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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
With the letter to the Romans our firsthand source of information for Paul's activity and achievements as a devoted supporter of the one whom years before he had bitterly opposed comes to an end. In all probability, Romans, written in Corinth as he planned for his subsequent activity in the West, whither he was soon to go, after a final visit to Jerusalem which he apparently viewed with concern, even reluctance, was the last letter to come from his pen, for the letters commonly styled “Letters of the Captivity”—Philippians, Colossians, Ephesians (if actually written by Paul), and Philemon—were not subsequently written from Rome, but in all probability were the product of his years in and about Ephesus, where in all likelihood he had suffered once again “prisons more abundantly, stripes above measure, deaths oft.”
1 2 Cor 11:23.
2 Rom 15:19.
3 Rom 15:24.
4 2 Cor 11:26.
5 Gal 2:12.
6 Rom 15:30–32.
7 Acts 19:21.
8 Acts 23:11.
9 Acts 24:17
10 One of the most consistent of the Lukan emphases is the apologetic insistence: arrested frequently; guilty never.
11 Acts 21:17–26; see Bowen, C. R., “Paul's Collection and the Book of Acts,” JBL 42 (1923) 49–58.Google Scholar
12 Acts 18:18.
13 I have frequently urged reexamination of this problem which appears to me basic; cf. my Reapproaching Paul (Westminster, 1972Google Scholar) and “Once Again, Luke and Paul,” ZNW 61 (1970) 253–71.Google Scholar
14 Acts 8:9–24.