The Fourth Betrayal! As we start the fourth betrayal, we must first absolutely identify what and who the main player of the betrayal is. Scripture clearly names Saul as the one that the Edomite controlled Priesthood sent forth, to imprison and or murder the Followers of the Way of Christ. So, Just who was this man named Saul who later changed his name to Paul in an effort to conceal his true identity?
The Evidence of Lineage and Allegiance to strip away the concealment of the name “Paul,” we look to the following historical and scriptural markers: The Herodian Connection: In Romans 16:11, Paul explicitly sends greetings to Herodion, whom he calls his “kinsman” (Greek: syngenē). This term denotes a blood relative, not merely a fellow countryman. This aligns with the historical reality that the Herodian family were Idumeans (Edomites) who had usurped the Judean throne. The Citizenship Paradox: Saul claimed Roman citizenship by birth (Acts 22:28). In first-century Judea, such a status was almost exclusively reserved for the high-ranking elite, tax-farming collaborators, or those with direct ties to the Roman-appointed Herodian house.
The High Priest’s Agent: Saul did not act as a lone zealot; he acted with “letters of authority” from the High Priest (Acts 9:1-2). At this time, the Priesthood was a political appointment controlled by the Romans and the Herodians. for Phase 1 The definitive proof of his identity is found in the nature of his Roman name.
The transition from Saul (Hebrew) to Paul (Roman) was not a spiritual rebirth, but the activation of his Roman Cognomen. By using the name Paulus, he was aligning himself with the Roman aristocracy—specifically the Gens Aemilia, one of the most powerful families in Rome.This confirms he was not merely a reformed persecutor, but a high-level asset of the very power structure Christ warned against. By Paul’s own words he has identified himself as a blood relative of the Herodian family, which we have already shown was Pure Edomites!
In Antiquities of the Jews (Book 20, Chapter 9), Josephus identifies a man named Saulus who was a high-ranking member of the Herodian royal family. The Family Link: Josephus describes this Saulus and his brother Costobarus as “of the royal lineage” of Agrippa. Since the Herodian dynasty was Idumean (Edomite), this places Saulus directly within the Edomite power structure.
The Behavior: Josephus records that this Saulus “got together a multitude of wicked wretches” and used violence to plunder the people. This historical profile matches the “Saul” of Acts 8 and 9—a man with high-level authority and a penchant for state-sponsored violence.
The Escape to Rome: When the Jewish revolt grew too dangerous, this Saulus escaped Jerusalem and fled to Nero in Greece to act as a Roman agent. This mirrors the biblical Paul’s trajectory from Jerusalem to Rome, under the protection of the Empire.
The Ebionites (the “Poor Ones”), who were the direct descendants of the original Jerusalem Church led by James the Just, preserved a different history of Paul than the one found in the Book of Acts.