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Explaining Peter's Dissimulation in Antioch

The Antioch Incident: When Programs Collide

It is one of the most striking scenes in the New Testament. In Galatians 2, we find Paul, the Apostle of the Gentiles, standing toe-to-toe with Peter, the lead Apostle of the Circumcision. Paul "withstood him to the face" because Peter was "to be blamed."

To the casual reader, this looks like a simple personality clash or a minor disagreement on church etiquette. However, through the lens of Right Division, we see a profound doctrinal crisis. This confrontation was not about Peter’s personal salvation; it was about protecting the integrity of a specific program God was revealing through Paul.

Understanding Peter’s Standing

To interpret this conflict correctly, we must first recognize Peter’s position. Peter was saved under the Gospel of the Kingdom. He had walked with the Lord during His earthly ministry, and his commission was focused on the nation of Israel and the fulfillment of prophetic promises (Mat.10:5-7).

Peter was not a "Grace believer" in the Pauline sense. He was a Kingdom saint who had been given a specific revelation regarding the Gentiles (Acts 10) to prepare him for the transition period. When Peter arrived in Antioch, he wasn't there as a convert to Paul’s ministry; he was a guest representative of the Jerusalem leadership.

The Two Groups in One Room

The tension in Antioch arose because two distinct groups were interacting in the same space:

  1. The Kingdom Apostles: Peter and those from James, who operated under the Kingdom program.
  2. The Antioch Believers: These were Gentiles (and some Jews) saved under the Gospel of the Grace of God committed to Paul.

In the Kingdom program, the distinction between Jew and Gentile remains vital, as Israel is the "priestly" nation through which the world is blessed. However, in the Grace program—the "Mystery" revealed to Paul—God is doing something entirely new.

The True Nature of the "Middle Wall"

A common misunderstanding is that the "middle wall of partition" mentioned in Ephesians 2 was broken down to merge the Kingdom and Grace programs together. This is a mistake.

The Kingdom and Grace programs remain separate in God’s purpose. The "wall" that was demolished was the barrier within the Grace program.

"For he is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us;" (Eph.2:14)

In the Body of Christ (the Grace program), there is neither Jew nor Gentile. They are "one new man." When Peter—a Jew—sat down to eat with Gentiles in Antioch, he was acknowledging this "one new man" reality. He was respecting the "house rules" of the Grace territory.

The Danger of Dissimulation

The problem began when "certain men came from James" (Gal.2:12). Fearing the opinion of these legalistic Kingdom Jews, Peter withdrew. He stopped eating with the Gentiles and separated himself.

Paul called this dissimulation, which essentially means "acting" or "hypocrisy." Peter knew better. He had already seen the sheet from heaven; he had already witnessed the Spirit fall on Cornelius (Act.10). Peter wasn't confused about doctrine; he was yielding to social pressure.

By withdrawing, Peter’s example was shouting what his words would never say: "To be truly holy, you Gentiles must live like Jews."

This was a direct attack on the Truth of the Gospel (Gal.2:14). If a "pillar" like Peter acted as though the wall of partition was still standing, the Gentile believers in Antioch would naturally conclude that their standing in Christ was incomplete without the Law of Moses.

Territory and Authority

Why did Paul have the right to rebuke Peter? It comes down to functional authority.

Antioch was the headquarters of the Grace movement. Just as Paul respected the authority of the Kingdom apostles in Jerusalem (Gal.2:1-10), Peter was expected to conform to the Grace pattern while in Antioch.

Paul’s reprimand was a "course correction." He wasn't questioning Peter’s heart or his future in the Kingdom. He was protecting the Body of Christ in Antioch from a confusing influence that threatened to merge Grace back into the Law. Even Barnabas, Paul’s loyal coworker, was "carried away" by Peter's influence. This shows how dangerous Peter's actions were—if not for Paul's intervention, the distinction between the programs would have become blurred.

Why This Matters for Us Today

Understanding this confrontation settles the issue of authority for the believer today. It proves that during this transition period, Paul’s revelation was the standard for the Body of Christ.

If Peter’s conduct could be judged by Paul’s Gospel, then Paul’s epistles carry the final authority for our doctrine and walk. We learn that:

  • Grace is absolute: Any attempt to rebuild the "wall" of religious requirements is a "frustration of the grace of God" (Gal.2:21).
  • Consistency is key: We must walk "uprightly according to the truth of the gospel."
  • Programmatic distinction is vital: We don't try to force Peter into Paul's shoes, nor Paul into Peter's. We recognize that God was working through both, but in different capacities.

Peter’s temporary failure in Antioch serves as a permanent lesson for us: the work of the Cross is sufficient. The wall is down, the Law is finished, and our standing in the Body of Christ is secure, independent of any Jewish shadow or ceremony.

"I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain." (Gal.2:21)

Summary Statement: The Preservation of the Truth of the Gospel

The confrontation in Antioch provides a definitive blueprint for Right Division in practice. We must maintain the clear distinction that the Kingdom program (Israel’s prophetic hope) and the Grace program (the Body of Christ) remain separate, distinct administrations of God. These programs are not to be merged or "blended" into a single, confusing message.

However, we must also recognize that inside the Grace program, the "middle wall of partition" has been completely abolished. For those saved under the Gospel of Grace, there is no longer a spiritual or social division between Jew and Gentile; we are "one new man" in Christ.

Our public conduct and fellowship must reflect this reality. To separate ourselves based on old religious distinctions is not just a social error—it is a "dissimulation" that denies the sufficiency of the Cross. As members of the Body, our lives should consistently bear witness to the fact that we are justified by faith alone, standing together in one Body without the barriers of the Law.

"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." (Gal.3:28) 



Concepts in Thessalonians that might confuse people regarding the Grace Doctrine

Concepts in Thessalonians that might confuse people regarding the Grace Doctrine

Why did Paul mention things like Jesus as King, the Day of the Lord, signs of the End Times, and the Antichrist in the Thessalonian letters? Are these things part of our Grace doctrine? How do we understand these things in the context of the Thessalonian epistles? 

These are valid questions, which in turn have valid answers.

1 Thess.5:1-2: “But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto you. For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night.”

Paul’s stay in Thessalonica was brief—about three to four weeks (Acts 17:2). He reasoned in the synagogue, proving from Scripture that Jesus was the Christ who suffered and rose again. His message was met with both faith and fierce opposition. Some Jews believed, many Gentiles turned from idols, but others stirred riots, accusing Paul of treason for proclaiming “another king, one Jesus” (Acts 17:7). The Thessalonian believers were young in the faith, surrounded by pagan idolatry, political suspicion, and persecution. Paul’s urgency was to ground them in the essentials: Christ crucified and risen, salvation by faith, holy living, and hope in His return. Yet because of rumours, false letters, and external pressures, he also had to clarify matters that touched on kingdom language—Jesus as King, the Day of the Lord, and signs of the end. These were not the core of his mystery gospel, but necessary clarifications to protect them from confusion.

What Paul actually taught in Thessalonica was the mystery gospel: salvation by grace through faith, Jew and Gentile united in one Body, with a heavenly destiny (Eph.3:1–9). That was his message to the Thessalonians. He proclaimed Jesus as Messiah, not to offer Israel the kingdom, but to prove to Jews that He was the promised Saviour. He declared Jesus as Lord and King, not to announce an earthly reign, but to show His supremacy over Caesar and idols. He taught resurrection hope, turning from idols, the triad of faith, love, and hope, and sanctification in a pagan culture. These were the foundations of grace doctrine.

Yet Paul also reminded them of the Day of the Lord. This was not part of his mystery gospel but a clarification. False teachers had unsettled the Thessalonians, claiming they were already in that day of wrath (2 Thess.2:2). Paul reassured them: believers are not appointed to wrath but to obtain salvation through Christ (1 Thess.5:9). He distinguished between the rapture—the blessed hope of the Body—and the Day of the Lord, which is judgment upon the world.

This is why some readers become confused when studying Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians. He mentions kingdom concepts such as Messiahship, kingship, and the Day of the Lord, but these references were not his doctrine for the Body of Christ. They were responses to external issues—false letters, rumours, and doubts among young believers. Paul’s true message was the mystery gospel, and that is what he taught consistently in every church. The kingdom language appears only as clarification, not as part of the grace doctrine.

For us today, the lesson is clear. We must distinguish between Paul’s mystery gospel and the kingdom program. Our hope is heavenly, not earthly. We await Christ’s coming for His Body, not Israel’s restoration. When Paul referenced kingdom themes, it was to defend and contextualise the mystery, not to mix doctrines. Just as he assured the Thessalonians, we too can rest in the promise that we are delivered from wrath and secured in Christ’s grace.

Exhortation: Hold fast to the mystery gospel—Christ crucified, risen, and coming for His Body. Do not be shaken by voices that confuse kingdom promises with our heavenly hope.



The Arabian Gap: Solving the Three-Year Mystery of Paul’s Early Ministry

The Arabian Gap: Solving the Three-Year Mystery of Paul’s Early Ministry

The timeline of Paul’s life immediately following his conversion is often treated as a sudden burst of activity, moving instantly from the Damascus road to the Jerusalem council. However, the scriptures reveal a deliberate and vital season of hiddenness that defined Paul’s unique apostleship. To truly grasp the origins of the Mystery doctrine, one must look closely at the "three-year gap" that occurred before Paul ever set foot in Jerusalem as a believer.

A common misinterpretation suggests that Paul spent those first three years entirely within the city of Damascus, refining his debating skills in the synagogues. Many readers look at the "many days" mentioned in the book of Acts and assume this refers to a single, continuous stay in the city, concluding that Paul immediately sought out the Twelve Apostles for instruction. This blending of accounts causes significant confusion, as it makes it appear that Paul’s gospel was merely a hand-me-down from the Jerusalem leadership rather than a direct revelation from the ascended Christ.

To correctly understand this timing, we must reconcile the historical narrative of Acts with the chronological autobiography provided in the first chapter of Galatians. The breakdown of these three years begins "straightway" after Saul received meat and was strengthened following his encounter with Ananias. While he initially preached in the Damascus synagogues, proving that Jesus is the Son of God, he did not remain there to build a local ministry. Paul explicitly states that he "conferred not with flesh and blood" and did not go up to Jerusalem. Instead, he departed into Arabia.

Words are Spirit: Living and Walking in the Truth

Words are Spirit: Living and Walking in the Truth

The concept of "the Spirit" is often shrouded in mystical confusion, relegated to the realm of inexplicable feelings or unpredictable emotional surges. Yet, if we look to the King James Bible, we find a definition that is both concrete and profoundly transformative. To truly understand the nature of the Spirit, we must anchor ourselves in the direct declaration of Jesus Christ: "It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life" (Jn.6:63). Here, the mystery is solved. The Spirit is not an atmospheric presence or a vague energy; the Spirit is the Word of God in operation.

This scriptural fact establishes that the Word of God is the delivery system for divine life. To "receive the Spirit" is not to be overcome by an outer force, but to receive the holy information, instruction, and doctrine of Christ into the heart. The Bible describes this process not as a human effort, but as the "washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost" (Tit.3:5). This regeneration is the total overhaul of the inner man by the power of the Word. This is the foundation of our spiritual existence—our "position" or standing before God.

However, a critical distinction exists between "living" and "walking," a distinction that Paul emphasized heavily to the churches in Galatia. To "live in the Spirit" refers to our spiritual quickening—having our status changed from an orphan of the world to a son of God. This is a positional reality secured by the internalization of life-giving words. Yet, Paul presents a secondary challenge: "If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit" (Gal.5:25). This command implies a striking possibility: a person can be "alive" by the Spirit—possessing the correct doctrine and having been saved by the Word—and yet fail to "walk" by that same Spirit.

Why Biblical Love Requires Knowledge

Why Biblical Love Requires Knowledge

In a world that often defines love as a fleeting sentiment or a blind acceptance of all things, the Apostle Paul provides a sobering and life-transforming correction. Writing from a Roman prison, his heart's desire for the saints was not merely that they would feel more, but that they would understand more. He writes in Php.1:9 (KJB): “And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment;” This reveals a profound pillar of the Mystery of Christ: true, Godly love is never directionless; it is a disciplined fruit of the Spirit that must be specifically channeled through the lens of truth.

The Vulnerability of Blind Love

We must recognise that love without knowledge is not a virtue, but a spiritual vulnerability. When love is divorced from the "form of sound words" (2Tim.1:13), it becomes prone to the errors of the flesh and the "sleight of men" (Eph.4:14). Paul warns that even a sincere "zeal of God" is unprofitable if it is "not according to knowledge" (Rom.10:2).

To walk safely, our love requires "judgment"—a moral perception that acts as a guardrail, allowing us to distinguish truth from error. In our current dispensation of Grace, we are not led by the "schoolmaster" of the law, but by a renewed mind that seeks to "approve things that are excellent" (Php.1:10). Without this biblical anchor, a believer’s affection for God can easily be hijacked by legalism or worldly philosophy.

The Root of the Mind: A Life Yielded to Glory

The Root of the Mind: A Life Yielded to Glory

The mind of Christ is a distinct spiritual disposition characterised by a total absence of selfish ambition and an instinctive drive toward the well-being of others. It is a state of being where one is perfectly joined together in the same judgment, possessing a love that does not fluctuate based on personal preference (1Cor.1:10; Php.2:2). This mindset is defined by a lowliness that naturally esteems others as better than oneself and looks outward at the needs of the body rather than inward at personal desires (Php.2:3-4). However, it is vital to recognise that this is not our mind; it does not originate within the human heart, nor is it an extension of our natural temperament.

The mind of Christ is entirely foreign to our corrupt nature. It is not a collection of our best thoughts or a refined version of our own desires; it is the very life and thinking of Christ Jesus Himself. We do not produce these thoughts by trying to think more "spiritually" or by exerting our self-will. Instead, these thoughts enter our mind as we read and study the scriptures, internalising the doctrine of grace. As we spend time in the Word, His thoughts begin to fill the spaces where our own used to dwell, renewing our thinking from the inside out (Rom.12:2). The more we occupy ourselves with His truth, the more His perspective becomes the lens through which we view the world.

The Strength of Patient Expectation

The Strength of Patient Expectation

Isa.40:31 (KJB): “But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.”

The Anchor of Hope in a Weary Land

In the quiet halls of history, few passages have offered as much sanctuary to the heavy-hearted as the closing words of Isaiah’s fortieth chapter. To understand the depth of this promise, we must look back to a people standing on the precipice of ruin. The nation of Judah was exhausted. Caught between the fading shadow of Assyria and the rising, dark tide of Babylonian captivity, the Israelites felt as though their God had turned His gaze away. They cried out that their "way" was hidden from the LORD, convinced that the political and cultural environment of their day had finally overwhelmed the promises of old.

It was into this atmosphere of spiritual and physical fatigue that Isaiah spoke with a warm, pastoral urgency. He did not offer a pep talk based on human resolve; instead, he directed their eyes upward to the Creator who sits upon the circle of the earth. Isaiah’s message was a sharp contrast to the surrounding pagan influences that relied on carved idols and military might. He reminded the remnant that while even the most vibrant "youths" and "young men" stumble and utterly fall, there is a source of inexhaustible energy available to those who understand the holy art of waiting.

The Divine Exchange