Jesus did not plead with him.
Paul was so dazzled by the bright light he saw that he fell to the ground. He knew it was God because he asked "who are you LORD?" Then he was told a) that it was Jesus and b) that Paul had been persecuting Jesus, himself. When he got up, Paul was blind; 3 days later someone laid hands on him, said "Jesus sent me to you" and he was healed and baptised.
After ascension Jesus was no longer a suffering Servant. There was no question of pleading words for stopping persecution. Stephen had the right vision. Even the Damascus event that is quoted twice is contradictory.
Paul was interested in preaching Jesus, not promoting
No, he had his own short gospel to preach people who couldn't question him because nothing godly was known to them.
The Son of God chose his disciples and apostles and sent his Spirit to inspire and equip them to preach the Gospel; so my answer is "all of them." Jesus said that if we reject one of his followers, we reject him.
Then there should not have been letters of others contradicting Paul's
I believe Paul AND the rest of the Lord's chosen apostles. I believe that the Spirit of truth would not inspire false teachers or letters from a false teacher to be included in Scripture.
That is man made decision. For about a thousand year, even after canon was fixed by Catholic church, Paul's letters were not given that much importance by Catholics as Protestants do now dishing out new doctrines, dozen by a day with private interpretations.
That wasn't my point.
Previously you have said that Paul knew nothing of the teaching of Jesus - such as the Sermon on the Mount - and implied that it is these teachings of Jesus that save us. I pointed out that John does not include the Sermon on the Mount in his Gospel, nor, in fact, many of the other sayings of Jesus which you appear to believe are so important for salvation. John's Gospel is different from the other 3 because he had a different reason for writing. The same with Paul - he does not include details of Jesus' earthly ministry because this was not his purpose, and focus, in writing. So saying that Paul does not refer to the Sermon on the Mount in his teachings is not a reason to dismiss them.
If you are not taught of the words and life of Jesus, you cannot claim to be a believer in Jesus. That is why we have four books with three similar and the fourth with more of spiritual content.
The Gospel is that Jesus gives us eternal life, John 3:16; that Jesus came to seek and save the lost, Luke 19:10, give his life as a ransom for many, Mark 10:45 and lay down his life for his sheep, John 10:11; that his blood was of the NEW Covenant and was poured out for the forgiveness of sin, Matthew 26:28. The Gospel is that that if you believe in Jesus - which means in all that he said and all that he came to do - you will have eternal life, because Jesus is the only way to God, John 14:6. Whoever has the Son of God has eternal life; whoever does not believe in the Son of God does not have eternal life, John 3:36. John the Baptist said that Jesus was the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world, John 1:29, and the angel told Joseph that Jesus would save people from their sins, Matthew 1:21. Jesus spoke of his own suffering, death and resurrection.
This is the Gospel, as written in the Gospels - and Paul agreed with this and preached Jesus and the cross.
There is no sign of any material from the Gospel books in Paul's. Who is interested in the words of Jesus and His life when Paul guaranteed that acknowledging His birth, death and resurrection will suffice for all--nothing but nominal and hypocritical belief.
What makes you think that?
Paul called them saints; what makes you think that they were only mocking the Christian faith?
That is another worst self-serving statement declaring one is a saint based on belief -- a bad interpretation on Paul.
He wrote his letter to them after he had left them. You don't need to write to someone when you are physically with them.
Either he heard from someone else that there were problems there, or they said so in the letter they wrote to him.
What type of communion observance he had taught them when he was there?
?? That comment has nothing to do with what I asked. My question was, how do you know that Paul didn't teach about Jesus' life and explain who Jesus was when he saw them?
We're not told in Scripture that he did, but we're not told that he didn't - so how do you KNOW that he didn't?
His compromise concepts have led to destructive doctrines, such as, faith alone, Once saved is always saved, self-determination of saint hood, etc.
I'm not interested in quotes from that dubious book; I want you to show me, from Scripture, where Paul contradicted Jesus.
Paul's letters were not written as to be considered scripture. That is man-made assumption for dubious doctrines for easy nominal life of hypocrites.
I never said they would, and, again, that wasn't my point.
You said that if I relied on the Holy Spirit he would remind me of the words of Jesus. I said that he reminded the 12 of the words of Jesus so they could write them down. I wasn't talking about Paul; I was correcting your teaching about the Holy Spirit.
(Incidentally, I'm sure you didn't mean to imply that I don't rely on the Holy Spirit, but that's how it came across.)
Show me in Paul Jesus' words. He has quoted only twice with words that do not belong to Jesus.
Well I could give you references, but you have already decided that anything Paul says were SELF claims. You say that Paul was a saint and chosen by the Son of God, yet you doubt what he wrote and claim that he was only out to promote himself and start a new religion based on him.
I hope you won't be too embarrassed when you have to explain all this to St Paul in heaven.
Then you should accept all the writings of Pope and saints of Catholics too. Paul has already appeared in my dreams indicating he did not distort the Gospel. But his writings prove otherwise.
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