(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) Called it to him two centurions, or the chief captain, excuse me, saying make ready two hundred soldiers to Caesarea, and horsemen three score and ten, and spearmen two hundred, and at the third hour of the night. Now just picture this. The centurion says, alright, two centurions, or I'm sorry, the chief captain says two centurions, which means two hundred soldiers each, or one hundred soldiers each, two hundred total. And then you have two hundred spearmen, men with spears, okay, horsemen three score and ten, and then they provide beasts so Paul can sit on, and bring him safe unto Felix the governor. Good night. So what's the principle that we can learn there? Yeah, Satan has his forty, but look how much God brought. Right? Because we see the forty and we're like, oh man, but then you have two hundred, four hundred guys, two hundred of them have spears, you have horsemen three score and ten, and don't worry Paul, you're not even going to have to walk, you can sit on a beast. Because most people walk during those days. He's like, walk him, put him on a, put him on a mule or something, get him on a donkey. So it shows you that greater is he that is in us, than he that is in the world. So it doesn't matter how big the thread, how big the company of wicked evil doers is, God always out does them, no matter what. It's like when they came to arrest Jesus, they had the band of soldiers, you know, Peter cuts off the ear of Malchus, and then Jesus rebukes him and says, look, I got legions of angels that can come and just destroy everything here right now, if I wanted to. So what Satan can do pales in comparison to what God can do.