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The could not see that he was the Messiah

And those Jews who did see Jesus as Messiah are considered to be Christians, not Jews who 'saw the light'. Therefore, your question answers itself.

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15y ago
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13y ago

Because they believed in plenty of Gods and lots and lots of different ones and so when Christianity came to the Romans lots and lots of people converted to it and so no one worshiped the Roman Gods because it was going against their new religion of only having one God so the government was angry because they stopped making sacrifices to their Gods because of what the Savior Jesus Christ so the Christians were persecuted for hundreds of years until finally it had grown into becoming Rome's official religion.

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8y ago

A New Testament perspective:Saul (originally) rejected Christianity for the same reason that all the "devout Pharisees" rejected Jesus; His teachings exposed their pompous hypocrisy and threatened their grip on religious power over the common people.

See Matthew 23 for Jesus' scathing indictment of the Pharisees (who had been seeking to kill Him since He healed a man's withered hand on a Sabbath, as recorded in chapter 12), then note what the Apostle Paul writes about his "former conduct in Judaism" in Galatians 1, and the affirmation that he himself was, "concerning the law, a Pharisee," in Philippians 3.

Before the risen Christ appeared to Saul on the road to Damascus, he had the same general attitude toward Jesus and Christians as any other Pharisee. His zeal is what set him apart, urging him into active persecution of Christians in defense of Mosaic Law (Acts 26:9-11), which he carried out with "all good conscience before God" (Acts 23:1).

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9y ago

Saul/ Paul was shunned by (Christians) believers of Jesus because he was known as a great persecutor of believers. He was on his way to Damascus to arrest believers when Jesus stopped him on the road and turned him into a believer.

Non-Christians did not like Paul because he was a believer in Christ. Christ tells us in The Bible that we Christians will be hated because He (Jesus) was hated. Many persons do not want to confront their sin and so they remain hostile to Christianity.

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8y ago

Paul himself provides very little information about why he persecuted the early Christians or how he came to believe that he was called to be the apostle to the gentiles. He never mentions any divine vision that led to his conversion; in fact his epistles seem to have ruled this out.

Acts of the Apostles, written decades after Paul's death, tells of the young Saul approving of the stoning of Stephen and, although not man enough to participate, holding the cloaks of those who took part in the stoning. There is an implied motive, as he later obtained permission from the priests in Jerusalem to travel to Damascus to persecute the Christians there. It also provides three parallel but different stories in which Jesus appeared to Paul on the road to Damascus.

There are many problems in the account given in Acts of the Apostles. In his epistles, Paul indicates that he had been unknown in the region of Cilicia, yet Acts gives Tarsus as his home town. The story of the trial and stoning of Stephen has surprising parallels to the story of the crucifixion of Jesus in Luke's Gospel and to the stoning of James. We even find that while Paul himself never mentions having been known as Saul, Josephus (Antiquities of the Jews) mentions a Saulus who led a riot in Jerusalem after the stoning of James. According to Raymond E. Brown (An Introduction to the New Testament), we can never verify the martyrdom or even existence of Stephen. The Jerusalem priests had no authority in Damascus and were unlikely to have placed themselves in the position of asserting a claim to authority that would be ignored in Damascus. The accounts of Paul's conversion appear to have been based on the ancient play of Euripedes called the Bacchae - in other words, they were not genuine records of Paul's conversion. Thus, much of the information we receive from Acts of the Apostles may not be entirely reliable.

We can certainly speculate why Saul, or Paul, initially rejected the Christians and why he converted to their cause, and such speculation could well be close to the truth. But speculation it must remain.

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Q: Why did Saul reject Jesus Christ and the Christians?
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Related questions

Who did saul persecute?

Christ-Christians


What relationship did saul have to christ's followers?

Saul hated Christians until he was converted.


Does paul become saul?

No. Saul became Paul because Saul murdered Christians, but when he started following Jesus, Jesus changed his name to Paul.


What did Saul do to the early Christians?

Saul persecuted Christ's followers. (Acts 9:1, 4, 17)


Was Paul Saul aways always a servant of Christ Jesus?

Saul who became Paul was a sworn enemy of jesus first.


What was christ command to Saul's?

Saul was also called Paul which we know him as better. In the book of Acts in chapter 9 it tells of Sauls conversion while travelling to Damascus. Saul was still working against the Christians when he was "intercepted" by Jesus. Jesus asked him why he was persecuting him. After saul was blinded by the light that shone from Jesus, Jesus told him to go into the city where he would receive further instructions. In Damascus a disciple of Christ named Ananias met with Saul (under Jesus's direction) and told him what Jesus told him to say. Saul's blindness was healed and he began preaching the good news about Jesus. In chapter 13, the Holy Spirit told them that Barnabas and Saul were to be set apart for the work to which Jesus had called them. This was the commissioning of Saul to begin preaching Jesus to people full time.


Who is named Saul in Roman times?

The individual first named Saul was alive when the ancient Roman empire occupied Judea. After a religious experience, Saul stopped persecuting Christians and became an apostle of Jesus Christ. He was renamed Paul. Reportedly Paul was executed in Rome.


Did Saul kill Christians?

Saul, who later became known as the apostle Paul, initially persecuted Christians and played a role in the martyrdom of Stephen. However, after experiencing a dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus, he became a fervent follower of Jesus Christ and devoted his life to spreading the gospel.


Who gave Saul authority to arrest Christians?

Saul, later known as the apostle Paul, was given authority by the high priest in Jerusalem to arrest Christians. He believed it was his duty to persecute followers of Jesus, which led to his transformation after a personal encounter with Jesus on the road to Damascus.


Who was Saul jealouse of and tried to kill in the book of the bible?

In Acts, Saul persecutes Christians because he did not believe Jesus was the son of God. He had many Christians killed before he was spoken to by Jesus and was then converted and is now known as St. Paul.


What did Saul believe about Jesus?

Saul / Paul believed Jesus is the Son of God:2Corinthians 1:19 For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who was preached among you by us..............Saul/Paul believed that one day Jesus will return to earth to judge all of mankind:2Timothy 4:1 I charge you therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who will judge the living and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom:Saul/Paul believed that a person is saved/put right with God through faith in Jesus:Galatians 2:16 knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of the law; for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified.1Thessalonians 5:9 For God did not appoint us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ,


Who was known as saul before didicating his life to christ?

Saul's name was changed to Paul after he accepted Jesus as his savior. Paul became an apostle.