him to be bound with two chains; he inquired who
he was and what he had done.  Some in the crowd shouted one thing, some
another; and as he could not learn the facts because of the uproar, he
ordered him to be brought into the barracks.  When Paul came to the steps,
the violence of the mob was so great that he had to be carried by the
soldiers.  The crowd that followed kept shouting, "Away with him!"

Just as Paul was about to be brought into the barracks, he said to the
tribune, "May I say something to you?"  The tribune replied, "Do you know
Greek?  Then you are not the Egyptian who recently stirred up a revolt and
led the four thousand assassins out into the wilderness?"  Paul replied,
"I am a Jew, from Tarsus in Cilicia, a citizen of an important city; I beg
you, let me speak to the people."