Paul in Easton's Bible Dictionary
=Saul (q.v.) was born about the same time as our Lord. His
circumcision-name was Saul, and probably the name
Paul was also
given to him in infancy "for use in the Gentile
world," as
"Saul" would be his Hebrew home-name. He was a
native of Tarsus,
the capital of Cilicia, a Roman province in the
south-east of
Asia Minor. That city stood on the banks of the
river Cydnus,
which was navigable thus far; hence it became a
centre of
extensive commercial traffic with many countries
along the
shores of the Mediterranean, as well as with the
countries of
central Asia Minor. It thus became a city
distinguished for the
wealth of its inhabitants.
Tarsus was also the seat of a famous university,
higher in
reputation even than the universities of Athens and
Alexandria,
the only others that then existed. Here Saul was
born, and here
he spent his youth, doubtless enjoying the best
education his
native city could afford. His father was of the
straitest sect
of the Jews, a Pharisee, of the tribe of Benjamin,
of pure and
unmixed Jewish blood (Acts 23:6; Phil. 3:5). We
learn nothing
regarding his mother; but there is reason to
conclude that she
was a pious woman, and that, like-minded with her
husband, she
exercised all a mother influence in moulding the
character of
her son, so that he could afterwards speak of
himself as being,
from his youth up, "touching the righteousness which
is in the
law, blameless" (Phil. 3:6)...
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