The Bible tells us there were 'some men' with him. It isn't any more specific than that. They would have been Jewish men somehow involved in the campaign against the early Christians. Jesus Christ was also present in a brilliant light.
Paul was on the road to Damascus when he was blinded by a light that was the Lord, who said, "Paul, Paul, why do you persecute me?" Paul went on into the city, where he was blind for three days. After that, he became a follower and believer in Jesus Christ.
He was on his way to Damascus when the Spirit of Jesus blinded him. Jesus then told him of his wrongs, and then Paul repented and followed the order Jesus gave him.
In the bible it says saul meets jesus on the road to Damascus, and is blinded.
The Word of God says that Paul sat his eyes on Elymas and told him (only by Paul speaking the word of God ) Elymas was then blinded. Read the book of Acts 13:6-12.
After Jesus finished speaking to Paul on the road to Damascus, Paul was blinded and led into the city where he stayed with a man named Judas. Later, Paul regained his sight after Ananias laid his hands on him and he was baptized.
Blinded is the correct spelling.
The Blinded was created in 2000.
He was blinded while on the road to Damascus.
A:Paul never mentions this episode in his own epistles, so we have no first-hand evidence of how he felt. In fact, what Paul wrote in his epistles, long before Acts of the Apostles was written, strongly suggests he was never blinded at all.Acts contains three versions of the account of Paul's (or Saul's) conversion on the road to Damascus, each a little different to the others. In each account in Acts, there was a blinding light, which appeared only to Paul in the version at acts 9:3-8 and probably at Acts 26:13-19, but appeared to both Paul and his men at Acts 22:6-11 (although only Paul was blinded). Paul alone heard a voice from heaven at Acts 22:6-1 and probably at Acts 26:13-19, but both Paul and his men heard the voice at Acts 9:3-8.In the account of Paul's conversion, Jesus is supposed to have remarked to Paul as he lay on the ground, "It hurts you to kick against the goad [or 'pricks']" (Acts 25:14). This should give a good indication of how Paul would have felt, lying blinded and helpless on the ground. However, this is a quotation from the ancient play, the Bacchae, by Euripides, and there are other parallels with the play and at least one use of the same play in Acts of the Apostles. This suggests that the account of Paul being blinded on the road to Damascus was a literary creation rather than a historical account. Paul was never made blind.
Yes its a verb. He was blinded by the sunlight.
He only blinded one: Polyphemus.
She Blinded Me with Science was created in 1982.