Apart from their obvious roles as Messiah and Apostle, scholars have long debated the apparent mismatch between the teachings of Jesus and Paul. One normal way of stating it is that Jesus preached about God but Paul preached about Jesus. Or, Jesus announced the kingdom of God and Paul announced the Messiahship of Jesus. Also, Jesus called people to a simple gospel of repentance, belief, and the practice of the Sermon on the Mount while Paul developed a complex theology of justification by faith, something Jesus never mentioned. Some say that Jesus preached a wonderful universal message and that Paul scrunched it back into the small distorting framework of his Jewish, rabbinic mind. Others say that Jesus preached a pure Jewish message and that Paul falsified it by turning it into a Greek, philosophical and even anti-Jewish construct. In defense of Paul here, he thought of it this way: Jesus was the Composer and he was the conductor or Jesus was the Architect and he was the builder. Paul was explicitly honouring Jesus by not saying and doing the same things but by pointing people back to Jesus' own unique achievement.
Yes, both Peter and Paul were important figures in early Christianity, but they were not among Jesus' original 12 disciples. Peter, also known as Simon Peter, was a close follower of Jesus and played a significant role in the early church. Paul, formerly known as Saul, was a Pharisee who converted to Christianity and became a prominent apostle, spreading the teachings of Jesus to the Gentiles.
Paul's Epistle to the Galatians is important in two ways. It provides an insight into the apostle Paul, and it provides important background regarding the history of early Christianity, against which the only other early Church history, Acts of the Apostles, can be compared and verified or corrected.
No. Without Jesus Christ, there would be no Christianity.
Paul, or Saint Paul, or the "Apostle of the Gentiles", was a Jewish convert to the teachings of Jesus. Through his travels and writings, he was one of the main disseminaters of Christianity. He is the early church teacher who is credited with opening up the teachings of Jesus to non-Jews, thus making Jesus a Savior to all men instead of strictly a Jewish Messiah.
Paul is a big one, and wrote a lot of the new testament..... Jesus started the movement though,,,
Three names for early church leaders in history are Peter, Paul, and James. Peter was one of the twelve apostles and a prominent leader in the early Christian church. Paul was a missionary who wrote many of the letters in the New Testament and played a key role in spreading Christianity. James, the brother of Jesus, was a leader in the church in Jerusalem and played a significant role in the early Christian community.
Jesus.
Jesus,Paul(Saul),and the other apostles of Jesus
Jesus Jesus Christ was the beginning of Christianity. Paul tought Christianity after Christ and his appostles were killed off.
Technically, Jesus is responsbile for the origin of Christianity, seeing as the religion is based around him. However, the tradition of Christianity was not set by Jesus; it developed over time, but was begun mainly by early Jewish Christian believers, especially the twelve apostles, who functioned as early leaders. Saint Paul (and later, more extremely, Marcion) are largely responsible for separating Christianity from Judaism.
Jesus did not spread Christianity , but the apostles and Paul spread it over the world.
they helped Jesus the messiah