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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Paul the Hero, by Rufus M. Jones
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: St. Paul the Hero
-
-Author: Rufus M. Jones
-
-Release Date: August 1, 2016 [EBook #52694]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. PAUL THE HERO ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Macmillan colophon]
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
-
- NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
- ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
-
- MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
-
- LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
-
- TORONTO
-
- [Illustration: TARSUS]
-
-
-
-
- ST. PAUL THE HERO
-
-
-
-
- BY
- RUFUS M. JONES
- Author of “The Inner Life,” etc.
-
-
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED_
-
-
-
-
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1917
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1917
- BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
-
- -------
-
- Set up and electrotyped. Published, March, 1917.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I THE BOY OF TEN YEARS 1
-
- II HIS HEROES 9
-
- III IN JERUSALEM 17
-
- IV IN RABBI GAMALIEL’S SCHOOL 25
-
- V TENT-MAKING IN TARSUS 32
-
- VI THE GREAT TEACHER OF GALILEE 40
-
- VII IN JERUSALEM AGAIN 48
-
- VIII THE MAN WITH A SHINING FACE 55
-
- IX ON THE ROAD TO DAMASCUS 63
-
- X IN ARABIA 73
-
- XI FIFTEEN WONDERFUL DAYS 80
-
- XII THE FIRST GREAT MISSIONARY JOURNEY 88
-
- XIII THE FIRST GREAT PROBLEM 97
-
- XIV A LETTER TO HIS CHURCHES 104
-
- XV “COME OVER INTO MACEDONIA AND HELP US” 111
-
- XVI ALONE IN ATHENS 119
-
- XVII CORINTH AND EPHESUS 126
-
- XVIII “READY TO BE BOUND” 139
-
- XIX IN THE PRISON AT CAESAREA 148
-
- XX THE STORMY JOURNEY TO ROME 157
-
- XXI THE TRIUMPH OF THE HERO 165
-
-
-
-
- PICTURES AND MAPS
-
-
- Tarsus _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- Falls of the Cydnus 3
-
- Antioch 88
-
- Map [North East Corner Medit.] 94
-
- Map [2nd Missionary Journey] 112
-
- Mars Hill, Athens 122
-
- Ephesus 129
-
- Temple of Diana 137
-
-
-
-
- ST. PAUL THE HERO
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- THE BOY OF TEN YEARS
-
-
-“Father, who made the mountains that reach clear up into the sky over
-there where the sun goes down in the west?”
-
-“It was God, my dear little boy. Don’t you remember the psalm we read in
-the synagogue last week: ‘I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains,
-from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the Lord who made the
-heavens and the earth’? God made the Taurus Mountains on the west of our
-dear city and He made those peaks of the Amanus you see off there in the
-East, over which the storks fly in the autumn, and He made this
-wonderful river, the Cydnus, which dashes through the cleft in the
-mountains and makes those great waterfalls which you love and which
-rushes headlong through the city on its way to the blue sea.”
-
-“Well, Father, He must be wonderful if He did that! But I don’t see how
-He ever could spread out this great blue tent of a sky over all these
-fields and over all the city and over both the mountain ranges and as
-far as men have ever been. All the way to holy Jerusalem it goes—and
-farther, to Alexandria where the man lives, who wrote the book you read
-to me yesterday. Is there any end to that tent and what is it made of?
-Nobody in all our province of Cilicia can weave tent-cloth like that!”
-
-“No, my son, nobody has ever found an end to the tent of the sky. It
-covers the whole world. It is harder to get to the end of it than it is
-to go to the end of the rainbow, which you tried to find a few days ago.
-But, my dear boy, God has made something more wonderful than the
-mountains, more wonderful than the river, more wonderful even than the
-blue canopy of the sky, that covers the world.”
-
-[Illustration: FALLS OF THE CYDNUS]
-
-“What can it be, Father, that is more wonderful than these things? Do
-you mean the sea, which you sail over when you go as a pilgrim to holy
-Jerusalem, to the passover?”
-
-“No, not the sea, though that _is_ wonderful and dreadful. I mean the
-law which God wrote with His own finger and gave to our great prophet
-Moses. That is God’s greatest gift to our race. I want my little boy to
-love the beauty of the mountains and the river and the sky and the sea.
-But beyond all things, I want him to love the holy law of God, to learn
-it by heart, to keep every word of it and to grow up and be one of
-Jehovah’s own men. My boy comes of the tribe of Benjamin, the favourite
-of all the sons of our father Jacob, and some day this little boy may
-become the leader and deliverer of God’s longsuffering people. Will
-little Saul promise to be Jehovah’s man, and will he always love and
-keep the whole law which our God gave to Moses?”
-
-“Will it be very hard to do, Father, and must I give up all the things I
-like to do?”
-
-“Yes, my dear boy, it will often be very hard and you will have to give
-up some things you like to do. But if you keep the whole law of God and
-make yourself perfect and do everything God asks you to do in the holy
-law, all the people of our race forever will call you blessed, and you
-will be the hero of the tribe of Benjamin, and you will help to bring
-the Messiah for whom we long and pray, and Jehovah will give you eternal
-life in His kingdom.”
-
-“Oh, Father, I don’t care how hard it is, I will do it. I will let my
-pet stork out of his cage, so that he can fly off with the other storks
-over the mountains. I will not do one single thing on the holy Sabbath
-that is wrong. I will not play by the river any more with little Gentile
-boys. I will learn every word of Moses’ law and say it all to mother
-when she puts me to bed. I will be ready to serve my race when God calls
-for some one to do the great deed, as David did in the book we read.”
-
-His father patted his boy on the head and smiled, as they walked home
-along the banks of the rushing Cydnus and looked off at the sun-lit tops
-of the Taurus Mountains.
-
-Little Saul had had ten birth-days and he had already caught the spirit
-of his race which was very strong in his father and mother who kept
-feeding him on the stories of the past and waking in him the desire to
-be the hero of his tribe. Tarsus, a beautiful city of the province of
-Cilicia, was his home. The city was twelve miles from the Mediterranean
-Sea and ships came up the river to the great wharves on either bank. Not
-far away to the south was the great island of Cyprus and through a pass
-in the Amanus Mountains a road went to Jerusalem and the land of his
-fathers. He had been often ill and weak during the ten years he had
-lived and often he had lain by the window and looked out on the world
-and wondered. More than once he had seen an army go marching up the
-street, carrying the Roman eagles and flashing Damascus blades in the
-sun. He wondered where they were going and what they would do with these
-terrible swords.
-
-He had an older sister who was too old to play games with him, but she
-took him on walks by the river and like everybody else she told him
-Hebrew stories about the heroes he loved. She would picture to him often
-a city on a great hill, with valleys running round it, with a gorgeous
-temple in it, and she would say, “Some day you and I will go there to
-live and that will be our home and we shall be where we can see the
-temple of God every day!”
-
-Saul’s father was proud of many things. He had married a wise and
-beautiful woman, of his own tribe, who made his home a very happy one.
-He was proud of his wife. He was proud of this strange boy who pondered
-and wondered and who promised to become some day a great Rabbi and
-leader. He was proud of his tribe and of his race. He was still more
-proud to be a Pharisee and to be classed among those who strictly kept
-the law and worshipped every least letter of it, and then he was proud
-that he was a Roman citizen. He had done some service to the empire and
-the great honour of being enrolled a citizen had been conferred upon
-him, so that little Saul had been born a Roman citizen and had received
-a double name, one for his home people—Saul, and one for Roman citizens
-to call him by, Paul, which meant, “the little one.”
-
-This was the boy who talked with his father by the shore of the Cydnus,
-one evening about twenty years after Christ was born in Bethlehem.
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- HIS HEROES
-
-
-Months passed by and the little boy of Tarsus grew stronger and more
-eager and earnest. His father had sailed from the port of Messina for
-Tyre and Ptolemais and Cæsarea, on his way to Jerusalem to keep the
-Passover in the Holy Land. Little Saul had begged to be taken with him
-that he might see the Temple and stand on the very ground over which the
-great heroes of his race had walked, but he was told that he must wait
-until he was a few years older and then he should go to Jerusalem to
-study with a great Rabbi who could answer all his questions. For a long
-time he had gazed at the sky where the sun had gone down over the
-Taurus. He was really not looking at anything—he was just gazing off
-into space and wondering. He wondered whether he would ever see the
-world beyond those mountains, the world he had heard men talk about, the
-world of Asia and Greece and Rome. Then he turned to look toward the
-dim, yet shimmering peaks in the East and he wondered whether he would
-some day climb those ranges and go through the pass into Syria and on
-into the land he loved best—the real world of his own race.
-
-He had not yet read any of the stories of Greece. He had dimly heard of
-the Trojan war, but it was only a name of little meaning. Theseus and
-Jason and Achilles and Ulysses were not his heroes. They were never
-mentioned in his home, though he sometimes heard the boys in the street
-speak of them. _His_ heroes had all lived over the other mountains.
-Their names he heard almost every day. They were household words. He
-sometimes made believe that he was David and he would run with a little
-hand sling and kill again the mighty Philistine giant that threatened
-his people. When he climbed a high hill-top he imagined himself Moses on
-Nebo, looking over Jordan on the wonderful land of promise, and every
-peak covered with a cloud that looked like smoke seemed to him once more
-Sinai, with the Lord above giving the law in the darkness and the
-thunder. He wished he could see the Seraphim as Isaiah did, with two
-wings over their faces, and two wings all the way down to their feet and
-two wings moving like a bird’s to carry them wherever the Lord willed
-them to go. And still more he wished that he could see that wonderful
-figure which Ezekiel saw by the river Chebar—a living creature with the
-face of a man, and a calf and a lion and an eagle, all woven in and out
-with wings and all full of eyes, flashing like lightning, whirling like
-wheels, and moving wherever the Spirit of God carried the strange living
-creature. He thrilled whenever he heard the story of Daniel and he
-wondered whether he himself would have dared to pray to Jehovah and go
-to the lions for it. He had seen a lion once who was being carried to
-Ephesus in a cage, to be let out in the amphitheatre. The lion roared
-and shook his cage and showed his terrible teeth. Then little Saul
-thought of calm, brave Daniel going down into a den full of beasts like
-that.
-
-And Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego, the three heroes of the burning
-fiery furnace, were men he loved to hear about. “Be it known unto thee O
-King, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image
-which thou hast set up.” Those words always stirred him like a trumpet.
-And he waited every time to hear once more about one like unto a son of
-God walking with these brave Jews in the midst of Nebuchadnezzar’s fire.
-But best of all he liked the story of the faith of great father Abraham.
-He could almost see him laying the sticks of wood on the altar and
-binding his own only boy upon them. He wondered if _his_ father would
-have done it with him, if _he_ heard the Lord tell him to do it! Then
-suddenly came the joyous relief: the ram in the thicket, and little
-Isaac spared, just as the dreadful knife flashed in the air.
-
-These heroes were going in procession through his mind as he gazed at
-the eastern gate in the mountains through which the road ran that led on
-toward the one city of all the world. Just then his mother stood by his
-side and took his hand in hers. She could see that big thoughts were
-moving in him and she felt a kind of awe as she looked down at the pale
-earnest face.
-
-“Mother, which is the hardest of all the commandments to keep—I mean,
-really to keep, and not to break at all?”
-
-In her mind, the fond Jewish mother standing in the dusk by the boy she
-loved, ran over all the commandments. “Thou shalt not have any other
-gods but Jehovah.”
-
-“Thou shalt not make any graven image.”
-
-“Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.”
-
-“Thou shalt observe the Sabbath day and keep it holy.”
-
-“Thou shalt honour thy father and mother.”
-
-“Thou shalt do no murder.”
-
-“Thou shalt not commit adultery.”
-
-“Thou shalt not steal.”
-
-“Thou shalt not bear false witness.”
-
-“Thou shalt not covet, or desire.” While she was thinking how to answer,
-little Saul said: “I know which is the easiest.”
-
-“And which is it?” asked his mother.
-
-“Thou shalt honour thy father and mother. It is the easiest thing there
-is to do. I don’t have to stop to think to do that! It is not so easy,
-though, to keep the Sabbath day holy. There are so many things to
-remember. Now that I have let my pet stork go, I do not feel tempted any
-more to play with him on the Sabbath day. But sometimes I start off for
-a walk before I think, and I carry things that are too heavy to be
-lifted on the Sabbath day. I wonder if I shall ever get so righteous,
-like our great Hebrew saints, that I shall not do anything wrong on the
-Sabbath day. It is very, very hard to be perfectly good. Do you not
-think, Mother, that this is the hardest of all the commandments to
-keep?”
-
-“No, my dear Saul, there is one which you will find much harder to keep.
-It is the last one in the list: “Thou shalt not want things—thou shalt
-not desire.” This commandment has to do with what goes on inside. All
-the others are about things we do in the world outside. This one is in
-there where you think. It says that you must rule your own spirit and
-not want or desire what you ought not to have or ought not to do. That
-my little boy, as he grows larger, will find very hard indeed to keep.
-Only the great God who guided Abraham our father all the way from Ur of
-the Chaldees to the dear land of Canaan can help my boy to keep that
-commandment.”
-
-“Anyway I shall try, mother. It isn’t any harder is it than going into a
-den of lions or into Nebuchadnezzar’s fiery furnace?”
-
-“Ah, but my Saul will never have any such dreadful things to do, for he
-is born a Roman citizen and he can always appeal to Cæsar. Now it is
-time little boys were in bed.”
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- IN JERUSALEM
-
-
-The days grew to weeks and the weeks to months; the months added
-themselves and made years in Tarsus in the first century just as happens
-now where my young reader lives. Time and the multiplication table go on
-in one century exactly as in another, no matter what else changes.
-Before the father and mother could quite realise it, or believe it
-possible, Saul, once our little boy, who looked out on his world and
-wondered, was old enough to go away from his home to a great school in
-Jerusalem where perhaps all his questions could be answered though only
-for a little while. His sister had married now and lived in Jerusalem
-and it was arranged for Saul to have his home with her while he was
-studying with the famous Rabbi Gamaliel, who knew better than almost any
-one else the law, and the rules by which the daily life of a strict Jew
-should be guided so that he might be perfect.
-
-Through the Syrian Gate in the Amanus ridge, Saul had gone with his
-father on their way to the holy city for the Passover and for a short
-time of sight-seeing and visit before the hard work of the school began.
-They came on through Antioch of Syria, the first great city which Saul
-had ever seen and one which some day he would know much better; then
-they journeyed on by hard and dangerous roads until they saw Damascus,
-with its two beautiful rivers and its high city walls. Some day Saul
-would know this city better too! And the time would come when he would
-find out how high those city walls were! Every foot of the road from
-Damascus was crowded with interest and excitement for this
-fifteen-year-old boy who was seeing the holy land for the first time.
-Now he thrilled in a new way as he actually saw with his eyes the scenes
-which before he had only pictured in imagination. When they crossed the
-Jordan, just south of the blue lake of Gennesareth, he could hardly
-contain himself. More than once he threw himself on the ground with his
-arms outspread as though he were trying to grasp the country and embrace
-it.
-
-The road up from Jericho to Jerusalem was so dangerous and he had heard
-so many tales of robbers there that he was too frightened to enjoy the
-journey. But when at length _the city_—the city of all the world—with
-its shining temple gleaming in the sun came in sight, he forgot all
-about robbers and dangers and his sore and tired feet, and fell on his
-face and thanked God for letting him see the Holy City about which he
-had dreamed and imagined ever since he was a tiny boy. There it was! It
-was no dream but a real city, with real streets and walls and houses,
-and above all the temple, to his mind the holiest place in all the
-world.
-
-The next day when he came to the temple, his heart beating and his
-throat swelling with emotion, he read with pride the inscription carved
-on the stones: “Only he that is a Jew may enter this sacred temple. If
-any one that is not a Jew enters he will be answerable for his death,
-which will ensue.” Around him thronged a vast multitude of people who
-had come from all parts of the known world to be present on the Great
-Day of Atonement. He could see the choirs of singing men and he could
-hear the far-away sound of harps, and then he saw the long line of
-priests with their dress as Moses had described it in the books of the
-law and the high-priest with his gorgeous robe, and on his breast were
-the mysterious stones which no man understood save he who had them.
-
-After the great days of the sacred week had passed and he had seen the
-wonders of the city, Saul entered the cloister door and came into the
-sombre room where the learned doctor, Gamaliel, gathered his students at
-his feet to teach them. The boy was filled with awe as he got his first
-sight of the white-haired man who was to be his guide in the mysteries
-of the law and he made a deep salaam before him and remained bowed until
-the Master said: “Rise, my son, and be seated here.”
-
-The quick-eyed boy noticed at once that his new teacher was as full of
-kindness as he was of wisdom. There was something in the face of the old
-Rabbi that gave him confidence and dismissed his fear.
-
-“Dost thou know the commandments?” asked the teacher.
-
-“I know them all,” answered the youth. “I have said them many times to
-my mother in Tarsus.”
-
-“Dost thou know what the law requires a faithful son of Abraham to do on
-the Sabbath day?”
-
-The youth surprised his teacher as he ran through the long and
-complicated lists of things that a faithful Jew might do and might not
-do on the Sabbath day. At last the teacher stopped the boy and gravely
-asked, “where hast thou studied?”
-
-“With my father and with my mother in the long evenings at Tarsus. My
-father is one of the wisest and one of the most strict of all the tribe
-of Benjamin and my mother is like the woman of whom the wise king Lemuel
-wrote in the Roll of Proverbs. They have taught me many things but I
-lack much and therefore have I come to Rabban Gamaliel.”
-
-“Canst thou recite the fifth book of Moses without a mistake?”
-
-“I can recite every word duly, for the book itself says ‘Lest ye
-forget.’”
-
-“Thou hast done well, my son, and thou hast walked many steps in wisdom
-for one so young, but now thou must learn the _authorities_, thou must
-become skilful to interpret, thou must know the unwritten law and all
-the traditions of the Elders and Scribes and thou must fill thy mind
-with all the gathered wisdom of the great Rabbis until thou canst
-explain every passage in the Rolls of the books which Jehovah our God
-has given us through the holy men of old. Thou must work with diligence,
-beginning early in the morning and continuing so long as the light
-lasts, and thou must spend years here with me until thou hast won the
-truth and until thou knowest clearly what brings God’s righteousness to
-a man. Art thou ready to give up the years of strong youth; art thou
-willing to lose the pleasures of the world; art thou able to endure the
-toil; wilt thou go all the way to the end with me?”
-
-Saul stepped one step nearer, raised his fine face and his dark eyes
-full of eagerness to the master’s face and calmly said: “Great Rabban,
-for that I come. I have left the things that are behind. I seek only one
-thing in this world—to be righteous, to know the whole secret of God, to
-be a perfect son of Abraham. Let it cost what it will, I follow where
-the wise Gamaliel shall take me, even to the end of the long road to
-truth.”
-
-Then the teacher bowed his head and prayed that the great Jehovah of the
-fathers would bless and enlighten the youth from Tarsus who was to be
-for many months in the cloister of Gamaliel.
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- IN RABBI GAMALIEL’S SCHOOL
-
-
-The person who is a real hero in spirit and nature can be a hero at
-school as well as anywhere else. In fact those who prove to be heroes in
-later life are almost always heroes in their school-days. This youth who
-had come to Jerusalem from Tarsus of Cilicia did not have to wait for
-some occasion, with all the world looking on, before he could rise to
-heroic actions. He found a chance to be heroic even in the quiet
-uneventful cloisters of Gamaliel’s school. All the boys and young men
-who gathered round this famous teacher very soon knew that a brave
-fellow and a real, born leader had joined their ranks. When a hard and
-difficult thing was to be done they turned naturally to him. When a
-question was asked which taxed everybody’s brain, they all looked for
-him to answer.
-
-There was no end to his zeal. Nothing seemed too hard for him. He had
-learned Greek as a boy in his home at Tarsus and he had always known the
-current Hebrew speech, but now he learned carefully the ancient Hebrew
-of his fathers. He pored over the Rolls of Scripture and took note of
-each jot and tittle. He learned all the fine points of grammar which his
-great Rabban could teach him. His patience seemed never to give out and
-he would work on in his search for truth long after the others had
-rolled up in their strange mat-like beds and were lost in peaceful
-slumber.
-
-He seemed to think of ignorance as a great giant enemy to be fought with
-and to be killed, no matter how long and hard the fight might be. It was
-in this fight he showed his true heroic fibre. He was always hunting a
-new weapon to fight with, or he was sharpening an old weapon in his
-possession. He would travel miles to find a book he wanted or to
-discover what a strange word meant or to consult some authority whose
-opinion he desired.
-
-“What do you suppose that Saul of Tarsus will be when he grows up?” the
-boys would ask of one another.
-
-“He will surely be a great Rabbi and have a school in Jerusalem, like
-our master,” one would say.
-
-“I think he will be greater even than that,” another would say. “I think
-sometimes, as I look at his face and watch him while he reads, that
-perhaps he will be a new prophet and bring a new word of God to our
-people.”
-
-“But that is not possible,” a pious youth from a Jerusalem family would
-answer. “The words of God have already all been given. There will be
-nothing new until Messiah comes. I have heard my father say that many
-times.”
-
-This coming of Messiah was one of the things our youth from Tarsus
-studied most carefully. The books and traditions had much to say about
-it, but it was hard to decide just what would happen and just how to get
-ready for this greatest event of all the world. With the help of
-Gamaliel and his books, young Saul came to believe that a great day was
-soon to come for Jerusalem and for all good Jews. A new king, like
-David, only greater and wiser and better and stronger would suddenly
-appear. He would have power to turn stones to bread, or to leap from the
-top of the temple to the ground without being hurt in the least. He
-would break the Roman army all to pieces in a minute. He would call
-hosts of angel soldiers from the sky at the sound of a trumpet and they
-would destroy or carry away all who had been bad Jews and had not kept
-the law. Then he would make Jerusalem a perfect city. The streets would
-all be cleansed and purified, until one could see his face reflected in
-every pavement. The walls would be changed into precious stones, the
-gates into pearls, and every person left in the city would be as pure as
-the city itself. Nobody would be sick any more, nobody would die, or
-have any sorrow. And best of all, all the good Jews who had ever lived
-would be brought back to life again to live in the perfect Jerusalem
-with the good people who were there with the great king. This king of
-their hopes and dreams was called “Messiah,” because he would be
-“anointed” by God himself to rule forever. Saul believed that his people
-were the only ones out of all the world who would have this king for
-their king and this perfect city, and all who had ever done anything
-against his nation would suffer and suffer and suffer, while the happy
-Jews were enjoying their beautiful Mount Zion.
-
-He believed, too, and he thought his books proved it, that he and others
-who were willing to work for it, could hurry up this great day and make
-it come sooner. This is the way you could do it. It couldn’t come until
-there were a great many persons who were good enough to start the new
-world and the perfect city. The king, Messiah, would not come until he
-could find a large number of people all ready for him and as near
-perfect as you could be. Now to be perfect you must keep all the law and
-do everything that God commanded in the Old Testament and in the
-traditions of the Rabbis. If you broke one single commandment, it was as
-bad as though you broke them all, for if you broke _one_, then you had
-not kept the whole law.
-
-Now my reader will see, I hope, what a hero this young Saul was. He had
-decided to be one of the men who would be ready for this mighty king and
-he was resolved to live the kind of life that would help bring him soon.
-He was going to live as though the perfect city had come already. He
-would not do one thing that would seem like disobeying God—even the
-littlest. Gamaliel had one student who was trying with all his might to
-be perfect, and that meant, to be a hero.
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- TENT-MAKING IN TARSUS
-
-
-Like winged birds, the time flew by, just as it does now for school-boys
-and school-girls and Saul’s years at the feet of Gamaliel were over. He
-had changed very much while he had been in Jerusalem. Soft hair was
-growing on his face now. His forehead was broader and fuller, but his
-shoulders were bowed over and he walked with a stoop because he had bent
-over his books so long and had taken very little exercise in these years
-of eager study. His hands were soft as a woman’s and he seemed thin and
-worn with the strain of his thoughts. But the same fire was in his dark
-eyes and the same fine beautiful light shone on his face. He wondered as
-he came up the river Cydnus from Messina to Tarsus (for he returned by
-sea), whether his mother would know him. The news had spread that the
-boat was coming and the whole family in the home at Tarsus were on the
-watch for the returning scholar. He did not have much time to wonder
-whether his mother would know him, for he soon felt her arms around his
-neck and he found himself once more in the dear home with everybody
-looking him over and asking him questions until he needed three or four
-tongues to answer them all. His mother did not like the stoop in his
-shoulders but everything else pleased her. The father was too proud of
-his splendid son and too much moved with joy to say much, though he had
-already given a brief prayer of thanksgiving to Jehovah for the safe
-return, and for the wonderful gift of such a man-child as this. Meantime
-a servant was killing the fattest of all the full-grown kids for the
-feast of joy which all the household joined in preparing, and the whole
-day was given up to rejoicing.
-
-It was a proud moment for the family the next Sabbath when young Saul
-was given the Roll of Scripture at the Synagogue and was asked to read
-the lesson and explain it. There he stood with all the Jewish families
-of Tarsus looking on and listening while he told them things they had
-never heard before. When the lesson was finished many a man turned to
-Saul’s father and said: “God has given you a remarkable son. He will be
-an honour to our race and to our city.”
-
-Now the time had come when Saul’s trade must be decided upon, for all
-young men who were to be Rabbis were expected to learn a trade, so that
-they could support themselves. Early and late in the home the question
-was discussed: What was the best trade for a slight, thin, soft-handed
-youth who was a great scholar and who was soon to be a famous teacher?
-The mother wanted him to learn a trade that would straighten his
-shoulders and make him strong and robust. The father thought he ought to
-select some occupation that would be refined and dignified and very
-honourable. After long and careful consideration, it was finally settled
-that Saul should learn the trade of weaving the goats’ hair to make
-heavy tent-cloth and to cut the cloth into tent patterns and to sew the
-long tent seams.
-
-It was strange work for the delicate scholar—so different from poring
-over books and settling points of the law. At first the soft hands
-blistered and the muscles were very tired with the work of the stiff
-hand-loom. But little by little the hands grew harder and the arms
-learned the trick of the motions and the work became natural and easy.
-Saul went at this work the way he did everything else. “It is,” he would
-say, “a part of my life. I cannot succeed unless I can support myself
-and so I must make tents a little better than anybody else can do it.
-Some good stiff work now and the habit of doing every part of it right
-will make the whole thing easy for me later.”
-
-He went to the best maker of tents in the city and worked with him, for
-he knew the worth of a good teacher. But this teacher was so different
-from his old master in the school at Jerusalem! Like Gamaliel, this man
-also knew every fine point in his field of work. He had the secret of
-selecting the finest goats’ hair and he knew the best weaves for making
-water-tight cloth and he drew the best patterns for both large tents and
-for small ones, and he had new ways of sewing seams that would neither
-rip in the wind nor leak in the hardest rains. The only trouble with him
-was that he was a Gentile and not a man of Saul’s race. But he, too, was
-a scholar. He had studied in the great University of Tarsus and he knew
-many books which Saul had never read or even heard about. While they
-worked at the tent-cloth the master workman talked much to Saul of what
-he had learned in the University under his Stoic teachers, for Tarsus
-was one of the greatest centres of Stoic wisdom in all the world.
-
-“Do you know,” he would say, as they sat sewing the long seams, “all my
-books say that God is a great Spirit who fills all the universe, just
-the way the soul dwells in and fills the body. This Spirit is in the
-ocean and in the river, in the mountains and in the trees, in the air
-and in the cloud, in the stars and in the sun and above all it is in the
-mind of man. It makes everything full of purpose, and intelligent. The
-bee and the spider are wise because this Spirit dwells in them and
-teaches them. One of our own poets who lived here in Tarsus, in a great
-hymn to the Allwise One, says that we men of earth are children of God
-because our spirits have come from his Spirit, and this Spirit lives and
-moves in us, if we are good and wise. The human soul is like a little
-inlet into which the great sea flows. Bad and wicked men have become bad
-and wicked because they shut themselves off from the inflowing tides of
-that great divine Spirit. Those who have most of this divine Spirit in
-their souls do not fuss or worry. They are not disturbed over what
-happens to them. They say that the only thing that matters is to be
-master of your own spirit and not to be conquered by anything in the
-world. If I should lose all my goats and all my tent-cloth, and if all
-my looms should burn up, I could still be a brave man and start again
-just as though nothing had happened, but if I lost my spirit and began
-to whine and lament, nobody could cure me of that. Then I should be
-beaten and defeated. We Stoics try to be citizens, not only of our own
-city but of the whole world. We love our own people. We are proud of our
-own race, but we want more than that. We take an interest in all men
-everywhere. We want all cities to be good cities. We want all people
-everywhere to know God and love him, and we want to make one great
-family on the earth, all living in harmony under the great Spirit.”
-
-Saul stopped sewing and sat perfectly still. It was different from
-anything he had heard in Jerusalem. It could not be true or Gamaliel
-would have known it and yet it was so wonderful and beautiful. He would
-think about it more, and he would read some of the books of the Stoics
-who said that we are the offspring of God!
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- THE GREAT TEACHER OF GALILEE
-
-
-While the young scholar was working at his new trade of weaving
-tent-cloth and making tents in the busy, thriving town of Tarsus,
-wonderful things were occurring beyond the Amanus Mountains, in the land
-of Palestine. Every traveller who came from Galilee and every pilgrim
-who passed through Capernaum brought tidings of a strange and
-extraordinary Teacher, totally unlike the great Rabbis and Scribes.
-
-In far-away Tarsus not much was reported at first of what this Teacher
-said. The travellers told, first of all, of the wonderful things He did.
-
-One man had heard, as he came through Galilee, of a little girl who had
-been very ill. Nobody could help her. At last in despair the father went
-out to search for this Teacher, to see if He could do anything to save
-his daughter. He found Him by the lakeside preaching to a great
-multitude of people, and he begged Him to come at once, to make his
-daughter whole. Many strange and unusual things happened on the way and,
-at last, when they arrived, the little girl seemed beyond help, for she
-lay all still and did not breathe. But this remarkable Person took her
-by the hand and spoke some words in His own Hebrew language and the girl
-rose up and walked and was instantly well, and everybody wondered.
-
-Many other such things they told of this Teacher. He made all kinds of
-sick people well. He even made totally blind persons see. All the towns
-around the Lake of Gennesareth were full of excitement over His cures
-and His other miraculous doings, and in all the country throughout
-Galilee people everywhere talked about Him and went long journeys to see
-Him, and to bring sick persons to Him.
-
-Then, slowly, reports began to come of His words and His teachings. They
-said He seemed to have found out something new and strange about God. He
-was not afraid of God as other people were. He loved Him and talked
-about Him as though He knew Him. He kept calling God His Father, and He
-said God wanted to be Father to all persons, because He was full of love
-and tenderness for everybody in the world. He kept telling, in all His
-talks with the people who came to hear Him, about a new kingdom which He
-was trying to set up in the world. It was very hard to tell from the
-vague reports, which the travellers brought, what this kingdom was to
-be. It did not seem like the “new Jerusalem,” that Saul had learned
-about in Gamaliel’s school. It seemed even greater than that, for it
-seemed like a new kind of world for everybody. Everybody, who loved God
-and learned how to live a life of love and kindness to all people
-everywhere, could be in it, and it would grow and spread like seeds of
-grain in the field.
-
-Then, later, when the people who had gone up from Tarsus to the
-Passover, came back from Jerusalem, they brought news of a terrible
-thing that had happened there during the Passover week. This Teacher, it
-would seem, had come up to keep the Passover and the common people had
-discovered Him and they thought at first that He must be the
-long-expected Messiah and they had made a procession for Him and had
-tried to proclaim Him their king. But this and other things frightened
-the rulers in Jerusalem and they sent by night and seized Him and got
-Pilate, the governor of Palestine, to condemn Him and crucify Him. Then
-all the people turned against Him and thronged out of the city in great
-multitudes to see Him nailed on the cross and to see Him die hanging in
-the air. And the pilgrim who brought the reports said He was not like
-any other victim that was ever crucified. Instead of shouting and
-wailing and cursing, He had been calm and unmoved. Every time He spoke,
-His words were full of love. Once He spoke in a quiet, gentle way to a
-thief who was crucified on a cross near Him. And once, and this was the
-strangest thing they reported, He looked up toward the sky and then out
-toward the great multitude of shouting people and said in a gentle voice
-which reached out over all the throng, “Father, forgive these people.
-They do not know what they are doing.”
-
-A few who came back later had another story which they told but they
-couldn’t make anybody at Tarsus believe it. They said that some of the
-followers and friends of this wonderful Teacher from Galilee declared
-that they had seen Him alive after He was crucified. Some of these
-followers said they had heard Him speak just the way He used to do
-before He was crucified, and they claimed that He told them when they
-were on the way going up to Jerusalem that He would be crucified, but
-that He would come back to life again.
-
-When Saul heard these strange reports he was at first very much moved by
-them. He could not sleep at night because he thought so much over the
-stories he heard from the travellers. But little by little he made up
-his mind that they were just idle tales such as travellers love to tell
-to those who stay at home. He said to himself: “It isn’t likely that
-there really was any such person in Galilee as this one they tell about.
-I should have heard about him while I was in Jerusalem, for he could not
-have got his power suddenly and if he was beginning to do these
-wonderful things then, it would have been known in the city. But nobody
-had heard of him at all. If he got his power suddenly, without any
-preparation and without studying in any of the schools, it is probable
-that some evil spirit, like Beelzebub, has helped him and revealed
-secrets to him. It is almost certain that he was not sent by God, for
-the books of the law do not tell about any such Teacher who would come
-and die for his truth, and the words they bring about his teaching are
-not at all like what we know of God from our sacred books. No, either
-there was no such person, or, if there was, he was deluded and
-misguided.”
-
-But when Saul was talking one beautiful evening with his mother, who
-seemed now much older than when she talked about the commandments with
-her little boy, suddenly Saul said: “Wouldn’t it be strange, Mother, if
-what that Galilean Teacher, of whom the travellers talk, said about God
-were really true—I mean, that God is a Father and loves men, even men
-who do wrong and sin. My tent-maker thinks that God is a great Spirit
-who dwells in everything and is everywhere. But _this_ is more
-wonderful, that God is full of love and tenderness for all kinds of
-people in the world. It cannot, however, be true, for the Rabbis would
-have known it if it had been so!”
-
-And the mother answered: “Ah, yes, no doubt the wise Rabbis would know.
-But is there not something just a little like that in some of the
-beautiful psalms which we sing in the Synagogue—‘Like as a Father’?”
-
-“But, Mother, this man, they say, died on a cross, and no good man, whom
-God approved, could die that way, for our law says that all who are
-hanged on trees are cursed and disapproved of by God, so that we need
-not think any more about him.” But try as he would, Saul could not get
-these things out of his mind.
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- IN JERUSALEM AGAIN
-
-
-All through the quiet period in Tarsus while Saul was learning his trade
-and living with his father and mother in the dear old home where he had
-been a boy, he was wondering what his life was going to be. He always
-felt, even as a little boy, that a great life-work lay before him. It
-was too sacred and solemn to talk about and he did not tell even his
-mother, but all the time, down deep in his soul, he dimly knew that he
-was destined to have an unusual life and to do something signal and
-wonderful. When he lay ill and everybody thought he would die, he felt
-very sure that he was not going to die yet, for the great work of his
-life was still to be done! He had often been in great danger, on his
-journey up to Jerusalem and on the ship coming back to Tarsus, and many
-times before he left home, but he always knew that somehow he would come
-through the danger and be spared.
-
-He was eager now to find his life-work and to start in on his great
-career. He was, therefore, very happy when a traveller of his own race,
-coming from the holy land, brought him a letter from the authorities in
-Jerusalem saying that they had work for him to do in that city. They
-wanted a young and learned Rabbi to teach the Jews living in Jerusalem
-who spoke Greek and who were called “Hellenists.” There were, my readers
-must know, two kinds of Jews. There were the Jews, first, who lived all
-the time in Palestine. They could keep the law more perfectly and more
-completely than other people could. They thought of themselves as the
-truly real Jews and as the inner circle of God’s own people. Then,
-secondly, there were the Jews who lived and did business in the great
-cities of the Roman Empire—cities like Rome and Alexandria, and Ephesus
-and Antioch and Philippi and Corinth and Tarsus. They could not keep
-themselves as pure or as perfect as the Palestine Jews could, for they
-had to meet and mingle with Gentiles who were not pure according to the
-law and who defiled those that came in contact with them. Then, too,
-these out-dwellers could not get to the temple very often to make
-sacrifices and to keep the requirements of the law. They used the
-language which the worldly people around them used. That was generally
-Greek. They had their Scriptures translated into Greek and many of them
-did not know and could not read Hebrew at all. But these Hellenists, or
-Greek-speaking Jews, went up to Jerusalem as often as they could and
-when it was possible for them to do so, they would stay in Jerusalem for
-long periods in order to be near the temple. They had a synagogue of
-their own in Jerusalem where they went for their lessons and for their
-Sabbath services and where their little children were taught while the
-parents were staying in Jerusalem. It was to this Synagogue that Saul,
-the young Rabbi, was to go, to teach the Jews who came from all the
-far-away countries to sojourn in Jerusalem.
-
-It was very different for him, going to Jerusalem now from what it had
-been for the fifteen-year-old boy the first time he went. Now he was
-going, not for a few years, but for life. Now he was setting his hand to
-carry out the great dreams and hopes of his life. Now he was leaving his
-mother, perhaps for the last time. His father would still continue to go
-to the Passover and Saul would perhaps see him there, but his mother
-would never leave home again and it would surely be many years before he
-would come back through the mountain-gate, or up the Cydnus River, to
-his birth-place. Nobody knows just what goes on in a young man’s heart
-when he takes this great venture and pushes out from the home he loves
-to begin his real life in the strange and difficult world, where some
-succeed and where some fail, where some keep pure and good, and where
-some go wrong.
-
-Many things seemed to have changed in Jerusalem during the short period
-since Saul had left it. Everybody was talking of the strange events that
-had taken place recently. A new people had appeared in the city. They
-called themselves “the people of the way,” or “those of the way,” or
-“those of Jesus’ way.” Others called them “Galileans,” or “Nazarenes.”
-They were men and women who believed that Jesus the great Teacher of
-Galilee was the Messiah and they declared that He was still alive and
-would soon return to be king and lord. They were growing fast in numbers
-and spreading in every part of the city. They met every day from house
-to house and ate their evening meal together in great joy and
-fellowship. They took care of all their poor people and their sick and
-they shared everything they had with one another as though they were all
-brothers and belonged to one great family.
-
-The rulers in Jerusalem, however, did not like to see them spreading
-through the city. They watched them carefully and arrested the leaders
-when they found them doing anything to attract attention or trying to
-get others to join them. They did not like to be told that the person
-they had Pilate crucify was the Messiah, or that He was raised from the
-dead and was now alive. It was easy to see that there was sure to be
-trouble in Jerusalem, if these people went on increasing and if they
-would not keep quiet.
-
-There were some of “those of the way” in the Synagogue where Saul was to
-be Rabbi. They were always ready to talk about their wonderful Teacher,
-who had been crucified and they were eager to prove that He was the real
-Messiah that had been so long expected. Saul thought he could very soon
-teach them sense and show them how foolish they were. He would quickly
-prove to them that Jesus could not be the Messiah, for the Messiah would
-surely never be crucified! He would come in splendour and glory, and if
-the Romans tried to crucify Him He would call down from heaven an army
-of angels and destroy all His enemies in a moment! And He would break
-the Roman Empire all to pieces, as one breaks an old jar of pottery. It
-would be only a few days, Saul felt sure, when he would be able to stop
-all this talk about a crucified Messiah. He would argue them down and
-make them ashamed to say such things any more. But Saul did not know how
-hard his task really was. He was to discover that some things in this
-world cannot be hushed up, or argued down!
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- THE MAN WITH A SHINING FACE
-
-
-There was one man in this Synagogue of the Hellenists more remarkable
-than any of the other people who belonged to it. His name was Stephen. I
-do not know what city he came from. But he was one of the
-“out-dwellers,” and he had become a follower of Jesus, “one of the
-way”—“a Nazarene.” He was different from any of the other followers of
-Jesus. He saw farther than the rest did. He seems to have been the first
-of “those of the way” to realise that Jesus did not come to be the
-Messiah of the Jews alone and to purify their customs. Stephen thought
-He came to bring life and light and joy to _all_ the world. The other
-followers of Jesus in this early period were loyal, devoted Jews. They
-went every day to the temple and they kept the law as the other Jews
-did. They supposed that Jesus was to be the king in Jerusalem and that
-only Jews were to be His people. Those who were not Jews could have no
-share in the good news which He proclaimed.
-
-Stephen was so pure and good and wise that he got a new idea of what the
-coming of Jesus meant. The truth was far bigger than the others dreamed,
-and he began to see it, and to tell about it. If God is Father, as Jesus
-kept saying He was, then He must love all men as well as Jews, and if
-God is Life and Spirit, then He can come into men’s lives everywhere
-without any temple and without priests and sacrifices. Stephen began to
-wonder, as he thought about all that Jesus had said and taught and done,
-whether His message was not far greater and more wonderful even than the
-law of Moses, whether some day it would not take the place of the old
-system of laws and customs and sacrifices and whether even the temple
-itself might no longer be needed to worship God in, for men might
-worship Him anywhere where they happened to be.
-
-Stephen was so bold and fearless, and he was so full of his great idea,
-that he tried to tell the people in Saul’s Synagogue about it. They all
-turned upon him and called him a dangerous man. They tried to make him
-see that he was not true to the religion of his fathers, that he was
-teaching new ideas, that he was turning people away from the old
-customs, and that if the people followed his teaching they would
-overthrow the whole wonderful system of Moses, and so make it impossible
-for the Messiah to come, for whom all good Jews were waiting and
-longing.
-
-Saul, with all his learning and his knowledge, thought he could easily
-answer Stephen and prove that he was entirely wrong. But every time he
-tried, Stephen got the best of him. Saul would quote texts from the Old
-Testament and Stephen would rise up and show that these texts meant
-something quite different from what Saul had always thought they meant.
-He was so powerful and his life was so noble that all the people who
-listened felt that even if he was wrong in his ideas he was great in his
-soul, and they began to wonder if he perhaps might be right and Saul
-wrong. Day after day the discussion went on without any end to it. At
-last Saul decided that this would never do. Some way must be found to
-stop this dangerous man who was leading the members of his Synagogue
-astray. He told the rulers in Jerusalem that he had discovered a traitor
-who must be arrested. “He talks against Moses,” he said. “He does not
-love our holy land, or our holy law, or our holy temple, the way all
-true Jews should.” Then the Council in Jerusalem had Stephen arrested
-and brought before them for trial, and witnesses came in and told all
-the things they could think of to make the Council condemn him.
-
-While they were talking against him they all saw a light shine on his
-face, and he looked more like an angel than like an ordinary man, and
-everybody wondered what he would say in answer to the charges that were
-made against him. And Saul must have been eager to see what was going to
-happen to this man with the shining face, whom nobody could defeat in an
-argument. Then quietly Stephen began to speak for himself. He did not
-try to prove that the things which had been said against him were false.
-He paid no attention to his own case. He told the Council that all
-through the history of their Hebrew race the people had always failed to
-see new light when God brought it to them; they had always missed the
-path when God was trying to lead them into a new way, and they had
-always misunderstood when God was trying to teach them new ideas. They
-cried out against Moses, he told them, in the wilderness. They
-worshipped a golden calf just at the time when he was giving them the
-law of God, and when the prophets came to teach them more about God,
-they served Moloch and other false gods instead of Him. Their great,
-wise king Solomon had told them, when he built the temple, that no
-temple, however wonderful, could contain the great God who fills the
-universe, but the people did not understand his words and seemed to
-think that God lived only in their temple. “You have always failed to
-see the truth,” Stephen cried. “You have always persecuted prophets when
-God has sent them to you. You have killed those who told about the
-coming of Jesus. And now _you, yourselves_, have betrayed and killed Him
-when He did come. You talk about the law and you say that God gave it
-through angels. But you do not understand it and you do not really keep
-it.”
-
-That was more than they could stand. They forgot that they were judges
-and were having an orderly trial. They all rushed at Stephen. They
-showed their teeth at him and howled him down. But he was as calm and
-steady as though everything were peaceful. In the midst of the uproar,
-they suddenly heard him say: “I see Jesus! There He is, up there in the
-open sky, at the right of God in His glory.” Then they all stopped their
-ears, so that they might not hear what he said, and they rushed at him
-and dragged him out of the city and stoned him. As the people who stoned
-him pulled off their garments so that they could throw the stones
-better, they gave their garments to Saul to hold. He did not join in
-throwing the stones, but he approved of what the others were doing and
-he ran along with them and carried the garments. And he could see
-Stephen’s wonderful face which was shining more than ever now! He did
-not say one hard word against those who were killing him. But just at
-the end, Saul heard him say: “Lord Jesus, do not blame these people for
-what they are doing”—“Wilt thou now receive my spirit to Thyself.” And
-then, with the stones raining round him, the brave, good Stephen
-died—with the light still on his face.
-
-Saul never forgot that face. He thought Stephen was wrong and he
-believed that he must be stopped or he would bring harm to God’s people.
-But he had never seen anybody die like that before! And the more he
-meditated and thought about it, the more he wondered at what Stephen had
-said, and still more over his dying words and his happy, shining face!
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- ON THE ROAD TO DAMASCUS
-
-
-This young man who now unexpectedly found himself a persecutor was by
-nature kind and tender-hearted. He had never wilfully hurt any creature
-or given pain to anybody. He had come up to Jerusalem for his
-life-career with the highest hopes and the noblest aspirations. His
-whole being was aflame with a passion for his nation. Ever since he was
-old enough to know the story of his own people he had dreamed of the
-splendid future that was soon to dawn. All that the greatest prophets
-had seen in distant vision, he believed he should one day see with his
-own eyes. He had tried, with almost superhuman effort, to make his own
-life perfect so that he might be one of the little inner circle of
-perfect Jews, who would help to bring the Messiah and the perfect age
-and who would be ready for this glorious king when he should come.
-
-Now he suddenly found, in his own Synagogue even, people who said that
-the Messiah _had come already_, that the rulers and Pharisees who were
-expecting Him and preparing for Him had not recognised Him when He did
-come and had crucified Him. This seemed to Saul an awful idea—an
-unbelievable tale. He was sure the Messiah could not be crucified. But
-he was afraid that these enthusiastic and misguided followers of Jesus
-would ruin his hopes. Everything that could be done must be done at once
-to stop their teaching and to destroy their influence. He saw only one
-way to guard the hope of Israel and that was to crush this movement
-absolutely and to shut up or kill every person who went about claiming
-that Jesus was the Messiah. It was a very disagreeable task, but it must
-be done for the good of the nation and, however hard and distasteful it
-might be, Saul was resolved to carry it through and to leave nobody who
-would ever again dare to say that Jesus, the crucified, was the
-long-expected king.
-
-Into the peaceful homes of the “Nazarenes” he went and seized both men
-and women and carried them away to prison. He had to separate husbands
-from their wives. He had to take mothers away from their tender little
-babies. He had to break up meetings and drag away those who were
-preaching the new gospel to their eager listeners. But everywhere he
-went he found that these people had something which he did not have. In
-the midst of their sufferings and their trials they were calm and
-peaceful and happy and triumphant and radiant. When they were persecuted
-their faces shone with a light that seemed almost heavenly. They prayed
-for those who injured them and were not disturbed by any troubles. They
-kept saying most remarkable words about Jesus and their faith in Him,
-and they all seemed to believe that He was still alive and that they
-would all soon be with Him.
-
-Saul had been trying all his life to be perfect, to be fully righteous.
-He had worked with all his might to keep all the law and all the
-commandments. But he knew deep down in his soul that he had failed to
-reach his aim. He could not do it. He found something in himself which
-he could not govern. If he didn’t break one commandment, he broke
-another. If he was strong at one point he was sure to be weak at
-another. That commandment which his mother had told him was the hardest
-to keep—“thou shalt not covet or desire”—was always bothering him. Even
-when he did not actually _do_ wrong things, he found himself _wanting_
-to do them, and _that_ he knew was wrong. It all filled him with
-discouragement, and sometimes with despair.
-
-But these people whom he was persecuting and dragging away to prisons
-seemed to be good almost without trying. They had found a new power
-somewhere that seemed to help them. It made him wonder whether they were
-perhaps right and he possibly was wrong. He hated what he was doing. How
-gladly he would stop it, if only he could be sure that God did not want
-him to persecute these strange followers of Jesus. But until God should
-make it perfectly plain to him, he must go on with his hard duty.
-
-He had heard of some of these “Jesus-people” in the city of Damascus. He
-would go to that city and stop them before they had time to spread. He
-got documents from the rulers in Jerusalem giving him power to ride to
-Damascus and to seize these people and to treat them as he had treated
-those in Jerusalem. With his band of helpers he started off on his
-journey, looking bold and fearless in his face, but feeling in his soul
-that it was the most disagreeable journey he had ever set out upon, and
-wishing all the time that he could ride straight on through Damascus and
-the Syrian gate in the mountains to Tarsus, and give up the whole sorry
-work of dragging mothers away from their children. As he rode he thought
-and wondered.
-
-The road took him through Capernaum and around the magnificent lake
-where Jesus had done much of His work, where He had preached His divine
-messages and where He healed multitudes of people. Saul could hardly
-stay at any inn in that country without hearing some wonderful story of
-the Galilean Teacher. He might easily see the father of the little girl
-who had been raised from her bed by this Teacher. He might talk with a
-man whose eyes had been opened, or with a person who had been delivered
-from leprosy or insanity, which the people in that day called being
-“possessed with devils.” He might hear men tell how they themselves had
-heard this wonderful Galilean talk about God His Father and about the
-kingdom of life and love. And he might hear strange stories of what had
-happened after the crucifixion—how fishermen who had lived by that lake
-all their lives had seen Jesus in glorified form, after He had been dead
-and buried.
-
-Saul would ride on from Galilee with new thoughts surging in his mind.
-The simple faith of those who saw with their own eyes and heard with
-their own ears would stir him with fresh meditation as he rode over the
-stretch of country between Gennesareth and Damascus.
-
-One thing had always made it impossible for him to believe that Jesus
-was divine, that He was sent by God or that He was the long-looked for
-Messiah: _He had suffered and died on the cross._ Saul felt sure that,
-if God had sent Him and He had been divine, He would not have had to
-suffer, but He would have come in glory and power. But as he rode along
-in silence and in deep thought, he remembered that he had heard these
-followers of Jesus say in their meetings that the Old Testament was full
-of prophecies which said that Christ must suffer. He began to think more
-carefully about these passages—especially the one in the fifty-third
-chapter of Isaiah: “He was despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrow
-and acquainted with grief.” “Surely he has borne our griefs and carried
-our sorrows.” “He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for
-our iniquities.” “As a lamb that is led to the slaughter and as a sheep
-that before her shearers is dumb; yea he opened not his mouth.” “For the
-transgression of my people was he smitten.” “He poured out his soul unto
-death and was counted with the transgressors, yet he bore the sins of
-many.”
-
-This might mean that God’s great servant would not be glorious and full
-of power when He came but a sufferer. It might be that He would come and
-suffer for the sins of others, and that He would do for men what they
-could not do for themselves. He might be the perfect one and He might
-through His suffering and death bring them a new power to live by. If he
-was only sure that God had raised Him from the dead and had brought Him
-triumphantly through His sufferings and His crucifixion, then he could
-believe that this Galilean was the Saviour and the divine Deliverer for
-whom they had been waiting.
-
-Stephen had cried out in his dying moments, “I see Jesus there, at the
-right hand of God.” Saul had heard how others claimed that they had seen
-Him alive and glorified. He would be likely to say to himself as he rode
-along: “If _I_ could only see Him as these others say they have done, I
-would believe as they do. I would stop this miserable work I am doing
-and I would follow Him forever and I would make everybody believe in
-Him.”
-
-Then in the stillness there suddenly broke in upon this young man a
-light which seemed brighter than the mid-day sun in the sky and he saw
-Jesus and heard Him speak and call him and his whole life was forever
-changed by this wonderful thing that happened on the road to Damascus.
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- IN ARABIA
-
-
-Though dazed and blinded by the light, which seemed to come from another
-world beyond this world, Saul nevertheless felt perfectly sure that he
-_saw_ Jesus glorified. Through all the rest of his life, he always said
-that he had _seen_ Christ—he had seen Him as Stephen saw Him. He had
-seen Him as Peter and James and John saw Him and he never had any doubt
-any more that He was alive and victorious over death. He had heard Him
-speak, too, in that wonderful meeting outside the gate of the city. He
-had heard Him say: “I am Jesus whom thou persecutest.” “Why persecutest
-thou _me_?”
-
-All the rest of the way into Damascus, he walked in darkness. His outer
-eyes were still blind from the light, but in the city his sight came
-back again and he could see once more. He knew that a mighty change had
-come within himself, but he did not know at once all that it meant. He
-wanted to go far away from all the old scenes of his life, far away from
-everybody he knew, far away from the noisy, busy world, and think out
-what had happened. Even before talking with Peter and the other
-disciples of Jesus, he wished to meditate alone and find his bearing in
-the new experience which had so suddenly come to him.
-
-The greatest leaders of Saul’s race had found out the meaning of life,
-alone with God, in the wilderness, or in the mountains, or on the edge
-of the desert. Moses had come face to face with God on Mount Sinai.
-Elijah had heard the still small voice speaking to him, far away from
-the rush and din of the world. John the Baptist got his preparation for
-his mission in the solitary wilderness undisturbed by people. Jesus had
-discovered in the desert how to come forth victorious over temptation
-and here he had realised that His kingdom was not to rest on force and
-worldly power. So, too, Saul now felt that he must go away from the city
-and live for a time in the heart of nature and open his soul to God.
-
-He decided to go to Arabia for his period of quiet and of meditation.
-Perhaps he went, as Moses had gone, to Sinai, or to some other region of
-this strange, mysterious land of wilderness, mountains and deserts. He
-has not told us a word about his life in Arabia and none of his friends
-has given us any reports of these months of solitude and meditation.
-To-day, if any man wished to prepare for a great career of ministry or
-missionary service, he would go to some college or university or
-seminary or training school and learn how to do the work which lay
-before him, and he would train his body with games of skill and athletic
-courses, so as to be at his very best in mind and heart and body. Saul
-had nothing of this sort open to him. He had finished his years of study
-but they only prepared him to be a Jewish Rabbi, a teacher of the law.
-Now he wanted to learn how to tell the world the full message, the good
-news, which Jesus had brought to men. There was no school where this was
-taught. There were no Christian colleges or universities or seminaries
-yet. There were only a few followers of Jesus. Most of them lived in
-Jerusalem, and they were ignorant people—fishermen, and
-tax-collectors—who had had no chance to study. The best thing Saul could
-do was, therefore, to go away alone and read and think and let God teach
-him.
-
-At first he supposed that the good news which Jesus had brought was for
-his own people alone but as he meditated and studied and listened he
-began to see that God’s love reached everybody and that the great
-Galilean had come to bring new life to all people in the world. It was
-many years perhaps before Saul fully realised all that this meant, but I
-think he began to see it in Arabia. Another thing kept coming before him
-all the time. He was eager to find out why Jesus had died on the cross,
-why He had suffered, and what it all meant. That also took years of
-thought before he understood it, but here in the quiet of the mountains
-he began to _see_. How we wish he had written some letters from Arabia
-and told what he was doing and thinking! If he had only written to his
-mother once a week, or even once a month, and she had preserved the
-letters, how eagerly we would read them now! But there is not a word
-about it all. We only know that in the stillness his spirit was
-gathering power and his soul was growing richer.
-
-At last he felt that he was “ready.” This is one of his great words—“I
-am now ready.” The time of quiet was over and the busy life must begin.
-He felt sure he could make everybody believe in his Christ. It was all
-so plain and wonderful that people would be bound to listen as he told
-them what he had seen and known and felt! He decided to go back to
-Damascus and begin there—near the place where he had first seen Jesus
-and where the great change in his life had come.
-
-But it was not as easy as he expected. In the first place he soon
-discovered that he needed to know more about the life of Jesus. He had
-not talked with anybody yet who had been with Him in Galilee and in
-Jerusalem. He must learn more about Him before he could move people with
-his words. And then he found that the people did not want to hear about
-Jesus. The Jews in Damascus all thought Saul was a traitor. He had
-started for their city to persecute the followers of Jesus and now he
-was one of the followers himself, trying to make them believe. They
-decided to seize him and do to him what he used to do to the followers
-of Jesus. They would soon put him where he would not talk any more about
-this Galilean Teacher. They watched all the gates of the city so that
-Saul could not get away and they had men hunting for him through the
-streets. But some of Saul’s friends put him in a great basket and in the
-dark of the night, by a long rope, they let him down the side of the
-wall and he got far away from the dangerous city before the morning sun
-came up.
-
-He must have felt a strange thrill as he passed by the place where he
-saw the great light and heard the voice saying: “Saul, why persecutest
-thou me?” But he hurried on over the road through Galilee and came to
-Jerusalem, which he had left three years before. He had started out a
-persecutor. He came back a follower of Jesus. He had crossed the “great
-divide.”
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- FIFTEEN WONDERFUL DAYS
-
-
-We have invented a little instrument called a “dictaphone.” If one of
-these instruments is hidden away in a room, a person at the other end of
-the dictaphone can overhear all the conversation that goes on in the
-room where it is concealed, and the entire conversation can be written
-down and kept. How we wish now that there had been a dictaphone in the
-room in which Saul staid with St. Peter for fifteen days in Jerusalem.
-Part of the time James, the brother of Jesus, was there, too, with them.
-But the rest of the time they were alone—talking, talking, talking. St.
-Peter was telling Saul the things he wanted to know about the life of
-Jesus and about His death and resurrection. What a wonderful story it
-would be, if we could only get it all back, word for word! There was
-that keen and eager face of the man still young, with all his life-work
-before him, and opposite the older man whose whole life had been boating
-and fishing until one with authority had said to him, “Follow me.” The
-older man knew more about this Galilean life than anybody else knew,
-unless it were that other fisherman, named John, and he could answer all
-the questions the young man asked so long as they were just questions
-about events, for he had seen with his eyes and he had heard with his
-ears and he had handled with his hands and he _knew_.
-
-The pity of it is, not a word of this conversation has been preserved.
-We can imagine what some of the questions were and we can guess what
-some of the answers would be, but the actual words are gone. They are
-lost forever. What we do know, however, is that at the end of these
-fifteen days of wonderful talk, Saul went away from Jerusalem, his mind
-stored with truth about Jesus. He had heard from Peter’s lips the
-supreme facts about the life of the Person who was henceforth to be Lord
-and Master of his own life. Peter and James told all their friends in
-Jerusalem what had happened to Saul, how his career had suddenly
-changed, how the man who once dragged harmless Christians to prison was
-now getting ready to give his whole life to the work of telling the good
-news about Jesus and they already saw that a mighty champion of the
-truth had joined them and they all thanked God for Saul of Tarsus. When
-he left Jerusalem, after his memorable visit with Peter, Saul probably
-went home to Tarsus, and he lived and worked for a time in the home
-province of Cilicia. There is a long period of his life at this time
-about which we know nothing at all. He must have been at work for he
-could not settle down and rest. There was a tremendous drive in his
-glowing spirit, and wherever he was something was always happening. If
-he spent some years in Tarsus, as is probable, it is certain that many
-people there heard of Jesus from him and we can well believe that he
-went from town to town through the mountain province to tell in all the
-synagogues the truth which he had learned.
-
-It is possible, however, that he may at this time have had a long period
-of serious illness. He has himself given us one single glimpse into this
-unknown period of his life. In the twelfth chapter of Second
-Corinthians, he says that a tremendous experience came to him fourteen
-years before—that would be in this period. He was suddenly “caught up”
-into a higher world where he saw what nobody can see with ordinary eyes
-and where he understood the mysteries of life in a new way. It seemed
-for a moment as though he had lost his body and found his soul, as
-though he had leaped across all the space of the universe and had come
-to God’s dwelling-place and everything lay plain and clear before him.
-But about this time, he says further, some terrible illness came upon
-him, which was so bad that it felt like “a thorn,” or “a stake in his
-body”—a piercing, racking pain that seemed to bore into his quivering
-flesh. It was almost more than he could endure. He begged and besought
-that he might be relieved of it but it lasted on and on. We do not know
-certainly what this painful disease was but perhaps a little later, as
-we go on with his life, we may get some idea of what it was, for it
-appears to have come back again when he was in Galatia.
-
-What we do know is that, while he was living in Tarsus, a man named
-Barnabas thought of Saul and came to Tarsus to find him. Barnabas was
-another man something like Stephen. He saw farther than most of the
-others did. He was always ready for new things and he was full of faith
-and activity. Like Saul, he could not rest—he wanted to tell everybody
-what he had discovered. He heard of a new movement in the great city of
-Antioch, the capital of the province of Syria, and he went off to
-Antioch to see what this movement really was. When he got there he found
-that some followers of Jesus who had been forced to leave Jerusalem,
-because of the persecutions, had come to Antioch and had begun a little
-church there and were preaching to everybody who would listen. It did
-not make any difference to them whether the people who came to hear were
-Jews or not. They were as ready to tell the good news about Christ to
-Greeks as to the people of their own race. It was the first time and the
-first place in all the world that anybody had done this. In Jerusalem,
-“those of the way” were all Jews and they had nothing to do with anybody
-else. They never dreamed that peoples of all races were alike and were
-equally dear to God and that Christ came to bless and save all men. They
-made a sharp distinction between Jews and Gentiles. But in Antioch it
-was all different. Those who formed the church in Antioch forgot about
-race and thought only about brotherhood. Greeks flocked into the same
-room with Jews and together they worshipped God like brothers. And here
-in Antioch where this new spirit was born and where this new movement
-began, the followers of Christ were for the first time called
-“Christians.” In Jerusalem this word was not used or thought of, because
-no outside people came in and there was no need of a new name. But in
-Antioch where the Greeks joined the movement and where everybody
-discovered that a new religion was born they needed a word to name it
-with and so they called these persons who talked so much about Christ,
-“Christians.” Barnabas was filled with joy when he found what was going
-on in Antioch. It looked like the beginning of a movement that would
-sweep across the world and change the whole empire. He saw at once that
-he must have the best man whom he could find to help him push the work
-along, and as he sat thinking of the different persons who could do this
-great work, suddenly he remembered the young man whose persecutions had
-driven these first Christians to Antioch and he knew that Saul was now a
-changed man and a powerful champion of the truth. Whereupon he hurried
-off through the Syrian gate in the mountains to fetch Saul to Antioch
-and Saul went back with him to begin the greatest work any man has ever
-done in the world.
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- THE FIRST GREAT MISSIONARY JOURNEY
-
-
-Antioch, the great Syrian city, from this time on became Saul’s new
-home. He was henceforth to be very closely connected with the
-flourishing capital of Syria. This was now to be the mother-church of
-all his activities. From Antioch he started out on all his missionary
-journeys and he came back to Antioch at the end of each of his
-far-reaching travels. Here were faithful Christians praying for him as
-he worked and suffered and here, when he arrived weary and worn with
-labour, were dear friends to welcome him and to refresh him. Antioch was
-the first city in the world to have Gentile Christians in it and it was
-from this city that Christianity spread out over the world and conquered
-the Roman Empire and became a world movement, and, as we shall see, the
-man from Tarsus was in this great undertaking the foremost leader and
-the untiring worker.
-
-[Illustration: ANTIOCH]
-
-For a whole year Barnabas and Saul worked in the city of Antioch,
-spreading the knowledge of Christ through that region, gathering in new
-people all the time, teaching them the truth and helping them to live
-the new way. It was joyous work and while they were doing it they were
-constantly discovering fresh light and were learning all the time how to
-tell the world their “good news” and how to build churches out of people
-who had before been heathen and idol-worshippers. At the end of the
-first year when the Antioch church had become strong and vigorous—full
-of life and power—Barnabas and Saul decided, with the approval of the
-entire church, to go out and tell their message to the great world
-around them. They felt sure that God called them to be missionaries and
-they resolved to go wherever He wanted them to go and to do whatever
-they felt in their hearts that He wanted them to do. These two men took
-with them as their companion and helper a third man, named John Mark,
-who had come from Jerusalem to Antioch and who was Barnabas’ nephew. It
-was probably this young man who later in life wrote the wonderful book
-which we call “The Gospel according to Mark.”
-
-The whole church came together for a very solemn meeting and prayed for
-the travellers and then the three men, full of joy and enthusiasm, set
-out on their journey down the river to Selucia, where they took ship
-for the island of Cyprus which lies west of the Syrian coast. They
-visited all the cities of the island, going from the eastern end across
-to the western edge, to the city of Paphos where the governor of the
-island lived. This governor was greatly impressed with the message and
-the extraordinary power of the missionaries and he, Roman as he was,
-believed the wonderful new truths which they told him about God and
-about the Christ who had come to reveal Him.
-
-From Paphos the little band of travellers struck out for a new field of
-work. They had been so successful in Cyprus that they now decided to
-attack a still larger and more difficult region of the earth. They
-sailed almost north from Paphos, to the shores of the Mediterranean,
-lying west of the Taurus mountains over which Saul gazed as a boy. They
-landed in the district of Pamphilia and came to the city of Perga, a
-little way in from the Sea. From this time on, our hero is never called
-Saul any more. His name suddenly changes here to Paul. It is probably
-due to the fact that the field of his work is now widening out to the
-Gentile world. He is leaving behind the narrow circle of his own people
-who always called him by his Jewish name and he is going out among the
-Greeks who henceforth call him by his Greek name, that has become so
-familiar to us.
-
-Three things that concern our story seem to have happened at Perga. Paul
-appears to have been taken ill here with some dangerous disease. It was
-probably a return of the trouble which he had a few years before and
-which he called “a stake in his flesh.” The reason why we think he was
-taken ill here is that he wrote afterwards to his friends in Galatia
-that he came to them because he had an illness, and he seems to have
-gone directly to Galatia now from Perga. The illness may quite likely
-have been malaria, though there is no way to prove it. The few
-references to his trouble have made some scholars think that it was
-malaria—a disease which comes back again and again and is dreadfully
-annoying to a person who wants to do a great work. The low land of
-Pamphilia may quite likely have brought on a new attack and compelled
-our travellers to move up to a higher and healthier region. Anyway,
-whether this theory is correct or not, Paul and Barnabas decided to push
-on farther north to the hill country of Pisidia. This was the second of
-the three things. And the third was that Mark refused to go on with
-them. Something about the undertaking disturbed and frightened him. He
-turned back and went off home. Paul did not like Mark’s desertion, but
-Barnabas, who was his uncle, did not treat it as quite so serious.
-
-The two men now started off alone up over the hills and through the
-dangerous robber-infested country to the finely situated city of Antioch
-in Pisidia, which my reader must remember is very different from the
-other Antioch in Syria, from which Paul started on his journey. This
-second Antioch is in the Roman province of Galatia and we must now
-realise that on this first great missionary journey of his life Paul
-came to one of the cities of Galatia where, so far as we know, he
-founded the first of his missionary churches.
-
-He began his work in the Jewish Synagogue in Antioch of Pisidia and he
-and Barnabas preached to the Jews of that city and to the other people
-who sympathised with them and who were called “God-fearers” because they
-were eager to learn about the God of the Jews. But after a little time
-the Jews disagreed with the message which the missionaries brought them
-and so Paul and Barnabas gave up trying to convince the Jews and set to
-work to tell their good news to the Greeks, just as they had done in
-Syrian Antioch, and these people flocked to hear them and believed their
-message with great joy, and were ready almost to pluck out their eyes
-and give them to Paul. From this first city of the Galatian province
-they went on to other important cities of the same province—Iconium,
-Derbe and Lystra. These four cities, we shall now assume, were the four
-centres of the churches of Galatia. One remarkable incident happened
-while Paul and Barnabas were working in the city of Lystra. The simple
-country people here made up their minds that Paul and Barnabas must be
-gods come down from heaven to visit them and they brought out their oxen
-and were ready to sacrifice them to Barnabas and Paul, who they thought
-were Jupiter and Mercury. It was here in this very region around Lystra
-that Baucis and Philemon once lived. And according to the old Greek
-stories, Jupiter and Mercury came down to earth on a visit. They came
-looking like common men and nobody knew that they were gods and when
-they came to men’s houses asking to be taken in and entertained, nobody
-would receive them. Finally they came to the poverty-stricken home of
-Baucis and Philemon, who received their visitors with much joy. They
-killed their only chicken for the supper and did the best they could to
-show true hospitality. Suddenly the two visitors stood forth as mighty
-gods. They blessed and thanked Baucis and Philemon and turned their
-humble dwelling into a splendid temple and glorified the two poor people
-who had received them so kindly.
-
-Well, these simple people at Lystra evidently thought when they listened
-to Paul and Barnabas and saw their wonderful deeds that Jupiter and
-Mercury had come back again and they were resolved not to make a second
-mistake and miss the blessing. Paul and Barnabas had no desire to be
-treated as gods nor to have sacrifices made to them, but they had
-difficult work getting the simple hearted people to treat them as men
-and to drive their oxen home.
-
-[Illustration: MAP [NORTH EAST CORNER MEDIT.]]
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- THE FIRST GREAT PROBLEM
-
-
-Paul and Barnabas had another experience at Lystra which was very
-different from that of being taken for gods. Paul’s own people, the
-Jews, had begun to see now that he was not like them. He did not care
-for the things which were as important to them as life. His entire
-interest lay in telling not about Moses and his law but about Christ and
-the new life which men could live in His power. To the faithful Jews he
-seemed like a traitor. They did not want to hear him preach and they
-were determined to make him stop telling these new things to the people,
-if they possibly could.
-
-The Jews got together from the cities which Paul and Barnabas had
-visited and they came in a body to Lystra and stirred up the fickle,
-changeable peasants and set them against the missionaries who had come
-to help them. They dragged them out of the city and stoned them until
-they thought they were dead. Paul must have thought of Stephen as the
-stones rained down upon him and he knew now how it felt to be stoned by
-the very people he wanted most to help. Fortunately the stones did not
-kill him. They only wounded him severely and when the mob had gone away
-he got up and came back into the city and preached again to his friends
-who had learned to love him and to believe in him. The next day he and
-Barnabas left Lystra and went to Derbe. Then they returned and revisited
-all the churches they had started in Galatia—in Derbe, Lystra, Iconium
-and Antioch of Pisidia, after which they went back to their home-church
-in great Antioch. It must have been a happy moment, as the two
-travellers sat in the midst of the group at Antioch and told of the
-wonderful events of their long and dangerous journey and as they related
-how in the far-away province of Galatia they had built up new and
-flourishing churches out of people who just before had been ignorant
-heathen. But the happiness and joy were not long undisturbed, for some
-members of the church in Jerusalem came to Antioch and told the
-Christians there that Paul was wrong in his ideas and in his teaching,
-that Barnabas was wrong and that the church there in Antioch was wrong.
-These men insisted that nobody except Jews could be Christians. If any
-Gentile wanted to be a Christian and come into the church, they said
-that he must first be circumcised and become a Jew and he must keep the
-whole law of Moses. Christ came only for Jews, they said. If anybody
-went about teaching that Greeks and barbarians and men of all races and
-all customs could be Christ’s followers, that man was wrong and was a
-dangerous teacher. What these people said struck right against
-everything Paul was doing. According to their views most of the people
-in the church at Antioch were not real Christians. They would have to
-change all their ways of living. They would need to accept the whole
-system of Moses and all the sacrifices set forth in the Old Testament
-before they could have any part in Christ and His “good news.”
-
-Paul was determined not to yield to these men from Jerusalem and he saw
-that he must go to Jerusalem himself and prove to the whole church there
-that this idea that only Jews could be Christians was false. He must
-make them see that the new idea which he and the Christians at Antioch
-held was true and right; the idea that all men everywhere, of every race
-and of every colour and of every custom could follow Christ and come to
-God through Him and live by the power of His Spirit without becoming
-Jews at all.
-
-Paul and Barnabas, with one of their new converts, Titus, who was a
-Greek and who had never become a Jew, went together to Jerusalem to have
-a council with the church there and to settle forever, if they could,
-this important and difficult question. Paul threw himself into the
-discussion with all the earnestness and fire that were in his nature. He
-brought in Titus, as a specimen and exhibit of the kind of Christians
-the Greeks made when they gave their lives to Christ. Paul refused to
-let Titus be circumcised. He declared that Titus was already a full
-Christian without doing anything to make himself a Jew. As Paul talked
-and showed what Christ meant to him and told of the wonderful things
-Christ had done through him the men in Jerusalem who had been disciples
-of Christ were convinced that he was right and they gave him their hands
-as a token of their faith in him and of their regard for him. But the
-other members of the church were not yet ready for the new teaching and
-the new ideas. They were old-fashioned people who could not change their
-habits. They listened to Paul and were impressed with his shining face
-and his glowing words, but when he was done speaking they thought just
-as they did before!
-
-Soon after he had returned from the great conference in Jerusalem, when
-he thought he had convinced the church in Jerusalem that his position
-was the right one, he heard that men from Jerusalem had gone to the
-cities in Galatia and had told his new converts there—in Derbe and
-Lystra and Iconium and in Pisidia—that the two missionaries, who had
-recently visited them and had told them about Christ, were false
-teachers and had led them astray. These Jerusalem men worked upon the
-simple-minded Galatian people until they made them really believe that
-Paul and Barnabas were wrong. Their new visitors told the people in
-Galatia that they must go on now and become Jews. They must be
-circumcised and keep the law of Moses and they said that if they did
-that they could have the privilege of enjoying Christ. But if they did
-not do _that_, then they could have no part in Christ.
-
-It was an unspeakable shock to Paul when this piece of news reached him
-about his Galatian friends. He saw how helpless they had been. He
-realised how hard it would be to answer their visitors and he knew that
-these simple peasants were not to blame for being confused. But he
-quickly saw that he must save them. He must not let them go astray. He
-must come to their help and he must write them a letter that would open
-their eyes and show them the full truth. I am inclined to think this
-letter was the first of all his wonderful epistles. We must turn and see
-how the great leader wrote to his beloved friends and young disciples in
-the hill country of Galatia.
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- A LETTER TO HIS CHURCHES
-
-
-When Paul sat down to write to the churches in the province of Galatia
-he was facing one of the greatest crises of his life. If he could not
-convince them that he was right in his teaching and that all men
-everywhere could follow Christ and become His disciples, then his
-missionary work was ended and his career was over. He had been proud
-once to be a Jew. He had gloried in the privilege of belonging to the
-chosen people and he had hoped to become perfectly righteous by keeping
-all the law and the commandments. He had tried this plan with all his
-energy and it had miserably failed. He had never made himself perfect
-and he had discovered that nobody ever could reach perfection that way.
-Just at the moment when he realised his failure most, he had suddenly
-found Christ and through His life and power he had learned how to live
-in joy and peace and triumph. It was the most wonderful discovery! The
-whole world seemed new and all nature seemed changed! The whole business
-of his life was to go out and tell people everywhere about his discovery
-and what it meant.
-
-And now these men from Jerusalem had gone out to his new churches and
-made them think that all his work was wrong, that all that he told them
-was false. They must become Jews. They must try with all their might to
-keep the law. They must do what Paul had endeavoured to do before he
-found Christ. They must strain and struggle on, all their lives, to make
-themselves good, and then, if they succeeded, they could enjoy Christ.
-It seemed to Paul a pitiful drop from his great and wonderful message.
-_He_ could never go out and tell people that. If his discovery and his
-message were not true, then he could never go out again on a missionary
-journey. There was nothing left for him but to go back to Tarsus and
-make tents and then to die and be buried like the rest of men. Now if
-ever he must make his new converts see and understand his discovery and
-he must absolutely convince them that he was right and that God was with
-him. That is what the Epistle to the Galatians was written for.
-
-Intense and eager and determined as he was, he was also tender and
-loving. This letter is all full of passages in which you can almost feel
-this great man’s heart throb. “You are,” he tells them, “just like my
-own children. I came to you when you were living in sin and ignorance
-and, like a father full of love, I helped you into a new life. I brought
-you to Christ and I showed you how to get free from your old bondage and
-how to rise into a life of joy and power. I cannot bear to see you drop
-back into bondage again. If you believe what these visitors have told
-you, you will never be free again, you will have to carry burdens all
-your days.” “When I came first among you,” he wrote, “you were full of
-joy. You loved me and believed me, as though I had been an angel or a
-god come to visit you. You would have plucked out your eyes and given
-them to me, if you could have done it. I want now to be your friend and
-I want you to believe that what I tell you is the truth.” Then he showed
-them how foolish was the story which the Jews from Jerusalem had told
-them. They had said that only those who were “sons of Abraham” could
-share in the promises of Christ. “Sons of Abraham,” Paul cried out to
-them, “who are the real sons of Abraham!” “Not those who become Jews and
-keep the law but those who are full of faith, who trust Christ and live
-by His power. The most wonderful thing about Abraham was his _faith_. He
-believed God. He trusted God. He walked with God. He did not keep the
-law, because the law was not given until many centuries after Abraham
-had died. If you want to be ‘a son of Abraham’ you must live by faith.
-You must trust God and take Christ for your leader, your helper, your
-inward strength.”
-
-He drew, in his letter, a wonderful picture of the true way to live. He
-gave his friends an account of his own life and told them they could
-also have what had come to him. “Why,” he said, “God has revealed His
-Son in my soul. I used to do wrong and go wrong. I could not keep
-myself. I tried to live by the law but it would not work. Now I live by
-faith—faith in Christ, and the life I now live is really the life He
-lives in me. I do not care any more for the things people do to make
-themselves good. I feel Christ coming into me and giving me strength and
-power, just as the sun comes into the tree and builds its life from
-within. You can all have that power formed in you. You can all feel the
-life of Christ sweep into your lives and that will make you free. And
-you will cry ‘Abba, Father,’ for you will find the life and spirit of
-God in your own hearts. When that happens you will not think much about
-those things which these Jews from Jerusalem have been telling you you
-must do to be saved!
-
-“There are two great forces in the world,” he told them. “One is the
-force that makes people do wrong. There seems to be something in us too
-strong for us to resist. We mean to do right, but often before we know
-it, something seems to push us into evil. We go the way of instinct. We
-fight, or we tell lies, or we take what is not ours, or we get angry, or
-we do things which are not pure and clean and beautiful. How are we to
-stop this force from pushing us and controlling us and spoiling us?”
-“You must get a new spirit,” Paul says. “The law and the commandments
-and the customs of Moses will not bring you life and power. You must
-find a new and higher force which will come into you and raise you out
-of your old self into a new way of life. Just that is what Christ does.
-When He helps you and comes into you, a new spirit is formed and you get
-love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meekness,
-and endurance in your own souls. It is like discovering a new world. It
-is like a new creation. That is what Christ does. He makes people new
-creatures. These people who came to you from Jerusalem cannot tell you
-how to do that—but I can tell you. I bear in my body the marks of this
-new creation which Christ has formed in me.”
-
-Something like that Paul wrote to his friends in Galatia and the best of
-it is, they believed him and stood by him. When they had read his
-letter, they said: Paul is right. It is so. We will take his way. We
-will have Christ and not the law-system—and so Paul had won his first
-great battle.
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- “COME OVER INTO MACEDONIA AND HELP US”
-
-
-The old heroes of Greece were heroes because they went out to fight with
-beasts and to free the world of terrible monsters. Then, again, there
-were heroes who fought with giants, or with deadly enemies of their
-country, and who risked their lives for their friends or for their
-people. Paul was a new kind of hero. His great battle was a battle with
-false ideas, a battle for the truth, a battle for the good news which
-Christ had brought to the world. It is harder to be this kind of a hero.
-Most people do not recognise the new kind of hero when he comes. They do
-not know that he _is_ a hero. He often has to fight alone and he is
-misunderstood even by his friends. Paul had many lonely hours. He could
-not have stood the strain and struggle if he had not been sure of
-Christ’s presence and help and if he had not known that he was the
-champion of the greatest truth in the world.
-
-Now that he had won the victory in this important contest in Galatia,
-and now that he had settled the question that Christ was the Saviour of
-all men of all races, he could go out again on another great
-out-reaching missionary journey. Paul wanted to go again with Barnabas,
-but Barnabas was determined to take Mark once more as companion and Paul
-was just as determined not to have Mark, because he deserted them on
-their former journey, so that they finally agreed to separate. Barnabas
-went to Cyprus with Mark, and Paul took a companion named Silas, and
-started out without quite knowing what country he would travel to before
-his return. He and Silas went, probably by land, through the Syrian gate
-in the mountains, to Tarsus and visited the Christian settlements in the
-province of Cilicia, then directly on to see his friends in Galatia who
-had been through so much since he saw them last. How we wish we knew
-what he said to them and what they said to him! But we do not know a
-single word that passed while Paul was living among the disciples of
-Galatia. We only know that he decided to take one of these Galatian
-Christians along with him as a helper in his work. This was a young man
-named Timothy whose home was in Derbe. He became one of Paul’s greatest
-friends and a wonderful help to him, clear through to the end of his
-life. Being with Paul made Timothy a hero too.
-
-After the three men had visited all the communities of Galatia, they
-started off toward the north and visited the cities in the district of
-Phrygia which belonged to the province of Galatia, and then they decided
-to strike across west and visit the great cities of the province of
-Asia, the capital of which was Ephesus, but they soon felt that the time
-had not come yet for this journey. They next tried to go to the country
-lying along the shores of the Black Sea, but something made them realise
-that this was not the right course for them to take, so that they went
-on to Troas on the shores of the Ægean Sea, without quite knowing where
-they would go next. Troas was the site of the old city of Troy where the
-Greeks and Trojans fought for ten years, and where some of the bravest
-deeds were done that the world ever saw. Here was the tomb of Achilles.
-Here Alexander the Great had come on his way to the conquest of the
-world. A greater conqueror had now come to Troas. Alexander went toward
-the east for his victories; the new conqueror was to go west!
-
-While they were here in Troas without any clear plan of action, Paul
-felt in his soul that the next course was to sail across the Ægean Sea
-into Europe. He felt it so clearly and strongly that it seemed to him as
-though he heard a man from the European side of the sea calling to him
-and saying: “Come across into Macedonia and bring us help.” But it was
-more than Macedonia that was calling. It was the whole of Greece. It was
-more than Greece that was calling. It was the whole of Europe. It was
-more than Europe that was calling. It was undiscovered America that was
-stretching out its hands that night and saying: “Come over and help us.”
-You see, if Paul had not gone into Europe, across the Ægean, perhaps we
-who live in America and in England would never have been followers of
-Christ, so that this call meant very much! Paul heard it and he was
-“ready” at once. He answered: “Yes, I will come.” The next morning he
-set sail from Troas on the eastern shore to Philippi on the western
-shore of the Ægean. Silas and Timothy were with him and he also found
-here a new companion. This new travelling-companion kept a Diary and
-wrote the account of this journey and of other journeys, too. You can
-find his Diary in the sections of the Book of Acts that say “we”—“the We
-Narratives.” Philippi in Macedonia is the first spot in Europe on which
-Paul set his foot and so far as we know the people in Philippi were the
-first people of all Europe who heard of Christ. They were not as eager
-to hear as you might expect. If they were calling to Paul to come over
-and help them, they did not recognise him when he arrived, for they very
-soon seized him and put him in prison and beat him with rods. Some of
-the people in Philippi, however, did recognise him. They were very glad
-to hear him and they were full of love for him and for his truth. They
-joined him and worked with him and a new church was formed—perhaps the
-first in all Europe. These Christians in Philippi were very dear to
-Paul’s heart and they loved him as though he had been their own father,
-and they remembered him later when he lay in prison in Rome and was
-lonely. When he left Philippi, he went on through the great cities of
-Macedonia, preaching and building up churches, wherever he could find
-people ready to listen to his message. In the city of Thessalonica,
-which is now called Salonika, Paul found many listeners and formed a
-successful church to which a little later he wrote two epistles. He
-found another splendid group in the city of Berœa and formed a church
-there. But in all these cities of Macedonia he had serious trouble, just
-as he had had in the province of Galatia. The Jews hated him and
-everywhere he came they raised a riot and tried to drive him out of the
-city or to get him into prison. They set the mob against him in some of
-the cities and in others they had him arrested and badly treated. But in
-spite of all their efforts to hinder him, he succeeded in doing a great
-work and in forming Christian churches all up and down the famous
-province of Macedonia.
-
-From the time Paul heard the voice calling him over into Macedonia, most
-of the rest of his life was to be lived and most of his future work in
-the world was to be done around the shores of the Ægean Sea. All the
-churches which he gathered after this time were around the Ægean and all
-his epistles from this time were written either to Ægean cities, or
-written while he was living in Ægean cities. It was Paul who shifted the
-centre of Christianity from Jerusalem to the Western World and during
-his life-time the great centres were around the shores of this famous
-Sea. The most famous of all the cities around the coasts of this Sea was
-Athens, the home of Socrates and Plato and of a hundred other great men,
-and to this wonderful city of the ancient world Paul now came.
-
-[Illustration: MAP [2ND MISSIONARY JOURNEY]]
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- ALONE IN ATHENS
-
-
-As Paul’s two companions, Silas and Timothy, had been left behind in
-Berœa to finish the work which had been begun in Macedonia Paul found
-himself “alone in Athens.” It was the most interesting city in the world
-for a traveller to visit. It was the “eye of Greece” and Greece had for
-five hundred years been leading the world in art, in poetry, in
-philosophy, in architecture and in many other things. The most beautiful
-temples that had ever been built were there for Paul to see. The most
-wonderful statues that had ever been carved were there for him to gaze
-upon. The most perfect poems that had ever been written were in the
-libraries there in Athens for him to read. A short walk would take him
-to the garden of the Academe where Plato once had his school. He could
-stand where Socrates stood. He could see the home of Stoic philosophy
-which he had heard about all his life. He was under the most perfect sky
-the sun shines through. He looked over the glorious hills where great
-deeds had been wrought. Delightful air wrapped him round and inspiring
-sights met him at every turn.
-
-But Paul thought little of these things. His mind was filled with
-something else which seemed to him more important. He wanted to make
-this famous city see what he saw. He wanted to build a church of Christ
-in the city that had built the Parthenon. He wanted to tell his message
-of truth to the people who gloried in the wisdom of Plato and Aristotle.
-As he was walking about alone in the city, he noticed an altar with the
-inscription on it: “To God Unknown.” At once, he thought, “How I should
-like to make these people know the God whom I know, but whom they have
-not found yet. They want to find Him, or they would not build altars
-like that. All their philosophers have wanted to find Him, and sometimes
-they almost did find Him. Oh, if I could only make them see!” While Paul
-was walking around the city, wishing for a chance to tell his message,
-the Athenian people in the streets and market-places were watching him.
-They saw at once that he was a stranger and of a different race. They
-noticed him gazing around. Some of them asked him questions and sounded
-him to see whether he brought any new ideas. But they did not expect
-much from a mere Jew. They thought from the little they listened to that
-he believed in two gods—or a god and a goddess—whom they had never heard
-of before, for he spoke of Jesus and of the resurrection. They thought
-Jesus was a new god and that the Resurrection was a new goddess. But
-most of the people thought that he was a “babbler”—a man who was talking
-about trifles. They never dreamed that this foreign visitor, this Jew,
-could teach them, wise Athenians as they were, anything that mattered to
-them. But some of the inquisitive and curious ones got Paul to come up
-to their great meeting-place on the Hill of Mars, which they called the
-Areopagus, and speak to them. That was exactly what Paul wanted. Now he
-had a chance to tell them his great truth. Would they listen? Would they
-understand?
-
-With a polite wave of the hand, he began to speak in the Greek which he
-had learned as a boy at Tarsus. “Athenian men,” he said, “you are very
-religious people. I see altars everywhere and you have filled your city
-with objects of worship. One strange thing I noticed as I walked about.
-I saw an altar on which was this inscription, ‘To God Unknown.’ That
-means that you have not quite found God yet. Let me tell you about Him,
-for I know. He made the world. He made all things above and all things
-beneath. But He does not dwell in temples. He does not need the things
-which men make with their hands, idols and images and statues. He has
-given life and breath to all living beings. He has planned the universe
-and put His wisdom into all the parts of it. He has arranged everything
-for men. He expects them to become one great family. He has put
-something into men’s hearts which makes them seek after Him and which
-makes them try to feel their way, as blind persons do, to find Him if
-they can. But He is never far away from anybody. He is near, within
-reach. We live in God. We move in Him. All our life is flooded with Him,
-and without Him we could not live at all. Your poets knew that. They
-have tried to tell you about it. One of them in his poem says that we
-are ‘offspring of God’—we have come from Him. If that is true, as your
-poet says it is, you ought not to think that God is like silver or gold
-or marble, or that He can be carved and made into a statue. All that is
-childlike and is the result of ignorance. When men were in the child
-stage and did not know any better, God excused them and waited for them
-to learn. But now that you are older and wiser, there is no excuse. God
-expects everybody now to live differently, to change their lives, and to
-prepare for the great beyond. He has sent His Son to show them how to do
-it, and He has raised Him from the dead.”
-
-They did not listen very well and when they found that the Resurrection
-was not a new goddess they were not interested any longer. They drifted
-away to look for something that was more exciting and they politely told
-Paul that they would hear him again some other time. One man who was a
-senator and one woman, who had listened eagerly, were convinced that
-this was the truth about God and they believed and accepted Paul’s way
-of life. But Athens was not ready yet for the great message and so the
-chance went by! In a few days Paul sailed away, out of that wonderful
-harbour, looking back on the beautiful city that had missed its
-opportunity, and landed in the great seaport city of Corinth, at that
-time the capital of the province of Achaia.
-
-[Illustration: MARS HILL—ATHENS]
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- CORINTH AND EPHESUS
-
-
-In Corinth Paul made two new friends who became very dear to him and who
-were able to be great helpers in his work. Their names were Aquila—a Jew
-from Pontus who had lived sometime in Italy—and his wife Priscilla who
-was a very remarkable woman. They became followers of Christ and joined
-with Paul in the work of spreading Christianity in the great Greek city
-of Corinth. Aquila and Priscilla were also tent-makers and part of the
-time they all worked at this trade to get money to live by. Then they
-gave all the rest of their time to the main business for which Paul had
-come to Corinth. It was a very happy group of workers for they all loved
-and enjoyed each other and they all loved and enjoyed their work. As
-Corinth was a great city close to the sea, people from all countries in
-the world came there. There were men of many colours and men of many
-languages. They had not learned how to live good and beautiful lives.
-Very wrong things were done in Corinth. We sometimes think that the
-world is wicked to-day but if we could see the way the Corinthians lived
-and then see how men live to-day we should discover that there has been
-some improvement.
-
-For a year and a half, this little group of missionaries laboured in the
-city, telling about Christ and His love and His death for men and His
-resurrection and of His Spirit working in the hearts of men. All kinds
-of people were changed by the power of this message. Jews and Greeks and
-persons from many lands listened and rejoiced and believed and followed
-Christ. Paul’s old enemies, the Jews, who had heard about his past life,
-made all the trouble they could for him, but he had been through trouble
-before and he knew how to bear it now. He went straight ahead with his
-work and was not disturbed by the difficulties. His soul was filled with
-joy as he saw his little church growing larger every day. New persons
-kept coming and there were more all the time who were trying to live the
-new way. All kinds of people came in to form the new church in Corinth.
-A few of them were learned and well off, but most of them were poor and
-ignorant. They were working people who had never had any real _life_
-before, and now the whole world seemed changed for them. It was as
-though they had been living in a dark cave before and now they had come
-into the beautiful world where the bright sun was shining.
-
-[Illustration: EPHESUS]
-
-After eighteen months of this hard and happy work, Paul, with his two
-companions, and with his two new friends, sailed away from Corinth,
-leaving behind a great group of Christian men and women and children
-gathered into a church. We can well believe that all these people, who
-had found the new life, were on the shore of the harbour at Cenchrea to
-say “farewell” and to wave their last greetings as the missionaries
-pushed out to sea. They sailed in and out among the famous islands of
-the Ægean and across its blue waters to the eastern shore and came to
-Ephesus. Paul had wanted to go to Ephesus at the beginning of this long
-missionary journey, but he had not been able to accomplish his desire
-then. Now after wonderful experiences, dangers and trials and after many
-months of work in Europe he found himself at last in the great city of
-Ephesus. He knew that this was to be one of the most important fields of
-his entire lifework, but he still felt that the time for his work in
-Ephesus had not come yet. So he left Aquila and Priscilla there and went
-on by ship to Cæsarea and then to his beloved home church group at
-Antioch.
-
-There were many things to tell as the Christian Jews and Greeks of
-Antioch flocked in to hear Paul recount the wonderful events of the
-greatest journey of his life. How the field had widened and how
-Christianity had spread in these eventful years since he last saw
-Antioch! After a short stay at Antioch, Paul went once more, and this
-was to be the last time, to see his dear friends in Galatia. When this
-visit was finished, he came over the great stretch of country which
-formed the ancient province of Asia to its capital, Ephesus. He had made
-a little beginning of work here before his return to Antioch and now he
-came back to finish what he had begun.
-
-Ephesus was much larger than Corinth and it was also, like Corinth, a
-very wicked city. There was much to do here and much to suffer before
-Ephesus could be changed into a city of pure and beautiful citizens. But
-nothing ever discouraged Paul. He went at his great task as though he
-fully expected to see it done. It was like fighting beasts in the arena
-to work among the hard and wicked people who tried every way they could
-to defeat Paul and spoil his work. Steadily he fought on—gaining a
-little all the time—explaining to everybody who came to hear and proving
-that he had found a new way to live.
-
-Right in the midst of this great work of transforming and remaking
-Ephesus, Paul heard very bad news from Corinth, across the Ægean. He
-heard that the church there was in sad trouble. The people had divided
-into parties and were quarrelling. Some of the people had gone wrong and
-were doing the kind of things they used to do when they were heathen.
-Paul wrote a wonderful letter to them—our First Corinthians. It was full
-of good advice and counsel and it showed them how to get back into the
-new way of living. The most wonderful thing in the letter was what Paul
-said to them about love. He told them, in the most beautiful words that
-perhaps were ever written that love was the greatest thing in the world,
-that when everything else failed love would not fail and when everything
-else vanished away love would still abide.
-
-You would have thought this letter would have settled all their troubles
-but it did not. When people get wrong it is very hard setting them right
-again and it often takes a long time and much patience. Things went from
-bad to worse. Finally Paul had to leave his work in Ephesus and go
-across to Corinth, to see the people there in person and to straighten
-out their trouble. But even when he got among them, they remained
-stubborn and difficult, and he had to go back without getting the
-trouble settled. Then he sent Timothy over and he failed. It looked as
-though the church would fall to pieces and Paul would lose all his
-friends in Corinth. Then he wrote another letter, full of pleading,
-which he sent by his friend Titus, who was now his companion.
-
-While he was waiting, full of anxiety, for Titus to come back with the
-answer from Corinth, some dreadful catastrophe happened in Ephesus.
-There was a great uprising in the city against Paul. It seemed for a
-time as though there was no hope that his life could be saved. He has
-told us that the sentence of death was pronounced against him—probably
-the sentence that he should be thrown into the arena to fight with
-lions. For a time there seemed no hope. But his friends Aquila and
-Priscilla, whom Paul sometimes calls “Prisca,” saved his life. He says
-that they “risked their necks” for him and that he was “delivered from
-death.”
-
-This catastrophe may very likely be connected in some way with the
-strange event so powerfully described in the nineteenth chapter of Acts.
-It happened this way. There was a man in Ephesus named Demetrius. He was
-a silversmith and made little silver images of the goddess Diana which
-he sold in great numbers to the people. These images were little copies
-of the great statue of Diana which the Ephesians believed had fallen
-down from heaven, and so it was looked upon with awe and was very
-sacred. One of the most beautiful temples in the world—one of the seven
-“wonders”—had been built to Diana in Ephesus and in this temple stood
-the famous statue. Now Demetrius made a great deal of money selling his
-silver images to those who visited the temple. But suddenly he
-discovered that people were not buying as many of his silver Dianas as
-they used to do. He began to wonder what was happening and he hit upon
-the idea that all the trouble was caused by the preaching of Paul! Paul
-was calling people to Christ and when they believed in Christ, they no
-longer worshipped Diana. They stopped going to her temple and they did
-not care to have copies of the great statue. Demetrius was losing money.
-His business was in danger. Something must be done. He called together
-all the silversmiths and stirred them up to do something at once to
-drive Paul out of the city. “Just see,” he cried, “how our trade is
-going down! We are losing all our business! We are making no money! This
-stranger has come to our city and he has told people that gods are not
-made of silver and gold; that gods made by hands are no gods at all! He
-has carried people away with his new ideas. They won’t buy our images
-now. Not only is our business in danger, but our whole city will suffer
-as well. People will stop coming to see the great temple which all the
-world admired. We must act. We must save the city and defend the great
-goddess!” Then all the silversmiths and goldsmiths and coppersmiths and
-workers in iron and brass began to make processions through the city,
-shouting as they marched, “Great is Diana of the Ephesians.” “Great is
-Diana of the Ephesians.” The whole city was aroused. People rushed out
-of their houses to see what was happening and a great commotion and
-excitement followed. The throng pressed into the immense city theatre
-and everybody kept shouting, some one thing and some another, as
-generally happens in a vast mob of excited people. Paul tried to get
-into the theatre. He was, as usual, ready to face the danger and stand
-his ground. But his friends kept him back and would not let him risk his
-life in such a wild and seething and furious crowd. When any one tried
-to speak the mob drowned the voice of the speaker with their shouts. A
-man named Alexander—perhaps he was “Alexander, the coppersmith,” who,
-Paul says, did him “much evil,” a little later—tried to speak, when
-suddenly the vast throng of excited people began crying again, “Great is
-Diana of the Ephesians.” “Great is Diana of the Ephesians.” For two
-hours nobody could stop this cry which went on and on, with the
-continual shout, “Great is Diana of the Ephesians.” At last the
-town-clerk of the city got the people quiet and made a sensible speech
-to them, telling them if they had any charge against Paul the right
-thing to do was to take the matter to the courts and not to get up a
-riot and endanger the liberty and reputation of the city. Then he sent
-the people away to their homes.
-
-How this uproar affected Paul we do not know. What danger threatened him
-now because of the hate of Demetrius and the silversmiths we cannot
-tell. Nobody knows exactly what happened, but in some way Paul escaped
-from the city, never to go back again. He got to Troas in safety and
-then crossed over the Ægean at the same place where he crossed the first
-time he entered Europe, and reached Macedonia where he was among his
-friends.
-
-Here in Macedonia where Paul was waiting, worn and perplexed and
-weary—but not cast down—Titus came to him from Corinth and told him the
-good news that his letter to Corinth had done its work, had saved the
-day, and that now his church there was ready to be faithful to him.
-Nothing in his life ever touched his soul with more joy than did that
-report which Titus brought. If you wish to see how he felt, you must
-read the first nine chapters of Second Corinthians, for he wrote those
-chapters just after Titus came to him. It makes you love Paul to find
-how eagerly he loved his friends and his churches, and to see how much
-he suffered when they did wrong or turned against him. Soon after this
-he went to Corinth and spent three months there with his old and new
-friends of that city.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE OF DIANA]
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- “READY TO BE BOUND”
-
-
-There were many things to do in Corinth, on this last visit of Paul’s
-life to the city where he had worked so long and suffered so much. He
-had many things to tell them. There were many changes to make in the
-management of the church. There were many families to visit and all the
-time there were new people being added to the church. Then Paul was
-raising a great fund of money which he hoped to carry up to Jerusalem on
-his return, for the support of the church in that city. Finally he had
-letters to write to his other churches, advice to give them,
-difficulties to settle and problems to solve. Perhaps the most important
-thing he did during this stay in Corinth—certainly the most important
-for us—was to write a letter, which we now call an Epistle, to the
-Christians in the city of Rome. It is the longest of all Paul’s Epistles
-and the one in which he sets forth most carefully and fully his entire
-message about Christ. He had not been to Rome yet and he had not met the
-Christians there, but he was planning to go to Rome, after he had been
-to Jerusalem, on his way to Spain and he wanted to prepare the
-Christians in the great capital of the empire for the teaching which he
-expected to give them when he arrived. He little thought as he was
-writing this wonderful letter that when he did come to Rome he would
-come chained to two soldiers and that this would be the end of his
-journey! He told the people at Rome, in this letter, how hard he had
-tried as a young man to make himself perfect, how he had resolved to
-keep the law and be absolutely righteous, and how miserably he had
-failed. “When I meant to do right,” he wrote, “I did wrong. The things I
-wanted to do I did not do. The things I did, were just those things
-which I ought not to have done. And when I was defeated and beaten and
-hopeless then suddenly I discovered the love of God which Christ
-revealed to me. I found a power to live by, which delivered me from the
-old power of sin in my nature. Now through that love and that power I am
-more than conqueror. I know now that nothing can ever separate me from
-the love of God. Neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities,
-nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor
-depth, nor anything that has ever been made in the universe, can
-separate me from the love of God in Christ Jesus.”
-
-He told these unseen friends of his in the far-away city how to live the
-new way day by day in the difficult world. He told them not to overcome
-evil by doing evil in return but to overcome it by being good and by
-doing good. He told them not to worry, or fret, or be disturbed, when
-things were hard and difficult, but to keep calm and steady and full of
-faith in the love of God, and when they had done the best they could, to
-leave it all with God. They were, as far as possible, to live in peace
-and love with all kinds of people and no matter what others did to them,
-they were to go right on loving them and doing good to them.
-
-When he had sent off his great epistle, and had done all that he could
-to strengthen the church in Corinth and had received a large collection
-for Jerusalem and had gathered his friends around him, Paul said
-farewell to Corinth and started on his return journey, accompanied by a
-number of companions. He went back through Macedonia—Berœa,
-Thessalonica, Philippi—and then across the Ægean to Troas where he had
-first heard the call to go to Europe. There must have been a church
-there on “the plains of windy Troy,” for Paul remained seven days and
-held meetings far into the night, but we do not know very much about
-this church by the Simois River—only that one of the young men there
-went to sleep while the meeting was going on and fell out of a window in
-the third story to the ground! Here at Troas Paul found again his old
-friend, the writer of the Diary—“the We Narrative”—who joined the party
-for the journey to Jerusalem. They went part of the way by land and part
-of the way by sea, stopping at Assos and Mitylene, touching at the
-famous island of Samos, and disembarking at Miletus. Here at Miletus,
-the leaders of the church at Ephesus came down to see the man whom they
-had learned to love, to hear his message and to say farewell to him. It
-was probably not safe for Paul to go to Ephesus with its beasts. There
-were too many dangers there for him. After all his years of work and his
-perils in that city it was a joy to see the men and women with whom he
-had lived and laboured and to have one more chance to speak to them
-about the highest things in life. It was a very solemn time as they
-gathered on the seashore and Paul told them of the troubles and dangers
-that lay before them and before him. He then told them that they would
-never see each other again. They loved him as though he had been a
-father to each one and they all wept as he left them to go into the ship
-to sail for Syria. As they went on their way Paul realised, from what he
-heard at every port where the ship stopped, that it would be very
-dangerous for him in Jerusalem. He had not been in the Holy City since
-the great conference there with Peter and James and John. Since that
-time tremendous things had happened across the world. Paul had
-succeeded, but the more he succeeded the more the Jews hated him. They
-had made trouble for him in every city. They had come to regard him as a
-traitor and as the enemy of their race and they were eager to get rid of
-him forever. He knew how they felt. He saw the danger ahead. He
-understood that if he went to Jerusalem it would be like going into the
-lion’s mouth. But he was determined to go, danger or no danger, for Paul
-was a hero. He had a great gift to carry up to the poor and needy
-Christians in Jerusalem and he must have thought that he could win them
-over and make them see his truth at last. He believed that this was the
-greatest opportunity of his life. Perhaps now, after all the wonderful
-work around the Ægean Sea he might be able to make his own people see
-the truth that had meant so much to the Greeks and to the Galatians.
-Perhaps now he could join both branches together—those who were Jewish
-Christians and those who were Gentile-Christians—and have one great
-world church with no division in it. It was worth trying anyhow. It was
-worth any kind of risk. The great gift would soften their hearts and he
-would plead with them, and then it would be done! When prophets on the
-way told Paul how dangerous the risk was, he said to them: “Do not talk
-to me of danger. Do not try to change my course. I am _ready_, not only
-to be bound in Jerusalem, but if necessary to die there for this
-cause”—and on he went, like the hero he was.
-
-He very soon found that he was in the midst of enemies. James told him
-that there were many thousands of Christian-Jews who had heard serious
-charges against him, how he no longer kept the law of Moses and how he
-taught his converts that they did not need to become Jews, or to do the
-things which all good Jews considered necessary and he showed Paul how
-stern they were sure to be toward him.
-
-He had hardly begun to live in Jerusalem when some Jews discovered him
-in the city. They gave a cry and raised a mob and rushed at him and
-seized him. They were so furious that they nearly killed him on the
-spot, but a Roman captain with a troop of soldiers came up just in time
-to rescue him and to carry him away to the military castle where the mob
-could not get at him. But he could hear them cry and shout: “Away with
-him! away with him!”
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- IN THE PRISON AT CÆSAREA
-
-
-Standing on the steps of the castle, with the angry, surging people in
-front of him Paul beckoned for silence and then spoke to the most
-difficult audience he ever addressed. He calmly told them the story of
-his life. He gave them an account of that great moment on the road to
-Damascus when Jesus met him and called him to a new life and a new
-mission. He explained to them how he tried to tell the good news to his
-own people and how God sent him to the great world of Gentiles. Then,
-all of a sudden, the people cried out in a fury: “Away with such a
-fellow from the earth.” They threw off their garments and would have
-ended his life in a moment if they could have reached him. It was
-another scene like the one which occurred when Jesus was on his way to
-Calvary, and when Stephen was being hurried out of the gates of
-Jerusalem and Paul himself held the garments of the men who threw the
-stones.
-
-This time the crowd was powerless for they could not get their victim.
-The soldiers guarded him and took him into the castle where he was to be
-scourged, that is beaten with rods. The soldiers tied Paul up to the
-wall with thongs and were ready to begin the terrible scourging when he
-quietly asked the centurion if it was lawful to scourge a Roman citizen
-who had not been found guilty of any crime. The centurion went out and
-told the chief captain that Paul was a Roman, and he immediately stopped
-the scourging. The next day Paul had an opportunity to address the great
-council of the Jews in the presence of Ananias, the high-priest, but the
-council divided in their opinion of Paul, some approving of him and some
-disapproving, until they nearly tore him in pieces in their excitement.
-Once more the soldiers saved him by rushing in and carrying him away to
-the castle. Meantime, a band of men got together and formed a secret
-plot to kill Paul and have done with him. This time it was not the Roman
-soldiers who saved him. It was his nephew. Paul, we remember, had a
-sister in Jerusalem. And in some way her son discovered this plot. He
-got into the castle and told his uncle, who brought him to a centurion
-and the centurion took the young man to the chief captain where he told
-all he knew of the plot. The brave boy saved his uncle’s life, for the
-chief captain, when he heard the boy’s story, ordered two hundred
-soldiers and seventy horsemen and two hundred spearmen to take Paul by
-night to Cæsarea, where the Roman governor had his home and headquarters
-and where Paul would be safe until his trial was over. He was taken at
-first to Herod’s palace, though we may be pretty sure that the part in
-which Paul lived was more like a prison than a palace, but this
-wonderful man had something in his soul which changed even prisons into
-palaces.
-
-Soon after his arrival, Ananias, the high-priest, with a lawyer named
-Tertullus, came down to Cæsarea to lay before Felix, the Roman governor,
-the charges against Paul. Tertullus made a speech charging Paul with
-being “a pestilent fellow,” “a mover of insurrections” up and down the
-empire wherever he travelled. He said Paul was “a ringleader of the
-Nazarenes” and that he did things contrary to the laws and customs of
-the Jews. Tertullus made out as bad a case as he could and the other
-Jews who had come down with him added whatever they could think of
-against the prisoner.
-
-Then Felix made a sign that Paul might speak in his own defence. He
-declared, in calm and persuasive words that he had never wilfully
-stirred up the crowd, or encouraged a riot. He told the governor that
-his whole business in the world was to live the way of life that God had
-revealed as the true way. A little later Paul spoke again before
-Drusilla, a Jewess, who was Felix’s wife. He spoke so powerfully this
-time of righteousness and self-control and the perfect way of life and
-of the future of joy and woe, that the old Roman governor trembled as he
-listened. But he did not change his life. He was weak of will and he had
-woven a chain of habits which he could not break. He had heard that Paul
-had brought great sums of money to Jerusalem and he hoped that Paul
-would offer a large bribe for his liberty so that Felix kept him in
-prison two years. Felix saw him occasionally and gave him a chance to
-offer a bribe, which never was offered! Thus two long years dragged by.
-Paul was longing to go on with the work that had been changing the
-world. He was eager to see his old friends and to help them in their
-troubles, but all the time he was fast bound with chains in the strong
-prison at Cæsarea. There is in the Second Epistle to Timothy a fragment
-of a letter which Paul may have written from Cæsarea. He asks Timothy to
-bring him the cloak which he left at Troas. The prison by the sea was a
-cold place. And more touching still, he asks him to bring his books—I
-wish we knew the titles of these books—and his pieces of parchment, so
-that he could write letters to his churches and to his friends. After
-two years had dragged by, there came a change of governors. Porcius
-Festus succeeded Felix. The Jerusalem Jews made a great effort to
-prejudice the new governor against Paul and he proposed to push the
-trial through at once and have the case settled. It was evident that
-Paul could hardly have a fair trial in Cæsarea. The Jews were full of
-passion against him. They were ready to use all the ways known to them
-to secure his condemnation and death. And Paul saw that he had little
-chance of escape in the local court, so that as the crisis approached he
-used his privilege as a Roman citizen and appealed to be tried before
-Cæsar in Rome, and Festus immediately granted the appeal.
-
-Before the time came for Paul to start on his momentous journey to Rome,
-King Agrippa and his wife Bernice came to Cæsarea to bring greetings to
-the new governor and they heard from Festus of the famous prisoner who
-had appealed to Cæsar. King Agrippa very much desired to see Paul and to
-hear him speak and Festus arranged for Agrippa to hear him. The king sat
-on a throne with much splendour. All the distinguished persons of the
-court were there. Soldiers with helmets and with the Roman eagles were
-stationed round the hall. And into the midst Paul was led by his guard
-and then was given permission to speak. It was a great moment for the
-prisoner. His one thought was to make some of these people understand
-his great message. Once more he told the story of his life and how the
-light had shined upon him at Damascus and how he had obeyed the heavenly
-message which came to him then. He thought he might make the king
-Agrippa see that God always meant to send His Son to bring light and
-life to the world and he was telling him about the great prophecies in
-the Old Testament when suddenly Festus interrupted. He told Paul that he
-was wild and deluded, that he had thought over these things until he had
-lost his reason. Unmoved Paul answered and said “I am not deluded. I am
-calm and sober. I am talking about things which are absolutely certain
-and real. King Agrippa knows that these things are so.” Then turning to
-the king, he said, “King Agrippa dost thou believe what our prophets
-have said? I know that thou must believe.”
-
-Then king Agrippa found it difficult to answer. It would not do to have
-a prisoner go on talking that way to a king and yet this prisoner seemed
-to be right. King Agrippa shrugged his shoulders and said: “With a very
-little argument you seem to think you can make _me_ a Christian!” Paul
-with dignity raised his chained hands and said: “Whether my argument is
-little or great, I would to God that not only thou but everybody here
-who hears me speak to-day might feel what I feel, and see what I see,
-and have the kind of life I have and become such a person as I am—only
-without these chains which are on my hands!”
-
-After Paul had retired King Agrippa said to Festus: “If this man had not
-appealed to Cæsar he might have been set free.”
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- THE STORMY JOURNEY TO ROME
-
-
-The journey from Cæsarea to Rome was at best a long and dangerous one.
-Paul was accustomed to the sea, for he had taken sea voyages ever since
-his early youth. He had already been shipwrecked three times and once he
-had clung to a piece of the wreck for twenty-four hours before he was
-rescued. But this was the first time he had gone on board ship as a
-prisoner and it was a new experience to be at sea in the charge of
-soldiers. The change from the prison in Cæsarea to the ship was,
-however, a welcome one, and now at last he was going to Rome and, he
-hoped, to freedom.
-
-He was in the charge of the Augustan cohort, with Julius for centurion
-and there were other prisoners besides himself. A little band of friends
-attended him and among them was the writer of the famous “We-Diary” who
-has given us a wonderful account of this journey. The ship touched first
-at Sidon where the good-hearted centurion allowed Paul to go on shore,
-to visit his friends and to have a good home meal, which must have been
-a welcome change after the long tedious period of prison fare. Then they
-sailed under the lee of Cyprus and skirted the shore of Paul’s beloved
-Cilicia. There were the mountains of his childhood in the
-distance—Amanus in the east, Taurus in the west. He could see the
-gleaming of the Cydnus on its way to the sea and imagination pictured
-the beautiful city on both banks of the river where he played and
-dreamed as a boy—the city he would never see again. Next came Pamphylia
-on whose shores he had landed years before and his mind ran on over the
-hills to a precious group of churches in the cities of Galatia.
-
-From the city of Myra in the province of Lycia they found an Alexandrian
-ship sailing for Italy and the centurion transferred his prisoners to
-it. They went far to the south of the Ægean, around whose shores the
-great work of Paul’s life had been done and where now groups of friends
-were praying for him. The ship took them to the south of the great
-island of Crete and finally the wind forced them to put into Fair Havens
-near the middle of the island. Paul warned the centurion not to go on
-because of the certain danger of the voyage in the stormy season, but
-the master of the vessel was determined to have the ship sail and as
-soon as a favourable wind appeared they launched forth. But the ship had
-not been long at sea when a Mediterranean hurricane struck it and drove
-it on through the desperate waters. The ship was wrenched and twisted by
-the fury of the storm and it leaked seriously so that the sailors were
-compelled to put undergirding around it to tighten up the seams. In the
-fearful danger they threw overboard the freight which the ship was
-carrying and finally they threw out the tackling and furniture of the
-ship to make it as light as possible. For fourteen days and nights they
-floundered about in the Sea of Adria at the mercy of the wind and the
-boisterous billows. No sun appeared by day and the nights were
-appallingly dark. Fear lay on everybody except one and all hope was gone
-in the minds of everybody but one. This one man had no fear and he was
-full of hope and confidence. He had never seen battles such as the
-centurion with his cohort had been through, but he had passed through
-great experiences and he had learned to trust God absolutely. He had
-received five terrible beatings from the Jews; three times he had been
-given the Roman scourge. He had been in many prisons. He had faced death
-again and again on his journeys. He had often been where no escape
-seemed possible, when an unexpected door had opened and he had gone on
-in safety. He was the man, then, for this dreadful hour. He had the hero
-spirit and he could calm the others and kindle their courage.
-
-Suddenly he stepped forth on deck and spoke to the men: “Be full of
-cheer and hope. We shall come through. My God has told me so. And I
-believe God. His I am. Him I serve and I know that He has given me all
-who sail with me in the ship. Not a life shall be lost!”
-
-Then when the sailors had sounded and had found the water growing
-shallow they threw out four anchors and waited for morning to come. We
-have just seen that Paul had four anchors, too—four anchors to his soul:
-“I believe God”; “His I am”; “Him I serve”; “He has given me those who
-sail with me.” In the morning they loosened the four anchors and let the
-sea drive the ship toward the shore at a place where two seas met and
-formed a cove, and there they beached it. The force of the waves broke
-the ship to pieces and the soldiers were for killing all the prisoners
-but the centurion had learned to respect Paul and was determined to save
-him, so that he allowed everybody on board to swim or float to shore and
-all were saved. The island turned out to be Malta, south of Sicily. Here
-the ship’s crew and the soldiers and the prisoners spent three months.
-Paul was able here once again to preach to the people and he worked
-wonders among them. At the end of the three months they started out
-again on the treacherous sea to complete the journey. The ship on which
-they sailed from Malta bore the sign of “the Twins,” Castor and Pollux,
-who were supposed by the Romans to be the guardians of sailors. The new
-ship touched at Syracuse, the famous capital of Sicily, where Plato had
-come with his wisdom, and, after two days, it brought its precious load
-into port at Puteoli, near Naples, in sight of a beautiful, quiet
-mountain peak, named Vesuvius, which, a few years later, was to spout
-lava and cinders over the towns lying on the shores of this wonderful
-blue bay. Here in the Italian port, Paul found a group of Christian
-believers who greatly refreshed him, and his kind centurion allowed him
-to stay there an entire week. These Christians at Puteoli were the first
-people in Italy to hear the great teacher of the new way of life. Then
-on foot or by horses, the strange troop wound up the glorious valley,
-leading from Puteoli to Rome. At the Forum of Appius, about ten miles
-out of the imperial city, a band of Roman Christians came to meet him as
-though he were a hero coming in triumph to their city. They found a
-prisoner kept by soldiers. When Paul saw these devoted Christian men
-coming to share their love and fellowship with him he forgot all about
-being a prisoner. Here were dear friends who loved him and that was
-enough. The long and arduous journey of many months was over. Here in
-front was Rome. Nero might be there, and his court and prison might be
-waiting for him, but the most important thing was that there was a
-church of Christ in Rome and Paul could see the members and make the
-church grow larger!
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- THE TRIUMPH OF THE HERO
-
-
-“I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ,” Paul had said in his letter
-to Rome. “It is the _power_ of God.” Rome was the most powerful city the
-world had ever seen up to that time. Its armies had gone everywhere and
-this city on the Tiber had become the conqueror of all lands and
-peoples. Out from the capital of the empire the roads ran like the
-spokes of a wheel from the hub, and the soldiers marched forth from this
-centre to subdue countries and to hold them wherever the emperor wished
-to send them. Here was power which all eyes could see and which all men
-could feel. Over against this visible power, Paul knew that he had
-discovered a new kind of power. It could not be seen as armies could be
-seen, but it changed lives and it remade cities and it upheld and
-supported men and women in the hardest suffering and trial. Here was
-this man now bound with chains, guarded by soldiers, a prisoner of the
-emperor’s, weak, frail, alone, but in reality the bravest, strongest,
-most powerful man in the whole empire. Nero is dead now. His empire has
-passed away. But Paul is still a mighty power in the world. Eight
-million copies of his letters are sold every year. Everybody reads what
-he wrote and he still goes on working in the world as though he were yet
-alive and speaking.
-
-At first, when he came to Rome, he was treated kindly and was allowed to
-have his own house, though of course he was under the care of Roman
-soldiers. The guard was changed every day so that he constantly had new
-soldiers by him. It gave him a splendid chance to preach his gospel to
-the Roman army, for he would surely never let a soldier stay all day by
-him without telling him of Christ. It must have _worked_, too, for, in
-his letter to the church at Philippi, he writes that “the saints in
-Cæsar’s household send greetings,” and he also says that he has been
-able to spread the news of Christ through the whole prætorian guard.
-Perhaps he did more as a prisoner than he could have done as a
-travelling preacher. Paul was the kind of man that would appeal to
-soldiers. They could see at once that he was as brave as they were, and
-they could feel that he was in his way a hero, and they were ready to
-listen to his story and we may be sure that many of them went back to
-Cæsar’s palace changed into “saints.” Others went out with the army and
-carried the truth about Christ into the lands where they were stationed.
-“It has all happened right,” Paul wrote to his friends. “My chains have
-helped to spread the gospel!”
-
-During the first part of the time in Rome, Paul expected to be freed. He
-thought his trial would come off favourably, and he was full of hope. In
-this early period he wrote a beautiful letter to his friend Philemon,
-who lived in Asia. He told this friend that he expected soon to be free
-and he playfully added you can get me a lodging, for I shall be coming
-to Asia before long. He had found in Rome a run-away slave that belonged
-to Philemon. He had told the slave, who was named Onesimus, about Christ
-and Onesimus had become a follower of Christ. Paul sent him back to his
-master, changed from a slave to a brother and Paul calls him his “own
-son in Christ.” This was the way Paul’s gospel worked for all kinds of
-people. It made them new men, and it gave them a new relationship to
-everybody. One day a poor, mean slave, the next day a brother and a son!
-In this letter Paul calls himself an old man. He writes: “I am Paul the
-aged.” He could not have been very old in years—probably not more than
-fifty-five—but his years in prison and the terrible hardships, through
-which he had been, had left their mark upon him and he seemed old before
-he was old.
-
-As time went on, and Paul had had two years in “his own hired house,” he
-seems to have been taken to some imperial prison, perhaps to the famous
-Mamertine prison, which was deep underground, and very dark, cold and
-damp. It became more and more evident that the wonderful prisoner was
-not to go free again. His friends in Philippi remembered him and sent
-one of their number all the way to Rome to comfort him and to carry to
-him the things he needed in his hard prison life. He was very deeply
-touched by their love and kindness and he wrote an extraordinary letter
-of thanks to his first Christian believers in Europe—those men of
-Macedonia who called him to them. He told them that he did not know
-whether the outcome of his trial was to be life or death, but that he
-was “ready” for either event that might come. “I have learned” he wrote,
-“how to be contented with what comes to me. I know how to be successful
-and how to be defeated. I know how to be happy when I am full and I know
-how to be happy when I am hungry. I can do everything with Christ’s
-help.” “I want you,” he told his friends, “to learn the secret. I want
-you to rejoice and again to _rejoice_, and evermore to REJOICE.”
-
-What happened at last, we do not know. Nobody has written for us any
-“We-Narrative” about the last prison days and about the trial in Cæsar’s
-court. Some people think that the great prisoner got his freedom and
-went on for many years doing missionary work across the world,
-travelling with Timothy and Titus and the other helpers, and preaching
-in new lands and in new cities. But I do not think so. I think that he
-never left Rome again. The Jews who were opposed to him had a very
-strong case against him. They could prove that in almost every city in
-the empire where Paul had been there had been riots and uprisings and
-they could make it seem that Paul was the cause of these things. He was
-one lone man with a whole multitude of furious enemies and in Cæsar’s
-court the testimony against him would count for very much, and would
-weigh very heavily. It seems most likely that the trial ended with a
-decision against the great missionary. If he was condemned, as I believe
-he was, then he was soon after executed, and, as a Roman citizen, he
-would be put to death with the sword. That is the steady tradition in
-Rome that he was taken out to the place now called the Three Fountains
-and there beheaded. We shall probably never know any more about the end
-of our hero’s life.
-
-One great fragment of a letter has been preserved for us. It does not
-tell anything about the prison, or the trial, or the manner of the
-death. But it does tell about his courage, his calmness, his faith and
-his noble spirit. It is a letter to Timothy, his young friend, written
-by “Paul the aged.” It says: “I am already being offered up now, and the
-time of my departure is come. I have fought the good fight. I have
-finished my course. I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up
-for me a crown of righteousness.” At the end, as always through his
-life, he was “ready.” Unmoved and undefeated, and, we may be sure, with
-his face shining, as Stephen’s shone that memorable day in Paul’s youth,
-he went to meet his death. They could kill his body with their sharp
-sword, but they could not crush his spirit or conquer his faith and
-hope. When his eyes could no longer see Rome with its capital and its
-coliseum, he could see his Christ, and when his ears could not hear the
-shouting and the cries of the people, he could hear a gentle voice say:
-“Well done, good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of thy Lord.”
-The hero got home with God at last.
-
-
-
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-and are obviously lacking in penetration into the inner meaning of the
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-extremes and by furnishing a critical investigation of Quakerism both in
-its outer forms and its inner spirit, Professor Jones has produced an
-excellent piece of work, done in an impartial and historical spirit and
-not too brief to admit of details. The account is an able and clear
-treatment of the religious principles of Quakerism, replete with
-first-hand knowledge and with concrete details, and thus it presents a
-truly historical picture of this great movement which bore no small part
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- Transcriber’s Note
-
-
-Punctuation has been normalized. Variations in hyphenation have been
-retained as they were in the original publication. The following changes
-have been made:
-
- “new Jersualem,” —> Jerusalem {page 42}
- the saints in Cæsar’s househould —> household {page 167}
-
-Italicized phrases are presented by surrounding the text with
-_underscores_.
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