Yes thet did preach to the gentiles, example Philip spoke to the Ethiopan eunech.
i may be wrong but i think he said that because they wouldn't preach or minister to the gentiles. he said that right before he left to preach to the gentiles.
Yes, Paul did meet some of the disciples of Jesus. He met with Peter and James, as recorded in the Bible, and received their approval for his mission to preach to the Gentiles.
They act like the disciples when they preach the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, as that is what the disciples did.
The last command of Jesus was to go out in the world and preach , and make disciples.
Christians were told to preach to the Gentiles and Jews because they were falling away from the Lord's teaching. There were several times throughout the Bible where the Lord instructed the Prophets to teach the non-Christians to help save them and change their ways.
God's salvation is available to all people Jew and Gentile. Paul was chosen by God to preach the gospel to the gentiles Galatians 1:15,16 But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother's womb and called me through His grace, to reveal His Son in me, that I might preach Him among the Gentiles, I did not immediately confer with flesh and blood,
Holy Spirit
No, there is no contradiction. Jesus' initial instruction to the Apostles was specific to their mission at that time, focused on the people of Israel. The command to Paul to preach to the Gentiles came later as part of the broader plan to spread the Gospel to all nations. This shows the progression and expansion of the mission rather than a contradiction.
Go forth and preach
The Disciples of Christ are Christian, from the Protestant branch of Christianity. Jewish people generally do not believe that "Christ" has come yet, and those people who do believe he came are called Christians (followers of Jesus Christ). So, the Disciples of Christ would be gentiles, since they are not Jews. It is worth noting that "Disciples of Christ" is the name of a particular church, not a general term for those who follow Christ.
No - Paul felt a special calling to go to the gentiles and preach the Good News of Jesus to them. Answer 2: It was before (and not after) his conversion that Paul was persecuting Jewish Christians (not Gentiles). Then he had a special experience on the road to Damascus which turned his life around.
because he wanted them to be with him and also so he could send them to preach his word