King Herod Agrippa II was the last of the Herodian rulers of Israel. These descendants of Esau, called Idumeans by the Romans, were forced proselytes to Judaism, but their lives were not characterized by love for God and holiness. Rather, they were noted for lust and infamy. Agrippa’s incestuous relationship to his sister Bernice, beside whom he sat in that judgment hall, was a sin condemned by the Judaism he was forced to embrace. Now Paul was pressing him with the truth of the Scriptures. Paul’s question to him was an uncomfortable invasion of his personal space: “Do you believe the prophets?” He could not admit to a negative response, so he utter the famous words, “Almost thou persuades me to be a Christian,” to sidestep the issue. The word of his mouth distanced him from the only hope of eternal life.
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