| Scriptural
Christianity |
William R. Newell
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| Two Great Revelators |
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There are two great revelators, or unfolders
of Divine Truth in the Bible--Moses in the Old Testament, and Paul in his
Epistles. Some may
ask, Is not Christ the Great Teacher? In a sense that is true; but actually He is the
Person taught about, rather than teaching, in the Gospel. The law and the prophets pointed
forward to Him; the epistles point back to Him; and the Revelation points to His second
coming, and those things connected with it. The Lord Jesus Christ, therefore, is the theme
of the Bible. Unto none of the Twelve Apostles
did God directly reveal the great body of doctrine for this age. Just as He chose Moses to
be the revelator to Israel of the Ten Commandments, and all connected with the Law
dispensation; so God chose Saul of Tarsus to be the revelator and unfolder of those mighty
truths connected with our Lord's death, burial, resurrection and His ascended Person. And
all the "mysteries," or "secrets," revealed to God's people in this
dispensation by the Holy Spirit in the Word are revealed by Paul. Finally, Paul is the
unfolder of that great company of God's elect, called the Church, the Body of Christ,
which is also the Bride--members of the Lord Jesus Himself. |
| Paul's Apostleship |
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No other Apostle speaks of these things.
Peter himself had to learn them from Paul (2 Pet. 3:15,16). When Paul finishes his
thirteen great epistles (Romans to Philemon), those which belong to the Church, God indeed
permits him to give a message to the Hebrews; but this is not part of the church's
doctrine. It indeed instructs Gentile believers as to the meaning of the Old Testament
Scriptures concerning the priestly Person and work of our Lord Jesus Christ as carried on
in heaven now. The Book of Hebrews is the great meeting place for both Gentile and Jewish
believers. James addressed his epistle to "the
twelve tribes"; that is, his epistle has a special reference to Jewish Christians in
the early days, and to such throughout the dispensation, for that matter. Peter writes to
"the strangers who are sojourners of the Dispersion," that is, to the dispersed
Jews who acknowledged Jesus as the Messiah. The word Cross does not appear in James,
Peter, or John. Paul is the unfolder of what God did at Calvary. If Peter (1 Pet. 2:24),
speaks of it, it is as "the tree" (Deut. 21:22,23) and for atonement only. |
| The Gospel |
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You can discern a man's preaching or teaching
by this rule--is he Pauline? Does his doctrine start and finish according to those
statements of Christian doctrine written by the Apostle Paul? No matter how wonderful a
man may seem in his gifts and apparent consecration, if his Gospel is not Pauline, it is
not the Gospel; and we might as well get our minds settled once and for all as to that.
Failure or refusal to discern the Pauline Gospel as a separate and new revelation, and not
a "development from Judaism," accounts for most of the confusion in many
people's minds today as regards just what the Gospel is. Paul calls down the
anathema, that is, the curse of God Himself upon anyone who preaches any other Gospel than
that which he declared (Gal. 1:8,9). Not for one moment are we to believe that James,
Peter and John are at variance with Paul--not in the least! They are given certain things
by the Spirit of God to say to certain classes of people, and they say it; and it is
true--just as true as Paul's words, and they in no way conflict with Paul. |
| Paul's Epistles |
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But, nevertheless, Paul is God's declarer and
revealer of the Gospel to us. Take his thirteen epistles of Romans to Philemon out of the
Bible and you are bereft of Christian doctrine. For instance, if you were to take Paul's
epistles from the Word, you cannot find anything about the Church, the Body of Christ, for
none of the apostles mention the Body of Christ. You cannot find one of the great
mysteries, such as the Rapture of the Church (1 Thess. 4 and 1 Cor. 15) or the mystery of
the present hardening of Israel (Rom. 11) for no other apostle speaks of any of those
mysteries. Paul alone reveals them. You cannot find
the exact meaning of any of the great doctrines, such as Propitiation, Reconciliation,
Justification, Identification, Redemption, or Sanctification. You cannot find what is
perhaps the most tremendous fact of every Christian life, that of his personal union with
the Lord Jesus in glory. Paul alone is the divinely chosen opener to us of truth for this
age. "The Church, of which I am made a minister, according to the dispensation of God
which is given to me for you, to fulfill the Word of God, even the mystery which hath been
hidden from ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to his saints" (Col.
1:24-26). "If ye have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which is given to
me toward you, how that by revelation he made known to me the mystery" (Eph. 3:2,3).
Saul already stood in clearer light regarding the Risen
Lord Jesus than did the other apostles; for they had known Him primarily in humiliation,
and they were His messengers to Israel, of whom is Christ "as concerning the
flesh" (Rom. 9:5); but Saul's first vision of Christ was as the Glorified One, the
Son of God, in resurrection glory. The concept of the Lord Jesus in Paul's epistles is one
of constant, unspeakable glory. We do not mean that the other apostles did not recognize
the Lord Jesus as the Son of God. They had, long since (Matt. 16:16; John 1:14, etc.). But
their first testimony at Jerusalem and to Israel had been more of the Messiahship and
Lordship of Jesus, as the Crucified and now Risen King, who was ready to return to Israel
and set up His kingdom if they would repent (Acts 2:36; 3:19, etc.). |
| All From Heaven |
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But Paul received his teaching all from
heaven, from the Lord Jesus in glory, rather than on earth in Jewish connections.
"But I make known unto you, brethren, that the Gospel which was preached by me is not
after man. For I neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by revelation of
Jesus Christ" (Gal. 1:11,12). Paul's Gospel has nothing Jewish about it. He was not
even converted in Jerusalem, but near a Gentile city (Acts 9:3). He was told by the Lord
Himself that his testimony would not be received by the Jews, and he was to go far from
them (Acts 22:18,21). The moment Paul begins his
life-work (Acts 13:2) he opens up to the believer a new thing, a marvelous thing, that far
exceeds in fullness of grace any words of the other apostles up to that time. "He
that believeth is justified from all things" (Acts 13:39). The basis of, the
character of, Paul's Gospel is the risen Lord Jesus Christ, and of God as the One who
raised Him from the dead and is now working on resurrection ground only!
Thank God for Paul, through whom those who seek liberty
and deliverance believe the Gospel set forth in Gal. 2:19-21 concerning righteousness.
When the heart rests in the Lord Jesus Christ alone, it just rejoices; it ceases from all
efforts to produce anything. It knows it is not under law but under is grace; its bondage
has ceased; the bond of the law has been taken away; the Lord Jesus is there instead of
the law as the hope of the heart , and its Object. |
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