"Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome." (Acts 23:11)
Paul is brought before the Sanhedrin. He looks straight at them and says he has fulfilled his duty to God in all good conscience. The high priest orders him struck on the mouth. Paul responds sharply: God will strike you, you whitewashed wall. When told he is insulting God's high priest, he apologises, citing Exodus 22:28. He then divides the council by calling out that the issue is the resurrection of the dead, which the Pharisees believe and the Sadducees deny. A violent dispute breaks out. The commander, afraid Paul will be torn to pieces, has the soldiers take him away by force. That night the Lord stands near Paul and says: Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome. The programme of Acts 1:8 is being fulfilled step by step, directed by the Lord himself.
More than forty Jews form a conspiracy and bind themselves with an oath not to eat or drink until they have killed Paul. Paul's nephew hears of the plot and reports it to Paul, who sends him to the commander. The commander takes the plot seriously and arranges a night transfer to Caesarea under heavy military escort: two hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen, two hundred spearmen. He writes to Governor Felix explaining that Paul is a Roman citizen against whom there is no charge deserving death or imprisonment. The machinery of the Roman empire, which will eventually bring Paul to Rome, is already at work serving the purposes of God. The Catechism calls this the mystery of divine providence: God uses human events and structures, including political ones, to advance the plan of salvation (CCC 306).
Brothers and sisters, take courage. The Lord stood near Paul in the night and said those two words before telling him what was coming next. The courage is given before the journey is explained. This is how divine encouragement works: not a detailed itinerary but a personal presence and a two-word command. Take courage. You will testify in the place I am sending you.
Lord Jesus, you stood near Paul in the night and gave him courage for what was coming. Stand near us in our nights. Give us the courage we need before we know what we will need it for. We trust that where you are sending us, you have already been. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.