| Journey / Period | Acts | Epistle(s) Written | Approx. Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conversion and Arabia | 9:1-30; 22:3-21; 26:9-18 | — (life in Damascus and Arabia) | A.D. 35-37 |
| First Visit to Jerusalem | 9:26-30 | — (Gal 1:18-24 narrates this event) | A.D. 37 |
| Years in Tarsus and Antioch | 11:19-30 | — (ministerial formation) | A.D. 37-47 |
| 1st Missionary Journey | 13:1–14:28 | — (Galatians? — scholarly debate) | A.D. 47-49 |
| Council of Jerusalem | 15:1-35 | Galatians 2:1-10 | A.D. 49-50 |
| 2nd Missionary Journey | 15:36–18:22 | 1-2 Thessalonians (from Corinth) | A.D. 50-52 |
| 3rd Missionary Journey | 18:23–21:16 | 1-2 Corinthians (from Ephesus/Macedonia) Romans (from Corinth) | A.D. 53-57 |
| Arrest in Jerusalem | 21:17–23:35 | — (Defenses) | A.D. 57-58 |
| Imprisonment in Caesarea | 24:1–26:32 | — (Appeal to Caesar) | A.D. 58-60 |
| Journey to Rome | 27:1–28:16 | — (Shipwreck) | A.D. 60-61 |
| 1st Imprisonment in Rome | 28:17-31 | Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon | A.D. 61-63 |
| Release and Journeys | — (post-Acts) | 1 Timothy, Titus | A.D. 63-65 |
| 2nd Imprisonment and Martyrdom | — (post-Acts) | 2 Timothy | A.D. 66-67 |
Conversion and Early Years
The harmonization of these accounts reveals that Paul experienced a radical transformation of his theological framework. Saul, the zealous Pharisee who persecuted the church, became Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles. In Galatians 1:15-16, Paul uses the language of Old Testament prophetic calling ("separated me from my mother's womb", cf. Jeremiah 1:5; Isaiah 49:1) to describe his conversion, presenting it not as a change of religion but as the fulfillment of a preordained divine purpose.
The stay in Arabia (Gal 1:17) is a mysterious period of approximately three years (A.D. 35-37) of which we have no record in Acts or the letters. Tradition suggests that Paul preached to the Nabataeans in the desert south of Damascus, but it is more likely that this was a time of theological reflection, where Paul, having received the revelation of Christ, reinterpreted the Old Testament in light of the crucified and risen Messiah. It was there that his theology of justification by faith, the relationship between law and grace, and his understanding of God's redemptive purpose for all nations were born.
Syrian Antioch was a cultural melting pot where Jews and Gentiles lived together. It was there that the gospel first transcended ethnic boundaries in a significant way, and where the disciples were called "Christians" for the first time (11:26). The church in Antioch, founded by Hellenistic believers scattered by the persecution following Stephen's death, became Paul's base of operations and the model of a multicultural church. Agabus's prophecy about the famine (11:27-30) led to the first inter-church relief effort, uniting Jewish and Gentile believers in practical solidarity. Barnabas, the "son of consolation," emerges here as the great mentor who saw Paul's potential and integrated him into the leadership of the church.
First Missionary Journey
The first journey establishes the pattern of Pauline ministry: he preaches first in the synagogue (13:14-41), some Jews believe, the majority oppose (13:44-45), Paul turns to the Gentiles (13:46-48), persecution breaks out (13:50; 14:5, 19), but churches are founded, which Paul visits again to strengthen before departing (14:21-23). In Lystra, Paul and Barnabas are mistaken for Hermes and Zeus (14:11-13), and moments later Paul is stoned and left for dead (14:19). His survival and return to the very cities that had persecuted him demonstrate a resilience that only the Holy Spirit can explain.
If Galatians was written to the southern churches, then the first journey ends with the foundation of the communities that Paul would later vehemently defend against the Judaizers. The "infirmity" he mentions in Galatians 4:13-14 might have been the result of the stoning in Lystra (14:19) or a chronic condition Paul called his "thorn in the flesh" (2 Corinthians 12:7). The gratitude of the Galatians was such that "if it had been possible, ye would have plucked out your own eyes, and have given them to me" (4:15), suggesting that Paul's condition affected his eyesight.
The letter to the Galatians is Paul's most passionate document, written in response to an urgent crisis: Judaizers were teaching that Gentiles had to be circumcised to be saved. Paul offers no greetings or thanksgiving (something exceptional in his letters); he goes straight to the attack: "I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel" (1:6). His biography in chapters 1-2 is not autobiography out of mere nostalgia; it is a legal defense of his apostleship and the divine source of his gospel.
Peter's speech at the council (Acts 15:7-11) and Paul's defense (Galatians 2:15-21) present the same theology: "We believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they" (Acts 15:11). James's solution—the four abstinences—was a practical compromise to facilitate fellowship in mixed churches. The Galatian controversy reveals that the tension between law and grace was not an academic debate but the existential question of Christian identity: is faith in Christ sufficient, or are the works of the law required?
Second Missionary Journey
The entry of the gospel into Europe is one of the most significant moments in Christian history. In Philippi, Paul meets a group of women by the river (16:13), reflecting the nature of Judaism in Macedonia: lacking a sufficient Jewish population for a synagogue. Lydia, a seller of purple, is the first European convert (16:14-15). The exorcism of the slave girl possessed with a spirit of divination (16:16-18) causes the first economic conflict: her masters lose their source of income when she can no longer divine. The imprisonment of Paul and Silas, the earthquake, and the conversion of the jailer (16:19-34) is one of the most dramatic stories in Acts.
The resistance Paul encountered in Philippi and Thessalonica is described rawly in 1 Thessalonians 2:2: "But even after that we had suffered before, and were shamefully entreated, as ye know, at Philippi, we were bold in our God to speak unto you the gospel of God with much contention." In Thessalonica, the accusation against Paul was political: "These that have turned the world upside down are come hither also... and these all do contrary to the decrees of Caesar, saying that there is another king, one Jesus" (Acts 17:6-7). The preaching of the Kingdom of Jesus as Lord implied a subversion of the empire that did not go unnoticed.
The speech at the Areopagus (17:22-31) is the most elaborate example of Paul's missionary strategy in a Greco-Roman intellectual context. He does not begin with the Old Testament but with Athenian culture: he quotes their poets (Aratus: "For we are also his offspring," v.28), uses the altar "to the unknown God" as a point of contact (v.23), and presents God as creator, sustainer, and judge. But when he arrives at the resurrection of the dead (v.31-32), the response is mostly mockery or skepticism. The gospel did not conquer the Greco-Roman world because it adapted to Greek philosophy, but because it responded to needs that philosophy could not satisfy: hope beyond death and power to live a transformed life.
In Corinth, Paul finds a hostile synagogue, but the vision of the Lord (18:9-10) strengthens him: "Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee." The proconsul Gallio, by refusing to judge Jewish religious disputes (18:12-17), establishes a legal precedent that protected Christian preaching in Achaia. The letters to the Thessalonians, written near the end of this stay, reveal Paul's pastoral tenderness: "we were gentle among you, even as a nurse cherisheth her children" (1 Thess 2:7). The eschatological teaching (1 Thess 4:13-5:11) is not abstract speculation but pastoral comfort for a community suffering from the loss of loved ones and uncertainty about the future.
Third Missionary Journey
Ephesus was the capital of the province of Asia and home to the temple of Artemis (Diana), one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Christianity competed directly with the cult of the goddess, whose temple was a center of pilgrimage and an international bank. Paul ministered first in the synagogue (three months), then in the school of Tyrannus (two years, 19:9-10). The special miracles (19:11-12), the conflict with Jewish exorcists (19:13-17), and the burning of magic books (19:18-19) show the transforming power of the gospel in a society dominated by superstition and magic.
The riot of the silversmiths (19:23-41) reveals the economic impact of conversion: Demetrius, who made silver shrines for Diana, saw his business threatened. The cry "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" became the clamor of an entire city defending its religious identity and economy. The crisis led Paul to leave Ephesus for Macedonia, but the gospel had already taken deep root. The churches of Asia (the seven of Revelation) were the fruit of this ministry.
The church in Corinth, founded by Paul on his second journey (A.D. 50-52), was a vibrant but conflicted community. 1 Corinthians reveals a church that reflected the problems of the most cosmopolitan and morally permissive port city in the empire. Chapters 12-14 on spiritual gifts are the NT's most complete treatise on the subject, and chapter 15 on the resurrection is the oldest and most detailed defense of the doctrine. The hymn of love (chap. 13) is universally recognized as the greatest description of Christian love ever written.
2 Corinthians is Paul's most autobiographical letter: it recounts his sufferings (11:23-28), his experience of the "third heaven" (12:1-4), and his "thorn in the flesh" (12:7-10). The defense of his apostleship is necessary because "super-apostles" (11:5; 12:11) had arrived in Corinth questioning his authority. The paradox Paul presents—"when I am weak, then am I strong" (12:10)—is the essence of his theology of the cross applied to his own life. The letter also reveals one of the most tense crises in Paul's history, resolved by the repentance of the majority (2 Cor 7:8-13) and final reconciliation. Both letters offer an intimate view of Paul's pastoral heart: firm discipline combined with unconditional love.
The letter to the Romans is the most systematic exposition of Paul's theology: justification by faith (1-4), the assurance of salvation (5-8), the relationship of Jews and Gentiles in God's plan (9-11), and Christian ethics (12-15). Written to a church Paul had neither founded nor visited, the letter serves as a theological introduction and preparation for his visit. The church in Rome was a mixture of Jews and Gentiles, and Paul addresses the tensions between both groups with his theology of justification by faith (3:21-31) and his "wild olive tree" (11:17-24).
Romans 9-11 is Paul's deepest reflection on the mystery of Israel: God has not cast away his people (11:1); salvation has come to the Gentiles to provoke Israel to jealousy (11:11); and "all Israel shall be saved" (11:26). God's plan is a single story of redemption that includes both Jews and Gentiles. Romans 8—with its assurance that "there is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus" (8:1) and the promise that "all things work together for good to them that love God" (8:28)—is one of the most sublime chapters in the NT. The chapter ends with the certainty that nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus (8:38-39).
Arrest, Imprisonment in Caesarea, and Journey to Rome
The prison epistles show a different Paul than in earlier letters. He has matured; he no longer defends his authority or combats immediate heresies (except in Colossians), but raises his gaze to the cosmic heights of Christ. Ephesians is Paul's most "cathedral-like" letter: in it he unfolds God's eternal plan to "gather together in one all things in Christ" (1:10), the unity of Jews and Gentiles in one body (2:11-22), and spiritual warfare against principalities and powers (6:10-20). Philippians is the most joyful and grateful letter, written to Paul's most beloved church, which had sent him an offering with Epaphroditus (4:10-18). In it is the Christological hymn of 2:5-11—"Christ Jesus, who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God"—which is likely an early church hymn that Paul incorporated.
Colossians combats a heresy that combined Jewish elements (circumcision, food, holidays) with Gnostic philosophy (worship of angels, denial of the fullness of Christ). Paul's response is the highest Christology of the Pauline corpus: Christ is "the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature" (1:15), "in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily" (2:9), and "he is the head of all principality and power" (2:10). The letter to Philemon, brief and personal, is a model of Christian ethics applied to the institution of slavery: Paul does not directly condemn slavery, but transforms relations by treating Onesimus as a "brother beloved" (v.16), subverting the institution from within.
Release, Final Journeys, and Martyrdom
The pastorals reveal an elderly Paul passing the torch to the next generation. 1 Timothy and Titus focus on church organization: the qualifications for bishops and deacons (1 Tim 3:1-13), the care of widows (1 Tim 5:3-16), and the correction of false doctrines (Titus 1:10-16). 2 Timothy is the most touching letter in the NT: Paul knows his end is near ("For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand," 4:6), yet there is no despair, only triumph: "I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith" (4:7). His most urgent request is for Timothy to bring "the cloke that I left at Troas... and the books, but especially the parchments" (4:13), showing the aging apostle still studying and learning until the very end.
Church tradition (Eusebius, HE 2.25; Clement of Rome, 1 Clem 5-6) states that Paul was martyred in Rome, beheaded on the Ostian Way during Nero's persecution. His death likely occurred between A.D. 64-67, after the Great Fire of Rome. The testimony of 2 Timothy 4:16-17—"At my first answer no man stood with me... Notwithstanding the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me"—suggests human abandonment that contrasts with divine faithfulness. Paul's final word is one of confidence: "And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen" (2 Tim 4:18).