Wednesday, January 17, 2018

The Apostle Paul Teachings, The Main Message

By Kathleen Perry


Apostles drew their messages from the lessons of Christ. However, each had different areas that he concentrated on in his works. The Apostle Paul Teachings are unique because of the depth and manner of coverage of the ordinary themes. Here is a look at the main areas that make his work stand out from that of other apostles.

Christ as Lord is a central theme whenever you read his epistles. Christ is not just regarded as the source of authority but as a king who is the source and reason for all authority. Chapter 16 and verse 22 of First Corinthians states that those who fail to recognize the authority of Christ as Christians must be accursed. It means that there is no claim of Christianity if it is not accompanied by recognition of Christ as the authority.

The message of resurrection is heavily repeated and advocated. This could be attributed to his background as a Pharisee. It gave him the understanding and strong ability to interpret the word with this depth. Borrowing form the resurrection of Lazarus, his message is that if death can obey Christ, every Christian has no option but to follow the same path.

Justification is at the center of the themes handled by the works of Paul. A look at his works shows a repetition of justification and justified on numerous occasion. In his words, it is Christ who grants the world legitimacy, without which humanity is useless. This message is borrowed from chapter 1 of the Gospel of John where those who have accepted Christ are given the right to be called his children.

There is a lot of teaching about Grace in his works. The apostle is known for his salutation which captures the word Grace on numerous occasions. He also uses the same word during benediction. Ephesians 2,8 is a perfect example that salvation is a matter of grace which then comes with faith. In Romans chapter 3 and verse 24, he combines grace and justification to pass another strong message.

Faith also features prominently when one reads through the works of Paul. While the word and idea populate all his works, Romans 1, 17 is unique. The word is mentioned three times, which is a record. Scholars indicate that Hebrew 11 is the best chapter when one wants to pass the message about faith. His reflections on faith are heavily borrowed from the Old Testament, a book he studied deeply as a Pharisee.

Paul is outstanding as an apostle because of his travels and forthright way of passing his message. He spent time with all the communities he visited to ensure that they had enough time to learn. In this way, it would be impossible to produce half baked Christians. He was sometimes sent out of places he went preaching. This explains his deep message that seemed to address the issues of his host city or community.

Paul did not deviate in any way from what Christ taught. It is his address of particular themes that made him standout and a source of great wisdom despite starting as Saul the persecutor. He was an incredibly travelled preacher who ended up in the hands of Emperor Nero in Rome Italy. He was martyred by beheading, alongside Peter who was crucified, albeit in a different position from Christ according to history books.




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