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A good introductory point to this topic is Proverbs 12:10 (NIV) which says "the LORD condemns a crafty man." We read similarly in Psalm 5:6: " deceitful men the LORD abhors." And finally, âCursed is he who doeth the work of the LORD deceitfully.â Jeremiah 48:10. Cf. Rev. 14:5: "And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without fault before the throne of God."
What kind of teacher was Paul, by his own admission? Did Paul ever say he used deceit (guile) and used craftiness to capture disciples? We shall see.
In Jesus was "no guile."
Jesus âleft us an example, that we should follow His steps: who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth.â (1 Peter 2:21-22)(ASV.)
What if Jesus ever spoke the words "I was crafty, and captured you with guile (deception)"? Wouldn't we think then Jesus was a sinner, and could not be of God? Wouldn't we conclude that if Jesus had truly said such a thing that Jesus would be cursed by God pursuant to Jeremiah 48:10? We would be compelled to abandon Jesus if he ever made such an outrageous statement that "I was crafty and captured you with guile / deception."
But then Paul says the same thing in 2 Cor. 12:16 which we would be revulsed if Jesus had said it, but we just accept it from Paul:
But be it so, I did not myself burden you; but, being crafty, I caught you with guile. (2 Cor. 12:16, ASV.)
A similar end-justifies the means attitude by Paul toward lying for the gospel is found here: "For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory; why yet am I also judged as a sinner?â Romans 3:7 KJV.
Paul means that if "my lie" has advanced God's truth, then "my lie" is no sin. What kind of Gospel can ever be based upon a lie?
This verse of Romans 3:7 has had a negative impact on even the translators who claim to be Christian on translating this very same verse. Out of sheer embarassment, the NIV alone among every other translation adds "Some may argue" in front of the verse -- thereby removing "my lie" from Paul's mouth, and putting it in some unknown's mouth.
As evangelical Christian Ray Stedman says in Reason to Rejoice: Love, Grace, and Forgiveness in Paul's Letter to the Romans (Discovery House, 2016) at this link:
"Translators of the New International Version erred by adding the phrase that is not in the original Greek text "Someone might argue...." The New King James renders it more accurately:
For if the truth of God has increased through my lie unto his glory, why am I judged a sinner?"
No Greek manuscript supports the NIV's alteration, as Stedman says. Nor does the NIV claim a variant as support in a footnote, as it often does, when it is relying upon a variant. The NIV has used its full authority to make us all think Paul did not actually express these words himself; it was someone else's hypothetical argument. What could be the justification?
The NIV itself necessarily must believe it commits no sin on us when it misleadingly translated this verse. Why? Because if guile is no sin for Paul to advance the Gospel, it is no sin for the NIV to change the verse to protect Paul from even justified criticism. We simply cannot have that, and thus are authorized by Paul to change verses to maintain Paul's credibility even though the change itself is utterly unwarranted. For more examples from the NIV doing so, see Mistranslations to Protect Paul. (Link to Come)
It should be noted that Romans 3:7 in the KJV's correct translation, Paul's meaning is clear. For Paul's point in context is to defend God authors evil, and does sometimes use evil to advance His truth. Thus, verse 7 is 100% pure Paul. Here is the proof.
If you read Romans 3:5-8, Paul begins by claiming "our unrighteousness God doth establish" -- so God authors our "unrighteous" behavior. (Verse 5.) This, for us as Spirit-filled Christians, should be seen as a repulsively evil blasphemy of God by Paul, but Paul will defend it.
Paul goes on and tells you how some criticize his view. Paul says the "manner of men" criticizes this by arguing that God would be "unrighteous" to inflict "wrath" on us for doing the very same "unrighteousness" that God made us perform. Then Paul rebuts this very valid point that God cannot judge us still guilty of sin if He made us do the sin by 2 arguments:
First, Paul says if it were so, "how shall God judge the world?" (no one would be punished for evil, implying God must remain innocent even though he makes us do evil).
Second, Paul utters the words at issue in verse 7 -- that the same unrighteousness (that God compels) can be justified when done to make God's truth "abound" -- "for if the truth of God in my falsehood did more abound to His glory, why yet am I as a sinner judged." This proves, Paul believes, it is not necessarily wrong for God to compel unrighteous behavior like lying when it is justified, such as a supposedly just lie.
Then the proof that verse 7 is Paul's own words rather than a hypothetical opponent's words is that in verse 8 Paul says that verse 7 is how he would word it, contrasted against "and not, as we are evil spoken of, and certain affirm we say - 'We may do the evil things, that the good may come."
Incidentally, I would say Paul says something far worse in verse 7 than his accusers claimed he said in verse 8. They merely said Paul says he sows evil in the hope good comes. But Paul defends that he does unrighteous lies that are no sins, and so why is he judged a sinner? He diffuses -- he thinks -- the claim -- that he says -let's do evil to see good come- by affirming what he truly defends is in verse 7 -- God's righteousness is advanced by lies sometimes, and that cannot be sin. Hence, verse 7 is a clear corrective to what Paul says is a false accusation in verse 8. Verse 7 is in Paul's mind the true way he wants it known that he defends lying - when it advances God's kingdom.
Romans 3:7 is not isolated. Paul elsewhere speaks of lies being a means of spreading the gospel: âWhat then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is preached; and in this I rejoice, yes, and will rejoice.â Philippians 1:18.
The Infinite Truth project ably comments on this verse:
Forgiving all his sins prior to his self-proclaimed conversion, let us ponder on the philosophy on which Paul preached. In Philippians Chapter 1, Verse 18: âBut what does it matter? The important thing is that in every way, whether from false motives or true, Christ is preached. And because of this I rejoice.â Paul clearly does not care if you go by evil means to spread the message of Christ, so long as people hear of Christ. ("Paul: Apostle or Heretic?" Infinite Truth Project (3/3/2016).)
An example of such pretense was Paul having Timothy circumcised in Acts 16:3, even though Paul said that if a believer became circumcised that Christ would profit him nothing. Evidently, Paul had Timothy circumcised as a pretense to curry favor with Christians who felt it necessary, and not from an honest belief it was ever necessary. As the Infinite Truth Project also astutely commented on that development:
And as a teacher, Paul showed some of his own hypocrisy. While keeping in mind Paulâs attitude towards circumcision found in Rom 2:25-27, 1 Cor 7:17-20, Gal 5:2-4, and Gal 6:12-15, we can see that Paul himself circumcised Timothy [Acts 16:3], even though Christ would profit him nothing. [Gal 5:2] Id.
Even Jerome in the 400s raised Paul's actions with Timothy as proof of the very same "deceitful dissimulation" that Paul accused Peter of in Galatians. Jerome also cited as another such example Paul's behavior of taking vows to shave his head in Acts 21 to appear Law-obedient when asked by James to prove he does not teach against the Law. Jerome wrote:
"Oh...Paul...why then did you cause Timothy to be circumcised contrary to your own convictions?...I ask you again Paul, why did you shave your head? ....We have thus seen that for fear of the Jews...Paul pretended that [he] observed the precepts of the Law." (Quoted in Agenor Etienne Gasparin, The Concessions of the Apostle Paul, and the Claims of Truth (1854) at 57.)
How instead should a follower of Jesus interpret Paul's statement in 2 Cor. 12:16 -- "being crafty, I caught you with guile"? We will prove this means we need to eject Paul from our minds and Bibles as an authority as his presence destroys the integrity of Scripture.
Also, we are fundamentally required to do so by our Lord's words. Jesus tells us the father of Paul's lies to a spiritual community was Satan. Jesus even explains this in John 8:44 in a way that brings Paul to mind because Paul too was a "murderer from the beginning..." as Luke depicts Paul in Acts 9:7:
You belong to your father, the devil, and you want to carry out your fatherâs desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, not holding to the truth, for there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and the father of lies. (John 8:44 NIV)
Paul was listening to Satan, our Lord says, and Paul in common with Satan was a "murderer from the beginning." One may even ask whether Jesus again was giving a subtle warning to us about Paul when we put two and two together.
To prove Paul's presence in the "Bible" destroys the Bible's trustworthiness, we will demonstrate how Paulinists defend Paul's use of guile. We will show you their explanation of how they justify Paul using intentional double-speak. Paul's agenda was, according to Luther and others, to get faith alone sold to the masses, and displace the gospel given by the 12--a defunct gospel these Paulinists assert. To do this, Paul had to use guile, but this goal supposedly justifies the means. This rationale has a familiar ring? The end supposedly justifies the means.
However, the Christ-centered response is that it is destructive of our Savior's message to keep such a voice alongside our Savior as any trustworthy authority. If we rationalize Paul can legitimately deceive us, and this is accepted to justify accepting a different Gospel than Jesus truly preached, then we will be permitting Paul's guileful tactic to rationalize destruction of the path to righteousness---the WAY Jesus taught. No man comes to the Father but by Jesus and His Principles. Thus we cannot let Paul draw us from the Way by guile to listen to a different voice than our Savior's.
As Gasparin wrote in 1854 in The Concessions of the Apostle Paul about such accomodating principles that such principles are self-destructive. They represent a "system of dogmatics in which truth has no absolute value, in which there are as many truths as apostles" which renders the Bible's truths "entirely broken;" it represents "quicksand [where] we have no longer any assurance of anything." Id. at 63.
Thus, when Paul's principles of duplicity to feign a view are accepted as a Biblical morality, as most seminary trained pastors do (and it is a literally valid reading), such principles destroy the entire Bible. For now nothing about what it stands for can be trusted as true because we accept as Bibically valid that nothing Paul teaches can be trusted as really true. We simply will each choose to trust what we surmise was the purpose of Paul's self-contradictory talk. It all becomes subjective, and what you prefer it means. Paul is the leaven that ruins the whole loaf.
Paul admits he was often being deceptive. Paul distinctly says, âbeing crafty, I caught you with guileâ (2 Cor. 12:16.) In Greek, "guile" is DOLOS and means Paul used "bait" like one craftily or cunningly uses to deceptively trick a fish to nibble, and then you have caught it on your hook.
For DOLOS means literally the word BAIT. This is the link to the Perseus Tuft definition of DOLOS.
Then you click Middle Liddell to find the correct Greek meaning. The Liddell is the best Greek dictionary, and it is free at that link. Here is what it says DOLOS means:
Jesus spoke in condemnation of such tactics by men He called "Hypocrites!" These men were the Pharisees. Then consider Paul counted himself still a member of the Pharisees after becoming a Christian: "My brothers, I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee...." Acts 23:6.
Paulâs self-professed guile compounds itself when he tells the Thessalonians to the contrary: âFor our exhortation was not of deceit, nor of uncleanness, nor in guile.â (1 Thess. 2:3.) Which way is it Paul? Honesty or guile? You cannot even decide! Are you truthful here, or merely more guile?
As a result, Paulinists delight and exalt in Paul being duplicitous, fully admitting he quotes Bible passages out of context, speaks contradictorily, and misleads the reader to think he endorses the Law, repentance and obedience for salvation so as to deflect the criticism from the 12. But all the while these Paulinists admit Paul is merely opening the door for a different gospel, and that is his real agenda. Paulâs record of all such crafty arguments is admiringly reviewed and defended in a book by the evangelical Mark D. Given entitled Paulâs True Rhetoric: Ambiguity, Cunning, and Deception in Greece and Rome (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press International, 2002)
Givenâs book is even highly praised in mainstream Biblical journals. For example, see the favorable review in Samuel Byrskog, âPaulâs True Rhetoric: Ambiguity, Cunning, and Deception in Greece and Rome,â Journal of Biblical Literature (December 31, 2002).
This characteristic in Paul has a long history of recognition and praise by both Erasmus (1466-1536) of Holland and by Luther.
Erasmus was the first European reformer in the early 1500s. He recognized Paulâs use of cunning and deception. Erasmus said in glowing terms that Paul in Romans uses âpious cunning and holy flattery.â Erasmus elsewhere similarly says: âThis apostle of ours is always skillful and slippery...such a squid, such a chameleon â he plays the part of Proteus or Vertumnus.â This quote is found in Holy Scripture Speaks: The Production and Reception of Erasmusâ Paraphrases of the New Testament (ed. Hilmar M. Pabel & Mark Vessey) (University of Toronto Press, 2002) at 105.
FYI: âErasmus, the greatest scholar of that age, had at first sympathized with Luther...[b]ut when Erasmus perceived that Lutherâs teachings, instead of reforming, produced confusion, disorder and threatened to undermine society itselfâ he backed off. (Stang, The Life of Martin Luther (Pustet, 1883) at 53.)
One would imagine that if Paul used deception it would prove embarrassing to those who admired Paul. Yet, Mr. Given finds Paulâs guile as something praiseworthy. Paul was presenting a âmysterious...and finally sophistic God who cares enough to be cunning and is devoted enough to be deceptive.â (Given, Paul's True Rhetoric (2002), supra at 181.)
Double-Yuck!
Paul taught us the example to accommodate Gentiles when around Gentiles and to act like a Jew around Jews.
"For though I am free from all men, I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win the more; and to the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might win Jews; to those who are under the law, as under the law, that I might win those who are under the law; to those who are without the law as without law... that I might win those who are without law; to the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some." 1Corinthians 9:19-22
"Therefore, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God. Give no offense, either to the Jews or to the Greeks or to the church of God, just as I also please all men in all things, not seeking my own profit, but the profit of many, that they may be saved. Imitate me, just as I also imitate Christ." 1Corinthians 10:31-33
Again, can anyone imagine Jesus / Yahshua playing chameleon and saying anything like "I have become all things to all men" or "I please all men in all things" as does Paul? But clearly this was Paul's tactical use of guile to gain followers -- deceiving Jews by keeping the outside of the cup clean by obeying Jewish laws and deceiving Gentiles by appearing to countenance their behaviors when around them as well.
Paul's avowed principles and behavior could not be a godly person who was following Christ. As Gasparin wrote in 1854 in The Concessions of Apostle Paul:
"If the apostles habitually gave themselves the license of appearing different from what they really were, and if they taught the distinction between those truths which it was necessary to maintain and those which may be sacrificed or disguised, it follows that God Himself sanctions two principles, against which His whole revelation protests, namely, that the claims of truth are not absolute, and that we may do evil that good may come!" Id. at 60.
Based upon this, Gasparin sought a solution -- we must reconcile Paul as pro-Law, as Jesus was, and that Paul only meant to reject the Pharisees' changes and additions to the Law. Id. at 41. Otherwise, our faith falls to ruins as self-contradictory and built on deception by even our Savior who said the Law would continue until heaven and earth pass away.
Yet, Paul is certainly clear in support of an anti-Law position as an opposing conclusion to what Gasparin proposed. See Romans 7:1-11 for the clearest exposition. See also chapter 5 of JWO.
Yet, Gasparin's premise was correct - if Paul's words are taken literally on the issue of the Law, as they are by most evangelical Christians and all Catholics, it destroys the credibility of the Bible, including of Jesus. No one of any weight ever has accepted Gasparin's solution to the problem texts -- to substitute for "Law" the oral law and oral traditions.
Gasparin's solution fails because Paul expressly endorsed using guile and deception to conform to Law principles when around those who were "weak" about thinking the Mosaic law continued. This was most notoriously clear in Paul's words on eating idol meat (which he allowed unless you were around someone who was "weak" and thought the Law ... a Mosaic law against eating such meat..still applied). As a result, Paul gave us a gospel of lawless accomodation to any level of morality, low or high. Gasparin's solution could not win out because it is a false solution itself: Paul endorsed deception and guile to appear law-compliant around those who thought the Law -- the written Law-- still was in effect.
Gasparin would make us all deluded deceivers, contending Paul consistently teaches whatever position we want Paul to endorse. Paul is a chameleon, and thus anyone who insists Paul is a true inspired authority becomes an unwitting accessory to deception by insisting they only see one viewpoint in Paul -- one camp claiming faith alone and the other faith and works, or one camp saying a life without God's original law is ok but another camp saying it still applies, such as sabbath.
More importantly, the view Paul is an inspired voice is a destructive seed of the most important part of canon of all -- the words of Christ -- destroying anyone seriously taking Jesus' words about the necessity of repentance from sin, of sending to hell those who called him Lord but did not do charity to his servants, and so on. Why? Because this view about Paul allows them to justify by subtle manipulation of words to make Jesus sound like Paul that a one-time faith Jesus died for your sins (1 Cor. 15:1-4) guarantees salvation, which is thereby never imperilled again by salvation (thereby "accommodating Jesus to Paul's principles").
Sadly, Paul was used by Luther in the early stages of the German Reformation to justify hypocritical tactics to promote the 'gospel' of Paul. Luther recognized that Paul advanced his faith-alone gospel by means of what were kindly dubbed pious frauds. Paul would often affirm the opposite of salvation by faith alone, matching Jesusâ salvation formula. Yet, Paulâs ulterior goal (and hence allegedly his supposedly laudable goal) was cunningly to slip in the teaching of salvation by faith alone as the superior message.
Also in combination with such sophist plays, Paul would frequently mangle quotes from the Bible, distorting their meaning to the opposite of what they said in their original context, plus adding and changing words -- but it was supposedly justified because it proved his gospel of faith alone. See Paul Misquotes of Holy Scripture. (Link to Come)
In line with those proofs, Erasmus said in The Praise of Folly (1509) that Paul engages in such conduct, and is our support for such similar "foolishness " (which Erasmus I hope was pretending to praise.) Erasmus -- one of the leading reformers of the Reformation -- explains:
But why do I insist upon any one particular example, when in general it is the public charter of all divines, to mould and bend the sacred oracles till they comply with their own fancy, spreading them (as Heaven by its Creator) like a curtain, closing together, or drawing them back, as they please? Thus indeed St. Paul himself minces and mangles some citations he makes use of, and seems to wrest them to a different sense from what they were first intended for, as is confessed by the great linguist, St. Hierom.
[See link, and word-search for this quote.]
In other words, you find the early reformers admitted Paul used guile in how he distorted the Bible. It is legitimate folly. They also praise Paul when he seemingly appeared for a moment to repeat Jesusâ message of faith and works. They said Paul advanced Jesusâ message of salvation by works and obedience only as a tactic to disarm the twelve apostles and James (the Lordâs brother) who suspected Paul was, in fact, retreating from Christâs doctrine.
Luther recognized several passages showed Paul was working against the apostolic twelve and their view that works-worthy-of-repentance matters for salvation. Paul often intimates the twelve apostles and James â the bishop whom the twelve appointed over Jerusalem â were the opponents of Paul's gospel. See Gal. 2:6 (apostles âimparted nothing to meâ); Gal. 2:9 (referring to Peter, John and James, Paul sneers at them, saying they only âseemed to be pillarsâ); Gal. 2:11-14 (âcondemnsâ Apostle Peter before âthem allâ); 2 Cor. 11:12-23, viz. verse 13 (âfashioning themselves into apostles of Christâ understood as allusion to the twelve being âfalse apostlesâ). See discussion in my prior work, Jesusâ Words Only (2007) at 336.
After reviewing these passages in Galatians, Luther justifies Paulâs disarming behavior in Lutherâs commentary on Galatians chapter two. Luther embraces the idea that Paul was seeing the twelve apostles as false apostles from whom Paul (Luther implies) correctly desired to learn nothing. The twelve were advancing Jesusâ conditional gospel, and hence Paul saw them (correctly, according to the young Luther) as the enemies of the (supposedly true) unconditional gospel that Paul brought later. Luther writes:
Paul here explains his motive for going up to Jerusalem. He did not go to Jerusalem to be instructed or confirmed in his Gospel by the other apostles. [Gal. 2:6, the twelve apostles âimparted nothing to me.â] He went to Jerusalem in order to preserve the true Gospel for the Galatian churches and for all the churches of the Gentiles. When Paul speaks of the truth of the Gospel he implies by contrast a false gospel. The false apostles also had a gospel, but it was an untrue gospel. âIn holding out against them,â says Paul, âI conserved the truth of the pure Gospel....The false gospel has it that we are justified by faith, but not without the deeds of the Law. The false apostles preached a conditional gospel.â (Martin Luther, Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians (1535) (trans. Theodore Graebner)(Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1949) at 48-60.)
Luther must be correct that Paul viewed the twelve as false apostles for advancing Jesusâ conditional gospel as still valid. This perfectly explains why we find in Romans that Paul AT FIRST endorsed the Law and salvation by works (Romans 2:6-7; 3:31;7:12) and in Acts 26:20 Paul's says his message to Gentiles -- hence his gospel -- was "repentance, turning to God and works worthy of repentance" â matching clearly Jesusâ doctrine of salvation in the Gospel of Matthew.
Specifically, in Romans 2:6-7 (KJV) Paul affirms unquestionably the key component that good works plays in salvation as Jesus taught the rich young ruler in Matthew's Gospel and in Jesus' statement "every tree without good fruit is cut down and thrown in the fire" (Matt. 7:19). Paul says:
Who will render to every man according to his deeds: 7To them who by patient continuance in well doing [i.e., ERGA AGATHA -- "Good works"] seek for glory and honour and immortality, eternal life:
[See Eerdman's Dictionary at 1387 on "Works" in 2:6-7 - erga, meaning "human activity" / "works"; see Bible.org, confesses 2:7 means "good works"; see also Biblos Greek - although it admits 'erga' is noun, it renders as gerund-verb form of 'doing.' See also Greek NT in transliterated form here.]
Indeed, in Romans 2:6-7 we find the conditional gospel of the 12, in particular the Gospel they quoted from Jesus in Matthew's Gospel. Paul says God will repay you for your deeds, and if you patiently do good deeds, God will render you "eternal life."
But in a short span, Paul will take that all back. The most emphatic is Romans 4:3-5 (KJV) -- which was the key passage upon which Luther built the faith-alone-without-works doctrine. Paul says there:
3For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. 4Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. 5But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.
As commonly interpreted by faith-alone advocates, this teaches that Abraham was "ungodly" when he had his first faith, and this faith alone justified him (saved him by grace), but he "worketh not." This is construed to mean good works including repentance were not involved in Abraham's justification (salvation). This is our supposed model, regardless of what Jesus taught, and thus Paul is understood (and I believe this is the correct reading of Paul) to be teaching in Romans 4:3-5:
How do Paulinists reconcile this obvious use of guile between Romans 2:7 and Romans 4:5? We read one example:
Good works please God (Romans 2:7), and yet they are not faith (Romans 4:5). ("Is Obeying God the same as Trusting God" (2011).)
[Archivist's note: original URL is here: http://contendforthefaith2.com/romans45.html This page is no longer available, and was not captured by the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.]
Yet, Romans 2:7 does not say that "good works please God...." No! It says "good works" are what you do patiently, and then God rewards you with "eternal life." So some Paulinists blind themselves so they do not have to confront the fact Paul used guile to affirm a truth he later disproves. Paul clearly used 2:7 to disarm the counter-attack of the 12 apostles or their allies, and once disarmed, he bombed them with Romans 4:5 to destroy their conditional Gospel -- the Gospel handed to them by Jesus Himself.
Incidentally, Paul in Romans 4:3-5 relies upon a Septuagint Greek mistranslation from 247 BC of the Hebrew of Gen. 15:6. The original passage, as it even reads in the KJV of Gen. 15:6 is: "And he believed in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness." Well, the second 'he' is interpolated to open up the possibility the second 'he' is not Abraham. However, in Hebrew there is no second 'he,' and instead the subject of the first clause -- Abraham -- is the intended subject of the second verb 'to count.' So it actually reads "he believed in the Lord and counted it to Him [i.e., God] as righteousness." (See our webpages where this is discussed: JWOS ch. 26 part 7.)
Hence, Abraham believed God about the promise of a child in old age (promised in the preceding verse - 15:5) and counted God's promise as righteousness toward Abraham. There is thus nothing here about salvation/justification when one reads the original Hebrew of Gen. 15:6.
Regardless, the point is that Paul in Romans 2:6-7 affirms salvation includes a component of good works, but in Romans 4:2-5 Paul denies that and says justification comes to the ungodly without any good works, and solely hinges on belief.
Hence, the double-speak of Romans 2:6-7 would throw off the original twelve. That passage makes it harder to isolate Paul's contrary doctrine as his true position and hence made arguing against Paul virtually impossible or very difficult. Paul's defenders always could, and still do, cite the verses that conform to Jesus, while they privately know Paul does not stick with that view, and later unravels that view. They realize and defend this tactic among themselves as a purposeful and God-serving tactic of guile. They can beat back your criticism with some verses where Paul endorses Jesus' doctrine on salvation, the law, etc., but then squirm away in their own minds that it is necessary to use such guile then and even today to defeat those who follow Jesus' teachings on salvation. In the die-hard Paulinist mind, Jesus' teachings in the flesh are defunct, and part of a prior dispensation; only Paul supposedly carries the resurrected Jesus' message for the current dispensation. See our article, "Examples of Paulinism." (Link to Come)
Another example of Paul's guile is Paulâs contradictory positions on the Law given Moses. First, Paul affirms belief in the Law given Moses. (Romans 3:31;7:12; Acts 24:14.) In particular, in Romans 3:31 (KJV), we read:
Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law.
Why did Paul initially affirm these truths only to undercut them later in Romans (as we shall see)? The gospel text by Matthew was circulating contemporaneously with Paulâs writings. Paul in Romans 3;31 had disarmed the twelveâs anticipated opposition that Paul was changing Jesus's view of the Law, so Paul NEXT slips in gradually and later strongly in the same epistle that the death of Christ put to death the bond of Israel to the Law which makes the Law now dead to us. We are now free to marry another without the bond to the old Law. (Romans 7:1-7. See our extensive commentary on Romans 7:1-7.)
Because of the pro-law passages in Romans 3:31, 7:12; Acts 24:14, faith-alone advocates can say Paul was âslanderously reported to be an Antinomianâ [i.e., one who teaches the Law given Moses is abrogated]. (Edward Fisher, The Marrow of Modern Divinity (Boston: John Bryce: 1766) at ii.)
But nothing is more clear in Paulâs writing than that he taught the Law given Moses, including the Sabbath command (one of the Ten Commandments), was abrogated. See, Ephesians 2:15, Colossians 2:14, 2 Cor. 3:11-17, Romans 7:1-7; 7:13 et seq, and Galatians 3:19 et seq. For full discussion, see my prior book, Jesusâ Words Only (2007) at 83 et seq.
Hence, again, Paulinists can say Paul is not Anti-Law / Antinomian by citing some pro-Law verses. But when they think they have the 'laugh' on you, they reaffirm to themselves and their followers that of course Paul believed the Law is dead and gone. I assure you though, the last laugh will be on them -- and tragically so.
Unfortunately, Paulâs example and words have had a tragic impact on Christian morals. Use of guile in argumentation became a revered principle of Roman Catholicism. Paulâs verse that he used âguileâ was proof enough for Aquinas that âguileâ (deceit) âis no sin.â (Summa Theologica Art. 4:1.)
Yet, Godâs position in all of this is ignored: âGuile is in the heart of them that think evil things.â (Prov.12:20.) The one who slays with âguileâ shall die. (Exodus 21:14.) Most ironic of all â because Paul in Romans 4:7 only quotes the first half of this verse to prove imputed righteousness by faith alone â Psalm 32:2 says: âBlessed is the man unto whom Yahweh imputeth not iniquity, And in whose spirit there is no guile.â There it is again! The righteous â the ones without guile â are the ones to whom God will impute no prior sin based on atonement! You would deliberately have to twist that verse around so that a person with guile has no sin imputed to him!
Luther was tragically defending that when Paul admits he used guile to capture the Gentiles that this justifies Christian pastors to use double-speak. Many of Paulâs writings never allowed you to pin him down to a decisive criticism of abandoning Christâs doctrines unless you were willing to call him an out and out liar. Paul did this by using double-speak. Many faith-alone adherents still follow this model, and it takes careful dissection of their words to find their inconsistencies.
One problem with thinking an inspired person can talk with guile is that it leads to a dissolution of the integrity of Scripture. If you can explain away Paul whenever his teaching becomes demonstrably false / inconsistent with Jesus by admitting he was simply lying under inspiration, why would this not apply to everything Paul said? For example, even if Paul intended a doctrine to be followed, a Bible-based argument can always be that Paul was simply lying again.
For example, Luther and Calvin each insisted Paul says in Romans 13:1-3 that a Christian must accept tyrants as Godâs agents and thus a Christian must never seek revolution (even though Peter in Acts 5:29 speaks to the contrary). However, during the year 1776, colonial ministers who favored revolution said Paul did not mean what he said. In 1776, in a famous sermon Pastor West said as to Romans 13:1-3 that he âhad to conclude that the apostle Paul meant the opposite of what he said.â (Quoted in Frazer, Political Theology of America's Founding (2006)(referenced at this link.) Westâs argument that Paul in effect LIED won the day among the religious colonial revolutionaries. (West's words on the right of Revolution later appear verbatim in the Declaration of Independence.)
Thus, an entire countryâs origin, spiritually speaking, relies on saying Paul lied, which justified rejecting Paulâs express guidance and then going ahead into revolt! (We could revolt based upon Acts 5:29 and passages in OT on resisting oppression. We did not have to affirm Paul was a pious fraudster to do so as the colonialists chose to do to resolve the spiritual dilemma Paul presented.)
This historical episode illustrates clearly the ongoing danger of Paulâs presence in inspired scripture. His presence destroys the integrity of ever taking anything God says as true. It may be all a lie like when Paul says one thing but means the opposite about faith-and-works.
Yet, recognizing Paul sometimes lies has been the only intelligible means for some who follow Paul's faith alone view to reject Paulâs just as clearly expressed view of the following:
But against these verses are raised the crystal clear explanations by Paul that works do not profit at all, obedience to the Law can never save (even severs us from Christ to attempt to perform), and salvation is like Abraham's -- faith alone on a man supposedly who was an ungodly sinner / unrepentant at the moment he had faith. (Eph. 2:8-9; Romans 4:4-5). The foundation of Luther's Reformation turned on one unequivocal sentence:
"He who works not but believes on the one who justifies the ungodly (note: not the repentant) is being accounted with the faithfulness of Him unto righteousness." (Romans 4:4-5.)
Paul emphasized later in Romans that to gain this covering, one need only express belief once and one is saved forever. (Romans 10:9.) And compare and contrast 1 Cor. 15:1-5 where Paul says you must "keep steadfastly in mind" the belief Jesus died for sins and rose from the dead, and you "shall be saved." Either way, no ethical obedienc to God is ever insisted upon for salvation - at total odds with Jesus' teachings. (Mark 9:42-47 - believer ensnared in sin has two choices: heaven maimed by stern repentance or go to hell whole / unmaimed.)
Then of course, any conditionality in ongoing good works / obedience/ repentance is erased by piling on top of these principles all the eternal security verses in Paul. Thus all the contrary bullet points above disappear into oblivion.
As a result, Paulinists teach if you make even one command, one act, or any effort at repentance, a requirement in addition to faith for salvation, Paul teaches you are lost! "But if you add something you have cancelled it out.â (R.B. Thieme Jr., Doctrine of Grace: Eternal Security (May 19, 1988) lesson 814.)
Consequently, no explanation of these conflicting messages is necessary for us dumb-folk by those who preach faith alone based upon Paul. Why?
Because Paulinists believe their man justifiably uses guile to gain adherents to his point of view of faith alone. The Paulinist who is aware of the deceit too can play the same game, and boldly deny they 'see' the contradiction. They will straight-face insist these statements in the bullet-point list above are all compatible 'if you understand the full-context.'
What they refuse to admit is these are self-contradictory doctrines by Paul because they do not want to admit what they privately believe: Paul spoke the bullet points as guile to draw you into an opposite gospel. The unconditional gospel as Luther identified it. A gospel Luther identified as opposite of the conditional gospel of the supposedly 'false apostles' i.e., the 12 still laboring under the belief that Jesus's words in the flesh were still part of the current dispensation of the church.
It begs all credulity that Paulinists can treat Paul as inspired when he talks like this. We supposedly know he is inspired when he talks one way, but somehow we just know he is uninspired and lying when he says things that support an opposing view. This is simply a subjective hermeneutic. If applied to true Biblical passages, such thinking that God can speak in contradictions undermines taking any passage specifically in one direction if there is a less costly and more attractive cost-free alternative. We just follow the easy way, not the Way that Jesus said involved "agonizing" effort to enter. (Luke 13:24, Greek agonozai, tepidly translated as 'strive' in the KJV.)
Then what instead should have been the response from a follower of Christ?
When we see someone using double-speak to maneuver around Jesusâ message given the 12, then this should have raised an alarm. When Paulinists admit Paul quotes the Master with âextreme rarityâ and came with a âfifth gospelâ wholly devoid of what is in the other four, a red flag also should have gone up. Finally, we should have immediately questioned the supposition of apostleship and inspiration of one engaging in what everyone (Paulinists included) admits is duplicity â a clear pattern of bait-and-switch.
A theologian once addressed the identical issue of how we must assess someone like this. When there are indications that someone is fraudulently trying to pawn off his words as inspired and as part of the Bible, we must pause. Speaking of a passage at the end of the Torah that speaks of Moses' death written by an author other than Moses, Rawlinson says this cannot be inspired scripture. In this context, Rawlinson expresses a valid principle. Rawlinson says if one engages in âimpudent fraudâ to âpalm [off] on the world a gross and elaborate deception... [that is,] to obtain for his statements a weight and authority which they otherwise would not be entitled,â such duplicity should destroy âour confidence in the integrity of the author.â (George Rawlinson, âOn the Genuineness and Authenticity of the Pentateuch,â Aids to Faith: A Series of Theological Essays (Ed. William Thomson, D.D.) (N.Y.: Appleton & Co., 1863) at 273, 279.)
Similarly, while deception by Paul may be excused by Givens and others devoted to Paul, we should have instead lost all sense of confidence in Paulâs integrity if the case for guile be proven. And that case is impossible to deny. As Thomas Cosette recently wrote: âPaulâs teachings use the most double-minded expressions of thought and practice there is.â (Thomas L. Cosette, Hebrew Prophecies of the Coming of Paul (2007) at 37.)
When that is the inescapable conclusion, then how can we selectively pick verses to follow at odds with Jesus unless we are totally being subjective in our analysis? Arenât we just picking verses from Paul solely because they conform to our predilection of an easy path even when at odds with Jesus? Aren't we favoring the easiest possible gospel to sell? Isnât it human sensual thinking therefore that impels this desire for the easy way over the way that Jesus taught which He said requires âagonizingâ effort to enter?
God is not amused by these developments. Paulinists may assume they can never be judged by the principles of repentance, good works, obedience, ongoing fear from sinning, or that charity is the most important virtue. They think they can insist Paul cunningly put those standards forth to throw off the âfalse [twelve] apostles.â Paul was supposedly acting with proper guile by pretending to endorse salvation principles based on faith-and-works, repentance and obedience in Romans 2:6-7; 3:31; 7:12; 8:13;11:20-22; Philippians 2:12-13; 1 Corinthians 4:2-5; 13:2,13; 2 Corinthians 7:9-10; Ephesians 5:6-7; Acts 26:20, and Galatians 5:19-20; 6:7-9, etc.
While Paulinists may think they will get away arguing this way with God, they are deluding themselves. God will never tolerate the idea that Paul could defend the allegedly true faith-alone gospel by deception and guile. God never could be the source of such bait-and-switch tactics.
Or will God instead excuse the Paulinists because Paul had signs and wonders? Was it truly reasonable to assume Paul spoke from God because Paul was confirmed by âsigns and wondersâ? Indeed, Paul repeatedly defended himself from charges he brought a false gospel by insisting âsigns and wondersâ were the âsigns of the apostlesâ that he enjoyed. (2 Cor. 12:12. See also Romans 15:19 âsigns and wondersâ validated himself.)
In other words, if signs and wonders are what Paul relied upon himself to prove his own validity, then will God have to accept that from you why you relied upon Paul? Will such an excuse protect you as a Paulinist if it turns out your confidence in Paul was misplaced?
Absolutely not! Jesus will respond to the die-hard Paulinists that He already said the âfalse prophetâ would come âin my nameâ with âsigns and wonders to deceive, if possible, the elect.â (Mark 13:22-23; Luke 21:8.)
In fact, signs and wonders are precisely what God allows false prophets to have in order to test the faithfulness of His people â to determine whether he or she loves God with his or her whole heart, mind and soul. (Deut. 13:1-5.) The key question, God insists, is not whether the would-be prophet has âsigns and wondersâ but whether such a pretender seeks to âseduce you from the way you were commanded to follow in the Law (given Moses).â (Deut. 13:3.)
As Tyndale says, this issue is whether such a pretender âjuggles with [true] Scripture, and beguiles the people with false interpretations.â (Obedience of a Christian Man.) If so, God commands you to ignore such a would-be prophet despite verifiable âsigns and wonders.â
What borders on the bizarre is that many Paulinists are admitting Paul is a deceptive lying teacher to advance a gospel at odds with the pre-Ascension-Jesusâ gospel but yet Paul has the superior gospel. Jesus must be scratching His head in wonderment. How did these Paulinists ever rationalize their final position of faith alone with this sorry record?
For you have their admission of following
This is what Luther said in essence in his commentary on Galatians 2 which we quoted above.
How can anyone take these components, and rationalize a defense of holding onto a gospel from Paul at odds with Jesus? It makes no sense.
Consequently, on Judgment Day, Jesus will certainly not allow Paulinists to cite any faith-alone verse in defense. This is because Paulinists claim Paul was inspired. Since even Paul said âGod cannot lieâ (Titus 1:2), Jesus on judgment day is free to cite from Paul all the verses that prove Paul simultaneously endorsed salvation by obedience, repentance, and works -- the verses the Paulinists now place under the list of verses-by-guile to introduce 'faith alone' as the true doctrine.
Hence, all such Paulinists who defend deception to ignore works and obedience verses in Paul will be fairly judged by all these verses anyway. God will not treat these verses as legitimate pious frauds.
If the Paulinist relied on faith-alone doctrine to their detriment (lived sinfully) or they misled just one person (let alone millions) into a lawless and non-salvific life, they only have themselves to blame for treating Paul as their teacher. For Jesus clearly said He Himself was the âSole Teacher.â (Matt. 23:8-11.) He was the Way, not Paul. If these contingencies occur (i.e., one soul is lost due to their false doctrine), these Paulinists will end up in the deepest darkness â the worst possible place in hell there is.
The author of the famous song Amazing Grace â Reverend John Newton (1725-1807) â explained this verse where Jesus cautions us against calling anyone else Teacher. Newton says it means that not even âthe bestâ of the ministers, pastors, etc., are âso thoroughly furnished, nor so free from mistake, as to deserve our implicit confidence [which Jesus alone deserves].â (Rev. John Newton, The Works of the Reverend John Newton (Hamilton & Smith, 1821) Vol.7-8, Sermon 15, at 167.)
There was thus never any excuse for a true follower of Christ making Paul a teacher in Christâs church, let alone one superior to Christ in effect. Jesus is and always will be our Sole Teacher.
Carlstadt had the priority of Jesusâ words right when he founded the German Reformation in 1517 with Luther. In his 1520 treatise, De Canoncis Scripturis Libellus, Carlstadt said:
It is necessary in fact to preserve obedience to the Lord, and as the Spirit of the Apostles is not a guide equal or greater than the Lord, thus also the heart of Paul within his letters does not have as much authority as has Christ. (Charles Beard's Martin Luther and the Reformation in Germany (1889) at 278 (reprint 2009) or 1896 edition at 401.)(translation from Latin).
Unfortunately, rather than accept this correction, Luther was infuriated with his partner. Luther drove out Carlstadt from the reform movement, declaring Carlstadt The New Judas. But Carlstadt was right: Jesus comes first. Everyone else is second tier. For there is only One Master. One Teacher.
Blessings, Doug
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Scholar Mark Given admits early on the truth about Paul's use of guile in his book Paul's True Rhetoric (Emory University, 2001), and lays out his biases:
Paul's rhetorical strategies...display such a degree of intentional ambiguity, cunning and deception as to make him justifiably vulnerable to the polemical charge of perpetuating sophistries." (Page 3)
"I am quite sympathetic with Paul, but I am also sympathetic to Paul's critics." (Page 3.)
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Doesn't Paul clearly excuse lying from sin if it supposedly advances God's glory?
For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory; why yet am I also judged as a sinner? (Romans 3:7, King James Version)
But if through my lie God's truth abounds to his glory, why am I still being condemned as a sinner? (English Standard Version)
But if the truth of God through my lie abounded unto his glory, why am I also still judged as a sinner? (American Standard Version)
Thus, clearly Paul admits he knew he was lying, but Paul felt the end justified the means. Yet, how indeed does truth abound by a lie?
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Femi Aribala of Nigeria has a quite pointed harsh article
on this issue about Paul yet to exhort us to righteousness and away from Paul's truly abhorrent principles. It can be excerpted in its entirety:
Jesus calls the devil âthe fatherâ of lies. He says: âHe was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth.â (John 8:44). This profile corresponds to that of Paul in the bible. Paul was a murderer of Christians from the beginning and he is an inveterate liar.
Paul disregards the truth. He says: âThe important thing is that in every way, whether from false motives or true, Christ is preached.â (Philippians 1:18). Like a chameleon, he declares: âI have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some.â (1 Corinthians 9:22). Accordingly, Paul says: "I try to please everybody in every way"(1 Corinthians 10:33). Then he contradicts himself: "If I were still trying to please men, I would not be a servant of Christ" (Galatians 1:10).
He even openly boasts of his deceitfulness: âCrafty fellow that I am, I caught you by trickery!â (2 Corinthians 12:16). This is not the way of Christ.
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Chrysostum was a famous church leader in the late 300s and early 400s. He is discussed as follows in
Jay Trumbull's A Lie Never Justifiable:
Chrysostom, as a young man, evaded ordination for himself and secured
it to his dearest friend Basil (who should not be confounded with
Basil the Great, the brother of Gregory of Nyssa) by a course of
deception, which he afterwards labored to justify by the claim that
there were lies of necessity, and that God approved of deception as a
means of good to others.[1] In the course of his exculpatory argument,
he said to his much aggrieved friend Basil: "Great is the value of
deceit, provided it be not introduced with a mischievous intention. In
fact, action of this sort ought not to be called deceit, but rather a
kind of good management, cleverness, and skill, capable of finding
out ways where resources fail, and making up for the defects of the
mind.... That man would fairly deserve to be called a deceiver who
made an unrighteous use of the practice, not one who did so with a
salutary purpose. And often it is necessary to deceive, and to do the
greatest benefits by means of this device, whereas he who has gone by
a straight course has done great mischief to the person whom he has
not deceived."[2]
[Footnote 1: See Smith and Wace's _Dictionary of Christian Biography_,
I., 519 f.; art. "Chrysostom, John."]
[Footnote 2: See Chrysostom's "Treatise on the Priesthood," in _The
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers_, first series (Am. ed.), IX., 34-38.]
In fact, Chrysostom seems, in this argument, to recognize no absolute
and unvarying standard of truthfulness as binding on all at all times;
but to judge lies and deceptions as wrong only when they are wrongly
used, or when they result in evil to others. He appears to act on the
anti-Christian theory[1] that "the end justifies the means." Indeed,
Dr. Schaff, in reprobating this "pious fraud" of Chrysostom, as
"conduct which every sound Christian conscience must condemn," says
of the whole matter: "The Jesuitical maxim, 'the end justifies the
means,' is much older than Jesuitism, and runs through the whole
apocryphal, pseudo-prophetic, pseudo-apostolic, pseudo-Clementine, and
pseudo-Isidorian literature of the early centuries. Several of the
best Fathers show a surprising want of a strict sense of veracity.
They introduce a sort of cheat even into their strange theory of
redemption, by supposing that the Devil caused the crucifixion under
the delusion [intentionally produced by God] that Christ was a mere
man, and thus lost his claim upon the fallen race." [2]
[Footnote 1: Rom. 3: 7, 8.]
[Footnote 2: See Dr. Schaff's "Prologemena to The Life and Works of
St. Chrysostom," in _The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers_, first Series
(Am. ed.), IX., 8.]
Chrysostom, like Gregory of Nyssa, having done that which was wrong in
itself, with a laudable end in view, naturally attempts its defense by
the use of arguments based on a confusion in his own mind of things
which are unjustifiable, with things which are allowable. He does not
seem to distinguish between deliberate deception as a mode of lying,
and concealment of that which one has a right to conceal. Like many
another defender of the right to lie in behalf of a worthy cause, in
all the centuries, Chrysostom essays no definition of the "lie," and
indicates no distinction between culpable concealment, and concealment
that is right and proper. Yet Chrysostom was a man of loving heart and
of unwavering purpose of life. In an age of evil-doing, he stood firm
for the right. And in spite of any lack of logical perceptions on his
part in a matter like this, it can be said of him with truth that
"perhaps few have ever exercised a more powerful influence over the
hearts and affections of the most exalted natures."[1]
[Footnote 1: Smith and Wace's _Dictionary of Christian Biography_, I.,
532.]