No, I don't think that's true. Paul had an obvious role in the spread of the gospel.
Yes. But not the gospel of the Kingdom.
He was obviously chosen by Christ as an apostle.
We agree!
But not an Apostle to the Jews!
He provided the bulk of church doctrine.
He provided the bulk of CHRISTIAN church doctrine, much of which was a mystery to the Twelve.
The only reason not to consider him as the replacement for Judas in the mind of Christ is if you are pushing a different gospel for the Jews.
False.
The reason is that the Twelve, who were given the authority to do such things, chose Matthias, not Paul, to replace Judas Iscariot, and there is nothing in any of Paul's writings or the rest of the New Testament to indicate that he replaced Judas, rather than Matthias, only commitment to certain doctrines external to scripture.
I'll repeat that there's nothing wrong with considering Matthias as Christ's replacement for Judas, either, and Paul being a special thirteenth apostle for the Gentiles. My doctrines allow for either. Yours don't.
Don't what? Allow for Matthias to be the twelfth? Or for Paul to be the twelfth? Why would it? If Matthias is the twelfth, and if Paul is the thirteenth to a different group of people, then there's no reason for Paul to be the twelfth. In fact, outside of a change in programs, there is literally no reason Paul should even BE an apostle.
No, I've stated (and restated above) that Matthias COULD be one of the twelve. And indeed he was considered to be so by those in Jerusalem and even Paul.
And that he was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve: [1 Corinthians 15:5 KJV]
Then what's the problem?
But we're talking about the eternal twelve,
Why do you assume that the list of the Twelve changed between Acts 1 and when they sit on the thrones?
and assuming that's what Christ meant when He said they would sit on twelve (and only twelve) thrones.
So why believe otherwise?
If Christ said that the twelve that He had chosen would sit on twelve thrones, and then one of them betrayed Him and then killed himself, and then a few days later, He rises from the dead, spends 40 days teaching them about the coming Kingdom of Israel, and about His return, and then they go and immediately pick a replacement for Judas Iscariot, Matthias, and they even do so citing the scriptures(!), why believe anything other than that Matthias replaced Judas Iscariot?
You keep bringing this up, and I don't deny that he was "numbered with the eleven"--by Luke, by the eleven, by the people that saw them at Pentecost, and by Paul.
That's at least three witnesses.
God's standard is "two or three to establish a matter."
What we don't have is Christ, or anyone, giving a list of the twelve, like you've done here, of the eternal twelve.
Again, why would the list of names change? Why Paul at all?
I'll take that under advisement, as long as you do as well.
And supra.
My doctrine doesn't depend on it either way. No grasping needed.
Supra.
No, just that of the two selected, God supposedly picked one.
Is that not more than enough to convince you that Matthias is the one that actually replaced Judas, and that given the circumstances, Paul was completely unnecessary?
If things had continued as they were going in Acts 1, 2, and so forth, Paul would have been completely unnecessary, because as Christ said, and I paraphrase, "you guys won't even be able to get through all the cities in Israel before I return." Having 12 people spread throughout Israel is a very efficient way to do things. Having 11 (plus one, if you include Matthias) stay in Jerusalem (ignoring the mission trips the twelve did which aren't mentioned in scripture except in passing) while one Apostle goes to the rest of the world is not.
But with the lots never being mentioned again, some think this is more of a denouncement of the process of casting lots, now that we all have the Holy Spirit
kgov.com
(and Paul says we are all to judge the world and angels, and it seems unlikely we will do it by casting lots).
The above link should give some insight.
I don't have time to finish this right now. I'll try to get back to the rest later.
Continued...
[Acts 28:23-31 KJV] And when they had appointed him a day, there came many {Jews} to him into [his] lodging; to whom he expounded and testified the kingdom of God, persuading them concerning Jesus, both out of the law of Moses, and [out of] the prophets, from morning till evening. And some believed the things which were spoken, and some believed not. And when they agreed not among themselves, they departed, after that Paul had spoken one word, Well spake the Holy Ghost by Esaias the prophet unto our fathers, Saying, Go unto this people, and say, Hearing ye shall hear, and shall not understand; and seeing ye shall see, and not perceive: For the heart of this people is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes have they closed; lest they should see with [their] eyes, and hear with [their] ears, and understand with [their] heart, and should be converted, and I should heal them. Be it known therefore unto you, that the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles, and [that] they will hear it. And when he had said these words, the Jews departed, and had great reasoning among themselves. And Paul dwelt two whole years in his own hired house, and received all {Jews and Gentiles} that came in unto him, Preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no man forbidding him.
The message was the same, for Jews or for Gentiles. It was about "the kingdom of God" and "those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ".
The "Kingdom of God" is not the "Kingdom of Israel." Rather, the Kingdom of God contains both the Kingdom of Israel (a nation) and the Body of Christ (an organism)
Kingdom of God
|.........................\
Kingdom of........Body of Christ
Israel
Hostility kept him from being used by the Spirit? Hardly!
As I pointed out above in post #233, Paul isn't even mentioned until the end of Acts 7, and it's when he's partaking in the martyrdom of Stephen, one of the disciples.
Or God chose to have one of the twelve concentrate on the Gentiles.
Why would He? It's extremely inefficient, not to mention unnecessary, since, again, Christ Himself said that they wouldn't be able to even get through the cities before His return.
Paul didn't separate himself from their ministries.
Aside from one instance 3 years after his conversion, and his presence at the Jerusalem council 14 years after that, he had ZERO contact with the rest of the Apostles in Jerusalem.
Well, he did from Barnabas, but not over content.
Yep, same gospel.
Can't be. "Uncircumcision" is not "Circumcision."
The fact you have a hard time with it is evidence that I'm getting it right.
Except that I'm not having a hard time with it.
(I think I heard that from you, once.) Not everything that is said is part of the gospel, just because someone said it.
Ok, but not part of the gospel.
It's a difference between what Paul taught and what the Twelve taught.
Great tribulation wouldn't be "good news" to anyone, Jews or Gentiles.
Agreed.
Why do you include it as part of the gospel?
Include what? The Trib?
I'm comparing what Paul said about Christ's return (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18), "therefore comfort one another with these words," with what Jesus and the Twelve, particularly John, in writing Revelation, said, along with Daniel and others.
Jesus' second coming, for Israel, means the Great Tribulation, something terrible.
Jesus' second coming, for the Body of Christ, means the rapture PRIOR to the Great Tribulation, a comfort.
Paul taught the latter, while Jesus and the Twelve taught the former.
Are you saying Paul was preaching the gospel when he was explaining when divorce was or wasn't appropriate? That's his gospel? Really?
I'm pointing out the fact that he had the authority to make such statements, compared to the Twelve, who were under the law, which stated and allowed for divorce ONLY through sexual immorality.
Do you see the difference? Paul was not bound by the law, and because of that, he could share his opinion on the matter (within the bounds of what God had taught him, of course), but the Twelve (as Paul taught) were cursed to keep and teach the law until the day they died.
Because they were so conditioned that the Messiah was for the Jews only,
Because He was.
"King of the Jews."
Gentiles had always been able to enter into relationship with God through Israel's covenant relationship with Him.
Having direct access to God WITHOUT the need for a covenant was completely contrary to literally the entire history of Israel!
that they couldn't fathom anything else.
Of course they couldn't, becuase their laws were, both literally and figuratively, set in stone. You want to enter into a relationship with God, you need to circumcise and keep the law.
Paul didn't teach that, though. He taught specifically to NOT circumcise, and to NOT put oneself under the law, because if you do, you're cursed.
Just like when Jesus kept telling them that He was going to die, and they didn't understand that He meant He was really going to die. People are hard-headed, as you know well after participating in this forum for years.
I agree, but that doesn't quite cover it.
There's a difference between being hard-headed, and being unaware of something.
Paul's mystery gospel was "kept secret since the world began." No one on earth, and perhaps even in heaven, knew of Paul's gospel. It was something that had never been explained before.
And they already knew the answer, since Acts 10, as Peter affirms.
Supra.
The conflicts weren't with different gospels, but to whom THE gospel was to be preached.
Wrong.
Again, Gentiles had always been able to enter into relationship with God through Israel's covenant. What God was showing Peter in Acts 10 was something COMPLETELY DIFFERENT.
Things that are different are not the same.
That wasn't the hypocrisy Paul was writing about. The hypocrisy was that Peter went back to keeping the law when the men from James showed up. You can see this in the Gal 2 text, if you'll allow yourself to read it honestly. He lived (normally) like he didn't have to keep the law because he KNEW he didn't have to keep the law--but just as he sank when walking to Jesus on the water, Peter fell back into old habits.
Yes, it was the same good news.
No, it wasn't.
The good news of the Kingdom was that the Messiah had come and was getting ready to take His throne.
The good news of the grace of God is that no one has to keep the law to form a relationship with God.
That's actually closer to how the passage reads.
[Galatians 2:7-9 KJV] But contrariwise, when they saw that the gospel of the uncircumcision was committed unto me, as [the gospel] of the circumcision [was] unto Peter; (For he that wrought effectually in Peter to the apostleship of the circumcision, the same was mighty in me toward the Gentiles
And when James, Cephas, and John, who seemed to be pillars, perceived the grace that was given unto me, they gave to me and Barnabas the right hands of fellowship; that we [should go] unto the heathen, and they unto the circumcision.
Note the bracketed words in the King James, above, mean those words were inserted for readability, but you can read it without those words just fine. Since "the gospel" is not repeated in vs 7, the emphasis is on the different recipients, not on the different content. Vs 8 backs that up by using the word "apostleship" of the circumcision, i.e., Peter was sent to the circumcision with the same message. If two times wasn't enough, Paul says it again in vs. 9 "that we unto the heathen and they unto the circumcision.
The point is that Peter, James, and John (and by extension, the rest of the Twelve) agreed to go to a different group than Paul did.
An unbalanced assignment that doesn't make much sense.
I don't. Can you explain?
That wasn't the first time Saul had been confronted by Christ. Remember that he had been "kicking against the pricks"?
It's the first time recorded in Scripture, which is what matters.
See again post #233.
Yes, but the significance those numbers convey is not always clear. To pick a significance and run with it without question is dangerous in many cases.
You're more than welcome to do a study on the number twelve in the Bible and confirm or reject what I said based on that, but I'm not about to do, nor do I have the time to do, a Bible study here in this thread. Suffice it to say that the work HAS been done by at the very least Bob Enyart. Not that he's right, of course, but I'm not making the claim based on nothing but conjecture.
From Bob's "The Plot":
God associates Israel with the number twelve and also with 144, that is, twelve squared, (122=144). For example, their New Jerusalem has twelve foundations (Rev. 21:14) and walls which tower 144 cubits in height (Rev. 21:17) containing twelve gates (Rev.21:12). Also, Jesus recognized a 24-hour day (John 11:9-10; Mat. 20:9-12; [27:45; John 1:39; 4:52; 9:4; Acts 2:15]). Thus the six working days of Israel's week contained 144 hours in which they could work, just as God sealed the 144 thousand Israelite "servants" (Rev. 7:3-4) for His work. So the 144 hour workweek even further ties the Sabbath to Israel. For God said:
"Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath…"
Ex. 20:9-10 |
I don't deny that Matthias was numbered with the eleven by someone. My hesitations are "by whom" and "for what purpose".
By God, to rule over the twelve tribes of Israel.