Seeing how today there are many accusations leveled against the Apostle Paul, it is good to look back over the scriptures and remove all doubt concerning him being called by the Lord. In Paulβs letters to the churches, it is clear that even in his day he had many detractors with whom he was in constant conflict. False teachers and false brothers had entered the church feigning to be wise men, who were in reality came seeking their own gain. Peter himself testified of these men, stating that many things Paul had written were difficult to understand, and there were some who twisted things Paul had written, and as well, other scriptures to their own destruction.
From the beginning of the time the gospel was first preached, the practice of self-serving heresies has never ceased, it continues even today and has become more common with the increasing emphasis on the Jewish roots of Christianity.
While it is certainly a good thing that many Christians today are awakening to the Jewish roots of the faith and shaking off the remaining shackles of Roman doctrines to place Christianity in its original Jewish context, there are some who desire to go a step further by putting back on the old broken shackles of righteousness through works under the Mosaic law.
To do this, it has become necessary to either misinterpret Paulβwhich is more commonβor to dismiss Paul altogether and declare him a false teacher who should not be in the Bible. It is clear that many of the very same distortions of the scripturesβwhich Paul himself addressed in his lettersβare espoused today to support the belief that we are still subject to the Mosaic law.
Specifically, the epistle to the Galatians seems as relevant today as it was at the time when Paul wrote, βTell me, you who desire to live under the law, do you not read the law?β (Galatians 4:21)
Paul was called by God to teach the transition from works to graceβGod having given Paul a greater understanding than all of the other apostles through an abundance of revelationsβfor which reason, Paul was sometimes compelled to declare his credentials as an apostle and say things he otherwise would not: “I speak as a fool,” Paul says, feeling the need to boast of himself out of necessity to defend the position God had placed him in.
Seeing how the same contention continues, it is therefore necessary that the same boasting be carried out on Paulβs behalf to defend not only Paul and his teachings, but the very saving grace of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
To begin with, Paulβs calling was not by man but by a direct personal encounter with Christ himself on the road to Damascus. His testimony is even strengthened further by the witness of Luke who tells how Ananias was sent to Paul by the Lord, who said to him, “Go thy way: for he is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the children of Israel; for I will shew him how great things he must suffer for my name’s sake.” Acts 9:15-16
The Lordβs directive to Ananias is Paul’s first endorsement. Furthermore, if you remove Paul from the scriptures, who wrote the most books in the New Testament, you must dismiss Luke, who wrote the largest volume of words that includes the book of Acts a gospel. Luke was with Paul, seemingly to the end. He recorded the miracles done at the hands of Paul, including healings and the raising of the dead. Peter also, in his second epistle, bears testimony to the wisdom given to Paul by the Lord.
Paul was instructed as a Pharisee and trained in the law. He knew the Torah and the writings of the prophets better than all of the other disciples before him, most of whom were called from being fishermen and more common men. Once Paul was saved, having the advantage of his prior knowledge of the law, God used his knowledge to open up a deeper and wider understanding of the law and of Christ. So much so, God allowed him to be afflicted, lest he become puffed up by the multitude of revelations delivered to him. For this, he sought the Lord three times, who said, “My grace is sufficient for thee,” and he accepted the burden the Lord placed upon him.
Anyone who can truly grasp even a part of the depths of Paulβs writings knows that his words are God-given. His understanding of spiritual things is deep, and his prophetic revelations of the future are so accurate and revealing that all his writings are beyond anything the carnal mind could devise and assemble.
In Chapter 13 of 1 Corinthians, Paul captures the very heart of Godβas much as is possible with wordsβand the essence of the Word of God and the fullness of the Spirit. It is one of the most powerful works of literature ever written.
Anyone who distorts or rejects Paulβs teachings, even if they proclaim the name of Jesus, does not truly comprehend the Lord in spirit and truth; they are embracing a religion of self-righteousness rather than the saving grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ.
As great as all the Apostles of Christ are and deserving of all honor, it was Paul who was chosen by God to make those things written before by the prophets known more perfectly by bringing providing a better understanding of the mysteries of God and of his plan for salvation, past, present, and future. Anyone who rejects Paul to embrace the ordinances of works in the first covenantβfulfilled for us by Jesusβis sacrificing grace to place themselves back under the bondage of the law. Only by faith in Christ are we justified, and not by the keeping of the ordinances in the law given to Moses that Christ fulfilled.