THE END
163. Return to Jerusalem.-After
completing his brief visit to Greece at the close
of his third missionary journey, Paul returned to
Jerusalem. He must by this time have been nearly
sixty years of age; and for twenty years he had been
engaged in almost superhuman labors. He had been
traveling and preaching incessantly, and carrying on
his heart a crushing weight of cares. His body
had been worn with disease and mangled with punishments
and abuse; and his hair must have been whitened, and
his face furrowed with the lines of age. As yet,
however, there were no signs of his body breaking down,
and his spirit was still as keen as ever in its enthusiasm
for the service of Christ.
His eye was specially directed to
Rome, and, before leaving Greece, he sent word to
the Romans that they might expect to see him soon.
But, as he was hurrying toward Jerusalem along the
shores of Greece and Asia, the signal sounded that
his work was nearly done, and the shadow of approaching
death fell across his path. In city after city
the persons in the Christian communities who were
endowed with the gift of prophecy foretold that bonds
and imprisonment were awaiting him, and, as he came
nearer to the close of his journey, these warnings
became more loud and frequent. He felt their
solemnity; his was a brave heart, but it was too humble
and reverent not to be overawed with the thought of
death and judgment. He had several companions
with him, but he sought opportunities of being alone.
He parted from his converts as a dying man, telling
them that they would see his face no more. But,
when they entreated him to turn back and avoid the
threatened danger, he gently pushed aside their loving
arms, and said, “What mean ye to weep and to
break my heart? for I am ready not to be bound only,
but also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord
Jesus.”
164. We do not know what business
he had on hand which so peremptorily demanded his
presence in Jerusalem. He had to deliver up to
the apostles a collection on behalf of their poor
saints, which he had been exerting himself to gather
in the Gentile churches; and it may have been of importance
that he should discharge this service in person.
Or he may have been solicitous to procure from the
apostles a message for his Gentile churches, giving
an authoritative contradiction to the insinuations
of his enemies as to the unapostolic character of his
gospel. At all events there was some imperative
call of duty summoning him, and, in spite of the fear
of death and the tears of friends, he went forward
to his fate.
165. Paul’s Arrest.-It
was the feast of Pentecost when he arrived in the
city of his fathers, and, as usual at such seasons,
Jerusalem was crowded with hundreds of thousands of
pilgrim Jews from all parts of the world. Among
these there could not but be many who had seen him
at the work of evangelization in the cities of the
heathen and come into collision with him there.
Their rage against him had been checked in foreign
lands by the interposition of Gentile authority; but
might they not, if they met with him in the Jewish
capital, wreak on him their vengeance with the support
of the whole population?
166. This was actually the danger
into which he fell. Certain Jews from Ephesus,
the principal scene of his labors during his third
journey, recognized him in the temple and, crying out
that here was the heretic who blasphemed the Jewish
nation, law and temple, brought about him in an instant
a raging sea of fanaticism. It is a wonder he
was not torn limb from limb on the spot; but superstition
prevented his assailants from defiling with blood
the court of the Jews, in which he was caught, and,
before they got him hustled into the court of the
Gentiles, where they would soon have despatched him,
the Roman guard, whose sentries were pacing the castle-ramparts
which overlooked the temple-courts, rushed down and
took him under their protection; and, when their captain
learned that he was a Roman citizen, his safety was
secured.
167. But the fanaticism of Jerusalem
was now thoroughly aroused, and it raged against the
protection which surrounded Paul like an angry sea.
The Roman captain on the day after the apprehension
took him down to the Sanhedrin in order to ascertain
the charge against him; but the sight of the prisoner
created such an uproar that he had to hurry him away,
lest he should be torn in pieces. Strange city
and strange people! There was never a nation
which produced sons more richly dowered with gifts
to make her name immortal; there was never a city
whose children clung to her with a more passionate
affection; yet, like a mad mother, she tore the very
goodliest of them in pieces and dashed them mangled
from her breast. Jerusalem was now within a few
years of her destruction; here was the last of her
inspired and prophetic sons come to visit her for
the last time, with boundless love to her in his heart;
but she would have murdered him; and only the shields
of the Gentiles saved him from her fury.
168. Forty zealots banded themselves
together under a curse to snatch Paul even from the
midst of the Roman swords; and the Roman captain was
only able to foil their plot by sending him under a
heavy escort down to Caesarea. This was a Roman
city on the Mediterranean coast; it was the residence
of the Roman governor of Palestine and the headquarters
of the Roman garrison; and in it the apostle was perfectly
safe from Jewish violence.
169. Imprisonment at Caesarea.-Here
he remained in prison for two years. The Jewish
authorities attempted again and again either to procure
his condemnation by the governor or to get him delivered
up to themselves, to be tried as an ecclesiastical
offender; but they failed to convince the governor
that Paul had been guilty of any crime of which he
could take cognizance or to persuade him to hand over
a Roman citizen to their tender mercies. The
prisoner ought to have been released, but his enemies
were so vehement in asserting that he was a criminal
of the deepest dye that he was detained on the chance
of new evidence turning up against him. Besides,
his release was prevented by the expectation of the
corrupt governor, Felix, that the life of the leader
of a religious sect might be purchased from him with
a bribe. Felix was interested in his prisoner
and even heard him gladly, as Herod had listened to
the Baptist.
170. Paul was not kept in close
confinement; he had at least the range of the barracks
in which he was detained. There we can imagine
him pacing the ramparts on the edge of the Mediterranean,
and gazing wistfully across the blue waters in the
direction of Macedonia, Achaia and Ephesus, where
his spiritual children were pining for him or perhaps
encountering dangers in which they sorely needed his
presence.
It was a mysterious providence which
thus arrested his energies and condemned the ardent
worker to inactivity. Yet we can see now the
reason for it. Paul was needing rest. After
twenty years of incessant evangelization he required
leisure to garner the harvest of experience.
During all that time he had been preaching that view
of the gospel which at the beginning of his Christian
career he had thought out, under the influence of
the revealing Spirit, in the solitudes of Arabia.
But he had now reached a stage when, with leisure
to think, he might penetrate into more recondite regions
of the truth as it is in Jesus. And it was so
important that he should have this leisure that, in
order to secure it. God even permitted him to
be shut up in prison.
171. Paul’s Later Gospel.-During
these two years he wrote nothing; it was a time of
internal mental activity and silent progress.
But, when he began to write again, the results of
it were at once discernible. The Epistles written
after this imprisonment have a mellower tone and set
forth a profounder view of doctrine than his earlier
writings. There is no contradiction, indeed,
or inconsistency between his earlier and later views:
in Ephesians and Colossians he builds on the broad
foundations laid in Romans and Galatians. But
the superstructure is loftier and more imposing.
He dwells less on the work of Christ and more on
His person; less on the justification of the sinner
and more on the sanctification of the saint.
In the gospel revealed to him in Arabia
he had set Christ forth as dominating mundane history,
and shown His first coming to be the point toward
which the destinies of Jews and Gentiles had been tending.
In the gospel revealed to him at Caesarea the point
of view is extra-mundane: Christ is represented
as the reason for the creation of all things, and
as the Lord of angels and of worlds, to whose second
coming the vast procession of the universe is moving
forward-of whom, and through whom, and
to whom are all things.
In the earlier Epistles the initial
act of the Christian life-the justification
of the soul-is explained with exhaustive
elaboration: but in the later Epistles it is
on the subsequent relations to Christ of the person
who has been already justified that the apostle chiefly
dwells. According to his teaching, the whole
spectacle of the Christian life is due to a union
between Christ and the soul; and for the description
of this relationship he has invented a vocabulary of
phrases and illustrations: believers are in Christ,
and Christ is in them: they have the same relation
to Him as the stones of a building to the foundation-stone,
as the branches to the tree, as the members to the
head, as a wife to her husband. This union is
ideal, for the divine mind in eternity made the destiny
of Christ and the believer one; it is legal, for their
debts and merits are common property; it is vital,
for the connection with Christ supplies the power of
a holy and progressive life; it is moral, for, in
mind and heart, in character and conduct, Christians
are constantly becoming more and more identical with
Christ.
172. His Ethics.-Another
feature of these later Epistles is the balance between
their theological and their moral teaching. This
is visible even in the external structure of the greatest
of them, for they are nearly equally divided into
two parts, the first of which is occupied with doctrinal
statements and the second with moral exhortations.
The ethical teaching of Paul spreads itself over all
parts of the Christian life; but it is not distinguished
by a systematic arrangement of the various kinds of
duties, although the domestic duties are pretty fully
treated. Its chief characteristic lies in the
motives which it brings to bear upon conduct.
To Paul Christian morality was emphatically
a morality of motives. The whole history of
Christ, not in the details of His earthly life, but
in the great features of his redemptive journey from
heaven to earth and from earth back to heaven again,
as seen from the extramundane standpoint of these
Epistles, is a series of examples to be copied by
Christians in their daily conduct. No duty is
too small to illustrate one or other of the principles
which inspired the divinest acts of Christ.
The commonest acts of humility and beneficence are
to be imitations of the condescension which brought
Him from the position of equality with God to the
obedience of the cross; and the ruling motive of the
love and kindness practised by Christians to one another
is to be the recollection of their common connection
with Him.
173. Appeal to Cæsar.-After
Paul’s imprisonment had lasted for two years,
Felix was succeeded in the governorship of Palestine
by Festus. The Jews had never ceased to intrigue
to get Paul into their hands, and they at once assailed
the new ruler with further importunities. As
Festus seemed to be wavering, Paul availed himself
of his privilege of appeal as a Roman citizen and
demanded to be sent to Rome and tried at the bar of
the emperor. This could not be refused him; and
a prisoner had to be sent to Rome at once after such
an appeal was taken. Very soon, therefore, Paul
was shipped off under the charge of Roman soldiers
and in the company of many other prisoners on their
way to the same destination.
174. Voyage to Italy.-The
journal of the voyage has been preserved in the Acts
of the Apostles and is acknowledged to be the most
valuable document in existence concerning the seamanship
of ancient times. It is also a precious document
of Paul’s life; for it shows how his character
shone out in a novel situation. A ship is a kind
of miniature of the world. It is a floating
island, in which there are the government and the
governed. But the government is, like that of
states, liable to sudden social upheavals, in which
the ablest man is thrown to the top. This was
a voyage of extreme perils, which required the utmost
presence of mind and power of winning the confidence
and obedience of those on board. Before it was
ended Paul was virtually both the captain of the ship
and the general of the soldiers; and all on board
owed to him their lives.
175. Arrival in Rome.-At
length the dangers of the deep were left behind; and
Paul found himself approaching the capital of the Roman
world by the Appian Road, the great highway by which
Rome was entered by travelers from the East.
The bustle and noise increased as he neared the city,
and the signs of Roman grandeur and renown multiplied
at every step. For many years he had been looking
forward to seeing Rome, but he had always thought
of entering it in a very different guise from that
which now he wore. He had always thought of Rome
as a successful general thinks of the central stronghold
of the country he is subduing, who looks eagerly forward
to the day when he will direct the charge against
its gates. Paul was engaged in the conquest of
the world for Christ, and Rome was the final position
he had hoped to carry in his Master’s name.
Years ago he had sent to it the famous challenge,
“I am ready to preach the gospel to you that
are at Rome also; for I am not ashamed of the gospel
of Christ, for it is the power of God unto salvation
to every one that believeth.” But now,
when he found himself actually at its gates and thought
of the abject condition in which he was-an
old, gray-haired, broken man, a chained prisoner just
escaped from shipwreck-his heart sank within
him, and he felt dreadfully alone.
At the right moment, however, a little
incident took place which restored him to himself:
at a small town forty miles out of Rome he was met
by a little band of Christian brethren, who, hearing
of his approach, had come out to welcome him; and,
ten miles farther on, he came upon another group,
who had come out for the same purpose. Self-reliant
as he was, he was exceedingly sensitive to human sympathy,
and the sight of these brethren and their interest
in him completely revived him. He thanked God
and took courage; his old feelings came back in their
wonted strength; and, when, in the company of these
friends, he reached that shoulder of the Alban Hills
from which the first view of the city is obtained,
his heart swelled with the anticipation of victory;
for he knew he carried in his breast the force which
would yet lead captive that proud capital.
It was not with the step of a prisoner,
but with that of a conqueror, that he passed at length
beneath the city gate. His road lay along that
very Sacred Way by which many a Roman general had passed
in triumph to the Capitol, seated on a car of victory,
followed by the prisoners and spoils of the enemy,
and surrounded with the plaudits of rejoicing Rome.
Paul looked little like such a hero: no car of
victory carried him, he trode the causewayed road
with wayworn foot; no medals or ornaments adorned
his person, a chain of iron dangled from his wrist;
no applauding crowds welcomed his approach, a few humble
friends formed all his escort; yet never did a more
truly conquering footstep fall on the pavement of
Rome or a heart more confident of victory pass within
her gates.
176. Imprisonment.-Meanwhile,
however, it was not to the Capitol his steps were
bent, but to a prison; and he was destined to lie in
prison long, for his trial did not come on for two
years. The law’s delays have been proverbial
in all countries and at all eras; and the law of imperial
Rome was not likely to be free from this reproach during
the reign of Nero, a man of such frivolity that any
engagement of pleasure or freak of caprice was sufficient
to make him put off the most important call of business.
The imprisonment, it is true, was of the mildest
description. It may have been that the officer
who brought him to Rome spoke a good word for the
man who had saved his life during the voyage, or the
officer to whom he was handed over, and who is known
in profane history as a man of justice and humanity,
may have inquired into his case and formed a favorable
opinion of his character; but at all events Paul was
permitted to hire a house of his own and live in it
in perfect freedom, with the single exception that
a soldier, who was responsible for his person, was
his constant attendant.
177. Occupation in Prison.-This
was far from the condition which such an active spirit
would have coveted. He would have liked to be
moving from synagogue to synagogue in the immense
city, preaching in its streets and squares, and founding
congregation after congregation among the masses of
its population. Another man, thus arrested in
a career of ceaseless movement and immured within
prison walls, might have allowed his mind to stagnate
in sloth and despair. But Paul behaved very
differently. Availing himself of every possibility
of the situation, he converted his one room into a
center of far-reaching activity and beneficence.
On the few square feet of space allowed him he erected
a fulcrum with which he moved the world, establishing
within the walls of Nero’s capital a sovereignty
more extensive than his own.
178. Even the most irksome circumstance
of his lot was turned to good account. This
was the soldier by whom he was watched. To a
man of Paul’s eager temperament and restlessness
of mood this must often have been an intolerable annoyance;
and, indeed, in the letters written during this imprisonment
he is constantly referring to his chain, as if it
were never out of his mind. But he did not suffer
this irritation to blind him to the opportunity of
doing good presented by the situation. Of course
his attendant was changed every few hours, as one
soldier relieved another upon guard. In this
way there might be six or eight with him every four-and-twenty
hours. They belonged to the imperial guard,
the flower of the Roman army.
Paul could not sit for hours beside
another man without speaking of the subject which
lay nearest his heart. He spoke to these soldiers
about their immortal souls and the faith of Christ.
To men accustomed to the horrors of Roman warfare
and the manners of Roman barracks nothing could be
more striking than a life and character like his; and
the result of these conversations was that many of
them became changed men, and a revival spread through
the barracks and penetrated into the imperial household
itself. His room was sometimes crowded with these
stern, bronzed faces, glad to see him at other times
than those when duty required them to be there.
He sympathized with them and entered into the spirit
of their occupation; indeed, he was full of the spirit
of the warrior himself.
We have an imperishable relic of these
visits in an outburst of inspired eloquence which
he dictated at this period: “Put on the
whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand against
the wiles of the devil; for we wrestle not against
flesh and blood, but against principalities, against
powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this
world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that
ye may be able to withstand in the evil day and, having
done all, to stand. Stand therefore, having
your loins girt about with truth, and having on the
breastplate of righteousness, and your feet shod with
the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all,
taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be
able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked.
And take the helmet of salvation and the sword of
the Spirit, which is the word of God.”
That picture was drawn from the life, from the armor
of the soldiers in his room; and perhaps these ringing
sentences were first poured into the ears of his warlike
auditors before they were transferred to the Epistle
in which they have been preserved.
179. Visitors.-But
he had other visitors. All who took an interest
in Christianity in Rome, both Jews and Gentiles, gathered
to him. Perhaps there was not a day of the two
years of his imprisonment but he had such visitors.
The Roman Christians learned to go to that room as
to an oracle or shrine. Many a Christian teacher
got his sword sharpened there; and new energy began
to diffuse itself through the Christian circles of
the city. Many an anxious father brought his
son, many a friend his friend, hoping that a word
from the apostle’s lips might waken the sleeping
conscience. Many a wanderer, stumbling in there
by chance, came out a new man. Such an one was
Onesimus, a slave from Colossae, who arrived in Rome
as a runaway, but was sent back to his Christian master,
Philemon, no longer as a slave, but as a brother beloved.
180. Still more interesting
visitors came. At all periods of his life he
exercised a strong fascination over young men.
They were attracted by the manly soul within him,
in which they found sympathy with their aspirations
and inspiration for the noblest work. These youthful
friends, who were scattered over the world in the work
of Christ, flocked to him at Rome. Timothy and
Luke, Mark and Aristarchus, Tychicus and Epaphras,
and many more came, to drink afresh at the well of
his ever-springing wisdom and earnestness. And
he sent them forth again, to carry messages to his
churches or bring him news of their condition.
181. Of his spiritual children
in the distance he never ceased to think. Daily
he was wandering in imagination among the glens of
Galatia and along the shores of Asia and Greece; every
night he was praying for the Christians of Antioch
and Ephesus, of Philippi and Thessalonica and Corinth.
Nor were gratifying proofs awanting that they were
remembering him. Now and then there would appear
in his lodging a deputy from some distant church,
bringing the greetings of his converts or, perhaps,
a contribution to meet his temporal wants, or craving
his decision on some point of doctrine or practice
about which difficulty had arisen. These messengers
were not sent empty away: they carried warm-hearted
messages of golden words of counsel from their apostolic
friend.
Some of them carried far more.
When Epaphroditus, a deputy from the church at Philippi,
which had sent to their dear father in Christ an offering
of love, was returning home, Paul sent with him, in
acknowledgment of their kindness, the Epistle to the
Philippians, the most beautiful of all his letters,
in which he lays bare his very heart and every sentence
glows with love more tender than a woman’s.
When the slave Onesimus was sent back to Colossae,
he received, as the branch of peace to offer to his
master, the exquisite little Epistle to Philemon,
a priceless monument of Christian courtesy. He
carried, too, a letter addressed to the church of
the town in which his master lived, the Epistle to
the Colossians.
The composition of these Epistles
was by far the most important part of Paul’s
varied prison activity; and he crowned this labor with
the writing of the Epistle to the Ephesians, which
is perhaps the profoundest and sublimest book in the
world. The Church of Christ has derived many
benefits from the imprisonment of the servants of God;
the greatest book of uninspired religious genius,
the Pilgrim’s Progress, was written in a jail;
but never did there come to the Church a greater mercy
in the disguise of misfortune than when the arrest
of Paul’s bodily activities at Caesarea and
Rome supplied him with the leisure needed to reach
the depths of truth sounded in the Epistle to the
Ephesians.
182. His Writings.-It
may have seemed a dark dispensation of providence
to Paul himself that the course of life he had pursued
so long was so completely changed; but God’s
thoughts are higher than man’s thoughts and
His ways than man’s ways; and He gave Paul grace
to overcome the temptations of his situation and do
far more in his enforced inactivity for the welfare
of the world and the permanence of his own influence
than he could have done by twenty years of wandering
missionary work. Sitting in his room, he gathered
within the sounding cavity of his sympathetic heart
the sighs and cries of thousands far away, and diffused
courage and help in every direction from his own inexhaustible
resources. He sank his mind deeper and deeper
in solitary thought, till, smiting the rock in the
dim depth to which he had descended, he caused streams
to gush forth which are still gladdening the city
of God.
183. Release from Prison.-The
book of Acts suddenly breaks off with a brief summary
of Paul’s two years’ imprisonment at Rome.
Is this because there was no more to tell?
When his trial came on, did it issue in his condemnation
and death? Or did he get out of prison and resume
his old occupations? Where Luke’s lucid
narrative so suddenly deserts us, tradition comes
in proffering its doubtful aid. It tells us
that he was acquitted on his trial and let out of prison;
that he resumed his travels, visiting Spain among
other places; but that before long he was arrested
again and sent back to Rome, where he died a martyr’s
death at the cruel hands of Nero.
184. New Journeys.-Happily,
however, we are not altogether dependent on the precarious
aid of tradition. We have writings of Paul’s
own undoubtedly subsequent to the two years of his
first imprisonment. These are what are called
the Pastoral Epistles-the Epistles to Timothy
and Titus. In these we see that he regained his
liberty and resumed his employment of revisiting his
old churches and founding new ones. His footsteps
cannot, indeed, be any longer traced with certainty.
We find him back at Ephesus and Troas; we find him
in Crete, an island at which he touched on his voyage
to Rome and in which he may then have become interested;
we find him exploring new territory in the northern
parts of Greece. We see him once more, like the
commander of an army who sends his aides-de-camp all
over the field of battle, sending out his young assistants
to organize and watch over the churches.
185. But this was not to last
long. An event had happened immediately after
his release from prison which could not but influence
his fate. This was the burning of Rome-an
appalling disaster, the glare of which even at this
distance makes the heart shudder. It was probably
a mad freak of the malicious monster who then wore
the imperial purple. But Nero saw fit to attribute
it to the Christians, and instantly the most atrocious
persecution broke out against them. Of course
the fame of this soon spread over the Roman world;
and it was not likely that the foremost apostle of
Christianity could long escape. Every Roman
governor knew that he could not do the emperor a more
pleasing service than by sending to him Paul in chains.
186. Second Imprisonment.-It
was not long, accordingly, before Paul was lying once
more in prison at Rome; and it was no mild imprisonment
this time, but the worst known to the law. No
troops of friends now filled his room; for the Christians
of Rome had been massacred or scattered, and it was
dangerous for any one to avow himself a Christian.
We have a letter written from his dungeon, the last
he ever wrote, the Second Epistle to Timothy, which
affords us a glimpse of unspeakable pathos into the
circumstances of the prisoner. He tells us that
one part of his trial is already over. Not a
friend stood by him as he faced the bloodthirsty tyrant
who sat on the judgment-seat. But the Lord stood
by him and enabled him to make the emperor and the
spectators in the crowded basilica hear the sound of
the gospel. The charge against him had broken
down. But he had no hope of escape. Other
stages of the trial had yet to come, and he knew that
evidence to condemn him would either be discovered
or manufactured.
The letter betrays the miseries of
his dungeon. He prays Timothy to bring a cloak
he had left at Troas, to defend him from the damp of
the cell and the cold of the winter. He asks
for his books and parchments, that he may relieve
the tedium of his solitary hours with the studies
he had always loved. But, above all, he beseeches
Timothy to come himself; for he was longing to feel
the touch of a friendly hand and see the face of a
friend yet once again before he died.
Was the brave heart then conquered
at last? Read the Epistle and see. How
does it begin? “I also suffer these things;
nevertheless I am not ashamed; for I know whom I have
believed, and am persuaded that He is able to keep
that which I have committed unto Him against that day.”
How does it end? “I am now ready to be
offered, and the time of my departure is at hand.
I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course,
I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid
up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord,
the righteous Judge, shall give me at that day; and
not to me only, but unto all them that love His appearing.”
That is not the strain of the vanquished.
187. Trial.-There
can be little doubt that he appeared again at Nero’s
bar, and this time the charge did not break down.
In all history there is not a more startling illustration
of the irony of human life than this scene of Paul
at the bar of Nero. On the judgment-seat, clad
in the imperial purple, sat a man who in a bad world
had attained the eminence of being the very worst and
meanest being in it-a man stained with
every crime, the murderer of his own mother, of his
wives and of his best benefactors; a man whose whole
being was so steeped in every namable and unnamable
vice that body and soul of him were, as some one said
at the time, nothing but a compound of mud and blood;
and in the prisoner’s dock stood the best man
the world contained, his hair whitened with labors
for the good of men and the glory of God. Such
was the occupant of the seat of justice, and such
the man who stood in the place of the criminal.
188. Death.-The trial
ended, Paul was condemned and delivered over to the
executioner. He was led out of the city with
a crowd of the lowest rabble at his heels. The
fatal spot was reached; he knelt beside the block;
the headsman’s axe gleamed in the sun and fell;
and the head of the apostle of the world rolled down
in the dust.
189. So sin did its uttermost
and its worst. Yet how poor and empty was its
triumph! The blow of the axe only smote off the
lock of the prison and let the spirit go forth to
its home and to its crown. The city falsely
called eternal dismissed him with execration from her
gates; but ten thousand times ten thousand welcomed
him in the same hour at the gates of the city which
is really eternal. Even on earth Paul could
not die. He lives among us to-day with a life
a hundredfold more influential than that which throbbed
in his brain whilst the earthly form which made him
visible still lingered on the earth. Wherever
the feet of them who publish the glad tidings go forth
beautiful upon the mountains, he walks by their side
as an inspirer and a guide; in ten thousand churches
every Sabbath and on a thousand thousand hearths every
day his eloquent lips still teach that gospel of which
he was never ashamed; and, wherever there are human
souls searching for the white flower of holiness or
climbing the difficult heights of self-denial, there
he whose life was so pure, whose devotion to Christ
was so entire, and whose pursuit of a single purpose
was so unceasing, is welcomed as the best of friends.
HINTS TO TEACHERS AND QUESTIONS FOR PUPILS
Teacher’s Apparatus.-English
theology has no juster cause for pride than the books
it has produced on the Life of Paul. Perhaps
there is no other subject in which it has so outdistanced
all rivals. Conybeare and Howson’s Life
and Epistles of St. Paul will probably always keep
the foremost place; in many respects it is nearly perfect;
and a teacher who has mastered it will be sufficiently
equipped for his work and require no other help.
The works of Lewin and Farrar are written on the
same lines; the former is rich in maps of countries
and plans of towns; and the strong point of the latter
is the analysis of Paul’s writings-the
exposition of the mind of Paul. Sir William Ramsay
has made the whole subject peculiarly his own by the
enthusiasm and labors of a lifetime. The German
books are not nearly so valuable. Hausrath’s
The Apostle Paul is a brilliant performance,
but it is as weak in handling the deeper things as
it is strong in coloring up the external and picturesque
features of the subject. Baur’s work is
an amazingly clever tour de force, but it is
not so much a well-proportioned picture of the apostle
as a prolonged paradox thrown down as a challenge
to the learned. The latest large German work,
Clemen’s Paulus, proceeds on the principle
that the miracle is untrue, and the effect may be
sufficiently seen in the account it gives of the first
visit to Philippi. In Weinal’s Paulus,
pp. 312, 313, there appears a forbidding picture
of the effects produced by the teaching of the subject
in the author’s country; in our country, on the
contrary, it has long been among the most attractive
subjects for both teachers and students. Adolphe
Monod’s Saint Paul, a series of five
discourses, is an inquiry into the secret of the apostle’s
life, written with deep sympathy and glowing eloquence;
and Renan’s work, with the same title, gives,
with unrivaled brilliance, a picture of the world
in which the apostle lived, if not of the apostle himself.
There are books on the subject which do honor to
American scholarship from the pens of Cone, Gilbert,
Bacon and A. T. Robertson, the last mentioned with
a valuable bibliography. But the best help is
to be found in the original sources themselves-the
cameolike pictures of Luke and the self-revelations
of Paul’s Epistles. The latter especially,
read in the fresh translation of Conybeare, will show
the apostle to any one who has eyes to see.
Johnstone’s wall-map of Paul’s journey
is indispensable in the class-room.