c. 4 A.D.- c.64 A.D
The apostle Paul, who was a younger contemporary of Jesus, became the
foremost proselytizer of the new religion of Christianity. His influence
on Christian theology proved to be the most permanent and far-reaching
of all Christian Writers and thinkers. Paul, also known as Saul was born
in Tarsus, a city in Cilicia (in present- day Turkey), a few years into
the Christian era. Although a Roman citizen, he was of Jewish birth, and
in youth he learned Hebrew and received a thorough Jewish education. He
also learned the triad of tent making. As a young man, he went to
Jerusalem to study under rabbi Gamaliel, an eminent Jewish teacher.
Though Paul was in Jerusalem at the same time as Jesus, it is doubtful
whether the two men even met. After the death of Jesus, the early
Christians were regarded as heretics and suffered persecution. For a
while, Paul himself participated in this persecution. However, during a
journey to Damascus he had a vision in which Jesus spoke him, and he was
converted to the new faith. It was the turning point of his life. The
one_ time opponent of Christianity became the most vigorous and
influential proponent of the new religion. Paul spent the rest of his
life thinking and writing about Christianity and winning converts to the
new religion during his missionary activities he traveled extensively in
Asia minor Greece Syria and Palestine Paul was not as successful in
preaching to the Jews as some of the other early Christians indeed his
manner often aroused great antagonism and on several occasions his life
was endangered. In preaching to non-Jews however, Paul was outstandingly
successful, So much so that he is often referred to as the 'Apostle to
the Gentiles" No other man played so large a role in the
propagation of Christianity. After three long missionary trips within
the eastern part of the Roman Empire, Paul returned to Jerusalem. He was
arrested there, and was eventually sent to Rome to stand trail. It is
unclear how that trial ended, or If he ever left Rome. Eventually,
however (most likely about 64 A.D), he was executed near Rome. Paul's
immense influence on the development of Christianity rests upon three
things: (1) his great success as a missionary: (2) his writings, which
constitute an important part of the New Testament; and (3) his role in
the development of Christian theology. Of the twenty _ seven books of
the New Testament, no fewer than fourteen are attributed to Paul. Even
though modern scholars believe that four or five of those books were
actually written by other people, it is clear that Paul is the most
important single author of the New Testament. Paul's influence on
Christian theology has been calculable. His ideas include the following:
Jesus was not merely an inspired human prophet, but was actually divine.
Chris died for our sins, and his suffering can redeem us. Man cannot
achieve salvation by attempting to conform to biblical injunctions, but
only by accepting Christ: conversely, if one accepts Christ, his sins
will be forgiven. Paul also enunciated the doctrine of original sin (see
Romans5:12-19). Since obedience to the law alone cannot provide
salvation, Paul insisted that there was no need for converts to
Christianity to accept Jewish dietary restrictions, or to conform to the
rituals of the Mosaic Code, or even to be circumcised. Several of the
other early Christian leaders disagreed strongly with Paul on this
point, and if their views had prevailed, it seems doubtful that
Christianity would have spread so rapidly throughout the Roman Empire.
Paul never married, and though there seems to be no way of proving it,
he apparently never had sexual relations with a woman. His views on sex
and on woman, because on their corporation into Holy Scripture, have had
a marked influence upon later attitudes. His most famous dictum on the
subject (I Corinthians 7:8.9) is: "I saw therefore to the unmarried
and the widows, it is good for them if they can abide even as I. But if
they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to
burn" Paul, more than any other man, was responsible for the
transformation of Christianity from a Jews sect into a world religion.
His central ideas of the divinity of Christ and of justification by
faith alone have remained basic to Christian thought through out all the
intervening centuries. Subsequent Christian's theologies, including
Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin, have been profoundly influenced
by his writings. Indeed influence of Paul's ideas has been so great that
some scholars have claimed that he, rather than Jesus, should be
regarded as the principal founder of the Christian religion. Such a view
seems to extreme. However, even if Paul's influence has not been on a
par with Jesus', it has been vastly greatest than that of any other
Christian thinker. |