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INTRO.DOC
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1994-12-09
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INTRODUCTION
The Apostle Paul stands in a unique category in Church
history. His extant writings are held by the Church to be
inspired by the Holy Spirit, whereas the writings of his
successors are not. One does not wish to attribute the work
of the Holy Spirit to Paul. However, Paul was obedient and
faithful to the mission God assigned him.
Paul has probably had more influence for Christ than any
man who ever lived, excepting the Lord Jesus himself. The
Jews rejected Christ in Paul's day, but the Gentiles accepted
Christ through the ministry of Paul.
The Epistles of Paul have been the ferment of every
great revival in the Christian Church. (George C. Cell, as
quoted by Ralph Earl).
Andrews says,
The interpretation of Christianity, and its
spread into the western world, are so bound up with
the apostolic ministry of St. Paul that neither can
be discussed intelligently apart from the story of
this man and his work.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Without the consecrated labours of this
Christ-intoxicated man it is debatable whether
Christianity would ever have become a world-wide
religion. No figure in church history stands so
high or has had such far-reaching influence as this
apostle to the non-Jewish world. Centuries have
not dimmed the lustre of his place in Christian
history. Whenever and wherever the impact of a
secular world and the spread of unworthy religious
practices have left the church in need of
revitalization, it is to Paul that men have turned,
as to a fountain from which again the pure water of
the evangelical faith could be drawn and the
essence of the Christian gospel republished.
(ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA, 1965 ed., s.v. "Paul,
Saint," by Elias Andrews).
This high praise of Paul comes from the ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA.
One feels that Paul is a great lesson in Christianity,
and an existential lesson who is too easily overlooked.
END