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A Pocket Guide to St. Paul

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A handy, yet thorough, guide to St. Paul!

St. Paul was a thinker, a pastor, a missionary, a revolutionary, and a martyr. By the end of his life -- and largely thanks to his efforts -- Christianity enjoyed a worldwide presence. Since then, he has emerged repeatedly down the millennia as a fresh voice, compelling us to envision God, and life, in a new way. We cannot understand Christianity unless we understand his message. We cannot understand ourselves as Christians unless we see ourselves in the light of his words.

94 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2008

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About the author

Scott Hahn

415 books1,338 followers
Scott Hahn is a renowned Catholic theologian, apologist, speaker, and bestselling author whose work has had a profound impact on contemporary biblical theology and Catholic thought. A former Presbyterian minister, Hahn converted to Catholicism in 1986 after an intense personal and theological journey, which he details in his popular book Rome Sweet Home, co-written with his wife, Kimberly Hahn. Their story of conversion has inspired countless readers around the world and remains a landmark in modern Catholic apologetics.
Hahn holds the Father Michael Scanlan Chair of Biblical Theology and the New Evangelization at the Franciscan University of Steubenville, where he has taught since 1990. He is also the founder and president of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting biblical literacy among the laity and biblical fluency among clergy. Through the Center, Hahn leads a wide range of initiatives, including publications, pilgrimages, Bible studies, and the scholarly journal Letter and Spirit.
Educated at Grove City College (B.A.), Gordon–Conwell Theological Seminary (M.Div.), and Marquette University (Ph.D. in Systematic Theology), Hahn brings a deep academic foundation to his work. His dissertation, Kinship by Covenant, was later published by Yale University Press and received praise for its theological insight and scholarly rigor.
Throughout his career, Hahn has emphasized the covenant as the key to understanding salvation history, showing how the biblical narrative reveals a divine plan that unites all of humanity into God's family. His works explore themes such as the Eucharist, the role of Mary, the sacraments, and the authority of the Church, often drawing on the writings of the early Church Fathers to bridge the ancient faith with modern understanding.
He is the author or editor of over forty books, including The Lamb’s Supper, Hail, Holy Queen, First Comes Love, Letter and Spirit, Swear to God, Reasons to Believe, The Creed, The Fourth Cup, and Holy Is His Name. Many of his books have become staples in Catholic households, study groups, and seminaries.
In addition to his writing, Hahn is a highly sought-after speaker, having delivered thousands of lectures across the United States and abroad. He appears regularly on EWTN and has collaborated with Lighthouse Catholic Media to bring his teachings to an even broader audience.
Scott Hahn lives in Ohio with his wife Kimberly. They have six children and numerous grandchildren. Together, the Hahns continue to lead efforts in evangelization and Catholic education, embodying a lifelong commitment to deepening faith and understanding through Scripture and tradition.

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Profile Image for Steven R. McEvoy.
3,803 reviews172 followers
July 6, 2025
This volume was added to my kindle library in 2018, but appears to now be out of print. On Goodreads there are 2 Kindle editions, a paperback and an eBook, But I cannot find it online at any resellers. The description of this volume states:

“A handy, yet thorough, guide to St. Paul!

St. Paul was a thinker, a pastor, a missionary, a revolutionary, and a martyr. By the end of his life -- and largely thanks to his efforts -- Christianity enjoyed a worldwide presence. Since then, he has emerged repeatedly down the millennia as a fresh voice, compelling us to envision God, and life, in a new way. We cannot understand Christianity unless we understand his message. We cannot understand ourselves as Christians unless we see ourselves in the light of his words.”

The chapters in this booklet are:

Introduction
1. How We Know About St. Paul
2. St. Paul’s Life
3. St. Paul’s Thought
4. St. Paul’s Letters
5. St. Paul and Us
6. Quick Reference for Catholic Doctrines and Practices in St. Paul’s Life and Work
7. The Quotable St. Paul
8. Prayers to St. Paul
9. For Further Reading

I highlighted several passages while reading this volume, some of them are:

“Trying to write A Pocket Guide to St. Paul is more than a little like writing A Pocket Guide to Nuclear Physics or A Pocket Guide to Neurosurgery. St. Paul is the most influential writer in the history of literature. His work comprises a significant portion of the most influential book in all human history. His erudition was vast, his thought complex, and his accomplishments prodigious. For the magnitude of his effect on the course of human events, he has no rival except his master, Jesus Christ, whose Gospel St. Paul served and proclaimed.”

“He aimed to extend the reach of Christianity through all the western lands of the Roman Empire. And he succeeded to an astonishing degree. By the end of his life—and largely thanks to his efforts—Christianity enjoyed a worldwide presence. Within a century—largely due to the momentum of Paul’s preaching—the Church had grown so large that it was perceived as a threat to the Roman social order. Less than three centuries after Paul’s martyrdom, Rome was a Christian city at the head of a Christian empire.”

“That was his first revolution, but not his last. He has emerged repeatedly down the millennia as a fresh voice, compelling preachers, rulers, and ordinary Christians to envision a new way of living. In the fifth century, St. Augustine re-thought the world along lines that he discerned in St. Paul. In the 16th century, Paul’s letters were at the center of the controversies of the Protestant Reformation and the Catholic Counter-Reformation—controversies that reshaped the world.”

“The Church’s self-understanding is dependent upon the words of St. Paul. Every Christian’s self-understanding should be, too. We cannot understand Christianity unless we understand his message.”

“The New Testament is our richest, most ancient, and most reliable source of information about St. Paul. Of its 27 books, 13 are letters attributed to St. Paul. (Many Church Fathers, and a small but growing number of modern scholars, credit him with a 14th letter as well, the Letter to the Hebrews.)”

“In the 2,000 years since St. Paul’s martyrdom, Christians have produced many commentaries on him. In my own library, I have more than a thousand such books—and they are but a small fraction of the works in print! And the works in print are a still smaller fraction of the works that have vanished from memory. Yet Paul’s life and work still hold Christians spellbound—and theological reflection produces new insights even today. His teaching is an inexhaustible treasury.”

“Saul saw his conversion not as a renunciation of the religion of his childhood and youth, but rather its fulfillment. He spoke of it in terms of a vocation, like the call received by the prophets of the Old Testament (see 1 Sam 3:4). He spoke of it in terms of an apparition, a revelation, and a commissioning (see Gal 1:15-16; 1 Cor 15:8-10), but never as an abandonment of the religion of Israel.”

“His range is remarkable. Romans is a doctrinal tour de force. Galatians is a stern rebuke. Philemon is an ingratiating plea. Philippians is full of warm encouragement and joyful gratitude. The letters to Timothy and Titus are handbooks of practical advice, from an experienced pastor to his young colleagues.”

“It is worth mentioning that at least some of the more critical attitudes toward Paul have sprung from modern interpreters’ anti-institutional bias. Protestant Pauline scholar Michael J. Gorman goes so far as to call it an “anti-Catholic bias,” which has allowed “theological preferences” to affect historical judgments.”

“St. Paul wrote this letter while he was staying in Ephesus, probably during his third missionary journey, around A.D. 56. Corinth was a prosperous commercial and administrative center, a way station on voyages between Asia and Italy. It was famous for sporting events and infamous for its low morals.”

“This letter contains Paul’s most sustained and developed reflection on the Church, which he sees as the Family of God, the Body of Christ, and the Temple of the Spirit. The vision is international, universal, and truly catholic. To be in the Church, Paul says repeatedly, is to be “in Christ.”

“Philippians is best known for its extended treatment of Jesus as the self-giving servant—the Son of God who set aside his deity to become the humblest of men and to die the most humiliating death. Because of this, God the Father exalted him in glory. Thus, Paul exhorts the Church to worship Jesus as God and to imitate the Lord’s self-giving. The letter also preserves Paul’s most intimate reflection on his own apostolate to date and his readiness for martyrdom.”

“This letter is the first of the “Pastoral Epistles” attributed to St. Paul. These letters are like handbooks of advice, addressed from one Christian clergyman to another. They focus on pastoral concerns and matters of Church order: liturgy, hierarchy, discipline, catechesis, and sacred Tradition.

“St. Paul’s favorite term for Christians was “saints” (see, for example, Col 1:2-4). Holiness is our calling and our dignity. Yet he also distinguished between the saints on earth (Col 1:2) and the “saints in light” (Col 1:12)—what Catholic devotion would later call, respectively, the “Church militant” and the “Church triumphant.” The Letter to the Hebrews tells us that the latter are “a cloud of witnesses” (Heb 12:1) around the former.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. The chapter on prayers to St. Paul includes the following prayers:

A Prayer to St. Paul
Litany of St. Paul the Apostle

When I returned to university as a mature student almost 30 years ago the first course I took was Pauls Life and Letters taught by Dr. Peter Frick, At St. Paul’s College at the University of Waterloo. It sparked a lifelong passion for Saint Paul and Pauline Theology. The final course I took to graduate was a directed readings course with the same professor on Paul. Since then I have aimed to read at least one volume on Paul a year. I have also been a fan of Dr Hahn’s works for many years. So this volume combines two areas of great interest for me.

This little volume is an excellent read. My own take on Pauline authorship falls in line with what Dr Hahn has outlined in the volume. I loved the mini overviews of each of Paul’s books from the bible. This book would be a great introduction to Paul and his works or as a refresher. It is easy to engage with. This volume could be read by a secondary school student, or a grad student, but a theologian or a new convert and they will all get something out of it. It is an excellent volume that any Catholic or any Christian would benefit from reading.

It is an excellent read, thank you Dr. Hahn and Our Sunday Visitor.


This book is part of a series of reviews: 2025 Catholic Reading Plan!
Profile Image for Chad Judice.
Author 6 books10 followers
July 21, 2012
This small but reliable book is a great tool for understanding the letter of St. Paul within both the historical and cultural context in which they were written. If one is truly a historian and a believer and follower of Jesus Christ, there is no way they won't be Catholic.
Profile Image for Avel Deleon.
125 reviews2 followers
December 27, 2013
Not a bad review of the life of St. Paul. This is only a brief sketch of the great Paul of Tarsus.
Profile Image for Deborah Halnon.
57 reviews2 followers
June 19, 2018
Excellent Guide to St. Paul

I liked this guide. An excellent review of St. Paul. So many letters, or epistles in the New Testament or Covenant to teach us almost more than Jesus taught us. His 10 years alone in the desert reviewing what Jesus taught him, and what he intended to teach us. More than I understand.
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