Logic is not the way to understand spiritual things! There cannot be more than 12 apostles! Peter calls him only beloved brother.
Hi Rt, "
ONLY beloved brother"
I'm sure you know who/what St. Paul was before he became a Christian and how he persecuted the church prior to his conversion. The very fact that St. Peter would even refer to him as "brother" speaks volumes, but qualifying that with "beloved" tells us just how much he thought of this man and of his ministry. If memory serves, this was St. Peter's only use of the term "
BELOVED brother" in the Bible (and he never referred to anyone directly as, "Apostle").
St. Peter (who was himself rebuked by St. Paul in Galatia ..
Galatians 2:11) taught us that both St. Paul
AND his epistles were to be trusted. No one who wrote what St. Paul did (i.e. - he referred to himself as an Apostle) or how he did (i.e. - with such authority), would have ever been called a "brother" by St. Peter, much less "
beloved", if it wasn't true. St. Peter and St. John (as well many others in Acts), certainly had multiple opportunities to let us know about St. Paul. The good news is, they did (and we read nothing from any of them that would cause us to call into question that he wasn't who he claimed to be).
And we have the testimony of both the Holy Spirit who sent him (i.e.
Acts of the Apostles 13:2) and the Lord Jesus who converted him and called him into His service to begin with (
Acts of the Apostles 9:1-31).
The Lord said to Ananias, “Go, for he [Paul] is a chosen instrument of Mine, to bear My name before the Gentiles and kings and the sons of Israel.” ~Acts 9:15
The word scripture in the NT refers to only the OT verses.
That's not true, as has already been mentioned in this thread, St. Peter calling St. Paul's epistles (which are certainly part of the NT), "Scripture" (
2 Peter 3:15-16). St. Paul also referred to St. Luke's Gospel as such.
Yours and His,
David
p.s. - there is also the testimony of the Early Church Fathers about St. Paul and his Epistles (Clement, Ignatius, and Polycarp all writing what they did in the late 1st to early 2nd centuries).