The works of Paul discussed in the New Testament took place in the years following the Crucifixion of Christ.
its A or D
After the death of Jesus. Paul taught of the life and works of Jesus Christ and his teaching of a New Covenant
Apostle Paul
St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.St. Paul traveled to spread the teachings of Christianity and to attract converts.
I'm trying to figure out from the Epistle of Romans how Paul differentiate between Judaism and the teachings of Jesus.
Primarily, it was the Apostle Paul, selected to go to the gentiles.
Because Jesus was the Christ, Christianity is the faith that purportedly follows the teachings of Jesus. However, most Christian religions following the teachings of the epistle writer Paul instead. For example, Jesus says in the Bible "I am not here to start a new religion but to bring a new covenant." The fact that there are religions that follow the teachings of Jesus is in direct contradiction to his own words.
The apostle Paul is often credited with spreading the teachings of Jesus the farthest and most effectively. Through his missionary journeys and letters, he helped establish early Christian communities throughout the Mediterranean world.
A:Mentioned only in Acts of the Apostles, Saul is the name of the apostle Paul before his conversion and his first missionary journey. Tarsus is also given in Acts as the home town of Saul. In his own epistles, Paul never mentions having been called Saul, or having come from the city of Tarsus. In spite of this, it is certainly possible that he had been called Saul and that he was from Tarsus. However, we can never be certain whether the author of Acts of the Apostles, writing several decades after the death of Paul, was mistaken in those attributions. Some of the key passages regarding Saul in Acts of the Apostles have parallels to a Saulus whom Josephus mentions in Antiquities of the Jews, with which the author of Acts is known to have been familiar. Josephus even talked of a riot in Jerusalem, led by Saulus after the stoning of James. Although this Saulus could have inspired the author of Acts, he could not really have been the same person as Paul.
It was Jesus of Nazareth a/k/a Jesus the Christ who brought new teachings to the Jews of His time. Although Jesus said "Upon this rock (Peter) I will build my church," it could be argued that it was Paul who actually founded the religion of Christianity.
Paul was not a friend of Jesus, as the bible says Paul wanted to persecute and kill the early christians.
----------------------- Scholars have noted that nowhere in his epistles does Paul mention going to any of the places associated with Jesus of Nazareth. He never visited Nazareth, nor Bethlehem, never asked to be shown where Jesus prayed or where he was crucified or buried. In fact, Paul seems to have been unaware that Jesus was a man who had lived in Palestine in the recent past, or that he had spent much of his life in Nazareth.