“Year 60 AD, a storm, 276 people on a ship, and a snake that did not kill. How the apostle ended up on Malta — and what it means today.”
Picture this: the year is 60 AD. A Mediterranean storm. A ship carrying 276 people breaks apart on the rocks. Everyone survives. A man comes ashore, a viper bites him — and he simply shakes it off and walks on. This, according to tradition, is how Saint Paul arrived on Malta.
Today St. Paul's Bay is a tourist resort area of Malta (Buġibba, Qawra, St. Paul's Bay village), but the history is tangible here.
In the middle of the bay, visible from all sides, stands a small island with a giant white statue of the apostle. According to tradition, this is where the ship ran aground. You can reach it by boat from Buġibba harbour — worth it for the views and the historical atmosphere.
Buġibba, Qawra and St. Paul's Bay village together form one large resort in the north of Malta. Each part has its own character:
Malta takes pride in Paul's visit here. The island considers itself one of the earliest Christian communities in the world precisely because of his arrival and preaching. 365 churches in an area roughly the size of a small city — and that is not an exaggeration.
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