Difference between revisions of "St. Paul"

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== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_80206" /> ==
 
<p> [[Capital]] of [[Minnesota]] State, finely situated on the Mississippi, a little below the mouth of the Minnesota River; in 1849 a village of 500 inhabitants; is now a beautiful and spacious city, equipped with colleges, libraries, government buildings, electric street-railways, &c.; is a centre for 10 railways, and carries on a large trade in distributing groceries and dry goods throughout the State. </p>
St. Paul <ref name="term_77972" />
       
<p> Originally called Saul, the great [[Apostle]] of the Gentiles, born at Tarsus, in Cilicia, by birth a Jew and a Roman citizen; trained to severity by [[Gamaliel]] at [[Jerusalem]] in the [[Jewish]] faith, and for a time the bitter persecutor of the Christians, till, on his way to Damascus, in the prosecution of his hostile purposes, the overpowering conviction flashed upon him that he was fighting against the cause that, as a Jew, he should have embraced, and which he was at once smitten with zeal to further, as the one cause on which hinged the salvation, not of the [[Jews]] only, but of the whole world. He did more for the extension, if not the exposition, of the [[Christian]] faith at its first promulgation than any of the Apostles, and perhaps all of them together, and it is questionable if but for him it would have become, as it has become, the professed religion of the most civilised section of the world. </p>
==References ==
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
 
<ref name="term_77972"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/paul,+st. St. Paul from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_80206"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/st.+paul St. Paul from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
</references>
</references>

Revision as of 17:51, 15 October 2021

St. Paul [1]

Originally called Saul, the great Apostle of the Gentiles, born at Tarsus, in Cilicia, by birth a Jew and a Roman citizen; trained to severity by Gamaliel at Jerusalem in the Jewish faith, and for a time the bitter persecutor of the Christians, till, on his way to Damascus, in the prosecution of his hostile purposes, the overpowering conviction flashed upon him that he was fighting against the cause that, as a Jew, he should have embraced, and which he was at once smitten with zeal to further, as the one cause on which hinged the salvation, not of the Jews only, but of the whole world. He did more for the extension, if not the exposition, of the Christian faith at its first promulgation than any of the Apostles, and perhaps all of them together, and it is questionable if but for him it would have become, as it has become, the professed religion of the most civilised section of the world.

References