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Saint Paul
Feastday: June 29

St. Paul, the indefatigable Apostle of the Gentiles,
was converted from Judaism on the road to Damascus. He remained
some days in Damascus after his Baptism, and then went to Arabia,
possibly for a year or two to prepare himself for his future missionary
activity. Having returned to Damascus, he stayed there for a time,
preaching in the synagogues that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of
God. For this he incurred the hatred of the Jews and had to flee
from the city. He then went to Jerusalem to see Peter and pay his
homage to the head of the Church.
Later he went back to his native Tarsus, where he
began to evangelize his own province until called by Barnabus to
Antioch. After one year, on the occasion of a famine, both Barnabus
and Paul were sent with alms to the poor Christian community at
Jerusalem. Having fulfilled their mission they returned to Antioch.
Soon after this, Paul and Barnabus made the first
missionary journey, visiting the island of Cypress, then Pamphylia,
Pisidia, and Lycaonia, all in Asia Minor, and establishing churches
at Pisidian Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe.
After the Apostolic Council of Jerusalem Paul, accompanied
by Silas and later also by Timothy and Luke, made his second missionary
journey, first revisiting the churches previously established by
him in Asia Minor, and then passing through Galatia. At Troas a
vision of a Macedonian was had by Paul, which impressed him as a
call from God to evangelize in Macedonia. He accordingly sailed
for Europe, and preached the Gospel in Philippi. Thessalonica, Beroea,
Athens, and Corinth. Then he returned to Antioch by way of Ephesus
and Jerusalem.
On his third missionary journey, Paul visited nearly
the same regions as on the second trip, but made Ephesus where he
remained nearly three years, the center of his missionary activity.
He laid plans also for another missionary journey, intending to
leave Jerusalem for Rome and Spain. Persecutions by the Jews hindered
him from accomplishing his purpose. After two years of imprisonment
at Caesarea he finally reached Rome, where he was kept another two
years in chains.
The Acts of the Apostles gives us no further information
on the life of the Apostle. We gather, however, from the Pastoral
Epistles and from tradition that at the end of the two years St.
Paul was released from his Roman imprisonment, and then traveled
to Spain, later to the East again, and then back to Rome, where
he was imprisoned a second time and in the year 67, was beheaded.
St. Paul untiring interest in and paternal affection
for the churches established by him have given us fourteen canonical
Epistles. It is, however, quite certain that he wrote other letters
which are no longer extant. In his Epistles, St. Paul shows himself
to be a profound religious thinker and he has had an enduring formative
influence in the development of Christianity. The centuries only
make more apparent his greatness of mind and spirit. His feast day
is June 29th.
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