To reproduce and make more people
No. The apostle to the Gentiles was Paul. He was a plain ordinary man chosen by God to tell the Gentiles of the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is described as the "Lamb of God".
Paul taught mostly to Gentiles. Peter was shown in a vision from God that the Gospel was for all men.
A:The Abrahamic God, Yahweh, was the national God of Judah and, perhaps later, of Israel. Foreign people, the gentiles, had their own national gods and would not have been expected to worship him.
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,
gentiles
God has His times and seasons. Actually there were a few Gentiles that received salvation in the Old Testament. Rahab in the Book of Joshua was one and Ruth in the Book of Ruth was another. There were more, but this was the exception to the rule. During Jesus' time on earth more Gentiles are mentioned and then finally when the Jewish people rejected Jesus as the Messiah it was time for the Gentile to be accepted by God on a different basis, although Salvation has always come by faith in God, God created a time when mostly Gentiles could come to Him freely and in great numbers. Salvation to the Gentiles was mentioned in the Old Testament a number of times, but the timing was God's.
God entrusted Paul with the stewardship of the gospel, to proclaim the message of salvation through faith in Jesus Christ to both Jews and Gentiles. Paul saw himself as a servant of God chosen to spread the good news of redemption and reconciliation to the world.
He preached the core message of Jesus - the Kingdom of God.
But they most certainly were and Paul was their specially appointed Apostle by God.
By making an everlasting covenant with them through the blood of Jesus Christ
It is not known how God created plants, but we do know He did create them.
This is a complex theological and philosophical question with differing perspectives. Some believe God created the brain and all things, while others suggest that the concept of God is a product of human brain function and cognitive processes. Ultimately, beliefs about the origins of the brain and the divine are varied and deeply personal.