Acts 18:1-11
Paul at Corinth
18:1 After this Paul departed from Athens and went to Corinth.
18:2 There he found a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, who had recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had ordered all the Jews to depart from Rome. Paul approached them,
18:3 and because he worked at the same trade, he stayed with them and worked with them (for they were tentmakers by trade).
18:4 He addressed both Jews and Greeks in the synagogue every Sabbath, attempting to persuade them.
18:5 Now when Silas and Timothy arrived from Macedonia, Paul became wholly absorbed with proclaiming the word, testifying to the Jews that Jesus was the Christ.
18:6 When they opposed him and reviled him, he protested by shaking out his clothes and said to them, “Your blood be on your own heads! I am guiltless! From now on I will go to the Gentiles!”
18:7 Then Paul left the synagogue and went to the house of a person named Titius Justus, a Gentile who worshiped God, whose house was next door to the synagogue.
18:8 Crispus, the president of the synagogue, believed in the Lord together with his entire household, and many of the Corinthians who heard about it believed and were baptized.
18:9 The Lord said to Paul by a vision in the night, “Do not be afraid, but speak and do not be silent,
18:10 because I am with you, and no one will assault you to harm you, because I have many people in this city.”
18:11 So he stayed there a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them.