Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The cold floor of the cell was the only comfort
he had left. Heavy chains clamped his aged wrists as
darkness devoured his hopes. Paul, the man who had faced storms, stonings,
and floggings, was now facing his greatest challenge, certain death,
under the rule of the cruelest emperor Rome had ever known.
This is the account of how one of the greatest
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apostles of the Christian faith met his final destiny. The
story begins in Jerusalem, where a young pharisee named Saul
ruthlessly persecuted the followers of the Way. With authorization from
the chief priests, he burst into homes, dragged men and
women to prison, and approved death sentences. The blood of Stephen,
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the first Christian martyr, had been spilled while Saul guarded
the executioners cloaks. His zeal for the Law of Moses
had made him a terror to the fledgling Church, forcing
many believers to flee to other cities. On the road
to Damascus, under the scorching mid day sun, everything changed.
A light brighter than the sun surrounded him, knocking him
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to the ground. A heavenly voice asked Saul, Saul, why
are you persecuting me? It was Jesus Christ, the very
one he was fighting. For three days, he remained blind,
without eating or drinking, until Anonius, following divine guidance, laid
hands on him. Scales fell from his eyes. Saul the
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persecutor became Paul the persecuted. The transformation was complete and radical.
For more than two decades, Paul traveled thousands of kilometers
throughout the Roman world. On his first journey with Barnabas,
he faced hostility in Posidian Antioch, was almost stoned in Iconium,
and in Listra survived a stoning after being mistaken for
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the god Hermes. Even so, he established churches and strengthened
new believers. On his second journey with Silas, he crossed
Asia Minor, and, guided by a night vision of a
Macedonian man, took the Gospel to Europe. In Philippi, he
was beaten and imprisoned unjustly. In Athens, he debated philosophers
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at the Areopagus. In Corinth, he established a strong community
over eighteen months of work. On the third journey, he
taught for two years in Ephesus, center of the cult
of the goddess Diana, causing an uproar among the artisans
who profited from idols. He re visited churches in Macedonia
and Greece, strengthening the believers and collecting offerings for those
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in need in Jerusalem. In each city, his message remained
the same, Christ crucified and risen, offering salvation to all,
regardless of ethnic background or social status. The Holy Spirit
warned Paul in every city he passed through that prisons
and afflictions awaited him in Jerusalem. In Miletus, saying farewell
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to the elders of Ephesus, he declared, with remarkable resolve,
I consider my life worth nothing to me if only
I may finish the race and complete the ministry I
received from the Lord Jesus to testify to the gospel
of God's grace. In Caesarea, the prophet Agabus took Paul's belt,
and binding his own feet and hands, prophesied that the
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Jewish authorities in Jerusalem would capture him. His traveling companions,
in tears, begged him not to go on. Paul replied,
why are you weeping and breaking my heart? I am
ready not only to be bound, but also to die
in Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus. His
determination was unwavering. The divine call outweighed any concern for
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personal safety. Each step toward Jerusalem was a deliberate step
toward the predicted suffering. In Jerusalem, Paul was warmly received
by the Brothers, but rumors circulated that he taught against
the law of Moses. To calm tempers, he participated in
a purification ritual at the temple. On the last day,
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Jews from Asia recognized him in citing a furious crowd,
this is the man who teaches against our people, our law,
and this holy place. Dragged out of the temple, Paul
would have been lynched if not for the intervention of
the Roman garrison. The commander, thinking he was a dangerous
Egyptian rebel, ordered him bound with two chains. As he
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was led to the Antonia Fortress, Paul asked for permission
to speak to the enraged crowd. Surprisingly, the officer allowed it.
From the fortress steps, Paul spoke in Aramaic, recounting his conversion.
When he mentioned his mission to the Gentiles, the crowd erupted,
rid the earth of this man. He does not deserve
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to live. The situation in Jerusalem was growing more perilous
for the apostle to the Gentiles. Ordered to be flogged
to extract a confession, Paul revealed his Roman citizenship, a
right protecting him from such punishment without a prior trial.
Alarmed having chained a Roman citizen, the commander convened the
Sanhedrin the next day. Before the council, Paul noticed the
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division between Pharisees and Sadducees and declared, I stand on
trial because of the hope of the resurrection of the dead.
This statement caused such a violent commotion that soldiers had
to rescue him. That night, the Lord appeared to Paul,
take courage, as you have testified about me in Jerusalem,
so you must also testify in Rome. Shortly after, the
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commander uncovered a plot by more than forty Jews, who
had sworn not to eat or drink until they killed Paul.
To protect him, he arranged for an escort of two
hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen and two hundred spearmen, transferring him
to Caesarrea under Governor Felix's custody. The divine plan was unfolding,
taking Paul away from Jerusalem toward his promised destination Rome.
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In Caesarea, Paul was held in Herod's pretorium while await
his accusers. Five days later, the high priest Anonius arrived
with elders and the attorney to Tullus, who presented the charges.
This man is a plague who stirs up riots among
all the Jews throughout the world. He is a ring
leader of the Nazarene sect, and even tried to desecrate
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the temple. Paul eloquently defended himself. During the twelve days
since I arrived to worship in Jerusalem, no one found
me arguing in the temple, or stirring up crowds in
the synagogues, or anywhere else. Felix, already acquainted with the way,
postponed the case and ordered that Paul be kept under guard,
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though with a degree of freedom. From time to time.
He summoned Paul to hear about faith in Christ. But
when Paul spoke on righteousness self control in the coming judgment,
Felix grew afraid and dismissed him. For now you may go.
When it is convenient, I will send for you. He
also hoped to receive a bribe. Thus two years went
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by with Paul remaining in prison. When Felix was succeeded
by Portius Festus, the new governor. Festus was quickly approached
by Jewish leaders demanding Paul's transfer to Jerusalem, intending to
ambush him on the way. Festus refused and invited them
to present their accusations in Caesarea. After hearing both sides.
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Seeking to please the Jews, Festus asked Paul, do you
wish to go up to Jerusalem and be tried there
before me? Sensing a trap, Paul exercised his citizen's right.
I am standing before Caesar's tribunal where I ought to
be tried. If I am guilty of something deserving death,
I do not refuse to die, I appealed to Caesar.
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A few days later, King Agrippa and Bernice visited Caesarea.
Festus explained Paul's situation, and Agrippa expressed interest in hearing him.
The next day, in a solemn session with civil and
military authorities present, Paul was given permission to speak. Agrippa,
well versed in Jewish customs, would be an ideal listener
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for the apostles defense and testimony about Christ's resurrection. With
an outstretched hand, Paul began his defense. I consider myself fortunate,
King Agrippa, to stand before you today to answer all
these accusations from the Jews, especially since you are well
acquainted with all the Jewish customs and controversies. He recounted
his life as a zealous Pharisee, his persecution of Christians,
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and his dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus. He
described the heavenly light brighter than the sun, his fall
to the ground, and the voice of Jesus speaking to
him in Aramaic. He explained his divine commission to open
the gentile's eyes, to turn them from darkness to light,
from the power of Satan to God. That is why
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King Agrippa I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision.
I have been preaching that all should repent, turn to God,
and do works befitting repentance. Paul declared that Christ would suffer,
rise from the dead and proclaim light to both Jews
and Gentiles. Festus interrupted, you are out of your mind, Paul.
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Your great learning is driving you insane. Paul replied, I
am not insane, Most excellent Festus, I speak words of
truth and reason. The King is familiar with these matters,
which is why I speak so freely to him. Appealing
to Caesar meant a long sea journey. Paul, along with
other prisoners, was handed over to Julius, a centurion of
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the Imperial Regiment. They boarded a ship from Adramytium bound
for the coast of Asia. Luke and Aristachus were with
him At Sidon. Julius kindly allowed Paul to visit friends
and receive care. They sailed under the Lee of Cyprus
due to contrary winds, crossing the open sea along Cilicia
and Pamphylia until they reached Myra in Lycia. There they
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transferred to an Alexandrian ship bound for Italy. Progressing slowly,
they arrived at a place called fair Havens near LEESEA
sailing was becoming dangerous, for the fast had already passed.
Paul warned men, I perceived that this voyage will be disastrous,
causing great damage to the ship, the cargo, and our
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very lives. Yet the centurion placed more trust in the
pilot and the owner. Because the harbour was unsuitable for wintering,
most decided to press on, hoping to reach Phoenix. A
harbour in crete facing southwest and northwest When a gentle
south wind began to blow, they thought they had achieved
their aim. They weighed anchor and sailed close to the
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coast of Crete, but soon a violent wind called the
northeaster struck the ship. Unable to resist, they let themselves
be carried along by the storm, passing to the lee
of the small island of Cowder. With great difficulty, they
hoisted the lifeboat and secure the hull with ropes. Fearing
they would run aground on the sand banks of cirties,
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they lowered the sails and were driven along. The next day,
battered by the storm, they began to throw the cargo overboard.
On the third day, they threw the ship's tackle overboard.
For many days, with neither sun nor stars visible, all
hope was lost. After a long fast, Paul stood and said, men,
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you should have listened to me and not left Crete,
avoiding this damage. But now I urge you to take courage,
for there will be no loss of life among you,
only of the ship. Last night, an angel of the
God to whom I belonged stood beside me and said,
do not be afraid, Paul. You must stand before Caesar,
and God has granted you the lives of all who
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sail with you. On the fourteenth night adrift in the Adriatic,
the sailors sensed land was near. Sounding showed one hundred
twenty feet, then ninety feet. Fearing they would be dashed
against the rocks, they dropped four anchors from the stern.
Longing for daybreak, When they tried to escape in the lifeboat,
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Paul warned the centurion, unless these men remain in the ship,
you cannot be saved. So the soldiers cut the ropes
and let the boat fall away before dawn. Paul encouraged
everyone to eat. Today marks fourteen days of continuous fasting.
Eat for your survival. Not a hair from your heads
will be lost. He took bread, gave thanks to God,
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broke it, and began to eat. Everyone was encouraged and
ate as well. All together there were two hundred seventy
six people on board. They then lightened the ship by
throwing the grain into the sea. At daybreak, they saw
a bay with a beach and decided to run the
ship aground there if they could. Cutting loose the anchors,
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hoisting the foresail to the wind, they headed for the beach.
The vessel struck a sand bar. The boughs stuck fast
while the stern began to break upon under the pounding
of the waves. Everyone reached land safely, discovering they were
on the island of Malta. The inhabitants showed extraordinary kindness,
lighting a fire amid the rain and cold. As Paul
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gathered sticks for the fire, a viper latched onto his hand.
The islanders, seeing this, concluded, this man must be a murderer.
Though he escaped the sea, justice will not let him live.
But Paul shook the snake off into the fire without harm,
so they changed their minds. He must be a god.
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Near By was an estate belonging to Publius, the Roman
official of the island, who hosted them for three days.
His father lay sick with fever and dysentery. Paul prayed,
laid hands on him, and healed him. Soon others on
the island with ailments came and were also healed. The
Maltese showed great honor to the shipwrecked survivors, and when
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they left after three months, supplied them with everything needed.
They set sail on an Alexandrian ship that had wintered
on the island, whose figurehead bore the twin gods Castor
and Pollux. They reached Syracuse, staying three days, then continued
to Regium and Puteoli. They found brothers who invited them
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to stay a week before heading on to Rome. In Rome,
Paul was permitted to live by himself, guarded by a soldier.
After three days, he summoned the local Jewish leaders, explaining, Brothers,
though I have done nothing against our people or the
customs of our ancestors. I was arrested in Jerusalem and
handed over to the Romans. After examining me, they wanted
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to release me because there was no crime deserving death,
but when the Jews objected, I was forced to appeal
to Caesar. Not that I had any charge against my nation.
It is because of the hope of Israel that I
am bound with these chains. They replied, we have received
no letters from Judea about nor any unfavorable reports. We
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want to hear your views, for we know that this
sect is opposed everywhere. They arranged a larger gathering where Paul,
from morning and till evening, expounded on the Kingdom of
God and sought to persuade them about Jesus. From the
Law and the prophets. Some were convinced, others not. Paul
spent two entire years in a rented house, welcoming all
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who came to see him. He preached the Kingdom of
God and taught about Jesus Christ with full boldness and
without hindrance. During this period he wrote several epistles that
would become a fundamental part of the New Testament. In
July of the year sixty four, while Paul remained under
custody in Rome, a devastating fire broke out in the
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Circus Maximus area. For six days and seven nights, the
flames consumed much of the imperial city. Ten out of
the fourteen districts were affected, three of them completely destroyed.
Who had been in Antium at the outset returned to
organize relief efforts, opening his gardens to the homeless and
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constructing temporary shelters. However, persistent rumours claimed he had ordered
the fire to clear space for his ambitious architectural project,
the Domus Arria Golden House. To deflect suspicion, Nero needed
scapegoats Christians, already viewed with mistrust due to their private
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gatherings and refusal to worship pagan gods became the perfect target,
according to the historian Tacitus, to put an end to
the rumour, Nero created culprits and inflicted the most exquisite
punishments upon those hated for their abominations, called Christians by
the populace. The ensuing persecution was brutal. Christians were arrested
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en mass, many turned in by neighbours. Some dressed in
animal skins, were torn apart by dogs. Others were crucified.
Many were smeared with pitch and burned human torches in
the Imperial gardens. The relative freedom of house arrest ended
with the persecution that followed the fire. As a prominent
Christian figure, Paul was transferred to the Mammertine Prison, a
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notorious jail at the foot of the Capitoline Hill, reserved
for enemies of the state awaiting execution. It consisted of
two stacked cells carved out of rock. The lower one,
likely where Paul stayed, was accessible only through a hole
in the ceiling, no windows, no natural light, and inadequate ventilation.
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In this cold fowl environment, almost entirely cut off from contact,
Paul wrote his second letter to Timothy his spiritual testament.
I am already being poured out like a drink offering,
and the time of my departure has come. I have
fought the good fight. I have finished the race. I
have kept the faith sorrowfully. He recounted his abandonment at
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my first defense. No one stood with me, every one
deserted me. Only Luke remained faithful. Paul asked Timothy to
come quickly before winter, bringing the cloak he had left
in troas a poignant request, revealing his need for physical
warmth in the freezing cell. In the autumn of the
year sixty seven, Paul was brought to trial before imperial
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representatives in the Roman Forum. Chained the apostle, prematurely aged
by his ordeals, traversed streets crowded with Roman citizens, merchants
and slaves, some curious, others disdainful of this follower of
the crucified one. Unlike the public trials in Judea, this
one was held behind closed doors. The charges had evolved.
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It was no longer only about Jewish religious questions, but
serious crimes against the Roman state, sedition disturbing the peace,
and possible involvement in the arson conspiracy, Paul, faithful to
his apostolic calling, turned his trial into one last opportunity
to proclaim the Gospel to Rome's authorities. As he himself wrote,
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at my defense, the Lord stood by my side and
gave me strength, so that the message might be fully
proclaimed and all the gentiles might hear it. In an
empire where worship of the emperor was increasingly central to
political loyalty, the Christian declaration Jesus' Lord directly contradicted Nero's
divine pretensions. Condemnation was all but certain. The verdict of
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the imperial tribunal was predictable. In times of systematic persecution
of Christians officially blamed for the fire, Paul could not
expect mercy. Nevertheless, as a Roman citizen, he would be
spared the cruelest methods of execution reserved for non citizens.
When the death sentence was pronounced, Paul received it with
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his characteristic dignity. There were no desperate pleas or denial
of faith. His own words revealed his outlook for to me,
to live is Christ and to die is gain back.
In the mamotine prison, he awaited execution. Later. Christian tradition
suggests that during this final period, Peter was also imprisoned
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in the same location. Although the New Testament does not
confirm this meeting, it is significant to imagine these two
great apostles, so different in personality and calling, yet united
in purpose, spending their final days encouraging one another. Out
of respect for his Roman citizenship. Paul was to be
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executed by the sword, a death considered more dignified than
the crucifixion reserved for Peter. In his last moments, he
might have recalled Jesus words to Annonius, I will show
him how much he must suffer for my name. On
the appointed morning, soldiers led Paul to the execution site
outside the city walls, along the Ostian Way toward the
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Port of Ostia. He walked with steady steps, despite advanced
age and weakened condition. Perhaps some Christians who survived the
persecution mingled discreetly with the crowd to witness the apostle's
final journey. They could not openly identify themselves without risking
their own lives, but their silent presence testified to Paul's impact.
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The procession passed temples and monuments of Imperial Rome, symbols
of the power that decreed his death. Ironically, that same
empire would provide the roads, common language, and relative stability
that allowed the Gospel message to reach the ends of
the earth. Tradition indicates that Paul encountered a noble Roman
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matron named Plotilla, who offered him her veil to cover
his eyes during the execution. Following Roman custom, Paul accepted,
promising to return it later, a promise which, according to
traditional accounts, he fulfilled by appearing to her after his death.
Arriving at the Aquae Salvia, now the Abbey of the
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Three Fountains, the designated execution spot, final preparations were made,
an execution block was set up. The executioner drew his
gleaming Roman sword. Before kneeling, Paul requested a few moments
to pray. According to early Christian traditions, he prayed not
only for himself, but also for the believers in Rome,
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for the churches he had established across the Mediterranean, and
even for Nero and Rome itself. With his eyes covered
by Plotilla's veil, Paul offered his neck. The Christians present
saw how he faced death with the same courage that
marked his life. There was no fear on his face
only peace and expectancy. One swift motion of the sword
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ended the apostle's earthly life. The man who had declared
for me to live is Christ and to die is
Gain now experienced that final reality. According to tradition, when
his head touched the ground, it reportedly bounced three times,
and at each spot a spring of water miraculously gushed forth,
giving the site its name three fountains. The few Christians present,
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risking their own lives, collected his body and buried it
on a plot of land along the Ostian Way. Paul's
body was laid to rest simply, but his influence was
only beginning. The place became a pilgrimage site for Christians.
In the fourth century, when Constantine legalized Christianity, a basilica
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was built over his tomb, the first of several churches
culminating in today's Basilica of Saint Paul outside the walls.
It is important to clarify the Bible does not record
how Paul died. The Book of Acts ends with Paul
under house arrest in Rome for two years Acts twenty
eight thirty to thirty one, without mentioning his ultimate fate.
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Early Christian tradition Eusebius, Tertullian and others states that Paul
was behead in Rome during Nero's persecution, but these are
extra biblical accounts. Many details in this narrative about his death,
such as imprisonment in the mammotine prison, the encounter with
the matron Ploutila, the miracle of the Three fountains, and
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the specific place of execution, come from later Christian traditions
and lack direct biblical confirmation. Paul's true legacy, however, lies
in his writings, which comprise nearly one third of the
New Testament. His epistles address fundamental questions justification by faith,
freedom in Christ, the Church as the body of Christ,
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and the hope of resurrection. Paul, who described himself as
the least of the apostles and the chief of sinners,
became the most influential interpreter of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection.
His missionary journeys established Christian communities throughout the Mediterranean, transforming
Christianity from a jewis Wish movement into a world wide faith.
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The zealous Pharisee, who left Jerusalem as a persecutor, died
in Rome as the persecuted, the proud Roman citizen found
his true citizenship in heaven. Nero, who ordered his execution,
would commit suicide less than a year later. His empire
would eventually fall, but Paul's spiritual legacy remains alive. I
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have fought the good fight. I have finished the race.
I have kept the faith.