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As the millenium clock counts the final months leading
up to the year 2000, Christians all over the world are preparing to
celebrate this significant anniversary of their religion. Record numbers
of pilgrims are expected to visit places of importance in the Christian
religion, ranging from Jerusalem and the nearby town of Bethlehem
where Christ was born in the east, to Rome in the west. Turkey played
in important role in early Christian history and the spread of this
religion westwards, and many biblical events and those of later Christian
history took place here, above all the journeys of St. Paul.
St. Paul was one of the earliest converts to Christianity,
either just before or within a few years of the crucifixion of Christ
in 33 AD. Soon after his conversion he left his home town of Tarsus
in Anatolia and travelled to Damascus and Jerusalem. Joining up with
St. Barnabus and St. Mark he began his missionary journeys through
Anatolia, founding Christian communities in the cities which they
visited. Altogether he covered twenty thousand miles in these journeys,
which also took him right around the Aegean coast and to Cyprus. He
was eventually captured by the Roman authorities and taken to Rome,
where he was executed.
Tourism
companies are organising biblical tours on a large scale this year,
many of them covering the routes taken by St. Paul in Turkey. St.
Paul was born of a Jewish family in Tarsus, and was originally known
by the Jewish form of his name, Saul. Although he was a Roman citizen
he received a strict Jewish upbringing and may have been instructed
by Gamaliel the Elder in Jerusalem. He was originally among the most
fanatical opponents of the new Christian faith, but after a vision
on the way to Damascus was converted. According to the account of
this event in the Bible Paul was blinded by a light from heaven, and
heard the voice of Jesus saying, ‘Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou
me?... Arise, and go into the city, and it shall be told what thou
must do.’ Paul remained blind for three days and was led into Damscus.
Jesus instructed a man named Ananias to go and find him, saying ‘Go
thy way, for he is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before
the Gentiles, and kings, and the children of Israel. For I will shew
him how great things he must suffer for my name’s sake.’ Ananias found
Paul and declared, ‘Brother Saul, the Lord, even Jesus, that appeared
unto thee in the way as thou camest, hath sent me, that thou mightest
receive thy sight.’ Paul’s eyes were opened, and he set out for Jerusalem.
Having with some difficulty persuaded the apostles that
he was now on their side, Paul’s life as a missionary began. St. Paul
made three missionary journeys, all of which took him through Anatolia.
The
first journey began in Antioch (today’s Antakya) in southeastern Turkey,
where with St. Barnabus and St. Mark he sailed to Cyprus, and from
there to the port of Attalia (Antalya), where they travelled by road
to Perge. They next travelled northwards to Pisidian Antioch (Yalvaç
in Isparta), where Paul delivered his first sermon in a synagogue
in 46 AD. Later the first church was constructed over this synagogue
and dedicated to St.Paul. They then travelled on to Iconium (Konya),
Lystra, Derbe (Karaman), and back to Perge and Attalia, where they
sailed back to Syrian Antioch. Almost all the credit for the early
spread of Christianity goes to St. Paul rather than the Apostles.
The hundreds of churches built near Derbe alone illustrates the great
impact he had, and today this region is known as Binbirkilise, which
means A Thousand and One Churches.
His second and third journeys were longer, taking him
further westwards through Anatolia to Ephesus on the Aegean coast,
and encircling the Aegean before returning to Antioch. During these
journeys which took place between 48 and 56 AD, he visited Ephesus
twice, once in August 51 AD, and for the second time in 54 AD when
he remained for almost two years. It was in Ephesus that he is thought
to have written his Epistles to the Romans, Corinthians, Galatians
and Ephesians.
In
Ephesus St. Paul’s teachings began to attract the active opposition
of silversmiths, traders in idols and others whose interests lay in
pagan worship. They sparked off public demonstrations against him
which finally forced him to leave the city.
Paul had been intending to make a fourth journey to Spain,
but in fact his last journey was as a prisoner of the Romans. In 56
AD he was arrested in Jerusalem and taken back for trial in Rome,
passing on the way through Caesarea, Sidon, Myra (Demre on Turkey’s
southwest coast), Knidos (on the Datça peninsula near Bodrum in southwest
Turkey), Crete and Malta. He and St. Peter were executed in Rome sometime
around 62 AD.
* Şengül Gündoğan Aydıngün is an art historian
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