Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- Chapter I THE CHURCH OF JERUSALEM
- Chapter II STEPHEN AND SAUL
- Chapter III THE FIRST EXTENSION OF THE CHURCH
- Chapter IV THE ENTRANCE OF THE GENTILES
- Chapter V THE CHURCH AT ANTIOCH
- Chapter VI THE APPEAL TO THE WORLD
- Chapter VII THE COLLECTION FOR THE SAINTS
- Chapter VIII THE END OF THE JOURNEYS
- INDEX
Chapter VI - THE APPEAL TO THE WORLD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- Chapter I THE CHURCH OF JERUSALEM
- Chapter II STEPHEN AND SAUL
- Chapter III THE FIRST EXTENSION OF THE CHURCH
- Chapter IV THE ENTRANCE OF THE GENTILES
- Chapter V THE CHURCH AT ANTIOCH
- Chapter VI THE APPEAL TO THE WORLD
- Chapter VII THE COLLECTION FOR THE SAINTS
- Chapter VIII THE END OF THE JOURNEYS
- INDEX
Summary
CYPRUS AND GALATIA
The appeal from the Hebrew Christians and their attempt to impose their beliefs on the whole Church, to the Jews of the Dispersion and the Gentile world, was inaugurated with due solemnity. A solemn service of prayer and fasting was held, at which Saul and Barnabas received in the customary form of the imposition of hands by the leading converts of Antioch the authorization and blessing of the community for the work they were about to undertake. They were accompanied on their venture by John Mark.
From Seleucia, the port of Antioch, the party proceeded to Salamis in Cyprus. The choice of the island was dictated by several considerations. In the first place it was natural to proceed with the work of evangelization on geographical lines, and the island formed an obvious extension of the area already touched by the work of the Apostles in Syria and Cilicia. Further, the Gospel had already been preached in Cyprus by the earliest refugees from Jerusalem, and it was desirable to organize the existing converts of the island into regular Churches and if possible to win them to the side of Antioch. Still more important was the fact that the existence of these Christians provided an excuse for the visit, since it was arguable that the original commission of Barnabas implied the duty of supervising all the work of the first evangelists outside Judaea and Samaria.
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- Information
- St Paul and the Church of Jerusalem , pp. 199 - 283Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1925