Paul had to withstand Peter to his face when he lost the guidance of the Holy Spirit
Hello again B'.
You say Peter lost the guidance of the Holy Spirit, so I must ask...did the "thousands at Jerusalem" also loose the guidance of the Holy Spirit? (Acts 21:20)
They were "zealous of the Law", as Peter was trying to be by separating from the Gentiles.
Peter was in that rare confluence(?)( conflux?) of Jewish and Gentile Christianity, and is portrayed as picking the wrong side.
Had the meeting taken place in Jerusalem, hosted by the Jewish believers, would they have been able to accept the Gentiles as equals?
Peter was stuck between a rock and a hard place, and a valuable teaching was brought forth.
...and Paul himself did the same when he insisted in going 'up to Jerusalem' when he was clearly being warned by the Spirit not to do so. He was arrested and imprisoned - the worst thing that could have happened to such a necessary evangelist. The fact that he expected to die shows that he was out of touch with the guidance of the Spirit. And then his behaviour at his trial. I believe he lied when he said that he did not know that his accusor was the chief priest. Paul would know that.
If such was a sin, why did God initially say to Ananias ..."But the Lord said unto him, Go thy way: for he is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the children of Israel:" (Acts 9:15)...
And then have an angel say to Paul..."Saying, Fear not, Paul; thou must be brought before Caesar: and, lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee." (Acts 27:24)
This was Paul's purpose in his new life in Christ, not safety and comfort.
He had yet to speak with kings, but met a few after he was shipped off the Caesarea.
Why does Romans 7 v 22 say that "For I delight in the law of God after the inward man" if the man is an unbeliever?
Paul uses the present-historical tense to relate a story of his previous life as a Jewish seeker of God. A Pharisee who couldn't do what he wanted in regard to Godliness. A man trapped in the flesh, and warring against the law of sin and death. (A law he was freed from by the law of the Spirit in Christ Jesus. Rom 8:2)
He is narrating what he went through before casting off the flesh to walk in the Spirit.
Good question though.