St. Paul was certainly a great missionary. He and his team planted churches in Cyprus, Asia Minor (Turkey), and Greece, in the first century AD. Barnabbas and he set up a pattern of mission outreach that focused on churchplanting, and training local leaders that has acted as a guide for thousands of missionaries after.
Does that make him the "greatest" missionary? Hard to say. However, he was a very successful early missionary and the one who had the most written about in The Bible. If other apostles did greater missionary work than Paul, it wasn't recorded by Luke in the book of "The Acts of the Apostles." Add to this the fact that he wrote several letters (the Pauline Epistles) that have come to be recognized as canonical or authoritative for church faith and practice. It is understandable why St. Paul is held in such high esteem.
He is considered the greatest missionary of all time because he was one of the first Christian missionaries. After Paul converted, his guilt over his past actions of persecuting Christians gave him quite a bit of fervor. He also wrote the majority of the New Testament.
Because of a few of his actions, the news of the Gospel spread to pretty much the whole world. For instance, he refused to let John Mark be on one of his voyages, apparently because he deserted the previous time. So John Mark, Peter, and others went on their own and went the other way and preached there too. That was more effective than all going together. Then there were the actions involving Rome. Paul was being accused of various crimes because of his preaching and he demanded to see the emperor of Rome and appeal to him. The Gospel would not have spread to Rome had it not been for that.
When Paul was doing his missionary work. At least that was when they were called Christians. When Paul was doing his missionary work. At least that was when they were called Christians. When Paul was doing his missionary work. At least that was when they were called Christians.
AnswerPaul spread the Christian faith in areas as far apart as Syria and Greece. According to Acts of the Apostles, he even spread Christianity to Cyprus, although there is no mention of that from Paul himself. That Paul was a key figure in the spread of Christianity is attested by the fact that his epistles were kept and subsequently copied throughout the Christian Church, as well as by the number of pseudo-Pauline epistles written decades later in his name. No other figure had such an enormous impact in the early apostolic period.
Yes, St. Paul is considered a missionary saint. He is known for his extensive travels throughout the Mediterranean region to spread the teachings of Christianity. St. Paul's missionary work was instrumental in the early growth and spread of the Christian faith.
Vincent de Paul was not a missionary in the true sense. He stayed in Paris and worked with the poor, orphans, unemployed and needy. He did not work abroad as a missionary except that he was taken prisoner by pirates for a time and converted one of his owners to Christianity.
No, Saint Paul did not live at the same time as Jesus. Saint Paul was a Jewish man who lived after the time of Jesus and became a prominent figure in spreading Christianity through his missionary work.
Paul is a big one, and wrote a lot of the new testament..... Jesus started the movement though,,,
Saul later Paul , who was a tent maker, missionary in the Mediterranean.
Paul White - missionary - died in 1992.
the missionary paul who is also known as saul. at the beginning of his ministry, he was actually persecuting christians, but God spoke to him with a bright light that blinded him, which turned his life around. he began to spread the word all over the world. he is the next most important person in christianity after Jesus.
Paul was the new name of Saul of Tarsus.
No. Without Jesus Christ, there would be no Christianity.
Paul of Tarsus ministered to the gentiles for about 13-14 years during his missionary journeys, spreading the teachings of Christianity to various regions in the Roman Empire.