百基拉
Priscilla, also known as Prisca, was a Jewish Christian and the wife of Aquila, who worked with Paul in his ministry and hosted a church in their home.
Priscilla, also known as Prisca, was a Jewish-Christian woman from Rome who, with her husband Aquila, became one of Paul's most trusted co-workers. Expelled from Rome under Claudius's edict against Jews (c. 49 CE), they settled in Corinth, where Paul lodged with them and worked at tentmaking (Acts 18:1–3). They accompanied Paul to Ephesus and remained there, taking the eloquent Apollos aside and 'expounding to him the way of God more accurately' (Acts 18:26). Paul greets them in Romans 16:3 as 'fellow workers in Christ Jesus, who risked their necks for my life.' Strikingly, Priscilla's name is mentioned before her husband's in four of the six references to the pair in the New Testament, suggesting she held an especially prominent role in early Christian communities.