* * - - | - º * * + y · 4. ^><á.¿| '._ſº: , „Y.§§§§ • .** …, /* ;...},��. &&-*** .. ?!<>• • • ***)· ,},|--|׺.! \;$ $ \,,- ;*.----+ + w:‘.x**{ º.---» |-...š, *:- ∞-'.|-} } , .*|--3. ^ ) ;* **, , )-. №ſ-* ----|--|-~:-----|-••-...žº|---.*:-(°-°) » , Zºº..…”- {{** . . ; „“.· *--%(-,- ( * cºſ, - & +'' -«{}, , , sººſ£& ģ §§2 ºff,¿¿.*§ ø ± ø §. – ) ſºſſºſ, º§, 4g?| ſºț¢ºš, * , , };ºſ,*ą Fºy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!a!!!!!!!!!! !! !!!!!!!!! <>\ſ&© : ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■— Ķīķiſ ·Ñ§§§ º HITTIINȚIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII§Ë!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ||- № 8 $$$$ §§ ∞ § !; Co immºnlºlliſ. Tº \, §§ ºzºº ºr cº-ºººººººººººººº. i Y. fººtººº-ºº: ●}*• . №ſ'}}','; ``\ % § Æ # Ē Ė F-J # Ē Ē §E #F ± ſ- Ē sweexo~ ~ - £3%%%%%A)Ž ſá%º\!, № ∞ *ſ Cſ [] () () [] C [] 'ſ C) U C 0 [] [] () 0 Œ Q () [] 0 () [] 0 C C 0 [× · ·: Tºll ∞ √° √≠ ≤ ∞ √∞ √∞ √° √≠ ≤ ∞, ∞, ∞, ∞, ∞- †ffffffffff;ĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪĪffHi, ſf. lºlºlºlºlºlºlillºlºſſ C SF | T Lý“, (* *?)& > --~~); “TXT”. -, ,‘ “ ’ſ’* , , (...) ğ }------- « · · · ·---- \ºöſſ;^; ºffs#.**§§«?Ñ DR. FARRAR'S LATEST AND GREATEST BOOK. The Ufe of St. Paul —E Y— ºś.<-ºº- CANON FARRAR, D.D., F.R.S. Arch-deacon of Westminster. CONTAINING CORRECT NMAPS AND ILLUSTRATED witH - º - • A LARGE NUMBER OF & Designed by World-renowned Artists. - *— ALSO HEPHDDUCTIONS OF WORLD-FBIIDUS PRINTINES By RAPHAEL, RUBENS, DORE and other Master Painters. ~ *- —sº- —- - H E N R Y N E I L, PHILADELPHIA. PREFACE. N the Zife of Christ I endeavored, to the best of my power, to furnish, in the form of a narrative, such a commentary upon the Gospels as should bring to bear the most valuable results of modern research. By studying every line and word of the Evangelists with close and reverent attention; by seeking for the most genuine readings and the most accurate translations; by visiting the scenes in the midst of which our Lord had moved; by endeavoring to form a conception - º at once true and vivid of the circumstances of the age in which He lived, and the daily conditions of religious thought and national custom by which He was surrounded—I thought that, while calling attention in large to His Divine Nature as the Incarnate Son of God, I might be enabled to set forth in clear outline the teach- ing and the actions of that human life which He lived for our example, and of that death which He died for us men and for our salvation. - . - In that work it was no small part of my object to enable readers to study the Gos- pels with a fuller understanding of their significance, and with a more intense impression of their reality and truth. In the present volume I have undertaken a similar task for the Acts of the Apostles and the thirteen Epistles of St. Paul. My first desire through- out has been to render some assistance towards the study of that large portion of the New Testament which is occupied with the labors and writings of the Apostle of the Gentiles; to show the grandeur of the work and example of one who was indeed a “vessel of elec- tion; ” and to bring his character and history to bear on the due comprehension of those Epistles, which have bequeathed to all subsequent ages an inestimable legacy of wisdom and knowledge. In order to accomplish this task, I can conscientiously say that I have used my best diligence and care. Circumstances have precluded me from carrying out my original intention of actually visiting the countries in which St. Paul labored; and to do this was the less necessary because abundant descriptions of them may be found in the works of many recent travellers. This branch of the subject has been amply illus- trated in the well-known volumes of Messrs. Conybeare and Howson, and Mr. Thomas Lewin. To those admirable works all students of St. Paul must be largely indebted, and I need not say that my own book is not intended in any way to come into competition - - (iii) i || º Z | Ü H - ..s - 313234 iv PREFACE. with theirs. It has been written in great measure with a different purpose, as well as from a different point of view. My chief object has been to give a definite, accurate, and intelligent impression of St. Paul's teaching; of the controversies in which he was en- gaged ; of the circumstances which educed his statements of doctrine and practice; of the in most heart of his theology in each of its phases; of his Epistles as a whole, and of each Epistle in particular as complete and perfect in itself. The task is, I think, more neces- sary than might be generally supposed. In our custom of studying the Bible year after year in separate texts and isolated chapters we are but too apt to lose sight of what the Bible is as a whole, and even of the special significance of its separate books. I thought, then, that if I could in any degree render each of the Epistles more thoroughly familiar, either in their general aspect, or in their special particulars, I should be rendering some service—however humble—to the Church of God. With this object it would have been useless merely to retranslate the Epistles. To do this, and to append notes to the more difficult expressions, would have been a very old and a comparatively easy task. But to make the Epistles an integral part of the life— to put the reader in the position of those to whom the Epistles were first read in the in- fant communities of Macedonia and Proconsular Asia—was a method at once less fre- quently attempted, and more immediately necessary. I wish above all to make the Epistles comprehensible and real. On this account I have constantly deviated from the English version. Of the merits of that version, its incomparable force and melody, it would be impossible to speak with too much reverence, and it only requires the removal of errors which were inevitable to the age in which it was executed, to make it as nearly perfect as any work of man can be. But our very familiarity with it is often a barrier to our due understanding of many passages; “for words,” it has been truly said, “when often repeated, do ossify the very organs of intelligence.” My object in translating without reference to the honored phrases of our English Bible has expressly been, not only to correct where correction was required, but also to brighten the edge of expressions which time has dulled, and to reproduce, as closely as possible, the exact force and form of the original, even in those roughnesses, turns of expression, and unfinished clauses which are rightly modified in versions intended for public reading. To aim in these ren- derings at rhythm or grace of style has been far from my intention. I have simply tried to adopt the best reading, to give its due force to each expression, tense, and particle, and to represent as exactly as is at all compatible with English idiom what St. Paul meant in the very way in which he said it. With the same object, I have avoided wearying the reader with those interminable discussions of often unimportant minutiae—those endless refutations of impossible hypotheses—those exhaustive catalogues of untenable explanations which encumber so many of our Biblical commentaries. Both as to readings, renderings, and explanations I have given at least a definite conclusion, and indicated as briefly and as comprehen- sively as possible the grounds on which it is formed. PREFACE. V In excluding the enumeration of transient opinions, I have also avoided the em- barrassing multiplication of needless references. When any German book has been well translated I have referred to the translation of it by its English title, and I have excluded in every way the mere semblance of research. In this work, as in the Zife of Christ, I have made large use of illustrations from Hebrew literature. The Talmud is becoming better known every day; the Mishna is open to the study of every scholar in the mag- nificent work of Surenhusius; and the most important treatises of the Gemara—such as the Berachóth and the Abhôda Zara—are now accessible to all, in French and German translations of great learning and accuracy. I have diligently searched the works of various Jewish scholars, such as Jost, Grätz, Schwab, Weill, Rabbinowicz, Deutsch, Derenbourg, Munk, and others; but I have had two great advantages—first in the very full collection of passages from every portion of the Talmud, by Mr. P. J. Hershon, in his Talmudic Commentaries on Genesis and Exodus—an English translation of the former of which is now in the press—and, secondly, in the fact that every single Tal- mudic reference in the following pages has been carefully verified by a learned Jewish clergyman—the Rev. M. Wolkenberg, formerly a missionary to the Jews in Bulgaria. All scholars are aware that references to the Gemara are in general of a most inaccurate and uncertain character, but I have reason to hope that, apart, it may be, from a few accidental errata, every Hebraic reference in the following pages may be received with absolute reliance. The most pleasant part of my task remains. It is to offer my heartfelt thanks to the many friends who have helped me to revise the following pages, or have given me the benefit of their kind suggestions. To one friend in particular—Mr. C. J. Monro, late fellow of Trin. Coll., Cambridge—I owe the first expression of my sincerest grati- tude. To the Rev. J. L1. Davies and the Rev. Prof. Plumptre I am indebted for an amount of labor and trouble such as it can be the happiness of few authors to receive from scholars at once so competent and so fully occupied by public and private duties. From the Very Rev. the Dean of Westminster; from Mr. Walter Leaf, Fellow of Trin. Coll., Cambridge, my friend and former pupil; from the Rev. J. E. Kempe, Rector of St. James's, Piccadilly; from Mr. R. Garnett, of the British Museum; and from my valued colleagues in the parish of St. Margaret's, the Rev. H. H. Montgomery and the Rev. J. S. Northcote, I have received valuable advice, or kind assistance in the laborious task of correcting the proof-sheets. The Bishop of Durham had kindly looked over the first few pages, and but for his elevation to his present high position, I might have derived still further benefit from his wide learning and invariable kindness. If my book fail to achieve the purposes for which it was written, I shall at least have enjoyed the long weeks of labor spent in the closest study of the Word of God, and next to this I shall value the remembrance that I received from so many friends a self-sacrificing kindness which I had so little right to expect, and am so little able to repay. I desire also to express my best obligations to my Publishers, and the gentlemen vi PREFACE. connected with their firm, who have spared no labor in seeing these volumes through the press. After having received such ungrudging aid it would be ungrateful to dwell on the disadvantages in the midst of which this book has been written. I have done my best under the circumstances in which a task of such dimensions was alone possible; and though I have fallen far short of my own ideal—though I am deeply conscious of the many necessary imperfections of my work—though it is hardly possible that I should have escaped errors in a book involving so many hundreds of references, and necessitat- ing the examination of so many critical and exegetical questions—I still hope that these volumes will be accepted as furnishing another part of a humble but faithful endeavor to enable those who read them to acquire a more thorough knowledge of a large portion of the Word of God. FREDERIC W. FARRAR. W §§ A §§ & \\\\\\\ N § \\ § º *~. % / !, º w - - s—s "ºffh'iº º SS ¥º >es *s N.Y a # **śî §§§ ºW Sº & “ss. \ N * ...º. x Wºes: S$ º \\\\ * * § º W/ º - & N. Yº s § & § iºs Jº §§ º “º º §s |NºW SS Sºs SS-º, gºsº NY § N § º § N § CŞs s *_º-ºº: º §º-sº sº §ssºsºft, * º §§ sº gº ºsis: § º § § sº §º %| | iº N < *ś º § /NSW § 4%\SS ºğsº wº º jºsses § §§§ N sº *: ~ - 22% zº.” sº g4. ńº CONTENTS 3300k I. The Training of the Apostle. CHAPTER I. Introductory. various types of the Apostolate.—St. Peter and St. John.—The place of St. Paul in the History of the Church.-- His training in Judaism.—What we may learn of his life.—Modern Criticism of the Acts of the Apostles.— Authorities for the Biography of St. Paul.—Records, though fragmentary, suffice for a true estimate.- . Grandeur of the Apostle's work . CHAPTER II. - Boyhood in a Heathen City. Date of his Birth.-Question of Birthplace.—Giscala or Tarsus?—The Scenery of Tarsus.—Its History and Trade.— Paul's indifference to the beauties of Nature.—His Parentage.—Early Education.—Contact with Paganism.— Paganism as seen at Tarsus.-Paganism as it was.—A decadent Culture.—Impressions left on the mind of St. Paul.—St. Paul a Hebraist.—His supposed familiarity with Classical Literature shown to be an unten- able opinion . e cº ge © e CHAPTER III. The Sehool of the Rabbi. Roman Citizenship.—School Life at Tarsus and Jerusalem.—Gamaliel.—Permanent effects of Rabbinic training as traced in the Epistles.—St. Paul’s knowledge of the Old Testament.—His method of quoting and apply- ing the Scriptures.—Instances.—Rabbinic in form, free in spirit.—Freedom from Rabbinic faults © e CHAPTER IV. Saul the Pharisee. Early struggles—The minutiae of Pharisaism.—Sense of their insufficiency.—Legal blamelessness gave no peace— Pharisaic hypocrisies.—Troubled years.—Memories of these early doubts never obliterated.—Had Saul seen Jesus?—It is almost certain that he had not.—Was he a married man?—Strong probability that he was . CHAPTER V. St. Peter and the First Penteeosts Saul's first Contact with the Christians.—Source of their energy.—The Resurrection.—The Ascension.—First Meet- ing.—Election of Matthias.--The Upper Room.—Three Temples.—The Descent of the Spirit at Pentecost.— Earthquake, Wind, and Flame.—Tongues.—Nature of the Gift.—Varying Opinions.—Ancient and Modern Views.--Glossolaly at Corinth.-Apparent Nature of the Sign.—Derisive Comment.—Speech of Peter.— Immediate Effects on the Progress of the Church . e te © • e te « » o tº Q CHAPTER VI. Early Persecutions. Beauty and Power of the Primitive Christian Life.—Alarm of the Sanhedrin.—Peter and John.—Gamaliel.—Toler ation and Caution.—Critical Arguments against the Genuineness of his Speech Examined . 3300ſ: II. - St. Stephen and the Hellenists. CHAPTER VII. The Dispersion : Hebraism and Hellenism. Preparation for Christianity by three events.-Spread of the Greek Language.—Rise of the Roman Empire.—Dis- persion of the Jews.—Its vast Effects.—Its Influence on the Greeks and Romans.—Its Influence on the Jews PAGE. I9 25 4I 49 6I (vii) viii CONTENTS. themselves.—Worked in Opposite Directions.—Pharisaic Jews.—Growing Power of the Scribes.—Decay of Spirituality.—Liberal Jews.—Commerce Cosmopolitan.—Hellenes and Hellenists.-Classes of Christians Tabulated.—Two Schools of Hellenism.—Alexandrian Hellenists.—Hebraizing Hellenists—Hellenists among the Christians.—Widows.--The Seven.—Stephen CHAPTER VIII. Work and Martyrdom of St. Stephen. Success of the Seven.—Pre-eminent Faith of Stephen.—Clear Views of the Kingdom.—Tardier Enlightenment of the Apostles.—Hollow Semblance of Union with Judaism.—Relation of the Law to the Gospel.—Ministry of St. Stephen.—Hellenistic Synagogues.—Saul.—Power of St. Stephen.—Rabbinic Views of Messiah. — Scriptural Views of a Suffering Messiah. —Suspected Heresies.—Discomfiture and Violence of the Hellenists. —St. Stephen Arrested.—Charges brought against him.—The Trial.—“The Face of an Angel.”—The Speech delivered in Greek.—Line of Argument.—Its Consummate Skill.—Proofs of its Authenticity.—His Method of Refutation and Demonstration.—Sudden Outburst of Indignation.—Lawless Proceedings.-‘‘He fell Asleep.” Saul e & e o e * e * © * e © te © go º º e te o e sº º & tº º e º PAGE 79 89 3500t; III. The Conversion. CHAPTER IX. Saul the Persecutor. 'Age of Saul.—His Violence.—Severity of the Persecution underrated.—“Compelled them to blaspheme.”— Flight of the Christians.—Continued Fury of Saul.—Asks for Letters to Damascus.-The High Priest Theo- philus.-Aretas e * tº & º CHAPTER X. The Conversion of Saul. The Commissioner of the Sanhedrin.—The Journey to Damascus.-Inevitable Reaction and Reflection.—Lonely Musings.-Kicking against the Pricks.--Doubts and Difficulties.—Noon.—The Journey's End.—The Vision and the Voice.—Change of Heart.—The Spiritual Miracle.—Sad Entrance into Damascus.—Ananias.-The Conversion as an Evidence of Christianity . tº ſº & e CHAPTER XI. The Retirement of St. Paul. Saul a “Nazarene.”—Records of this Period fragmentary.—His probable Movements guided by Psychological Considerations.—His Gospel not “of man.—Yearnings for Solitude.—Days in Damascus.-Sojourn in Ara- bia.—Origin of the “Stake in the Flesh.”—Feelings which it caused.—Influence on the Style of the Epis- tles.—Peculiarities of St. Paul's Language.—Alternating Sensibility and Boldness . ſº tº e tº e CHAPTER XII. The Beginning of a Long Martyrdom. “To the Jew first.”—Reappearance in Damascus.-Saul in the Synagogues.—No ordinary Disputant.—The Syllo- gism of Violence.—First Plot to Murder him.—His Escape from Damascus.-Journey to Jerusalem . Qe CHAPTER XIII. Saul’s Reception at Jerusalem. Visit to Jerusalem.—Apprehensions and Anticipations.—St. Peter's Goodness of Heart.—Saul and James.—Con- trast of their Character and Epistles.—The Intervention of Barnabas.-Intercourse with St. Peter.—Saul and the Hellenists.-Trance and Vision of Saul at Jerusalem.—Plot to Murder him.—Flight.—Silent Period at Tarsus tº º tº ſº e * wº tº g e te e o 3500ſ; IV. The Recognition of the Gentiles. CHAPTER XIV. The Samaritans—The Eunueh–The Centurionn. The brightening Dawn of the Church.—“Other Sheep not of this Fold.”—Consequence of Saul’s Persecution.— I IO II7 I31 I42 I47 CONTENTS. Ix Philip in Samaria.-Simon Magus.-The Ethiopian Eunuch.-Significance of his Baptism.—St. Peter at Joppa.—House of Simon the Tanner.—Two Problems: (1) What was the relation of the Church to the Gen- tiles (2) and to the Levitical Law 2–Christ and the Mosaic Law.—Utterances of the Prophets.—Uncertain- ties of St. Peter.—The Tanner's Roof.—The Trance.—Its strange Significance and Appropriateness.—“This He said . . . making all meats pure.”—Cornelius.—“God is no respecter of persons.”—Bold initiative of Peter.—Ferment at Jerusalem.—How it was appeased & e o wº & & tº w o © © 3500t; W. Antioch. CHAPTER XV. The Second Capital of Christianity. Hellenists boldly preach to the Gentiles.—Barnabas at Antioch.-Need of a Colleague.—He brings Saul from Tar- sus.—The Third Metropolis of the World, the Second Capital of Christianity.—Site and Splendor of Antioch.—Its Population.—Its Moral Degradation.—Scepticism and Credulity.—Daphne and its Asylum.— The Street Singon.—The name of “Christian.”—Its Historic Significance.—Given by Gentiles.—Christiani and Chrestiani.—Not at once adopted by the Church.—Marks a Memorable Epoch.-Joy of Gentile Converts CHAPTER XVI. A Martyrdom and a Retribution. A Year of Happy Work.-Another Vision.—Agabus and the Famine.—Collections for Poor Brethren of Jerusalem. —Paul and Barnabas sent with the Chaluka.-The Royal Family of Adiabene.—The Policy of Herod Agrippa I.—Martyrdom of St. James the Elder.—Seizure and Escape of Peter.—Agrippa in his Splendor.—Smitten of God.—St. Mark Q e e {e e g * e CHAPTER XVII. Judaism and Heathemism. The Church at Antioch.—Stirrings of the Missionary Spirit.—The Prophets and the Gentiles.—Difficulties of the Work.—Hostility of the Jews to the Gospel.—Abrogation of the Law.—A Crucified Messiah. —Political Tim- idity.—Hatred of Gentiles for all Jews and especially for Christian Jews.-Depravity of the Heathen World. —Influx of Oriental Superstitions.—Despairing Pride of Stoicism.—The Voice of the Spirit . o & wº 3300ſ: VI. The First Missionary Journey. • cHAPTER xvii.I. & Cyprus. “Sent forth by the Holy Ghost.”—Ancient Travelling.—Prospects of the Future.—Paul, his Physical and Moral Nature.—His Extraordinary Gifts.—Barnabas.—Mark.-Arrival at Cyprus.-The Pagan Population.—Sala- mis.-The Syrian Aphrodite.—Paphos.-Sergius Paulus.-Elymas.-Just Denunciation and Judgment.— “Saul who also is called Paul” . © & & & & e & CHAPTER XIX. Antioch in Pisidiae Perga.-Defection of Mark.-Passes of the Taurus.-St. Paul's Absorption in his one Purpose.—Pisidian Antioch.- Worship of the Synagogue.—The Parashah and Haphtarah. —The Sermon in the Synagogue.—Example of e wº Paul's Method.—Power of his Preaching.—Its Effect on the Jews.-Immediate Results.-‘‘We turn to the Gentiles.”—Driven from the City e CHAPTER XX. w The Close of the Journey. Iconium.-Persistent Enmity of the Jews.-Lystra.-Healing of the Cripple.—Unwelcome Honors.—The Fickle Mob.-The Stoning.—Probable Meeting with Timothy.—Derbe.—They Retrace their Steps.—Return to Antioch.—Date of the Journey.—Effects of Experience on St. Paul.—The Apostle of the Gentiles. gº CHAPTER XXI. The Consultation at Jerusalem. “Certain from Judaea '.' visit Antioch.-A Hard Dogma.-Circumcision.—A Crushing Yoke.—Paul's Indignation.— . **s PAGE 156 I72 183 I93 2OI 225 X CONTENTS. Reference to Jerusalem.—The Delegates from Antioch.-Sympathy with them in their Journey.—The First Meeting.—The Private Conference.—The Three won over to St. Paul's Views.-Their Request about the Poor.—Titus.—Was he Circumcised ?—Strong Reasons for believing that he was.—Motives of St. Paul.— The Final Synod.—Eager Debate.—The Speech of St. Peter.—St. James: his Character and Speech.-His Scriptural Argument.—Final Results.-The Synod not a “Council.”—The Apostolic Letter.—Not a Compre- hensive and Final “Decree.”—Questions still Unsolved.—Certain Genuineness of the Letter.—Its Prohibi- tions e e e o & e © e g º * ſe CHAPTER XXII. St. Peter and St. Paul at Antioch. Joy at Antioch.-Ascendency of St. Paul.—St. Peter at Antioch.-Arrival of “certain from James.”—“He separated himself.”—Want of Moral Courage.—Unhappy Results.—Arguments of St. Paul.-Character of St. Peter.—A Public Rebuke.—Effects of the Rebuke.—Malignity of the Pseudo Clementine Writings.- Mission-Hunger.—The Quarrel of Paul and Barnabas.—Results of their Separation.—Overruled for Good.— Barnabas and Mark * e e * & & © CHAPTER XXIII. Beginning of the Second Missionary Journey: Paul in Galatia. Paul and Silas.—The Route by Land.—The Cilician Gates.—Derbe.—Where is Barnabas?—Lystra.—“Timothy my Son.”—His Circumcision and Ordination.—The Phrygian and Galatian District.—Scanty Details of the Record.—The Galatians.—Illness of St. Paul.—Kindness of the Galatians.—Varied Forms of Religion.— Pessinus, Ancyra, Tayium.—Their course guided by Divine Intimations.—Troas.—The Vision.—“Come over into Macedonia and help us.”—Meeting with St. Luke.—His Character and Influence 3300t; VII. Christianity in Macedonia. CHAPTER XXIV. Philippi. The Sail to Neapolis.—Philippi.—The Place of Prayer.—Lydia.-Macedonian Women.—Characteristics of Phil- ippian Converts.-The Girl with the Spirit of Python.—The Philippian Praetors.-Their Injustice.—Scourg- ing.—The Dungeon and the Stocks.-Prison Psalms.-The Earthquake.—Conversion of the Jailer.—Honor- ably dismissed from Philippi. ę tº e º 9 gº tº CHAPTER XXV. Thessalonica and Beroea. Thessalonica and its History.—Poverty of the Apostles.—Philippian generosity.—Success among the Gentiles.— Summary of Teaching.—St. Paul’s State of Mind.—The Mob and the Politarchs.-Attack on the House of Jason.—Flight to Beroea.—“These were more noble.”—Sopater.—Escape to Athens . ſº & © e 3300ſ: VIII. Christianity in Achaia. CHAPTER XXVI. St. Paul at Athens. The Spell of Athens.—Its Effect on St. Paul.—A City of Statues.—Heathen Art.—Impression produced on the Mind of St. Paul.—Altar “to the Unknown God.”—Athens under the Empire.—Stoics and Epicureans.— Curiosity excited.—The Areopagus.-A Mock Trial.—Speech of St. Paul.—Its Power, Tact, and Wisdom.— Its many-sided Applications.—Mockery at the Resurrection.—Results of St. Paul’s Visit ... • tº * © CHAPTER XXVII. $ | St. Paul at Corinth. Corinth, Its Population and Trade.—Worship of Aphrodite.—Aquila and Priscilla.—Eager Activity.—Crispus.- Character of the Corinthian Converts.-Effect of Experience on St. Paul’s Preaching.—Rupture with the Jews.--Another Vision.—Gallio.—Discomfiture of the Jews.-Beating of Sosthenes.—Superficial Disdain PAGE 236 256 264 279 299 316 CONTENTS. xi PAGE CHAPTER XXVIII. The First Epistle to the Thessalonians. Timothy with St. Paul.—Advantages of Epistolary Teaching.—Importance of bearing its characteristics in mind. —Vivid Spontaneity of Style.—St. Paul's Form of Greeting.—The Use of “we” and “I.”—Grace and Peace. —The Thanksgiving.—Personal Appeal against Secret Calumnies.—Going off at a Word.—Bitter Complaint against the Jews.—Doctrinal Section.—The Coming of the Lord.—Practical Exhortations.—Unreasonable Fears as Regards the Dead.—Be Ready.—Warning Against Insubordination and Despondency.—Its Recep- tion.—The Second Advent.—Conclusion of the First Epistle . * e e {º} tº © ſº © . 328 CHAPTER XXIX. The Second Epistle to the Thessalonians. News from Thessalonica.-Effects of the First Letter.—A New Danger.—Eschatological Excitement.—“We which are alive and remain.”—St. Paul’s Meaning.—The Day of the Lord.—Destruction of the Roman and the Jewish Temples.—Object of the Second Epistle.—The Epistles Rich in Details, but Uniform in Method.— Consist Generally of Six Sections.—The Greeting.—Doctrinal and Practical Sections of the Epistle.—Moral Warnings.—Autograph Authentication.—Passage Respecting “the Man of Sin.”—Mysterious Tone of the Language.—Reason for this.—Similar Passage in Josephus.-What is meant by “the Checker” and “the Check.”—The rest incapable of present explanation . * * © ge e e tº º ſº © • 34O 3300t; IX. Ephesus. CHAPTER XXX. Paul at Ephesus. St. Paul 1eaves Corinth.—Nazarite Vow.—Ephesian Jews.-Fourth Visit to Jerusalem.—Cold Reception.—Return to Antioch.-Confirms Churches of Galatia and Phrygia.-Re-visits Ephesus.--Its Commerce, Fame, and Splen- dor.—Its Great Men.—Roman Rule.—Asylum.—Temple of Artemis.-The Heaven-fallen.—Megabyzi.—Ephe- sian Amulets.—Apollonius of Tyana. –Letters of the Pseudo-Heraclitus.-Apollos.--Disciples of John.— School of Tyrannus.-‘‘Handkerchiefs and Aprons.”—Discomfiture of the Beni Sceva. –Burning of Magic Books.-Trials and Perils at Ephesus.—Bad News from Corinth.-The Ephesia.-Exasperation of the Ar- tisans.—Artemis.—Demetrius.-Attempt to seize Paul.-Riot in the Theatre.—Gaius and Aristarchus.— Speech of the Recorder.—Farewell to the Church at Ephesus.—Present Condition of Ephesus . e • 349 CHAPTER XXXI. Condition of the Church of Corinth. Difficulties of Converts from Heathenism.—Letter from Corinth.-Various Enquiries.—Disputes in the Church.- Apollos' Party.—Petrine Party.—The Judaic Teacher.—Disorderly Scenes in Church Assemblies.—The Agapae.—Desecration of the Eucharistic Feast.—Condonation of the Notorious Offender.—Steps taken by St. Paul.—Sends Titus to Corinth.-Dictates to Sosthenes a Letter to the Corinthians.—Topics of Letter.— Greeting.—Thanksgiving.—Party-spirit.—True and False Wisdom.—Sentence on the Notorious Offender.— Christ Our Passover.—Christian and Heathen Judges.—Lawful and Unlawful Meats.-Marriage.—Celibacy.— Widows.—Divorce.—Meats offered to Idols.-Digression on his Personal Self-abnegation, and Inference from it.—Covering the Head.—Disorder at the Lord's Supper.—Glossolalia.-Charity.—Rules about Preaching.— The Resurrection.—Practical Directions.—Salutations.—Benediction g e e G * re & e 374 CHAPTER XXXII. Second Epistle to the Corinthians. Anxiety of St. Paul.—Short Stay at Troas.-Meeting with Titus.-Effect of First Letter on the Corinthians.—Per- sonal Opposition to his Authority.—Return of Titus to Corinth.—Trials in Macedonia.-Characteristics of the Epistle.—Greeting.—Tribulation and Consolation —Self-defence.—Explanations.—Metaphors.-Ministry of the New Covenant.—Eloquent Appeals.--Liberality of the Churches of Macedonia.-Exhortation to Liberal- ity.—Sudden Change of Tone.—Indignant Apology.—Mingled Irony and Appeal.—False Apostles.—Un- recorded Trials of his Life.—Vision at his Conversion.—Proofs of the Genuineness of his Ministry.—Saluta- tion.—Benediction . wº º tº * e e te CHAPTER XXXIII. The Seconnel Visit to Corinth. Second Sojourn in Macedonia.-Brief Notice by St. Luke.—Illyricum the furthest point of his Missionary Journey. —Institution of the Offertory.—His Fellow Travellers in the Journey to Corinth.-His Associates at Corinth. –Condition of the Church.—Two Epistles Written at Corinth . e # sº o e g o tº . 4O6 391 xii CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXXIV. •. Importance of the Epistle to the Galatians. Judaizing Opponents among the Galatian Converts.-Galatian Fickleness.-Arguments against St. Paul.—Circum- cision the Battle-ground.—Christian Liberty at Stake.—Instances of Proselytes to Circumcision among the Heathen Royal Families.—Courage and Passion of St. Paul's Argument.—The Epistle to the Galatians, the Manifesto of Freedom from the Yoke of Judaism * e ſº e CHAPTER XXXV. The Epistle to the Galatians. Brief Greeting.—Indignant Outburst.—Vindication of his Apostolic Authority.—Retrospect.—Slight Intercourse with the Apostles.—Co-ordinate Position.—Kephas at Antioch.-Second Outburst.—Purpose of the Law.— Its Relation to the Gospel.—Boldness of his Arguments.-Justification by Faith.—Allegory of Sarah and Hagar.—Bondage to the Law.—Freedom in Christ.—Lusts of the Flesh.-Fruits of the Spirit.—Practical Exhortations.—Autograph Conclusion.—Contemplates another Visit to Jerusalem, and a Letter to Rome CHAPTER XXXVI. The Epistle to the Romans, and the Theology of St. Paul. The Jews at Rome.—Numbers of the Christian Converts.—Christianity Introduced into Rome.—Not by St. Peter.— Was the Church mainly Jewish or Gentile?—Solution of Apparent Contradictions.—Note on the Sixteenth Chapter.—Probably Part of a Letter to Ephesus.-Main Object of the Epistle.—Written in a Peaceful Mood. —Theory of Baur as to the Origin of the Epistle.—Origin and Idea of the Epistle.—Outlines of the Epistle Gemneral rhetor the Epistle. * Salutation.—Thanksgiving.—Fundamental Theme.—The Just Shall Live by Faith.-Examination of the Meaning of the Phrase . e * > © & © º © e we e e © se * * * º tº e III. - Universality of Sim. Guilt of the Gentiles.—God’s Manifestation of Himself to the Gentiles in His Works.—Therefore their Sin Inexcus- able.—Vices of Pagan Life.—The Jew more Inexcusable because more enlightened.—Condemned in Spite of their Circumcision and Legal Obedience © { } tº e © te e © gº gº e * > e e Objections anºmarmation. Has the Jew an Advantage 2–Can God Justly Punish 2–Repudiation of False and Malignant Inferences.—Jew and Gentile all under Sin.—Quotations from the Psalms and Isaiah . e de e © © © © o e swuaenº, by Faith. “The Righteousness of God” explained.—The Elements of Justification.—Faith does not nullify the Law.—Abra- ham's Faith.-Peace and Hope the Blessed Consequences of Faith.-Three Moments in the Religious History of Mankind.—Adam and Christ.—May we sin that Grace may abound?—The Conception of Life in Christ excludes the possibility of Wilful Sin.—The Law cannot Justify.—The Law Multiplies Transgressions.—We are not under the Law, but under Grace.—Apparent Contradictions.—Faith and Works.-Dead to the Law. —The Soul's History.—Deliverance.—Hope.—Triumph . e ge * Qe & © º º e * CHAPTER XXXVII. Predestimation and Free Will. Rejection of the Jews.-Foreknowledge of God.—The Resistance of Evil.—The Potter and the Clay.—Man's Free Will.—Fearlessness and Conciliatoriness of St. Paul's Controversial Method.—Rejection of Israel.—Not Total nor Final.—Gleams of Hope.—Christ the Stone of Offence to the Jews.—Prophecies of a Future Restoration. -The Heave-offering.—The Oleaster and the Olive.—The Universality of Redeeming Grace.—Doxology CHAPTER XXXVIII. Fruits of Faith. Break in the Letter.—Practical Exhortation.—Christian Graces.—Obedience to Civil Powers.—Value of Roman Law.—Functions of Civil Governors.—Payment of Civil Dues.—Ebionitic Tendencies.—Advice to “Strong” and “Weak.”—Entreaty for the Prayers of the Church.-Benediction.—Reasons for concluding that the Sixteenth Chapter was addressed to the Ephesian Church.-Concluding Doxology. e te . . CHAPTER XXXIX. The Last Journey to Jerusalem. Preparing to Start for Jerusalem.—Fury of the Jews.-Plot to Murder St. Paul.—How defeated.—Companions of his X PAGE 4I3 42O 431 442 446 45O 45I 464 472 CONTENTS. xiii * PAGE Journey.—He Remains at Philippi with St. Luke for the Passover.—Troas.-Eutychus.-Walk from Troas to Assos.—Sail among the Grecian Isles to Miletus.-Farewell Address to the Elders of Ephesus.—Sad Parting. —Coos. –Rhodes.—Patara.—Tyre.—The Prayer on the Sea Shore.—Caesarea.—Philip the Evangelist.—The Prophet Agabus.-Warnings of Danger.—Fifth Visit to Jerusalem.–Guest of Mnason the Cyprian.—Assembly of the Elders.—James the Lord's Brother.—Presentation of the Contribution from the Churches.—St. Paul’s Account of his Work.-Apparent Coldness of his Reception.—A Humiliating Suggestion.—Nazarite Vow.— Elaborate Ceremonies.—St. Paul Consents.-His Motives and Justification.—Political State of the Jews at this time.—Quarrels with the Romans.—Insolent Soldiers.-Quarrel with Samaritans.—Jonathan.-Felix.- Sicarii.-St. Paul Recognized in the Court of the Women.—A Tumult.—Lysias.-Speech of St. Paul to the Mob.—Preparation for Scourging.—Civis Romanus sum.–Trial by the Sanhedrin.—Ananias the High Priest. —“Thou Whited Wall.”—Apology.—St. Paul asserts himself a Pharisee.—Was this Justifiable?—Is told in a Vision that he shall go to Rome.—The Vow of the Forty Jews.-Conspiracy revealed by a Nephew.—St. Paul conducted to Caesarea.—Letter of Lysias to Felix.—In Prison . º © º tº © o © . 479 CHAPTER XL. Paul and Felix. Trial before Felix.—Speech of Tertullus.-St. Paul's Defence.—The Trial postponed.—Discourse of St. Paul before - Felix and Drusilla.-Riot in Caesarea.—Felix recalled.—Two Years in Prison . e º º º © • 5 I2 CHAPTER XLI. St. Paul Before Festus and Agrippa II. Fresh Trial before Porcius Festus.—His Energy and Fairness.--St. Paul appeals to Caesar.—Visit of Agrippa II. and Berenice to Festus.—A Grand Occasion.—St. Paul's Address.—Appeal to Agrippa II., and his Reply.— Favorable Impression made by St. Paul . © & º º © e e e * - CHAPTER XLII. The Voyage and Shipwreck. Sent to Rome under Charge of Julius.-The Augustani.-Prisoners Chained to Soldiers.—Plan of the Journey.— Luke and Aristarchus.-Day spent at Sidon.—Voyage to Myra.—The Alexandrian Wheatship.–Sail to Crete. —Windbound at Fair Havens.—Advice of St. Paul.—Rejected.—Julius decides to try for Port Phoenix.-The Typhoon.-Euroaquilo.—Great Danger.—Clauda.—Securing the Boat.—Frapping the Vessel.—Other Meas- ures to Save the Ship.–Misery Caused by the Continuous Gale.—St. Paul’s Vision.—He Encourages Them. —They near Land.—Ras el Koura.-Attempted Escape of the Sailors.—The Crew take Food.—Final Ship- wreck.—The Soldiers.-Escape of the Crew. e de o e º tº 518 e te e e e Q © e o º • 527 3300ſ: X. Rome. CHAPTER XLIII. St. Paul’s Arrival at Rome. Received with Hospitality by the natives of Melita.-A Viper Fastens on his Hand.—Three Months at Malta.-The Protos.-The Father of Publius Healed.—Honor paid to St. Paul.-Embarks on board the Castor and Polluar. —Syracuse.—Rhegium.—Puteoli.-Journey towards Rome. —Met by Brethren at Appii Forum.—Tres Ta- bernae.—The Appian Road.—Enters Rome.—Afranius Burrus.—Observatio.—Irksomeness of his Bondage.— Summons the Elders of the Jews.—Their Cautious Reply.—Its Consistency with the Epistle to the Romans. —The Jews Express a Wish for Further Information.—A Long Discussion.—Stern Warning from the Apostle. —Two Years a Prisoner in Rome.—The Constancy of his Friends.-"Unmolestedly” . . . . . 539 CHAPTER XLIV. - St. Paul’s Sojourn in Rome. His Hired Apartments.—His General Position.—His State of Mind.—His Life and Teaching in Rome.—Condition of various Classes in Rome.—Improbability of his Traditional Intercourse with Seneca.-‘‘Not Many Noble.” —Few Converts among the Aristocracy of Rome.--Condition of Slaves.—Settlement of the Jews in Rome.— First Encouraged by Julius Caesar.—Their Life and Condition among the Roman Population.—The Character and Government of Nero.—The Downfall of Seneca.-Fenius Rufus and Tigellinus, Praetorian Prefects .. 548 CHAPTER XLV. - Epistles of the Captivity. ,” The History of St. Paul’s Imprisonment Derived from the Epistles of the Captivity.—The Four Groups into which xiv CONTENTS. the Epistles may be divided.—The Characteristics of those Groups.--Key-note of each Epistle.—The Order of the Epistles.—Arguments in favor of the Epistle to the Philippians being the Earliest of the Epistles of the Captivity.—Parallels in the Epistle to the Philippians to the Epistle to the Romans.—St. Paul’s Contro- versy with Judaism almost at an End.—Happier Incidents Brighten his Captivity.—Visit of Epaphroditus.- His Illness and Recovery.—The Purity of the Philippian Church.--‘‘Rejoice” the Leading Thought in the Epistle (e & e e & * •º CHAPTER XLVI. - The Epistle to the Philippians. Greeting.—Implied Exhortation to Unity.—Words of Encouragement.—Even Opposition Overruled for Good.— Earnest Entreaty to follow the Example of Christ.—His Hopes of Liberation.—Epaphroditus.—Sudden Break. —Vehement Outburst against the Jews.—Pressing Forward.—Euodia and Syntyche.—Syzygus.-Farewell and Rejoice.—Future of Philippian Church . • * * e © e e g tº e CHAPTER XLVII. Gnosticism in the Germ. Colossians, “Ephesians,” Philemon.—Attacks on their Genuineness.—Epaphras.—Laodicea, Hierapolis, Colossae.— The Lycus Valley.—Onesimus.-Sad News brought by Epaphras.-A New Form of Error.—An Essene Teacher. —St. Paul develops the Counter-Truth.-Christ Alone.—Oriental Theosophy the Germ of Gnosticism.—The Christology of these Epistles.—Universality and Antiquity of Gnostic Speculations.—Variations in the Style of St. Paul Q o & * . «» e e & CHAPTER XLVIII. º -- The Epistle to the Colossians. Greeting.—Christ the Eternal Son.—Grandeur of the Ministry of the Gospel.—The Pleroma.-Warnings against False Teaching.—Practical Consequences.—A Cancelled Bond.—A Needless Asceticism.—The true Remedy against Sin.—Practical Exhortations.—Personal Messages.—Asserted Reaction against Pauline Teaching in Asia.—Papias.—Colossae e © - - CHAPTER XLIX. The Epistle to Philemon. Private Letters.-Onesimus.-Degradation of Slaves.—A Phrygian Runaway.—Christianity and Slavery.—Letter of Pliny to Sabinianus.-A “Burning Question.”—Contrast between the Tone of Pliny and that of St. Paul . CHAPTER L. . - The Epistle to Philemon. Paraphrase of the Epistle.—Comparison with Pliny’s Appeal to Sabinianus.-Did St. Paul Visit Colossae again? . CHAPTER LI. The Epistle to “the Ephesians.” . Genuineness of the Epistle.—Testimonies to its Grandeur.—Resemblance and Contrasts between “Ephesians” and Colossians.—Style of St. Paul.—Christology of the later Epistles.—Doctrinal and Practical.—Grandeur of the Mystery.—Recurrence of Leading Words. –Greeting.—“To the praise of His glory.”—Christ in the Church. —Resulting Duties.—Unity in Christ.—The New Life.—Christian Submissiveness.-The Christian Armor- End of the Acts of the Apostles.—St. Paul's Expectations.—The Neronian Persecution . e tº CHAPTER LII. - - - - - - The First Epistle to Timothy. - Did St. Paul Visit Spain?—Character of the First Epistle to Timothy.—Peculiarities of the Greeting.—False Teachers. —Function of the Law.—Digressions.—Regulations for Public Worship.–Qualifications for Office in the Church.-Deacons.—Deaconesses.—The Mystery of Godliness.-Dualistic Apostasy.—Pastoral Advice to Timothy.—Bearing towards Presbyters.-Personal Advice.—Duties of Slaves.—Solemn Adjuration.—Last Appeal . g e & ſº $ ę ſe tº e CHAPTER LIII. * & The Epistle to Titus. Probable Movements of St. Paul.—Christianity in Crete.—Missions of Titus.-Greeting.—Character of the Cretans. —Sobermindedness.—Pastoral Duties, and exhortations to various classes.—Warnings against False Teachers. —Personal Messages.—“Ours also.”—Titus - PAGE 555 563 569 58O 586 591 592 609 615 CONTENTS. XV CHAPTER LIV. The CIosing Days. & Genuineness of the Pastoral Epistles.—The Second Epistle to Timothy.—State of the Church in the last year of St. Paul.—His possible Movements.—Arrest at Troas.-Trial and Imprisonment at Ephesus.-Parting with Timothy.—Companions of his last Voyage to Rome.—Closeness and Misery of the Second Imprisonment.— Danger of visiting him.—Defection of his Friends.—Loneliness.—Onesiphorus.-The Prima actio.—St. Paul deserted.—“Out of the mouth of the Lion.”—The Trial.—Paul before Nero.—Contrast between the two.— St. Paul remanded . tº Q * * e & & CHAPTER LV. Paul’s Last Letter. º e o e e & e The Greeting.—Digressions.—Christian Energy.—Warnings against False Teachers.-Solemn Pastoral Appeals.— Personal Entreaties and Messages.—Pudens and Claudia.-The Cloke.-The Papyrus Books.-The Vellum Rolls.--Parallel with Tyndale.—Triumph over Melancholy and Disappointment.—Tone of Courage and Hope CHAPTER LVI. The End. The Last Trial.—The Martyrdom.—Earthly Failure and Eternal Success.-Unequalled Greatness of St. Paul.- “God Buries his Workmen, but carries on their Work” * \º $º º's º º º ** §§§ tº iftſ. & I * \º ºf Wi § º 22%2. As Wºº ^ A ROMAN CENTURION. PAGE 62I 634 64I ILLUSTRATIONS. Roman Centurion . e © The Coast of Cilicia . tº © Map of the Neighborhood of Tarsus Great Mosque at Tarsus Falls of the Cydnus, near Tarsus . Tent-Making © Inhabitants of Modern Tarsus General View of Tarsus An Eastern School . Sinai . & gº º tº © Brazen Laver . to e View in the Neighborhood of Tarsus Golgotha . * e & e Reputed Site of the Ascension Bethany From Jerusalem to Bethany Ground Plan of Solomon’s Temple Olivet and Jerusalem e Upper Room in a Jewish House Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem Beyrout Road, Damascus A Pharisee Praying at the Corner St. Stephen's Gate, Jerusalem Wall of Jerusalem Near St. Stephen's Gate . e Martyrdom of St. Stephen º Tarsus e ę e © e Pompey (From Visconti) º The Shores of Gennesareth . Nablous and Gerizim ſº tº View from St. Stephen’s Gate o View in Jerusalem from Damascus Gate Distant View of Damascus Part of the Tower of Antonia A Lower Spur on Mount Hermor View in Damascus Map showing the Roads from Jerusalem to Damascus The Straight Street, Damascus In the Straight Street, Damascus Caucabe, from the Damascus Road On the Banks of the Barada, Damascus 2 PAGE I5 25 26 27 28 3I 34 37 42 49 5O 54 58 6I 62 63 64 65 69 74. 75 77 79 83 89 9I 95 96 99 IO4 Io'7 IIO II3 II4 II7 118 I2I I28 I29 I3 I I33 Market at Damascus tº e Banks of the Barada The Walls of Damascus Ruins of Caesarea . Outside Jerusalem Portals of a Synagogue at Meirón Remains of an Ancient Mole at Tyre Bust of the Emperor Gaius Roof of an Eastern House Jaffa . ge {º © Approach to Antioch e Ruins of the Walls of Antioch The Emperor Julian e & View on the Orontes The Emperor Claudius Ruins of Caesarea . e e Antioch tº e º gº wº Bust of Tiberius tº e & The Colosseum at Rome Sketch in Larnaca, Cyprus . Marina, Larnaca, Cyprus Old Greek Church in Cyprus ge * ge Part of the Taurus Range near Tarsus Pass in the Taurus . te * Antioch in Pisidia e A Niche in a Synagogue gº Kara Dagh in the Taurus Attaleia cº te e © e Roman Arch at Tarsus Map of the Country from Antioch to Samaria Entrance to the Tomb of the Virgin Ruins of a Synagogue View in Cilicia (Pylae-Cilicae) Socrates . & º º gº Antioch . e e Qe © Gate of Tarsus . e e c The Country Round Tarsus . Adana, Plain of Cilicia . e The Valley of the Cydnus © © © The Burning Plains and Freezing Mountain Passes of Asia Minor . • tº (xvii) e PAGE I39 I42 I45 I4 A I49 I53 I56 158 I63 I69 I72. I75. I8R 183 187 I90 I93 I98 I99 2OI 2O7 2I3 2I4. 2I6 22O 223 225 23I 236 24O 243 250 252 254 256 264 265 266 268 274 xviii ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE A Roman Centurion Q º © & © . 278 Roman Eagle . & e o i- © tº . 279 A Pythoness on her Tripod . . . . . 285 Salonica (Thessalonica) . . . . . . 29I Olympus . © © e • * te © • 293 Sunium . e o ge e & Q º . 299 Ruins of the Parthenon . e de e { } . 3O2 Ruins of the Temple of Theseus, Athens . • 3O3 Altar from Athens, in the British Museum . . 3O5 Site of the Areopagus, Athens ſº te e • 3O9 Nero . e * > © tº e . 3 IO Bay of Eleusis, near Athens . e © gº • 317 Gladiators Fighting with Wild Beasts . ~ . 32O Parnassus . & © e G tº • e • 323 The Acropolis, Corinth . e e tº tº • 329 Ruins of a Christian Church at Hierapolis . • 33L Wiew on the Gulf of Corinth . © e © • 333 Substructures of the Colosseum gº © g • 342 Wayside Fountain in the Taurus . . . . 349 Bridge near the Pylae-Ciliciae . e © tº • 352 Ruins of Sardis © q.e. e * > gº º • 355 Diana of the Ephesians . e & O e • 357 Ruined Arch at Ephesus e te e gº • 359 Ruined Church at Lystra o * tº º . 364 Pergamos . & e •e e tº tº tº . 365 Ephesus, with the Tower called the Prison of St. Paul . e ſº te e e e e . 367 View on the Borders of Caria, with Miletus in the Distance . © e gº e e º . 372 A Veiled Greek e e e Ç º º . 386 Ruin of Troas . & tº • 39 I Plain of Cilic a * ſº e tº e Cybele º e & e & © & e The Fabrician Bridge, Rome . tº * > ge Statue of St. Paul . § © 49 cº • The Via Appia, Rome . © e & & A Street in Rhodes . tº e Castle Rosso, on the Coast of Lycia A Roman Centurion Ptolemais, the Modern Acre The Theatre at Miletus The Tower of Antonia, Jerusalem . The Ruins of Caesarea e Ruins of Ancient Citadel, Sidon Salmona Island, near Point Koura, Malta In the Straits of Messina e e e The Bay of Puteoli . g ſº g © * } Tomb of Caecilia Metella, Rom º © * Reggio (Ancient Rhegium) . . tº e The Arch of Drusus, Rome Straits of Messina © © * g g Valley of the Maeander, with Hierapolis in the Dis- tance tº House in the Taurus e © e e º Ruins of Gymnasium at Laodicea . Ruins of Hierapolis . e * tº Sculptured Drum from Base of Column from Tem- ple of Diana, Ephesus tº º & Restoration of the Temple of Diana, Ephesus Column of the Temple of Diana * > Substructures of the Colosseum, Rome (showing Stagnum and Arena) e e is tº The Valley of the Maeander . © tº tº Basilica at Pergamos © sº e e gº Ruins of Pergamos & º g Castle and Church of St. John, Ephesus Basilica of Constantine, Rome tº e © ſº View Down the Valley of the Cydnus, from Jebil . Tre Fontane e º * e tº * de Pyramid of C. Cestiu, , * w & O & PAGE 423 425 433 44O 464 485 487 499 5O2 5O3 515 52 I 529 533 542 545 55I 555 56I 569 57O 573 581 583 Ruins of Ancyra, the Capital of Galatia e • 394 Part of a Column from the Temple of Diana at • . . . . . 397 Ruined Church at Lystra º e º º . 4CI Part of a Triumphal Arch at Damascus © • 404 Map Illustrating St. Paul's Route . C & . 407 Ephesus, from Ayasalouk . . . . . 4Io Tomb of Helena, Jerusalem . « » e o • 417 Ephesus . & 594 597 599 607 615 617 622 626 630 639 64I 644 36 O J # 38. THE TRAINING OF THE APOSTLE. C H A P T E. R. I. INTRODUCTORY. -Kº g gº º “Aſe is to me a z/essel of election.”—ACTS ix. I5. º F the twelve men whom Jesus chose to be His companions and heralds during the brief years of His earthly ministry, two alone can be said to have stamped upon the infant Church the impress of their own individuality. These two were John and Simon. Our Lord Himself, by the titles which He gave them, indicated the distinc- tions of their character, and the pre-eminence of their gifts. John was called a Son of Thunder; Simon was to be known to all ages as Kephas, or Peter, the Apostle of the Foundation stone. To - Peter was granted the honor of authoritatively admitting the first uncircumcised Gentile, on equal terms, into the brotherhood of Christ, and he has ever been regarded as the main pillar of the early Church. John, on the other hand, is the Apostle of Love, the favorite Apostle of the Mystic, the chosen Evangelist of those whose inward adoration rises above the level of outward forms. Peter as the first to recognize the Eternal Christ, John as the chosen friend of the living Jesus, are the two of that first order of Apostles whose names appear to human eyes to shine with the brightest lustre upon those twelve precious stones, which are the foundations of the New Jerusalem. Yet there was another, to whom was entrusted a wider, a more fruitful, a more laborious mission ; who was to found more numerous churches, to endure intenser suf- ferings, to attract to the fold of Christ a vaster multitude of followers. On the broad shoulders of St. Peter rested, at first, the support and defence of the new Society; yet his endurance was not tested so terribly as that of him on whom fell daily the “care of all * - (19) 2O INTRODUCTORY. , sº the churches.” St. John was the last survivor of the Apostles, and he barely escaped sharing with his brother James the glory of being one of the earliest martyrs; yet even lais life of long exile and heavy tribulations was a far less awful trial than that of him who counted it but a light and momentary affliction to “die daily,” to be “in deaths oft.” A third type of the Apostolate was necessary. Besides the Apostle of Catholicity and the Apostle of Love, the Church of Christ needed also “the Apostle of Progress.” In truth it is hardly possible to exaggerate the extent, the permanence, the vast importance, of those services which were rendered to Christianity by Paul of Tarsus. It would have been no mean boast for the most heroic worker that he had toiled more abundantly than such toilers as the Apostles. It would have been a sufficient claim to eternal gratitude to have preached from Jerusalem to Illyricum, from Illyricum to Rome, - and, it may be, even to Spain, the Gospel which gave new life to a weary and outworn world. Yet these are, perhaps, the least permanent of the benefits which mankind has reaped from his life and genius. For it is in his Epistles—casual as was the origin of some of them—that we find the earliest utterances of that Christian literature to which the world is indebted for its richest treasures of poetry and eloquence, of moral wisdom and spiritual consolation. It is to his intellect, fired by the love and illuminated by the Spirit of his Lord, that we owe the first systematic statement, in their mutual connection and inter-dependence, of the great truths of that Mystery of Godliness which had been hidden from past ages, but was now revealed in the Gospel of the Christ. It is to his undaunted determination, his clear vision, his moral loftiness that we are indebted for the emancipation of religion from the intolerable yoke of legal observances—the cutting asunder of the living body of Christianity from the heavy corpse of an abrogated Levit- ism. It was he alone who was God’s appointed instrument to render possible the uni- versal spread of Christianity, and to lay deep in the hearts of European churches the solid bases of Christendom. As the Apostle of the Gentiles he was pre-eminently and necessarily the Apostle of freedom, of culture, of the understanding; yet he has, if possi- ble, a higher glory than all this, in the fact that he, too, more than any other, is the Apostle who made clear to the religious consciousness of mankind the “justification by faith ” which springs from the mystic union of the soul with Christ—the Apostle who lias brought home to numberless Christians in all ages the sense of their own help- lessness, and pointed them most convincingly to the blessedness and the universality of that redemption which their Saviour wrought. And hence whenever the faith of Christ has been most dimmed in the hearts of men, whenever its pure fires have seemed in greatest danger of being stifled, as in the fifteenth century—under the dead ashes of sensuality, or quenched, as in the eighteenth century, by the chilling blasts of scepti- cism, it is mostly by the influence of his writings that religious life has been revived. It was one of his searching moral precepts—“Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying ” —which became to St. Augustine a guiding star out of the night of deadly moral aber- INTRODUCTORY. 21 rations: It was his prevailing doctrine of free deliverance through the merits of Christ which, as it had worked in the spirit of Paul himself to shatter the bonds of Jewish for- malism, worked once more in the soul of Luther to burst the gates of brass, and break the bars of iron in sunder with which the Papacy had imprisoned for so many centuries the souls which God made free. - It has happened not unfrequently in the providence of God that the destroyer of a creed or system has been bred and trained in the inmost bosom of the system which he was destined to shake or to destroy. It was not otherwise with St. Paul. The victorious enemy of heathen philosophy and heathen worship had passed his boyhood amid the heathen surroundings of a philosophic city. The deadliest antagonist of Judaic exclusive- ness was by birth a Hebrew of the Hebrews. The dealer of the death-wound to the spirit of Pharisaism was a Pharisee, a son of Pharisees; had been brought up from his youth at Jerusalem at the feet of Gamaliel; had been taught according to the perfect manner of the law of the fathers; had lived “after the most straitest sect” of the Jewish service. As his work differed in many respects from that of the other Apostles, so his training was wholly unlike theirs. Their earliest years had been spent in the villages of Genne- sareth and the huts of the fishermen on the shores of the Sea of Galilee; his in the crowded ghetto of a Pagan capital. They, with few exceptions, were men neither of commanding genius nor strongly marked characteristics; he was a man of intense indi- viduality and marvellous intellectual power. They were “unlearned and ignorant,” untrained in the technicalities, inexperienced in the methods, which passed among the Jews for theologic learning; he had sat as a “ disciple of the wise’’ at the feet of the most eminent of the Rabbis, and had been selected as the inquisitorial agent of Priests and Sanhedrists because he surpassed his contemporaries in burning zeal for the traditions of the schools. - º This is the man whose career will best enable us to understand the Dawn of Chris- tianity upon the darkness alike of Jew and Gentile; the man who loosed Christianity from the cerements of Judaism, and inspired the world of Paganism with joy and hope. The study of his life will leave upon our minds a fuller conception of the extreme noble- ness of the man, and of the truths which he lived and died to teach. And we must con- sider that life, as far as possible, without traditional bias, and with the determination to see it as it appeared to his contemporaries, as it appeared to Paul himself. “For if he was a Paul,” says St. Chrysostom, “he also was a man"—nay, more than this, his very infirmities enhanced his greatness. He stands infinitely above the need of indiscriminate panegyric. If we describe him as exempt from all human weakness—if we look at his actions as though it were irreverence to suppose that they ever fell short of his own ideal—we not only describe an impossible character, but we contradict his own reiterated testimonies. It is not a sinless example which we are now called upon to contemplate, but the life of one who, in deep sincerity, called himself “the chief of sinners;” it is the career of one whose ordinary life (bios) was human, not divine—human in its impetuosity, 22 - INTRODUCTORY. human in its sensibilities, human, perhaps, in some of its concessions and accommoda- tions; but whose inner life (zoe) was truly divine in so far as it manifested the workings of the Spirit, in so far as it was dead to the world, and hid with Christ in God. It is utterly alien to the purpose and manner of Scripture to present to us any of our fellow- men in the light of faultless heroes or unapproachable demi-gods. The notion that it is irreverent to suppose a flaw in the conduct of an Apostle is one of those instances of . “false humility” which degrade Scripture under pretence of honoring it, and substitute a dead letter-worship for a living docility. From idealized presentments of the lives of our fellow-servants, there would be but little for us to learn ; but we do learn the greatest and most important of all lessons when we mark in a struggling soul the triumph of the grace of God—when we see a man, weak like ourselves, tempted like ourselves, erring like ourselves, enabled by the force of a sacred purpose to conquer temptation, to trample on selfishness, to rear even upon sins and failures the superstructure of a great and holy life—to build (as it were) “the cities of Judah out of the ruined fortresses of Samaria.” It may seem strange if I say that we know the heart of St. Paul to its in most depths. It is true that, besides a few scattered remnants of ecclesiastical tradition, we have but two sources whence to derive his history—the Acts of the Apostles, and the Epistles of Paul himself; and the day has gone by when we could at once, and without further inquiry, assume that both of these sources, in the fullest extent, were absolutely and equally to be relied on. But without entering on any separate defence of the Acts of the Apostles against the assaults of modern critics, I will at present only express my conviction that, even if we admit that it was “an ancient Eirenicon,” intended to check the strife of parties by showing that there had been no irreconcilable opposition between the views and ordinances of St. Peter and St. Paul;-even if we concede the obvious principle that whenever there appears to be any contradiction between the Acts and the Epistles, the interpretation of the former must be decided by the statements of the latter; —nay, even if we acknowledge that subjective and artificial considerations may have had some influence in the form and construction of the book;-yet the Acts of the Apostles is a genuine and trustworthy history. Let it be granted that in the Acts we have a picture of essential unity between the followers of the Judaic and the Pauline schools of thought, which we might conjecture from the Epistles to have been less harmonious and less undisturbed; let it be granted that in the Acts we more than once see Paul acting in a way which from the Epistles we should a prior, have deemed unlikely. Even these concessions are fairly disputable; yet in granting them we only say what is in itself sufficiently obvious, that both records are confessedly fragmentary. They are fragmentary of course, because neither of them even professes to give us any continuous narrative of the Apostle's life. That life is—roughly speaking—only known to us at intervals during its central and later period, between the years A. D. 36 and A. D. 66. It is like a manuscript of which the beginning and the end are irrecoverably lost. It is like one of those rivers which spring from unknown sources, and sink into the INTRODUCTORY. 23 ground before they have reached the sea. But more than this, how incomplete is our knowledge even of that portion of which these records and notices remain . Of this fact we can have no more overwhelming proof than we may derive from reading the famous passage of the Second Epistle to the Corinthians, where, driven against his will by the calumnies of his enemies to an appearance of boastfulness of which the very notion was abhorrent to him, he is forced to write a summary sketch of what he had done and suffered. That enumeration is given long before the end of his career, and yet of the specific outrages and dangers there mentioned no less than eleven are not once alluded to in the Acts, though many others are recorded in the Acts, which were subse- quent to that sad enumeration. Not one, for instance, of the five scourgings with Jewish thongs is referred to by St. Luke; one only of the three beatings with Roman rods; not one of the three shipwrecks, though a later one is so elaborately detailed; no allusion to the night and day in the deep; two only of what St. Clement tells us were seven imprisonments. There are even whole classes of perils to which the writer of the Acts, though he was certainly at one time a companion of St. Paul, makes no allusion whatever—as, for instance, the perils of rivers, the perils of robbers, the perils in the wilderness, the perils among false brethren, the hunger, the thirst, the fasting, the cold, the nakedness. And these, which are thus passed over without notice in the Acts, are in the Epistles mentioned only so cursorily, so generally, so unchronologically, that scarcely one of them can be dwelt upon and assigned with certainty to its due order of succession in St. Paul's biography. If this, then, is the case, who can pretend that in such a life there is not room for a series of events and actions—even for an exhibition of phases of character—in the narrative, which neither did nor could find place in the letters; and for events and features of character in the letters which find no reflection in the narrative? For of those letters how many are preserved? Thirteen only—even if all the thirteen be indisputably genuine—out of a much larger multitude which he must undoubtedly have written. And of these thirteen some are separated from others by great intervals of time; some contain scarcely a single particular which can be made to bear on a consecutive biography; and not one is preserved which gives us the earlier stage of his views and experiences before he had set foot on European soil. It is, then, idle to assume that either of our sources must be rejected as untrustworthy because it presents us with fresh aspects of a myriad-sided character; or that events in the narra- tive must be condemned as scarcely honest inventions because they present no prima facie accordance with what we might otherwise have expected from brief and scattered letters out of the multiplex correspondence of a varied life. If there were anything in the Acts which appeared to me irreconcilable with the certain indications of the Epistles, I should feel no hesitation in rejecting it. But most, if not all, of the objections urged against the credibility of the Acts appear to me—for reasons to be hereafter given —both frivolous and untenable. If there are any passages in that book which have been represented as throwing a shade of inconsistency over the character of the great 24 - INTRODUCTORY. Apostle, there is no such instance which, however interpreted, does not find its support and justification in his own undoubted works. If men of great learning, eminence, and acuteness had not assumed the contrary, it might have seemed superfluous to say that the records of history, and the experiences of daily life, furnish us with abundant instances of lives narrated with perfect honesty, though they have been presented from opposite points of view; and of events which appear to be contradictory only because the point of reconcilement between them has been forgotten. Further than this, the points of contact between the Acts and the Epistles are numberless, and it must suffice, once for all, to refer to Paley's Horae Paulinae in proof that even the undesigned coincidences may be counted by scores. To furnish a separate refutation of all the objections which have been brought against the credibility of the Acts of the Apostles, would be a tedious and interminable task; but the actual narrative of the following pages should exhibit a decisive answer to them, unless it can be shown that it fails to combine the separate data, or that the attempt to combine them has led to incongruous and impossible results. I believe, then, that we have enough, and more than enough, still left to us to show what manner of life Paul lived, and what manner of man he was. A biography sketched in outline is often more true and more useful than one that occupies itself with minute detail. We do not in reality know more of a great man because we happen to know the petty circumstances which made up his daily existence, or because a mistaken admira- tion has handed down to posterity the promiscuous common-places of his ordinary corre- spondence. We know a man truly when we know him at his greatest and his best; we realize his significance for ourselves and for the world when we see him in the noblest activity of his career, on the loftiest summit, and in the fullest glory of his life. There are lives which may be instructive from their very littleness, and it may be well that the biographers of such lives should enter into detail. But of the best and greatest it may be emphatically asserted that to know more about them would only be to know less of them. It is quite possible that if, in the case of one so sensitive and so impetuous as St. Paul a minute and servile record had preserved for us every hasty expression, every fugitive note, every momentary fall below the loftiest standard, the small souls which ever rejoice at seeing the noblest of their race degraded, even for an instant, to the same dead level as themselves, might have found some things over which to glory. That such must have been the result we may infer from the energy and sincerity of self-con- demnation with which the Apostle recognizes his own imperfections. But such miser- able records, even had they been entirely truthful, would only have obscured for us the true Paul—Paul as he stands in the light of history; Paul as he is preserved for us in the records of Christianity; Paul energetic as Peter, and contemplative as John ; Paul the hero of unselfishness; Paul the mighty champion of spiritual freedom ; Paul a greater preacher than Chrysostom, a greater missionary than Xavier, a greater reformer than Luther, a greater theologian than St. Thomas of Aquinum; Paul the inspired Apostle of the Gentiles, the slave of the Lord Jesus Christ. - TEIE COAST OF CILICIA. CHAPTER II. BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. “A citizen of no undistinguished city.”—Acts xxi. 39. *Mºjº HOUGH we cannot state with perfect accuracy the date either of SJº ºx- s&B º \º lſº ׺/ the birth or death of the great Apostle of the Gentiles, both may Nºi. §§ L-. º º be inferred within narrow limits. When he is first mentioned, on *|| º *\º the occasion of Stephen's martyrdom, he is called a young man, *- *lſº t; Nº and when he wrote the Epistle to Philemon he calls himself Paul & ńYº: º the aged. Now, although the words “young man " and “aged ” § º were used vaguely in ancient times, and though the exact limits | Aº Q, of “youth '' and “age" were as indeterminate then as they have . 2׺ * ever been, yet, since we learn that immediately after the death of Stephen, Saul was intrusted with a most important mission, and was in all probability a member of the Sanhedrin, he must at that time have been a man of thirty. Now, the martyrdom of Stephen probably took place early in A. D. 37, and the Epistle to Philemon was written about A. D. 63. At the latter period, therefore, he would have been 1ess than sixty years old, and this may seem too young to claim the title of “the aged.” But “age’ is a very relative term, and one who had been scourged, and lashed, and stoned, and imprisoned, and shipwrecked—one who, for so many years, besides the heavy burden of mental anguish and responsibility, had been “scorched by the heat of Sirius and tossed by the violence of Euroclydon,” might well have felt himself an old and out- worn man when he wrote from his Roman prison at the age of threescore years. It is, therefore, tolerably certain that he was born during the first ten years of our era, and probable that he was born about A. D. 3. Since, then, our received Dionysian era is now ~ * Q - (25) 26 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. known to be four years too early, the birth of Christ's greatest follower happened in the same decade as that of our Lord Himself. - But all the circumstances which surrounded the cradle and infancy of the infant Saul were widely different from those amid which his Lord had grown to boyhood. It was in an obscure and lonely village of Palestine, amid surroundings almost exclu- sively Judaic, that Jesus “grew in wisdom and stature and favor with God and man;" but Saul passed his earliest years in the famous capital of a Roman province, and must have recalled, with his first conscious reminiscences, the language and customs of the Pagan world. * . , - There is no sufficient reason to doubt the entire accuracy of the expression “born in Tarsus,” which is attributed to St. Paul in his Hebrew speech to the infuriated multitude from the steps of the Tower of Antonia. To assert that the speeches in the Acts could not have attained to verbal exactness ***** **, 3% º may be true of some of them, but, on the other SAV, s "ſº % sº ſº... N t s > * .*,** sº ...tºS º ºN | hand, those who on such grounds as these dis- º . ." * N* rº. & *| parage the work of St. Luke, as a mere “treatise Rºº. h.} g *…* 2 with an obj ect,” must bear in mind that it would, ºf \{: & § 2. in this point of view, have been far more to the s purpose if he had made St. Paul assert that he was born in a Jewish town. We must, there- fore, reject the curious and twice-repeated asser- tion of St. Jerome, that the Apostle was born at Giscala, and had been taken to Tarsus by his parents when they left their native city, in con- sequence of its devastation by the Romans. The assertion is indeed discredited because it is ENGLISH Miles ºf 20 *-*—*—º-º mixed up with what appears to be a flagrant MAP of THE NEIGHBoRHood of TARsus. anachronism as to the date at which Giscala was destroyed. It is, however, worthy of atten- tion. St. Jerome, from his thorough familiarity with the Holy Land, in which he spent so many years of his life, has preserved for us several authentic fragments of tradition, and we may feel sure that he would not arbitrarily have set aside a general belief founded upon a distinct statement in the Acts of the Apostles. If in this matter pure invention had been at work, it is almost inconceivable that any one should have singled out for distinction so insignificant a spot as Giscala, which is not once mentioned in the Bible, and which acquired its sole notoriety from its connection with the zealot Judas. We may, therefore, fairly assume that the tradition mentioned by St. Jerome is so far true that the parents or grandparents of St. Paul had been Galilaeans and had, from some cause or other—though it cannot have been the cause which the tradition assigned—been compelled to migrate from Giscala to the busy capital of Pagan Cilicia. & | º ; º § º º §t. i i -- & sº wº & * * * Ş S.X& NYS §§ SSSSSSN §§ SS º Š # # i; º ; GREAT MOSQUE AT TARSUS. 28 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. If this be the case, it helps, as St. Jerome himself points out, to explain another difficulty. St. Paul, on every possible occasion, assumes and glories in the title not only of “an Israelite,” which may be regarded as a “name of honor,” but also of “a Hebrew—a Hebrew of the Hebrews.” Perhaps St. Paul spoke Aramaic with even greater fluency than he spoke Greek itself; and his knowledge of Hebrew may be inferred from his custom of sometimes reverting to the Hebrew scriptures in the original when the LXX. version was less suitable to his purpose. It is an interesting, though undesigned, confirmation of this fact, that the Divine Vision on the road to Damascus spoke to him, at the Supreme moment of his life, in the language which was evidently the language of his own in most thoughts. As one, therefore, to whom :=# - É 2:E - wº- FALLs of THE CYDNUs, NEAR TARSUs. the Hebrew of that day was a sort of mother-tongue, and the Hebrew of the Bible an acquired language, St. Paul might call himself a Hebrew, though technically speak- ing he was also a Hellenist; and the term would be still more precise and cogent if his parents and forefathers had, almost till the time of his birth, been Palestinian Jews. - - The Tarsus in which St. Paul was born was very different from the dirty, squalid and ruinous Mohammedan city which still bears the name and stands upon the site. BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. 29 º, The natural features of the city, indeed, remain unchanged : the fertile plain still surrounds it; the snowy mountains of the chain of Taurus still look down on it; the bright, swift stream of the Cydnus still refreshes it. But with these scenes of beauty and majesty we are the less concerned, because they seem to have had no influence over the mind of the youthful Saul. We can well imagine how, in a nature differently constituted, they would have been like a continual inspiration; how they would have melted into the very imagery of his thoughts; how, again and again, in crowded cities and foul prisons, they would have - “Flashed upon that inward eye. Which is the bliss of solitude.” The scenes in which the whole life of David had been spent were far less majestic, as well as far less varied, than many bf those in which the lot of St. Paul was cast; yet the Psalms of David are a very handbook of poetic description, while in the Epistles of St. Paul we only breathe the air of cities and synagogues. He alludes, indeed, to the Temple not made with hands, but never to its mountain pillars, and but once to its nightly stars. To David the whole visible universe is but one vast House of God, in which, like angelic ministrants, the fire and hail, snow and vapor, wind and storm, fulfil His word. St. Paul is no less aware than David that “the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly visible, being apprehended by the things that He hath made, even His eternal power and divinity”—but to him this was an indis- putable axiom, not a conviction constantly renewed with admiration and delight. There are few writers who, to judge solely from their writings, seemed to have been less moved by the beauties of the external world. Though he had sailed again and again across the blue Mediterranean, and must have been familiar with the beauty of those Isles of Greece— . . . . - - - . . . . . “Where burning Sappho loved and sung, . Where grew the arts of war and peace, Where Delos rose, and Phoebus sprung; ” - though he had again and again traversed the pine-clad gorges of the Asian hills, and seen Ida, and Olympus and Parnassus, in all their majesty; though his life had been endangered in mountain torrents and stormy waves, and he must have often wandered as a child along the banks of his native stream, to see the place where it roars in cata- racts over its rocky course—his soul was so entirely absorbed in the mighty moral and spiritual truths which it was his great mission to proclaim, that not by one verse, scarcely even by a single expression, in all his letters, does he indicate the faintest gleam of delight or wonder in the glories of Nature. There is, indeed, an exquisite passage in his speech at Lystra on the goodness of “the living God, which made heaven and earth, and the sea, and all things that are therein,” and “left not Himself without 30 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. witness, in that He did good, and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness.” But in this case Barnabas had some share in the address, which even if it do not, as has been conjectured, refer to the fragment of some choral song, is yet, in tone and substance, directly analogous to passages of the Old Testament. And apart from this allusion, I cannot find a single word which shows that Paul had even the smallest susceptibility for the works of Nature. There are souls in which the burning heat of some transfusing purpose calcines every other thought, every other desire, every other admiration; and St. Paul's was one. His life. was absorbingly, if not solely and exclusively, the spiritual life—the life which is utterly dead to every other interest of the groaning and travailing creation, the life hid with Christ in God. He sees the universe of God only as it is reflected in the heart and life of man. It is true—as Humboldt has shown in his Cosmos—that what is called the sentimental love of Nature is a modern rather than an ancient feeling. In St. Paul, however, this indifference to the outer world is neither due to his antiquity nor to his Semitic birth, but solely to his individual character. The poetry of the Old Testament is full of the tenderness and life of the pastures of Palestine. In the dis- courses and conversations of our Lord we find frequent allusions to the loveliness of the flowers, the joyous carelessness of birds, the shifting winds, the red glow of morning and evening clouds. St. Paul's inobservance of these things—for the total absence of the remotest allusion to them by way of even passing illustration amounts to a proof that they did not deeply stir his heart—was doubtless due to the expulsive power and paramount importance of other thoughts. It may, however, have been due also to that early training which made him more familiar with crowded assemblies and thronged bazaars than with the sights and sounds of Nature. It is at any rate remarkable that the only elaborate illustration which he draws from Nature turns not on a natural phenomenon but on an artificial process, and that even this process—if not abso- lutely unknown to the ancients—was the exact opposite of the one most commonly adopted. - . ---> - ~- But if St. Paul derived no traceable influence from the scenery with which Tarsus is surrounded, if no voices from the neighboring mountains or the neighboring sea mingled with the many and varied tones of his impassioned utterance, other results of this providential training may be easily observed, both in his language and in his life. - - - The very position of Tarsus made it a centre of commercial enterprise and political power. Situated on a navigable stream by which it communicated with the eastern- most bay of the Mediterranean, and lying on a fruitful plain under that pass over the Taurus which was known as “the Cilician gates,” while by the Amanid and Syrian gates it communicated with Syria, it was so necessary as a central emporium that even the error of its having embraced the side of Antony in the civil war hardly disturbed its fame and prosperity. It was here that Cleopatra held that famous meeting with BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. 3I the Roman Triumvir which Shakespeare has immortalized, when she rowed up the silver Cydnus, and - “The barge she sat in like a burnished throne Burnt on the water; the poop was beaten gold, Purple the sails, and so perfumed that The winds were love-sick with them.” %23% ºft\; Sº % º Š § º§§ * | %2FS * † "ſº º %/Zº/? ”, ſa tº ſºft TENT MARING. Yet it continued to flourish under the rule of Augustus, and enjoyed the distinction of being both a capital and a free city—libera and immunis. It was from Tarsus that the vast masses of timber, hewn in the forests of Taurus, were floated down the river to the Mediterranean dockyards; it was here that the vessels were unladen which 32 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. brought to Asia the treasures of Europe; it was here that much of the wealth of Asia Minor was accumulated before it was despatched to Greece and Italy. On the coins of the city she is represented as seated amid bales of various merchandise. The bright and busy life of the streets and markets must have been the earliest scenes which attracted the notice of the youthful Saul. The dishonesty which he had witnessed in its trade may have suggested to him his metaphors of “huckstering ” and “adulterating ” the word of life; and he may have borrowed a metaphor from the names and marks of the owners stamped upon the goods which lay upon the quays, and from the earnest-money paid by the purchasers. It may even have been the assembly of the free city which made him more readily adopt from the Septuagint that name of Ecclesia for the Church of Christ's elect of which his Epistles furnish the earliest instances. It was his birth at Tarsus which also determined the trade in which, during so many days and nights of toil and self-denial, the Apostle earned his daily bread. The staple manufacture of the city was the weaving, first into ropes, then into tent-covers and garments, of the hair which was supplied in boundless quantities by the goat flocks of the Taurus. As the making of these célicia was unskilled labor of the commonest sort, the trade of tent-maker was one both lightly esteemed and miserably paid. It must not, however, be inferred from this that the family of St. Paul were people of low position. The learning of a trade was a duty enjoined by the Rabbis on the parents of every Jew- ish boy. The wisdom of the rule became apparent in the case of Paul, as doubtless of hundreds besides, when the changes and chances of life compelled him to earn his own livelihood by manual labor. It is clear, from the education provided for Paul by his parents, that they could little indeed have conjectured how absolutely their son would be reduced to depend on a toil so miserable and so unremunerative. But though we see how much he felt the burden of the wretched labor by which he determined to earn his own bread rather than trespass on the charity of his converts, yet it had one advantage in being so absolutely mechanical as to leave the thoughts entirely free. While he plaited the black, strong-scented goat's hair, he might be soaring in thought to the inmost heaven, or holding high converse with Apollos or Aquila, with Luke or Timothy, on the loftiest themes which can engage the mind of man. . .r W. - - Before considering further the influence exercised by his birthplace on the future fortunes of St. Paul, we must pause to inquire what can be discovered about his imme- diate family. It must be admitted that we can ascertain but little. Their possession, by whatever means, of the Roman citizenship—the mere fact of their leaving Palestine, perhaps only a short time before Paul's birth, to become units in the vast multitude of the Jews of the Dispersion—the fact, too, that so many of St. Paul’s “kinsmen’’ bear Greek and Latin names, and lived in Rome or in Ephesus, might, at first sight, lead us to suppose that his whole family were of Hellenizing tendencies. On the other hand, we know nothing of the reasons which may have compelled them to leave Palestine, and we have only the vaguest conjectures as to their possession of the franchise. Even if it BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. 33 be certain that the word “kinsmen º’ is used in our sense, and not, as Olshausen thinks, in the sense of “fellow-countrymen,” it was so common for Jews to have a second name, which they adopted during their residence in heathen countries, that Andronicus and the others, whom he salutes in the last chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, may all have been genuine Hebrews. The real name of Jason, for instance, may have been Jesus, just as the real name of Paul was Saul. However this may be, the thorough Hebraism of the family appears in many ways. Paul's father and grandfather had been Pharisees, and were, therefore, most strict observers of the Mosaic law. They had so little forgot- ten their extraction from the tribe of Benjamin—one of the two tribes which had re- mained faithful to the covenant—that they called their son Saul, partly perhaps because the name, like Theaetetus, means “asked ” (of God), and partly because it was the name of that unfortunate hero-king of their native tribe, whose sad fate seems for many ages to have rendered his very name unpopular. They sent him, probably not later than the age of thirteen, to be trained at the feet of Gamaliel. They seem to have had a married daughter in Jerusalem, whose son, on one memorable occasion, saved Paul's life. Though they must have ordinarily used the Septuagint version of the Bible, from which the great majority of the Apostle's quotations are taken, and from which nearly his whole theological phraseology is derived, they yet trained him to use Aramaic as his native tongue, and to read the Scriptures—an accomplishment not possessed by many learned Jewish Hellenists—in their own venerable original Hebrew. - - That St. Paul was a “Hebraist” in the fullest sense of the word is clear from almost every verse of his Epistles. He reckons time by the Hebrew calendar. He makes con- stant allusion to Jewish customs, Jewish laws, and Jewish festivals. His metaphors and turns of expression are derived with great frequency from that quiet family life for which the Jews have been in all ages distinguished. Though he writes in Greek, it is 11ot by any means in the Greek of the schools, or the Greek which, in spite of its occa- sional antitheses and paronomasias, would have been found tolerable by the rhetoricians of his native city. The famous critic Longinus does indeed, if the passage be genuine, praise him as the master of a dogmatic style; but certainly a Tarsian professor or a philosopher of Athens would have been inclined to ridicule his Hebraic peculiarities, harshly-mingled metaphors, strange forms, and irregular constructions. St. Jerome, criticising the unusual phrase in 2 Cor. xi. 9, xii. 13—which in our version is rendered, “I was not burdensome to you,” but appears to mean literally, “I did not benumb you"— speaks of the numerous cz/icisms of his style; and it is probable that such there were, though they can hardly be detected with certainty by a modern reader. For though Tarsus was a city of advanced culture, Cilicia was as intellectually barbarous as it was morally despicable. The proper language of Cilicia was a dialect of Phoenician, and the Greek spoken by some of the cities was so faulty as to have originated the term “sole. cism,” which has been perpetuated in all languages to indicate impossible constructions. The residence of a Jew in a foreign city might, of course, tend to undermine his 3 - - 34 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. national religion, and make him indifferent to his hereditary customs. It might, how- ever, produce an effect directly the reverse of this. There had been abundant instances of Hellenistic Jews who Hellenized in matters far more serious than the language which they spoke; but, on the other hand, the Jews, as a nation, have ever shown an almost miraculous vitality, and so far from being denationalized by a home among the heathen, they have only been confirmed in the intensity of their patriotism and their faith. We lºnow that this had been the case with that numerous and important body, the Jews of Tarsus. In this respect they differed considerably from the Jews of Alexandria. They could not have been exempt from that hatred which has through so many ages wronged and dishonored their noble race, and which was already virulent among the Romans of | º § §§ *. W. : % * |% * % % INHABITANTS OF MO DERN TARSUS. that day. All that we hear about them shows that the Cilician Jews were as capable as any of their brethren of repaying hate with double hatred, and scorn with double scorn. They would be all the more likely to do so from the condition of things around them. The belief in Paganism was more firmly rooted in the provinces than in Italy, and was specially vigorous in Tarsus—in this respect no unfitting burial-place for Julian the Apostate. No ages are worse, no places more corrupt, than those that draw the glittering film of an intellectual culture over the deep stagnancy of moral degradation. And this was the condition of Tarsus. The seat of a celebrated school of letters, it was at the same time the metropolis of a province so low in universal estimation that it was counted among the three most villainous k's of antiquity, Kappadokia, Kilikia, and Krete. What religion there was at this period had chiefly assumed a wild and oriental BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. 35 character, and the popular faith of many even in Rome was a strange mixture of Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Phrygian, Phoenician, and Jewish elements. The fanatical enthusi- asms of the Eastern cults shook with new sensations of sensuality and superstition the jaded despair of Western Paganism. The Tarsian idolatry was composed of these mingled elements. There, in Plutarch's time, a generation after St. Paul, the sword of Apollo, miraculously preserved from decay and rust, was still displayed. Hermes Eriounios, or the luck-bringer, still appears, purse in hand, upon their coins. AEscu- lapius was still believed to manifest his power and presence in the neighboring Ægae. But the traditional founder of the city was the Assyrian, Sardanapalus, whose semi-his- torical existence was confused with various representatives of the sun-god—the Asiatic Sandan, the Phoenician Baal, and the Grecian Hercules. The gross allusiveness and origin of this worship, its connection with the very types and ideals of luxurious effemi- nacy, unbounded gluttony, and brutal licence, were quite sufficient to awake the indig- nant loathing of each true-hearted Jew; and these revolts of natural antipathy in the hearts of a people in whom true religion has ever been united with personal purity would be intensified with patriotic disgust when they saw that, at the main festival of this de- graded worship, the effeminate Sardanapalus and the masculine Semiramis—each equally detestable—were worshipped with rites which externally resembled the pure and thank- ful rejoicings of the Feast of Tabernacles. St. Paul must have witnessed this festival. He must have seen at Auchiale the most defiant symbol of sensual contentment, in the statue of Sardanapalus represented as Snapping his fingers while he uttered the senti- ment engraved upon the pedestal— *. . “Eat, drink, enjoy thyself; the rest is nothing.” The result which such spectacles and such sentiments had left upon his mind, had not been one of tolerance, or of blunted sensibility to the horror of evil. They had in- spired, on the one hand, an overpowering sense of disgust; on the other, an overwhelm- ing conviction, deepened by subsequent observation, that mental perversity leads to, and is in its turn aggravated by, moral degradation; that error in the intellect involves an ultimate error in the life and in the will ; that the darkening of the understanding is inevitably associated with the darkening of the soul and spirit, and that out of such darkness spring the hidden things which degrade immoral lives. He who would know what was the aspect of Paganism to one who had seen it from childhood upwards in its char- acteristic developments, must read that most terrible passage of all Scripture, in which the full blaze of scorching sunlight burns with its fiercest indignation upon the pollutions of Pagan wickedness. Under that glare of holy wrath we see Paganism in all its un- natural deformity. No halo of imagination surrounds it, no gleam of fancy plays over its glittering corruption. We see it as it was. Far other may be its aspect when the glamour of Hellenic grace is flung over it. But he who would truly judge of it—he who would see it as it shall seem when there shall fall on it a ray out of God's eternity, # 36 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. must view it as it appeared to the penetrating glance of a pure and enlightened eye. St. Paul, protected by inward chastity—unmoved, untempted, unbewitched, unterrified— sees in this painted Circe no laughing maiden, no bright-eyed daughter of the Sun, but a foul and baleful harlot; and, seizing her by the hair, stamps deep upon her leprous forehead the burning titles of her shame. Henceforth she may go for all time through- out the world a branded sorceress. All may read that festering stigma; none can henceforth deceive the nations into regrets for the vanished graces of a world which knew not God. - But besides this unmitigated horror inspired by the lowest aspect of heathen life, St. Paul derived from his early insight into its character his deep conviction that earthly knowledge has no necessary connection with heavenly wisdom. If we may trust the romance of the sophist Philostratus, and if he is not merely appropriating the senti- ments which he had derived from Christianity, the youthful Apollonius of Tyana, who was afterwards held up as a kind of heathen parallel to Christ, was studying under the orator Euthydemus at Tarsus at the very time when it must also have been the residence of the youthful Paul; and even Apollonius, at the age of thirteen, was so struck with the contrast between the professed wisdom of the city and its miserable morality, that he obtained leave from his father to remove to AEgae, and so pursue his studies at a more serious and religious place. The picture drawn, so long afterwards, by Philostratus, of the luxury, the buffoonery, the petulance, the dandyism, the gossip, of the life at Tar- sus, as a serious boy-philosopher is supposed to have witnessed it, might have no his- torical value if it were not confirmed in every particular by the sober narrative of the contemporary Strabo. “So great,” he says, “is the zeal of the inhabitants for philoso- phy and all other encyclic training, that they have surpassed even Athens and Alexan- dria, and every other place one could mention in which philological and philosophical schools have arisen.” The state of affairs resulting from the social atmosphere which he proceeds to describe is as amusing as it is despicable. It gives us a glimpse of the pro- fessorial world in days of Pagan decadence; of a professorial world, not such as it now is, and often has been, in our English and German Universities, where Christian Brotherhood and mutual esteem have taken the place of wretched rivalism, and where good and learned men devote their lives to “gazing on the bright countenance of truth in the mild and dewy air of delightful studies; ” but as it was also in the days of the Renaissance—cliques of jealous savams, narrow, selfish, unscrupulous, base, sceptical, impure—bursting with gossip, scandal, and spite. “The thrones” of these little “aca- demic gods” were as mutually hostile and as universally degraded as those of the Olympian deities, in which it was, perhaps, a happy thing that they had ceased to be- lieve. One illustrious professor cheated the State by stealing oil; another avenged him- self on an opponent by epigrams; another by a nocturnal bespattering of his house; and rhetorical jealousies often ended in bloody quarrels. On this unedifying spectacle of littleness in great places the people in general looked with admiring eyes, and dis. ſ º, º |: º ĒĒĒĒ𠧧§§§§ș№§§ §§ -、&& %ſăī£§§§§§§§§ §§§ğ Èğ$ -§§ §% §§) *§eae §ĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĒĖ , -Èſ ſ|}}}## |įjįž %ķ% ∞{};%%ae ģ Äğģ | į Sºta221&■<æ¿ ſĒģžğ№ GENERĄ I, VIEW OF TARSUS. 38 BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. cussed the petty discords of these squabbling sophists as though they were matters of historical importance. We can well imagine how unutterably frivolous this phase of society would appear to a serious-minded and faithful Jew ; and it may have been his Tarsian reminiscences which added emphasis to St. Paul's reiterated warnings—that the wise men of heathendom, “alleging themselves to be wise, became fools;” that “they became vain in their disputings, and their unintelligent heart was darkened ; ” that “the wisdom of this world is folly in the sight of God, for it is written, He who graspeth the wise in their own craftiness.” And again, “the Lord knoweth the reasonings of the wise that they are vain.” But while he thus confirms his tenet, according to his usual custom, by Scriptural quotations from Job and the Psalms, and elsewhere from Isaiah and Jeremiah, he reiterates again and again from his own experience that the Greeks seek after wisdom and regard the Cross as foolishness, yet that the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God stronger than men, and that God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise, and the base things of the world to confound the mighty; and that when, in the wisdom of God, the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased Gód by “the foolishness of the proclamation ”—for in his strong irony he loves and glories in the antitheses of his opponent's choosing—“by the foolish- ness of the thing preached ” to save them that believe. . If the boasted wisdom of the Greek and Roman world was such as the young Saul had seen, if their very type of senselessness and foolishness was that which the converted Paul believed, then Paul at least—so he says in his passionate and scornful irony—would choose for ever to be on the side of, to cast in his lot with, to be gladly numbered among, the idiots and the fools. “He who hath felt the Spirit of the Highest Cannot confound, or doubt Him, or defy ; Yea, with one voice, O world, though thou deniest, Stand thou on that side—for on this am I ?” St. Paul, then, was to the very heart a Jew—a Jew in culture, a Jew in sympathy, a Jew in nationality, a Jew in faith. His temperament was in no sense what we ordi- narily regard as a poetic temperament; yet when we remember how all the poetry which existed in the moral depths of his nature was sustained by the rhythms and imagery, as his soul itself was sustained by the thoughts and hopes, of his national literature—when we consider how the star of Abraham had seemed to shine on his cradle in a heathen land, and his boyhood in the dim streets of unhallowed Tarsus to gain freshness and sweetness “from the waving and rustling of the oak of Mamre”—we can understand that though in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, neither circumcision nor uncir- cumcision, but a new creation, yet for no earthly possession would he have bartered his connection with the chosen race. In his Epistle to the Romans he speaks in almost the very language of the Talmudist: “Israel hath sinned (Josh. vii. 11), but although he hath sinned,” said Rabbi Abba bar Zavda, “he is still Israel. Hence the proverb–A BOYHOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. 39 myrtle among nettles is still called a myrtle.” And when we read the numerous pas- sages in which he vaunts his participation in the hopes of Israel, his claim to be a fruitful branch in the rich olive of Jewish life; when we hear him speak of their adoption, their Shechinah, their covenants, their Law, their worship, their promises, their Fathers, their oracles of God, their claim of kinsmanship with the humanity of Christ, we can under- stand to the full the intense ejaculation of his patriotic fervor, when—in language which has ever been the stumbling-block of religious selfishness, but which surpasses the noblest utterances of heroic self-devotion—he declares that he could wish himself ac- cursed from Christ for his brethren, his kinsmen, according to the flesh. The valiant spirit of the Jews of Tarsus sent them in hundreds to die, sword in hand, amid the carnage of captured Jerusalem, and to shed their last blood to slake, if might be, the very embers of the conflagration which destroyed the Temple of their love. The same patriotism burned in the spirit, the same blood flowed in the veins, not only of Saul the Pharisee, but of Paul the prisoner of the Lord. It will be seen from all that we have said that we wholly disagree with those who have made it their favorite thesis to maintain for St. Paul the early acquisition of an advanced Hellenic culture. His style and his dialectic method have been appealed to in order to support this view. His style, however, is that of a man who wrote in a peculiar and provincial Greek, but thought in Syriac; and his dialectical method is purely Rab- binic. As for his deep knowledge of heathen life, we may be sure that it was not derived from books, but from the fatal wickedness of which he had been a daily witness. A Jew in a heathen city needed no books to reveal to him the “depths of Satan.” In this respect how startling a revelation to the modern world was the indisputable evidence of the ruins of Pompeii! Who would have expected to find the infamies of the Dead Sea cities paraded with such infinite shamelessness in every street of a little provincial town 2 What innocent snow could ever hide the guilty front of a life so unspeakably abomin- able? Could anything short of the earthquake have engulfed it, or of the volcano have burnt it up 2 And if Pompeii was like this, we may judge, from the works of Aristoph- anes and Athenaeus, of Juvenal and Martial, of Petronius and Apuleius—which may be regarded as the “pieces justificatives" of St. Paul's estimate of heathendom—what Tarsus and Ephesus, what Corinth and Miletus, were likely to have been. In days and countries when the darkness was so deep that the very deeds of darkness did not need to hide themselves—in the days and cities where the worst vilenesses of idolatry were trumpeted in its streets, and sculptured in its market-places, and consecrated in its wor- ship, and stamped upon its coins—did Paul need Greek study to tell him the character- istics of a godless civilization ? The notion of Baumgarten that, after his conversion, St. Paul earnestly studied Greek literature at Tarsus, with a view to his mission among the heathen—or that the “books” and parchments which he asked to be sent to him from the house of Carpus at Troas were of this description—is as precarious as the fancy that his parents sent him to be educated at Jerusalem in order to counteract the 4O BOYEIOOD IN A HEATHEN CITY. commencing sorcery exercised over his imagination by Hellenic studies. Gamaliel, it is true, was one of the few Rabbis who took the liberal and enlightened view about the permissibility of the “wisdom of the Greeks”—one of the few who held the desirability of not wholly dissevering the white fa//iſh of Shem from the stained fallium of Japhet. But, on the one hand, neither would Gamaliel have had that false toleration which seems to think that “the ointment of the apothecary’ is valueless without “the fly which causeth it to stink; ” and, on the other hand, if Gamaliel had allowed his pupils to handle such books, or such parts of books, as dwelt on the darker side of Paganism, Paul was not the kind of pupil who would, for a moment, have availed Himself of such “ruinous edification.” The Jews were so scrupulous, that some of them held concerning books of their own hagiographa-such, for instance, as the Book of Esther—that they were dubious reading. They would not allow their youth even to open the Song of Solomon before the age of twenty-one. Nothing, therefore, can be more certain than that “a Pharisee of Pharisees,” even though his boyhood were spent in heathen Tarsus, would not have been allowed to read—barely even allowed to 1