Paul the Apostle

Schaul of Tarsus, A.K.A. "Saint Paul" by Christians, was a Jewish religious-political agitator with Roman citizenship, who introduced the Christian subversion into Europe. He was the main ideologist of Christianity (even more than Yeshua bar Yosef, A.K.A. Jesus Christ) and largely responsible for its expansion in the ancient world. Paul's influence on Christian thinking is recognized as more significant than any other New Testament writer.

Saul was a Pharisee Jew, a descendant of the tribe of Benjamin and educated in Jerusalem under the school of the famous rabbi Gamaliel, citing this as something he was proud (Philippians 3: 5). Initially, in the name of the authorities of official Judaism, he was dedicated to persecute the members of the new Jewish sect (Christians), however, at a time of his life realizes that this doctrine who had such schismatic and conflicting effect among the Jews themselves, would cause also a terrible devastation in Rome, hated to death by him and by almost all the Jews of his time, resented because the occupation of the legions, the Jewish-Roman wars and deportations. Saul was an extremely astute individual who takes advantage of the effects of Christian preaching to subvert the values and traditions of the pagan world.

After his great revelation, narrated in New Testament as a mystical vision during his journey to Damascus, Saul decides that Christianity is a valid doctrine to be preached to the Gentiles, i.e., to non-Jews (goym) and claimed for himself the title "Apostle to the Gentiles". Saul, now Paul, sets numerous Christian communities in Asia Minor and the Aegean (very multicultural places), from which he preach the "good news" and where the Jewish sect begins to acquire Hellenistic influences. Subsequently, many preaching centers are founded in North Africa, Syria and Palestine, inevitably going to Greece and Rome. His Roman citizenship allows him to travel freely throughout the Roman Empire, and thus, to contact very diverse people and to facilitate geographically the spread of his teachings. The doctrines of the new jewish sect is extremely appealing to the masses of slaves, expanding rapidly among the lowest and ignorant classes of the Empire's population, which were ethnically more orientalized.
Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? ... Not many of you were wise by flesh; not many were powerful; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. God chose the lowly things of this world, the despised things, and the things that are not, to nullify the things that are, so that no one may boast before him.

-1 Corinthians, 20 and 26-29.

Christianity's universalism supposed therefore a denial of the national identity of the individual, and the religion of their ancestors, encouraged pacifism and civil disobedience. Thus, Christianity became one of the first and most important internationalist, globalist, egalitarian and political correctness movement of history.