The principal New Testament author, the Apostle Paul, experienced some of his deepest revelations during a three-year sabbatical in Arabia. Did he visit Mount Sinai? Did he give us a clue in the New Testament to its real location?
Prior to his Damascus Road experience, Saul of Tarsus was a “zealous” Pharisee in the tradition of righteous avengers of the Old Testament who meted out divinely prescribed punishment to idolaters and traitors.
Theologians suggest that Saul’s zeal emulated Phinehas of Torah fame (Numbers 25) as well as the great prophet Elijah. Phinehas and Elijah were Paul’s main role models in his zealous persecution of the Church. But when Saul had a vision of Jesus on the Damascus Road, he followed in the footsteps of his role model Elijah on a soul-searching pilgrimage to the desert of Sinai: “I did not go up to Jerusalem to see those who were apostles before I was, but I went immediately into Arabia” (Galatians 1:17).
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