What
is shown below is taken word for word from The Sierra Reference
Encyclopedia.
Copyright
1996 P. F. Collier, L. P. All rights reserved.
PAUL, ST. (died
c. A.D. 68), founder of Pauline Christianity. His name was originally
Saul. He later claimed that he was a Jew of the tribe of Benjamin,
from a long-established Pharisee family in Tarsus. According to
Acts (though not according to Paul himself) he studied in Jerusalem
under Gamaliel, the leader of the Pharisees and grandson of Hillel.
This account of Paul's youth, however, is subject to doubt, since
the tribe of Benjamin had long ceased to exist, and Pharisee families
are otherwise unknown in Tarsus. According to Paul's opponents,
the Ebionites, he came from a family of recent converts to Judaism.
He learnt the trade of tent-making (or perhaps leather-working),
by which he made his living.
While still
a youth in Jerusalem, Saul became part of the opposition to the
newly formed Jerusalem Church (the disciples of Jesus, who, believing
that Jesus had been resurrected, continued to hope for his return
to complete his messianic mission). Saul was present at the death
of Stephen. Soon after, Saul was an active persecutor of the Jerusalem
Church, entering its synagogues and arresting its members. Acts
represents this as due to Saul's zeal as a Pharisee, but this is
doubtful, as the Pharisees, under Gamaliel, were friendly to the
Jerusalem Church (see Acts 5).
Moreover, Saul
was acting in concert with the high priest (Acts 9:2), who was a
Sadducee opponent of the Pharisees. It seems likely that Saul was
at this period an employee of the Roman-appointed high priest, playing
a police role in suppressing movements regarded as a threat to the
Roman occupation. Since Jesus had been crucified on a charge of
sedition, his followers were under the same cloud.
The high priest
then entrusted Saul with an important mission, which was to travel
to Damascus to arrest prominent members of the Jerusalem Church.
This must have been a clandestine kidnapping operation, since Damascus
was not under Roman rule at the time but was in fact a place of
refuge for the persecuted Nazarenes. On the way to Damascus, Paul
experienced a vision of Jesus that converted him from persecutor
to believer. Paul joined the Christians of Damascus, but soon he
had to flee Damascus to escape the officers of King Aretas (II Corinthians
11:32-33), though a later, less authentic, account in Acts 9:22-25
changes his persecutors to "the Jews."
After his vision,
according to Paul's own account (Galatians 1:17), he went into the
desert of Arabia for a period, seeking no instruction. According
to Acts, however, he sought instruction first from Ananias of Damascus
and then from the apostles in Jerusalem. These contradictory accounts
reflect a change in Paul's status: in his own view, he had received
a revelation that put him far higher than the apostles, while in
later Church opinion he had experienced a conversion that was only
the beginning of his development as a Christian.
Paul's self-assessment
is closer to the historical truth, which is that he was the founder
of Christianity. Neither Jesus himself nor his disciples had any
intention of founding a new religion. The need for a semblance of
continuity between Christianity and Judaism, and between Gentile
and Jewish Christianity, led to a playing-down of Paul's creative
role. The split that took place between Paul and the Jerusalem Church
is minimized in the Paulinist book of Acts, which contrasts with
Paul's earlier and more authentic account in Galatians 2.
Paul's originality
lies in his conception of the death of Jesus as saving mankind from
sin. Instead of seeing Jesus as a messiah of the Jewish type human
saviour from political bondage he saw him as a salvation-deity whose
atoning death by violence was necessary to release his devotees
for immortal life. This view of Jesus' death seems to have come
to Paul in his Damascus vision. Its roots lie not in Judaism, but
in mystery-religion, with which Paul was acquainted in Tarsus. The
violent deaths of Osiris, Attis, Adonis, and Dionysus brought divinization
to their initiates. Paul, as founder of the new Christian mystery,
initiated the Eucharist, echoing the communion meal of the mystery
religions. The awkward insertion of eucharistic material based on
I Corinthians 11:23-26 into the Last Supper accounts in the Gospels
cannot disguise this, especially as the evidence is that the Jerusalem
Church did not practise the Eucharist.
Paul's missionary
campaign began c.44 in Antioch. He journeyed to Cyprus, where he
converted Sergius Paulus, the governor of the island. It was probably
at this point that he changed his name from Saul to Paul, in honor
of his distinguished convert. After journeys in Asia Minor where
he made many converts, Paul returned to Antioch. His second missionary
tour (51-53) took him as far as Corinth; and his third (54-58) led
to a three-year stay in Ephesus. It was during these missionary
periods that he wrote his Epistles.
Paul's new religion
had the advantage over other salvation-cults of being attached to
the Hebrew Scriptures, which Paul now reinterpreted as forecasting
the salvation-death of Jesus. This gave Pauline Christianity an
awesome authority that proved attractive to Gentiles thirsting for
salvation. Paul's new doctrine, however, met with disapproval from
the Jewish-Christians of the Jerusalem Church, who regarded the
substitution of Jesus' atoning death for the observance of the Torah
as a lapse into paganism. Paul was summoned to Jerusalem by the
leaders James (Jesus' brother), Peter, and John to explain his doctrine
(c.50).
At the ensuing
conference, agreement was reached that Paul's Gentile converts did
not need to observe the Torah. This was not a revolutionary decision,
since Judaism had never insisted on full conversion to Judaism for
Gentiles. But Paul on this occasion concealed his belief that the
Torah was no longer valid for Jews either. He was thus confirmed
in the role of "apostle to the Gentiles," with full permission
to enroll Gentiles in the messianic movement without requiring full
conversion to Judaism.
It was when
Peter visited him in Antioch and became aware of the full extent
of Paul's views that a serious rift began between Pauline and Jewish
Christianity. At a second conference in Jerusalem (c.55), Paul was
accused by James of teaching Jews "to turn their backs on Moses"
(Acts 21:21). Again, however, Paul evaded the charge by concealing
his views, and he agreed to undergo a test of his own observance
of the Torah. His deception, however, was detected by a group of
"Asian Jews" (probably Jewish Christians) who were aware
of his real teaching. A stormy protest ensued in which Paul feared
for his life and was rescued by the Roman police, to whom he declared
for his protection that he was a Roman citizen. This surprising
announcement was the end of Paul's association with the Jerusalem
Church, to whom the Romans were the chief enemy.
The Roman commandant,
Claudius Lysias, decided to bring Paul before the Sanhedrin in order
to discover the cause of the disturbance. With great presence of
mind, Paul appealed to the Pharisee majority to acquit him, claiming
to be a Pharisee like James. Paul was rescued by the Pharisees from
the high priest, like Peter before him. However, the high priest,
resenting this escape, appointed a body of men to assassinate Paul.
Learning of the plot, Paul again placed himself under the protection
of the Romans, who transported him by armed guard from Jerusalem
to Caesarea. The High Priest Ananias was implacable, no doubt because
of Paul's defection from his police task in Damascus, and laid a
charge of anti-Roman activity against him. Paul appealed for a trial
in Rome before Caesar, his right as a Roman citizen. The assertion
of Acts that the Jewish "elders" were also implicated
in the charges against Paul is unhistorical, since these same elders
had just acquitted him in his Sanhedrin trial. Paul was sent to
Rome, and here our information ends. Legends speak of his eventual
martyrdom in Rome.
Paul's
authentic voice is found in his Epistles. Here he appears as an
eloquent writer, skilled in asserting his authority over his converts
as their inspired teacher. The view often asserted, however, that
Paul writes in the style of a rabbi is incorrect. His occasional
attempts to argue in rabbinical style (e.g., Romans 7:1-6) reveal
his lack of knowledge of rabbinic logic. Paul's letters belong to
Greek literature and have affinity to Stoic and Cynic literature.
His knowledge of the Scriptures is confined to their Greek translation,
the Septuagint. Paul was a religious genius, who invested Greek
mystery-religion with the historical sweep and authority of the
Jewish Bible.
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