|  | Chapter 27 | 
|  | And when our sailing to Italy was determined, they were  delivering up both Paul and certain others, prisoners, to a  centurion, by name Julius, of the band of Sebastus, | 
|  | and having embarked in a ship of Adramyttium, we, being  about to sail by the coasts of Asia, did set sail, there being  with us Aristarchus, a Macedonian of Thessalonica, | 
|  | on the next [day] also we touched at Sidon, and Julius,  courteously treating Paul, did permit [him], having gone on  unto friends, to receive [their] care. | 
|  | And thence, having set sail, we sailed under Cyprus,  because of the winds being contrary, | 
|  | and having sailed over the sea over-against Cilicia and  Pamphylia, we came to Myria of Lycia, | 
|  | and there the centurion having found a ship of Alexandria,  sailing to Italy, did put us into it, | 
|  | and having sailed slowly many days, and with difficulty  coming over-against Cnidus, the wind not suffering us, we  sailed under Crete, over-against Salmone, | 
|  | and hardly passing it, we came to a certain place called  'Fair Havens,' nigh to which was the city [of] Lasaea. | 
|  | And much time being spent, and the sailing being now  dangerous -- because of the fast also being already past --  Paul was admonishing, | 
|  | saying to them, 'Men, I perceive that with hurt, and much  damage, not only of the lading and of the ship, but also of  our lives -- the voyage is about to be;' | 
|  | but the centurion to the pilot and to the shipowner gave  credence more than to the things spoken by Paul; | 
|  | and the haven being incommodious to winter in, the more  part gave counsel to sail thence also, if by any means they  might be able, having attained to Phenice, [there] to winter,  [which is] a haven of Crete, looking to the south-west and  north-west, | 
|  | and a south wind blowing softly, having thought they had  obtained [their] purpose, having lifted anchor, they sailed  close by Crete, | 
|  | and not long after there arose against it a tempestuous  wind, that is called Euroclydon, | 
|  | and the ship being caught, and not being able to bear up  against the wind, having given [her] up, we were borne on, | 
|  | and having run under a certain little isle, called Clauda,  we were hardly able to become masters of the boat, | 
|  | which having taken up, they were using helps, undergirding  the ship, and fearing lest they may fall on the quicksand,  having let down the mast -- so were borne on. | 
|  | And we, being exceedingly tempest-tossed, the succeeding  [day] they were making a clearing, | 
|  | and on the third [day] with our own hands the tackling of  the ship we cast out, | 
|  | and neither sun nor stars appearing for more days, and not  a little tempest lying upon us, thenceforth all hope was taken  away of our being saved. | 
|  | And there having been long fasting, then Paul having stood  in the midst of them, said, 'It behoved [you], indeed, O men  -- having hearkened to me -- not to set sail from Crete, and to  save this hurt and damage; | 
|  | and now I exhort you to be of good cheer, for there shall  be no loss of life among you -- but of the ship; | 
|  | for there stood by me this night a messenger of God --  whose I am, and whom I serve -- | 
|  | saying, Be not afraid Paul; before Caesar it behoveth thee  to stand; and, lo, God hath granted to thee all those sailing  with thee; | 
|  | wherefore be of good cheer, men! for I believe God, that  so it shall be, even as it hath been spoken to me, | 
|  | and on a certain island it behoveth us to be cast.' | 
|  | And when the fourteenth night came -- we being borne up  and down in the Adria -- toward the middle of the night the  sailors were supposing that some country drew nigh to them; | 
|  | and having sounded they found twenty fathoms, and having  gone a little farther, and again having sounded, they found  fifteen fathoms, | 
|  | and fearing lest on rough places we may fall, out of the  stern having cast four anchors, they were wishing day to come. | 
|  | And the sailors seeking to flee out of the ship, and  having let down the boat to the sea, in pretence as [if] out of  the foreship they are about to cast anchors, | 
|  | Paul said to the centurion and to the soldiers, 'If these  do not remain in the ship -- ye are not able to be saved;' | 
|  | then the soldiers did cut off the ropes of the boat, and  suffered it to fall off. | 
|  | And till the day was about to be, Paul was calling upon  all to partake of nourishment, saying, 'Fourteen days to-day,  waiting, ye continue fasting, having taken nothing, | 
|  | wherefore I call upon you to take nourishment, for this is  for your safety, for of not one of you shall a hair from the  head fall;' | 
|  | and having said these things, and having taken bread, he  gave thanks to God before all, and having broken [it], he began  to eat; | 
|  | and all having become of good cheer, themselves also took  food, | 
|  | (and we were -- all the souls in the ship -- two hundred,  seventy and six), | 
|  | and having eaten sufficient nourishment, they were  lightening the ship, casting forth the wheat into the sea. | 
|  | And when the day came, they were not discerning the land,  but a certain creek were perceiving having a beach, into which  they took counsel, if possible, to thrust forward the ship, | 
|  | and the anchors having taken up, they were committing [it]  to the sea, at the same time -- having loosed the bands of the  rudders, and having hoisted up the mainsail to the wind -- they  were making for the shore, | 
|  | and having fallen into a place of two seas, they ran the  ship aground, and the fore-part, indeed, having stuck fast,  did remain immoveable, but the hinder-part was broken by the  violence of the waves. | 
|  | And the soldiers' counsel was that they should kill the  prisoners, lest any one having swam out should escape, | 
|  | but the centurion, wishing to save Paul, hindered them  from the counsel, and did command those able to swim, having  cast themselves out first -- to get unto the land, | 
|  | and the rest, some indeed upon boards, and some upon  certain things of the ship; and thus it came to pass that all  came safe unto the land. |