Recall the two following fundamental theorems of mathematical logic:
Completeness Theorem: A theory T is syntactically consistent -- i.e., for no statement P can the statement "P and (not P)" be formally deduced from T -- if and only if it is semantically consistent: i.e., there exists a model of T.
Compactness Theorem: A theory T is semantically consistent iff every finite subset of T is semantically consistent.
It is well-known that the Compactness Theorem is an almost immediate consequence of the Completeness Theorem: assuming completeness, if T is inconsistent, then one can deduce "P and (not P)" in a finite number of steps, hence using only finitely many sentences of T.
The traditional proof of the completeness theorem is rather long and tedious: for instance, the book Models and Ultraproducts by Bell and Slomson takes two chapters to establish it, and Marker's Model Theory: An Introduction omits the proof entirely. There is a quicker proof due to Henkin (it appears e.g. on Terry Tao's blog), but it is still relatively involved.
On the other hand, there is a short and elegant proof of the compactness theorem using ultraproducts (again given in Bell and Slomson).
So I wonder: can one deduce completeness from compactness by some argument which is easier than Henkin's proof of completeness?
As a remark, I believe that these two theorems are equivalent in a formal sense: i.e., they are each equivalent in ZF to the Boolean Prime Ideal Theorem. I am asking about a more informal notion of equivalence.
UPDATE: I voted up Joel David Hamkins' answer because it was interesting and informative. Nevertheless, I remain open to the possibility that (some reasonable particular version of) the completeness theorem can be easily deduced from compactness.