Paul in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(small, little). Nearly all the original materials for the
life St. Paul are contained in the Acts of the Apostles and
in the Pauline epistles. Paul was born in Tarsus, a city of
Cilicia. (It is not improbable that he was born between A.D.
0 and A.D. 5.) Up to the time of his going forth as an
avowed preacher of Christ to the Gentiles, the apostle was
known by the name of Saul. This was the Jewish name which he
received from his Jewish parents. But though a Hebrew of the
Hebrews, he was born in a Gentile city. Of his parents we
know nothing, except that his father was of the tribe of
Benjamin, Phm 3:5 and a Pharisee, Ac 23:6 that Paul had
acquired by some means the Roman franchise ("I was free
born,") Ac 22:23 and that he was settled in Tarsus. At
Tarsus he must have learned to use the Greek language with
freedom and mastery in both speaking and writing. At Tarsus
also he learned that trade of "tent-maker," Ac 18:3 at which
he afterward occasionally wrought with his own hands. There
was a goat's-hair cloth called cilicium manufactured in
Cilicia, and largely used for tents, Saul's trade was
probably that of making tents of this hair cloth. When St.
Paul makes his defence before his countrymen at Jerusalem,
Ac 22:1 ... he tells them that, though born in Tarsus he had
been "brought up" in Jerusalem. He must therefore, have been
yet a boy when was removed, in all probability for the sake
of his education, to the holy city of his fathers. He
learned, he says, at the feet of Gamaliel." He who was to
resist so stoutly the usurpations of the law had for his
teacher one of the most eminent of all the doctors of the
law. Saul was yet "a young man," Ac 7:58 when the Church
experienced that sudden expansion which was connected with
the ordaining of the seven appointed to serve tables, and
with the special power and inspiration of Stephen. Among
those who disputed with Stephen were some "of them of
Cilicia." We naturally think of Saul as having been one of
these, when we find him afterward keeping the clothes of
those suborned witnesses who, according to the law, De 17:7
were the first to cast stones at Stephen. "Saul," says the
sacred writer significantly "was consenting unto his death."
Saul's conversion. A.D. 37.--The persecutor was to be
converted. Having undertaken to follow up the believers
"unto strange cities." Saul naturally turned his thoughts to
Damascus...
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