Yes, of course, I know when the scales fell off his eyes. It's not the point. The totality of the event is what led to his conversion and regeneration in the Holy Spirit.Zobel said:Two problems. One, he didn't say "Jesus is Lord". Asking who someone is isn't the same thing. And the second problem is the scripture says when he received the Holy Spirit, and it wasn't then - it was when Ananias laid hands on him: "Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus who appeared to you on the road by which you came has sent me so that you may regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit"Quote:
The event on the road to Damascus was not just God appointing him to his calling, but he was given faith. "No man can say Jesus is Lord except in the Holy Spirit". What is the first thing Paul says? "Who are you, Lord?".
Brother, I'm not attacking you and I agree with most of what you're saying here, but you're making an implication that Paul wasn't converted.Quote:Well, perhaps it would be more productive to ask instead of telling me what I am saying and then arguing with it. You may not think it is important that St Paul didn't change religions, but I do, because the idea that over here there was this thing called Judaism, and over there was this thing called Christianity, and St Paul stopped being a Jew to become a Christian is wrong - and a lot of people believe it. And that gives rise to all sorts of misunderstandings and misconceptions.Quote:
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I'm not sure the point of making this distinction about religion and conversion. The real point is that Paul's "religion" prior to conversion was in error and Jesus had rather strong words to say about that.
St Paul's "religion" (were such a thing true) was not in error - his entire sect of Judaism was solely focused on living righteously by the Torah, and going even further to put a hedge around it to avoid violating the Torah even by mistake. He was a fanatic about keeping the Torah, an extremist. That wasn't bad! The problem was he missed the point of the Torah, and missed the very Messiah he was truly working so hard to welcome.
It is as if modern Christians want so badly for there to be a major disjunction between the Old Testament and the New - between Yahweh and Jesus. But there was not. Jesus taught the Torah as it was meant to be taught. He did not change it, He didn't negate it, or end it. He literally said as much. His issue with the Pharisees wasn't that they were wrong, it is that they were hypocritical. They followed the Torah diligently but forgot mercy. "You tithe mint and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the Torah: justice and mercy and faithfulness. These you ought to have done, without neglecting the others." Meaning - their diligence about the Torah was good and they should do it! But not without the other. St Paul teaches the exact same thing: merely following the Torah in an external way did not and could not make them righteous. Since following the Torah is literally what made you a Jew, even being a devoted Jew could not make you righteous. THAT is the teaching that St Paul repeats over and over again, and THAT is the same thing Christ Jesus told the scribes and the Pharisees. St Paul and Christ Jesus are perfectly in sync. Rather than throwing out the Torah, they both upheld it. I think the reason for this desire is probably because if we are supposed to have the same faith as the Apostles, and the Apostle's faith looked like first century Judaism vs modern Christianity, then there is a problem. So people re-invent first century Christianity and imagine it looked like theirs. It did not.
In your OP,
There's no "instead of conversion", he was in fact, converted into Christianity. Being a Christian is not a description of religion, its a designation of New Covenant membership. That's not me trying to say I want some disjunction between the Old and New Covenants. Paul was a zealous Jew, Pharisee of Pharisees, but he gained Christ in this event and "counted everything else as loss for the sake of Christ". He was a Jew outwardly, according to the flesh, per his own words. And no, I disagree with you that following the Torah is what literally made you a Jew. That made you ethnically jewish, but a Jew is one inwardly, according to the heart. That's why there's a remnant of "Jews" amongst the ethnic Jews, those according to the promise. Why do you think Paul was so amazed by mercy in his testimony in 1 Timothy? He was the foremost of sinners, insolent in his unbelief, but God showed mercy not because God excused his sin due to ignorance, but because God was going to use him for His glory by pure grace unmerited.Quote:
Instead of conversion, when St Paul talks about what happened to him, he describes it as a revelation and calling - he explicitly likens himself to the prophets of the Old Testament.
The lack of distinction between Jew and Greek is precisely because of what I'm saying above. Once a person is spiritually regenerated, you are a child of God, heir according to promise. Paul was not of the vine. As I've said, Paul heard the gospel, rejected Jesus as the Christ and was cut off. You saying he was of the vine is incongruous with Paul saying about himself: "9 and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith".Quote:"Religion" as a category of thing didn't exist in the first century. There wasn't a secular / religious divide, there wasn't a cultural / religious divide, and there wasn't an ethnic / religious divide. All of those things were wrapped up into one. That's part of the point of the OP. Reading modern categories back is an error, and it makes people say things like the above which really don't make any sense in the context of the first century. Your "religion" can't help but change - no - your life and who you are? Yes.Quote:
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I would also disagree that Paul's religion didn't change. Paul very much understood the "types and shadows" were now gone and there is no longer distinction, "Jew or Greek". So even though he may have carried on some practices (Nazarite Vow), he very much understood there were things he couldn't go back to, hence the scolding remarks he gives to the Galatians. You're religion can't help but change when you put on Christ.
The lack of distinction between Jew or Greek was about being able to come to God, not "religion". And your comments about the Galatians miss the point - the exact issue I was talking about in the OP.
The Galatians did change their faith, and their religion, and their way of life, because they were pagans. They were separated from God, and did not know the God of Israel. They were living a life that was incompatible with faithfulness to God, so their entire life had to dramatically change. How they worshipped, their daily pattern of life, the food they ate, the clothes they wore, how they had sex, how they got married, how they understood their marriages and family obligations, their jobs, all of it had to be tested and changed and baptized. Some of it had to completely go, some could be redeemed. They had to stop being Galatians, in some ways completely withdraw from public and civic life, and start being something new and different - Christian Galatians, a category of being and people that had never existed before. A new creation!
This is precisely the difference between the conversion of a pagan to following the Messiah and someone like St Paul. St Paul's way of life and practice were not abhorrent to God. His understanding of right and wrong, how to live, morality, sexuality, worship, all of these things were informed by the Torah -- the words of God -- and the teaching of the prophets. The pattern of life he was trying to follow was in and of itself good - as he says, "indeed, the Torah is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good." But all of this was nothing without the point of the Torah - the culmination or telos of the Torah - which is the Messiah. Which is why he says all of that is garbage compared to faithfulness to Jesus and the righteousness that brings.
The Lord's words to St Photini at the well are similar, and drive this point home. The Jews worship what they know - Yahweh - because He revealed Himself to them. The Samaritans did not know God, and like all of the other people of the nations (the gentiles) were separated from God, were not clean, and were ignorant. But the hour came, the once-for-all atonement happened, the people of all nations were made clean in the blood of Jesus ("do not call unclean what God has made clean") and that grace opened the way for them to be joined to the heir, the true vine, which is Jesus - and the vine he planted, which is Israel. This is the major point of St Paul's gospel, literally how he describes it ("The mystery is that through the gospel the Gentiles are fellow heirs, fellow members of the body, and fellow partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus...")
St Paul was part of the vine already - at danger of being cut off for his hypocrisy and error - but by grace he remained. He received mercy and grace for his ignorance and disbelief. Had he rejected the Lord, he would have been cut off. But he was a natural branch of that vine as a son of Israel. The Galatians, the Samaritans, the Greeks, the Germans... your ancestors and mine.... we were all grafted in. They converted to something new. St Paul did not. He changed, but his "religion" didn't.
Everyone is saved through Christ, even Abraham. Yes, even Abraham was converted into Christianity effectively through the perfect work and sacrifice of our Lord, Jesus Christ. It is the only covenant God provided that offered salvation. The Old Covenant didn't have the power to save anyone. All this talk about "religion" is literally pointless. Religion is the outworking of your faith. It's an effect, not a cause of anything. Paul became a Christian and thus his religion changed even if he held to some Jewish practices, but clearly according to Hebrews, elements of the Torah were now of the past. All the apostles converted to Christianity likewise. Christianity is not a religion, it's an inheritance.