PAUL, SAINT

d. a.d. 64? or 67?, the apostle to the Gentiles, b. Tarsus, Asia Minor. He was a Jew. His father was a Roman citizen, probably of some means, and Paul was a tentmaker by trade. His Jewish name was Saul. He was educated in Jerusalem, where he studied under Gamaliel and became a zealous nationalist; he was probably a Pharisee. The chronology of St. Paul's life is difficult, but there is general agreement (within a few years) on almost all details. The hypothetical dates given here are according to one chronological system.

The sources for St. Paul's life are the Acts of the Apostles, in which he is the dominant figure, and the Pauline Epistles. The value of the latter depends on the extent to which they are accepted as genuinely written by the apostle. Romans, First and Second Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, Colossians, First Thessalonians, and Philemon are undoubted; Ephesians and Second Thessalonians are rejected by most critics; First and Second Timothy and Titus are generally considered to be in their present form later and non-Pauline; finally, Hebrews was not written by St. Paul himself.

Paul's first known contact with Christianity is his presence at the martyrdom of St. Stephen. Soon after this he got a commission from the chief priest to go to Damascus to help suppress Christianity there (a.d. 33). As he approached Damascus he suddenly saw a blinding light and heard Jesus ask, "Why persecutest thou me?" Paul was temporarily blinded and was led into Damascus, where he was found (on the Lord's direction) by the disciple Ananias. On regaining his sight, Paul was baptized and immediately began preaching. (Acts 8.1–3; 9.1–30; 22.3–21; 26.9–23; Gal. 1.12–15.)

Paul spent the next 13 years learning the faith, part of the time living in seclusion in the Arabian desert. He visited Jerusalem probably twice (a.d. 37, 44) and dwelt at Tarsus and Antioch for some time. (Acts 11.) From Antioch, Paul set out on his first missionary journey (Acts 13–14.27; a.d. 47–49), on which he was accompanied by St. Barnabas and for a time by St. Mark. In general the method was to go from city to city preaching in synagogues and in marketplaces. Among the stops on this first mission were Cyprus, Antioch, and Derbe. Churches were set up, and as soon as the little Christian groups seemed strong enough the apostle and his companions would move on. Among their stops were Cyprus, Pamphylia, and Derbe. About a.d. 50 there was a council of the apostles at Jerusalem to discuss whether Gentile Christians should be circumcised, i.e., whether Christianity was to be a Jewish sect. St. Paul opposed the Judaistic group vigorously, and the council decided against them. (Acts 15; Gal. 2.)

On his second mission (Acts 15.36–18.22; a.d. 50–53) Paul, having quarreled with Barnabas, was accompanied by Silas. During visits to Philippi and Salonica they founded two churches that were to become great. They later sailed to Athens where Paul delivered his famous address on the "unknown god" in the market. (Acts 17.16–34.) From Athens, Paul went to Corinth. In the course of a long stay there he wrote First and Second Thessalonians (a.d. 52). Possibly about this time he also wrote his letter to the Galatians, although some scholars think this was the earliest of the epistles (written from Antioch), while others believe it was written later from Ephesus. At length Paul sailed to Caesarea in Palestine and visited Jerusalem again. He spent some time in Antioch.

The third missionary journey of St. Paul (Acts 18.23–21.26; a.d. 53–57) took him to Galatia, then Phrygia, and over to Ephesus. His two-and-a-half-year stay in Ephesus was one of the most fruitful periods of his life; in this time he wrote his two letters to the Corinthians (c.a.d. 56). He went to Corinth to help the Christians there, and he probably wrote the Epistle to the Romans there. Thence he returned to Ephesus and finally to Jerusalem. This was his last visit to the Holy City (a.d. 57–59), for soon after he arrived he was arrested for provoking a riot.

After being held prisoner for two years and after hearings before the council of priests, before the Roman procurator Felix and his successor Festus, before Herod Agrippa II, and again before Festus, he appealed to Rome on his citizen's right. So he was sent to Rome under guard. (Acts 21.27–28.31.) On the way they were shipwrecked on Malta but finally landed at Puteoli (Puzzuoli). Paul was imprisoned (a.d. 60) in Rome but was allowed to conduct his ministry among the Roman Christians and Jews who visited him. Of his final fate tradition says that he was beheaded south of the city, near the Ostian Way, probably during the persecution of Nero. A lesser tradition claims that Paul was released after his first imprisonment and that he went East again, and perhaps also to Spain, before his martyrdom. Some scholars believe that Paul was executed after his initial imprisonment, probably a.d. 62. St. Paul's tomb and shrine are at the Roman basilica of St. Paul's Without the Walls.

St. Paul's figure dominates the apostolic age, and his epistles have left a tremendous impress on Christianity. The first Christian theological writing is found in them, where it is characterized rather by spiritual fervor than by systematic analysis. St. Paul became a fountainhead of Christian doctrine, and countless interpretations have been given of his teachings. Thus, Roman Catholic theology leans upon him at all times, and Martin Luther derived from the Epistle to the Romans his principle of justification by faith alone. There can be no doubt that Paul's interpretation of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, his doctrine of the church as the mystical body of Christ, his teaching on law and grace, and his view of justification have been decisive in the formation of the Christian faith. The feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, June 29, is one of the principal days of the church calendar; the conversion of St. Paul is commemorated Jan. 25.

See D. R. McDonald, The Legend and the Apostle (1983); J. A. Ziesler, Pauline Christianity (1990); and E. P. Sanders, Paul (1991).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Paul Saint  - 11013 results

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...Publication Data: Kauffmann, Jean-Paul. Chambre noire de Longwood...Longwood: Napoleons exile on Saint-Helena/by Jean-Paul Kauffman; translated from the...Helena. 2. Kauffmann, Jean-Paul Journeys Saint Helena. 3. France...
...detailed demonstration in our article: " Saint Paul a-t-il enseigne deux resurrections...the RB April 1932 , called "Saint Paul et la double resurrection corporelle...366-7. Nordlingen, 1864 . 31 Paul is concerned utterly and only with...
...communication with him. My fathers full name was Bernard Paul Ernest Saint-Gaudens; " Bernard Paul Honeste, if you please," he called it later...the Pyrenees, five miles south of the town of Saint-Gaudens, in the arrondissement of Saint-Gaudens...
Assistants in Saint-Gaudens studio, ii. 6...33 Avet , cameo cutter, Saint-Gaudens apprenticeship to...ii. 42 , 211 Bartlett, Paul , ii. 36 Bartlett, Truman...New York, i. 312 Bion, Paul , his intimate acquaintance...
...The Medieval Mind . New York. Macmillan, 1925. 2 vols. Van Paul Dyke. Ignatius Loyola, the Founder of the Jesuits . New York...Culture . Milwaukee: Bruce: 1937. Walz Angelus, O.P. Saint Thomas Aquinas: A Biographical Study . Tr. by Sebastian Bullough...
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...symbolofideisme.(9) He had taught Paul (no relation) during the 1880s...identity in surname benefited Paul. As a result of the biographys...his Life more comprehensible. Saint of the Spit The conservatives...Monniers biography. Likewise Paul Sabatiers introduction gives...Gregory IX shortly after the saints canonization in 1228. However...
Leo-Paul Hebert, Les Clercs De Saint-Viateur Au Canada, 1947-1997. by Pierre Lanthier Leo-Paul Hebert, Les Clercs de Saint-Viateur...996 p. En ecrivant ce livre, Leo-Paul Hebert a du faire face a un dilemme...
...patronages des Religieux de Saint-Vincent de Paul: lieu de formation religieuse...rellgieuse, les Religieux de Saint-Vincent de Paul instaurent en 1888 la congregation...larnivee des Religieux de Saint-Vincent de Paul. Ceux-ci etendent le modele...
Paul in Acts by Paul W. Walaskay Paul in Acts by Stanley E. Porter Library of Pauline Studies. Hendrickson, Peabody, 2001.242 pp. $24.95. ISBN 1-56563-613-9. PORTER INVITES US to consider "a depiction of one character, Paul...
...you have all you want!"-Paul believes that the fullness of...beginning of the letter, where Paul tells his audience that he gives...Christ Jesus, called to be saints" (1:2), and "called...sacrifices (8:6-7). Although Paul does not dismiss the knowledge...
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...stained glass windows "saints" that have not yet been...safely assume, in John Paul IIs many canonizations...papacy, and exuberance in saint-making seems, in retrospect...suspects that in time John Paul himself will be declared not only a saint but a doctor of the Church...Threshold of Hope, John Paul II writes--specifically...more general way to all saints--that "they have...
Paul no saint by Jeff Melton The plane crash that killed Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone, his wife and daughter, and...illustrate a very important lesson that Paul himself might have taught in his days at...
Saint Paul by Michael Anthony SAINT PAUL Minnesota Opera last trotted out Bizets Les pecheurs des perles...companys 2009/ Ki season at the Ordwav ( enter in downtown Saint Paul was much more colorful. Zandra Rhodes, known chiefly as a fashion...
Saint Paul by Michael Anthony SAINT PAUL With due apology to the late Agama Christie, Minnesota Operas...in the past. All this looked splendid on the stage, tiianks to Paul Palazzo s evocative lighting and Anna R. Olivers stylish 20s costumes...
Saint Paul by Michael Anthony SAINT PAUL Minnesota Operas new production of Faust., unveiled Jan. 24...Faust is often portrayed as weak and vacillating, the fine tenor Paul Groves gave the character an appealing vigor that was almost heroic...
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...Private School for Bea; Seen as a Saint: Sir Paul Arriving for Hearing. Byline: Richard...Julie Moult RELATIONS between Sir Paul McCartney and Heather Mills have...experience of state schooling. Sir Paul has told friends how his other children...
Saints Peter and Paul. THE death of Pope John Paul II and the election of Pope Benedict XVI brought unusual media...and world affairs. Todays Catholic feast of Saints Peter and Paul likewise draw attention to the Petrine office and its service...
WAS HE SUCH A SAINT? Two Years after His Death, Pope John Paul II Is Being Fast-Tracked to...being granted: the late Pope John Paul II is being fast-tracked by...are handed a halo. Pope John Paul seems to have got one under his...
THE FUNERAL OF POPE JOHN PAUL II 1920-2005: The Cardinals...in the Wind as Crowd Chanted Saint, Saint. Byline: By Pippa...to be no more words from John Paul II, the great communicator...appeared on the screens. John Paul IIs cypress coffin, borne by...
...Fantasy league: Sideshows keep seats full for St. Paul Saints by Jody Foldesy ST. PAUL, Minn. - It is Fractured Fairy Tale Night at Midway...couldnt squeeze in another soul to watch the St. Paul Saints face the Sioux Falls Canaries. Saints general...
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encyclopedia articles on: Paul Saint  - 77 results

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PAUL, SAINT d. a.d. 64? or 67?, the apostle to...Roman citizen, probably of some means, and Paul was a tentmaker by trade. His Jewish name...finally, Hebrews was not written by St. Paul himself. Pauls first known contact with...
VINCENT DE PAUL, SAINT 1580? 1660, French priest renowned for...Rome he came to the attention of Pope Paul V, who sent him on a mission to the French...Leonard, ed., Letters of St. Vincent de Paul (1938); biographies by H. Daniel...
PAUL OF THE CROSS, SAINT 1694 1775, Italian, religious founder of the Passionists. His original name was Paolo Francesco Danei. He had visions calling...
SAINT PAUL city (1990 pop. 272,235), state capital...the Mississippi and a railroad hub, St. Paul is also an industrial, commercial, and...are in the Midway district, between St. Paul and Minneapolis. The National Hockey Leagues...
WEST SAINT PAUL city (1990 pop. 19,248), Dakota co., SE Minn., a suburb of St. Paul ; inc. 1889. Inks, apparel, paper goods, chemicals, and medical supplies are manufactured in the city...
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