Confession and Council
The sources that preserve Paul's memory dwell on a single defining episode: a bishop whose hands were ruined under torture yet who lived to sit among the fathers at Nicaea. The detail of his injury is recorded by the church historian Theodoret, who writes that Paul had been deprived of the use of both hands when a red-hot iron contracted and destroyed the nerves that move the muscles.
His participation at Nicaea in 325 places him among the confessors of the persecution whose survival into the era of Constantine joined the age of the martyrs to the age of the councils. After his release he is said to have returned to shepherd his diocese and to have reposed in peace following years of pastoral service.