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Paul the Apostle

Paul[a] (previously called Saul of Tarsus;[b] c. 5 – c. 64/65 AD), commonly known as Paul the Apostle[7] and Saint Paul,[8] was a Christian apostle who spread the teachings of Jesus in the first-century world.[9] Generally regarded as one of the most important figures of the Apostolic Age,[8][10] he founded several Christian communities in Asia Minor and Europe from the mid-40s to the mid-50s AD.[11]


Paul the Apostle
The Apostle Paul, c. 1657, Rembrandt
Apostle to the Gentiles, Martyr
BornSaul of Tarsus
c. 5 AD[1]
Tarsus, Cilicia, Roman Empire (in 21st-century Turkey)
Diedc. 64/65 AD[2][3]
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[2][4]
Venerated inAll Christian denominations that venerate saints
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Major shrineBasilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, Rome, Italy
Feast
AttributesChristian martyrdom, sword, book
PatronageMissionaries, theologians, evangelists, and Gentile Christians
Theology career
EducationSchool of Gamaliel[6]
OccupationChristian missionary
Notable work
Theological work
EraApostolic Age
LanguageKoine Greek
Tradition or movementPauline Christianity
Main interestsTorah, Christology, eschatology, soteriology, ecclesiology
Notable ideasPauline privilege, Law of Christ, Holy Spirit, unknown God, divinity of Jesus, thorn in the flesh, Pauline mysticism, biblical inspiration, supersessionism, non-circumcision, salvation

According to the New Testament book Acts of the Apostles, Paul lived as a Pharisee.[12] He participated in the persecution of early disciples of Jesus, possibly Hellenised diaspora Jews converted to Christianity,[13] in the area of Jerusalem, prior to his conversion.[note 1] Some time after having approved of the execution of Stephen,[14] Paul was traveling on the road to Damascus so that he might find any Christians there and bring them "bound to Jerusalem" (ESV).[15] At midday, a light brighter than the sun shone around both him and those with him, causing all to fall to the ground, with the risen Christ verbally addressing Paul regarding his persecution.[16][17] Having been made blind,[18] along with being commanded to enter the city, his sight was restored three days later by Ananias of Damascus. After these events, Paul was baptized, beginning immediately to proclaim that Jesus of Nazareth was the Jewish messiah and the Son of God.[19] Approximately half of the content in the book of Acts details the life and works of Paul.

Fourteen of the 27 books in the New Testament have traditionally been attributed to Paul.[20] Seven of the Pauline epistles are undisputed by scholars as being authentic, with varying degrees of argument about the remainder. Pauline authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews is not asserted in the Epistle itself and was already doubted in the 2nd and 3rd centuries.[note 2] It was almost unquestioningly accepted from the 5th to the 16th centuries that Paul was the author of Hebrews,[22] but that view is now almost universally rejected by scholars.[22][23] The other six are believed by some scholars to have come from followers writing in his name, using material from Paul's surviving letters and letters written by him that no longer survive.[9][8][note 3] Other scholars argue that the idea of a pseudonymous author for the disputed epistles raises many problems.[25]

Today, Paul's epistles continue to be vital roots of the theology, worship and pastoral life in the Latin and Protestant traditions of the West, as well as the Eastern Catholic and Orthodox traditions of the East.[26] Paul's influence on Christian thought and practice has been characterized as being as "profound as it is pervasive", among that of many other apostles and missionaries involved in the spread of the Christian faith.[9]

Names

Paul's Jewish name was "Saul" (Hebrew: שָׁאוּל, Modern: Sha'ûl, Tiberian: Šā'ûl), perhaps after the biblical King Saul, the first king of Israel and like Paul a member of the Tribe of Benjamin; the Latin name Paul, meaning small, was not a result of his conversion as it is commonly believed but a second name for use in communicating with a Greco-Roman audience.[27][28]

According to the Acts of the Apostles, he was a Roman citizen.[29] As such, he bore the Latin name "Paul" – in Latin Paulus and in biblical Greek Παῦλος (Paulos).[30][31] It was typical for the Jews of that time to have two names: one Hebrew, the other Latin or Greek.[32][33][34]

Jesus called him "Saul, Saul"[35] in "the Hebrew tongue" in the Acts of the Apostles, when he had the vision which led to his conversion on the road to Damascus.[36] Later, in a vision to Ananias of Damascus, "the Lord" referred to him as "Saul, of Tarsus".[37] When Ananias came to restore his sight, he called him "Brother Saul".[38]

In Acts 13:9, Saul is called "Paul" for the first time on the island of Cyprus – much later than the time of his conversion.[39] The author of Luke–Acts indicates that the names were interchangeable: "Saul, who also is called Paul." He refers to him as Paul through the remainder of Acts. This was apparently Paul's preference since he is called Paul in all other Bible books where he is mentioned, including those that he authored. Adopting his Roman name was typical of Paul's missionary style. His method was to put people at their ease and to approach them with his message in a language and style to which they could relate, as in 1 Corinthians 9:19–23.[40][41]

Available sources

The main source for information about Paul's life is the material found in his epistles and in the Acts of the Apostles.[42] However, the epistles contain little information about Paul's pre-conversion past. The Acts of the Apostles recounts more information but leaves several parts of Paul's life out of its narrative, such as his probable but undocumented execution in Rome.[43] The Acts of the Apostles also contradict Paul's epistles on multiple accounts, in particular concerning the frequency of Paul's visits to the church in Jerusalem.[44][45]

Sources outside the New Testament that mention Paul include:

Biography

Early life

 
Geography relevant to Paul's life, stretching from Jerusalem to Rome

The two main sources of information that give access to the earliest segments of Paul's career are the Acts of the Apostles and the autobiographical elements of Paul's letters to the early Christian communities.[42] Paul was likely born between the years of 5 BC and 5 AD.[47] The Acts of the Apostles indicates that Paul was a Roman citizen by birth, but Helmut Koester takes issue with the evidence presented by the text.[48][49]

He was from a devout Jewish family[50] based in the city of Tarsus.[27] One of the larger centers of trade on the Mediterranean coast and renowned for its university, Tarsus had been among the most influential cities in Asia Minor since the time of Alexander the Great, who died in 323 BC.[50]

Paul referred to himself as being "of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee".[51][52] The Bible reveals very little about Paul's family. Acts quotes Paul referring to his family by saying he was "a Pharisee, born of Pharisees".[53][54] Paul's nephew, his sister's son, is mentioned in Acts 23:16.[55] In Romans 16:7, he states that his relatives, Andronicus and Junia, were Christians before he was and were prominent among the Apostles.[56]

The family had a history of religious piety.[57][note 4] Apparently, the family lineage had been very attached to Pharisaic traditions and observances for generations.[58] Acts says that he was an artisan involved in the leather crafting or tent-making profession.[59][60] This was to become an initial connection with Priscilla and Aquila, with whom he would partner in tentmaking[61] and later become very important teammates as fellow missionaries.[62]

While he was still fairly young, he was sent to Jerusalem to receive his education at the school of Gamaliel,[63][52] one of the most noted teachers of Jewish law in history. Although modern scholarship agrees that Paul was educated under the supervision of Gamaliel in Jerusalem,[52] he was not preparing to become a scholar of Jewish law, and probably never had any contact with the Hillelite school.[52] Some of his family may have resided in Jerusalem since later the son of one of his sisters saved his life there.[64][27] Nothing more is known of his biography until he takes an active part in the martyrdom of Stephen,[65] a Hellenised diaspora Jew.[66]

Although it is known (from his biography and from Acts) that Paul could and did speak Aramaic (then known as "Hebrew"),[27] modern scholarship suggests that Koine Greek was his first language.[67] In his letters, Paul drew heavily on his knowledge of Stoic philosophy, using Stoic terms and metaphors to assist his new Gentile converts in their understanding of the Gospel and to explain his Christology.[68][69]

Persecutor of early Christians

Paul says that prior to his conversion,[70] he persecuted early Christians "beyond measure", more specifically Hellenised diaspora Jewish members who had returned to the area of Jerusalem.[71][note 1] According to James Dunn, the Jerusalem community consisted of "Hebrews", Jews speaking both Aramaic and Greek, and "Hellenists", Jews speaking only Greek, possibly diaspora Jews who had resettled in Jerusalem.[72] Paul's initial persecution of Christians probably was directed against these Greek-speaking "Hellenists" due to their anti-Temple attitude.[73] Within the early Jewish Christian community, this also set them apart from the "Hebrews" and their continuing participation in the Temple cult.[73]

Conversion

 
The Conversion of Saint Paul on the Way to Damascus (c. 1889), by José Ferraz de Almeida Júnior

Paul's conversion can be dated to 31–36 AD[74][75][76] by his reference to it in one of his letters. In Galatians 1:16, Paul writes that God "was pleased to reveal his son to me."[77] In 1 Corinthians 15:8, as he lists the order in which Jesus appeared to his disciples after his resurrection, Paul writes, "last of all, as to one untimely born, He appeared to me also."[78]

According to the account in the Acts of the Apostles, it took place on the road to Damascus, where he reported having experienced a vision of the ascended Jesus. The account says that "He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, 'Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?' He asked, 'Who are you, Lord?' The reply came, 'I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting'."[79]

According to the account in Acts 9:1–22, he was blinded for three days and had to be led into Damascus by the hand.[80] During these three days, Saul took no food or water and spent his time in prayer to God. When Ananias of Damascus arrived, he laid his hands on him and said: "Brother Saul, the Lord, [even] Jesus, that appeared unto thee in the way as thou camest, hath sent me, that thou mightest receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Ghost."[81] His sight was restored, he got up and was baptized.[82] This story occurs only in Acts, not in the Pauline epistles.[83]

The author of the Acts of the Apostles may have learned of Paul's conversion from the church in Jerusalem, or from the church in Antioch, or possibly from Paul himself.[84]

According to Timo Eskola, early Christian theology and discourse was influenced by the Jewish Merkabah tradition.[85] Similarly, Alan Segal and Daniel Boyarin regard Paul's accounts of his conversion experience and his ascent to the heavens (in 2 Corinthians 12) as the earliest first-person accounts that are extant of a Merkabah mystic in Jewish or Christian literature. Conversely, Timothy Churchill has argued that Paul's Damascus road encounter does not fit the pattern of Merkabah.[86]

Post-conversion

 
St Paul (c. 1611) by Peter Paul Rubens

According to Acts:

And immediately he proclaimed Jesus in the synagogues, saying, "He is the Son of God." And all who heard him were amazed and said, "Is not this the man who made havoc in Jerusalem of those who called upon this name? And has he not come here for this purpose, to bring them bound before the chief priests?" But Saul increased all the more in strength, and confounded the Jews who lived in Damascus by proving that Jesus was the Christ.

— Acts 9:20–22[87]

Early ministry

 
The house believed to be of Ananias of Damascus in Damascus
 
Bab Kisan, believed to be where Paul escaped from persecution in Damascus

After his conversion, Paul went to Damascus, where Acts 9 states he was healed of his blindness and baptized by Ananias of Damascus.[88] Paul says that it was in Damascus that he barely escaped death.[89] Paul also says that he then went first to Arabia, and then came back to Damascus.[90][91] Paul's trip to Arabia is not mentioned anywhere else in the Bible, and some suppose he actually traveled to Mount Sinai for meditations in the desert.[92][93] He describes in Galatians how three years after his conversion he went to Jerusalem. There he met James and stayed with Simon Peter for 15 days.[94] Paul located Mount Sinai in Arabia in Galatians 4:24–25.[95]

Paul asserted that he received the Gospel not from man, but directly by "the revelation of Jesus Christ".[96] He claimed almost total independence from the Jerusalem community[97] (possibly in the Cenacle), but agreed with it on the nature and content of the gospel.[98] He appeared eager to bring material support to Jerusalem from the various growing Gentile churches that he started. In his writings, Paul used the persecutions he endured to avow proximity and union with Jesus and as a validation of his teaching.

Paul's narrative in Galatians states that 14 years after his conversion he went again to Jerusalem.[99] It is not known what happened during this time, but both Acts and Galatians provide some details.[100] Though a view is held that Paul spent 14 years studying the scriptures and growing in the faith. At the end of this time, Barnabas went to find Paul and brought him to Antioch.[101][102] The Christian community at Antioch had been established by Hellenised diaspora Jews living in Jerusalem, who played an important role in reaching a Gentile, Greek audience, notably at Antioch, which had a large Jewish community and significant numbers of Gentile "God-fearers."[103] From Antioch the mission to the Gentiles started, which would fundamentally change the character of the early Christian movement, eventually turning it into a new, Gentile religion.[104]

When a famine occurred in Judea, around 45–46,[105] Paul and Barnabas journeyed to Jerusalem to deliver financial support from the Antioch community.[106] According to Acts, Antioch had become an alternative center for Christians following the dispersion of the believers after the death of Stephen. It was in Antioch that the followers of Jesus were first called "Christians".[107]

First missionary journey

The author of Acts arranges Paul's travels into three separate journeys. The first journey,[108] for which Paul and Barnabas were commissioned by the Antioch community,[109] and led initially by Barnabas,[note 5] took Barnabas and Paul from Antioch to Cyprus then into southern Asia Minor, and finally returning to Antioch. In Cyprus, Paul rebukes and blinds Elymas the magician[110] who was criticizing their teachings.

They sailed to Perga in Pamphylia. John Mark left them and returned to Jerusalem. Paul and Barnabas went on to Pisidian Antioch. On Sabbath they went to the synagogue. The leaders invited them to speak. Paul reviewed Israelite history from life in Egypt to King David. He introduced Jesus as a descendant of David brought to Israel by God. He said that his team came to town to bring the message of salvation. He recounted the story of Jesus' death and resurrection. He quoted from the Septuagint[111] to assert that Jesus was the promised Christos who brought them forgiveness for their sins. Both the Jews and the "God-fearing" Gentiles invited them to talk more next Sabbath. At that time almost the whole city gathered. This upset some influential Jews who spoke against them. Paul used the occasion to announce a change in his mission which from then on would be to the Gentiles.[112]

 
Map of the missionary journeys of St. Paul

Antioch served as a major Christian home base for Paul's early missionary activities,[4] and he remained there for "a long time with the disciples"[113] at the conclusion of his first journey. The exact duration of Paul's stay in Antioch is unknown, with estimates ranging from nine months to as long as eight years.[114]

In Raymond Brown's An Introduction to the New Testament (1997), a chronology of events in Paul's life is presented, illustrated from later 20th-century writings of biblical scholars.[115] The first missionary journey of Paul is assigned a "traditional" (and majority) dating of 46–49 AD, compared to a "revisionist" (and minority) dating of after 37 AD.[116]

Council of Jerusalem

A vital meeting between Paul and the Jerusalem church took place in the year 49 AD by "traditional" (and majority) dating, compared to a "revisionist" (and minority) dating of 47/51 AD.[117] The meeting is described in Acts 15:2[118] and usually seen as the same event mentioned by Paul in Galatians 2:1.[119][43] The key question raised was whether Gentile converts needed to be circumcised.[120][121] At this meeting, Paul states in his letter to the Galatians, Peter, James, and John accepted Paul's mission to the Gentiles.

The Jerusalem meetings are mentioned in Acts, and also in Paul's letters.[122] For example, the Jerusalem visit for famine relief[123] apparently corresponds to the "first visit" (to Peter and James only).[124][122] F. F. Bruce suggested that the "fourteen years" could be from Paul's conversion rather than from his first visit to Jerusalem.[125]

Incident at Antioch

Despite the agreement achieved at the Council of Jerusalem, Paul recounts how he later publicly confronted Peter in a dispute sometimes called the "Incident at Antioch", over Peter's reluctance to share a meal with Gentile Christians in Antioch because they did not strictly adhere to Jewish customs.[120]

Writing later of the incident, Paul recounts, "I opposed [Peter] to his face, because he was clearly in the wrong", and says he told Peter, "You are a Jew, yet you live like a Gentile and not like a Jew. How is it, then, that you force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs?"[126] Paul also mentions that even Barnabas, his traveling companion and fellow apostle until that time, sided with Peter.[120]

The outcome of the incident remains uncertain. The Catholic Encyclopedia suggests that Paul won the argument, because "Paul's account of the incident leaves no doubt that Peter saw the justice of the rebuke".[120] However, Paul himself never mentions a victory, and L. Michael White's From Jesus to Christianity draws the opposite conclusion: "The blowup with Peter was a total failure of political bravado, and Paul soon left Antioch as persona non grata, never again to return".[127]

The primary source account of the Incident at Antioch is Paul's letter to the Galatians.[126]

Second missionary journey

 
Saint Paul delivering the Areopagus sermon in Athens, by Raphael, 1515. This sermon addressed early issues in Christology.[128][129]

Paul left for his second missionary journey from Jerusalem, in late Autumn 49 AD,[130] after the meeting of the Council of Jerusalem where the circumcision question was debated. On their trip around the Mediterranean Sea, Paul and his companion Barnabas stopped in Antioch where they had a sharp argument about taking John Mark with them on their trips. The Acts of the Apostles said that John Mark had left them in a previous trip and gone home. Unable to resolve the dispute, Paul and Barnabas decided to separate; Barnabas took John Mark with him, while Silas joined Paul.

Paul and Silas initially visited Tarsus (Paul's birthplace), Derbe and Lystra. In Lystra, they met Timothy, a disciple who was spoken well of, and decided to take him with them. Paul and his companions, Silas and Timothy, had plans to journey to the southwest portion of Asia Minor to preach the gospel but during the night, Paul had a vision of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him to go to Macedonia to help them. After seeing the vision, Paul and his companions left for Macedonia to preach the gospel to them.[131] The Church kept growing, adding believers, and strengthening in faith daily.[132]

In Philippi, Paul cast a spirit of divination out of a servant girl, whose masters were then unhappy about the loss of income her soothsaying provided.[133] They seized Paul and Silas and dragged them into the marketplace before the authorities and Paul and Silas were put in jail. After a miraculous earthquake, the gates of the prison fell apart and Paul and Silas could have escaped but remained; this event led to the conversion of the jailor.[134] They continued traveling, going by Berea and then to Athens, where Paul preached to the Jews and God-fearing Greeks in the synagogue and to the Greek intellectuals in the Areopagus. Paul continued from Athens to Corinth.

Interval in Corinth

Around 50–52 AD, Paul spent 18 months in Corinth. The reference in Acts to Proconsul Gallio helps ascertain this date (cf. Gallio Inscription).[43] In Corinth, Paul met Priscilla and Aquila,[135] who became faithful believers and helped Paul through his other missionary journeys. The couple followed Paul and his companions to Ephesus, and stayed there to start one of the strongest and most faithful churches at that time.[136]

In 52, departing from Corinth, Paul stopped at the nearby village of Cenchreae to have his hair cut off, because of a vow he had earlier taken.[137] It is possible this was to be a final haircut prior to fulfilling his vow to become a Nazirite for a defined period of time.[138] With Priscilla and Aquila, the missionaries then sailed to Ephesus[139] and then Paul alone went on to Caesarea to greet the Church there. He then traveled north to Antioch, where he stayed for some time (Ancient Greek: ποιησας χρονον, "perhaps about a year"), before leaving again on a third missionary journey.[citation needed] Some New Testament texts[note 6] suggest that he also visited Jerusalem during this period for one of the Jewish feasts, possibly Pentecost.[140] Textual critic Henry Alford and others consider the reference to a Jerusalem visit to be genuine[141] and it accords with Acts 21:29,[142] according to which Paul and Trophimus the Ephesian had previously been seen in Jerusalem.

Third missionary journey

 
The Preaching of Saint Paul at Ephesus by Eustache Le Sueur (1649)[143]

According to Acts, Paul began his third missionary journey by traveling all around the region of Galatia and Phrygia to strengthen, teach and rebuke the believers. Paul then traveled to Ephesus, an important center of early Christianity, and stayed there for almost three years, probably working there as a tentmaker,[144] as he had done when he stayed in Corinth. He is claimed to have performed numerous miracles, healing people and casting out demons, and he apparently organized missionary activity in other regions.[43] Paul left Ephesus after an attack from a local silversmith resulted in a pro-Artemis riot involving most of the city.[43] During his stay in Ephesus, Paul wrote four letters to the church in Corinth.[145] The Jerusalem Bible suggests that the letter to the church in Philippi was also written from Ephesus.[146]

Paul went through Macedonia into Achaea[147] and stayed in Greece, probably Corinth, for three months[147] during 56–57 AD.[43] Commentators generally agree that Paul dictated his Epistle to the Romans during this period.[148] He then made ready to continue on to Syria, but he changed his plans and traveled back through Macedonia because of some Jews who had made a plot against him. In Romans 15:19,[149] Paul wrote that he visited Illyricum, but he may have meant what would now be called Illyria Graeca,[150] which was at that time a division of the Roman province of Macedonia.[151] On their way back to Jerusalem, Paul and his companions visited other cities such as Philippi, Troas, Miletus, Rhodes, and Tyre. Paul finished his trip with a stop in Caesarea, where he and his companions stayed with Philip the Evangelist before finally arriving at Jerusalem.[152]

Journey from Rome to Spain

Among the writings of the early Christians, Pope Clement I said that Paul was "Herald (of the Gospel of Christ) in the West", and that "he had gone to the extremity of the west".[153] John Chrysostom indicated that Paul preached in Spain: "For after he had been in Rome, he returned to Spain, but whether he came thence again into these parts, we know not".[154] Cyril of Jerusalem said that Paul, "fully preached the Gospel, and instructed even imperial Rome, and carried the earnestness of his preaching as far as Spain, undergoing conflicts innumerable, and performing Signs and wonders".[155] The Muratorian fragment mentions "the departure of Paul from the city [of Rome] [5a] (39) when he journeyed to Spain".[156]

Visits to Jerusalem in Acts and the epistles

This table is adapted from White, From Jesus to Christianity.[122] Note that the matching of Paul's travels in the Acts and the travels in his Epistles is done for the reader's convenience and is not approved of by all scholars.

Acts Epistles
  • First visit to Jerusalem[157]
    • "after many days" of Damascus conversion
    • preaches openly in Jerusalem with Barnabas
    • meets apostles
  • First visit to Jerusalem[124]
    • three years after Damascus conversion[158]
    • sees only Cephas (Simon Peter) and James
  • Second visit to Jerusalem[159]
    • for famine relief
  • There is debate over whether Paul's visit in Galatians 2 refers to the visit for famine relief[160] or the Jerusalem Council.[161] If it refers to the former, then this was the trip made "after an interval of fourteen years".[162]
  • Third visit to Jerusalem[163]
    • with Barnabas
    • "Council of Jerusalem"
    • followed by confrontation with Barnabas in Antioch[164]
  • Another[note 7] visit to Jerusalem[99]
    • 14 years later (after Damascus conversion?)
    • with Barnabas and Titus
    • possibly the "Council of Jerusalem"
    • Paul agrees to "remember the poor"
    • followed by confrontation with Peter and Barnabas in Antioch[126]
  • Fourth visit to Jerusalem[165]
    • to "greet the church"
  • Apparently unmentioned.
  • Fifth visit to Jerusalem[166]
    • after an absence of several years[167]
    • to bring gifts for the poor and to present offerings
    • Paul arrested
  • Another[note 8] visit to Jerusalem.[168]
    • to deliver the collection for the poor

Last visit to Jerusalem and arrest

 
Saint Paul arrested, early 1900s Bible illustration

In 57 AD, upon completion of his third missionary journey, Paul arrived in Jerusalem for his fifth and final visit with a collection of money for the local community. The Acts of the Apostles reports that he initially was warmly received. However, Acts goes on to recount how Paul was warned by James and the elders that he was gaining a reputation for being against the Law, saying "they have been told about you that you teach all the Jews living among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, and that you tell them not to circumcise their children or observe the customs."[169] Paul underwent a purification ritual so that "all will know that there is nothing in what they have been told about you, but that you yourself observe and guard the law."[170]

When the seven days of the purification ritual were almost completed, some "Jews from Asia" (most likely from Roman Asia) accused Paul of defiling the temple by bringing gentiles into it. He was seized and dragged out of the temple by an angry mob. When the tribune heard of the uproar, he and some centurions and soldiers rushed to the area. Unable to determine his identity and the cause of the uproar, they placed him in chains.[171] He was about to be taken into the barracks when he asked to speak to the people. He was given permission by the Romans and proceeded to tell his story. After a while, the crowd responded. "Up to this point they listened to him, but then they shouted, 'Away with such a fellow from the earth! For he should not be allowed to live.'"[172] The tribune ordered that Paul be brought into the barracks and questioned by flogging. Paul asserted his Roman citizenship, which would prevent his flogging. The tribune "wanted to find out what Paul was being accused of by the Jews, the next day he released him and ordered the chief priests and the entire council to meet".[173] Paul spoke before the council and caused a disagreement between the Pharisees and the Sadducees. When this threatened to turn violent, the tribune ordered his soldiers to take Paul by force and return him to the barracks.[174]

The next morning, forty Jews "bound themselves by an oath neither to eat nor drink until they had killed Paul",[175] but the son of Paul's sister heard of the plot and notified Paul, who notified the tribune that the conspiracists were going to ambush him. The tribune ordered two centurions to "Get ready to leave by nine o'clock tonight for Caesarea with two hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen, and two hundred spearmen. Also provide mounts for Paul to ride, and take him safely to Felix the governor."[176]

Paul was taken to Caesarea, where the governor ordered that he be kept under guard in Herod's headquarters. "Five days later the high priest Ananias came down with some elders and an attorney, a certain Tertullus, and they reported their case against Paul to the governor."[177] Both Paul and the Jewish authorities gave a statement "But Felix, who was rather well informed about the Way, adjourned the hearing with the comment, "When Lysias the tribune comes down, I will decide your case."[178]

Marcus Antonius Felix then ordered the centurion to keep Paul in custody, but to "let him have some liberty and not to prevent any of his friends from taking care of his needs."[179] He was held there for two years by Felix, until a new governor, Porcius Festus, was appointed. The "chief priests and the leaders of the Jews" requested that Festus return Paul to Jerusalem. After Festus had stayed in Jerusalem "not more than eight or ten days, he went down to Caesarea; the next day he took his seat on the tribunal and ordered Paul to be brought." When Festus suggested that he be sent back to Jerusalem for further trial, Paul exercised his right as a Roman citizen to "appeal unto Caesar".[43] Finally, Paul and his companions sailed for Rome where Paul was to stand trial for his alleged crimes.[180]

 
St. Paul's Grotto in Rabat, Malta

Acts recounts that on the way to Rome for his appeal as a Roman citizen to Caesar, Paul was shipwrecked on "Melita" (Malta),[181] where the islanders showed him "unusual kindness" and where he was met by Publius.[182] From Malta, he travelled to Rome via Syracuse, Rhegium and Puteoli.[183]

Two years in Rome

 
Paul Arrives in Rome, from Die Bibel in Bildern

Paul finally arrived in Rome around 60 AD, where he spent another two years under house arrest.[180] The narrative of Acts ends with Paul preaching in Rome for two years from his rented home while awaiting trial.[184]

Irenaeus wrote in the 2nd century that Peter and Paul had been the founders of the church in Rome and had appointed Linus as succeeding bishop.[185] However, Paul was not a bishop of Rome, nor did he bring Christianity to Rome since there were already Christians in Rome when he arrived there;[186] Paul also wrote his letter to the church at Rome before he had visited Rome.[187] Paul only played a supporting part in the life of the church in Rome.[188]

Death

 
The Beheading of Saint Paul by Enrique Simonet, 1887

The date of Paul's death is believed to have occurred after the Great Fire of Rome in July 64 AD, but before the last year of Nero's reign, in 68 AD.[2]

The Second Epistle to Timothy states that Paul was arrested in Troad[189] and brought back to Rome, where he was imprisoned and put on trial; the Epistle was traditionally ascribed to Paul, but today many scholars considered it to be pseudepigrapha, perhaps written by one of Paul's disciples.[190] Pope Clement I writes in his Epistle to the Corinthians that after Paul "had borne his testimony before the rulers", he "departed from the world and went unto the holy place, having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance."[191] Ignatius of Antioch writes in his Epistle to the Ephesians that Paul was martyred, without giving any further information.[192]

Eusebius states that Paul was killed during the Neronian Persecution[193] and, quoting from Dionysius of Corinth, argues that Peter and Paul were martyred "at the same time".[194] Tertullian writes that Paul was beheaded like John the Baptist,[195] a detail also contained in Lactantius,[196]Jerome,[197] John Chrysostom[198] and Sulpicius Severus.[199][full citation needed]

A legend later developed that his martyrdom occurred at the Aquae Salviae, on the Via Laurentina. According to this legend, after Paul was decapitated, his severed head rebounded three times, giving rise to a source of water each time that it touched the ground, which is how the place earned the name "San Paolo alle Tre Fontane" ("St Paul at the Three Fountains").[200][201] The apocryphal Acts of Paul also describe the martyrdom and the burial of Paul, but their narrative is highly fanciful and largely unhistorical.[202]

Remains

According to the Liber Pontificalis, Paul's body was buried outside the walls of Rome, at the second mile on the Via Ostiensis, on the estate owned by a Christian woman named Lucina.[203] It was here, in the fourth century, that the Emperor Constantine the Great built a first church. Then, between the fourth and fifth centuries, it was considerably enlarged by the Emperors Valentinian I, Valentinian II, Theodosius I, and Arcadius. The present-day Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls was built there in the early 19th century.[200]

Caius in his Disputation Against Proclus (198 AD) mentions this of the places in which the remains of the apostles Peter and Paul were deposited: "I can point out the trophies of the apostles. For if you are willing to go to the Vatican or to the Ostian Way, you will find the trophies of those who founded this Church".[204]

Jerome in his De Viris Illustribus (392 AD) writing on Paul's biography, mentions that "Paul was buried in the Ostian Way at Rome".[205]

In 2002, an 8-foot (2.4 m)-long marble sarcophagus, inscribed with the words "PAULO APOSTOLO MART" ("Paul apostle martyr") was discovered during excavations around the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls on the Via Ostiensis. Vatican archaeologists declared this to be the tomb of Paul the Apostle in 2005.[206] In June 2009, Pope Benedict XVI announced excavation results concerning the tomb. The sarcophagus was not opened but was examined by means of a probe, which revealed pieces of incense, purple and blue linen, and small bone fragments. The bone was radiocarbon-dated to the 1st or 2nd century. According to the Vatican, these findings support the conclusion that the tomb is Paul's.[207][208]

Church tradition

 
Greek Orthodox mural painting of Saint Paul

Various Christian writers have suggested more details about Paul's life.

1 Clement, a letter written by the Roman bishop Clement of Rome around the year 90, reports this about Paul:

By reason of jealousy and strife Paul by his example pointed out the prize of patient endurance. After that he had been seven times in bonds, had been driven into exile, had been stoned, had preached in the East and in the West, he won the noble renown which was the reward of his faith, having taught righteousness unto the whole world and having reached the farthest bounds of the West; and when he had borne his testimony before the rulers, so he departed from the world and went unto the holy place, having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance.

— Lightfoot 1890, p. 274, The First Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians, 5:5–6

Commenting on this passage, Raymond Brown writes that while it "does not explicitly say" that Paul was martyred in Rome, "such a martyrdom is the most reasonable interpretation".[209] Eusebius of Caesarea, who wrote in the 4th century, states that Paul was beheaded in the reign of the Roman Emperor Nero.[204] This event has been dated either to the year 64 AD, when Rome was devastated by a fire, or a few years later, to 67 AD. According to one tradition, the church of San Paolo alle Tre Fontane marks the place of Paul's execution. A Roman Catholic liturgical solemnity of Peter and Paul, celebrated on 29 June, commemorates his martyrdom, and reflects a tradition (preserved by Eusebius) that Peter and Paul were martyred at the same time.[204] The Roman liturgical calendar for the following day now remembers all Christians martyred in these early persecutions; formerly, 30 June was the feast day for St. Paul.[210] Persons or religious orders with a special affinity for St. Paul can still celebrate their patron on 30 June.

The apocryphal Acts of Paul and the apocryphal Acts of Peter suggest that Paul survived Rome and traveled further west. Some think that Paul could have revisited Greece and Asia Minor after his trip to Spain, and might then have been arrested in Troas, and taken to Rome and executed.[211][note 4] A tradition holds that Paul was interred with Saint Peter ad Catacumbas by the via Appia until moved to what is now the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls in Rome. Bede, in his Ecclesiastical History, writes that Pope Vitalian in 665 gave Paul's relics (including a cross made from his prison chains) from the crypts of Lucina to King Oswy of Northumbria, northern Britain. The skull of Saint Paul is claimed to reside in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran since at least the ninth century, alongside the skull of Saint Peter.[212]

The Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul is celebrated on 25 January.[213]

Paul is remembered (with Peter) in the Church of England with a Festival on 29 June.[214] Paul is considered the patron saint of London.

Physical appearance

 
Facial composite of Saint Paul, created by experts of the Landeskriminalamt of North Rhine-Westphalia using historical sources

The New Testament offers little if any information about the physical appearance of Paul, but several descriptions can be found in apocryphal texts. In the Acts of Paul[215] he is described as "A man of small stature, with a bald head and crooked legs, in a good state of body, with eyebrows meeting and nose somewhat hooked".[216] In the Latin version of the Acts of Paul and Thecla it is added that he had a red, florid face.

In The History of the Contending of Saint Paul, his countenance is described as "ruddy with the ruddiness of the skin of the pomegranate".[217] The Acts of Saint Peter confirms that Paul had a bald and shining head, with red hair.[218] As summarised by Barnes,[219] Chrysostom records that Paul's stature was low, his body crooked and his head bald. Lucian, in his Philopatris, describes Paul as "corpore erat parvo, contracto, incurvo, tricubitali" ("he was small, contracted, crooked, of three cubits, or four feet six").[32]

Nicephorus claims that Paul was a little man, crooked, and almost bent like a bow, with a pale countenance, long and wrinkled, and a bald head. Pseudo-Chrysostom echoes Lucian's height of Paul, referring to him as "the man of three cubits".[32]

Writings

Of the 27 books in the New Testament, 13 identify Paul as the author; seven of these are widely considered authentic and Paul's own, while the authorship of the other six is disputed.[220][221][222] The undisputed letters are considered the most important sources since they contain what is widely agreed to be Paul's own statements about his life and thoughts. Theologian Mark Powell writes that Paul directed these seven letters to specific occasions at particular churches. As an example, if the Corinthian church had not experienced problems concerning its celebration of the Lord's Supper,[223] today it would not be known that Paul even believed in that observance or had any opinions about it one way or the other. Powell comments that there may be other matters in the early church that have since gone unnoticed simply because no crises arose that prompted Paul to comment on them.[224]

In Paul's writings, he provides the first written account of what it is to be a Christian and thus a description of Christian spirituality. His letters have been characterized as being the most influential books of the New Testament after the Gospels of Matthew and John.[8][note 9]

Date

Paul's authentic letters are roughly dated to the years surrounding the mid-1st century. Placing Paul in this time period is done on the basis of his reported conflicts with other early contemporary figures in the Jesus movement including James and Peter,[225] the references to Paul and his letters by Clement of Rome writing in the late 1st century,[226] his reported issues in Damascus from 2 Corinthians 11:32 which he says took place while King Aretas IV was in power,[227] a possible reference to Erastus of Corinth in Romans 16:23,[228] his reference to preaching in the province of Illyricum (which dissolved in 80 AD),[229] the lack of any references to the Gospels indicating a pre-war time period, the chronology in the Acts of the Apostles placing Paul in this time, and the dependence on Paul's letters by other 1st-century pseudo-Pauline epistles.[230]

Authorship

 
Paul Writing His Epistles, painting attributed to Valentin de Boulogne, 17th century

Seven of the 13 letters that bear Paul's name – Romans, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians and Philemon – are almost universally accepted as being entirely authentic (dictated by Paul himself).[8][220][221][222] They are considered the best source of information on Paul's life and especially his thought.[8]

Four of the letters (Ephesians, 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus) are widely considered pseudepigraphical, while the authorship of the other two is subject to debate.[220] Colossians and 2 Thessalonians are possibly "Deutero-Pauline" meaning they may have been written by Paul's followers after his death. Similarly, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus may be "Trito-Pauline" meaning they may have been written by members of the Pauline school a generation after his death. According to their theories, these disputed letters may have come from followers writing in Paul's name, often using material from his surviving letters. These scribes also may have had access to letters written by Paul that no longer survive.[8]

The authenticity of Colossians has been questioned on the grounds that it contains an otherwise unparalleled description (among his writings) of Jesus as "the image of the invisible God", a Christology found elsewhere only in the Gospel of John.[231] However, the personal notes in the letter connect it to Philemon, unquestionably the work of Paul. Internal evidence shows close connection with Philippians.[32]

Ephesians is a letter that is very similar to Colossians, but is almost entirely lacking in personal reminiscences. Its style is unique. It lacks the emphasis on the cross to be found in other Pauline writings, reference to the Second Coming is missing, and Christian marriage is exalted in a way that contrasts with the reference in 1 Corinthians.[232] Finally, according to R. E. Brown, it exalts the Church in a way suggestive of the second generation of Christians, "built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets" now past.[233]

The defenders of its Pauline authorship argue that it was intended to be read by a number of different churches and that it marks the final stage of the development of Paul's thinking. It has been said, too, that the moral portion of the Epistle, consisting of the last two chapters, has the closest affinity with similar portions of other Epistles, while the whole admirably fits in with the known details of Paul's life, and throws considerable light upon them.[234]

 
Russian Orthodox icon of the Apostle Paul, 18th century (Iconostasis of Transfiguration Church, Kizhi Monastery, Karelia, Russia)

Three main reasons have been advanced by those who question Paul's authorship of 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus, also known as the Pastoral Epistles:

  1. They have found a difference in these letters' vocabulary, style, and theology from Paul's acknowledged writings. Defenders of the authenticity say that they were probably written in the name and with the authority of the Apostle by one of his companions, to whom he distinctly explained what had to be written, or to whom he gave a written summary of the points to be developed, and that when the letters were finished, Paul read them through, approved them, and signed them.[234]
  2. There is a difficulty in fitting them into Paul's biography as it is known.[235] They, like Colossians and Ephesians, were written from prison but suppose Paul's release and travel thereafter.[32]
  3. 2 Thessalonians, like Colossians, is questioned on stylistic grounds with, among other peculiarities, a dependence on 1 Thessalonians—yet a distinctiveness in language from the Pauline corpus. This, again, is explainable by the possibility that Paul requested one of his companions to write the letter for him under his dictation.[32]

Acts

Although approximately half of the Acts of the Apostles deals with Paul's life and works, Acts does not refer to Paul writing letters. Historians believe that the author of Acts did not have access to any of Paul's letters. One piece of evidence suggesting this is that Acts never directly quotes from the Pauline epistles. Discrepancies between the Pauline epistles and Acts would further support the conclusion that the author of Acts did not have access to those epistles when composing Acts.[236][237]

British Jewish scholar Hyam Maccoby contended that Paul, as described in the Acts of the Apostles, is quite different from the view of Paul gleaned from his own writings. Some difficulties have been noted in the account of his life. Paul as described in the Acts of the Apostles is much more interested in factual history, less in theology; ideas such as justification by faith are absent as are references to the Spirit, according to Maccoby. He also pointed out that there are no references to John the Baptist in the Pauline Epistles, although Paul mentions him several times in the Acts of the Apostles.

Others have objected that the language of the speeches is too Lukan in style to reflect anyone else's words. Moreover, George Shillington writes that the author of Acts most likely created the speeches accordingly and they bear his literary and theological marks.[238] Conversely, Howard Marshall writes that the speeches were not entirely the inventions of the author and while they may not be accurate word-for-word, the author nevertheless records the general idea of them.[239]

F. C. Baur (1792–1860), professor of theology at Tübingen in Germany, the first scholar to critique Acts and the Pauline Epistles, and founder of the Tübingen School of theology, argued that Paul, as the "Apostle to the Gentiles", was in violent opposition to the original 12 Apostles. Baur considers the Acts of the Apostles were late and unreliable. This debate has continued ever since, with Adolf Deissmann (1866–1937) and Richard Reitzenstein (1861–1931) emphasising Paul's Greek inheritance and Albert Schweitzer stressing his dependence on Judaism.

Views

 
Byzantine ivory relief, 6th – early 7th century (Musée de Cluny)

Self-view

In the opening verses of Romans 1,[240] Paul provides a litany of his own apostolic appointment to preach among the Gentiles[241] and his post-conversion convictions about the risen Christ.[8] Paul described himself as set apart for the gospel of God and called to be an apostle and a servant of Jesus Christ. Jesus had revealed himself to Paul, just as he had appeared to Peter, to James, and to the twelve disciples after his resurrection.[242] Paul experienced this as an unforeseen, sudden, startling change, due to all-powerful grace, not as the fruit of his reasoning or thoughts.[243]

Paul also describes himself as afflicted with "a thorn in the flesh";[244] the nature of this "thorn" is unknown.[245]

There are debates as to whether Paul understood himself as commissioned to take the gospel to the gentiles at the moment of his conversion.[246] Before his conversion he believed his persecution of the church to be an indication of his zeal for his religion;[247] after his conversion he believed Jewish hostility toward the church was sinful opposition, that would incur God's wrath.[248][249] Paul believed he was halted by Christ, when his fury was at its height.[250] It was "through zeal" that he persecuted the Church,[247] and he obtained mercy because he had "acted ignorantly in unbelief".[251][note 4]

Understanding of Jesus Christ

Paul's writings emphasized the crucifixion, Christ's resurrection and the Parousia or second coming of Christ.[74] Paul saw Jesus as Lord (kyrios), the true messiah and the Son of God, who was promised by God beforehand, through his prophets in the Holy Scriptures. While being a biological descendant from David ("according to the flesh"),[252] he was declared to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead.

According to E. P. Sanders, Paul "preached the death, resurrection, and lordship of Jesus Christ, and he proclaimed that faith in Jesus guarantees a share in his life."[8] In Paul's view, "Jesus' death was not a defeat but was for the believers' benefit,"[8] a sacrifice which substitutes for the lives of others, and frees them from the bondage of sin. Believers participate in Christ's death and resurrection by their baptism. The resurrection of Jesus was of primary importance to Paul, bringing the promise of salvation to believers. Paul taught that, when Christ returned, "those who died in Christ would be raised when he returned", while those still alive would be "caught up in the clouds together with them to meet the Lord in the air".[253][8]

Sanders concludes that Paul's writings reveal what he calls the essence of the Christian message: "(1) God sent his Son; (2) the Son was crucified and resurrected for the benefit of humanity; (3) the Son would soon return; and (4) those who belonged to the Son would live with him forever. Paul's gospel, like those of others, also included (5) the admonition to live by the highest moral standard: "May your spirit and soul and body be kept sound and blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ"."[254][8]

In Paul's writings, the public, corporate devotional patterns towards Jesus in the early Christian community are reflective of Paul's perspective on the divine status of Jesus in what scholars have termed a "binitarian" pattern of devotion. For Paul, Jesus receives prayer,[255][256][257] the presence of Jesus is confessionally invoked by believers,[258][259][260] people are baptized in Jesus' name,[261][262] Jesus is the reference in Christian fellowship for a religious ritual meal (the Lord's Supper;[263] in pagan cults, the reference for ritual meals is always to a deity), and Jesus is the source of continuing prophetic oracles to believers.[264][265]

Atonement

Paul taught that Christians are redeemed from sin by Jesus' death and resurrection. His death was an expiation as well as a propitiation, and by Christ's blood peace is made between God and man.[266] By grace, through faith,[267] a Christian shares in Jesus' death and in his victory over death, gaining as a free gift a new, justified status of sonship.[268]

According to Krister Stendahl, the main concern of Paul's writings on Jesus' role, and salvation by faith, is not the individual conscience of human sinners, and their doubts about being chosen by God or not, but the problem of the inclusion of gentile (Greek) Torah observers into God's covenant.[269][270][271][272][note 10] "Dying for our sins" refers to the problem of gentile Torah-observers, who, despite their faithfulness, cannot fully observe commandments, including circumcision, and are therefore 'sinners', excluded from God's covenant.[274] Jesus' death and resurrection solved this problem of the exclusion of the gentiles from God's covenant, as indicated by Romans 3:21–26.[275]

Paul's conversion fundamentally changed his basic beliefs regarding God's covenant and the inclusion of Gentiles into this covenant. Paul believed Jesus' death was a voluntary sacrifice, that reconciled sinners with God.[276] The law only reveals the extent of people's enslavement to the power of sin—a power that must be broken by Christ.[277] Before his conversion Paul believed Gentiles were outside the covenant that God made with Israel; after his conversion, he believed Gentiles and Jews were united as the people of God in Christ.[278] Before his conversion he believed circumcision was the rite through which males became part of Israel, an exclusive community of God's chosen people;[279] after his conversion he believed that neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything, but that the new creation is what counts in the sight of God,[280] and that this new creation is a work of Christ in the life of believers, making them part of the church, an inclusive community of Jews and Gentiles reconciled with God through faith.[281]

According to E. P. Sanders, who initiated the New Perspective on Paul with his 1977 publication Paul and Palestinian Judaism, Paul saw the faithful redeemed by participation in Jesus' death and rising. Though "Jesus' death substituted for that of others and thereby freed believers from sin and guilt", a metaphor derived from "ancient sacrificial theology,"[8][note 11] the essence of Paul's writing is not in the "legal terms" regarding the expiation of sin, but the act of "participation in Christ through dying and rising with him."[citation needed] According to Sanders, "those who are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death, and thus they escape the power of sin [...] he died so that the believers may die with him and consequently live with him."[8] By this participation in Christ's death and rising, "one receives forgiveness for past offences, is liberated from the powers of sin, and receives the Spirit."

Relationship with Judaism

Some scholars see Paul as completely in line with 1st-century Judaism (a Pharisee and student of Gamaliel as presented by Acts),[284] others see him as opposed to 1st-century Judaism (see Marcionism), while the majority see him as somewhere in between these two extremes, opposed to insistence on keeping the "Ritual Laws" (for example the circumcision controversy in early Christianity) as necessary for entrance into God's New Covenant,[285][286] but in full agreement on "Divine Law". These views of Paul are paralleled by the views of Biblical law in Christianity.

Paul redefined the people of Israel, those he calls the "true Israel" and the "true circumcision" as those who had faith in the heavenly Christ, thus excluding those he called "Israel after the flesh" from his new covenant.[287][288] He also held the view that the Torah given to Moses was valid "until Christ came," so that even Jews are no longer "under the Torah," nor obligated to follow the commandments or mitzvot as given to Moses.[289]

Tabor 2013

Paul is critical both theologically and empirically of claims of moral or lineal superiority[290] of Jews while conversely strongly sustaining the notion of a special place for the Children of Israel.[291] Paul's theology of the gospel accelerated the separation of the messianic sect of Christians from Judaism, a development contrary to Paul's own intent. He wrote that faith in Christ was alone decisive in salvation for Jews and Gentiles alike, making the schism between the followers of Christ and mainstream Jews inevitable and permanent. He argued that Gentile converts did not need to become Jews, get circumcised, follow Jewish dietary restrictions, or otherwise observe Mosaic laws to be saved.[43]

According to Paula Fredriksen, Paul's opposition to male circumcision for Gentiles is in line with Old Testament predictions that "in the last days the gentile nations would come to the God of Israel, as gentiles (e.g., Zechariah 8:20–23),[292] not as proselytes to Israel."[293] For Paul, Gentile male circumcision was therefore an affront to God's intentions.[293] According to Hurtado, "Paul saw himself as what Munck called a salvation-historical figure in his own right," who was "personally and singularly deputized by God to bring about the predicted ingathering (the "fullness") of the nations."[294][293]

According to Sanders, Paul insists that salvation is received by the grace of God; according to Sanders, this insistence is in line with Judaism of c. 200 BC until 200 AD, which saw God's covenant with Israel as an act of grace of God. Observance of the Law is needed to maintain the covenant, but the covenant is not earned by observing the Law, but by the grace of God.[295]

Sanders' publications[285][296] have since been taken up by Professor James Dunn who coined the phrase "The New Perspective on Paul".[297] N.T. Wright,[298] the Anglican Bishop of Durham, notes a difference in emphasis between Galatians and Romans, the latter being much more positive about the continuing covenant between God and his ancient people than the former. Wright also contends that performing Christian works is not insignificant but rather proof of having attained the redemption of Jesus Christ by grace (free gift received by faith).[299] He concludes that Paul distinguishes between performing Christian works which are signs of ethnic identity and others which are a sign of obedience to Christ.[298]

World to come

According to Bart Ehrman, Paul believed that Jesus would return within his lifetime.[300] Paul expected that Christians who had died in the meantime would be resurrected to share in God's kingdom, and he believed that the saved would be transformed, assuming heavenly, imperishable bodies.[301]

Paul's teaching about the end of the world is expressed most clearly in his first and second letters to the Christian community of Thessalonica. He assures them that the dead will rise first and be followed by those left alive.[302] This suggests an imminent end but he is unspecific about times and seasons and encourages his hearers to expect a delay.[303] The form of the end will be a battle between Jesus and the man of lawlessness[304] whose conclusion is the triumph of Christ.

Before his conversion he believed God's messiah would put an end to the old age of evil, and initiate a new age of righteousness; after his conversion, he believed this would happen in stages that had begun with the resurrection of Jesus, but the old age would continue until Jesus returns.[305][249]

Role of women

 
Paul the Apostle, (16th-century) attributed to Lucas van Leyden

The second chapter of the first letter to Timothy—one of the six disputed letters—is used by many churches to deny women a vote in church affairs, reject women from serving as teachers of adult Bible classes, prevent them from serving as missionaries, and generally disenfranchise women from the duties and privileges of church leadership.[306]

9In like manner also, that women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness and sobriety; not with broided hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array;
10But (which becometh women professing godliness) with good works.
11Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection.
12But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.
13For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
14And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.
15Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety.

— 1 Timothy 2:9–15[307]

The King James Bible (Authorised Version) translation of this passage taken literally says that women in the churches are to have no leadership roles vis-à-vis men.[308]

Fuller Seminary theologian J. R. Daniel Kirk[309] finds evidence in Paul's letters of a much more inclusive view of women. He writes that Romans 16 is a tremendously important witness to the important role of women in the early church. Paul praises Phoebe for her work as a deaconess and Junia who is described by Paul in Scripture as being respected among the Apostles.[56] It is Kirk's observation that recent studies have led many scholars to conclude that the passage in 1 Corinthians 14 ordering women to "be silent" during worship[310] was a later addition, apparently by a different author, and not part of Paul's original letter to the Corinthians.

Other scholars, such as Giancarlo Biguzzi, believe that Paul's restriction on women speaking in 1 Corinthians 14 is genuine to Paul but applies to a particular case where there were local problems of women, who were not allowed in that culture to become educated, asking questions or chatting during worship services. He does not believe it to be a general prohibition on any woman speaking in worship settings since in 1 Corinthians Paul affirms the right (responsibility) of women to prophesy.[311][312]

Biblical prophecy is more than "fore-telling": two-thirds of its inscripturated form involves "forth-telling", that is, setting the truth, justice, mercy, and righteousness of God against the backdrop of every form of denial of the same. Thus, to speak prophetically was to speak boldly against every form of moral, ethical, political, economic, and religious disenfranchisement observed in a culture that was intent on building its own pyramid of values vis-a-vis God's established system of truth and ethics.

— Baker's Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology[313]

There were women prophets in the highly patriarchal times throughout the Old Testament.[313] The most common term for prophet in the Old Testament is nabi in the masculine form, and nebiah in the Hebrew feminine form, is used six times of women who performed the same task of receiving and proclaiming the message given by God. These women include Miriam, Aaron and Moses' sister,[314] Deborah,[315] the prophet Isaiah's wife,[316] and Huldah, the one who interpreted the Book of the Law discovered in the temple during the days of Josiah.[317] There were false prophetesses just as there were false prophets. The prophetess Noadiah was among those who tried to intimidate Nehemiah.[318] Apparently they held equal rank in prophesying right along with Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Elisha, Aaron, and Samuel.[313]

Kirk's third example of a more inclusive view is Galatians 3:28:

There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

— Galatians 3:28[319]

In pronouncing an end within the church to the divisions which are common in the world around it, he concludes by highlighting the fact that "there were New Testament women who taught and had authority in the early churches, that this teaching and authority was sanctioned by Paul, and that Paul himself offers a theological paradigm within which overcoming the subjugation of women is an anticipated outcome".[320]

Classicist Evelyn Stagg and theologian Frank Stagg believe that Paul was attempting to "Christianize" the societal household or domestic codes that significantly oppressed women and empowered men as the head of the household. The Staggs present a serious study of what has been termed the New Testament domestic code, also known as the Haustafel.[321] The two main passages that explain these "household duties" are Paul's letters to the Ephesians[322] and to the Colossians.[323] An underlying Household Code is also reflected in four additional Pauline letters and 1 Peter: 1 Timothy 2:1ff, 8ff; 3:1ff, 8ff; 5:17ff; 6:1f; Titus 2:1–10[324] and 1 Peter.[325] Biblical scholars have typically treated the Haustafel in Ephesians as a resource in the debate over the role of women in ministry and in the home.[326] Margaret MacDonald argues that the Haustafel, particularly as it appears in Ephesians, was aimed at "reducing the tension between community members and outsiders".[327]

E. P. Sanders has labeled Paul's remark in 1 Corinthians[328] about women not making any sound during worship as "Paul's intemperate outburst that women should be silent in the churches".[285][296] Women, in fact, played a very significant part in Paul's missionary endeavors:

  • He became a partner in ministry with the couple Priscilla and Aquila who are specifically named seven times in the New Testament—always by their couple name and never individually. Of the seven times they are named in the New Testament, Priscilla's name appears first in five of those instances, suggesting to some scholars that she was the head of the family unit.[329] They lived, worked, and traveled with the Apostle Paul, becoming his honored, much-loved friends and coworkers in Jesus.[330] In Romans 16:3–4,[331] thought to have been written in 56 or 57, Paul sends his greetings to Priscilla and Aquila and proclaims that both of them "risked their necks" to save Paul's life.
  • Chloe was an important member of the church in Corinth.[332]
  • Phoebe was a "deacon" and a "benefactor" of Paul and others[333]
  • Romans 16[334] names eight other women active in the Christian movement, including Junia ("prominent among the apostles"), Mary ("who has worked very hard among you"), and Julia
  • Women were frequently among the major supporters of the new Christian movement[8]

Views on homosexuality

Most Christian traditions[335][336][337] say Paul clearly portrays homosexuality as sinful in two specific locations: Romans 1:26–27,[338] and 1 Corinthians 6:9-10.[339] Another passage, 1 Timothy 1:8–11, addresses the topic more obliquely.[340] Since the 19th century, however, most scholars have concluded that 1 Timothy (along with 2 Timothy and Titus) is not original to Paul, but rather an unknown Christian writing in Paul's name some time in the late-1st to mid-2nd century.[341][342]

Influence

 
Statue of St. Paul (1606) by Gregorio Fernández. Paul is widely depicted in artwork.

Paul's influence on Christian thinking arguably has been more significant than any other New Testament author.[8] Paul declared that "Christ is the end of the law",[343] exalted the Christian church as the body of Christ, and depicted the world outside the Church as under judgment.[43] Paul's writings include the earliest reference to the "Lord's Supper",[344] a rite traditionally identified as the Christian communion or Eucharist. In the East, church fathers attributed the element of election in Romans 9[345] to divine foreknowledge.[43] The themes of predestination found in Western Christianity do not appear in Eastern theology.

Pauline Christianity

Paul had a strong influence on early Christianity. Hurtado notes that Paul regarded his own Christological views and those of his predecessors and that of the Jerusalem Church as essentially similar. According to Hurtado, this "work[s] against the claims by some scholars that Pauline Christianity represents a sharp departure from the religiousness of Judean 'Jesus movements'."[346]

Marcion

Marcionism, regarded as heresy by contemporary mainstream Christianity, was an Early Christian dualist belief system that originated in the teachings of Marcion of Sinope at Rome around the year 144.[note 12] Marcion asserted that Paul was the only apostle who had rightly understood the new message of salvation as delivered by Christ.[347]

Marcion believed Jesus was the savior sent by God, and Paul the Apostle was his chief apostle, but he rejected the Hebrew Bible and the God of Israel. Marcionists believed that the wrathful Hebrew God was a separate and lower entity than the all-forgiving God of the New Testament.

Augustine

In his account of his conversion experience, Augustine of Hippo gave his life to Christ after reading Romans 13.[348][349] Augustine's foundational work on the gospel as a gift (grace), on morality as life in the Spirit, on predestination, and on original sin all derives from Paul, especially Romans.[43]

Reformation

In his account of his conversion Martin Luther wrote about righteousness in Romans 1 praising Romans as the perfect gospel, in which the Reformation was birthed.[350] Martin Luther's interpretation of Paul's writings influenced Luther's doctrine of sola fide.

John Calvin

John Calvin said the Book of Romans opens to anyone an understanding of the whole Scripture.[351]

Modern theology

Visit any church service, Roman Catholic, Protestant or Greek Orthodox, and it is the apostle Paul and his ideas that are central – in the hymns, the creeds, the sermons, the invocation and benediction, and of course, the rituals of baptism and the Holy Communion or Mass. Whether birth, baptism, confirmation, marriage or death, it is predominantly Paul who is evoked to express meaning and significance.

Professor James D. Tabor for the Huffington Post[352]

In his commentary The Epistle to the Romans (German: Der Römerbrief; particularly in the thoroughly re-written second edition of 1922), Karl Barth argued that the God who is revealed in the cross of Jesus challenges and overthrows any attempt to ally God with human cultures, achievements, or possessions.

In addition to the many questions about the true origins of some of Paul's teachings posed by historical figures as noted above, some modern theologians also hold that the teachings of Paul differ markedly from those of Jesus as found in the Gospels.[353] Barrie Wilson states that Paul differs from Jesus in terms of the origin of his message, his teachings and his practices.[354] Some have even gone so far as to claim that, due to these apparent differences in teachings, that Paul was actually no less than the "second founder" of Christianity (Jesus being its first).[355][356]

As in the Eastern tradition in general, Western humanists interpret the reference to election in Romans 9 as reflecting divine foreknowledge.[43]

Views on Paul

Jewish views

 
A statue of Paul holding a scroll (symbolising the Scriptures) and the sword (symbolising his martyrdom)

Jewish interest in Paul is a recent phenomenon. Before the positive historical reevaluations of Jesus by some Jewish thinkers in the 18th and 19th centuries, he had hardly featured in the popular Jewish imagination and little had been written about him by the religious leaders and scholars. Arguably, he is absent from the Talmud and rabbinical literature, although he makes an appearance in some variants of the medieval polemic Toledot Yeshu (as a particularly effective spy for the rabbis).[357]

However, with Jesus no longer regarded as the paradigm of gentile Christianity, Paul's position became more important in Jewish historical reconstructions of their religion's relationship with Christianity. He has featured as the key to building barriers (e.g. Heinrich Graetz and Martin Buber) or bridges (e.g. Isaac Mayer Wise and Claude G. Montefiore) in interfaith relations,[358] as part of an intra-Jewish debate about what constitutes Jewish authenticity (e.g. Joseph Klausner and Hans Joachim Schoeps),[359] and on occasion as a dialogical partner (e.g. Richard L. Rubenstein and Daniel Boyarin).[360]

He features in an oratorio (by Felix Mendelssohn), a painting (by Ludwig Meidner) and a play (by Franz Werfel),[361] and there have been several novels about Paul (by Shalom Asch and Samuel Sandmel).[362] Jewish philosophers (including Baruch Spinoza, Leo Shestov, and Jacob Taubes)[363] and Jewish psychoanalysts (including Sigmund Freud and Hanns Sachs)[364] have engaged with the apostle as one of the most influential figures in Western thought. Scholarly surveys of Jewish interest in Paul include those by Hagner 1980, pp. 143–65, Meissner 1996, Langton 2010, Langton 2011a, pp. 55–72 and Langton 2011b, pp. 585–87.

Gnosticism

In the 2nd (and possibly late 1st) century, Gnosticism was a competing religious tradition to Christianity which shared some elements of theology.

Elaine Pagels concentrated on how the Gnostics interpreted Paul's letters and how evidence from gnostic sources may challenge the assumption that Paul wrote his letters to combat "gnostic opponents" and to repudiate their statement that they possess secret wisdom.[365][page needed]

Muslim views

Muslims have long believed that Paul purposefully corrupted the original revealed teachings of Jesus,[366][367][368] through the introduction of such elements as paganism,[369] the making of Christianity into a theology of the cross,[370] and introducing original sin and the need for redemption.[371]

Sayf ibn Umar claimed that certain rabbis persuaded Paul to deliberately misguide early Christians by introducing what Ibn Hazm viewed as objectionable doctrines into Christianity.[372][373] Ibn Hazm repeated Sayf's claims.[374] The Karaite scholar Jacob Qirqisani also believed that Paul created Christianity by introducing the doctrine of Trinity.[372] Paul has been criticized by some modern Muslim thinkers. Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas wrote that Paul misrepresented the message of Jesus,[368] and Rashid Rida accused Paul of introducing shirk (polytheism) into Christianity.[369] Mohammad Ali Jouhar quoted Adolf von Harnack's critical writings of Paul.[370]

In Sunni Muslim polemics, Paul plays the same role (of deliberately corrupting the early teachings of Jesus) as a later Jew, Abdullah ibn Saba', would play in seeking to destroy the message of Islam from within.[373][374][375] Among those who supported this view were scholars Ibn Taymiyyah (who believed while Paul ultimately succeeded, Ibn Saba failed) and Ibn Hazm (who claimed that the Jews even admitted to Paul's sinister purpose).[372]

Other views

The critics of Paul the Apostle include US president Thomas Jefferson, a Deist, who wrote that Paul was the "first corrupter of the doctrines of Jesus."[376] Christian anarchists Leo Tolstoy and Ammon Hennacy took a similar view.[377][378]

In the Baha'i faith, scholars have various viewpoints on Paul. Discussions in Bahá'í scholarship have focused on whether Paul changed the original message of Christ or delivered the true Gospel, with proponents of both positions.[379]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Latin: Paulus; Ancient Greek: Παῦλος, romanizedPaulos; Coptic: ⲡⲁⲩⲗⲟⲥ; Biblical Hebrew: פאולוס השליח
  2. ^ Biblical Hebrew: שאול התרסי, romanized: Sha'ūl ha-Tarsī; Arabic: بولس الطرسوسي; Ancient Greek: Σαῦλος Ταρσεύς, romanizedSaũlos Tarseús; Turkish: Tarsuslu Pavlus; Latin: Paulus Tarsensis
  1. ^ a b Acts 8:1 "at Jerusalem"; Acts 9:13 "at Jerusalem"; Acts 9:21 "in Jerusalem"; Acts 26:10 "in Jerusalem". In Galatians 1:13, Paul states that he "persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy it," but does not specify where he persecuted the church. In Galatians 1:22 he states that more than three years after his conversion he was "still unknown by sight to the churches of Judea that are in Christ," seemingly ruling out Jerusalem as the place he had persecuted Christians.[44]
  2. ^ Tertullian knew the Letter to the Hebrews as being "under the name of Barnabas" (De Pudicitia, chapter 20 where Tertullian quotes Hebrews 6:4–8); Origen, in his now lost Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews, is reported by Eusebius[21] as having written "if any Church holds that this epistle is by Paul, let it be commended for this. For not without reason have the ancients handed it down as Paul's. But who wrote the epistle, in truth, God knows. The statement of some who have gone before us is that Clement, bishop of the Romans, wrote the epistle, and of others, that Luke, the author of the Gospel and the Acts, wrote it
  3. ^ Paul's undisputed epistles are 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Romans, Philippians, and Philemon. The six letters believed by some to have been written by Paul are Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus.[24]
  4. ^ a b c 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus may be "Trito-Pauline", meaning they may have been written by members of the Pauline school a generation after his death.
  5. ^ The only indication as to who is leading is in the order of names. At first, the two are referred to as Barnabas and Paul, in that order. Later in the same chapter, the team is referred to as Paul and his companions.
  6. ^ This clause is not found in some major sources: Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Alexandrinus, Codex Vaticanus or Codex Laudianus
  7. ^ Paul does not exactly say that this was his second visit. In Galatians, he lists three important meetings with Peter, and this was the second on his list. The third meeting took place in Antioch. He does not explicitly state that he did not visit Jerusalem in between this and his first visit.
  8. ^ Note that Paul only writes that he is on his way to Jerusalem, or just planning the visit. There might or might not have been additional visits before or after this visit, if he ever got to Jerusalem.
  9. ^ Sanders 2019: "Paul [...] only occasionally had the opportunity to revisit his churches. He tried to keep up his converts' spirit, answer their questions, and resolve their problems by letter and by sending one or more of his assistants (especially Timothy and Titus). Paul's letters reveal a remarkable human being: dedicated, compassionate, emotional, sometimes harsh and angry, clever and quick-witted, supple in argumentation, and above all possessing a soaring, passionate commitment to God, Jesus Christ, and his own mission. Fortunately, after his death one of his followers collected some of the letters, edited them very slightly, and published them. They constitute one of history's most remarkable personal contributions to religious thought and practice.
  10. ^ Dunn 1982, p. n.49 quotes Stendahl 1976, p. 2 "... a doctrine of faith was hammered out by Paul for the very specific and limited purpose of defending the rights of Gentile converts to be full and genuine heirs to the promise of God to Israel" Westerholm 2015, pp. 4–15: "For Paul, the question that 'justification by faith' was intended to answer was, 'On what terms can Gentiles gain entrance to the people of God?" Bent on denying any suggestion that Gentiles must become Jews and keep the Jewish law, he answered, 'By faith—and not by works of the (Jewish) law.'" Westerholm refers to: Stendahl 1963 Westerholm quotes Sanders: "Sanders noted that 'the salvation of the Gentiles is essential to Paul's preaching; and with it falls the law; for, as Paul says simply, Gentiles cannot live by the law'.[273] (496). On a similar note, Sanders suggested that the only Jewish 'boasting' to which Paul objected was that which exulted over the divine privileges granted to Israel and failed to acknowledge that God, in Christ, had opened the door of salvation to Gentiles."
  11. ^ According to the Jewish Encyclopedia (1906), "The Mishnah says that sins are expiated (1) by sacrifice, (2) by repentance at death or on Yom Kippur, (3) in the case of the lighter transgressions of the positive or negative precepts, by repentance at any time [...] The graver sins, according to Rabbi, are apostasy, heretical interpretation of the Torah, and non-circumcision (Yoma 86a). The atonement for sins between a man and his neighbor is an ample apology (Yoma 85b)."[282] The Jewish Encyclopedia further writes: "Most efficacious seemed to be the atoning power of suffering experienced by the righteous during the Exile. This is the idea underlying the description of the suffering servant of God in Isa. liii. 4, 12, Hebr. [...] of greater atoning power than all the Temple sacrifices was the suffering of the elect ones who were to be servants and witnesses of the Lord (Isa. xlii. 1–4, xlix. 1–7, l. 6). This idea of the atoning power of the suffering and death of the righteous finds expression also in IV Macc. vi. 27, xvii. 21–23; M. Ḳ. 28a; Pesiḳ. xxvii. 174b; Lev. R. xx.; and formed the basis of Paul's doctrine of the atoning blood of Christ (Rom. iii. 25)."[283]
  12. ^ 115 years and 6 months from the Crucifixion, according to Tertullian's reckoning in Adversus Marcionem, xv

Citations

  1. ^ "Saul of Tarsus: Rooted in Three Worlds". In the Footsteps of Paul. PBS. 2003. Retrieved 19 November 2010.
  2. ^ a b c Brown 1997, p. 436.
  3. ^ Harris 2003, p. 42: He was probably martyred in Rome about 64–65 AD
  4. ^ a b Harris 2003.
  5. ^ Domar: the calendrical and liturgical cycle of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church, Armenian Orthodox Theological Research Institute, 2003, p. 446.
  6. ^ Acts 22:3
  7. ^ Brown 1997, p. 442.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Sanders 2019.
  9. ^ a b c Powell 2009.
  10. ^ Dunn 2001, p. 577, Ch 32.
  11. ^ Rhoads 1996, p. 39.
  12. ^ Acts 26:5
  13. ^ Dunn 2009, pp. 345–346.
  14. ^ Acts 8:1
  15. ^ Acts 9:2
  16. ^ Acts 26:13–14
  17. ^ Acts 22:7–9
  18. ^ Acts 22:11
  19. ^ Acts 9:3–22
  20. ^ Brown 1997, p. 407.
  21. ^ Eusebius (1885). "Book VI/Chapter 25" . Church History . S.13 – via Wikisource.
  22. ^ a b Brown, Fitzmyer & Murphy 1990, p. 920, col.2, Ch 60:2.
  23. ^ Kümmel 1975, pp. 392–94, 401–03.
  24. ^ . United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on 23 August 2000.
  25. ^ Carson & Moo 2009.
  26. ^ Aageson 2008, p. 1.
  27. ^ a b c d Dunn 2003, p. 21.
  28. ^ a. Marrow, Stanley B. (1986). Paul: His Letters and His Theology : an Introduction to Paul's Epistles. Paulist Press. pp. 5, 7. ISBN 978-0809127443.
    b. . Catholic Answers. Archived from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  29. ^ Acts 22:25–29
  30. ^ Greek lexicon G4569 Σαύλος (Saul)
    Greek lexicon G3972 Παύλος (Paul)
    Hebrew lexicon H7586 שׁאוּל (Shaul/Saul)
  31. ^ Acts 16:37, 22:25–289
  32. ^ a b c d e f Prat 1911.
  33. ^ Lewis & Short 1879, Paulus: "a Roman surname (not a praenomen;)".
  34. ^ Cole 1989.
  35. ^ Acts 9:4; 22:7; 26:14
  36. ^ Acts 26:14
  37. ^ Acts 9:11
  38. ^ Acts 9:17; 22:13
  39. ^ Acts 13:9
  40. ^ 1 Corinthians 9:19–23
  41. ^ . Catholic Answers. Archived from the original on 30 October 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  42. ^ a b Dunn 2003, pp. 19–20.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cross & Livingstone 2005, St Paul.
  44. ^ a b Martin, Dale B. (2009). "Introduction to the New Testament History and Literature – 5. The New Testament as History". Open Yale Courses. Yale University.
  45. ^ Ehrman 2000, pp. 262–65.
  46. ^ Ladeuze 1909.
  47. ^ White 2007, pp. 145–47.
  48. ^ Koester 2000, p. 107.
  49. ^ Acts 16:37,Acts 22:25–29
  50. ^ a b Wright 1974, p. 404.
  51. ^ Philippians 3:5
  52. ^ a b c d Dunn 2003, pp. 21–22.
  53. ^ Acts 23:6
  54. ^ Dunn 2003, p. 22.
  55. ^ Acts 23:16
  56. ^ a b Romans 16:7
  57. ^ 2 Timothy 1:3
  58. ^ Philippians 3:5–6
  59. ^ Acts 18:1–3
  60. ^ Dunn 2003, pp. 41–42.
  61. ^ Acts 18:3
  62. ^ Romans 16:4
  63. ^ Acts 22:3
  64. ^ Acts 23:16
  65. ^ Acts 7:58–60; 22:20
  66. ^ Dunn 2009, pp. 242–44.
  67. ^ Bruce 2000, p. 43.
  68. ^ Lee 2006, pp. 13–26.
  69. ^ Kee 1983, p. 208.
  70. ^ Galatians 1:13–14, Philippians 3:6, Acts 8:1–3
  71. ^ Dunn 2009, pp. 246–47, 277.
  72. ^ Dunn 2009, pp. 246–47.
  73. ^ a b Dunn 2009, p. 277.
  74. ^ a b Bromiley 1979, p. 689.
  75. ^ Barnett 2002, p. 21.
  76. ^ Niswonger 1992, p. 200.
  77. ^ Galatians 1:16
  78. ^ 1 Corinthians 15:8
  79. ^ Acts 9:4–5
  80. ^ Acts 9:1–22
  81. ^ Acts 9:17
  82. ^ Acts 9:18
  83. ^ Aslan 2014, p. 184.
  84. ^ McRay 2007, p. 66.
  85. ^ Eskola 2001.
  86. ^ Churchill 2010.
  87. ^ Acts 9:20–22
  88. ^ Hengel 1997, p. 43.
  89. ^ 2 Corinthians 11:32
  90. ^ Galatians 1:17
  91. ^ Lake 1911, pp. 320–23.
  92. ^ Wright 1996, pp. 683–92.
  93. ^ Hengel 2002, pp. 47–66.
  94. ^ Galatians 1:13–24
  95. ^ Galatians 4:24–25
  96. ^ Galatians 1:11–16
  97. ^ Harris 2003, p. 517.
  98. ^ Galatians 1:22–24
  99. ^ a b Galatians 2:1–10
  100. ^ Barnett 2005, p. 200.
  101. ^ Dunn 2009, p. 369.
  102. ^ Acts 11:26
  103. ^ Dunn 2009, p. 297.
  104. ^ Dunn 2009.
  105. ^ Ogg 1962.
  106. ^ Barnett 2005, p. 83.
  107. ^ Acts 11:26
  108. ^ Acts 13–14
  109. ^ Dunn 2009, p. 370.
  110. ^ Acts 13:8–12
  111. ^ "Saul Of Tarsus (known as Paul, the Apostle of the Heathen)". JewishEncyclopedia.com. 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2020. His quotations from Scripture, which are all taken, directly or from memory, from the Greek version, betray no familiarity with the original Hebrew text (…) Nor is there any indication in Paul's writings or arguments that he had received the rabbinical training ascribed to him by Christian writers
  112. ^ Acts 13:13–48
  113. ^ Acts 14:28
  114. ^ Spence-Jones 2015, p. 16.
  115. ^ Brown 1997, p. 445.
  116. ^ Brown 1997, pp. 428–29.
  117. ^ Brown 1997, pp. 428–29, 445.
  118. ^ Acts 15:2
  119. ^ Galatians 2:1
  120. ^ a b c d Bechtel 1910.
  121. ^ Acts 15:2,Galatians 2:1
  122. ^ a b c White 2007, pp. 148–49.
  123. ^ Acts 11:27–30
  124. ^ a b Galatians 1:18–20
  125. ^ Bruce 2000, p. 151.
  126. ^ a b c Galatians 2:11–14
  127. ^ White 2007, p. 170.
  128. ^ McGrath 2006.
  129. ^ Mills 2003, pp. 1109–10.
  130. ^ Köstenberger, Kellum & Quarles 2009, p. 400.
  131. ^ Acts 16:6–10
  132. ^ Acts 16:5
  133. ^ Acts 16:16–24}
  134. ^ Acts 16:25–40
  135. ^ Acts 18:2
  136. ^ Acts 18:18–21
  137. ^ Acts 18:18
  138. ^ Driscoll 1911.
  139. ^ Acts 18:19–21
  140. ^ Acts 18:21
  141. ^ "Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18". biblehub.com. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  142. ^ Acts 21:29
  143. ^ Crease 2019, pp. 309–10.
  144. ^ Acts 20:34
  145. ^ McRay 2007, p. 185.
  146. ^ Jerusalem Bible (1966), Introduction to Saint Paul, p. 260
  147. ^ a b Acts 20:1–2
  148. ^ Sanday n.d., p. 202.
  149. ^ Romans 15:19
  150. ^ Burton 2000, p. 26.
  151. ^ Petit 1909.
  152. ^ Acts 21:8–10, Acts 21:15
  153. ^ 1st Clement – Lightfoot translation Early Christian Writings 1 Clem 5:5: "By reason of jealousy and strife Paul by his example pointed out the prize of patient endurance. After that he had been seven times in bonds, had been driven into exile, had been stoned, had preached in the East and in the West, he won the noble renown which was the reward of his faith, [5:6] having taught righteousness unto the whole world and having reached the farthest bounds of the West; and when he had borne his testimony before the rulers, so he departed from the world and went unto the holy place, having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance". Where Lightfoot has "had preached" above, the Hoole translation has "having become a herald". See also the endnote (3) by Arthur Cleveland Coxe on the last page of wikisource 1st Clement regarding Paul's preaching in Britain.
  154. ^ Chrysostom's Homilies on 2 Timothy, verse 4:20
  155. ^ Cyril on Paul and gifts of the Holy Ghost (Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series II Volume VII, Lecture 17, para. 26)
  156. ^ The Muratorian Fragment lines 38–39 Bible Research
  157. ^ Acts 9:26–27
  158. ^ Galatians 1:17–18
  159. ^ Acts 11:29–30, Acts 12:25
  160. ^ Acts 11:30, 12:25
  161. ^ Acts 15
  162. ^ Galatians 2:1
  163. ^ Acts 15:1–19
  164. ^ Acts 15:36–40
  165. ^ Acts 18:21–22
  166. ^ Acts 21:17ff
  167. ^ Acts 24:17
  168. ^ Romans 15:25, 2 Corinthians 8–9, 1 Corinthians 16:1–3
  169. ^ Acts 21:21
  170. ^ Acts 21:22–26
  171. ^ Acts 21:27–36
  172. ^ Acts 22:22
  173. ^ Acts 22:30
  174. ^ Acts 23:10
  175. ^ Acts 23:12
  176. ^ Acts 23:23
  177. ^ Acts 24:1
  178. ^ Acts 24:22
  179. ^ Acts 24:23
  180. ^ a b Capes, Reeves & Richards 2011, p. 203.
  181. ^ Acts 27:39–44
  182. ^ Acts 28:1–10
  183. ^ Acts 28:11–14
  184. ^ Acts 28:30–31
  185. ^ Irenaeus Against Heresies 3.3.2: the "...Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also [by pointing out] the faith preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops. [...] The blessed apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate"; Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  186. ^ Acts 28:14–15
  187. ^ Romans 1:1, 7, 11–13; 15:23–29
  188. ^ MaGee Greg. "The Origins of the Church at Rome" Bible.org; Accessed 18 March 2013
  189. ^ 2 Timothy 4:13
  190. ^ Brown 1984, pp. 31–46.
  191. ^ Pope Clement I, First Epistle to the Corinthians, 5:7
  192. ^ Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to the Ephesians, 12:55
  193. ^ Eusebius, Church History, Book 2, Chapter 22, Paragraph 3
  194. ^ Eusebius, Church History, Book 2, Chapter 25, Paragraph 8
  195. ^ Tertullian, De Praescriptione Haereticorum, Chapter 36
  196. ^ Lactantius. "Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died, addressed to Donatus". ccel.org.
  197. ^ Jerome, De Viris Illustribus, Chapter 5
  198. ^ John Chrysostom, Concerning the Lowliness of Mind, Chapter 4
  199. ^ Sulpicius Severus, Chronica, Chapter 29
  200. ^ a b Ratzinger, Joseph Aloisius (2009). General Audience of 4 February 2009: St Paul's martyrdom and heritage. Paul VI Audience Hall, Rome: Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  201. ^ De Leonardis & Masi 1999, p. 21.
  202. ^ James 1924.
  203. ^ Who was Lucina? by Hedvig Ehrenheim (University of Stockholm)
  204. ^ a b c Eusebius (1885). "Book II/Chapter 25" . Church History  – via Wikisource.
  205. ^ Jerome. "On Illustrious Men : Chapter 5". New Advent. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  206. ^ Silver 2013, p. 18.
  207. ^ St Paul's tomb unearthed in Rome from BBC News (8 December 2006); Vatican to open Apostle Paul's tomb
  208. ^ "Remains of St. Paul confirmed". The Washington Times. 29 June 2009.
  209. ^ Brown & Meier 1983, p. 124.
  210. ^ Butler 1866, 30 June: St. Paul, the Apostle.
  211. ^ 2 Timothy 4:13
  212. ^ Cuming, H. Syer (December 1870). "Notes on a group of reliquaries". Journal of the British Archaeological Association.
  213. ^ "Chambers' The Book of Days". 1869. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  214. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  215. ^ Barnstone 1984, p. 447.
  216. ^ Malherbe 1986, p. 170.
  217. ^ Budge 1901, p. 531, The History of the Contending of Saint Paul.
  218. ^ Budge 1901, p. 501, The Acts of Saint Peter.
  219. ^ Barnes 1844, p. 212.
  220. ^ a b c Aune 2010, p. 9.
  221. ^ a b Dunn & Rogerson 2003, p. 1274.
  222. ^ a b Perkins 1988, pp. 4–7.
  223. ^ 1 Corinthians 11:17–34
  224. ^ Powell 2009, p. 234.
  225. ^ Wiley 2002, p. 21.
  226. ^ Donaldson 2010, p. 53.
  227. ^ Donaldson 2010, p. 39.
  228. ^ Bitner 2015, p. 268.
  229. ^ Andria 2012, p. 271.
  230. ^ Dunn 2010, pp. 170–71.
  231. ^ MacDonald & Harrington 2000, p. 58.
  232. ^ 1 Corinthians 7:8–9
  233. ^ Brown 1984, p. 48.
  234. ^ a b Aherne 1908.
  235. ^ Barrett 1963, pp. 4ff.
  236. ^ Ehrman 2006, p. 98.
  237. ^ Williams 1957, pp. 22, 240.
  238. ^ Shillington 2007, p. 18.
  239. ^ Marshall 1980, p. 42.
  240. ^ Romans 1
  241. ^ Galatians 1:16
  242. ^ 1 Corinthians 9:1
  243. ^ Galatians 1:12–15, 1 Corinthians 15:10
  244. ^ 2 Corinthians 12:7
  245. ^ Coogan, Michael D.; Brettler, Marc Z.; Newsom, Carol A.; Perkins, Pheme, eds. (2010). "The Second Letter Of Paul To The Corinthians". The New Oxford Annotated Bible: New Revised Standard Version With The Apocrypha (4th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 2038. [Footnote 7] Nature of the thorn is unknown.
  246. ^ Horrell 2006, p. 30.
  247. ^ a b Philippians 3:6
  248. ^ 1 Thessalonians 2:14–16
  249. ^ a b Powell 2009, p. 236.
  250. ^ Acts 9:1–2
  251. ^ 1 Timothy 1:13
  252. ^ Romans 1:3
  253. ^ 1 Thessalonians 4:14–18
  254. ^ 1 Thessalonians 5:23
  255. ^ 1 Corinthians 1:2
  256. ^ 2 Corinthians 12:8–9
  257. ^ 1 Thessalonians 3:11
  258. ^ 1 Corinthians 16:22
  259. ^ Romans 10:9–13
  260. ^ Philippians 2:10–11
  261. ^ 1 Corinthians 6:11
  262. ^ Romans 6:3
  263. ^ 1 Corinthians 11:17–34
  264. ^ 1 Thessalonians 4:15–17
  265. ^ Hurtado 2005, pp. 134–52.
  266. ^ Cross & Livingstone 2005, Atonement.
  267. ^ Ephesians 2:8–9
  268. ^ Galatians 4:4–7
  269. ^ Stendahl 1963.
  270. ^ Dunn 1982, p. n.49.
  271. ^ Finlan 2004, p. 2.
  272. ^ Westerholm 2015, pp. 4–15.
  273. ^ Gal 2.14
  274. ^ Mack 1997, pp. 88–89, 92.
  275. ^ Mack 1997, pp. 91–92.
  276. ^ Romans 5:6–10, Philippians 2:8
  277. ^ Romans 3:20b, Romans 7:7–12
  278. ^ Galatians 3:28
  279. ^ Philippians 3:3–5
  280. ^ Galatians 6:15
  281. ^ Romans 6:4
  282. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia, SIN
  283. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia (1906), ATONEMENT
  284. ^ Orr 1915, p. 2276.
  285. ^ a b c Sanders 1977.
  286. ^ Dunn 1982.
  287. ^ Galatians 6:16
  288. ^ Philippians 3:3
  289. ^ Galatians 3–4
  290. ^ Romans 2:16–26
  291. ^ Romans 9–11
  292. ^ Zechariah 8:20–23
  293. ^ a b c Larry Hurtado (4 December 2018 ), "When Christians were Jews": Paula Fredriksen on "The First Generation"
  294. ^ Romans 11:25
  295. ^ Cooper 2014.
  296. ^ a b Sanders 1983.
  297. ^ Dunn 1982, pp. 95–122.
  298. ^ a b "New Perspectives on Paul". Ntwrightpage.com. 28 August 2003. Retrieved 19 November 2010.
  299. ^ Romans 2:13ff
  300. ^ Ehrman 2006.
  301. ^ 1 Corinthians 15:51–53
  302. ^ 1 Thessalonians 4:16ff
  303. ^ Rowland 1985, p. 113.
  304. ^ 2 Thessalonians 2:3
  305. ^ Romans 16:25, 1 Corinthians 10:11, Galatians 1:4
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  315. ^ Judges 4:4
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  321. ^ Stagg & Stagg 1978.
  322. ^ Ephesians 5:22–6:5
  323. ^ Colossians 3:18–4:1
  324. ^ Titus 2:1–10
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  327. ^ MacDonald 2004, p. 109.
  328. ^ 1 Corinthians 14:34–36
  329. ^ Achtemeier 1985, p. 882.
  330. ^ Keller 2010.
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  • Pall, Zoltan (2013). Lebanese Salafis Between the Gulf and Europe: Development, Fractionalization and Transnational Networks of Salafism in Lebanon. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-90-8964-451-0.

Further reading

  • Agosto, Efrain (2012). Servant Leadership: Jesus and Paul. Chalice Press. ISBN 978-0-8272-3506-9.
  • Bradford, Ernle. Paul the Traveller: Saint Paul and his World. Allen Lane, 1974.
  • Davies, W. D. Paul and Rabbinic Judaism: Some Rabbinic Elements in Pauline Theology. S.P.C.K., 3rd ed., 1970. ISBN 0-281-02449-9
  • Davies, W. D. "The Apostolic Age and the Life of Paul" in Matthew Black, ed. Peake's Commentary on the Bible. London: T. Nelson, 1962. ISBN 0-8407-5019-6
  • Fredriksen, Paula (2018). When Christians Were Jews: The First Generation. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-24074-0.
  • Hans-Joachim Schoeps. Paul: The Theology of the Apostle in the Light of Jewish Religious History (Library of Theological Translations); 34 pages, Lutterworth Press (July 2002); ISBN 978-0-227-17013-7
  • Holzbach, Mathis Christian, Die textpragmat. Bedeutung d. Kündereinsetzungen d. Simon Petrus u.d. Saulus Paulus im lukan. Doppelwerk, in: Jesus als Bote d. Heils. Stuttgart 2008, 166–72.
  • Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome, Jesus and Paul: Parallel Lives (Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press, 2007) ISBN 0-8146-5173-9
  • Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome, Paul the Letter-Writer: His World, His Options, His Skills (Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press, 1995) ISBN 0-8146-5845-8
  • Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome, Paul: A Critical Life (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996) ISBN 0-19-826749-5
  • Pinchas Lapide, Peter Stuhlmacher. Paul: Rabbi and Apostle; 77 pages, Augsburg Publishing House; (December 1984)
  • Pinchas Lapide, Leonard Swidler, Jürgen Moltmann. Jewish Monotheism and Christian Trinitarian Doctrine; 94 pages, Wipf & Stock Publishers (2002)
  • Reece, Steve. Paul's Large Letters: Pauline Subscriptions in the Light of Ancient Epistolary Conventions. London: T&T Clark, 2016.
  • Rashdall, Hastings, The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology (1919)
  • Ruef, John, Paul's First Letter to Corinth (Penguin 1971)
  • Segal, Alan F. Paul, the Convert, (New Haven/London, Yale University Press, 1990) ISBN 0-300-04527-1
  • Segal, Alan F., "Paul, the Convert and Apostle" in Rebecca's Children: Judaism and Christianity in the Roman World (Harvard University Press 1986) ISBN 978-0674750760

External links

Listen to this article (1 hour and 14 minutes)
 
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  • St Paul on In Our Time at the BBC
  • Lecture on Paul of Tarsus s by Dr. Henry Abramson
  • Catholic Encyclopedia: Paul of Tarsus
  • Bartlet, James Vernon (1911). "Paul, the Apostle" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). pp. 938–55.
  • Novena to Saint Paul Apostle
  • Paul's mission and letters From PBS Frontline series on the earliest Christians.
  • Representations of Saint Paul
  • "Saint Paul, the Apostle". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2009.
  • The Apostle and the Poet: Paul and Aratus Dr. Riemer Faber
  • Works by or about Paul the Apostle in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Biblical Archaeology Review
  • Santiebeati: Saint Paul
  • Catholic Online: Saint Paul
  • Footsteps of St. Paul by Christian Tours
  • Old maps showing the travels of Paul from the Eran Laor Cartographic Collection, National Library of Israel

paul, apostle, saint, paul, redirects, here, other, uses, saint, paul, disambiguation, paul, previously, called, saul, tarsus, commonly, known, saint, paul, christian, apostle, spread, teachings, jesus, first, century, world, generally, regarded, most, importa. Saint Paul redirects here For other uses see Saint Paul disambiguation Paul a previously called Saul of Tarsus b c 5 c 64 65 AD commonly known as Paul the Apostle 7 and Saint Paul 8 was a Christian apostle who spread the teachings of Jesus in the first century world 9 Generally regarded as one of the most important figures of the Apostolic Age 8 10 he founded several Christian communities in Asia Minor and Europe from the mid 40s to the mid 50s AD 11 SaintPaul the ApostleThe Apostle Paul c 1657 RembrandtApostle to the Gentiles MartyrBornSaul of Tarsusc 5 AD 1 Tarsus Cilicia Roman Empire in 21st century Turkey Diedc 64 65 AD 2 3 Rome Italia Roman Empire 2 4 Venerated inAll Christian denominations that venerate saintsCanonizedPre CongregationMajor shrineBasilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls Rome ItalyFeast25 January Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul 10 February Feast of Saint Paul s Shipwreck in Malta 29 June Feast of Saints Peter and Paul with Peter the Apostle 30 June Former solo feast day still celebrated by some religious orders 18 November Feast of the dedication of the basilicas of Saints Peter and Paul Saturday before the sixth Sunday after Pentecost Feast of the Twelve Apostles and Paul the thirteenth Apostle Armenian Apostolic Church 5 AttributesChristian martyrdom sword bookPatronageMissionaries theologians evangelists and Gentile ChristiansTheology careerEducationSchool of Gamaliel 6 OccupationChristian missionaryNotable workCertain Epistle to the RomansEpistle to the GalatiansFirst Epistle to the CorinthiansSecond Epistle to the CorinthiansFirst Epistle to the ThessaloniansEpistle to PhilemonEpistle to the PhilippiansDisputed Second Epistle to the ThessaloniansEpistle to the ColossiansEpistle to the EphesiansFirst Epistle to TimothySecond Epistle to TimothyEpistle to TitusTheological workEraApostolic AgeLanguageKoine GreekTradition or movementPauline ChristianityMain interestsTorah Christology eschatology soteriology ecclesiologyNotable ideasPauline privilege Law of Christ Holy Spirit unknown God divinity of Jesus thorn in the flesh Pauline mysticism biblical inspiration supersessionism non circumcision salvationAccording to the New Testament book Acts of the Apostles Paul lived as a Pharisee 12 He participated in the persecution of early disciples of Jesus possibly Hellenised diaspora Jews converted to Christianity 13 in the area of Jerusalem prior to his conversion note 1 Some time after having approved of the execution of Stephen 14 Paul was traveling on the road to Damascus so that he might find any Christians there and bring them bound to Jerusalem ESV 15 At midday a light brighter than the sun shone around both him and those with him causing all to fall to the ground with the risen Christ verbally addressing Paul regarding his persecution 16 17 Having been made blind 18 along with being commanded to enter the city his sight was restored three days later by Ananias of Damascus After these events Paul was baptized beginning immediately to proclaim that Jesus of Nazareth was the Jewish messiah and the Son of God 19 Approximately half of the content in the book of Acts details the life and works of Paul Fourteen of the 27 books in the New Testament have traditionally been attributed to Paul 20 Seven of the Pauline epistles are undisputed by scholars as being authentic with varying degrees of argument about the remainder Pauline authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews is not asserted in the Epistle itself and was already doubted in the 2nd and 3rd centuries note 2 It was almost unquestioningly accepted from the 5th to the 16th centuries that Paul was the author of Hebrews 22 but that view is now almost universally rejected by scholars 22 23 The other six are believed by some scholars to have come from followers writing in his name using material from Paul s surviving letters and letters written by him that no longer survive 9 8 note 3 Other scholars argue that the idea of a pseudonymous author for the disputed epistles raises many problems 25 Today Paul s epistles continue to be vital roots of the theology worship and pastoral life in the Latin and Protestant traditions of the West as well as the Eastern Catholic and Orthodox traditions of the East 26 Paul s influence on Christian thought and practice has been characterized as being as profound as it is pervasive among that of many other apostles and missionaries involved in the spread of the Christian faith 9 Contents 1 Names 2 Available sources 3 Biography 3 1 Early life 3 2 Persecutor of early Christians 3 3 Conversion 3 4 Post conversion 3 5 Early ministry 3 6 First missionary journey 3 7 Council of Jerusalem 3 8 Incident at Antioch 3 9 Second missionary journey 3 10 Interval in Corinth 3 11 Third missionary journey 3 12 Journey from Rome to Spain 3 12 1 Visits to Jerusalem in Acts and the epistles 3 12 2 Last visit to Jerusalem and arrest 3 12 3 Two years in Rome 3 12 4 Death 4 Remains 5 Church tradition 6 Physical appearance 7 Writings 7 1 Date 7 2 Authorship 7 3 Acts 8 Views 8 1 Self view 8 2 Understanding of Jesus Christ 8 3 Atonement 8 4 Relationship with Judaism 8 5 World to come 8 6 Role of women 8 7 Views on homosexuality 9 Influence 9 1 Pauline Christianity 9 2 Marcion 9 3 Augustine 9 4 Reformation 9 5 John Calvin 9 6 Modern theology 10 Views on Paul 10 1 Jewish views 10 2 Gnosticism 10 3 Muslim views 10 4 Other views 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Bibliography 12 4 Further reading 13 External linksNamesPaul s Jewish name was Saul Hebrew ש או ל Modern Sha ul Tiberian Sa ul perhaps after the biblical King Saul the first king of Israel and like Paul a member of the Tribe of Benjamin the Latin name Paul meaning small was not a result of his conversion as it is commonly believed but a second name for use in communicating with a Greco Roman audience 27 28 According to the Acts of the Apostles he was a Roman citizen 29 As such he bore the Latin name Paul in Latin Paulus and in biblical Greek Paῦlos Paulos 30 31 It was typical for the Jews of that time to have two names one Hebrew the other Latin or Greek 32 33 34 Jesus called him Saul Saul 35 in the Hebrew tongue in the Acts of the Apostles when he had the vision which led to his conversion on the road to Damascus 36 Later in a vision to Ananias of Damascus the Lord referred to him as Saul of Tarsus 37 When Ananias came to restore his sight he called him Brother Saul 38 In Acts 13 9 Saul is called Paul for the first time on the island of Cyprus much later than the time of his conversion 39 The author of Luke Acts indicates that the names were interchangeable Saul who also is called Paul He refers to him as Paul through the remainder of Acts This was apparently Paul s preference since he is called Paul in all other Bible books where he is mentioned including those that he authored Adopting his Roman name was typical of Paul s missionary style His method was to put people at their ease and to approach them with his message in a language and style to which they could relate as in 1 Corinthians 9 19 23 40 41 Available sourcesFurther information Historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles The Conversion of Saul fresco by Michelangelo 1542 1545 The main source for information about Paul s life is the material found in his epistles and in the Acts of the Apostles 42 However the epistles contain little information about Paul s pre conversion past The Acts of the Apostles recounts more information but leaves several parts of Paul s life out of its narrative such as his probable but undocumented execution in Rome 43 The Acts of the Apostles also contradict Paul s epistles on multiple accounts in particular concerning the frequency of Paul s visits to the church in Jerusalem 44 45 Sources outside the New Testament that mention Paul include Clement of Rome s epistle to the Corinthians late 1st early 2nd century Ignatius of Antioch s epistles to the Romans and to the Ephesians 46 early 2nd century Polycarp s epistle to the Philippians early 2nd century Eusebius s Historia Ecclesiae early 4th century The apocryphal Acts narrating the life of Paul Acts of Paul Acts of Paul and Thecla Acts of Peter and Paul the apocryphal epistles attributed to him the Latin Epistle to the Laodiceans the Third Epistle to the Corinthians and the Correspondence of Paul and Seneca and some apocalyptic texts attributed to him Apocalypse of Paul and Coptic Apocalypse of Paul These writings are all late they are usually dated from the 2nd to the 4th century BiographyEarly life Geography relevant to Paul s life stretching from Jerusalem to Rome The two main sources of information that give access to the earliest segments of Paul s career are the Acts of the Apostles and the autobiographical elements of Paul s letters to the early Christian communities 42 Paul was likely born between the years of 5 BC and 5 AD 47 The Acts of the Apostles indicates that Paul was a Roman citizen by birth but Helmut Koester takes issue with the evidence presented by the text 48 49 He was from a devout Jewish family 50 based in the city of Tarsus 27 One of the larger centers of trade on the Mediterranean coast and renowned for its university Tarsus had been among the most influential cities in Asia Minor since the time of Alexander the Great who died in 323 BC 50 Paul referred to himself as being of the stock of Israel of the tribe of Benjamin a Hebrew of the Hebrews as touching the law a Pharisee 51 52 The Bible reveals very little about Paul s family Acts quotes Paul referring to his family by saying he was a Pharisee born of Pharisees 53 54 Paul s nephew his sister s son is mentioned in Acts 23 16 55 In Romans 16 7 he states that his relatives Andronicus and Junia were Christians before he was and were prominent among the Apostles 56 The family had a history of religious piety 57 note 4 Apparently the family lineage had been very attached to Pharisaic traditions and observances for generations 58 Acts says that he was an artisan involved in the leather crafting or tent making profession 59 60 This was to become an initial connection with Priscilla and Aquila with whom he would partner in tentmaking 61 and later become very important teammates as fellow missionaries 62 While he was still fairly young he was sent to Jerusalem to receive his education at the school of Gamaliel 63 52 one of the most noted teachers of Jewish law in history Although modern scholarship agrees that Paul was educated under the supervision of Gamaliel in Jerusalem 52 he was not preparing to become a scholar of Jewish law and probably never had any contact with the Hillelite school 52 Some of his family may have resided in Jerusalem since later the son of one of his sisters saved his life there 64 27 Nothing more is known of his biography until he takes an active part in the martyrdom of Stephen 65 a Hellenised diaspora Jew 66 Although it is known from his biography and from Acts that Paul could and did speak Aramaic then known as Hebrew 27 modern scholarship suggests that Koine Greek was his first language 67 In his letters Paul drew heavily on his knowledge of Stoic philosophy using Stoic terms and metaphors to assist his new Gentile converts in their understanding of the Gospel and to explain his Christology 68 69 Persecutor of early Christians Conversion on the Way to Damascus 1601 by Caravaggio Paul says that prior to his conversion 70 he persecuted early Christians beyond measure more specifically Hellenised diaspora Jewish members who had returned to the area of Jerusalem 71 note 1 According to James Dunn the Jerusalem community consisted of Hebrews Jews speaking both Aramaic and Greek and Hellenists Jews speaking only Greek possibly diaspora Jews who had resettled in Jerusalem 72 Paul s initial persecution of Christians probably was directed against these Greek speaking Hellenists due to their anti Temple attitude 73 Within the early Jewish Christian community this also set them apart from the Hebrews and their continuing participation in the Temple cult 73 Conversion Main article Conversion of Paul the Apostle The Conversion of Saint Paul on the Way to Damascus c 1889 by Jose Ferraz de Almeida Junior Paul s conversion can be dated to 31 36 AD 74 75 76 by his reference to it in one of his letters In Galatians 1 16 Paul writes that God was pleased to reveal his son to me 77 In 1 Corinthians 15 8 as he lists the order in which Jesus appeared to his disciples after his resurrection Paul writes last of all as to one untimely born He appeared to me also 78 According to the account in the Acts of the Apostles it took place on the road to Damascus where he reported having experienced a vision of the ascended Jesus The account says that He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him Saul Saul why do you persecute me He asked Who are you Lord The reply came I am Jesus whom you are persecuting 79 According to the account in Acts 9 1 22 he was blinded for three days and had to be led into Damascus by the hand 80 During these three days Saul took no food or water and spent his time in prayer to God When Ananias of Damascus arrived he laid his hands on him and said Brother Saul the Lord even Jesus that appeared unto thee in the way as thou camest hath sent me that thou mightest receive thy sight and be filled with the Holy Ghost 81 His sight was restored he got up and was baptized 82 This story occurs only in Acts not in the Pauline epistles 83 The author of the Acts of the Apostles may have learned of Paul s conversion from the church in Jerusalem or from the church in Antioch or possibly from Paul himself 84 According to Timo Eskola early Christian theology and discourse was influenced by the Jewish Merkabah tradition 85 Similarly Alan Segal and Daniel Boyarin regard Paul s accounts of his conversion experience and his ascent to the heavens in 2 Corinthians 12 as the earliest first person accounts that are extant of a Merkabah mystic in Jewish or Christian literature Conversely Timothy Churchill has argued that Paul s Damascus road encounter does not fit the pattern of Merkabah 86 Post conversion St Paul c 1611 by Peter Paul Rubens According to Acts And immediately he proclaimed Jesus in the synagogues saying He is the Son of God And all who heard him were amazed and said Is not this the man who made havoc in Jerusalem of those who called upon this name And has he not come here for this purpose to bring them bound before the chief priests But Saul increased all the more in strength and confounded the Jews who lived in Damascus by proving that Jesus was the Christ Acts 9 20 22 87 Early ministry The house believed to be of Ananias of Damascus in Damascus Bab Kisan believed to be where Paul escaped from persecution in Damascus After his conversion Paul went to Damascus where Acts 9 states he was healed of his blindness and baptized by Ananias of Damascus 88 Paul says that it was in Damascus that he barely escaped death 89 Paul also says that he then went first to Arabia and then came back to Damascus 90 91 Paul s trip to Arabia is not mentioned anywhere else in the Bible and some suppose he actually traveled to Mount Sinai for meditations in the desert 92 93 He describes in Galatians how three years after his conversion he went to Jerusalem There he met James and stayed with Simon Peter for 15 days 94 Paul located Mount Sinai in Arabia in Galatians 4 24 25 95 Paul asserted that he received the Gospel not from man but directly by the revelation of Jesus Christ 96 He claimed almost total independence from the Jerusalem community 97 possibly in the Cenacle but agreed with it on the nature and content of the gospel 98 He appeared eager to bring material support to Jerusalem from the various growing Gentile churches that he started In his writings Paul used the persecutions he endured to avow proximity and union with Jesus and as a validation of his teaching Paul s narrative in Galatians states that 14 years after his conversion he went again to Jerusalem 99 It is not known what happened during this time but both Acts and Galatians provide some details 100 Though a view is held that Paul spent 14 years studying the scriptures and growing in the faith At the end of this time Barnabas went to find Paul and brought him to Antioch 101 102 The Christian community at Antioch had been established by Hellenised diaspora Jews living in Jerusalem who played an important role in reaching a Gentile Greek audience notably at Antioch which had a large Jewish community and significant numbers of Gentile God fearers 103 From Antioch the mission to the Gentiles started which would fundamentally change the character of the early Christian movement eventually turning it into a new Gentile religion 104 When a famine occurred in Judea around 45 46 105 Paul and Barnabas journeyed to Jerusalem to deliver financial support from the Antioch community 106 According to Acts Antioch had become an alternative center for Christians following the dispersion of the believers after the death of Stephen It was in Antioch that the followers of Jesus were first called Christians 107 First missionary journey The author of Acts arranges Paul s travels into three separate journeys The first journey 108 for which Paul and Barnabas were commissioned by the Antioch community 109 and led initially by Barnabas note 5 took Barnabas and Paul from Antioch to Cyprus then into southern Asia Minor and finally returning to Antioch In Cyprus Paul rebukes and blinds Elymas the magician 110 who was criticizing their teachings They sailed to Perga in Pamphylia John Mark left them and returned to Jerusalem Paul and Barnabas went on to Pisidian Antioch On Sabbath they went to the synagogue The leaders invited them to speak Paul reviewed Israelite history from life in Egypt to King David He introduced Jesus as a descendant of David brought to Israel by God He said that his team came to town to bring the message of salvation He recounted the story of Jesus death and resurrection He quoted from the Septuagint 111 to assert that Jesus was the promised Christos who brought them forgiveness for their sins Both the Jews and the God fearing Gentiles invited them to talk more next Sabbath At that time almost the whole city gathered This upset some influential Jews who spoke against them Paul used the occasion to announce a change in his mission which from then on would be to the Gentiles 112 Map of the missionary journeys of St Paul Antioch served as a major Christian home base for Paul s early missionary activities 4 and he remained there for a long time with the disciples 113 at the conclusion of his first journey The exact duration of Paul s stay in Antioch is unknown with estimates ranging from nine months to as long as eight years 114 In Raymond Brown s An Introduction to the New Testament 1997 a chronology of events in Paul s life is presented illustrated from later 20th century writings of biblical scholars 115 The first missionary journey of Paul is assigned a traditional and majority dating of 46 49 AD compared to a revisionist and minority dating of after 37 AD 116 Council of Jerusalem Main article Council of Jerusalem See also Circumcision controversy in early Christianity A vital meeting between Paul and the Jerusalem church took place in the year 49 AD by traditional and majority dating compared to a revisionist and minority dating of 47 51 AD 117 The meeting is described in Acts 15 2 118 and usually seen as the same event mentioned by Paul in Galatians 2 1 119 43 The key question raised was whether Gentile converts needed to be circumcised 120 121 At this meeting Paul states in his letter to the Galatians Peter James and John accepted Paul s mission to the Gentiles The Jerusalem meetings are mentioned in Acts and also in Paul s letters 122 For example the Jerusalem visit for famine relief 123 apparently corresponds to the first visit to Peter and James only 124 122 F F Bruce suggested that the fourteen years could be from Paul s conversion rather than from his first visit to Jerusalem 125 Incident at Antioch Main article Incident at Antioch Despite the agreement achieved at the Council of Jerusalem Paul recounts how he later publicly confronted Peter in a dispute sometimes called the Incident at Antioch over Peter s reluctance to share a meal with Gentile Christians in Antioch because they did not strictly adhere to Jewish customs 120 Writing later of the incident Paul recounts I opposed Peter to his face because he was clearly in the wrong and says he told Peter You are a Jew yet you live like a Gentile and not like a Jew How is it then that you force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs 126 Paul also mentions that even Barnabas his traveling companion and fellow apostle until that time sided with Peter 120 The outcome of the incident remains uncertain The Catholic Encyclopedia suggests that Paul won the argument because Paul s account of the incident leaves no doubt that Peter saw the justice of the rebuke 120 However Paul himself never mentions a victory and L Michael White s From Jesus to Christianity draws the opposite conclusion The blowup with Peter was a total failure of political bravado and Paul soon left Antioch as persona non grata never again to return 127 The primary source account of the Incident at Antioch is Paul s letter to the Galatians 126 Second missionary journey Saint Paul delivering the Areopagus sermon in Athens by Raphael 1515 This sermon addressed early issues in Christology 128 129 Paul left for his second missionary journey from Jerusalem in late Autumn 49 AD 130 after the meeting of the Council of Jerusalem where the circumcision question was debated On their trip around the Mediterranean Sea Paul and his companion Barnabas stopped in Antioch where they had a sharp argument about taking John Mark with them on their trips The Acts of the Apostles said that John Mark had left them in a previous trip and gone home Unable to resolve the dispute Paul and Barnabas decided to separate Barnabas took John Mark with him while Silas joined Paul Paul and Silas initially visited Tarsus Paul s birthplace Derbe and Lystra In Lystra they met Timothy a disciple who was spoken well of and decided to take him with them Paul and his companions Silas and Timothy had plans to journey to the southwest portion of Asia Minor to preach the gospel but during the night Paul had a vision of a man of Macedonia standing and begging him to go to Macedonia to help them After seeing the vision Paul and his companions left for Macedonia to preach the gospel to them 131 The Church kept growing adding believers and strengthening in faith daily 132 In Philippi Paul cast a spirit of divination out of a servant girl whose masters were then unhappy about the loss of income her soothsaying provided 133 They seized Paul and Silas and dragged them into the marketplace before the authorities and Paul and Silas were put in jail After a miraculous earthquake the gates of the prison fell apart and Paul and Silas could have escaped but remained this event led to the conversion of the jailor 134 They continued traveling going by Berea and then to Athens where Paul preached to the Jews and God fearing Greeks in the synagogue and to the Greek intellectuals in the Areopagus Paul continued from Athens to Corinth Interval in Corinth Around 50 52 AD Paul spent 18 months in Corinth The reference in Acts to Proconsul Gallio helps ascertain this date cf Gallio Inscription 43 In Corinth Paul met Priscilla and Aquila 135 who became faithful believers and helped Paul through his other missionary journeys The couple followed Paul and his companions to Ephesus and stayed there to start one of the strongest and most faithful churches at that time 136 In 52 departing from Corinth Paul stopped at the nearby village of Cenchreae to have his hair cut off because of a vow he had earlier taken 137 It is possible this was to be a final haircut prior to fulfilling his vow to become a Nazirite for a defined period of time 138 With Priscilla and Aquila the missionaries then sailed to Ephesus 139 and then Paul alone went on to Caesarea to greet the Church there He then traveled north to Antioch where he stayed for some time Ancient Greek poihsas xronon perhaps about a year before leaving again on a third missionary journey citation needed Some New Testament texts note 6 suggest that he also visited Jerusalem during this period for one of the Jewish feasts possibly Pentecost 140 Textual critic Henry Alford and others consider the reference to a Jerusalem visit to be genuine 141 and it accords with Acts 21 29 142 according to which Paul and Trophimus the Ephesian had previously been seen in Jerusalem Third missionary journey The Preaching of Saint Paul at Ephesus by Eustache Le Sueur 1649 143 According to Acts Paul began his third missionary journey by traveling all around the region of Galatia and Phrygia to strengthen teach and rebuke the believers Paul then traveled to Ephesus an important center of early Christianity and stayed there for almost three years probably working there as a tentmaker 144 as he had done when he stayed in Corinth He is claimed to have performed numerous miracles healing people and casting out demons and he apparently organized missionary activity in other regions 43 Paul left Ephesus after an attack from a local silversmith resulted in a pro Artemis riot involving most of the city 43 During his stay in Ephesus Paul wrote four letters to the church in Corinth 145 The Jerusalem Bible suggests that the letter to the church in Philippi was also written from Ephesus 146 Paul went through Macedonia into Achaea 147 and stayed in Greece probably Corinth for three months 147 during 56 57 AD 43 Commentators generally agree that Paul dictated his Epistle to the Romans during this period 148 He then made ready to continue on to Syria but he changed his plans and traveled back through Macedonia because of some Jews who had made a plot against him In Romans 15 19 149 Paul wrote that he visited Illyricum but he may have meant what would now be called Illyria Graeca 150 which was at that time a division of the Roman province of Macedonia 151 On their way back to Jerusalem Paul and his companions visited other cities such as Philippi Troas Miletus Rhodes and Tyre Paul finished his trip with a stop in Caesarea where he and his companions stayed with Philip the Evangelist before finally arriving at Jerusalem 152 Journey from Rome to Spain Among the writings of the early Christians Pope Clement I said that Paul was Herald of the Gospel of Christ in the West and that he had gone to the extremity of the west 153 John Chrysostom indicated that Paul preached in Spain For after he had been in Rome he returned to Spain but whether he came thence again into these parts we know not 154 Cyril of Jerusalem said that Paul fully preached the Gospel and instructed even imperial Rome and carried the earnestness of his preaching as far as Spain undergoing conflicts innumerable and performing Signs and wonders 155 The Muratorian fragment mentions the departure of Paul from the city of Rome 5a 39 when he journeyed to Spain 156 Visits to Jerusalem in Acts and the epistles This table is adapted from White From Jesus to Christianity 122 Note that the matching of Paul s travels in the Acts and the travels in his Epistles is done for the reader s convenience and is not approved of by all scholars Acts EpistlesFirst visit to Jerusalem 157 after many days of Damascus conversion preaches openly in Jerusalem with Barnabas meets apostles First visit to Jerusalem 124 three years after Damascus conversion 158 sees only Cephas Simon Peter and JamesSecond visit to Jerusalem 159 for famine relief There is debate over whether Paul s visit in Galatians 2 refers to the visit for famine relief 160 or the Jerusalem Council 161 If it refers to the former then this was the trip made after an interval of fourteen years 162 Third visit to Jerusalem 163 with Barnabas Council of Jerusalem followed by confrontation with Barnabas in Antioch 164 Another note 7 visit to Jerusalem 99 14 years later after Damascus conversion with Barnabas and Titus possibly the Council of Jerusalem Paul agrees to remember the poor followed by confrontation with Peter and Barnabas in Antioch 126 Fourth visit to Jerusalem 165 to greet the church Apparently unmentioned Fifth visit to Jerusalem 166 after an absence of several years 167 to bring gifts for the poor and to present offerings Paul arrested Another note 8 visit to Jerusalem 168 to deliver the collection for the poorLast visit to Jerusalem and arrest Saint Paul arrested early 1900s Bible illustration In 57 AD upon completion of his third missionary journey Paul arrived in Jerusalem for his fifth and final visit with a collection of money for the local community The Acts of the Apostles reports that he initially was warmly received However Acts goes on to recount how Paul was warned by James and the elders that he was gaining a reputation for being against the Law saying they have been told about you that you teach all the Jews living among the Gentiles to forsake Moses and that you tell them not to circumcise their children or observe the customs 169 Paul underwent a purification ritual so that all will know that there is nothing in what they have been told about you but that you yourself observe and guard the law 170 When the seven days of the purification ritual were almost completed some Jews from Asia most likely from Roman Asia accused Paul of defiling the temple by bringing gentiles into it He was seized and dragged out of the temple by an angry mob When the tribune heard of the uproar he and some centurions and soldiers rushed to the area Unable to determine his identity and the cause of the uproar they placed him in chains 171 He was about to be taken into the barracks when he asked to speak to the people He was given permission by the Romans and proceeded to tell his story After a while the crowd responded Up to this point they listened to him but then they shouted Away with such a fellow from the earth For he should not be allowed to live 172 The tribune ordered that Paul be brought into the barracks and questioned by flogging Paul asserted his Roman citizenship which would prevent his flogging The tribune wanted to find out what Paul was being accused of by the Jews the next day he released him and ordered the chief priests and the entire council to meet 173 Paul spoke before the council and caused a disagreement between the Pharisees and the Sadducees When this threatened to turn violent the tribune ordered his soldiers to take Paul by force and return him to the barracks 174 The next morning forty Jews bound themselves by an oath neither to eat nor drink until they had killed Paul 175 but the son of Paul s sister heard of the plot and notified Paul who notified the tribune that the conspiracists were going to ambush him The tribune ordered two centurions to Get ready to leave by nine o clock tonight for Caesarea with two hundred soldiers seventy horsemen and two hundred spearmen Also provide mounts for Paul to ride and take him safely to Felix the governor 176 Paul was taken to Caesarea where the governor ordered that he be kept under guard in Herod s headquarters Five days later the high priest Ananias came down with some elders and an attorney a certain Tertullus and they reported their case against Paul to the governor 177 Both Paul and the Jewish authorities gave a statement But Felix who was rather well informed about the Way adjourned the hearing with the comment When Lysias the tribune comes down I will decide your case 178 Marcus Antonius Felix then ordered the centurion to keep Paul in custody but to let him have some liberty and not to prevent any of his friends from taking care of his needs 179 He was held there for two years by Felix until a new governor Porcius Festus was appointed The chief priests and the leaders of the Jews requested that Festus return Paul to Jerusalem After Festus had stayed in Jerusalem not more than eight or ten days he went down to Caesarea the next day he took his seat on the tribunal and ordered Paul to be brought When Festus suggested that he be sent back to Jerusalem for further trial Paul exercised his right as a Roman citizen to appeal unto Caesar 43 Finally Paul and his companions sailed for Rome where Paul was to stand trial for his alleged crimes 180 St Paul s Grotto in Rabat Malta Acts recounts that on the way to Rome for his appeal as a Roman citizen to Caesar Paul was shipwrecked on Melita Malta 181 where the islanders showed him unusual kindness and where he was met by Publius 182 From Malta he travelled to Rome via Syracuse Rhegium and Puteoli 183 Two years in Rome Paul Arrives in Rome from Die Bibel in Bildern Paul finally arrived in Rome around 60 AD where he spent another two years under house arrest 180 The narrative of Acts ends with Paul preaching in Rome for two years from his rented home while awaiting trial 184 Irenaeus wrote in the 2nd century that Peter and Paul had been the founders of the church in Rome and had appointed Linus as succeeding bishop 185 However Paul was not a bishop of Rome nor did he bring Christianity to Rome since there were already Christians in Rome when he arrived there 186 Paul also wrote his letter to the church at Rome before he had visited Rome 187 Paul only played a supporting part in the life of the church in Rome 188 Death The Beheading of Saint Paul by Enrique Simonet 1887 The date of Paul s death is believed to have occurred after the Great Fire of Rome in July 64 AD but before the last year of Nero s reign in 68 AD 2 The Second Epistle to Timothy states that Paul was arrested in Troad 189 and brought back to Rome where he was imprisoned and put on trial the Epistle was traditionally ascribed to Paul but today many scholars considered it to be pseudepigrapha perhaps written by one of Paul s disciples 190 Pope Clement I writes in his Epistle to the Corinthians that after Paul had borne his testimony before the rulers he departed from the world and went unto the holy place having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance 191 Ignatius of Antioch writes in his Epistle to the Ephesians that Paul was martyred without giving any further information 192 Eusebius states that Paul was killed during the Neronian Persecution 193 and quoting from Dionysius of Corinth argues that Peter and Paul were martyred at the same time 194 Tertullian writes that Paul was beheaded like John the Baptist 195 a detail also contained in Lactantius 196 Jerome 197 John Chrysostom 198 and Sulpicius Severus 199 full citation needed A legend later developed that his martyrdom occurred at the Aquae Salviae on the Via Laurentina According to this legend after Paul was decapitated his severed head rebounded three times giving rise to a source of water each time that it touched the ground which is how the place earned the name San Paolo alle Tre Fontane St Paul at the Three Fountains 200 201 The apocryphal Acts of Paul also describe the martyrdom and the burial of Paul but their narrative is highly fanciful and largely unhistorical 202 RemainsAccording to the Liber Pontificalis Paul s body was buried outside the walls of Rome at the second mile on the Via Ostiensis on the estate owned by a Christian woman named Lucina 203 It was here in the fourth century that the Emperor Constantine the Great built a first church Then between the fourth and fifth centuries it was considerably enlarged by the Emperors Valentinian I Valentinian II Theodosius I and Arcadius The present day Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls was built there in the early 19th century 200 Caius in his Disputation Against Proclus 198 AD mentions this of the places in which the remains of the apostles Peter and Paul were deposited I can point out the trophies of the apostles For if you are willing to go to the Vatican or to the Ostian Way you will find the trophies of those who founded this Church 204 Jerome in his De Viris Illustribus 392 AD writing on Paul s biography mentions that Paul was buried in the Ostian Way at Rome 205 In 2002 an 8 foot 2 4 m long marble sarcophagus inscribed with the words PAULO APOSTOLO MART Paul apostle martyr was discovered during excavations around the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls on the Via Ostiensis Vatican archaeologists declared this to be the tomb of Paul the Apostle in 2005 206 In June 2009 Pope Benedict XVI announced excavation results concerning the tomb The sarcophagus was not opened but was examined by means of a probe which revealed pieces of incense purple and blue linen and small bone fragments The bone was radiocarbon dated to the 1st or 2nd century According to the Vatican these findings support the conclusion that the tomb is Paul s 207 208 Church tradition Greek Orthodox mural painting of Saint Paul Various Christian writers have suggested more details about Paul s life 1 Clement a letter written by the Roman bishop Clement of Rome around the year 90 reports this about Paul By reason of jealousy and strife Paul by his example pointed out the prize of patient endurance After that he had been seven times in bonds had been driven into exile had been stoned had preached in the East and in the West he won the noble renown which was the reward of his faith having taught righteousness unto the whole world and having reached the farthest bounds of the West and when he had borne his testimony before the rulers so he departed from the world and went unto the holy place having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance Lightfoot 1890 p 274 The First Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians 5 5 6 Commenting on this passage Raymond Brown writes that while it does not explicitly say that Paul was martyred in Rome such a martyrdom is the most reasonable interpretation 209 Eusebius of Caesarea who wrote in the 4th century states that Paul was beheaded in the reign of the Roman Emperor Nero 204 This event has been dated either to the year 64 AD when Rome was devastated by a fire or a few years later to 67 AD According to one tradition the church of San Paolo alle Tre Fontane marks the place of Paul s execution A Roman Catholic liturgical solemnity of Peter and Paul celebrated on 29 June commemorates his martyrdom and reflects a tradition preserved by Eusebius that Peter and Paul were martyred at the same time 204 The Roman liturgical calendar for the following day now remembers all Christians martyred in these early persecutions formerly 30 June was the feast day for St Paul 210 Persons or religious orders with a special affinity for St Paul can still celebrate their patron on 30 June The apocryphal Acts of Paul and the apocryphal Acts of Peter suggest that Paul survived Rome and traveled further west Some think that Paul could have revisited Greece and Asia Minor after his trip to Spain and might then have been arrested in Troas and taken to Rome and executed 211 note 4 A tradition holds that Paul was interred with Saint Peter ad Catacumbas by the via Appia until moved to what is now the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls in Rome Bede in his Ecclesiastical History writes that Pope Vitalian in 665 gave Paul s relics including a cross made from his prison chains from the crypts of Lucina to King Oswy of Northumbria northern Britain The skull of Saint Paul is claimed to reside in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran since at least the ninth century alongside the skull of Saint Peter 212 The Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul is celebrated on 25 January 213 Paul is remembered with Peter in the Church of England with a Festival on 29 June 214 Paul is considered the patron saint of London Physical appearance Facial composite of Saint Paul created by experts of the Landeskriminalamt of North Rhine Westphalia using historical sources The New Testament offers little if any information about the physical appearance of Paul but several descriptions can be found in apocryphal texts In the Acts of Paul 215 he is described as A man of small stature with a bald head and crooked legs in a good state of body with eyebrows meeting and nose somewhat hooked 216 In the Latin version of the Acts of Paul and Thecla it is added that he had a red florid face In The History of the Contending of Saint Paul his countenance is described as ruddy with the ruddiness of the skin of the pomegranate 217 The Acts of Saint Peter confirms that Paul had a bald and shining head with red hair 218 As summarised by Barnes 219 Chrysostom records that Paul s stature was low his body crooked and his head bald Lucian in his Philopatris describes Paul as corpore erat parvo contracto incurvo tricubitali he was small contracted crooked of three cubits or four feet six 32 Nicephorus claims that Paul was a little man crooked and almost bent like a bow with a pale countenance long and wrinkled and a bald head Pseudo Chrysostom echoes Lucian s height of Paul referring to him as the man of three cubits 32 WritingsMain article Pauline epistles Statue of St Paul in the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran by Pierre Etienne Monnot Of the 27 books in the New Testament 13 identify Paul as the author seven of these are widely considered authentic and Paul s own while the authorship of the other six is disputed 220 221 222 The undisputed letters are considered the most important sources since they contain what is widely agreed to be Paul s own statements about his life and thoughts Theologian Mark Powell writes that Paul directed these seven letters to specific occasions at particular churches As an example if the Corinthian church had not experienced problems concerning its celebration of the Lord s Supper 223 today it would not be known that Paul even believed in that observance or had any opinions about it one way or the other Powell comments that there may be other matters in the early church that have since gone unnoticed simply because no crises arose that prompted Paul to comment on them 224 In Paul s writings he provides the first written account of what it is to be a Christian and thus a description of Christian spirituality His letters have been characterized as being the most influential books of the New Testament after the Gospels of Matthew and John 8 note 9 Date Paul s authentic letters are roughly dated to the years surrounding the mid 1st century Placing Paul in this time period is done on the basis of his reported conflicts with other early contemporary figures in the Jesus movement including James and Peter 225 the references to Paul and his letters by Clement of Rome writing in the late 1st century 226 his reported issues in Damascus from 2 Corinthians 11 32 which he says took place while King Aretas IV was in power 227 a possible reference to Erastus of Corinth in Romans 16 23 228 his reference to preaching in the province of Illyricum which dissolved in 80 AD 229 the lack of any references to the Gospels indicating a pre war time period the chronology in the Acts of the Apostles placing Paul in this time and the dependence on Paul s letters by other 1st century pseudo Pauline epistles 230 Authorship Main article Authorship of the Pauline epistles Paul Writing His Epistles painting attributed to Valentin de Boulogne 17th century Seven of the 13 letters that bear Paul s name Romans 1 Corinthians 2 Corinthians Galatians Philippians 1 Thessalonians and Philemon are almost universally accepted as being entirely authentic dictated by Paul himself 8 220 221 222 They are considered the best source of information on Paul s life and especially his thought 8 Four of the letters Ephesians 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus are widely considered pseudepigraphical while the authorship of the other two is subject to debate 220 Colossians and 2 Thessalonians are possibly Deutero Pauline meaning they may have been written by Paul s followers after his death Similarly 1 Timothy 2 Timothy and Titus may be Trito Pauline meaning they may have been written by members of the Pauline school a generation after his death According to their theories these disputed letters may have come from followers writing in Paul s name often using material from his surviving letters These scribes also may have had access to letters written by Paul that no longer survive 8 The authenticity of Colossians has been questioned on the grounds that it contains an otherwise unparalleled description among his writings of Jesus as the image of the invisible God a Christology found elsewhere only in the Gospel of John 231 However the personal notes in the letter connect it to Philemon unquestionably the work of Paul Internal evidence shows close connection with Philippians 32 Ephesians is a letter that is very similar to Colossians but is almost entirely lacking in personal reminiscences Its style is unique It lacks the emphasis on the cross to be found in other Pauline writings reference to the Second Coming is missing and Christian marriage is exalted in a way that contrasts with the reference in 1 Corinthians 232 Finally according to R E Brown it exalts the Church in a way suggestive of the second generation of Christians built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets now past 233 The defenders of its Pauline authorship argue that it was intended to be read by a number of different churches and that it marks the final stage of the development of Paul s thinking It has been said too that the moral portion of the Epistle consisting of the last two chapters has the closest affinity with similar portions of other Epistles while the whole admirably fits in with the known details of Paul s life and throws considerable light upon them 234 Russian Orthodox icon of the Apostle Paul 18th century Iconostasis of Transfiguration Church Kizhi Monastery Karelia Russia Three main reasons have been advanced by those who question Paul s authorship of 1 Timothy 2 Timothy and Titus also known as the Pastoral Epistles They have found a difference in these letters vocabulary style and theology from Paul s acknowledged writings Defenders of the authenticity say that they were probably written in the name and with the authority of the Apostle by one of his companions to whom he distinctly explained what had to be written or to whom he gave a written summary of the points to be developed and that when the letters were finished Paul read them through approved them and signed them 234 There is a difficulty in fitting them into Paul s biography as it is known 235 They like Colossians and Ephesians were written from prison but suppose Paul s release and travel thereafter 32 2 Thessalonians like Colossians is questioned on stylistic grounds with among other peculiarities a dependence on 1 Thessalonians yet a distinctiveness in language from the Pauline corpus This again is explainable by the possibility that Paul requested one of his companions to write the letter for him under his dictation 32 Acts Although approximately half of the Acts of the Apostles deals with Paul s life and works Acts does not refer to Paul writing letters Historians believe that the author of Acts did not have access to any of Paul s letters One piece of evidence suggesting this is that Acts never directly quotes from the Pauline epistles Discrepancies between the Pauline epistles and Acts would further support the conclusion that the author of Acts did not have access to those epistles when composing Acts 236 237 British Jewish scholar Hyam Maccoby contended that Paul as described in the Acts of the Apostles is quite different from the view of Paul gleaned from his own writings Some difficulties have been noted in the account of his life Paul as described in the Acts of the Apostles is much more interested in factual history less in theology ideas such as justification by faith are absent as are references to the Spirit according to Maccoby He also pointed out that there are no references to John the Baptist in the Pauline Epistles although Paul mentions him several times in the Acts of the Apostles Others have objected that the language of the speeches is too Lukan in style to reflect anyone else s words Moreover George Shillington writes that the author of Acts most likely created the speeches accordingly and they bear his literary and theological marks 238 Conversely Howard Marshall writes that the speeches were not entirely the inventions of the author and while they may not be accurate word for word the author nevertheless records the general idea of them 239 F C Baur 1792 1860 professor of theology at Tubingen in Germany the first scholar to critique Acts and the Pauline Epistles and founder of the Tubingen School of theology argued that Paul as the Apostle to the Gentiles was in violent opposition to the original 12 Apostles Baur considers the Acts of the Apostles were late and unreliable This debate has continued ever since with Adolf Deissmann 1866 1937 and Richard Reitzenstein 1861 1931 emphasising Paul s Greek inheritance and Albert Schweitzer stressing his dependence on Judaism Views Byzantine ivory relief 6th early 7th century Musee de Cluny Self view In the opening verses of Romans 1 240 Paul provides a litany of his own apostolic appointment to preach among the Gentiles 241 and his post conversion convictions about the risen Christ 8 Paul described himself as set apart for the gospel of God and called to be an apostle and a servant of Jesus Christ Jesus had revealed himself to Paul just as he had appeared to Peter to James and to the twelve disciples after his resurrection 242 Paul experienced this as an unforeseen sudden startling change due to all powerful grace not as the fruit of his reasoning or thoughts 243 Paul also describes himself as afflicted with a thorn in the flesh 244 the nature of this thorn is unknown 245 There are debates as to whether Paul understood himself as commissioned to take the gospel to the gentiles at the moment of his conversion 246 Before his conversion he believed his persecution of the church to be an indication of his zeal for his religion 247 after his conversion he believed Jewish hostility toward the church was sinful opposition that would incur God s wrath 248 249 Paul believed he was halted by Christ when his fury was at its height 250 It was through zeal that he persecuted the Church 247 and he obtained mercy because he had acted ignorantly in unbelief 251 note 4 Understanding of Jesus Christ Paul s writings emphasized the crucifixion Christ s resurrection and the Parousia or second coming of Christ 74 Paul saw Jesus as Lord kyrios the true messiah and the Son of God who was promised by God beforehand through his prophets in the Holy Scriptures While being a biological descendant from David according to the flesh 252 he was declared to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead According to E P Sanders Paul preached the death resurrection and lordship of Jesus Christ and he proclaimed that faith in Jesus guarantees a share in his life 8 In Paul s view Jesus death was not a defeat but was for the believers benefit 8 a sacrifice which substitutes for the lives of others and frees them from the bondage of sin Believers participate in Christ s death and resurrection by their baptism The resurrection of Jesus was of primary importance to Paul bringing the promise of salvation to believers Paul taught that when Christ returned those who died in Christ would be raised when he returned while those still alive would be caught up in the clouds together with them to meet the Lord in the air 253 8 Sanders concludes that Paul s writings reveal what he calls the essence of the Christian message 1 God sent his Son 2 the Son was crucified and resurrected for the benefit of humanity 3 the Son would soon return and 4 those who belonged to the Son would live with him forever Paul s gospel like those of others also included 5 the admonition to live by the highest moral standard May your spirit and soul and body be kept sound and blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 254 8 In Paul s writings the public corporate devotional patterns towards Jesus in the early Christian community are reflective of Paul s perspective on the divine status of Jesus in what scholars have termed a binitarian pattern of devotion For Paul Jesus receives prayer 255 256 257 the presence of Jesus is confessionally invoked by believers 258 259 260 people are baptized in Jesus name 261 262 Jesus is the reference in Christian fellowship for a religious ritual meal the Lord s Supper 263 in pagan cults the reference for ritual meals is always to a deity and Jesus is the source of continuing prophetic oracles to believers 264 265 Atonement Main article Atonement in Christianity Paul taught that Christians are redeemed from sin by Jesus death and resurrection His death was an expiation as well as a propitiation and by Christ s blood peace is made between God and man 266 By grace through faith 267 a Christian shares in Jesus death and in his victory over death gaining as a free gift a new justified status of sonship 268 According to Krister Stendahl the main concern of Paul s writings on Jesus role and salvation by faith is not the individual conscience of human sinners and their doubts about being chosen by God or not but the problem of the inclusion of gentile Greek Torah observers into God s covenant 269 270 271 272 note 10 Dying for our sins refers to the problem of gentile Torah observers who despite their faithfulness cannot fully observe commandments including circumcision and are therefore sinners excluded from God s covenant 274 Jesus death and resurrection solved this problem of the exclusion of the gentiles from God s covenant as indicated by Romans 3 21 26 275 Paul s conversion fundamentally changed his basic beliefs regarding God s covenant and the inclusion of Gentiles into this covenant Paul believed Jesus death was a voluntary sacrifice that reconciled sinners with God 276 The law only reveals the extent of people s enslavement to the power of sin a power that must be broken by Christ 277 Before his conversion Paul believed Gentiles were outside the covenant that God made with Israel after his conversion he believed Gentiles and Jews were united as the people of God in Christ 278 Before his conversion he believed circumcision was the rite through which males became part of Israel an exclusive community of God s chosen people 279 after his conversion he believed that neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything but that the new creation is what counts in the sight of God 280 and that this new creation is a work of Christ in the life of believers making them part of the church an inclusive community of Jews and Gentiles reconciled with God through faith 281 According to E P Sanders who initiated the New Perspective on Paul with his 1977 publication Paul and Palestinian Judaism Paul saw the faithful redeemed by participation in Jesus death and rising Though Jesus death substituted for that of others and thereby freed believers from sin and guilt a metaphor derived from ancient sacrificial theology 8 note 11 the essence of Paul s writing is not in the legal terms regarding the expiation of sin but the act of participation in Christ through dying and rising with him citation needed According to Sanders those who are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death and thus they escape the power of sin he died so that the believers may die with him and consequently live with him 8 By this participation in Christ s death and rising one receives forgiveness for past offences is liberated from the powers of sin and receives the Spirit Relationship with Judaism Main articles Paul the Apostle and Judaism and New Perspective on Paul Some scholars see Paul as completely in line with 1st century Judaism a Pharisee and student of Gamaliel as presented by Acts 284 others see him as opposed to 1st century Judaism see Marcionism while the majority see him as somewhere in between these two extremes opposed to insistence on keeping the Ritual Laws for example the circumcision controversy in early Christianity as necessary for entrance into God s New Covenant 285 286 but in full agreement on Divine Law These views of Paul are paralleled by the views of Biblical law in Christianity Paul redefined the people of Israel those he calls the true Israel and the true circumcision as those who had faith in the heavenly Christ thus excluding those he called Israel after the flesh from his new covenant 287 288 He also held the view that the Torah given to Moses was valid until Christ came so that even Jews are no longer under the Torah nor obligated to follow the commandments or mitzvot as given to Moses 289 Tabor 2013 Paul is critical both theologically and empirically of claims of moral or lineal superiority 290 of Jews while conversely strongly sustaining the notion of a special place for the Children of Israel 291 Paul s theology of the gospel accelerated the separation of the messianic sect of Christians from Judaism a development contrary to Paul s own intent He wrote that faith in Christ was alone decisive in salvation for Jews and Gentiles alike making the schism between the followers of Christ and mainstream Jews inevitable and permanent He argued that Gentile converts did not need to become Jews get circumcised follow Jewish dietary restrictions or otherwise observe Mosaic laws to be saved 43 According to Paula Fredriksen Paul s opposition to male circumcision for Gentiles is in line with Old Testament predictions that in the last days the gentile nations would come to the God of Israel as gentiles e g Zechariah 8 20 23 292 not as proselytes to Israel 293 For Paul Gentile male circumcision was therefore an affront to God s intentions 293 According to Hurtado Paul saw himself as what Munck called a salvation historical figure in his own right who was personally and singularly deputized by God to bring about the predicted ingathering the fullness of the nations 294 293 According to Sanders Paul insists that salvation is received by the grace of God according to Sanders this insistence is in line with Judaism of c 200 BC until 200 AD which saw God s covenant with Israel as an act of grace of God Observance of the Law is needed to maintain the covenant but the covenant is not earned by observing the Law but by the grace of God 295 Sanders publications 285 296 have since been taken up by Professor James Dunn who coined the phrase The New Perspective on Paul 297 N T Wright 298 the Anglican Bishop of Durham notes a difference in emphasis between Galatians and Romans the latter being much more positive about the continuing covenant between God and his ancient people than the former Wright also contends that performing Christian works is not insignificant but rather proof of having attained the redemption of Jesus Christ by grace free gift received by faith 299 He concludes that Paul distinguishes between performing Christian works which are signs of ethnic identity and others which are a sign of obedience to Christ 298 World to come See also Christian eschatology Second Coming and World to come According to Bart Ehrman Paul believed that Jesus would return within his lifetime 300 Paul expected that Christians who had died in the meantime would be resurrected to share in God s kingdom and he believed that the saved would be transformed assuming heavenly imperishable bodies 301 Paul s teaching about the end of the world is expressed most clearly in his first and second letters to the Christian community of Thessalonica He assures them that the dead will rise first and be followed by those left alive 302 This suggests an imminent end but he is unspecific about times and seasons and encourages his hearers to expect a delay 303 The form of the end will be a battle between Jesus and the man of lawlessness 304 whose conclusion is the triumph of Christ Before his conversion he believed God s messiah would put an end to the old age of evil and initiate a new age of righteousness after his conversion he believed this would happen in stages that had begun with the resurrection of Jesus but the old age would continue until Jesus returns 305 249 Role of women Paul the Apostle 16th century attributed to Lucas van Leyden Main article Paul the Apostle and women See also 1 Timothy 2 12 I suffer not a woman The second chapter of the first letter to Timothy one of the six disputed letters is used by many churches to deny women a vote in church affairs reject women from serving as teachers of adult Bible classes prevent them from serving as missionaries and generally disenfranchise women from the duties and privileges of church leadership 306 9In like manner also that women adorn themselves in modest apparel with shamefacedness and sobriety not with broided hair or gold or pearls or costly array 10But which becometh women professing godliness with good works 11Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection 12But I suffer not a woman to teach nor to usurp authority over the man but to be in silence 13For Adam was first formed then Eve 14And Adam was not deceived but the woman being deceived was in the transgression 15Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety 1 Timothy 2 9 15 307 The King James Bible Authorised Version translation of this passage taken literally says that women in the churches are to have no leadership roles vis a vis men 308 Fuller Seminary theologian J R Daniel Kirk 309 finds evidence in Paul s letters of a much more inclusive view of women He writes that Romans 16 is a tremendously important witness to the important role of women in the early church Paul praises Phoebe for her work as a deaconess and Junia who is described by Paul in Scripture as being respected among the Apostles 56 It is Kirk s observation that recent studies have led many scholars to conclude that the passage in 1 Corinthians 14 ordering women to be silent during worship 310 was a later addition apparently by a different author and not part of Paul s original letter to the Corinthians Other scholars such as Giancarlo Biguzzi believe that Paul s restriction on women speaking in 1 Corinthians 14 is genuine to Paul but applies to a particular case where there were local problems of women who were not allowed in that culture to become educated asking questions or chatting during worship services He does not believe it to be a general prohibition on any woman speaking in worship settings since in 1 Corinthians Paul affirms the right responsibility of women to prophesy 311 312 Biblical prophecy is more than fore telling two thirds of its inscripturated form involves forth telling that is setting the truth justice mercy and righteousness of God against the backdrop of every form of denial of the same Thus to speak prophetically was to speak boldly against every form of moral ethical political economic and religious disenfranchisement observed in a culture that was intent on building its own pyramid of values vis a vis God s established system of truth and ethics Baker s Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology 313 There were women prophets in the highly patriarchal times throughout the Old Testament 313 The most common term for prophet in the Old Testament is nabi in the masculine form and nebiah in the Hebrew feminine form is used six times of women who performed the same task of receiving and proclaiming the message given by God These women include Miriam Aaron and Moses sister 314 Deborah 315 the prophet Isaiah s wife 316 and Huldah the one who interpreted the Book of the Law discovered in the temple during the days of Josiah 317 There were false prophetesses just as there were false prophets The prophetess Noadiah was among those who tried to intimidate Nehemiah 318 Apparently they held equal rank in prophesying right along with Abraham Isaac Jacob Moses Elisha Aaron and Samuel 313 Kirk s third example of a more inclusive view is Galatians 3 28 There is neither Jew nor Gentile neither slave nor free nor is there male and female for you are all one in Christ Jesus Galatians 3 28 319 In pronouncing an end within the church to the divisions which are common in the world around it he concludes by highlighting the fact that there were New Testament women who taught and had authority in the early churches that this teaching and authority was sanctioned by Paul and that Paul himself offers a theological paradigm within which overcoming the subjugation of women is an anticipated outcome 320 Classicist Evelyn Stagg and theologian Frank Stagg believe that Paul was attempting to Christianize the societal household or domestic codes that significantly oppressed women and empowered men as the head of the household The Staggs present a serious study of what has been termed the New Testament domestic code also known as the Haustafel 321 The two main passages that explain these household duties are Paul s letters to the Ephesians 322 and to the Colossians 323 An underlying Household Code is also reflected in four additional Pauline letters and 1 Peter 1 Timothy 2 1ff 8ff 3 1ff 8ff 5 17ff 6 1f Titus 2 1 10 324 and 1 Peter 325 Biblical scholars have typically treated the Haustafel in Ephesians as a resource in the debate over the role of women in ministry and in the home 326 Margaret MacDonald argues that the Haustafel particularly as it appears in Ephesians was aimed at reducing the tension between community members and outsiders 327 E P Sanders has labeled Paul s remark in 1 Corinthians 328 about women not making any sound during worship as Paul s intemperate outburst that women should be silent in the churches 285 296 Women in fact played a very significant part in Paul s missionary endeavors He became a partner in ministry with the couple Priscilla and Aquila who are specifically named seven times in the New Testament always by their couple name and never individually Of the seven times they are named in the New Testament Priscilla s name appears first in five of those instances suggesting to some scholars that she was the head of the family unit 329 They lived worked and traveled with the Apostle Paul becoming his honored much loved friends and coworkers in Jesus 330 In Romans 16 3 4 331 thought to have been written in 56 or 57 Paul sends his greetings to Priscilla and Aquila and proclaims that both of them risked their necks to save Paul s life Chloe was an important member of the church in Corinth 332 Phoebe was a deacon and a benefactor of Paul and others 333 Romans 16 334 names eight other women active in the Christian movement including Junia prominent among the apostles Mary who has worked very hard among you and Julia Women were frequently among the major supporters of the new Christian movement 8 Views on homosexuality See also Homosexuality in the New Testament Most Christian traditions 335 336 337 say Paul clearly portrays homosexuality as sinful in two specific locations Romans 1 26 27 338 and 1 Corinthians 6 9 10 339 Another passage 1 Timothy 1 8 11 addresses the topic more obliquely 340 Since the 19th century however most scholars have concluded that 1 Timothy along with 2 Timothy and Titus is not original to Paul but rather an unknown Christian writing in Paul s name some time in the late 1st to mid 2nd century 341 342 Influence Statue of St Paul 1606 by Gregorio Fernandez Paul is widely depicted in artwork Paul s influence on Christian thinking arguably has been more significant than any other New Testament author 8 Paul declared that Christ is the end of the law 343 exalted the Christian church as the body of Christ and depicted the world outside the Church as under judgment 43 Paul s writings include the earliest reference to the Lord s Supper 344 a rite traditionally identified as the Christian communion or Eucharist In the East church fathers attributed the element of election in Romans 9 345 to divine foreknowledge 43 The themes of predestination found in Western Christianity do not appear in Eastern theology Pauline Christianity Main article Pauline Christianity Paul had a strong influence on early Christianity Hurtado notes that Paul regarded his own Christological views and those of his predecessors and that of the Jerusalem Church as essentially similar According to Hurtado this work s against the claims by some scholars that Pauline Christianity represents a sharp departure from the religiousness of Judean Jesus movements 346 Marcion Main articles Marcion and Marcionites Marcionism regarded as heresy by contemporary mainstream Christianity was an Early Christian dualist belief system that originated in the teachings of Marcion of Sinope at Rome around the year 144 note 12 Marcion asserted that Paul was the only apostle who had rightly understood the new message of salvation as delivered by Christ 347 Marcion believed Jesus was the savior sent by God and Paul the Apostle was his chief apostle but he rejected the Hebrew Bible and the God of Israel Marcionists believed that the wrathful Hebrew God was a separate and lower entity than the all forgiving God of the New Testament Augustine In his account of his conversion experience Augustine of Hippo gave his life to Christ after reading Romans 13 348 349 Augustine s foundational work on the gospel as a gift grace on morality as life in the Spirit on predestination and on original sin all derives from Paul especially Romans 43 Reformation Main article ReformationIn his account of his conversion Martin Luther wrote about righteousness in Romans 1 praising Romans as the perfect gospel in which the Reformation was birthed 350 Martin Luther s interpretation of Paul s writings influenced Luther s doctrine of sola fide John Calvin John Calvin said the Book of Romans opens to anyone an understanding of the whole Scripture 351 Modern theology Visit any church service Roman Catholic Protestant or Greek Orthodox and it is the apostle Paul and his ideas that are central in the hymns the creeds the sermons the invocation and benediction and of course the rituals of baptism and the Holy Communion or Mass Whether birth baptism confirmation marriage or death it is predominantly Paul who is evoked to express meaning and significance Professor James D Tabor for the Huffington Post 352 See also Pauline Christianity and Jesuism In his commentary The Epistle to the Romans German Der Romerbrief particularly in the thoroughly re written second edition of 1922 Karl Barth argued that the God who is revealed in the cross of Jesus challenges and overthrows any attempt to ally God with human cultures achievements or possessions In addition to the many questions about the true origins of some of Paul s teachings posed by historical figures as noted above some modern theologians also hold that the teachings of Paul differ markedly from those of Jesus as found in the Gospels 353 Barrie Wilson states that Paul differs from Jesus in terms of the origin of his message his teachings and his practices 354 Some have even gone so far as to claim that due to these apparent differences in teachings that Paul was actually no less than the second founder of Christianity Jesus being its first 355 356 As in the Eastern tradition in general Western humanists interpret the reference to election in Romans 9 as reflecting divine foreknowledge 43 Views on PaulJewish views A statue of Paul holding a scroll symbolising the Scriptures and the sword symbolising his martyrdom Main article Paul the Apostle and Judaism See also Messianic Judaism Jewish interest in Paul is a recent phenomenon Before the positive historical reevaluations of Jesus by some Jewish thinkers in the 18th and 19th centuries he had hardly featured in the popular Jewish imagination and little had been written about him by the religious leaders and scholars Arguably he is absent from the Talmud and rabbinical literature although he makes an appearance in some variants of the medieval polemic Toledot Yeshu as a particularly effective spy for the rabbis 357 However with Jesus no longer regarded as the paradigm of gentile Christianity Paul s position became more important in Jewish historical reconstructions of their religion s relationship with Christianity He has featured as the key to building barriers e g Heinrich Graetz and Martin Buber or bridges e g Isaac Mayer Wise and Claude G Montefiore in interfaith relations 358 as part of an intra Jewish debate about what constitutes Jewish authenticity e g Joseph Klausner and Hans Joachim Schoeps 359 and on occasion as a dialogical partner e g Richard L Rubenstein and Daniel Boyarin 360 He features in an oratorio by Felix Mendelssohn a painting by Ludwig Meidner and a play by Franz Werfel 361 and there have been several novels about Paul by Shalom Asch and Samuel Sandmel 362 Jewish philosophers including Baruch Spinoza Leo Shestov and Jacob Taubes 363 and Jewish psychoanalysts including Sigmund Freud and Hanns Sachs 364 have engaged with the apostle as one of the most influential figures in Western thought Scholarly surveys of Jewish interest in Paul include those by Hagner 1980 pp 143 65 Meissner 1996 Langton 2010 Langton 2011a pp 55 72 and Langton 2011b pp 585 87 Gnosticism In the 2nd and possibly late 1st century Gnosticism was a competing religious tradition to Christianity which shared some elements of theology Elaine Pagels concentrated on how the Gnostics interpreted Paul s letters and how evidence from gnostic sources may challenge the assumption that Paul wrote his letters to combat gnostic opponents and to repudiate their statement that they possess secret wisdom 365 page needed Muslim views Muslims have long believed that Paul purposefully corrupted the original revealed teachings of Jesus 366 367 368 through the introduction of such elements as paganism 369 the making of Christianity into a theology of the cross 370 and introducing original sin and the need for redemption 371 Sayf ibn Umar claimed that certain rabbis persuaded Paul to deliberately misguide early Christians by introducing what Ibn Hazm viewed as objectionable doctrines into Christianity 372 373 Ibn Hazm repeated Sayf s claims 374 The Karaite scholar Jacob Qirqisani also believed that Paul created Christianity by introducing the doctrine of Trinity 372 Paul has been criticized by some modern Muslim thinkers Syed Muhammad Naquib al Attas wrote that Paul misrepresented the message of Jesus 368 and Rashid Rida accused Paul of introducing shirk polytheism into Christianity 369 Mohammad Ali Jouhar quoted Adolf von Harnack s critical writings of Paul 370 In Sunni Muslim polemics Paul plays the same role of deliberately corrupting the early teachings of Jesus as a later Jew Abdullah ibn Saba would play in seeking to destroy the message of Islam from within 373 374 375 Among those who supported this view were scholars Ibn Taymiyyah who believed while Paul ultimately succeeded Ibn Saba failed and Ibn Hazm who claimed that the Jews even admitted to Paul s sinister purpose 372 Other views The critics of Paul the Apostle include US president Thomas Jefferson a Deist who wrote that Paul was the first corrupter of the doctrines of Jesus 376 Christian anarchists Leo Tolstoy and Ammon Hennacy took a similar view 377 378 In the Baha i faith scholars have various viewpoints on Paul Discussions in Baha i scholarship have focused on whether Paul changed the original message of Christ or delivered the true Gospel with proponents of both positions 379 See alsoAchaicus of Corinth Collegiate Parish Church of St Paul s Shipwreck List of biblical figures identified in extra biblical sources New Perspective on Paul Old Testament Christian views of the Law Paul Apostle of Christ 2018 film Pauline mysticism Pauline privilege Persecution of Christians in the New Testament Persecution of religion in ancient Rome Peter and Paul 1981 miniseries Psychagogy St Paul s CathedralReferencesNotes Latin Paulus Ancient Greek Paῦlos romanized Paulos Coptic ⲡⲁⲩⲗⲟⲥ Biblical Hebrew פאולוס השליח Biblical Hebrew שאול התרסי romanized Sha ul ha Tarsi Arabic بولس الطرسوسي Ancient Greek Saῦlos Tarseys romanized Saũlos Tarseus Turkish Tarsuslu Pavlus Latin Paulus Tarsensis a b Acts 8 1 at Jerusalem Acts 9 13 at Jerusalem Acts 9 21 in Jerusalem Acts 26 10 in Jerusalem In Galatians 1 13 Paul states that he persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy it but does not specify where he persecuted the church In Galatians 1 22 he states that more than three years after his conversion he was still unknown by sight to the churches of Judea that are in Christ seemingly ruling out Jerusalem as the place he had persecuted Christians 44 Tertullian knew the Letter to the Hebrews as being under the name of Barnabas De Pudicitia chapter 20 where Tertullian quotes Hebrews 6 4 8 Origen in his now lost Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews is reported by Eusebius 21 as having written if any Church holds that this epistle is by Paul let it be commended for this For not without reason have the ancients handed it down as Paul s But who wrote the epistle in truth God knows The statement of some who have gone before us is that Clement bishop of the Romans wrote the epistle and of others that Luke the author of the Gospel and the Acts wrote it Paul s undisputed epistles are 1 Thessalonians Galatians 1 and 2 Corinthians Romans Philippians and Philemon The six letters believed by some to have been written by Paul are Ephesians Colossians 2 Thessalonians 1 Timothy 2 Timothy and Titus 24 a b c 1 Timothy 2 Timothy and Titus may be Trito Pauline meaning they may have been written by members of the Pauline school a generation after his death The only indication as to who is leading is in the order of names At first the two are referred to as Barnabas and Paul in that order Later in the same chapter the team is referred to as Paul and his companions This clause is not found in some major sources Codex Sinaiticus Codex Alexandrinus Codex Vaticanus or Codex Laudianus Paul does not exactly say that this was his second visit In Galatians he lists three important meetings with Peter and this was the second on his list The third meeting took place in Antioch He does not explicitly state that he did not visit Jerusalem in between this and his first visit Note that Paul only writes that he is on his way to Jerusalem or just planning the visit There might or might not have been additional visits before or after this visit if he ever got to Jerusalem Sanders 2019 Paul only occasionally had the opportunity to revisit his churches He tried to keep up his converts spirit answer their questions and resolve their problems by letter and by sending one or more of his assistants especially Timothy and Titus Paul s letters reveal a remarkable human being dedicated compassionate emotional sometimes harsh and angry clever and quick witted supple in argumentation and above all possessing a soaring passionate commitment to God Jesus Christ and his own mission Fortunately after his death one of his followers collected some of the letters edited them very slightly and published them They constitute one of history s most remarkable personal contributions to religious thought and practice Dunn 1982 p n 49 quotes Stendahl 1976 p 2 a doctrine of faith was hammered out by Paul for the very specific and limited purpose of defending the rights of Gentile converts to be full and genuine heirs to the promise of God to Israel Westerholm 2015 pp 4 15 For Paul the question that justification by faith was intended to answer was On what terms can Gentiles gain entrance to the people of God Bent on denying any suggestion that Gentiles must become Jews and keep the Jewish law he answered By faith and not by works of the Jewish law Westerholm refers to Stendahl 1963 Westerholm quotes Sanders Sanders noted that the salvation of the Gentiles is essential to Paul s preaching and with it falls the law for as Paul says simply Gentiles cannot live by the law 273 496 On a similar note Sanders suggested that the only Jewish boasting to which Paul objected was that which exulted over the divine privileges granted to Israel and failed to acknowledge that God in Christ had opened the door of salvation to Gentiles According to the Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 The Mishnah says that sins are expiated 1 by sacrifice 2 by repentance at death or on Yom Kippur 3 in the case of the lighter transgressions of the positive or negative precepts by repentance at any time The graver sins according to Rabbi are apostasy heretical interpretation of the Torah and non circumcision Yoma 86a The atonement for sins between a man and his neighbor is an ample apology Yoma 85b 282 The Jewish Encyclopedia further writes Most efficacious seemed to be the atoning power of suffering experienced by the righteous during the Exile This is the idea underlying the description of the suffering servant of God in Isa liii 4 12 Hebr of greater atoning power than all the Temple sacrifices was the suffering of the elect ones who were to be servants and witnesses of the Lord Isa xlii 1 4 xlix 1 7 l 6 This idea of the atoning power of the suffering and death of the righteous finds expression also in IV Macc vi 27 xvii 21 23 M Ḳ 28a Pesiḳ xxvii 174b Lev R xx and formed the basis of Paul s doctrine of the atoning blood of Christ Rom iii 25 283 115 years and 6 months from the Crucifixion according to Tertullian s reckoning in Adversus Marcionem xv Citations Saul of Tarsus Rooted in Three Worlds In the Footsteps of Paul PBS 2003 Retrieved 19 November 2010 a b c Brown 1997 p 436 Harris 2003 p 42 He was probably martyred in Rome about 64 65 AD a b Harris 2003 Domar the calendrical and liturgical cycle of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church Armenian Orthodox Theological Research Institute 2003 p 446 Acts 22 3 Brown 1997 p 442 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Sanders 2019 a b c Powell 2009 Dunn 2001 p 577 Ch 32 Rhoads 1996 p 39 Acts 26 5 Dunn 2009 pp 345 346 Acts 8 1 Acts 9 2 Acts 26 13 14 Acts 22 7 9 Acts 22 11 Acts 9 3 22 Brown 1997 p 407 Eusebius 1885 Book VI Chapter 25 Church History S 13 via Wikisource a b Brown Fitzmyer amp Murphy 1990 p 920 col 2 Ch 60 2 Kummel 1975 pp 392 94 401 03 Paul and His Influence in Early Christianity United Methodist Church Archived from the original on 23 August 2000 Carson amp Moo 2009 Aageson 2008 p 1 a b c d Dunn 2003 p 21 a Marrow Stanley B 1986 Paul His Letters and His Theology an Introduction to Paul s Epistles Paulist Press pp 5 7 ISBN 978 0809127443 b Why did God change Saul s name to Paul Catholic Answers Archived from the original on 30 October 2012 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Acts 22 25 29 Greek lexicon G4569 Saylos Saul Greek lexicon G3972 Paylos Paul Hebrew lexicon H7586 ש או ל Shaul Saul Acts 16 37 22 25 289 a b c d e f Prat 1911 Lewis amp Short 1879 Paulus a Roman surname not a praenomen Cole 1989 Acts 9 4 22 7 26 14 Acts 26 14 Acts 9 11 Acts 9 17 22 13 Acts 13 9 1 Corinthians 9 19 23 Why did God change Saul s name to Paul Catholic Answers Archived from the original on 30 October 2012 Retrieved 31 August 2014 a b Dunn 2003 pp 19 20 a b c d e f g h i j k l Cross amp Livingstone 2005 St Paul a b Martin Dale B 2009 Introduction to the New Testament History and Literature 5 The New Testament as History Open Yale Courses Yale University Ehrman 2000 pp 262 65 Ladeuze 1909 White 2007 pp 145 47 Koester 2000 p 107 Acts 16 37 Acts 22 25 29 a b Wright 1974 p 404 Philippians 3 5 a b c d Dunn 2003 pp 21 22 Acts 23 6 Dunn 2003 p 22 Acts 23 16 a b Romans 16 7 2 Timothy 1 3 Philippians 3 5 6 Acts 18 1 3 Dunn 2003 pp 41 42 Acts 18 3 Romans 16 4 Acts 22 3 Acts 23 16 Acts 7 58 60 22 20 Dunn 2009 pp 242 44 Bruce 2000 p 43 Lee 2006 pp 13 26 Kee 1983 p 208 Galatians 1 13 14 Philippians 3 6 Acts 8 1 3 Dunn 2009 pp 246 47 277 Dunn 2009 pp 246 47 a b Dunn 2009 p 277 a b Bromiley 1979 p 689 Barnett 2002 p 21 Niswonger 1992 p 200 Galatians 1 16 1 Corinthians 15 8 Acts 9 4 5 Acts 9 1 22 Acts 9 17 Acts 9 18 Aslan 2014 p 184 McRay 2007 p 66 Eskola 2001 Churchill 2010 Acts 9 20 22 Hengel 1997 p 43 2 Corinthians 11 32 Galatians 1 17 Lake 1911 pp 320 23 Wright 1996 pp 683 92 Hengel 2002 pp 47 66 Galatians 1 13 24 Galatians 4 24 25 Galatians 1 11 16 Harris 2003 p 517 Galatians 1 22 24 a b Galatians 2 1 10 Barnett 2005 p 200 Dunn 2009 p 369 Acts 11 26 Dunn 2009 p 297 Dunn 2009 Ogg 1962 Barnett 2005 p 83 Acts 11 26 Acts 13 14 Dunn 2009 p 370 Acts 13 8 12 Saul Of Tarsus known as Paul the Apostle of the Heathen JewishEncyclopedia com 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2020 His quotations from Scripture which are all taken directly or from memory from the Greek version betray no familiarity with the original Hebrew text Nor is there any indication in Paul s writings or arguments that he had received the rabbinical training ascribed to him by Christian writers Acts 13 13 48 Acts 14 28 Spence Jones 2015 p 16 Brown 1997 p 445 Brown 1997 pp 428 29 Brown 1997 pp 428 29 445 Acts 15 2 Galatians 2 1 a b c d Bechtel 1910 Acts 15 2 Galatians 2 1 a b c White 2007 pp 148 49 Acts 11 27 30 a b Galatians 1 18 20 Bruce 2000 p 151 a b c Galatians 2 11 14 White 2007 p 170 McGrath 2006 Mills 2003 pp 1109 10 Kostenberger Kellum amp Quarles 2009 p 400 Acts 16 6 10 Acts 16 5 Acts 16 16 24 Acts 16 25 40 Acts 18 2 Acts 18 18 21 Acts 18 18 Driscoll 1911 Acts 18 19 21 Acts 18 21 Pulpit Commentary on Acts 18 biblehub com Retrieved 4 October 2015 Acts 21 29 Crease 2019 pp 309 10 Acts 20 34 McRay 2007 p 185 Jerusalem Bible 1966 Introduction to Saint Paul p 260 a b Acts 20 1 2 Sanday n d p 202 Romans 15 19 Burton 2000 p 26 Petit 1909 Acts 21 8 10 Acts 21 15 1st Clement Lightfoot translation Early Christian Writings 1 Clem 5 5 By reason of jealousy and strife Paul by his example pointed out the prize of patient endurance After that he had been seven times in bonds had been driven into exile had been stoned had preached in the East and in the West he won the noble renown which was the reward of his faith 5 6 having taught righteousness unto the whole world and having reached the farthest bounds of the West and when he had borne his testimony before the rulers so he departed from the world and went unto the holy place having been found a notable pattern of patient endurance Where Lightfoot has had preached above the Hoole translation has having become a herald See also the endnote 3 by Arthur Cleveland Coxe on the last page of wikisource 1st Clement regarding Paul s preaching in Britain Chrysostom s Homilies on 2 Timothy verse 4 20 Cyril on Paul and gifts of the Holy Ghost Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Series II Volume VII Lecture 17 para 26 The Muratorian Fragment lines 38 39 Bible Research Acts 9 26 27 Galatians 1 17 18 Acts 11 29 30 Acts 12 25 Acts 11 30 12 25 Acts 15 Galatians 2 1 Acts 15 1 19 Acts 15 36 40 Acts 18 21 22 Acts 21 17ff Acts 24 17 Romans 15 25 2 Corinthians 8 9 1 Corinthians 16 1 3 Acts 21 21 Acts 21 22 26 Acts 21 27 36 Acts 22 22 Acts 22 30 Acts 23 10 Acts 23 12 Acts 23 23 Acts 24 1 Acts 24 22 Acts 24 23 a b Capes Reeves amp Richards 2011 p 203 Acts 27 39 44 Acts 28 1 10 Acts 28 11 14 Acts 28 30 31 Irenaeus Against Heresies 3 3 2 the Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles Peter and Paul as also by pointing out the faith preached to men which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops The blessed apostles then having founded and built up the Church committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate Christian Classics Ethereal Library Acts 28 14 15 Romans 1 1 7 11 13 15 23 29 MaGee Greg The Origins of the Church at Rome Bible org Accessed 18 March 2013 2 Timothy 4 13 Brown 1984 pp 31 46 Pope Clement I First Epistle to the Corinthians 5 7 Ignatius of Antioch Epistle to the Ephesians 12 55 Eusebius Church History Book 2 Chapter 22 Paragraph 3 Eusebius Church History Book 2 Chapter 25 Paragraph 8 Tertullian De Praescriptione Haereticorum Chapter 36 Lactantius Of the Manner in Which the Persecutors Died addressed to Donatus ccel org Jerome De Viris Illustribus Chapter 5 John Chrysostom Concerning the Lowliness of Mind Chapter 4 Sulpicius Severus Chronica Chapter 29 a b Ratzinger Joseph Aloisius 2009 General Audience of 4 February 2009 St Paul s martyrdom and heritage Paul VI Audience Hall Rome Libreria Editrice Vaticana Retrieved 1 April 2016 De Leonardis amp Masi 1999 p 21 James 1924 Who was Lucina by Hedvig Ehrenheim University of Stockholm a b c Eusebius 1885 Book II Chapter 25 Church History via Wikisource Jerome On Illustrious Men Chapter 5 New Advent Retrieved 3 June 2015 Silver 2013 p 18 St Paul s tomb unearthed in Rome from BBC News 8 December 2006 Vatican to open Apostle Paul s tomb Remains of St Paul confirmed The Washington Times 29 June 2009 Brown amp Meier 1983 p 124 Butler 1866 30 June St Paul the Apostle 2 Timothy 4 13 Cuming H Syer December 1870 Notes on a group of reliquaries Journal of the British Archaeological Association Chambers The Book of Days 1869 Retrieved 9 February 2012 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Barnstone 1984 p 447 Malherbe 1986 p 170 Budge 1901 p 531 The History of the Contending of Saint Paul Budge 1901 p 501 The Acts of Saint Peter Barnes 1844 p 212 a b c Aune 2010 p 9 a b Dunn amp Rogerson 2003 p 1274 a b Perkins 1988 pp 4 7 1 Corinthians 11 17 34 Powell 2009 p 234 Wiley 2002 p 21 Donaldson 2010 p 53 Donaldson 2010 p 39 Bitner 2015 p 268 Andria 2012 p 271 Dunn 2010 pp 170 71 MacDonald amp Harrington 2000 p 58 1 Corinthians 7 8 9 Brown 1984 p 48 a b Aherne 1908 Barrett 1963 pp 4ff Ehrman 2006 p 98 Williams 1957 pp 22 240 Shillington 2007 p 18 Marshall 1980 p 42 Romans 1 Galatians 1 16 1 Corinthians 9 1 Galatians 1 12 15 1 Corinthians 15 10 2 Corinthians 12 7 Coogan Michael D Brettler Marc Z Newsom Carol A Perkins Pheme eds 2010 The Second Letter Of Paul To The Corinthians The New Oxford Annotated Bible New Revised Standard Version With The Apocrypha 4th ed New York Oxford University Press p 2038 Footnote 7 Nature of the thorn is unknown Horrell 2006 p 30 a b Philippians 3 6 1 Thessalonians 2 14 16 a b Powell 2009 p 236 Acts 9 1 2 1 Timothy 1 13 Romans 1 3 1 Thessalonians 4 14 18 1 Thessalonians 5 23 1 Corinthians 1 2 2 Corinthians 12 8 9 1 Thessalonians 3 11 1 Corinthians 16 22 Romans 10 9 13 Philippians 2 10 11 1 Corinthians 6 11 Romans 6 3 1 Corinthians 11 17 34 1 Thessalonians 4 15 17 Hurtado 2005 pp 134 52 Cross amp Livingstone 2005 Atonement Ephesians 2 8 9 Galatians 4 4 7 Stendahl 1963 Dunn 1982 p n 49 Finlan 2004 p 2 Westerholm 2015 pp 4 15 Gal 2 14 Mack 1997 pp 88 89 92 Mack 1997 pp 91 92 Romans 5 6 10 Philippians 2 8 Romans 3 20b Romans 7 7 12 Galatians 3 28 Philippians 3 3 5 Galatians 6 15 Romans 6 4 Jewish Encyclopedia SIN Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 ATONEMENT Orr 1915 p 2276 a b c Sanders 1977 Dunn 1982 Galatians 6 16 Philippians 3 3 Galatians 3 4 Romans 2 16 26 Romans 9 11 Zechariah 8 20 23 a b c Larry Hurtado 4 December 2018 When Christians were Jews Paula Fredriksen on The First Generation Romans 11 25 Cooper 2014 sfn error no target CITEREFCooper2014 help a b Sanders 1983 Dunn 1982 pp 95 122 a b New Perspectives on Paul Ntwrightpage com 28 August 2003 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Romans 2 13ff Ehrman 2006 1 Corinthians 15 51 53 1 Thessalonians 4 16ff Rowland 1985 p 113 2 Thessalonians 2 3 Romans 16 25 1 Corinthians 10 11 Galatians 1 4 Kroeger amp Kroeger 1998 1 Timothy 2 9 15 Wright 2006 pp 5 10 Kirk J R Daniel Faculty fuller edu Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 1 Corinthians 14 1 Corinthians 11 Giguzzi 2004 pp 95 107 a b c Prophet Prophetess Prophecy Baker s Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology Exodus 15 20 Judges 4 4 Isaiah 8 3 2 Kings 22 14 2 Chronicles 34 22 Nehemiah 6 14 Galatians 3 28 Kirk 2012 Stagg amp Stagg 1978 Ephesians 5 22 6 5 Colossians 3 18 4 1 Titus 2 1 10 1 Peter 3 1 9 Gombis 2005 pp 317 30 MacDonald 2004 p 109 1 Corinthians 14 34 36 Achtemeier 1985 p 882 Keller 2010 Romans 16 3 4 1 Corinthians 1 11 Romans 16 1 2 Romans 16 Catechism of the Catholic Church Article 6 The sixth commandment vatican va 10 January 1951 M Mikhail The Coptic Orthodox Church s View on Homosexuality Christianity and Homosexuality CARM The Christian Apologetics amp Research Ministry 25 November 2008 Romans 1 26 27 1 Corinthians 6 9 10 1 Timothy 1 8 11 Ehrman 2000 p 393 Collins 2002 p 4 Romans 10 4 1 Corinthians 10 14 17 1 Corinthians 11 17 34 Romans 9 Hurtado 2005 p 160 Mack 1995 Guzik 15 December 2015 Augustine 2019 pp 354 430 Herrmann 2016 pp 475 488 Parker 1993 Christianity Before Paul HuffPost 29 November 2012 Retrieved 27 August 2017 Maccoby 1998 p 14 Wilson 2011 chapters 9 10 12 Dwyer 1998 p 27 Wrede 1907 p 179 Langton 2010 pp 23 56 Langton 2010 pp 57 96 Langton 2010 pp 97 153 Langton 2010 pp 154 76 Langton 2010 pp 178 209 Langton 2010 pp 210 30 Langton 2010 pp 234 62 Langton 2010 pp 263 78 Pagels 1992 Hindson amp Caner 2008 p 280 De Young 2004 p 60 a b Riddell 2001 p 235 a b Waardenburg 1999 p 276 a b Waardenburg 1999 p 255 De Young 2004 p 64 a b c Adang 1996 pp 105 06 a b Anthony 2011 p 68 a b Brann 2010 pp 65 66 Pall 2013 p 55 Jefferson 1854 Tolstoy 1891 p 17 Hennacy 2010 Christianity from a Baha i Perspective bahai library com Retrieved 26 December 2021 Bibliography Aageson James W 2008 Paul the Pastoral Epistles and the Early Church Hendrickson ISBN 978 1 59856 041 1 Achtemeier Paul J 1985 Harper s Bible dictionary Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 069862 1 via Society of Biblical Literature Adang Camilla 1996 Muslim Writers on Judaism and the Hebrew Bible From Ibn Rabban to Ibn Hazm Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10034 3 Aherne Cornelius 1908 Epistle to the Colossians In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 4 New York Robert Appleton Company Anthony Sean 2011 The Caliph and the Heretic Ibn Sabaʾ and the Origins of Shiʿism Brill ISBN 978 90 04 21606 8 Andria Solomon 2012 Romans Harpercollins Christian Pub ISBN 978 9966 003 06 5 Aslan Reza 2014 Zealot The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth Random House ISBN 978 0 8129 8148 3 Augustine 2019 Thomas Williams ed Confessions Hackett ISBN 978 1 62466 782 4 OCLC 1057245526 Aulen Gustaf Christus Victor SPCK 1931 Aune David E 2010 The Blackwell Companion to The New Testament John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4443 1894 4 Barnes Albert 1844 Notes on the New Testament Explanatory and Practical Vol VI II Corinthians and Galatians Glasgow Blackie amp Son Barrett C K 1963 The Pastoral Epistles Oxford Clarendon Press Barnett Paul 2002 Jesus and the Rise of Early Christianity A History of New Testament Times InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2699 5 Barnett Paul 2005 The Birth of Christianity The First Twenty Years Wm B Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 2781 4 Barnstone Willis 1984 The Other Bible Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 250031 1 Bitner Bradley J 2015 Paul s Political Strategy in 1 Corinthians 1 4 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 08848 1 Bechtel Florentine Stanislaus 1910 Judaizers In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 8 New York Robert Appleton Company Black C Clifton Smith D Moody Spivey Robert A eds 2019 1969 Paul Apostle to the Gentiles Anatomy of the New Testament 8th ed Minneapolis Fortress Press pp 187 226 doi 10 2307 j ctvcb5b9q 17 ISBN 978 1 5064 5711 6 OCLC 1082543536 S2CID 242771713 Brann Ross 2010 Power in the Portrayal Representations of Jews and Muslims in Eleventh and Twelfth Century Islamic Spain Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14673 7 Bromiley Geoffrey William 1979 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Vol A D Wm B Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 3781 3 Brown Raymond Edward Meier John P 1983 Antioch and Rome New Testament Cradles of Catholic Christianity Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 2532 6 Brown Raymond Edward 1984 The Churches the Apostles Left Behind Paulist Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 8091 2611 8 Brown Raymond Edward Fitzmyer Joseph A Murphy Roland Edmund 1990 The New Jerome Biblical Commentary G Chapman ISBN 978 0 225 66640 3 Brown Raymond Edward 1997 An Introduction to the New Testament Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 24767 2 Bruce F F Is the Paul of Acts the Real Paul Bulletin John Rylands Library 58 1976 283 305 Bruce Frederick Fyvie 2000 Paul Apostle of the Heart Set Free Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 4778 2 Budge E A Wallis 1901 The Contendings of the Twelve Apostles Being the Histories and the Lives and Martyrdomes and Deaths of the Twelve Apostles and Evangelists Vol 2 The English Translation London Henry Frowde Burton Ernest de Witt 2000 A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 05029 8 Butler Alban 1866 Saint Paul the Apostle June 30 The Lives of the Fathers Martyrs and Other Principal Saints Compiled from Original Monuments and Authentic Records Vol VI June Dublin James Duffy via bartleby com Calisi Antonio February 2021 Paul Apostle of Christ Call Journeys Epistles Teachings Martyrdom ISBN 978 9 9189 5171 0 Capes David B Reeves Rodney Richards E Randolph 2011 Rediscovering Paul An Introduction to His World Letters and Theology InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 3941 4 Carson D A Moo Douglas J 2009 An Introduction to the New Testament Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 53955 1 Churchill Timothy W R 2010 Divine Initiative and the Christology of the Damascus Road Encounter Eugene Pickwick Conzelmann Hans The Acts of the Apostles A Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles Augsburg Fortress 1987 Cole R Alan 1989 The Letter of Paul to the Galatians An Introduction and Commentary Wm B Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 0478 5 Collins Raymond F 2002 1 amp 2 Timothy and Titus A Commentary Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22247 5 Crease Robert P 18 March 2019 The rise and fall of scientific authority and how to bring it back Nature 567 7748 309 10 Bibcode 2019Natur 567 309C doi 10 1038 d41586 019 00872 w S2CID 81987842 Hanging in the Louvre Museum in Paris is an imposing painting The Preaching of St Paul at Ephesus In this 1649 work by Eustache Le Sueur the fiery apostle lifts his right hand as if scolding the audience while clutching a book of scripture in his left Among the rapt or fearful listeners are people busily throwing books into a fire Look carefully and you see geometric images on some of the pages Cross F L Livingstone E A eds 2005 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd Revised ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 De Leonardis Serena Masi Stefano 1999 Art and History Rome and the Vatican Casa Editrice Bonechi ISBN 978 88 476 0178 9 De Young James 2004 Terrorism Islam and Christian Hope Reflections on 9 11 and Resurging Islam Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 59752 005 8 Donaldson Terence 2010 Ch 3 Introduction to the Pauline Corpus In John Muddiman John Barton eds The Pauline Epistles The Oxford Bible Commentary Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958026 2 Driscoll James F 1911 Nazarite In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 10 New York Robert Appleton Company Dunn James D G 1982 The New Perspective on Paul Bulletin of the John Rylands Library Manson Memorial Lecture 4 November 1982 65 2 95 122 doi 10 7227 BJRL 65 2 6 Dunn James D G 1990 Jesus Paul and the Law Studies in Mark and Galatians Louisville KY Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 0 664 25095 5 Dunn James 2001 McDonald Lee Martin Sanders James A eds The Canon Debate Baker ISBN 978 1 4412 4163 4 Dunn James D G ed 2003 The Cambridge Companion to St Paul Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 78155 8 Dunn James D G 2009 Christianity in the Making Volume 2 Beginning from Jerusalem Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Dunn J D G 2010 Ch 8 Ephesians In John Muddiman John Barton eds The Pauline Epistles The Oxford Bible Commentary Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958026 2 Dunn James D G Jesus Paul and the Gospels Grand Rapids MI Wm B Eerdmans 2011 Dwyer John C 1998 Church History Twenty Centuries of Catholic Christianity Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 3830 2 Dunn James D G Rogerson John William eds 2003 Eerdmans Commentary on the Bible Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 3711 0 Ehrman Bart D 2000 The New Testament A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512639 6 Ehrman Bart D 2006 Peter Paul and Mary Magdalene The Followers of Jesus in History and Legend Oxford University Press p 98 ISBN 978 0 19 974113 7 Eisenman Robert 1996 Paul as Herodian Journal of Higher Criticism 3 1 110 22 Retrieved 13 February 2020 Eskola Timo 2001 Messiah and the Throne Jewish Merkabah Mysticism and Early Exaltation Discourse Tubingen Mohr Siebeck Finlan Stephen 2004 The Background and Content of Paul s Cultic Atonement Metaphors Society of Biblical Literature Freeman Charles 2010 What Did Paul Achieve A New History of Early Christianity New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 45 65 doi 10 12987 9780300166583 ISBN 978 0 300 12581 8 JSTOR j ctt1nq44w LCCN 2009012009 S2CID 170124789 Giguzzi Giancarlo 2004 Paolo un apostolo contro le donne Credere Oggi in dialogo con San Paolo e le sue lettere Padova Edizioni Messaggero no 124 pp 95 107 Gombis Timothy June 2005 A Radically Different New Humanity The Function of the Haustafel in Ephesians PDF Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 48 2 317 30 Retrieved 14 February 2013 Hagner Donald 1980 Hagner Donald ed Paul in Modern Jewish Thought in Pauline Studies Exeter Paternoster Press Hanson Anthony T Studies in Paul s Technique and Theology Eerdmans 1974 ISBN 0 8028 3452 3 Harris Stephen L 2003 Understanding the Bible McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 7674 2916 0 OCLC 436028175 Hengel Martin 1997 Paul Between Damascus and Antioch The Unknown Years Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25736 1 Hengel Martin 2002 Paul in Arabia PDF Bulletin for Biblical Research 12 1 47 66 doi 10 2307 26422340 JSTOR 26422340 S2CID 53622634 Hennacy Ammon 2010 The Book of Ammon Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 60899 053 5 Herrmann Erik H 2016 Preface to the Wittenberg Edition of Luther s German Writings 1539 The Annotated Luther Volume 4 Augsburg Fortress doi 10 2307 j ctt19qgg0d 20 ISBN 978 1 4514 6510 5 Hindson Ed Caner Ergun 2008 The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics Surveying the Evidence for the Truth of Christianity Harvest House ISBN 978 0 7369 3635 4 Horrell David G 2006 An Introduction to the Study of Paul 2nd ed A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 04083 1 Hurtado Larry 2005 Lord Jesus Christ Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 3167 5 Irenaeus Against Heresies James Montague Rhodes 1924 The Acts of Paul The Apocryphal New Testament Oxford Clarendon Press Jefferson Thomas 1854 H A Washington ed The Writings of Thomas Jefferson Being his Autobiography Correspondence Reports Messages Addresses and Other Writings Official and Private Published by the Order of the Joint Committee of Congress on the Library from the Original Manuscripts Deposited in the Department of State With Explanatory Notes Tables of Contents and a Copious Index to Each Volume as well as a General Index to the Whole Vol VII Washington D C Taylor Maury Kee Howard Clark 1983 Understanding the New Testament Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 936591 1 Keller Marie Noel 2010 Priscilla and Aquila Paul s Coworkers in Christ Jesus Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5284 8 Kim Yung Suk A Theological Introduction to Paul s Letters Eugene Oregon Cascade Books 2011 ISBN 978 1 60899 793 0 Kirk J R Daniel 2012 Jesus Have I Loved but Paul A Narrative Approach to the Problem of Pauline Christianity Baker Academic ISBN 978 1 4412 3625 8 Koester Helmut 2000 History and Literature of Early Christianity Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 014970 8 Kostenberger Andreas J Kellum Leonard Scott Quarles Charles L 2009 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament B amp H ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 Kroeger Richard Clark Kroeger Catherine Clark 1998 I Suffer Not a Woman Rethinking I Timothy 2 11 15 in Light of Ancient Evidence Baker ISBN 978 0 8010 5250 7 Kummel Werner Georg 1975 Introduction to the New Testament Abingdon Press ISBN 978 0 687 19576 3 Ladeuze Paulin 1909 Epistle to the Ephesians In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company Lake Kirsopp 1911 The earlier Epistles of St Paul their motive and origin London Langton Daniel R 2010 The Apostle Paul in the Jewish Imagination Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51740 9 Langton Daniel 2011a Westerholm Stephen ed Jewish Readings of Paul in Blackwell Companion to Paul Blackwell Langton Daniel 2011b Levine Amy Jill ed Paul in Jewish Thought in The Jewish Annotated New Testament Oxford University Press Lee Michelle V 2006 Paul the Stoics and the Body of Christ Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series vol 137 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511584541 ISBN 978 0 51 158454 1 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles eds 1879 A Latin Dictionary Oxford University Press Lightfoot Joseph Barber 1890 The Apostolic Fathers A Revised Text with Introductions Notes Dissertations and Translations Macmillan p 274 ISBN 0 8010 5612 8 OCLC 54248207 Maccoby Hyam 1998 The Mythmaker Paul and the Invention of Christianity Barnes amp Noble ISBN 978 0 7607 0787 6 MacDonald Dennis Ronald 1983 The Legend and the Apostle The Battle for Paul in Story and Canon Philadelphia Westminster Press 1983 ISBN 978 0664244644 MacDonald Margaret Y Harrington Daniel J 2000 Colossians and Ephesians Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5819 2 MacDonald Margaret Y 2004 The Pauline Churches A Socio Historical Study of Institutionalization in the Pauline and Deutrero Pauline Writings Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61605 8 Mack Burton L 1995 Who wrote the New Testament The making of the Christian myth HarperSan Francisco ISBN 978 0 06 065517 4 Mack Burton L 1997 1995 Wie schreven het Nieuwe Testament werkelijk Feiten mythen en motieven Who Wrote the New Testament The Making of the Christian Myth Uitgeverij Ankh Hermes bv Malherbe Abraham J 1986 A Physical Description of Paul Harvard Theological Review 79 1 3 170 175 doi 10 1017 S0017816000020435 ISSN 0017 8160 JSTOR 1509409 S2CID 162687215 Marrow Stanley B 1986 Paul His Letters and His Theology An Introduction to Paul s Epistles Paulist Press p 5 ISBN 978 0809127443 Marshall I Howard 1980 The Acts of the Apostles Grand Rapids W B Eerdmans ISBN 0 8028 1423 9 McDowell Sean 2016 The Fate of the Apostles Examining the Martyrdom Accounts of the Closest Followers of Jesus Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 03190 1 McGrath Alister E 2006 Christianity An Introduction Wiley ISBN 978 1 4051 0901 7 McRay John 2007 Paul His Life and Teaching Grand Rapids MI Baker Academic ISBN 978 1441205742 Meissner Stefan 1996 Die Heimholung des Ketzers Tubingen Mohr Mills Watson E 2003 Mercer Commentary on the New Testament Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 86554 864 0 Montague George T 1966 The Living Thought of St Paul Milwaukee Bruce Publishing Co Ogg George 1962 Chronology of the New Testament In Black Matthew ed Peake s Commentary on the Bible Nelson OL 5847288M Niswonger Richard L 1992 New Testament History Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 31201 7 Orr James ed 1915 The International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia Vol IV Chicago Howard Severance Pagels Elaine 1992 The Gnostic Paul Gnostic Exegesis of the Pauline Letters Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 85539 591 6 Parker Thomas Henry Louis 1993 Calvin s New Testament commentaries T and T Clark ISBN 0 567 29241 X OCLC 716774834 Perkins Pheme 1988 Reading the New Testament An Introduction Paulist Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 8091 2939 3 Petit Louis 1909 Archdiocese of Durazzo In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company Powell Mark Allan 2009 Introducing the New Testament A Historical Literary and Theological Survey Baker ISBN 978 0 8010 2868 7 Prat Ferdinand 1911 St Paul In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company Rhoads David M 1996 The Challenge of Diversity The Witness of Paul and the Gospels Fortress Press ISBN 978 1 4514 0617 7 Riddell Peter G 2001 Islam and the Malay Indonesian World Transmission and Responses University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2473 0 Rowland Christopher 1985 Christian Origins An Account of the Setting and Character of the Most Important Messianic Sect of Judaism SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 04110 7 Sanday W n d The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans In Ellicott Charles John ed A Bible commentary for English readers London Cassell Sanders E P 1977 Paul and Palestinian Judaism A Comparison of Patterns of Religion Fortress ISBN 978 1 4514 0740 2 Sanders E P 1983 Paul the Law and the Jewish People SCM Press ISBN 978 1 4514 0741 9 Sanders E P 27 December 2019 Saint Paul the Apostle Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 8 January 2013 Seifrid Mark A 1992 Justification by Faith The Origin and Development of a Central Pauline Theme Novum Testamentum Supplements Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 90 04 09521 7 ISSN 0167 9732 Shillington V George 2007 An Introduction to the Study of Luke Acts A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 567 03053 5 Silver Sandra Sweeny 2013 Footprints in Parchment Rome Versus Christianity 30 313 Ad Author House ISBN 978 1 4817 3374 8 Spence Jones Henry 2015 The Pulpit Commentary Vol 8 Delmarva Publications GGKEY EER24GEUYX4 Spong John Shelby The Man From Tarsus in Rescuing the Bible From Fundamentalism reprint ed New York HarperCollins 1992 Stagg Evelyn Stagg Frank 1978 Woman in the World of Jesus Westminster Press ISBN 978 0 664 24195 7 Stendahl Krister 1963 The Apostle Paul and the Introspective Conscience of the West PDF Harvard Theological Review 56 3 199 215 doi 10 1017 S0017816000024779 ISSN 0017 8160 S2CID 170331485 Stendahl Krister 1976 Paul Among Jews and Gentiles and Other Essays Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 1224 5 lt ref gt Tabor James D 16 September 2013 Paul the Jew as Founder of Christianity HuffPost Retrieved 28 August 2017 Tolstoy Leo 1891 Church and State and Other Essays Including Money Man and Woman Their Respective Functions The Mother A Second Supplement to the Kreutzer Sonata B R Tucker p 17 Waardenburg Jacques 1999 Muslim Perceptions of Other Religions A Historical Survey Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535576 5 Westerholm Stephen 2015 The New Perspective on Paul in Review Direction 44 1 4 15 White L Michael 2007 From Jesus to Christianity San Francisco CA HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 081610 0 Wiley Tatha 2002 Original Sin Origins Developments Contemporary Meanings Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 4128 9 Wilken Robert Louis 2013 Ephesus Rome and Edessa The Spread of Christianity The First Thousand Years A Global History of Christianity New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 17 27 ISBN 978 0 300 11884 1 JSTOR j ctt32bd7m 6 LCCN 2012021755 S2CID 160590164 Williams Charles Stephan Conway 1957 A Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles Harper Wilson Barrie 2011 How Jesus Became Christian The Early Christians And The Transformation Of A Jewish Teacher Into The Son Of God Orion ISBN 978 1 78022 206 6 Wrede William 1907 Paul Translated by Edward Lummis London Philip Green Wright G Ernest 1974 Great People of the Bible and How They Lived Pleasantville NY The Reader s Digest Association Inc Wright N T 1996 Paul Arabia and Elijah Galatians 1 17 PDF Journal of Biblical Literature 115 4 683 92 doi 10 2307 3266349 ISSN 0021 9231 JSTOR 3266349 Wright N T 2006 The Biblical Basis for Women s Service in the Church PDF Priscilla Papers 20 4 Pall Zoltan 2013 Lebanese Salafis Between the Gulf and Europe Development Fractionalization and Transnational Networks of Salafism in Lebanon Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 8964 451 0 Further reading Agosto Efrain 2012 Servant Leadership Jesus and Paul Chalice Press ISBN 978 0 8272 3506 9 Bradford Ernle Paul the Traveller Saint Paul and his World Allen Lane 1974 Davies W D Paul and Rabbinic Judaism Some Rabbinic Elements in Pauline Theology S P C K 3rd ed 1970 ISBN 0 281 02449 9 Davies W D The Apostolic Age and the Life of Paul in Matthew Black ed Peake s Commentary on the Bible London T Nelson 1962 ISBN 0 8407 5019 6 Fredriksen Paula 2018 When Christians Were Jews The First Generation Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 24074 0 Hans Joachim Schoeps Paul The Theology of the Apostle in the Light of Jewish Religious History Library of Theological Translations 34 pages Lutterworth Press July 2002 ISBN 978 0 227 17013 7 Holzbach Mathis Christian Die textpragmat Bedeutung d Kundereinsetzungen d Simon Petrus u d Saulus Paulus im lukan Doppelwerk in Jesus als Bote d Heils Stuttgart 2008 166 72 Murphy O Connor Jerome Jesus and Paul Parallel Lives Collegeville Minn Liturgical Press 2007 ISBN 0 8146 5173 9 Murphy O Connor Jerome Paul the Letter Writer His World His Options His Skills Collegeville Minn Liturgical Press 1995 ISBN 0 8146 5845 8 Murphy O Connor Jerome Paul A Critical Life Oxford Clarendon Press 1996 ISBN 0 19 826749 5 Pinchas Lapide Peter Stuhlmacher Paul Rabbi and Apostle 77 pages Augsburg Publishing House December 1984 Pinchas Lapide Leonard Swidler Jurgen Moltmann Jewish Monotheism and Christian Trinitarian Doctrine 94 pages Wipf amp Stock Publishers 2002 Reece Steve Paul s Large Letters Pauline Subscriptions in the Light of Ancient Epistolary Conventions London T amp T Clark 2016 Rashdall Hastings The Idea of Atonement in Christian Theology 1919 Ruef John Paul s First Letter to Corinth Penguin 1971 Segal Alan F Paul the Convert New Haven London Yale University Press 1990 ISBN 0 300 04527 1 Segal Alan F Paul the Convert and Apostle in Rebecca s Children Judaism and Christianity in the Roman World Harvard University Press 1986 ISBN 978 0674750760External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Paul of Tarsus Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul of Tarsus Wikisource has original works by or about Paul the Apostle Look up Pauline conversion in Wiktionary the free dictionary Listen to this article 1 hour and 14 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 23 February 2019 2019 02 23 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles St Paul on In Our Time at the BBC Lecture on Paul of Tarsus s by Dr Henry Abramson Catholic Encyclopedia Paul of Tarsus Documentary film on Apostle Paul Bartlet James Vernon 1911 Paul the Apostle Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed pp 938 55 Novena to Saint Paul Apostle Paul s mission and letters From PBS Frontline series on the earliest Christians Representations of Saint Paul Saint Paul the Apostle Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2009 The Apostle and the Poet Paul and Aratus Dr Riemer Faber The Apostle Paul s Shipwreck An Historical Examination of Acts 27 and 28 Works by or about Paul the Apostle in libraries WorldCat catalog Why Paul Went West The Differences Between the Jewish Diaspora Biblical Archaeology Review Santiebeati Saint Paul Catholic Online Saint Paul Footsteps of St Paul by Christian Tours Old maps showing the travels of Paul from the Eran Laor Cartographic Collection National Library of Israel Portals Ancient Rome Saints Bible Christianity Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul the Apostle amp oldid 1132350588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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