Paul and Pseudepigraphy (Pauline Studies, Book 8)

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74 stanley e. porter


in the new testament.22 these two sources, while not firmly attesting


to Paul’s re-arrest and death in rome, do suggest his release from a first


roman imprisonment.


if this evidence is to be believed, and there is at least some reason to


think so, this does not solve the problem of the writing of the Pastoral


epistles, because the Pastorals purport to represent Paul moving east of


rome, not west. fee says that this is plausible, however, because, if the


prison epistles were written from a roman imprisonment (e.g., Philippi-


ans, Colossians, and Philemon), Paul expected to be released (Phil 1:18–19,


24–26; 2:24) and to make another trip to asia (Phlm 22).23 if this is correct,


while this may help us to believe that Paul could have traveled to the east,


it does not necessarily help us to reconstruct how the Pastoral epistles


fit within this framework, apart from 2 timothy being written during his


second and final roman imprisonment. nevertheless, despite the lack of


firm evidence, there have been a number of attempts to reconstruct Paul’s


intermediate travels.


there have been various ways in which this position has been rep-


resented. a standard position, promoted by a reasonably large number,


follows the kind of proposal made by lightfoot, who includes both the


trip west to spain and travels in the east as represented by the Pasto-


ral epistles themselves. according to this proposal, in a period of roughly


four years between his release and re-arrest, possibly in Corinth, Paul first


went eastward to macedonia, including Philippi (Phil 2:24), then asia and


Phrygia, then Colossae (Phlm 22), before heading west. he, then, possibly


founded the church in Crete, first visited on his voyage to rome, then


went to spain, possibly gaul (2 tim 4:10) and dalmatia (2 tim 4:10), before


again turning eastward. he then revisited asia and Phrygia (2 tim 1:15–18),


including ephesus (1 tim 1:3), and left timothy in ephesus presiding over


the church there. Paul then went to macedonia (1 tim 1:3), including


Philippi, and possibly revisited achaia, and then wrote 1 timothy. Paul


then either went to Crete for the first time or revisited it and left titus


there presiding over the church (titus 1:5) and returned to asia, where he


wrote the letter to titus. Paul then visited miletus (2 tim 4:20), proceeded


to troas (2 tim 4:13), and ended up in Corinth (2 tim 4:20), intending to


go to nicopolis to spend the winter (titus 3:12), when he was arrested


22 see Kümmel, Introduction, 377.
23 gordon d. fee, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus (new international Biblical Commentary;
Peabody, ma: hendrickson, 1988), 4.

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