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  2. Jan 4, 2022 · The answer is that Saul’s name was also Paul. The custom of dual names was common in those days. Acts 13:9 describes the apostle as “Saul, who was also called Paul.” From that verse on, Saul is always referred to in Scripture as “Paul.” Paul was a Jew, born in the Roman city of Tarsus.

    • Dual Names

      Saul is a Hebrew name; Paul is a Roman name. He began to use...

  3. Aug 9, 2023 · In terms of names, there probably was no conversion of Saul to Paul. Saul was most likely called Paul at birth. Contrary to popular belief, Saul did not drop his Jewish name to fully embrace his new life and vocation as a Christian missionary to the Gentiles.

    • The Significance of Names
    • The Nature of Roman Names
    • The Names Used
    • Why The Change?
    • Related Articles

    Names were significant in the ancient world, as in much of the world today. A person’s name said something about them, maybe a characteristic of the person, or who a significant ancestor was. Changes of name were particularly significant, such as Abram (“exalted father”) becoming Abraham (“father of many”) because of God’s promise to him of many de...

    In the first century AD, Roman citizens had three names, written in the order praenomen, nomen, and cognomen.2 The nomen was the family name, received at birth or on gaining citizenship. The praenomen was taken from a limited list (only eighteen by the time of the late Roman republic), and frequently abbreviated to one letter: e.g., M. = Marcus; G....

    Σαῦλος/Σαούλ (Saulos/Saoul), “Saul” in Hebrew (שׁאול šʾwl, meaning “[the child] asked for”), was his Jewish name, and he would be known thus among Jews—at least prior to his Damascus road encounter with Jesus. This name was relatively widely used in Palestine, but rare among diaspora Jews such as this Saul.4 The two Greek spellings reflect (respect...

    Four main reasons have been proposed for the name change at this point in Acts. They are a mixture of historical and literary explanations—that is, explanations focused on what happened on the ground in the first century or on how Luke presents his story of Paul. The hinge in Cyprus prompts some—going back to Jerome (Vir. ill. 5)—to propose that th...

  4. The spirit which led the Apostle to change the name of Saul, with its memories of the royal dignity which, in the person of its great wearer, had honoured his tribe, for a Roman name is the same which he formally announces as a deliberately adopted law of his life.

  5. May 3, 2017 · There is no scriptural evidence, however, to support a name change for Saul/Paul. Here are six lines of biblical evidence that prove the popular notion wrong: 1. Jesus addresses him as “Saul, Saul” during the christophany (Acts 9:4). Nothing in the narrative suggests Jesus subsequently changed Saul’s name.

  6. Mar 16, 2024 · By changing his name, Paul was symbolizing his new identity in Christ. It was a way of saying that he was no longer the person he used to be. He had been transformed by encountering Jesus and now had a new purpose in life – to spread the message of Jesus’ love and salvation to the world.

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