Saint Paul the Apostle
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from Wish List failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
Buy Now for $5.99
No valid payment method on file.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Bob Lord
-
Penny Lord
-
By:
-
Bob Lord
-
Penny Lord
About this listen
Saint Paul was born in Tarsus, a port city in the southeastern part of Turkey. He was from a Jewish family who traced their roots back to the tribe of Benjamin. This Jewish community had been sent to Tarsus during the Diaspora. Pompey had made Tarsus the capital of the province of Cilicia. Mark Anthony gave the people of Tarsus freedom, immunity, and the right to become Roman citizens, which accounts for Paul's reference to, and pride in, his Roman citizenship. He invoked his rights as a Roman citizen many times during his ministry to get out of some serious scrapes with the Jews.
Saint Paul was originally named Saul, after the first king of the Jews. But the Jews in Tarsus had assimilated so greatly with the Romans that he was probably given the Roman equivalent of Saul, which is Paul, at birth. He was called Paul in public, and Saul among Jewish gatherings. It was not unusual for Jews who had integrated into foreign cultures to take on a Hebrew name and an ethnic name. He grew up under two cultures, that of his Hebrew ancestors, and that of the Greco-Roman customs of his adopted country. He was greatly influenced by the Greek background; Greek was a second language to him. He studied Greek philosophers.
Nothing is certain as to when he came to Jerusalem. His whole family moved there when he was a young man. The year AD 30 is as good a barometer as it gets. Scripture scholars claim there was little possibility that he ever saw Jesus during his lifetime. There are others who believe that, while he may never have spoken to the Lord, he may have seen him before his death. Remember, they really frequented the same circles. They were at different ends of the spectrum, but they were both religious men.
Saint Paul was a Pharisee. He studied under Gamaliel for three or four years. This would have been during the time of Jesus' ministry, AD 30 to 33. Jesus became very prominent after the arrest and murder of John the Baptist, probably about a year or so into his ministry. The temple area of Jerusalem was always abuzz with rumors about this new Prophet. The personality of Paul was that of a zealot, a nosy body, who had to know everything that was going on, all the time. Also, he was a defender of the Jewish law, which he believed Jesus was breaking. Paul would have agreed with those who considered Jesus a blasphemer and lawbreaker, who should be dealt with accordingly.
©1990 Journeys of Faith (P)1990 Journeys of Faith