Tag: the-apostle-paul

  • Following Paul

    🟦 Paul’s Method: Gleaning the Torah and the Prophets for New‑Covenant Doctrine

    Acts 26 provides a clear window into Paul’s interpretive method. Paul states that everything he preached came from:

    • Moses (Torah)
    • The Prophets
    • The rest of the Hebrew Scriptures

    He never appeals to Greek philosophy, pagan religion, or extra‑biblical traditions. His entire doctrinal framework is rooted in the first 39 books — but not in the Sinai covenant as a binding system.

    Paul extracts what is universal, moral, spiritual, and prophetic, and leaves behind what is covenantal, national, judicial, or temporary.

    This produces a consistent, traceable pattern.

    đźź© 1. Paul Retains What Is Universal and Spiritual

    Habakkuk 2:4 — “The righteous shall live by faith.”

    Paul elevates this prophetic line as the governing principle of New‑Covenant righteousness.

    Moral principles

    Love, fidelity, honesty, sexual purity, justice, mercy — all affirmed and intensified in Paul’s letters.

    Prophetic promises

    Paul repeatedly cites the prophets to show that Gentile inclusion and Spirit‑empowered righteousness were foretold long before Christ.

    These elements are trans‑covenantal — they apply to all people in all eras.

    🟩 2. Paul Removes What Is Covenant‑Bound to Israel

    These elements belong to Israel’s national covenant and are never carried into the ekklēsia:

    Judicial penalties (stoning, executions)

    These are tied to Israel’s land jurisdiction. Paul never imports them into the assemblies.

    Dietary laws

    Explicitly set aside (Romans 14; 1 Timothy 4).

    Circumcision

    Not merely optional — forbidden for Gentiles (1 Corinthians 7; Galatians 5).

    Sacrificial system

    Fulfilled in Christ; never re‑established for Gentile believers.

    Righteousness by works (Deut 6:25)

    Paul replaces the Sinai formula with faith‑righteousness (Hab 2:4; Romans 1:17).

    These components are covenantal, not universal.

    🟩 3. Paul Builds Doctrine Only From the Hebrew Scriptures — Through a New‑Covenant Lens

    Paul’s gospel is:

    • rooted in Moses and the Prophets,
    • yet radically different from Sinai.

    He extracts:

    • the spiritual core,
    • the prophetic trajectory,
    • the universal moral truths.

    He discards:

    • the national,
    • the ceremonial,
    • the judicial,
    • the temporary elements of the Sinai covenant.

    This is why Paul can say he teaches “nothing except what Moses and the Prophets said” while simultaneously rejecting large portions of the Sinai system.

    🟩 4. The Result: A Purified, Spirit‑Driven Framework

    Paul distills the Hebrew Scriptures down to their universal, Spirit‑centered essence.

    By following Paul’s doctrines and practices, believers walk confidently in the revealed will of God for the nations.

    This is the jurisdictional shift: Scripture remains the source, but Sinai is not the covenant.