Saint
Paul
June 29th
Feast of Saints Peter & Paul
Patron Saints of the Patriarchate of Antioch
On this day we celebrate the Feast of Saint Paul
We can learn much about the
gentile Disciple from the Book of Acts and his 14 Epistles. These two
mutually–independent sources confirm and complement each other, in spite of
certain discrepancies of detail.
Saint Paul was born in Tarsus
in Cicilia about 10 A.D. of
the tribe of Benjamin, and was a Roman citizen. As a young man, he was educated
in Jerusalem
by Gamaliel, who gave him a
thorough grounding in religious doctrine of the school
of Pharisees.
He became a bitter persecutor of the infant Church. But on the road to Damascus,
where he was going to persecute and bring the few faithful back to present to
the Jewish Court, 34 A.D., a vision of the Risen Jesus changed his whole life.
The Risen Lord opened his mind to the truth of the Christian faith and revealed
that He had chosen him to be the Apostle of the Pagans. From then on, Paul
dedicated his life to serving Christ, Who had personally chosen him as His
follower (PH.3:12). After spending some time in Arabia,
he returned to Damascus
and began his preaching there. In about 39 A.D., after a brief visit to Jerusalem,
he went to Syria
and Cilicia,
until Barnabas fetched him back to Antioch,
where they preached together.
During his first missionary journey, he began to use the name,
"Paul", instead of his Jewish name, "Saul". Fourteen years
after his conversion, he went to Jerusalem
to take part in the Apostle's Council and it was partly through his influence
that the Council agreed that the Jewish law was not binding on Christian
converts from paganism (Acts
15). His mission as an Apostle to the pagans was formally sanctioned. In
58, Paul was arrested in Jerusalem
(Acts
21:27) and imprisoned until 60 A.D. In the autumn of 60, Festus the
Procurator sent him to Rome
under escort, where, after two years in prison, his case was dismissed. It is
possible that he went to Spain—a
subsequent imprisonment in Rome
ended, according to every ancient tradition, in Martyrdom, probably in the year
67 A.D.
CHARACTER
of PAUL
Saint Paul was a person of great dedication, capable of pursuing
an idea with a complete disregard for the cost. For him, the only thing that
mattered was God, and, as God's servant, he refused any sort of compromise. It
was with equally single-minded determination that Paul had persecuted those he
considered God's enemies (1 Tim:13).
The Apostle knew what work he had been given by God (1 Cor.9:16) and he let
nothing stop him from doing it: hard work, exhaustion, suffering, poverty,
danger and death. Far from letting these things weaken his love for God or Christ, he welcomed them, since
they helped him to grow into the image of his suffering and crucified Master.
The knowledge that his vocation was unique, gave him an enormous ambition,
without making him arrogant. He never forgot that having persecuted the Church
of Christ,
he was the un–worthiest of all the Apostles. All of his achievements, he
attributed to God's Grace, working through Him.(1Co.15:10)
PAUL
PREACHING & WRITING
His main teaching was that Christ had been crucified and had Risen from the
dead and all of these were told in the Scriptures (1 Co.2:2;Ga 3:1). And what he calls "his Good News"
was identical with the faith of the Apostles and the Church of his time. He
emphasized the conversion of Pagans. Though he probably never met Jesus during
his earthly life, Paul was familiar with His teaching (1 Th.4:15) and
confidently claimed to have seen the Risen Christ, not only on the Damascus
Rd. (Acts
22:17); he also had revelations and ecstasies (2 Co.12:1–4).
Within his lifetime, Saul, who became known by the Greek name, Paul (which
means the sent one), made three major missionary journeys, extending from Jerusalem
and Antioch of Syria, westward through Cypress
and Asia Minor, into part of Europe,
and finally to Rome,
where he was imprisoned and died. It is important to remember that Paul's 14
letters were not meant as theological treatises: They were a response to
questions or situations in a particular Church. They were dissertations
intended for a specific circle of readers, and in a general way, for all the
faithful. Paul's letters do not give any systematic and exhaustive exposition
of his teaching; they are all commentaries on certain points of sermons that he
preached. The depth and range of his letters, give us all the essentials of Paul's
message. No matter what the reason was for writing, his basic teaching remained
the same: That Christ died and Rose from the dead, union with Christ, and that
such a union makes us members of the body of Christ (1 Cor. 12:4–20). The
"union with Christ" reminds me of the story of a little girl, who was
telling a teacher what Jesus meant to her. She concluded by quoting these
comforting words of the Lord: "And I give unto them eternal life, and they
shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of My hand" (John 10:28).
Just then, jokingly, the teacher piped up with the question: "But suppose
you slip through His fingers?" Quick as a flash, the little girl replied:
"Never. Never. You see,I
am one of the fingers."
Troparion of Saint Paul in Tone Four
Leaders of the Apostles and teachers of the world,
pray to the Master of all to grant peace to the world and great mercy to our
souls