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Christian History Institute
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Christian History Institute February 8, 58 • Paul Sailed from Malta to His Roman Prison--Maybe ©2007 |
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![]() Artist's conception of Paul.
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Paul,
the apostle of grace Follow the footsteps of the apostle who rocked
the Roman Empire to its foundations. Paul's radical gospel of grace lit the fire of the faith that would sweep across Europe and beyond. This video takes you to the places Paul visited.
NEW ON DVD
Gospel of Judas and Other Gnostic Secrets Revealed. Was Judas Iscariot really a traitor or was he the spiritual hero recorded in the Gnostic Gospels? Just what is the origin of the Gnostic gospels and are they reliable?
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dentifying events in the New Testament with ancient dates is tricky. Controversy swirls around attempts to date of happenings in the lives of Christ, Paul, and other Biblical figures. Scholars are always excited when they can link the chronology of the gospels and the Acts of the Apostles with dates that can be determined from non-Biblical sources. Because we are given so much detail about Paul, not only by Luke, but by Paul himself in his letters to churches, historians have many facts that they can attempt to tie in with ancient writings and archaeological finds. We know, for example, that Paul was brought before Gallio the year Gallio was proconsul of Achaia. We know that he met Priscilla and Aquilla after they had been expelled from Rome. We know he stood before Festus in Festus' first year as governor of Judea. If we can determine dates for those events, we have a rough outline of Paul's movements. Unfortunately, none of those years are easy to pin down. The world's greatest authorities disagree. According to Jack Finegan's reckoning in the Handbook of Biblical Chronology, Paul was converted in ad 36. For several years he preached the gospel, always going to Jews first, and when the majority rejected him, turning to the gentiles. His gospel was of salvation by faith in the resurrected Christ whom he had seen with his own eyes. Good deeds could not win it although they would surely follow it. Despite great adversity, Paul carried the gospel through Asia Minor and Southern Europe. In fact, Europe is Christian today in large measure because of Paul's zeal. Eventually Paul was arrested in Jerusalem. Imprisoned for several years, he finally appealed to Caesar, which was his right as a Roman citizen. He was shipped off to Rome under guard. This was probably in 57. On the way, he and his companions were wrecked on the island of Malta where they wintered, in custody of Roman soldiers. This day, February 8, 58, may be the day that Paul sailed from Malta. Pliny tells us in his Natural History (an early encyclopedic work) that February 8 was the date Spring opened its seas to voyagers. If the sailors acted on the traditional date, we may actually have pinned down an exact moment in Paul's life. But from the evidence we have today, we cannot know for certain. Even the year is conjectural. Some researchers place the date of the shipwreck two years later. Bibliography:
Last updated May, 2007. |