Originally named Saul, he was born
at Tarsus. He was raised as a pharasaical Jew. At first he
persecuted Christians, even taking part in the stoning of St. Stephen,
the first Christian martyr.
On the road to Damascus, he was
struck blind and experienced a vision that led to his conversion and the
conviction that he was to bring Christianity to the Gentiles. He was baptized
and went to Arabia for three years of prayer and reflection.
Returning to Jerusalem, the apostles
were wary of him until St. Barnabas perceived his sincerity. A tireless
missionary and elegant writer, he led a dangerous and adventurous life
on behalf of Christ. He worked in Jerusalem, Antioch, Cyprus, Asia
Minor, Greece, Ephesus (where he wrote I Corinthians), Macedonia, and Achaia
(where he wrote Romans.)
Upon his return to Jerusalem,
he was attacked and imprisoned for his preaching and invoked the privilege
of his Roman citizenship to be tried in Rome. On his way, he was
shipwrecked at Malta. Finally reaching Rome, he was kept in house
arrest for two years awaiting trial and wrote the four "captivity" epistles.
Presumably acquitted, he returned
to Ephesus, and may have gone to Spain. According to tradition, he
was beheaded in Rome during the persecution of Nero and is buried where
the basilica of St. Paul's "outside the walls" now stands. The date
of his death is thought to be June 29, 65 AD.
Paul had a profound effect on the
development of Christian theology including promulgation of the concepts
of redemption through faith in Christ, the abrogation of the old Law and
the beginning of the age of the Spirit, Christ as the eternal Son of God,
His pre-existence before the Incarnation, His exaltation to God's right
hand after the Resurrection, the Church as the mystical Body of Christ,
and the belief that Christians live in Christ and will eventually be transformed
at the final resurrection.
It would be difficult to overstate
St. Paul's influence on Christian thought and history, not only through
such figures as Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin, but continuing
on today through the reading of the Bible.
Incidentally, the image of Paul
is thought to be fairly accurate. He was described in contemporary
documents as being small, bald, bow-legged, with a long nose and eyebrows
that met. He has consistently been depicted as having a long beard
and face and deep set eyes.
Finally, he is the senior member
of our congregation having attended every Eucharist at St. Paul's since
its founding.
Taken largely from The Oxford Dictionary of Saints,
2nd ed, 1987, David Hugh Farmer