Paul in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
frontACTS, THE BOOK OF.) The leading facts of his life which
appear in that history, subsidiary to its design of sketching
the great epochs in the commencement and development of
Christ's kingdom, are: his conversion (Acts 9), his labours at
Antioch (Acts 11), his first missionary journey (Acts 13; 14),
the visit to Jerusalem at the council on circumcision (Acts
15), introduction of the gospel to Europe at Philippi (Acts
16),: visit to Athens (Acts 17), to Corinth (Acts 18), stay at
Ephesus (Acts 19), parting address to the Ephesian elders at
Miletus (Acts 20), apprehension at Jerusalem, imprisonment at
Casesarea, and voyage to Rome (Acts 21-27). Though of purest
Hebrew blood (Philemon 3:5), "circumcised the eighth day, of
the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, (bearing the
name of the eminent man of that tribe, king Saul), an Hebrew
of the Hebrew," yet his birthplace was the Gentile Tarsus.
(Acts 21:39, "I am a Jew of Tarsus in Cilicia, a citizen of no
mean city.") His father, as himself, was a Pharisee (Acts
23:6). Tarsus was celebrated as a school of Greek literature
(Strabo, Geogr. 1:14)...
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